“I hold up two fingers. 'How many fingers?'
He squints. 'Twenty-five?'
'Yeah, you'll be fine.”
“I hold up two fingers. 'How many fingers?'
He squints. 'Twenty-five?'
'Yeah, you'll be fine.”
These speculative fiction novels that provide a sense of mystery and adventure are great for older elementary students and middle school students. These novels provide a source to show students what is possible in fiction, especially speculative fiction, and will get many students excited about reading and the stories that can unfold in them.
After reading the first chapter of the book it provided a creative journey of excitement and adventure (with most Rick Riordan books of course). The book follows Ana who is a freshman at the Harding-Pencroft Academy which is not a regular school. When her and her brother adventure below the surface they find there may be things they do not know about and great mysteries lay ahead, which also tie the reader into the novel.
“I don‘t know exactly how the grid works. I do know it isn‘t supposed to flicker, though”
This speculative fiction novel is a great book for older elementary students or as a read aloud for middle elementary students. This book is a great tool to show them what is possible in fiction writing and to get them excited about reading
The first chapter of Daughter of the Deep provides much in terms of excitement and adventure. The books main character Ana is a freshmen at the mysterious Harding-Pencroft Academy, which Riordan makes clear is not a typical school. When Ana and her brother Dev swim below the surface, they find there might be greater mysteries around then they thought.
“As dawn breaks, the lagoon turns to turquoise-and-pink glass. I plunge into the warm clear water. Immediately, I'm surrounded by a tornado of angelfish. I free dive through the reefs. I wave good morning (from a safe distance) to a viper moray who's peeking out from his crevice. I admire a fourteen-foot nurse shark cruising through the sea grass.“
This book talks about death and war. This book would be appropriate for high school readers and maybe mature middle schoolers. This story may be hard for readers to read about loosing parents or even loved ones close to them. This story allows for those older readers to use their imagination and see the story happening right in front of them. This story has a great message about bravery and leadership and stepping up in times of need.
This book is speculative fiction. The main character Ana is a freshman at a five-year high school that graduates the best marine scientists. Her parents died while on a scientific expedition so she is left with her older brother Dev. While on her way to a weekend trial at sea she learns that her school Harding-Pencroft and Land Institute have been fighting for 150 years. Ana's fighting and leadership skills are put to the test.
“I never realized how much of leadership is learning to sound confident when you're actually terrified.”
I would use this book with older elementary (4-5) students to discuss how one story can contain aspects from different genres within speculative fiction. For example, how fantasy and adventure work together to tell the story. I would also use this book to discuss the importance of leaning on friendships during hard times, how to deal with those we may feel tension with, discovering ones own heritage, and how to be a leader during intense moments.
“Daughter of the Deep“ is considered to be a fantasy and adventure book under the realm of speculative fiction. In this story, the main character, Ana, is a member of a prestigious aquatic-focused high school. She leaves for a secret trial at sea with her classmates where they witness a terrible tragedy that will change her life forever. Also, Ana and her classmates are now in the midst of a cold war with their rival high school and are in danger.
“I look at my mother's black pearl-her talisman that was supposed to bring her long life and protection from evil.“
Throughout the story Ana (the main character) makes amazing friends and discoveries about her heritage as she puts her leadership skills to the test for the first time. These lessons could be beneficial in the classroom for students. This would be a good book for a book club as well or for during silent reading for children who love adventures.
Daughter of the Deep is a speculative fiction set in a contemporary timeline. This story was written by Rick Riordan and published in 2021. It is an action adventure story that focuses on Ana Dakkar a freshman at Harding-Pencroft Academy which is a highschool that has the best marine scientists, naval warriors, navigators, and underwater explorers in the world. The story is full of unexpected twists that ends in a race against dangerous enemies.
There were a few moments when I got a little bored with the book, but they didn't last long. I didn't quite feel like the characters were acting their age, they seemed to be more on the mature side. But the story itself was good. I loved the characters, they really made the book for me.
This is my second try. The premise seems like something I would be into immensely. But every time I try, I get so bored and confused. I love Riorden, but this book may not be for me
Led a middle grade book club on this book that was so fun! We sorted ourselves into the four houses with a quiz, then played a trivia game. And had Trolli octopus candy! 🐙
Book #2 of Dewey‘s is complete! I‘ve been putting off reading this for a while and I‘m glad that I finally got around to it. I really enjoyed it!
Dewey‘s check in: halfway through Daughter of the Deep and really enjoying it! (As I always enjoy Uncle Rick‘s books) As you can see, Scout and Clete are enthralled 😂
I was hesitant to read this, as I felt that perhaps Rick Riordan was going the way of other too-oft-published authors (replacing quality with quantity). I‘m so glad I read it, as this is NOT the case! This is funny, heartbreaking, adventurous and engaging. I laughed out loud at some of the sarcastic remarks sprinkled throughout. It seems as if it could be the beginning of a series, too. Great for ages 10-110!
“…the impossible is merely the possible for which we don‘t yet know the science.”