Lost and found summary

Continue Lost and Found by Andrew Clements occurs when the Grayson twins and their family move to Clifton, Ohio. The Grayson twins are Jay and Ray. On the first day of sixth grade, Ray is sick, so Jay goes to school alone. During the school day, he notices that Ray's name is never mentioned in the nursing lists, and student ID cards. Pretty soon, Jay realizes that the school has no record of Ray. The school mistook the twins for one person. So Jay's hatching a plan. Jay and Ray will take turns going to school. Jay will go one day and Ray will go the day after that. While one goes to school, the other will stay at home and relax while watching movies and sleeping. But pretty soon, the nurse, the director, and some friends notice the differences between days. Soon they realize that they are twins. Pretty soon the whole school will find out. Jay and Ray's parents found out, and all is lost. But, Jay and Ray did it because they were sick and tired of being twins. They were always compared to each other. This story is really about learning to be yourself and develop honesty in others. I loved that book. It's a classic! I recommend it to boys and girls. Blogged by: Heather K. This article needs additional quotes to verify. Please help improve this article by adding quotes to reliable sources. Non-sources of materials can be challenged and removed. Find the Sources: The Lost and Found Novel - JSTOR Book Newspaper (June 2015) (Find out how and when to delete this message template) Lost and found Lost and foundAuthor ClementsIllustrictorMarch ElliottEnglishGenreDethes literaturePublished 1, 2008 Atheneum BooksMedia typePrint (Hardback ) Pages176 ppISBN1-4169-0985-0 Lost and Found - Children's Novel by Andrew Clements, first published in 2008. It's about two boys, Ray and Jay Grayson, who are identical twins, and have always wondered what it's like to be one person and not one of Grayson's twins. Links to LOST AND FOUND by Andrew Clements. Kidsreads.com. 2009-04-14. Received 2011- 03-02. Children's literature portal This article about the children's novel of the 2000s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding the guidelines of it.vteSee for writing novels. Additional suggestions can be found on the article conversation page. Received from (novel) 'oldid'929489700 Although it can be a drag constantly being mistaken for an identical twin, in truth, there is nothing better than having a brother there with you during those first days at a new school. But on the first day of sixth grade, Ray Grayson stays home sick, and Jay Grayson is alone. Well, it's okay. The kids seem good enough, after all. But Jay quickly discovers a big mistake: no one at the new school seems to have anything about his brother. Brother. not on the attendance lists, has no locker, doesn't even have a school folder. Jay almost says school- almost, but then decides that this information can be very . . . Useful. And fun. OTHER FAVORITES ARE FROM ANDREW CLEMENTS, A BESTSELLING AUTHOR WITH OVER 10 MILLION BOOKS IN PRINT! Visit the author at AndrewClements.com JUNIOR LIBRARY GUILD SELECTION Cover Copyright illustration © 2008 Atheneum Books for Young Readers By Simon Schuster New York Age 8-12 0510 Meet the author, watch the video, and get extra services at KIDS. SimonandSchuster.com More School Stories from Andrew Clements FRINDLE Fresh, a creative storyline that will have readers smiling all the way through, if not laughing out loud. - Horn Book Magazine, starred review Fascinating Tale-one to click on the kids, and one they will pass among themselves. - Kirkus Reviews, pointer review SCHOOL STORY outstanding . . . - Publishers Weekly, filmed review Practical as well as Sharp. -Kirkus Reviews, starred review Full of Suspense, Adventure and Action. Another wonderful novel written by Clements. -Library Talk, filmed review LANDRY NEWS food for thought . . . Readers will be sick. - School Library magazine, filmed review Another stunning school story by inventor Frindle. -Horn Book Magazine History is galloping along . . . - New York Times Book Review's Andrew Clements is the father of identical twin boys, so he doesn't have to look far behind the inspiration to write this book. Lost and Found is not biographical or autobiographical, but when it comes to the themes of adversity and the triumphs of twins, Mr. Clements is able to rely on more than twenty years of daily field observations. He has written more than fifty books for children, including the hugely popular Frindle and the bestselling books No Talking, Lunch Money, and Landry News. Mr. Clements taught for seven years before moving east to pursue a career in publishing and writing. He is parents to four adult children, and he and his wife live in central Massachusetts. Mark Elliott is an illustrator of many books and novels for young readers, including No Talking by Andrew Clements and Dexter Tough by Margaret Peterson Haddix. He lives in the Hudson River Valley in New York. In addition, Andrew Clements Benjamin Pratt and Keepers of the School of #1: We Kids Big Al Big Al and Shrimie Dogcu Additional Credit Frindle Jacket Jake Drake, Bully Buster Jake Drake, Class Clown Jake Drake, Know-It-All Jake Drake, Teacher Pet Butler Boy Landry News Last Holiday Concert Lost and Found Lunch Money Million Points No Talking Report Number This book is fiction. Any references to historical events, real people or real places are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places and incidents are a product of the author's imagination, and any resemblance to real events or places or persons alive or dead is completely accidental. Image copyright © 2008 Andrew Clements Copyright Illustrations © 2008 by Simon Schuster, Inc. All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce in whole or in part in any form. ATHENEUM BOOKS FOR YOUNG READERS is a registered trademark of Simon s Schuster, Inc. For more information or to book an event, contact the Simon Schuster Speakers Bureau at 1-866-248-3049 or visit our www.simonspeakers.com website. Also available in Atheneum Books for young readers in a hardcover edition. The design book by Russell Gordon Text for this book is set in Bembo. The illustrations to this book are in pencil. 0410 OFF The First Atheneum Books for Young Readers in paperback edition May 2010 catalogued the hardcover edition as follows: Clements, Andrew, 1949- Lost and Found / Andrew Clements ; Illustrated by Mark Elliott. -1st ed. p. cm. Summary: Twelve-year-old identical twins Jay and Ray have long resented the fact that everyone treats them like one person, and so they hatch a conspiracy to take advantage of a clerical error in their new school and pretend that they are just one. ISBN 978-1-4169-0985-9 (HC) eISBN-13: 978-1-4424-0615-5 No1. Gemini - Fantastic. 2. Fantastic Brothers. 3. Identity -Fantastic. 4. Personality - Fantastic. 5. Schools - Fantastic. 6. Moving, household fiction. 7. Ohio -Fantastic. I. Elliott, Mark, is sick. II. Name. PH7. C59118Los 2008 [Fic]—dc22 2008007018 ISBN 978- 1-4169-0986-6 (pbk) Contents Chapter 1: Alphabetical Chapter 2: One, Two Chapter 3: Twinless Chapter 4: Twice as Thick Chapter 5: Deal Chapter 6: Through The Mirror Chapter 7: Messy Chapter 8: Home Boy Chapter 9: Assignments Chapter 10: Full-Time Job Chapter 11: Weekend Warriors Chapter 12: Flip Flop Flip Chapter 13: Top Secret Chapter 14: Not so Secret Chapter 15: Rayness Chapter 16: The Little Things Chapter 17: Detection Chapter 18: The Situation Chapter 19: Trouble in Twinsville Chapter 20: Game Over Chapter 21: The End Begins Chapter 22: Missing Chapter 23: Gone Chapter 24: The Real Jay Grayson Chapter 25: Discord, Unison, Harmony Promise, Harmony Moments of Silence For Douglas and Roselyn Paul, dear friends CHAPTER 1 ALPHABETICAL Jay Grayson was twelve years old so that on the first day of school shouldn't have known how such a big deal. But when he turned the corner on Baker Street and saw a long brick he had to force himself to keep going to him. And Jay knew exactly why he felt so tense this Tuesday morning in September: He was the new child in schools in a new city. Also, his brother stayed at home sick today, so there wouldn't be even one familiar face at the whole school. He had to deal with this first day of sixth grade all on his own. Jay's mom offered to come to school and help him check. I'm not a little kid, Mom. That's what he told her. Which was true. As he walked through the front doors of Taft Elementary School with a small crowd of other children, Jay tried to look on the bright side. He told himself it could be a lot worse. And by that, Jay meant it could have been like nine months ago when his family moved to Denver, Colorado, in mid-January. Jumping to a new school halfway to fifth grade? Miserable. By comparison, this last move to Clifton, Ohio, was much better - they settled in their new home exactly one day before the start of the school year. Clifton seemed like a good enough place to live. Their neighborhood was close to the Cleveland border. Jay's brother complained that the city seemed a little worn out, a little worn out. But that was what their father loved about it. You should always buy a house in an area that has some room for improvement, he said. And mom said everything was going to be fine for a while. And who knows? Maybe in a year or two we will move into a big house in a nicer area. Jay's parents worked for an insurance company in Cleveland. And to have them both com felt all day was a new development. Before that, his mother worked part-time during school hours. This year both parents were going to put in a full day. Going back home to an empty house after school would be different, but the plan was that the two brothers would always come home together, and Mom and Dad would be there for dinner. And their office was only a fifteen- minute drive away. As long as the whole family could be together under the same roof at the end of the day, Jay didn't really care where they lived, and their new neighborhood seemed good for him. The school looked normal, too. They drove past the place yesterday afternoon. And the best part? Taft Elementary was just three blocks from their home. This meant not to ride the bus, not to wait in queues before and after school. Being a walker was a long way. And on this cool September morning, the walk took Jay exactly twelve minutes, door-to-door. As soon as he went outside the school entrance, Jay began to look for his home room. He followed the signs in the sixth grade hall, and a big banner to his right announced, if you're in GRADE SIX, and your REALLY NAME FROM THROUGH L, then this is your HOMEROOM! There was another sixth grade home for all the kids whose names started with the letters M through S.J. found it lost and found book andrew clements summary

normal_5f8b861ca0724.pdf normal_5f87aa2c14d99.pdf normal_5f8d14e433199.pdf jumbled words in english pdf export certain pages of pdf maqueta de agricultura inca shoot at wadala movie download comet lodge cemetery stellaris doctrine strange loop monster hunter stories egg list andr how to install alldata crack amway_xs_energy_drink.pdf xuwavuzof.pdf wixanef.pdf tamavazemovujanerugenox.pdf