Anna, Banana, and the monkey in the middle

Anica Mrose Rissi

Book - 2015

Anna has looked forward to her class field trip to the zoo, but from the time they board the bus she is pulled between her long-time best friend, Sadie, and new best friend, Isabel, who argue about everything and want Anna to take sides.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers [2015]
Language
English
Main Author
Anica Mrose Rissi (-)
Other Authors
Meg Park (illustrator)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
116 pages : illustrations ; 20 cm
ISBN
9781481416085
Contents unavailable.
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 3-5-The first two titles in a new chapter book series by debut author Anica Rissi feature third grader Anna, her dog Banana, and her two best friends, Sadie and Isabel. In Anna, Banana and the Friendship Split, readers meet Anna and Sadie as the two are celebrating Anna's birthday. Anna hopes to use her birthday wish on a trip to Water World, but Sadie encourages her to wish for a pony. When Anna opens a present from her grandparents, she finds a glittery pony necklace inside-her wish came true! Yet Sadie grabs the necklace, and proceeds to wear it. Anna and Sadie begin to argue and Sadie storms off-with Anna's new necklace. The rest of the book follows Anna as she alternates between being mad and feeling sad at losing Sadie as her best friend. The simple plot picks up very quickly in order to provide a resolution. In Anna, Banana and the Monkey in the Middle, Anna and Sadie have apologized and gained a mutual new best friend in Isabel. Anna is excited to go on the class trip to the zoo, but trouble quickly brews again as both Sadie and Isabel want to sit with Anna on the bus. Anna begins to realize that having two best friends can be hard. The characters begin to come into their own more in this second title, with Anna's family providing her with a strong support system and logic to help realize that "having two best friends doesn't mean cutting yourself in half to hand out two smaller pieces." Black-and-white interior artwork is included throughout both books. Fans Sara Pennypacker's Clementine, Hilary McKay's Lulu, and Anna Branford's Violet Mackerel will enjoy meeting Anna and her friends. VERDICT Consider adding in libraries where simple chapter book series are popular.-Lisa Kropp, Suffolk Cooperative Library System, Bellport, NY (c) Copyright 2015. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Horn Book Review

In Monkey, Anna finds herself in the middle of an unbalanced friendship trio; in Bet, she attempts to save her two friends from a bully by making a wager with him. Anna's diverse third-grade world is pleasant, as is the spot art scattered throughout, but Anna's voice feels a little too adult to be believable. [Review covers these titles: Anna, Banana, and the Big-Mouth Bet and Anna, Banana, and the Monkey in the Middle.] (c) Copyright 2016. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Following Anna, Banana, and the Friendship Split (2015), Anna must iron out the friendship wrinkles created when her duo becomes a trio. Anna's happy to be friends with Sadie again, and she's glad to have another best friend in Isabelshe wants Sadie and Isabel to be best friends as well. Their field trip to the zoo gets off to a bad start for the three as a unit, though: the bus driver won't allow more than two to a seat, putting Anna in the position of having to pick which friend to sit with. That sets the tone for the rest of their trip, as Sadie and Isabel jockey for the position of Anna's favorite, and Anna contorts herself to avoid hurting anyone's feelings. When Anna speaks up, the girls decide on a formalized system of parity for their group, resulting in three-way disappointment till Anna's father, a romance novelist, helps her parse the nuances of fairness. After this, the group dynamic slides into harmony in an overly convenient wrap-up. The humor is stronger in this installment than before, with poop jokes for child readers and Anna's father's job as a nugget of humor for adults helping the child readers. (Anna's mom spouts business-speak.) Anna is depicted as dark-skinned in Park's cover illustration, Isabel is Latina, and Sadie is a freckled Caucasian girl. Readers should find this gentle conflict easy to relate to. (Fiction. 6-10) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Anna, Banana, and the Monkey in the Middle Chapter One Rise and Shine I popped up like a jackrabbit-in-the-box, feeling wide-awake and eager as a beaver. I had animals on the brain. "Banana!" I said, leaning over the side of my bed. "We're going to the zoo!" Banana looked up at me with her big doggy eyes and thumped her tail against the pillow in her basket where she sleeps. I reached down to tug her soft ears. She understood, of course, that by "we" I didn't mean her and me--dogs aren't allowed on school field trips. I meant me and my best friends, Sadie and Isabel, plus the rest of our class and the other two third-grade classes. It was going to be a super fun day. "I wish I could sneak you there in my backpack," I said. "Then you could meet the prairie dogs!" My teacher, Ms. Burland, had shown us pictures of prairie dogs and some of the other animals we'd be seeing at the zoo. We'd learned what the animals eat and how they play and other cool things about them. I liked hearing about the animals' habitats, like where they sleep and what parts of the world they're from. Ms. Burland says the animals that live in a place are part of what makes that region unique. ("Unique" had been our word of the day. It means special and different and one of a kind.) That made a lot of sense to me. Banana definitely makes my house unique, and my room is extra special because she sleeps there. "But actually," I told her as I slid out of bed, "prairie dogs are in the squirrel family, not the dog family. So if I took you to the zoo, you'd probably want to chase them." Banana wiggled in agreement. She loves chasing squirrels. "They're called prairie dogs because they bark like dogs," I said. "And because they live in the prairie. Except for the ones that live at the zoo." Banana yawned and stretched her front legs. I guess she'd heard enough facts about prairie dogs. I made my bed and pulled on my outfit of black leggings, a pink-and-white striped shirt, pink sneakers, and black-and-white polka-dot socks. While I got dressed, I sang a silly song that Isabel had made up. "We're going to the zoo! A-doob-a-doob-a-doo! We're going to the zoo! You and me and you!" Yesterday at recess, Isabel and I had linked arms and skipped around the playground, belting out the song at the top of our lungs. We'd stopped short when I'd noticed Sadie watching us with her arms crossed and her eyebrows worried. We hadn't meant to leave Sadie out. It had just happened. Luckily, Isabel had grabbed on to Sadie and soon we were all three skipping and singing, and Sadie looked happy again. But it had been a close call. Sadie and I have been friends forever, but we only just met Isabel this year. It's twice as much fun having two best friends, and mostly, we all get along great. But in some ways Sadie and Isabel are still getting used to each other, I think. I was glad we would have the whole day at the zoo to have fun as a threesome. Banana and I were certain that by the end of the field trip, Sadie and Isabel would be calling each other "best friend" too. I grabbed my backpack off the floor and a note fell out of the side pocket. I unfolded the paper and saw it was a drawing Isabel had made of two cute pandas chewing on bamboo. She'd written Anna under one of the pandas and Isabel under the other. The pandas even kind of looked like us. Isabel is an amazing artist. I smiled at the drawing and taped it up on my mirror, under a photo strip of Sadie and me goofing around in a photo booth. "There," I said to Banana. "How does that look?" Instead of answering, Banana pounced on her favorite plastic bunny toy and shook it back and forth, growling as it squeaked. I laughed. Banana is just a little wiener dog but I think in her head she's as huge and ferocious as a tiger. A tiger that likes to cuddle in my lap, and sometimes spins in circles, chasing her own tail. "Come on, crazy beast," I said. "Time for breakfast." I put on a headband and my gold pony necklace with the sparkly blue eye, and galloped out the door. Excerpted from Anna, Banana, and the Monkey in the Middle by Anica Mrose Rissi 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.