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A modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more. For select classroom titles, we also provide Teaching Guides with discussion and quiz questions to prompt student engagement.
This resource can be used as supplemental teacher material or as a primary basis for literature study to:
Note to Teachers: To support lesson-planning, connections to the work’s primary themes are noted throughout this resource (The Dichotomy of Old and New, The Benefits of Creative Thinking and Open-Mindedness, and Fair Play Versus Cutthroat Competition).
Use these questions or activities to help gauge students’ familiarity with and spark their interest in the context of the work, giving them an entry point into the text itself.
Short Answer
Let’s check your library skills savvy! Can you brainstorm a list of the ten Dewey Decimal Classification System categories? Do you know any of the matching number labels? If not, what are ten category headings you would choose to sort books on nonfiction topics?
Teaching Suggestion: Many elementary and middle schools have been required to cut their library skills programming (not to mention librarian, media resource center, and library aide positions), so some readers may be unaware of the knowledge needed to “read” call numbers and find titles in a library. Explain that in the novel, escaping from Mr. Lemoncello’s library, which is highly modernized and filled with technological marvels, relies on characters’ knowledge of Melvil Dewey’s library classification system from 1873—an example of the novel’s theme of The Dichotomy of Old and New.
Short Activity
In your small group, you have 15 minutes to “speed play” the board game your teacher assigns. Document moments of your game experience while you play by taking notes and, if possible, photos with a learning device (like an iPad). Then, in your group, discuss these characteristics:
Brief the class on your game analysis with a short oral report based on your notes, discussion, photos, and experiences while playing. Make sure all group members contribute to the briefing.
Teaching Suggestion: In the novel, characters use elements of games and puzzles to “play” their way out of the library—and the first escapee wins the prize. Providing readers an opportunity to analyze games and gameplay will encourage analysis of characters’ game moves and plot points in the story. Supply a variety of traditional board games like Sorry!, Monopoly, Scrabble, Scattergories, and others for groups of 4 or 5. Try to offer games that rely on strategy and skill, like Scrabble, others that are more luck-of-the-draw or race-to-the-finish, like Sorry!, and some that rely on both luck and strategy, like Monopoly. Also, a few games that appeal to visual learners (like Spot It!) and tactile learners (like Suspend or Connect 4 Shots) would be ideal.
The goal is critical thinking about the structure and design challenges of each game. Through questioning and discussion after briefings, introduce novel themes of The Benefits of Creative Thinking and Open-Mindedness and Fair Play Versus Cutthroat Competition. An alternate activity: Skip the briefings and circulate groups through the games in 10-minute stations; then have groups use a chart or other graphic organizer to record comparison/contrast notes.
For those in the class who prefer games of an electronic variety, “24 Mind-Blowing Gaming Industry Statistics for 2021” offers revealing facts for and about gamers.
These prompts can be used for in-class discussion, exploratory free-writing, or reflection homework before or after reading the novel.
Pre-Reading “Icebreaker”
Small group work is a common way to accomplish a goal; ideally, each group member contributes their own skills and ideas to the working process. Often, group members fall into different informal roles when working in a small group, such as:
Consider a recent group activity in which you participated. Without revealing names or identities, what roles did you recognize among your peers? What actions or behaviors fit those roles? What role do you think you played in this work group? What other roles do you recognize in yourself or others, perhaps with outside-of-school small groups? Respond in a journal-style paragraph.
Teaching Suggestion: You might lead this Pre-Reading Icebreaker session with a small group task so that everyone has a common experience to address (stress anonymity in the writing activity, and collect writings for individual feedback instead of sharing to the group). The small group task can be very simple; for example, in a small group of 4-5, students have 3 minutes to collect a series of objects from their desks or bins, one object for each letter of the alphabet. Assign and complete the task without discussing the potential roles beforehand, but request that students pay attention to the process and each other’s actions as they complete the task. Then reveal the roles and the prompt.
Connect the concept of roles in small groups to Escape from Mr. Lemoncello’s Library by explaining that as the characters attempt to escape, they develop small teams that work together, and members of each group play some of the roles suggested above. As they read, students can anticipate and analyze the roles characters fulfill and record their ideas in a reading log, double-entry notetaking system, or other reader response organizer.
Post-Reading Analysis
Recall that dynamic characters are ones whose personality traits or judgments change throughout a story, and static characters are ones whose traits and judgments do not change. Draw a 2-column chart labeled with “Dynamic” and “Static.” Categorize each character in the novel based on whether or not he or she has changed by the end of the nights spent in Mr. Lemoncello’s library.
Then choose 1 static and 1 dynamic character to analyze. In 1-3 paragraphs, discuss why you categorized each of these 2 characters as you did, using plot and character details to support your thinking.
Teaching Suggestion: If students enjoy this categorization exercise, they might also want to categorize the characters as 3-dimensional (round) or flat and as primary, secondary, or tertiary. Additionally, this is an excellent novel to reference in introducing or reviewing point of view, indirect characterization, and character arcs, especially with characters like Haley and Sierra.
Use these links to supplement and complement students’ reading of the work and to increase their overall enjoyment of literature. Challenge them to discern parallel themes, engage through visual and aural stimuli, and delve deeper into the thematic possibilities presented by the title.
Recommended Texts for Pairing
“The Best Board Games of the Ancient World”
Mr. Lemoncello’s Library Series
The Mysterious Benedict Society, Chapter One
The Mysterious Benedict Society Series
Other Student Resources
“Meet the Author Recording with Chris Grabenstein”
Trailer for Nickelodeon’s film version of Escape from Mr. Lemoncello’s Library
“Dewey Decimal System—A Guide to Call Numbers”
“24 Mind-Blowing Gaming Industry Statistics for 2021”
Teacher Resources
“Response: Ways to Use Games Effectively in the Classroom”
“Crack the Case: Middle Grade Mystery Books”
“What We’re Reading: Mr. Lemoncello’s Library Olympics”
Use this activity to engage all types of learners, while requiring that they refer to and incorporate details from the text over the course of the activity.
ACTIVITY: Retheming a Classic
In this activity, redesign a classic board game with cohesive and clever theming for Escape from Mr. Lemoncello’s Library.
Share your summary and sketches with the class as time allows.
Teaching Suggestion: Critical thinking evidenced by organized, informative writing is the “name of the game” in this activity; actual construction of re-themed games might be offered as a bonus or extension.
If students have difficulty conceptualizing the idea of a re-themed board game, you might briefly share some sites for inspiration. A quick look at original Monopoly compared to, say, Lord of the Rings Monopoly might help students better visualize the retheming of a game.
Paired Text Extension:
Read “The Most Dangerous Game,” a short story by Richard Connell.
Teaching Suggestion: You might opt to read this classic short story aloud to students; it offers a great opportunity for expressive dialogue, dramatic pauses, and suspense. Class discussion might center on the shared theme of Fair Play Versus Cutthroat Competition.
Use these essay questions as writing and critical thinking exercises for all levels of writers, and to build their literary analysis skills by requiring textual references throughout the essay.
Scaffolded/Short-Answer Essay Questions
Student Prompt: Write a short (1-3 paragraph) response using one of the below bulleted outlines. Cite details from the novel over the course of your response that serve as examples and support.
1. Escape from Mr. Lemoncello’s Library is a plot-driven story, but the author still utilizes various characterization techniques. Indirect characterization is achieved through a character’s tone, actions, and decisions, as well as what others say about the character.
2. Dramatic irony occurs when the reader knows important story details that some characters do not know.
3. Dr. Zinchenko clearly states her most important rule before the children enter the library: “Be gentle. With each other and most especially, the library’s books and exhibits” (Chapter 10).
Full Essay Assignments
Student Prompt: Write a structured and well-developed essay. Include a thesis statement, at least 3 main points supported by text details, and a conclusion.
1. Kyle explains to his doubtful peers, “[…] you don’t ever quit until somebody else actually wins” (Chapter 5). In what ways is this theme represented in the escape game? Select 3 characters whose belief in this message benefits them in some way during the game (Kyle can be one of them). Explain their actions with regard to the quote and discuss how the character’s traits or actions contribute to the theme of The Benefits of Creative Thinking and Open-Mindedness.
2. How do Sierra and Haley each demonstrate that they are dynamic characters? What “old” traits do they abandon or transform for “new” traits, with regard to the theme of The Dichotomy of Old and New? What parallels can you find in the reasons that cause these changes in the girls? What similarities do they share by the end of the story, despite their different personality traits? Add text details to your discussion for support.
3. Each member of Kyle’s team demonstrates a strength area in the ways they learn and think. How is this true of personality traits as well? In other words, what unique, dominant trait does each character present? How does this trait contribute to winning the escape game? Do any of the team members share the same dominant trait? Connect your discussion of the characters (separately or collectively) to the theme of Creative Thinking and Open-Mindedness.
Reading Check, Multiple Choice & Short Answer Quizzes
Reading Check questions are designed for in-class review on key plot points or for quick verbal or written assessments. Multiple Choice and Short Answer Quizzes create ideal summative assessments, and collectively function to convey a sense of the work’s tone and themes.
Chapters 1-8
Reading Check
1. What is the goal of the game Kyle plays with his brothers? What is the result?
2. Which character shows traits of the “quiet bookworm” stereotype in the early chapters?
3. How does Kyle react when Mrs. Cameron tells him she will not accept his improved essay?
Multiple Choice
1. Based on Dr. Zinchenko’s walk-through, how can the reader best describe the new library?
A) It is devoted to modern technology and recently discovered writers.
B) It includes the use of new secret technology, some of which workers have leaked.
C) It showcases attention-getting videos and holograms but respects classic works.
D) It is an ode to crime, crime fiction, and the history of criminal activity in the town.
2. After he emails his essay but before he is chosen as a winner, which adjective best describes Kyle’s attitude toward his friends’ chances of winning?
A) kindly
B) angry
C) suspicious
D) neutral
Short-Answer Response
Answer each of the following questions in a complete sentence or sentences. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. Based on information discovered and explained by Miguel and Andrew, what is Mr. Lemoncello’s emotional connection to the new library?
2. Most of the early chapters are third-person point of view limited to Kyle. In what scenes does the novel break from this viewpoint? What is the probable reason for different viewpoints?
Chapters 9-17
Reading Check
1. How do the children first notice the importance of the Dewey Decimal system to the library?
2. What will the winner of the “Top of the Heap” life-size game receive?
3. When students opt to leave the game, where do they place their library cards?
Multiple Choice
1. How do the events at the toy store indirectly characterize Kyle and Charles?
A) Kyle avoids taking any credit for his selflessness; Charles wants recognition for his generosity.
B) Kyle seeks payback for his kindness; Charles thinks kindness is never worth any price.
C) Kyle and Charles feel the same charity of spirit toward family and friends.
D) Kyle wants others to share in his prize; Charles promotes self-interest above family.
2. Finding dessert in the library is the second game of the evening. Which theme idea is most strongly represented in how players win the game?
A) teamwork
B) flexible thinking
C) scholarship
D) kindness
Short-Answer Response
Answer each of the following questions in a complete sentence or sentences. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. What is the new library’s number one rule? What do you think Dr. Zinchenko means by the way she words the rule?
2. How are the children awakened in the morning after the night in the library, and what do they discover?
Chapters 18-28
Reading Check
1. What escape attempt does Kyle make that fails, wasting a valuable hour?
2. Who finds the first Staff Pick book?
3. What do Kyle, Akimi, and Sierra plan to do for help in playing the “ultimate version” (Chapter 23) of Mr. Lemoncello’s Bewilderingly Baffling Bibliomania?
Multiple Choice
1. Why does Charles race Yasmeen to the fire exit?
A) to stop her from leaving
B) to make her run faster
C) to get to the door first
D) to hold the door open for her
2. Compared to her behavior in front of others, how can Haley’s internal, personal reasons for winning the game be described?
A) more selfless
B) less polite
C) less desperate
D) more dramatic
Short-Answer Response
Answer each of the following questions in a complete sentence or sentences. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. How does Haley react when Kyle and the others rescue her from the treadmill predicament? What does this show about her character?
2. Once Haley makes an alliance with Charles and Andrew, what is notably different about the intentions of Kyle’s team compared to Charles’s team?
Chapters 29-40
Reading Check
1. Which character realizes that new, special cards probably exist for their playing of Bibliomania?
2. Where does Haley find the crucial clue “crawled”?
3. What book is the recommended read for Kyle’s team while the Dewey rooms are locked?
Multiple Choice
1. Based on his actions when his team still needs four cards, which character is Charles most closely allied with?
A) Haley
B) Miguel
C) Sierra
D) Andrew
2. What is the result of Kyle’s choice to Ask an Expert?
A) It is a waste of an opportunity because Curtis cannot help.
B) Curtis offers several ideas but none of them prove to be helpful.
C) Curtis does not help but the call inspires a lightbulb moment.
D) The call does not go through so Kyle will have a later chance.
Short-Answer Response
Answer each of the following questions in a complete sentence or sentences. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. Describe how Kyle’s team discovers the Bible verse clue, “Thou shalt not steal.”
2. What is Charles’s reaction when Andrew recalls how to find Anne of Green Gables?
Chapters 41-50
Reading Check
1. How does Andrew gain access to Kyle’s team’s conference room?
2. For what purpose did Dr. Zinchenko plan the escape game?
3. What physical danger does Kyle face during the Extreme Challenge?
Multiple Choice
1. What are two direct consequences of Andrew’s entrance to Kyle’s team’s conference room?
A) Charles dismisses Andrew from his team, and Charles gets bonus clues.
B) Mr. Lemoncello reprimands Andrew and Charles, and new rules appear.
C) Haley switches teams, and Andrew is ejected from the game.
D) Charles argues with Sierra, and Kyle’s team gets Andrew’s card.
2. Which set of clues remains impossible to figure out?
A) the meaning of “lodgepole, loblolly, and Rocky Mountain white” (Chapter 45)
B) the five copies of a children’s picture book on the center circulation desk
C) the numbers that appear intermittently on the Wonder Dome
D) the paired titles listed on the back of each player’s library card
Short-Answer Response
Answer each of the following questions in a complete sentence or sentences. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. What must Kyle do for the Extreme Challenge, and who volunteers to help him?
2. Who is James F. Willoughby the Third, and of what significance is he to the story?
Chapters 51-56
Reading Check
1. What kind of a game was Mr. Lemoncello’s “Very First and Worst Idea” (Chapter 52)?
2. Which rule does Charles break, leading to his dismissal from the game?
3. What is the answer to the lock riddle on the basement window?
Multiple Choice
1. What happens when the Dewey Rooms are finally unlocked?
A) Charles rushes to get to the Rooms before anyone from Kyle’s team can.
B) Kyle manages to beat Charles to the 300s Room.
C) Kyle’s team splits up and only the girls go to the Rooms.
D) No one goes to the Rooms as they are focused on other clues.
2. Which of the following strategies contributes to Kyle’s team’s success?
A) They are willing to admit one of their ideas was wrong and try again.
B) They trust the insight of one clear leader on their team.
C) They take advantage of opponents’ weaknesses throughout.
D) They learn more clues in Ask an Expert calls than the other team.
Short-Answer Response
Answer each of the following questions in a complete sentence or sentences. Incorporate details from the text to support your response.
1. Summarize the moment of physical conflict in the 300s Room.
2. What redeeming action shows that Haley’s character has changed since the story’s beginning?
Chapters 1-8
Reading Check
1. The game objective is to find objects around the house and yard, scavenger-hunt-style. Kyle wins the game but is grounded for a week for breaking the basement window. (Chapter 1)
2. Sierra Russell (Chapter 3)
3. He finds an email address for Mr. Lemoncello on a company website and sends the essay, but the auto-reply indicates that it did not go through. (Chapter 6)
Multiple Choice
Short Answer
1. Mr. Lemoncello loved the peace and quiet of his childhood library in Alexandriaville, where he was able to read, think, and imagine away from the chaos of his nine brothers and sisters at home. He donated the money for the new library in Alexandriaville. (Chapter 5)
2. Dr. Zinchenko’s walk-through of the library in Chapter 2 and Charles Chiltington’s essay session with his tutor in Chapter 4 are third-person omniscient scenes. Most likely, the author wants to build suspense through dramatic irony by revealing characterization and plot details that Kyle would not logically know or witness. (Chapters 2, 4)
Chapters 9-17
Reading Check
1. The rotunda’s video screens show images representing the Dewey System’s ten major categories. (Chapter 11)
2. a night in Mr. Lemoncello’s fancy private quarters (Chapter 12)
3. in a bowl on a column in the Electronic Learning Center (Chapter 16)
Multiple Choice
1. D (Chapter 9)
2. A (Chapter 14)
Short-Answer Response
1. Dr. Zinchenko says the number one rule is to be “gentle” with the library’s books, exhibits, and technology as well as with each other. This means the children should respect items in the library and the other players by treating everyone and everything with kindness. (Chapter 10)
2. Theme music from the movie Rocky blasts loudly, waking them; the doors are locked and they cannot leave. (Chapter 14)
Chapters 18-28
Reading Check
1. He tries to reach a hand through a rotunda window via the maglev, but realizes the windows are mesh-covered. (Chapter 19)
2. Charles (Chapter 20)
3. They plan to play the original game in the Young Adult room. (Chapter 25)
Multiple Choice
1. B (Chapter 18)
2. A (Chapter 22)
Short-Answer Response
1. Haley does not thank them and tells them she plans to win. She refuses to tell anyone that she might be hurt. Her reaction shows that she is tenacious and motivated, but unappreciative and rather impolite. (Chapter 21)
2. One notable difference is that the members of Kyle’s team want to pool their skills and genuinely help one another to win as a team, while on Charles’s team, at least Charles and Haley are using one another to profit for individual gains. (Another difference is that each team is now trying a different path toward victory: Kyle’s team will play Bibliomania, while Charles’s team will search for Staff Picks clues.) (Chapters 27, 28)
Chapters 29-40
Reading Check
1. Kyle (Chapter 29)
2. in a section of the Lemoncello-abilia Room that is decorated to look like Mr. Lemoncello’s childhood bedroom (Chapter 38)
3. The Complete Sherlock Holmes (Chapter 38)
Multiple Choice
1. D (Chapter 33)
2. C (Chapter 39, 40)
Short-Answer Response
1. Sierra pulls a strange number on her turn, two-twenty-fifteen, that mystifies them; when they find the book that matches the call number she also got on her turn (the King James Bible), a hologram of Johannes Gutenberg appears and helps them by revealing that the mystery number is a Bible verse. (Chapter 32)
2. Charles is irate and blames Andrew for wasting his time. He subtly threatens Andrew, saying that Andrew owes him “big time.” (Chapter 36)
Chapters 41-50
Reading Check
1. He steals Sierra’s library card. (Chapter 42)
2. as a gift for Mr. Lemoncello’s birthday, which is that day (Chapter 45)
3. rolling, shifting bookcases (“Stacks”) that threaten to run him down (Chapter 50)
Multiple Choice
1. C (Chapter 44, 45)
2. D (Chapter 47)
Short-Answer Response
1. Kyle has 15 minutes to find a memory box somewhere in the library. Haley offers to help; she directs him to where she hid the box earlier. (Chapter 48)
2. He is Charles’s uncle and the head librarian at the Library of Congress. Charles calls him to Ask an Expert; he wants help finding True Crime Ohio. (Chapter 49)
Chapters 51-56
Reading Check
Multiple Choice
1. D (Chapter 52)
2. A (Chapter 52, 53)
Short-Answer Response
1. Charles and Kyle wrestle to grab hold of the same book, and when Sierra reminds Kyle not to hurt the book, Charles slams Kyle and the book to the floor; Charles then lies about who almost ruined the book. (Chapter 54)
2. She makes her way out of the library first, but immediately credits the success of finding an escape route to the work of the entire team; she also kindly introduces Sierra to the crowd so that she receives just as many shouts and cheers. (Chapter 56)
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By Chris Grabenstein