Available:*
Library | Call Number | Status |
---|---|---|
Searching... Hardwood Creek Library (Forest Lake) | J FICTION AIN | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Lake Elmo Library | J FICTION AIN | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... Oakdale Library | J FICTION AIN | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... R.H. Stafford Library (Woodbury) | J FICTION AIN | Searching... Unknown |
Bound With These Titles
On Order
Summary
Summary
Jules is back starring in another hilarious chapter book!
Things I Didn't Know About Being on TV
by Jules Bloom
1. Shooting a pilot does not mean what you think it means.
2. On TV, people live in mansions and have drivers!
3. You get to completely change who you are, which everyone but me thinks I can do.
4. You might have to miss the moving up play at school, which no one but me cares about.
When Jules lands a role on a new TV show, she gets stuck choosing between taking part in her class moving up ceremony at school and shooting a sitcom. And that's only half the drama!
With a quiet best friend who won't ever hoot and holler and an ex-best friend who may be moving to the burbs, Jules's insides are all mixed-up. She'll need a little bit of nerve and a whole lot of pizzazz if she wants to make it through the last month of second grade without turning into a drama queen!
Author Notes
A Pennsylvania girl at heart, Beth Ain fell in love with life in New York City, and she loves trying to capture the essence of family life there. Thankfully, she now has the benefits of both city and small town life, having settled in Port Washington, NY, where she lives very happily with her husband and their two kids.
Reviews (2)
Horn Book Review
Spunky second grader Jules Bloom is set to start filming her first movie when disaster strikes. This plan change results in her starring in a television pilot instead, a school play, and "a top-secret project" to help her new best friend Elinor. Jules works admirably to juggle school, acting, and her friendships in this entertaining second outing. Higgins's illustrations reflect Jules's charming effervescence. (c) Copyright 2014. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Review
Second-grader Jules Bloom returns for another audition (Starring Jules (as Herself), 2013)--this time for a television sitcom--with New York Citysized tension and hilarity. Full of energy and charisma, Jules has been asked to audition for a TV show about a New York City family; she would be the youngest of three siblings. Ain gives this bubbly girl a distinctive voice ("I am having so many feelings inside my body that I feel like a pan of shake-over-the-stovetop popcorn") that brims with questions and confidence. Jules skitters from problem to problem like a city cab, balancing her audition with another project: cheering up her new friend Elinor, who is from London. Things are busy at school, too: Her exbest friend Charlotte continues to steal the limelight there, receiving the plum role in the end-of-the-year play. Soon, the juggling of school, friends and an acting career produces conflicts that even her creative family cannot solve. The multiple problems nearly overwhelm the story; they keep the dramatic tension high, but they also leave a few quick loose ends to tie at the conclusion. Still, Jules is a lovable star with good friends and a supportive family, living a frenetic city life that is constantly entertaining. Fans of Clementine and Gooney Bird Greene will look forward to the next book in the series. (Fiction. 6-9)]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Excerpts
Excerpts
From Starring Jules (in Drama-rama)I wake up with a giant pain in my stomach. "Mommy!" I yell, which does not bring my mom, but it does bring my brother. "What, Jules?" he says with his hands asking the question, like a grown-up. Sometimes I think Big Henry is more like a parent than a little boy. "Tell Mommy I have a Charlotte-ache," I say. Big Henry leaves and I pull the covers over my head and wait. "A Charlotte-ache?" my mom says, standing over my head. She has not yet pulled the covers off of me, and I know it's coming. I nod. "So, we're talking about a stomachache, right?" she asks. I nod again. "A stomachache because you have to go to school and tell Charlotte that you are not filming your part in the movie today?" I nod again and I can't believe she hasn't pulled the covers off yet. I feel like I might suffocate. I picture the ocean in Florida and getting sucked away by the undertow and I start to panic. I sit straight up and throw the covers off of me. "Why didn't you pull off my covers? I WAS DROWNING!" I say in a very loud voice, louder than my mother is comfortable with. "Excuse me?" she says in her about-to-freak-out voice. I start to cry. "She is going to make fun of me," I say. My ex-best friend, Charlotte (Stinkytown) Pinkerton, is just waiting for me to fail at being an actor. "And then she is going to tell me that she knows Hollywood and that this means there will be no movie and that I will never be a movie star and that at least it was nice while it lasted." Excerpted from Starring Jules (in Drama-Rama) by Beth Ain 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.