Showing posts with label dystopia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dystopia. Show all posts

Freaky Green Eyes Review

Freaky Green Eyes
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
this is the best book i've read in a lonnng time. Just like the cover says, it does haunt you long after the last page. francesca's alter ego, freaky green eyes, knows the truth, the truth that francesca does not want to know. The whole book you can tell that francesca's dad is a little scary, through his intolerance, abuse, and something else that is reflected in Oates writing. this is a mix of a coming to age story, and a mystery. it is the only mystery book i've read where the main character actually goes into artistic detail about her feelings. Buy this book and you won't be dissapointed.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Freaky Green Eyes



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Freaky Green Eyes

Read More...

All Alone in the Universe Review

All Alone in the Universe
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
There's not a whole lot that happens in this book--it's basically an account of how one girl gets dumped by her best friend and then gets over the heartbreak of being cast aside.
But the book is an amazing little gem, both funny and sad and full of casual profound moments that the narrator comes upon in really natural ways. The prose is sharp and funny and nicely complemented by the author's hilarious pictures.
The best compliment I can pay to the work is to say that I wish I'd read this book when *I* was thirteen and coping with the painful fact that my best friend and I had grown apart. It would have made a world of difference to me. A great book. Enough said.

Click Here to see more reviews about: All Alone in the Universe



Buy Now

Click here for more information about All Alone in the Universe

Read More...

Born Blue Review

Born Blue
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Many professionals are writing about reactive attachment disorder, but this is the first book I've encountered that allows the reader to see into the soul of a child with this condition. The author does not attempt to sponge up the messes the protagonist creates for herself. Instead Han Nolan helps the reader understand why a child with this condition views the world without empathy for others. The protagonist's only concern is for herself because she cannot trust anyone else to care for her. The world is, after all, a very dangerous place. Despite the protagonist's anti-social actions, the reader experiences compassion for her. Perhaps this book will help more people become aware of RAD. We must continue to seek therapeutic alternatives for these children.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Born Blue



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Born Blue

Read More...

Best Foot Forward Review

Best Foot Forward
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This is a great sequel to an equally stunning and entertaining read, "Rules of the Road".
Bauer has vastly impressed me with all her books I've read thus far, but this one was like a big fat cherry along with the whipped creme on top of the hot fudge sundae known as "Rules of the Road".
Jenna Boller is back, back with a vengence alongside the owner and her boss, Madeline Gladstone. There are some new characters that add flavor to an already sweet treat of a story.
For anyone who just likes a good plot and lots of laughs, I recommend this. It may be targeted at teenagers(those teenagers are darn lucky cuz there were no writers like this in my teen days), but at 36, I have grown into a great fan of Joan Bauer's writing. She is very talented at telling a tale that is funny and endearing. It is a really easy read that I know younger girls will really enjoy because while I may be 36, deep down, I am still a teenager at heart.
Eileen F.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Best Foot Forward



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Best Foot Forward

Read More...

Firegold Review

Firegold
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
If Dia Calhoun continues writing such works as this and "Aria of the Sea," she may become the next Robin McKinley! This book is wonderful, emotional, deep, but all wrapped in simple prose and style.
It centers around Jonathon, a teenage boy who has something that no one else in his native Valley has: blue eyes. Rumors flit about his mother, by the people who live in the valley and suspecy that the young boy is a Dalriada. The Dalriada are viewed as barbarians by the Valley folk, with their horses and astounding powers. They have blue eyes -- and, according to others, they also have horns from their foreheads. The Valley inhabitants fear that, as Jonathon reaches adulthood, he will go insane -- and mysterious welts are rising on his forehead, where horns would be...
These rumors reach their peak when Jonathon's mother dies, and he is accused of bringing a blight down. He must leave his home for his future, among the Dalriada. He will go to the ends of the world and back again, with the Firegold apples that will help him -- and those he loves -- to their destiny.
This book is elevated from a usual coming-of-age novel via Calhoun's beautiful prose and style. Her fantasy world is very similar to ours (a reference is made to a grandfather clock) yet the mythos and mystical experiences are different. It also brings to the forefront the disgusting bigotry and prejudice, without being heavy-handed in the execution.
Jonathon is a wonderful character, growing in strength and complexity as the book progresses. Some of the people who oppose him are a bit too narrow-minded for outright believability, but that is a very small flaw in a very good book.
I advise all admirers of good fiction -- fantasy or otherwise -- to check into this book. (I also advise you to read her second novel, "Aria of the Sea," which I am half done with)

Click Here to see more reviews about: Firegold



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Firegold

Read More...

The New You Review

The New You
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
"The New You" written by Kathleen Leverich is really great and causes you to think. I borrowed it from my library and read it the same day. I liked it so very much I bought it! I like Abby or Abigail, the two new girl friends she makes, and her really cool lifelike dream she had caused by a fever! It's like a short story, and when I finished reading it, I wanted more. That's what reading it over and over is for. I think that this is a must read. Mostly for girls, maybe at least nine or even ten years of age, because it could be too hard or confusing to understand for younger readers. I'm a girl and when I first was reading this book a couple times, I was thinking how it was one of my new favorite books.

Click Here to see more reviews about: The New You



Buy Now

Click here for more information about The New You

Read More...

Does This Book Make Me Look Fat?: Stories About Loving -- and Loathing -- Your Body Review

Does This Book Make Me Look Fat: Stories About Loving -- and Loathing -- Your Body
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
With fourteen stories and personal essays written by popular authors such as Sara Zarr, Carolyn Mackler, Ellen Hopkins, and more, this book is quite amazing. The stories all focus on the weight and body image issues that most everyone has at one point in their life.
Whether it's feeling overweight or thinking you're too skinny, how you feel that your breasts are either way too small or way too big, everyone has issues with their bodies.
Not much else I can really say about this book. I actually loved each and every one of the stories, and that really surprised me. I thought at least one or two of them I probably wouldn't end up liking.
I'd recommend DOES THIS BOOK MAKE ME LOOK FAT? to anyone who has issues with their body and even to people who don't. Every single story is just written so well. I didn't want to finish the last one when I got to it.
The only thing wrong with this book: it should have been longer!
Reviewed by: Breanna F.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Does This Book Make Me Look Fat: Stories About Loving -- and Loathing -- Your Body



Buy NowGet 22% OFF

Click here for more information about Does This Book Make Me Look Fat: Stories About Loving -- and Loathing -- Your Body

Read More...

Finding Stinko Review

Finding Stinko
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
You know those books that are great stories but the writing is sort of lame? (You know which ones I mean). And then there are books that have really good prose and thoughtful turns of phrases, but they require a shock-collar-zap to make you turn the page because they are dullsville. And then there are books like "Finding Stinko."
DeGuzman's short novel has the right touch of thrifty prose and fast-paced plot, hitting the target exactly with fine writing and a fine story line. In it, the lifer foster-kid, Newboy, makes a break from his latest loveless foster home at the Knox's, who "made a business of their boys". Newboy hasn't been able to talk for years, probably because it wasn't worth the trouble. But once he's on the run, he finds a ratty ventrilaquist dummy in a dumptster, and names him Stinko. To Newboy's surprise and delight, Stinko does all the talking for him.
In this urban quest for freedom and family, Newboy and Stinko must elude bullies and crooks, cops and caretakers. The chase is on, and there is hardly a second for Newboy to feel sorry for himself, or the street kids who become his friends and enemies. "Stinko" is gritty without being profane. Its backdrop is hard but not hopeless. In the end, when Newboy sticks out his thumb with his two new buddies and a dummy, I was sure he was hitching to a far better place, and it was the beginning of something good.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Finding Stinko



Buy NowGet 61% OFF

Click here for more information about Finding Stinko

Read More...