📚 Get ready to laugh out loud with Greg's latest misadventures!
The Last Straw is the third installment in the Diary of a Wimpy Kid series, featuring 224 pages of humor and vibrant illustrations that follow the relatable and hilarious escapades of middle schooler Greg Heffley.
A**R
amazing book
I love this book so much it is definitely one of my favorites of all time and worth the price
K**K
Excellent!
My kid loved it
C**I
Bought as a gift.. and she loved it
bought as a gift for my grandaughter.. she loved it..
S**Y
Perfect series for 10-year-old boy
Love this series perfect for 10-year-old boy
A**1
And the formula continues
My 7 year old son has gotten into these books recently and asked for book 3rd book for Christmas after finishing the 2nd that he got for his birthday. This series is written for slightly older children but my son gets a lot of the humor and likes the books anyway. I think some parents would find some of the humor inappropriate. The main character, Greg, is largely self-centered and often not kind to his family and main friend, Rowley. These character traits often lead to the comedy but I could see how someone would interpret the book as condoning some of this unkind behavior.This third entry is much similar to the first two. The kind of hijinks are the same although the jokes don't seem too stale. The format is the same but still works for the content.Book printing and bind quality is the same as the first two books we purchased in the series and is pretty good for the price point.
L**E
"Wimpy" Kid With Comedic Muscle
If your kids know and love Jeff Kinney's bestselling `Wimpy Kid' books, this latest installment will not disappoint. If you and your family haven't yet read these hilarious cartoon novels, let this green-bound book be your delicious introduction.In "The Last Straw" we rejoin middle school student Greg Heffley journaling his frank opinions about school, suburbia and his own zany family. But unlike Harriet the Spy, another intrepid chronicler of everyday American life, Greg's greatest ripostes are at his own expense. He cheerfully confesses to an attempt to make change from the church collection plate and also describes digging up a time capsule and pocketing the contents. (There's an especially funny reflection about the dilemma of a young man with no clean underwear except a worn Speedo and a pair of Wonder Woman Underoos.) Happily unethical, young Greg is always searching for the shortcuts in life. For example, after he signs up with Boy Scout Troop 133, he is dismayed to learn he must earn a `whittling badge.' Greg determines he can squeeze the soap into shapes instead of carving it. After turning in a soap with four protuberances as a "sheep" Greg then turns it upside down and resubmits it as "the Titanic." While Greg will never make Eagle Scout, he does remains true to himself and his fear of sharp objects.One of the best things about this best-selling series is how addictive the books are to young people, even the reluctant reader. If your child enjoys this book, he or she will happily move on to the original, red-bound "Diary of a Wimpy Kid," ($[...]) and the second in the series, "Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules"($[...]) There's also the fun "Diary of a Wimpy Kid Do-It-Yourself" book ($[...]) This orange-bound book will get your child to journal and answer some rather tough questions. A sample: True or False: Have you ever peed a swimming pool?It's interesting to note that Kinney, a former college cartoonist, worked on his Wimpy Kid concepts for six years before publishing in installments on [...] To date, the online version has had more than 70 million visits. Having won a vast online and print audience, `Wimpy Kid' is expected to move to the big-screen, with a casting call now underway for the film version of Greg Heffley's adventures. [...]As with Charlie Brown creator Charles Schultz, Kinney's work revolves around childhood events like the school Valentine party, sibling rivalry, or warming the bench during the big game. But unlike Schultz, Kinney suggests that being the underdog is not so bad. In fact, the underdog may even get the last laugh in the end--or at least avoid military school.Time will tell if Kinney's works deserve to be ranked with Schultz' Peanuts gang, or with Bill Watterson's Calvin & Hobbes series, for that matter. In the short term, these books will be a rollicking, well-read addition to your family bookshelf.
G**R
very good book
very good and entertaining book i’ve read it 3 times now
T**R
My son loves this book
HOW WE CAME UPON THIS SERIES OF BOOKS:My son got the first 2 'Diary of a Wimpy Kid' earlier in 2010 as a gift. He enjoyed them a lot and asked for the next 2 for Christmas. He'll get the most recent one entitled 'The Ugly Truth' for his birthday in mid 2011. (I am not counting the 'do-it-yourself' book.)WHO WILL PROBABLY MOST ENJOY THIS BOOK:The appropriate age of readers varies on reading ability and maturity - to relate to the subject matter. My son is younger but reads easily at the 6th grade level, and can comprehend up to 8th grade level. These books are probably most readable for about the 5th/6th grade level.WHY MY SON LIKES THE BOOKS:The books are a narrative of a kid (boy) dealing with upper elementary to earlier junior high life (school, family and friends). The books are written as a personal narrative, in 'journal' style using both sketched pictures and words, like a boy of that age would use. There's nothing too crude in these books. They stay within the usual taste and sense of humor of the audience. Some of it is 'angst' of that age and some of it is joys of that age - very relatable to the intended audience.WHY I LIKE THAT MY SON LIKES THE BOOKS:My son will stop and read aloud from the books, then give his thoughts on how the lead character (Greg) handles or remarks on a situation. He'll laugh out loud at some passages, then stop and say, "You've got to hear this" and read the 'funny' passage. I really like this because it helps me understand where he 'is' in his head with certain issues of that age. He's sharing that information of his own free will (through his commentary on the books) without being asked questions and sometimes we have conversations on why he thinks what he does about a certain passage or instance described in the book.ADDITIONALLY:I watched a piece on TV talking about this series of books making non-readers or kids indifferent to reading, into readers. That's a wonderful thing.
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