Ellie May on Presidents' Day

An Ellie May Adventure

Part of Ellie May

Illustrated by Jeffrey Ebbeler
Look inside
Hardcover
$14.99 US
5.88"W x 8"H x 0.66"D  
On sale Nov 14, 2018 | 112 Pages | 9781580898195
Grades 1-4
Reading Level: Lexile 520L | Fountas & Pinnell M

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Just how far will Ellie May go to be chosen as class flag leader during the exciting week leading up to Presidents' Day?

Quirky and funny, second-grader Ellie May enjoys learning about US presidents. But she absolutely loves the idea of being class flag leader during the week before Presidents' Day. Tired of not being chosen to hold the flag, she makes it her mission to finally get picked. Along the way, Ellie May ends up karate chopping the class plant when she tries to determine whether George Washington actually chopped down that cherry tree. Next she takes apart the class pencil sharpener when she learns that Abraham Lincoln liked learning how gadgets work. Ellie May may not be perfect like Miss-Know-it-All Ava or calm like her best friend Lizzy, but she's good-hearted and eventually realizes that honesty and patience go a long way.
Jeffrey Ebbeler has illustrated more than forty picture books, including the Main Street School series (Looking Glass Library/Random House). He has worked as an art director, done paper engineering for pop-up books, created large scale murals for schools and churches, and sculpted puppets. He currently lives in Cincinnati, OH. www.jeffillustration.com View titles by Jeffrey Ebbeler
“Who wants to be flag leader?” asked Ms. Silva first thing Monday morning.
I sprang out of my seat and shouted, “Me! Me! Me!” My arms swished like windshield wipers.
        The whole class laughed.
        Ms. Silva pointed to my desk. “Ellie May, body in chair, please.” Then my teacher smiled at a girl across the room. A girl who was not swishing. A girl who was quietly sitting. “Ava will be our flag leader,” said Ms. Silva. “Let’s give her a big ten-finger woo.”
        All the kids held up their hands. They wiggled their fingers and shouted, “Woo, woo, woo!”
Even Lizzy—my best friend in the whole entire class—played along. But not me. I kept my body in chair and my hands super still.
        Ava strolled to the front of the class and stood next to the flag. Everyone was silent. She lifted her hand to start the Pledge of Allegiance, and the rest of the class joined in. Ava had already been flag leader twice since winter break. And so had Lizzy. I hadn’t been flag leader once in February or for months. I felt all fizzled and flat.
        After the pledge Ms. Silva tapped the calendar. “Next Monday we won’t be here. The school will be closed in honor of Presidents’ Day, a very special holiday. Throughout the week, we will celebrate our presidents.”
        My belly got fluttery. There were only four more days this week to be flag leader before a very special holiday. I’d be a good flag leader. For one, I have a loud voice. Plus, I know how to stand up straight.
        Over some holidays kids get to go to National Parks like Yosemite to see waterfalls or Muir Woods to see really tall trees. They brag about it during show-and-tell. But my family doesn’t go away much in the winter. And as far as I knew, we weren’t going anywhere over Presidents’ Day weekend. I’d at least like to get to be flag leader for the holiday.
Ellie May wants desperately to be flag leader in class this week, but can she figure out how to please her teacher? Ellie May hasn't been flag leader in months even though she waves her hands enthusiastically every morning to be picked. Her class is learning about U.S. presidents for Presidents' Day, and Ellie May figures that if she can act like a president, maybe Ms. Silva will pick her. Chopping down a class plant so that she can tell the truth about it, as George Washington supposedly did, doesn't work. (Ava, know-it-all-turned-friend, and Ms. Silva both explain that the cherry-tree story is a myth.) Taking apart the class pencil sharpener because Abraham Lincoln liked taking gadgets apart completely backfires. When she owns up to her actions though, she is surprised by the results. The classroom is ethnically diverse—Ellie May, Ava, and Mo appear black (notably, Ava has a dark skin tone); the teacher presents as white. While the text clarifies that presidents were just people, the uncritical glorification of historical presidents by black kids (who would have been treated poorly by them) seems a little off-key. For more of her antics, see Ellie May on April Fool's Day. An appended note on the Pledge of Allegiance omits mention of "under God"; it's followed by a note on Presidents' Day. Like a Clementine of color, Ellie May is a protagonist readers can feel for even if they don't share her preoccupations.
Kirkus Reviews


Second-grader Ellie May is a live wire with a good heart and less good impulse control. In Ellie May on Presidents’ Day, she’s desperate for her chance to be class flag leader, but when she tries to impress her teacher with her devotion to George Washington–style honesty, she ends up insulting her classmates instead. In Ellie May on April Fools’ Day, our heroine is jealous of Mo, the class funny guy, and wants to pull off a great prank herself; unfortunately, she takes things too far. Ellie May is a sympathetic heroine in her yearning for recognition (“Mo’s funny. Ava is smart. You’re artsy. I just want to be something too”), and the episodic chapters make for approachable and humorous early reading. Spirited, cartoonish black and white art has an appropriately chaotic edge in its interpretation of Ellie May’s diverse classroom and mixed-race family. Since the relevant holiday gets decent coverage in each book, this offers the possibility for solid curricular use as well as an amiable new series friend. 
The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Book

Ellie May wants to be flag leader, but she hasn’t been chosen in months because she gets easily distracted. Presidents’ Day is next week, so she desperately wants to be chosen! Mrs. Silva explains that presidents are people with character who do the right thing, and Ellie May decides to impress her teacher with her knowledge. First, she tries to reenact Washington and the cherry tree by karate-chopping a cactus, but soon she learns the story is a myth. She tries to be honest but ends up being hurtful, so she writes an apology letter because Washington wrote letters. Finally, she learns Lincoln loved gadgets, so she takes apart the pencil sharpener but only makes a mess. Will she ever be chosen? Readers who find themselves anxious and easily distracted will root for Ellie May and the intent behind her actions, even if her plans don’t always turn out as she hoped. Homie also includes notes on the Pledge of Allegiance and Presidents’ Day. Simultaneously published with Ellie May on April Fool’s Day.—Booklist

About

Just how far will Ellie May go to be chosen as class flag leader during the exciting week leading up to Presidents' Day?

Quirky and funny, second-grader Ellie May enjoys learning about US presidents. But she absolutely loves the idea of being class flag leader during the week before Presidents' Day. Tired of not being chosen to hold the flag, she makes it her mission to finally get picked. Along the way, Ellie May ends up karate chopping the class plant when she tries to determine whether George Washington actually chopped down that cherry tree. Next she takes apart the class pencil sharpener when she learns that Abraham Lincoln liked learning how gadgets work. Ellie May may not be perfect like Miss-Know-it-All Ava or calm like her best friend Lizzy, but she's good-hearted and eventually realizes that honesty and patience go a long way.

Author

Jeffrey Ebbeler has illustrated more than forty picture books, including the Main Street School series (Looking Glass Library/Random House). He has worked as an art director, done paper engineering for pop-up books, created large scale murals for schools and churches, and sculpted puppets. He currently lives in Cincinnati, OH. www.jeffillustration.com View titles by Jeffrey Ebbeler

Excerpt

“Who wants to be flag leader?” asked Ms. Silva first thing Monday morning.
I sprang out of my seat and shouted, “Me! Me! Me!” My arms swished like windshield wipers.
        The whole class laughed.
        Ms. Silva pointed to my desk. “Ellie May, body in chair, please.” Then my teacher smiled at a girl across the room. A girl who was not swishing. A girl who was quietly sitting. “Ava will be our flag leader,” said Ms. Silva. “Let’s give her a big ten-finger woo.”
        All the kids held up their hands. They wiggled their fingers and shouted, “Woo, woo, woo!”
Even Lizzy—my best friend in the whole entire class—played along. But not me. I kept my body in chair and my hands super still.
        Ava strolled to the front of the class and stood next to the flag. Everyone was silent. She lifted her hand to start the Pledge of Allegiance, and the rest of the class joined in. Ava had already been flag leader twice since winter break. And so had Lizzy. I hadn’t been flag leader once in February or for months. I felt all fizzled and flat.
        After the pledge Ms. Silva tapped the calendar. “Next Monday we won’t be here. The school will be closed in honor of Presidents’ Day, a very special holiday. Throughout the week, we will celebrate our presidents.”
        My belly got fluttery. There were only four more days this week to be flag leader before a very special holiday. I’d be a good flag leader. For one, I have a loud voice. Plus, I know how to stand up straight.
        Over some holidays kids get to go to National Parks like Yosemite to see waterfalls or Muir Woods to see really tall trees. They brag about it during show-and-tell. But my family doesn’t go away much in the winter. And as far as I knew, we weren’t going anywhere over Presidents’ Day weekend. I’d at least like to get to be flag leader for the holiday.

Praise

Ellie May wants desperately to be flag leader in class this week, but can she figure out how to please her teacher? Ellie May hasn't been flag leader in months even though she waves her hands enthusiastically every morning to be picked. Her class is learning about U.S. presidents for Presidents' Day, and Ellie May figures that if she can act like a president, maybe Ms. Silva will pick her. Chopping down a class plant so that she can tell the truth about it, as George Washington supposedly did, doesn't work. (Ava, know-it-all-turned-friend, and Ms. Silva both explain that the cherry-tree story is a myth.) Taking apart the class pencil sharpener because Abraham Lincoln liked taking gadgets apart completely backfires. When she owns up to her actions though, she is surprised by the results. The classroom is ethnically diverse—Ellie May, Ava, and Mo appear black (notably, Ava has a dark skin tone); the teacher presents as white. While the text clarifies that presidents were just people, the uncritical glorification of historical presidents by black kids (who would have been treated poorly by them) seems a little off-key. For more of her antics, see Ellie May on April Fool's Day. An appended note on the Pledge of Allegiance omits mention of "under God"; it's followed by a note on Presidents' Day. Like a Clementine of color, Ellie May is a protagonist readers can feel for even if they don't share her preoccupations.
Kirkus Reviews


Second-grader Ellie May is a live wire with a good heart and less good impulse control. In Ellie May on Presidents’ Day, she’s desperate for her chance to be class flag leader, but when she tries to impress her teacher with her devotion to George Washington–style honesty, she ends up insulting her classmates instead. In Ellie May on April Fools’ Day, our heroine is jealous of Mo, the class funny guy, and wants to pull off a great prank herself; unfortunately, she takes things too far. Ellie May is a sympathetic heroine in her yearning for recognition (“Mo’s funny. Ava is smart. You’re artsy. I just want to be something too”), and the episodic chapters make for approachable and humorous early reading. Spirited, cartoonish black and white art has an appropriately chaotic edge in its interpretation of Ellie May’s diverse classroom and mixed-race family. Since the relevant holiday gets decent coverage in each book, this offers the possibility for solid curricular use as well as an amiable new series friend. 
The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Book

Ellie May wants to be flag leader, but she hasn’t been chosen in months because she gets easily distracted. Presidents’ Day is next week, so she desperately wants to be chosen! Mrs. Silva explains that presidents are people with character who do the right thing, and Ellie May decides to impress her teacher with her knowledge. First, she tries to reenact Washington and the cherry tree by karate-chopping a cactus, but soon she learns the story is a myth. She tries to be honest but ends up being hurtful, so she writes an apology letter because Washington wrote letters. Finally, she learns Lincoln loved gadgets, so she takes apart the pencil sharpener but only makes a mess. Will she ever be chosen? Readers who find themselves anxious and easily distracted will root for Ellie May and the intent behind her actions, even if her plans don’t always turn out as she hoped. Homie also includes notes on the Pledge of Allegiance and Presidents’ Day. Simultaneously published with Ellie May on April Fool’s Day.—Booklist

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