As of late, I haven’t been able to even finish a book, let
alone write about one, so my apologies for slacking this month. However, that was until
the funny, fast-paced, and light-hearted Paranormalcy
hit the spot. Evie is 16 and works for
the International Paranormal Containment Agency (IPCA). Since she has the ability to see beyond
creatures’ glamours down to whom or what they really are, she mainly does “bag-and-tag”
missions. This involves tagging vampires
and werewolves and the like to catalog and neutralize their powers. Evie believes she’s a normal girl and longs
to have a normal life not filled with creepy, decrepit vampires and evil
faeries until she discovers she happens to be a Category Seven Paranormal, the highest category meant for the most unknown paranormals. All types of mystical creatures make an
appearance in this trilogy and feisty Evie is often making fun of them which I
really enjoyed after so many dark and angsty paranormal novels.
August 27, 2012
August 13, 2012
Will Grayson, Will Grayson by David Levithan and John Green
These two are geniuses, and I mean Levithan and Green, however the teenaged Will Grayson's are unforgettable too. Alternating chapters between the Will Grayson's provides an insight into each as individuals until their serendipitous meeting in an adult video store. Tiny, whose real name is not Will Grayson, has a starring role as the best friend of one WG and as the boyfriend of OWG (Other Will Grayson). Both WG's lives become intertwined after their meeting and eventually learn a lot about themselves in this hilarious coming-of-age story. I highly recommend listening to this book, the actors are phenomenal as well and brought the characters to life.
July 31, 2012
MWF Seeking BFF by Rachel Bertsche
Rachel Bertsche, a lifelong New Yorker, relocates to Chicago with her husband and, missing the two childhood friends she left behind, spends a great deal of time contemplating her Chicago friendships or lack thereof. So she starts a year-long project to go on girl dates, first getting set up with friends of friends, to meeting girls at book clubs and cooking clubs, to chatting up anyone anywhere. Bertsche even tries to rent a friend. It’s a very funny and thought-provoking girl-meets-girl-and-tries-to-make-her-a-best-friend tale. I appreciate that Bertsche expresses the difficulty of her task, especially for someone who is socially shy, and provides ideas to help others, such as say yes to everything.
July 24, 2012
Dear Photograph by Taylor Jones
Dear Photograph is a compilation of photos from the original website Dear Photograph created by Taylor Jones. It’s a photograph from the past held up in front of the same scene in the present and captured again, often accompanied with a message from the photographer. Jones came up with the idea when he was sitting at his parent’s dinner table with his family looking through old photographs. He found a photo of his brother when he was younger with a birthday cake displayed on the table in front of him. Jones looked up across the table and there was his adult brother still sitting in the exact same spot. So Jones lined up the old photo with the table and cabinets and snapped a new photo and posted it on his blog and an idea was born. So I decided to go through some of my old photos and found one of my younger brother when he was around 2 sitting inside my parent's kitchen cabinet. He is now 20 and in the Army.
July 10, 2012
The Name of the Star by Maureen Johnson
When her parents have to move to England for work, Louisiana native Rory, gets to choose where she wants to go for her senior year. Her choice: Wexford, a boarding school in London. At the same time, a Jack the Ripper copy-cat killer begins to recreate the gruesome murders from 1888. Around the dates of the past murders, the school and much of London goes on lockdown. On one of these nights, Rory and her roommate sneak out of their dorm and unfortunately, Rory ends up being the only witness to the killer. She's not sure how her roommate never saw this eerie man. And now Rory has become his newest target. This was an awesome page-turning mystery.
July 3, 2012
Between the Lines by Jodi Picoult and Samantha Van Leer
Since the moment I heard about Between the Lines, I’ve been itching to read it and, yes, I was jealous of the 13 year old at Jodi’s book talk (the one I went to back in March) who got an advanced reader’s copy, for free, from Jodi. But I waited like a proper adult until it came out and then read it within two days. It’s a story about a loner, Delilah, who reads and rereads a children's fairy tale memorizing every word until one day the story changes. The main character, Prince Oliver, comes to life and explains that he and the rest of the characters are actually real people stuck within the book, having to play their roles over and over again. Oliver so desperately wants to escape his routine life and Delilah, having fallen for his character many readings ago, really wants to help him get out. It’s an adorable and charming story and any fan of Jodi's with children should be excited to read this with them.
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