Wednesday, March 30, 2011


FINISHED:
Mull, Brandon. (2011). Beyonders: A world without heroes. New York: Simon & Schuster.

[Jason is transported, by way of the mouth of a hippo at the zoo he works at, to another world where he is set on a quest to find the syllables to a word which will vanquish the evil lord of the land forever.]

STARTED:
O'Connor, Barbara. (2010). The fantastic secret of Owen Jester. New York: Farrar Straus & Giroux.

[.]

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Thursday, March 17, 2011


FINISHED:
Gantos, Jack. (1998). Joey Pigza swallowed the key. New York: HarperCollins.

[.]

STARTED:
Mull, Brandon. (2011). Beyonders: A world without heroes. New York: Simon & Schuster.

[.]

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Tuesday, March 15, 2011


FINISHED:
Potter, Ellen. (2010). The kneebone boy. New York: Feiwel & Friends.

[Took me so long because I was on vacation for a week and didn't get a chance to read at all.]

STARTED:
Gantos, Jack. (1998). Joey Pigza swallowed the key. New York: HarperCollins.

[Have had this on my shelf for quite some time... and it's overdue...]

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Friday, March 4, 2011


FINISHED:
Service, Pamela F. (2011). Alien envoy. Minneapolis, MN: Lerner.

[Zack is an alien from the planet Izbor who was physically altered and sent to Earth as an Alien Agent for the Galactic Patrol. On Halloween night, Zack, the Alien Envoy to Earth, is picked up by fellow agents and whisked away in their spacecraft to meet with the Galactic Council who are deciding whether or not to invite Earth to join the Galactic Union. Unfortunately, it’s not an easy trip as the Kiapa Kapa Syndicate, who seem to have uncovered Zack’s true identity and are bent on making sure that he doesn’t make it in front of the Council, seem to be hot on their heels. Service has crafted a brisk, rollicking adventure with just the right amount of action and a healthy dose of hilarious description (“Zythis cleared his several throats.”), and even manages to slip in social messages about race relations (“When our people learned how to change the face of living things, we made it so that everyone was born a different color. That way there could be no groups of one color hating people of another color. Everyone was different.”) and commentary on how we treat our planet (“These people of Earth have not only endangered their own world; they could threaten the peace of the entire galaxy! A study of their history shows them to be a hopelessly reckless, warlike people.”). Gorman’s modern-cartoon illustrations appear in just the right amount – not too often or too sparse – and add the right zing, giving face to some of the more bizarrely described alien beings. This sixth installment in the Alien Agent series (Carolrhoda, 2008) works perfectly well on its own as a brief outerspace adventure that reluctant readers should find particularly appealing.]

STARTED:Potter, Ellen. (2010). The kneebone boy. New York: Feiwel & Friends.

[.]

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Wednesday, March 2, 2011

STARTED:
Service, Pamela F. (2011). Alien envoy. Minneapolis, MN: Lerner.

[Reviewing for ACL.]

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