
My fifth grader recently read Because of Mr. Terupt for his nightly independent reading and raved about it. I decided to read it myself and review it. He was right – it’s terrific!
The fifth graders in Mr. Terupt’s class thought they had it made when they got him as their teacher – after all, he was a rookie. But they didn’t know this would be the school year that would change their lives.
This book is written from the first-person perspectives of seven students as they recount the events of their extraordinary school year.
Their journal-like entries illustrate how Mr. Terupt gives them space to navigate challenges on their own, while teaching the principles of being positive, looking at things differently, always trying and, most importantly, forgiving.
When an accident involving their teacher leaves the students feeling helpless, blameful and shaken, they realize how much they need one another despite their differences, and they find themselves believing everything happens for a reason.
Buyea smoothly weaves the kids’ individual stories together in a way that keeps the plot moving forward. At the same time, he reveals details about each student that remind the reader that it’s easy to make assumptions about peers when you don’t really know them, but everyone has a story to tell.
Buyea wrote additional books, Mr. Terupt Falls Again and Saving Mr. Terupt, though we have not yet read them. I anticipate they will be well worth reading.











