Just Like Me
Just Like Me
Select a format:
Perma-Bound Edition ©2017--
Library Binding ©2016--
Paperback ©2017--
To purchase this item, you must first login or register for a new account.
Sourcebooks, Inc
Annotation: In this story about unlikely friendships and finding your place in the world, three very different girls, adopted as babies from the same Chinese orphanage, spend a week at a summer camp, where the adoption agency coordinator wants them to journal their "bonding" experience.
 
Reviews: 4
Catalog Number: #5797863
Format: Library Binding
Publisher: Sourcebooks, Inc
Copyright Date: 2016
Edition Date: 2016 Release Date: 04/01/16
Pages: 246 pages
ISBN: 1-492-60427-5
ISBN 13: 978-1-492-60427-3
Dewey: Fic
LCCN: 2015027629
Dimensions: 22 cm.
Language: English
Reviews:
ALA Booklist

As infants, three girls left the same Chinese orphanage to be adopted by American families from the same town. Now almost 12, nerdy Avery and sporty Becca are good friends who embrace their Chinese ethnicity, but Julia wants nothing to do with her Chinese roots t even chopsticks. When the three girls end up at church camp for the week to "bond," a disaster seems to be the inevitable result, especially since their cabin mates are difficult to get along with. Told from Julia's perspective through a mix of personal narrative and journal entries, this delightful, touching story transports the reader to summer camp, incorporating touchstone details that range from crafts in the art shed and mystery ham in the cafeteria, to water fights in the cabin and rowing competitions on the lake. The characters are believable and well developed, and the mix of personalities helps propel the story forward. Through the issues of family and friendship, Cavanaugh (This Journal Belongs to Ratchet, 2013) explores what connects us to one another.

Horn Book

This well-intentioned novel is narrated by Julia, an eleven-year-old adoptee from China navigating a week at Bible camp along with two girls who were also adopted from the same orphanage. As the proposed subjects of an article on international adoption, they're compelled to keep journals, opening Julia's inner life to readers as reluctance gives way to self-discovery. Readable and interesting, but predictable.

School Library Journal (Fri Jan 01 00:00:00 CST 2016)

Gr 4-7 Eleven-year-old Julia heads reluctantly off to Camp Little Big Woods, a Christian summer camp for girls in Wisconsin, along with exuberant, sporty Becca, and talkative, pedantic Avery. All three were in the same orphanage in China as babies and now have journals from Ms. Marcia, their families' adoption agency coordinator, who is writing an article about transracial adoptees. Placed in a cabin with queen bee Vanessa; her fawning sidekick, Meredith; and her decidedly uncool cousin, Gina, the girls find that tempers flare, nerves fray, and friendships are sorely tested. Becca and Avery are equally at ease with their Chinese background and American upbringing, while Julia is more ambivalent thanks to a mother who denies that race is a factor in how she is treated and some insensitive classmates and teachers. Tween readers will find much to identify with in this charming and refreshingly wholesome coming-of-age story. Set to a soundtrack of 1970s and 1980s disco and pop classics and filled with swimming, campfires, games, and an occasional Bible study, the narrative follows all six cabin residents as they learn important lessons about being honest, kind, and comfortable in your own skin. Short chapters told from Julia's viewpoint alternate with her journal entries for Ms. Marcia, showing her progress as she learns to speak up for herself and admit her deepest fears. Vanessa and Meredith also come to terms with other kinds of family drama. Filled with slapstick humor and fast-paced action, the novel will engage reluctant readers, while offering fuel for deep contemplation by those ready to tackle questions of identity and belonging. Give this one to fans of Jeanne Birdsall's "Penderwicks" (Knopf) series, Jennifer L. Holm, and Andrew Clements. VERDICT Highly recommended for middle grade realistic fiction collections. Laura Simeon, Open Window School Library, WA

Reviewing Agencies: - Find Other Reviewed Titles
ALA Booklist
Horn Book
ILA Children's Choice Award
School Library Journal (Fri Jan 01 00:00:00 CST 2016)
Word Count: 39,135
Reading Level: 5.4
Interest Level: 3-6
Accelerated Reader: reading level: 5.4 / points: 6.0 / quiz: 184968 / grade: Middle Grades
Reading Counts!: reading level:6.2 / points:10.0 / quiz:Q68780
Lexile: 900L
<p><b>1</b></p><p>The camp bus sputtered and chugged up the interstate, sounding as if this might be its last trip. Avery sat across the aisle from me with her earbuds on, practicing a Chinese vocabulary lesson. Becca sat next to her, chewing on a straw and watching a soccer match on her cell phone.</p><p>"Ni hao ma," Avery said, her chin-length hair with bangs making her look studious in her thick, black-framed glasses.</p><p>When she saw me looking at her, she pulled out one earbud and offered it to me.</p><p>Did she really think I wanted to learn Chinese with her?</p><p>"Technically the lesson I'm working on is review, but I could teach you the basics if you want."</p><p>I looked around at all the kids on the bus staring at her and shook my head.</p><p>"GO! GO! GO!" Becca yelled, pumping her fist in the air as she cheered for Spain's soccer team. Her hair spilled out of her ponytail as if she were playing in the soccer game instead of just watching it. "Booyah! Score!"</p><p>As kids stood up on the bus to see what all the yelling was about, I slid down in my seat, and the driver gave us that "death look" in her rearview mirror. The one that said, "If I have to stop this bus, somebody's gonna get it..."</p><p>"Hey, Julia!" Becca yelled, holding up her phone. "Wanna watch with me? The game just went into overtime!"</p><p>"No thanks."</p><p>Crowding around a tiny phone screen and watching people kick a soccer ball around was not my idea of fun.</p><p>My idea of fun was craft camp at the park district with my best friend, Madison, but Mom said I had the rest of the summer to do that.</p><p>Instead I was heading north toward Wisconsin to Camp Little Big Woods, but at least that was better than heading south toward Indiana for Summer Palace Chinese Culture Camp.</p><p>As soon as we "graciously" agreed to be the subjects of Ms. Marcia's adoption article, she suggested that the three of us spend a week together making paper lanterns and learning the pinyin alphabet at culture camp.</p><p>"It will be a great way for you girls to reconnect not only with each other, but also with your heritage," Ms. Marcia had gushed.</p><p>She loved treating us as if we were two instead of almost twelve.</p><p>But I said there was no way I was going to eat Chinese food three times a day and do tai chi every morning, so we settled on the sleepaway camp Avery and Becca went to every year.</p><p>I reached into the pocket of my suitcase and pulled out the plastic lacing of the gimp friendship bracelet I had started a few days ago. I had planned to finish it before camp so that I could give it to Madison when I said good-bye to her, but I'd run out of time. I decided I'd try to finish it while I was at camp and mail it to her along with a nice, long letter saying how much I missed her.</p><p>"Hey, Julia!" Becca yelled. "What's that?"</p><p>"Nothing," I said. "Just a friendship bracelet for my friend Madison."</p><p>"COOL!" Becca yelled. "We should totally make those for each other in the arts-and-crafts room at camp."</p><p>She went back to her straw-chewing and her tiny-phone-screen soccer game.</p><p>Friendship bracelets for the three of us? I guess "technically" as Avery would say, the three of us were friends. But even though "technically" I had known Avery and Becca longer than I had known my parents, I couldn't imagine ever thinking of them as the friendship-bracelet kind of friends.</p><p>What are your thoughts on the Chinese proverb: "An invisible red thread connects those destined to meet regardless of time, place, or circumstances. The thread may stretch or tangle, but never break."</p><p>Dear Ms. Marcia,</p><p>I've been hearing about this red thread for as long as I can remember, but I cannot imagine a thread, of any color-red, blue, purple, orange, or green-connecting Avery, Becca, and me. And if by some chance there really is a thread, I'm pretty sure this trip to camp might just be enough to snap that thing like an old rubber band, breaking it once and for all. Then that Chinese proverb would be history in a whole new way.</p><p>Julia</p>

Excerpted from Just Like Me by Nancy Cavanaugh
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

Just Like Me is the perfect book for middle school girls and doubles as an adoption book for kids, as three adopted sisters navigate their relationship with one another while at summer camp. From the award-winning author of This Journal Belongs to Ratchet, comes a funny, uplifting summer camp story about unlikely friendships and finding your place in the world, making this the perfect growing up book for girls. Told through a mix of traditional narrative and journal entries, don't miss this funny, surprisingly sweet summer read! Who eats Cheetos with chopsticks?! Avery and Becca, my "Chinese Sisters," that's who. We're not really sisters--we were just adopted from the same orphanage. And we're nothing alike. They like egg rolls, and I like pizza. They wave around Chinese fans, and I pretend like I don't know them. Which is not easy since we're all going to summer camp to "bond." (Thanks, Mom.) To make everything worse, we have to journal about our time at camp so the adoption agency can do some kind of "where are they now" newsletter. I'll tell you where I am: At Camp Little Big Lake in a cabin with five other girls who aren't getting along, competing for a camp trophy and losing (badly), wondering how I got here...and where I belong. Told through a mix of traditional narrative and journal entries, don't miss this funny, surprisingly sweet summer read! "A tender and honest story about a girl trying to find her place in the world, and the thread that connects us all."--Liesl Shurtliff, author of Rump: The True Story of Rumpelstiltskin "A heartwarming story about the universal struggle of yearning to be an individual while longing to fit in."--Karen Harrington, author of Sure Kinds of Crazy


*Prices subject to change without notice and listed in US dollars.
Perma-Bound bindings are unconditionally guaranteed (excludes textbook rebinding).
Paperbacks are not guaranteed.
Please Note: All Digital Material Sales Final.