Chalk Box Kid (Stepping Stone,  paper)
Stock image - cover art may vary
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 0394891023
ISBN-13: 9780394891026
Publisher: Random House Books for Young Readers
Release Date: September, 1987
Length: 64 Pages
Weight: Unavailable
Dimensions: 7.4 X 5 X 0.2 inches
Language: English
   
   

Chalk Box Kid (Stepping Stone, paper)

Rate it!  
(Avg. 5)
Customer Reviews

Add to Wish List

From
$3.97 Free Shipping
in the USA

List Price: $7.98 Amazon.com
Save $4.01 (50% off)

Random House is proud to present the tenth anniversary edition of a book Publishers Weekly called "a gem of a book...a story that goes straight to the heart."  When nine-year-old Gregory experiences several upsets in his life, he responds by creating a fantastic chalk garden on the charred walls of a burned-out factory behind his house.  As his gar...
Read more
Buy Now Filter by Shipping Prices
Seller Ships From   Condition Copies Price Shipping Qty. Order
Green Earth Books OR Good 1 $3.99 FREE Add to Cart
Motor City Books MI Good 1 $3.99 FREE Add to Cart
Atlanta Book Company GA Good 1 $3.99 FREE Add to Cart
Books Squared TX   Good 1 $3.99 FREE Add to Cart
Yankee Clipper Books CT Good 1 $3.99 FREE Add to Cart
Blue Cloud Books AZ Good 1 $3.99 FREE Add to Cart
Silver Arch Books MO Good 1 $3.99 FREE Add to Cart
Free State Books MD Good 1 $3.99 FREE Add to Cart
Books Squared TX   Acceptable 1 $3.97 FREE Add to Cart
Yankee Clipper Books CT Acceptable 1 $3.97 FREE Add to Cart
Sierra Nevada Books NV Acceptable 1 $3.97 FREE Add to Cart
Ex-Library Copy

5 5

Customer Reviews

  I love this book!

I like this book because it teaches you to be nice to other people and not to be mean to people like Vance was to Gregory. I think you should read this book you will learn to be nice.
 
  What an imagination!

Gregory moves into a new house in a new town on his birthday.He starts his new school and his class is doing a project, they are growing gardens at home. Gregory can't grow a regular garden like the other kids, so with some chalk and a burned building behind his house he draws his garden on the walls of the building. He makes a friend, Ivy who also likes to draw. His classmates make fun of his garden, but in the end everyone thought his garden was beautiful.
 
  This is an interesting book about a 9 year old boy, Gregory.

This book is about a nine-year-old boy named Gregory. The story starts with the worst birthday of his life because he is moving to a house that he has never seen before and it ends with a friendship. When he moves to a new house, at the beginning, his birthday is the best, because he has his own room.

Towards the middle of the book, he finds a burned down chalk factory, with only three walls left standing. He draws a beautiful garden on these three walls, with the chalk that he has found.

In the beginning of the summary, we mentioned that it ends with a friendship. The friend's name is Ivy. Ivy is a shy girl who loves art as much as Gregory.

Matthew and Skylar

Third Grade

 
  A Real Gem

Nine-year-old Gregory's going through a tough time: his dad lost his job recently, he just moved to a new neighborhood, he switched schools, he didn't get to celebrate his birthday this year, and the one bright spot of everything -- the bedroom his parents added on to the house just for him (Gregory's never had his own room before) -- he has to share with his 20-year-old slacker Uncle Max, who just moved in. To make things worse, the kids at school aren't exactly standing in line to be his friends and his family doesn't have a lot of time for him now.

Things start to look up when Gregory discovers an abandoned chalk factory next door. Under the rubble are boxes and boxes of leftover chalk and Gregory starts drawing on the walls. What he draws and what happens when others take notice is the story.

Discussion:
This is one of the best beginning chapter books I've read in a long time. There are no 50 cent words and the sentences are short but the paragraphs pull you along so you'd never notice it. What makes this book so unique are the topics it skids around.

Gregory is a very frustrated little boy. His parents both work and can't afford to give him the art supplies, clothes, garden space, etc that his friends have access to. His uncle is more of a spoiled new brother than an adult and neither he nor Gregory's parents take much interest in Gregory's concerns and activities. His new teacher is nice but he's having trouble fitting in at school. There is no place in his house that is private. Nothing horrible ever happens but little things build up and although he doesn't know how to say it, Gregory's pent-up frustrations need an outlet. (He's not the only child in this book with this problem: a classmate, Ivy, also has difficulty putting words what's bothering her.)

In a typical beginner reader book an adult would take notice and step in and find a way to make Gregory feel special. Instead the author has Gregory discover an unlimited supply of chalk and 3 walls of the chalk factory to draw on. Now that Gregory has a place that he can make his own, everything else is more bearable. When he finds that he's the only one in his class without a yard to grow a garden in, he simply draws one on the walls outside.

It doesn't take long before others catch on to what he's doing, but by then Gregory has a little more control over his feelings (he no longer feels like kicking things). Again, Bulla is realistic: Nothing fantastic happens but things work out anyway and the ending is more satisfying because of it.
 
  Wonderful book for kids!

This book about Gregory tells how a child learns to express himself and win the admiration of his family, teachers and classmates. We have a copy for each of our second graders and use it as a reader. ....