LK


 * media type="file" key="Book Performance on the Mystery of the London Eye_2.wmv" width="469" height="475"

This is the script I used in the making of my book performance. **

First Image: The London Eye Mystery, by Siobhan Dowd. Book Cover: This is the cover of the book. Third Image: Kat and Ted have their cousin visiting from Manchester. Salim there cousin wants to go ride on the London Eye. So they stand in line and wait to get tickets. Then a man walks up to them and gives them a free ticket. Salim goes up on the eye then where is Salim, he never came down! Fourth Image: Did Salim purposely leave the Eye without letting his cousins see him? Fifth Image: Or was he kidnapped? Sixth Image: Did he spontaneously combust? Seventh Image: Read the book to find out what happens to Salim and if he ever gets found. Eight Image: This is the London Eye where Salim gets lost. Ninth Image: This is the back of the book: Monday 24 May, 11.32 a.m  Ted and Kat watch their cousin Salim get on board the Eye. He turns and waves as the pod rises from the ground. Monday 24 May, 12.02 p.m.  The pod lands and the doors open. People exit in all shapes and sizes - but where is Salim.

**This is the script I used for making my book performance:**

Picture 1: The title of my book is Allie Finkle’s Rules for Girls Stage Fright, and the author is Meg Cabot. Picture 2: From the cover and title of the book you think Allie is going to have to go on stage and then she gets stage fright, but that’s not really what happens, Allie is about to go on stage when she feels scared but then she remembers that she is not herself when she goes on stage she is the character. Picture 3: This is the cover of the book… Picture 4: I liked this book because there wasn’t as much bulling as in the last book, which I like because I was thinking about the things that Allie should do to get this bully to stop and she never really does anything to help herself. Picture 5: A good thing about the way the author wrote the book is she made the title of the chapters in the story, not just related, but word for word. Picture 6: In my opinion the author did a good job with her Allie Finkle books because people can relate to them after they read about Allie Finkle’s troubles in school. Picture 7: This is the summary on the back of the book. Picture 8: Room 209 is putting on a play, and almost all the girls in Allie’s class want the lead role…including Allie. Fortunately Allie has a few tricks up her sleeve to guarantee her winning the role, including her mom’s new job as film critic on the local cable show //Good News!// and Uncle Jay’s secret past as a theater major. Picture 9: But what happens when Allie finds out one of her best friends, Sophie, wants the part of Princess Penelope even more than she does? Can Allie follow the rules of friendship and still make her own dream come true?

media type="file" key="Allie Finkle's Rules for Girls Book Performance.wmv" width="526" height="560"