Infant-school-age twins, Marius and Marcus Cott, may look alike, but they are very different and so are their teachers. When the boys trade places so they can figure out once and for all who has the better teacher, something happens that surprises them both!
**
From Publishers Weekly
Hurwitz (Class Clown; School Spirit) didn't stray far afield to find the heroes of this effervescent caper. Familiar to her many fans, Lucas Cott?now a sixth grader?appears in these pages, but the leading roles go to his five-year-old twin brothers, Marius and Marcus. On the first day of kindergarten, the precocious boys disrupt their respective classes: Marius leads a mouse hunt in his classroom for the critter Lucas has told him resides there, and Marcus hurls a deck of cards in the air to initiate a game of 52 Pick Up in his. Adding an unusual slant, Hurwitz periodically eavesdrops on the teachers' room, making readers privy to the exasperation of the duo's teachers. While Marius and Marcus play an ongoing game of one-upmanship to convince the other that his teacher is better, the two educators attempt to prove to the other that her student is worse. Just when this dual bickering begins to grate, Hurwitz comes up with a clever concluding twist: the teachers switch classes to experience the other's tribulations on the very day that the identical twins do the same. Hurwitz's focus on younger characters may extend her readership into lower grades, but there's a curious discrepancy here between the age of the protagonists and that of the targeted audience, who likely would rather read about peers or slightly older kids. Still, the author's fresh scenarios and sassy dialogue are as diverting as ever. Ages 7-up.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From School Library Journal
Grade 2-4-Lucas Cott's twin brothers, Marcus and Marius, enter kindergarten in this beginning chapter book. Throughout the fall, their teachers compare notes, each believing that they have the worst-behaved twin in their class. While one child searches daily for nonexistent mice, the other shows his classmates how to play "52 pickup" with a deck of cards. These boys whom readers first met in School Spirit (1994) and School's Out (1991, both Morrow) really love kindergarten and don't intend to cause trouble, but their curiosity and exuberance inevitably give their teachers daily headaches. To settle their dispute over which boy is more difficult, the teachers switch classes for a morning, but, alas, that is also the morning the siblings decide to switch to see whose class is better. Although each teacher unknowingly has the same twin, each readily concedes that her colleague has the harder job. A few black-and-white line drawings illustrate the text. Though short on plot, this contemporary school story may evoke a few chuckles as all decide that the grass is not greener on the other side. Janet M. Bair, Trumbull Library, CT
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Description:
Infant-school-age twins, Marius and Marcus Cott, may look alike, but they are very different and so are their teachers. When the boys trade places so they can figure out once and for all who has the better teacher, something happens that surprises them both!
**
From Publishers Weekly
Hurwitz (Class Clown; School Spirit) didn't stray far afield to find the heroes of this effervescent caper. Familiar to her many fans, Lucas Cott?now a sixth grader?appears in these pages, but the leading roles go to his five-year-old twin brothers, Marius and Marcus. On the first day of kindergarten, the precocious boys disrupt their respective classes: Marius leads a mouse hunt in his classroom for the critter Lucas has told him resides there, and Marcus hurls a deck of cards in the air to initiate a game of 52 Pick Up in his. Adding an unusual slant, Hurwitz periodically eavesdrops on the teachers' room, making readers privy to the exasperation of the duo's teachers. While Marius and Marcus play an ongoing game of one-upmanship to convince the other that his teacher is better, the two educators attempt to prove to the other that her student is worse. Just when this dual bickering begins to grate, Hurwitz comes up with a clever concluding twist: the teachers switch classes to experience the other's tribulations on the very day that the identical twins do the same. Hurwitz's focus on younger characters may extend her readership into lower grades, but there's a curious discrepancy here between the age of the protagonists and that of the targeted audience, who likely would rather read about peers or slightly older kids. Still, the author's fresh scenarios and sassy dialogue are as diverting as ever. Ages 7-up.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From School Library Journal
Grade 2-4-Lucas Cott's twin brothers, Marcus and Marius, enter kindergarten in this beginning chapter book. Throughout the fall, their teachers compare notes, each believing that they have the worst-behaved twin in their class. While one child searches daily for nonexistent mice, the other shows his classmates how to play "52 pickup" with a deck of cards. These boys whom readers first met in School Spirit (1994) and School's Out (1991, both Morrow) really love kindergarten and don't intend to cause trouble, but their curiosity and exuberance inevitably give their teachers daily headaches. To settle their dispute over which boy is more difficult, the teachers switch classes for a morning, but, alas, that is also the morning the siblings decide to switch to see whose class is better. Although each teacher unknowingly has the same twin, each readily concedes that her colleague has the harder job. A few black-and-white line drawings illustrate the text. Though short on plot, this contemporary school story may evoke a few chuckles as all decide that the grass is not greener on the other side.
Janet M. Bair, Trumbull Library, CT
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.