great book
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| Review Date: April 22, 2010 |
| Reviewer: B. Ahmad, toronto,canada |
| my son loved this book he carries it everywhere he goes, its kind of like a kid diary even though it states it in the book that it isnt..lol, even me the mom read it and found it really funny... |
Fun, but a little thin...
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| Review Date: May 29, 2010 |
| Reviewer: Harris Macklin, Canada |
| There is quite a bit of filler here, but my daughter had a blast with this book. So did I due to the hilarious colour cartoons in the middle. Particularly "Jerome, the Man with Incredibly Red Lips" and "The Amazing FP" Awesome stuff. |
Be Sure You Know This Is Different from the First Two Books before Buying It
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| Review Date: November 30, 2008 |
| Reviewer: Professor Donald Mitchell, Thanks for Providing My Reviews over 96,000 Helpful Votes Globally |
Take the subtitle of this book seriously: It is mostly a do-it-yourself book rather than funny stories like the ones in Diary of a Wimpy Kid and Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules. Sixteen pages of colored cartoons are the only funny stories in the book that are similar to the earlier two books. Some funny illustrations surround the diary's questions. The idea is to create a journal that a youngster will look back on some day, a sort of written time capsule.
If you insist on buying this, you've been warned. It's not what you think it is . . . and it's not a very good value.
When I was 9-12 years old, that was the last thing I would have wanted. As an adult, I'm always annoyed by "books" that mostly blank pages of lined paper (with little cartoons in one corner). I can buy lined paper much cheaper in other forms.
With those warnings in mind, some youngsters will be glad if they answer some of these questions and later look back on what they wrote. I would warn those who think about doing that not to write anything that they wouldn't want parents, siblings, and friends to see at the moment. Some of the questions are ripe for creating vast embarrassment for a youngster.
The book starts off in confusing fashion on a page entitled "What're you gonna do with this thing?" At the bottom, it says "Whatever you do, just make sure you don't write down your 'feelings' in here. Because one thing's for sure: This is NOT a diary."
Contrary to that statement is the book's title: Diary of a Wimpy Kid. In addition, less than halfway through the book there's a section preceding all those pages of lined paper that says "What's Your Story?" which contains these directions:
"Use the rest of the book to keep a daily journal, write a novel, draw comic strips, or tell your life story."
Those directions immediately follow a page that says: "Diary of a _____"
Is a diary by another name any less a diary?
The fill-in-the-blank parts of the book contain lots of questions designed to elicit current likes and dislikes (video games, songs, books, movies, animals, colors, and houses), your predictions for the future, and potentially embarrassing facts. There is also a lot of emphasis on creating comic strips by providing unfinished panels to be completed and then followed by empty panels. You also have a chance to draw some maps as well. More fun is to describe things that you would like to do in the future (such as the first laws you would pass as president). |
They prefer it written for them...
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| Review Date: November 27, 2008 |
| Reviewer: David, |
| My son was a great fan of the previous Wimpy Kid Diary. Seeing the good change in my son's reading habits (he read very little before Wimpy KId) I got this Do-it-Yourself book for him. That, however, was not the same at all! He and his frinds had a passing interest in creating their own stories but for whatever reason it did not work, and their commens wouldn't be actually appropriate to cite in this review... Therefore I just hope that the next book from the series Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Last Straw will be more like the previous one. As for my daughter, she continues to be loyal to her series of Why Some Cats are Rascals, Book 3 |
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