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Merry Christmas, Miss McConnell!
Merry Christmas Miss McConnell
Author: Colleen O'Shaughnessy McKenna
A warm Christmas tale about a fith grade girl who, between a tough teacher at school and tough times at home, expects the worst Christmas ever--only to have it turn out to be one of the best.
ISBN-13: 9780590435543
ISBN-10: 059043554X
Publication Date: 9/1990
Pages: 155
Reading Level: Ages 9-12
Rating:
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0 stars, based on 0 rating
Publisher: Scholastic Trade
Book Type: School Library Binding
Other Versions: Paperback
Members Wishing: 0
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annalovesbooks avatar reviewed Merry Christmas, Miss McConnell! on
ISBN 0590435558 - I'm a very picky reader, so it bothered me to find a scarf described on page 35 as "the stiff, dark green scarf" and then, on page 61 as "soft and warm". Stiff AND soft? But THAT would be my only complaint, and I wouldn't take away a star for it!

Meg's class loves their teacher, Mrs Jackson, so they're sad to see her take maternity leave just as Christmas is approaching. They're extra sad when they get Miss McConnell as her replacement! Meg, Gaelen and Raymond have signed up for a contest at the mall and Mrs Jackson has been their sponsor through it all. Miss McConnell, though, is tough on the entire class and doesn't seem to have any Christmas spirit at all. When the three friends offend her and she decides to withdraw them from the mall competition, they're all upset. Meg was counting on the prize money to be able to buy some Christmas cheer for her family because her father was injured and isn't working and her mother's just working too much! Will Christmas be ruined by Miss McConnell? And can you really buy Christmas cheer, anyway?

This is the second book I've read recently where there's a black character that I didn't know was black, based on the text. I'm not sure if that's good or bad - Raymond's race doesn't really matter, and it's nice that it never comes up between them, but it caught me off guard when, near the end, a nurse asks if the kids are related to Mrs Jackson and Raymond jokes "Not directly." The joke went over my head until I checked the front cover! Overall, nice lesson about judging people without beating the lesson to death - and a nice message about the real meaning of Christmas, too!

- AnnaLovesBooks


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