Fair Weather
By Richard Peck
I've been noticing all of these books by Richard Peck on the library shelves--some with gold or silver book award stickers--and I'd never read a single one. So I borrowed this, read it, and now I can't wait to read all the others!
It's 1893, the year of the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, and Rosie and her older sister, little brother and goofy grandpa head from their isolated farm by train to experience the magic and wonder of the big city and the Fair. Electric lights, running water, Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show, the world's first Ferris wheel and many other marvels await them....
Richard Peck describes the time period in such wonderful detail, I felt like I was right there, and I learned quite a lot about both country life and city life at the turn of the last century!
Welcome to this collection of thoughts and opinions about books and other reading material for tweens and teens.
Monday, May 18, 2015
Fair Weather
Labels:
Historical Fiction,
History,
Laughable,
Realistic Fiction
Monday, May 11, 2015
Doll Bones
Doll Bones
By Holly Black
I thought Doll Bones was just as great as it looks and sounds!
A creepy underlying story about a supposedly-murdered-girl-turned-into-a-ceremic-doll really makes for an excellent plot.
And the three middle school-aged friends, Zach, Poppy and Alice are very endearing and believable. Dealing with their own issues about growing up and getting too old to "play dolls", they embark upon an exciting adventure with many twists and turns, and some unexpected disappointments too.
An excellent book that truly kept me up--reading--at night!
P.S. I had to look up whether bone china is really made from bones...It is...!
By Holly Black
I thought Doll Bones was just as great as it looks and sounds!
A creepy underlying story about a supposedly-murdered-girl-turned-into-a-ceremic-doll really makes for an excellent plot.
And the three middle school-aged friends, Zach, Poppy and Alice are very endearing and believable. Dealing with their own issues about growing up and getting too old to "play dolls", they embark upon an exciting adventure with many twists and turns, and some unexpected disappointments too.
An excellent book that truly kept me up--reading--at night!
P.S. I had to look up whether bone china is really made from bones...It is...!
Labels:
Adventure,
Award winner,
Fantasy,
Mystery,
Page turners,
Pirates,
Realistic Fiction,
Spooky
Tuesday, May 5, 2015
Ninth Ward
Ninth Ward
By Jewell Parker Rhodes
Lanesha sees ghosts--all around her neighborhood in New Orleans, including her own mama who died giving birth to her. Growing up with her adopted grandmother, Mama Ya-Ya, Lanesha has become comfortable with the ghosts and even appreciates their company.
When Hurricane Katrina hits the city, Lanesha needs to be stronger than she's ever been, drawing on all the skills and knowledge Mama Ya-Ya has taught her over the past 12 years. Even the ghosts are called upon to help out as Lanesah, Mama Ya-Ya, a neighbor boy and their dog end up in a serious survival situation: the Mississippi River flooding into their home and the waters are rising and rising...
This is an intense book based on the real events of Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
By Jewell Parker Rhodes
Lanesha sees ghosts--all around her neighborhood in New Orleans, including her own mama who died giving birth to her. Growing up with her adopted grandmother, Mama Ya-Ya, Lanesha has become comfortable with the ghosts and even appreciates their company.
When Hurricane Katrina hits the city, Lanesha needs to be stronger than she's ever been, drawing on all the skills and knowledge Mama Ya-Ya has taught her over the past 12 years. Even the ghosts are called upon to help out as Lanesah, Mama Ya-Ya, a neighbor boy and their dog end up in a serious survival situation: the Mississippi River flooding into their home and the waters are rising and rising...
This is an intense book based on the real events of Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
Friday, May 1, 2015
Brown Girl Dreaming
Brown Girl Dreaming
By Jacqueline Woodson
This is a beautiful collection of story-poems about author Jacqueline Woodson's own childhood in both the South and in New York. Her perspective of the Civil Rights Movement is particularly interesting and engaging, since she was a little girl at the time and just beginning to understand what it was all about.
Brown Girl Dreaming won the National Book Award in 2014 for YA literature; click here to see the author speaking about her book when she received this prestigious award!
Labels:
African American,
Award winner,
Biography,
Civil Rights,
Poetry,
Strong Girls
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