Thursday, May 23, 2013

FINISHED:
Hartinger, Brent. (2007). Split screen: Attack of the Soul-sucking Brain Zombies. New York: HarperCollins.


[LOVE LOVE LOVE these books!  I've said it before many times, but, where were these books when I was growing up??  Funny and matter-of-fact, treating homosexuality (and bisexuality) as plain as one would heterosexuality.  AND, there's a "discussion" between Russel and his parents (who find out about his being gay... and don't handle it so well...) that is BRILLIANT.  I'm going to copy those pages and hold on to them - Russel doesn't back down at all in the talk, and, in fact, makes some brilliant points that render the priest somewhat speechless.  Where's the next one??]


STARTED:
Yancey, Rick. (2013). The 5th wave. New York: G.P. Putnam's/Penguin.


[.]

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Saturday, May 18, 2013

FINISHED:
Coben, Harlan. (2013). Six years. New York: Dutton/Penguin.


[.]


STARTED:
Hartinger, Brent. (2007). Split screen: Attack of the Soul-sucking Brain Zombies. New York: HarperCollins.


[.]

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Sunday, May 12, 2013

FINISHED:
Hunter, Erin. (2013). River of lost bears (Seekers: Return to the wild #3). New York: HarperCollins.


[.]


STARTED:
Coben, Harlan. (2013). Six years. New York: Dutton/Penguin.


[Look, ma!  I can read books for adults, too!]

*

Sunday, May 5, 2013

ABANDONED:
Mull, Brandon. (2013). Chasing the prophecy (Beyonders #3). New York: Aladdin.

[After weeks and weeks of plodding through this one... I finally... gave up!  Sorry Brandon!  You're one of  my favorites, but this series just didn't grab me... and I couldn't even stick it out to the end...]

STARTED:
Hunter, Erin. (2013).  River of lost bears (Seekers: Return to the wild #3). New York: HarperCollins.

[Reviewing for ACL... but it's not a chore because I'm kinda hooked on this series...]


*

Sunday, April 14, 2013

FINISHED:


[Review forthcoming...]


STARTED:
Mull, Brandon. (2013). Chasing the prophecy (Beyonders #3). New York: Aladdin.


[One of my favorite children's/YA authors.]

*

Monday, April 1, 2013

FINISHED:
Green, John. (2012). The fault in our stars. New York: Dutton/Penguin.


[This one had received SO MUCH hype that by the time I got around to reading it, maybe my perception was skewed.  That said, it still just didn't resonate with me as much as I expected it to.  Hazel and Augustus meet at a cancer support group meeting for teens, hit it off immediately, and embark on a relationship knowing full well that their time together will be limited.  While I thought some of the language was wonderful, many things that the kids say just didn't seem like they'd come from a teenagers mouth... even one who's staring death in the face.  The character of the author of Hazel's favorite book seemed like a gross caricature, and Hazel and Augustus's SUDDEN trip to Amsterdam (Augustus uses his "wish" from the Make a Wish Foundation...) didn't seem plausible.  This isn't to say that I didn't enjoy the book at all, I suppose it was all of the praise that set it up for me as too good to be true.  NOTE: At one point toward the end, Hazel's mom says that she's been taking online college courses and, if all goes well, will go UP to the Bloomington campus in the summer.  Well, the characters live in Indianapolis... so... if they were to go to IU Bloomington from there, they'd be driving SOUTH (i.e. DOWN).  The author lives in Indy, so I don't know why he wouldn't know this... unless he's refering to one of IU's satellite campuses in Northern Indiana...]

STARTED & FINISHED:


[.]

STARTED:
Lerangis, Peter. (2013). The colossus rises. New York: HarperCollins.


[Reviewing for ACL...]


*

Saturday, March 23, 2013

FINISHED:


[Where was this book when I was a tween/teen??  Nate steals away from his sheltered, conservative Pennsylvania town to head to New York so that he can audition for the role of Elliott in a new musical based on the movie "E.T.: the Extraterrestrial".  This is a hilariously fun novel that takes place over the course of just a couple of days, and which has Nate reconnecting with an Aunt who has been estranged from Nate's mother when she stole away to New York in an effort to be someplace more open-minded and accepting.  It's one of those books that every small town kid who's just coming into realizing s/he is gay ought to read in order to see that it truly does "get better".  Like I said, this one would've given me so much hope when I was a (closeted) teenager stealing away to Chicago at every opportunity so that I could be around some diversity.]


STARTED:
Green, John. (2012). The fault in our stars. New York: Dutton/Penguin.


[.]


*

Sunday, March 17, 2013

FINISHED:
Balliett, Blue. (2013). Hold fast. New York: Scholastic.


[.]


STARTED:
Federle, Tim. (2013). Better Nate than ever. New York: Simon & Schuster.


[.]

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Sunday, March 10, 2013

Friday, March 8, 2013

FINISHED:
Spinelli, Jerry. (2013). Hokey Pokey. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.


[???  Not my cup of tea... and I'm not sure how many kids would pick this one up because of its ?? nature.  I think that it's just too esoteric for the intended audience.  I mean, a novel about a bunch of kids living in the desert with bicycles that behave like wild stallions??  I appreciate the fact that it's clearly an allegory about growing out of childhood, but I think that a kid would get it even less than I did.]


STARTED:
McAlpine, Gordon. (2013). The tell-tale start: The misadventures of Edgar & Allan Poe (Book 1).  New York: Viking.


[.]

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