2010年2月19日 星期五

Homework

1. Writing task
2. Literature Reading - 5 chapters with summary writing.
3. Proofreading Task

2010年2月12日 星期五

The Star of Kazan

Annika is a foundling being happily raised by an unusual family in Vienna. When her “real” mother arrives to claim her, things just don’t seem right. There is an adventure with a trunk full of clothes and jewels, a three-legged dog and a beautiful horse. Annika’s friends in Vienna and her new friend, Zed, help to solve the puzzle and free Annika from a terrible fate.


Plot
Tone of book? - upbeat
Time/era of story - 1900-1920's
Kids growing up/acting up? Yes
Internal struggle/realization? Yes
Struggle over - search for family/history
Crime & Police story Yes
Story of - conman stealing/fraud
Is this an adult or child's book? - Age 11-14
Parents/lack of parents problem? - fighting with bitchy momma

Main Character
Gender - Female
Profession/status: - servant
Age: - a kid
Is this an ordinary person caught up in events? Yes
Ethnicity/Nationality - Austrian
How sensitive is this character? - sensitive to others' feelings
Sense of humor - Mostly serious with occasional humor
Intelligence - Smarter than most other characters

Main Adversary
Identity: - Female
Age: - 20's-30's
Profession/status: - wealthy
How much of work is main antagonist actually present in: - an average amount
How sensitive is this character? - middling sensitive to others' feelings
Sense of humor - Mostly serious with occasional humor
Intelligence - Smarter than most other characters

Setting
How much descriptions of surroundings? - 2 (a little)
Europe Yes
European country: - Germany - Austrian
City? Yes
City: - wealthy
Misc setting - fancy mansion

Style
Person - mostly 3rd
Accounts of torture and death? - no torture/death
Amount of dialog - roughly even amounts of descript and dialog

Homework:
Comprehension worksheet
Proofreading worksheet
Plot Summary of The Star of Kazan
"Abandoned at birth, 12-year-old Annika has been raised as a servant in the Viennese home of three quirky--but loveable—professors (Emil, Gertrude, and Julius). Annika has two best friends (Stefan and Pauline), adores her surrogate mothers, Ellie (the cook) and Sigrid (the housemaid), and cultivates a special friendship with an elderly neighbor (La Rondine). Although these relationships bring Annika much happiness, she nevertheless secretly longs to be reunited with her birth mother.

One day, Annika's pie-in-the-sky dream comes true: a finely dressed woman arrives with legal documents which declare that Annika is not only her long-lost daughter, but a member of a wealthy, noble-blooded German family to boot. Frau Edeltraut von Tannenberg whisks Annika off to Spittal, a sprawling estate in northeastern Germany. As Annika attempts to adjust to life as an aristocrat, she befriends the stable-boy (Zed) and Spittal's prize stallion, Rocco.

It isn't long before Annika senses that something about Spittal is not quite right. The mansion is enormous—but decaying; the von Tannenberg family is glamorous and noble—but secretive. Annika soon discovers that the von Tannenburg fortune has been gambled away, but her new mother assures her that she has “a plan.” Frau Edeltraut departs on a few mysterious “business trips,” returning with a generous inheritance from a distant relative that ensures a future of leisure and luxury for the von Tannenberg family.

But when Frau Edeltraut ships Annika off to a miserably strict boarding school, Zed suspects that there is more to the von Tannenberg legacy than meets the eye. He bravely rides to Austria on horseback and discloses his suspicions to Annika's Viennese family. As Zed explains, there is reason to believe that Frau Edeltraut has intercepted a trunk of valuable jewels recently bequeathed to Annika by La Rondine.

At Zed's urging, the professors, Ellie, and Stefan travel to Germany and smuggle Annika out of the boarding school. Upon their return to Vienna, Pauline uncovers evidence that Frau Edeltraut is not Annika's birth mother, but merely a selfish woman so desperate to save her family's impoverished estate that she took advantage of an orphan girl's good fortune. In recounting this saga, Ibbotson subtly suggests that a family has more to do with love and genuine affection than bloodlines or lineage. As Annika learns, the family she longs for is, in actuality, the family she already has.

Extracted from the link AllReaders.com:
http://www.allreaders.com/Topics/Info_29296.asp