Anastasia, Absolutely (Anastasia Krupnik Book 9)

by Lois Lowry

Other authorsDiane De Groat (Illustrator)
Ebook, 1995

Status

Available

Call number

[Fic]

Publication

HMH Books for Young Readers

Description

More adventures of thirteen-year-old Anastasia Krupnik as she tries to deal with a new dog, her school values class, and a personal moral dilemma.

User reviews

LibraryThing member EmScape
Lowry returns to with in the final book in her Anastasia series. Anastasia gets a dog and mistakenly puts it's.. um... droppings in a mailbox instead of the letter she intended to mail. She feels guilty, of course, and struggles with whether to call the post office to confess. At the same time, she
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is taking a course in "Values' and wrestles with questions like, "If you could shave one day off the end of your life and by doing so save the life of a baby in China, would you?" Anastasia has always had an interesting perspective, and these questions really highlight that as well as induce young readers to think about what they would do in the same situation. As always, the Krupnik family are wildly entertaining as well as realistic secondary characters. I am very pleased by how this series ended up.
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LibraryThing member fatlamb
A book that mad me laugh out loud, very clever and well written. Not sure if all chldren reading this will get all the humor but for a children's book I was a bit surprised of how much I did enjoy this book. I think the book does portray the realities of today's children, Anastasia makes a mistake
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while she is walking her dog, she realizes that she must do the right thing of turning herself in, even if she may get into some serious trouble. The setting is modern, I believe in Massachusetts, her father is a professor for Harvard, very modern feel to the story. Controversial issue do arise, Anastasia has a Values class and she is asked many difficult questions such as will you give away one day in your life to save a baby even though the baby will be a criminal, questions dealing with ethics and morals but nothing dealing with language, drugs, or sex. There is stereotyping another story dealing with a dog. I believe the thought process of Anastasia when she is contemplating whether to or whether not too tell anyone about her horrible mishap.
Funny and entertaining with a good story about doing what is right, with a happy ending.
Ages 8 - 11 .....
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LibraryThing member satyridae
Less cute than its predecessors, more contrived. Still amusing but teetering on the edge. I'm glad this is the last one, and I'm not sure about reading the Sam wing of the series. Opinions? Wendy says yes, how about the rest of my kidlit coterie?
LibraryThing member csoki637
This one's a bit disappointing for the Anastasia series.
LibraryThing member fingerpost
Sadly, the Anastasia series ends with one of the weaker books in the collection. The entire story revolves around Anastasia making a mistake that no one would actually make... She is walking her dog while she goes to mail a package for her mother, and after picking up the dog poop in a plastic bag,
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she puts the dog poop in the public mail box and takes her mother's package home and throws it in the trash can. When she realizes her mistake, and discovers the next day that the mailbox she threw the poop in has been removed, she is sure she'll spend her life in prison for the crime of mail tampering.
No laugh out loud moments in this one, and not much involvement from her parents or friends either.
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Language

Original publication date

1995-10-30

ISBN

9780547345550
Page: 0.3627 seconds