• Jeann McDuffie • My grandkids and I read Miss Rogers Stinks together. I reminisced as we read it, so my “grands” learned a lot about me as well as the times in which I grew up. I recommend that others do the same. It’s a great history lesson for the kids. They loved it and so did I. I especially appreciated “Definitions, Descriptions, Explanations & Things to Think About” at the back of the book. Five Stars.
• Becca Williams – 4th Grade • I read it for a book report. I liked how Tina thought she wasn’t good at anything, and then she wrote that poem. I liked how at the end she found out that a lot of the kids thought she was the best poem writer and the best storyteller in the world. And so did Miss Rogers.
• Amie Chavez • Miss Rogers Stinks is a really good book for learning about when World War II ended. I never knew they put whole families into prisons just for being Japanese. And I never knew about a lot of other things, like soda fountains at the drugstore, and cloakrooms. Tina’s mom came up with a good punishment for her when she read her poem. I liked reading about the Girl Scouts, some things were really different but some are the same.