Blogging Leave of Absense

Unfortunately, time for book blogging has been rare lately. With prac throughout October and my intention to participate in NaNoWriMo in November things have been ragged. As such, I'll be going to be on light mode until November is over, but will be back come December and will no doubt be chanting at the bit for some nice relaxing reading and reviewing.
Until then, I'll leave it off with a challenge update. Nothing like depressing myself with how behind I am before I run off to get even further behind.
Initials Reading Challenge (November 30)
1/5 - I'll give it a go, but it's probably a right-off
100+ Reading Challenge
89/100 - probably fine
A-Z Reading Challenge (Dec 31st)
40/52 books read - hopefully doable
Mythopoeic Challenge (Dec 31st)
2/7 - hmm. Probably not.
Arthurian Challenge (March 2009)
11/12 - The minimum only calls for five items, so I'm technically done, but I think I can handle one more book.
Book Awards Challenge (June 1, 2009)
1/10 - no problem
42 Challenge (ongoing through 2009)
21/42 items completed - no problem
Ender's Game
Orson Scott Card
226 pages; published 1977

"I am your enemy, the first one you've ever had who was smarter than you. There is no teacher but the enemy. No one but the enemy will tell you what the enemy is going to do. No one but the enemy will ever teach you how to destroy and conquer. Only the enemy tells you where he is strong. And the rules of the game are what you can do to him and what you can stop him from doing to you. I am your enemy from now on. From now on I am your teacher."

After two invasion strikes from an insectoid alien race, the "Buggers", Earth's reluctantly allied nations and militaries are fearful of the next, and likely final, strike to come. Their best chance of success, they feel, is in the training of a whole generation of amazingly gifted children.
And so it is that, at the age of six, Andrew "Ender" Wiggins is removed from his home (his parents signing him over to the government) and taken to Earth's orbitting Battle School, never to step foot on Earth again until the age of sixteen. Unlike the rest of his extraordinarily peers, however, Ender has caught the eyes of those in charge. He's not just another would-be soldier; in Ender is the potential for so much more. The potential to plan, the potential to lead ... the potential to win.
Ender's days at the Battle School are filled with trial after trial, each worse than the one before as the ones in control hack away at his childhood, sculpting him into the war commander they need him to be. The war commander they need to save Earth. 4/5



Other Reviews
Have you written a review for this book? I would love to include it, comment below and I'll add your link!
Dead Until Dark
Charlaine Harris
326 pages; published 2004


For a second I felt ashamed at calling Bill to rescue me: I should have handled the situation myself. Then I thought, Why? When you know a practically invincible being who professes to adore you, someone so hard to kill it’s next to impossible, someone preternaturally strong, that’s who you’re gonna call. (255-6)

Sookie Stackhouse lives in the small town of Bon Temps, Louisiana. Her life is ordinary – she lives with her grandmother, works at the local bar, and has a brother who lives nearby. Problem is, despite her lifestyle, Sookie herself is anything but ordinary. Ever since she was a young girl, Sookie has had the ability to read the minds of those around her.

Normality never sticks around for very long though – at least not with a character like Sookie in the lead. Bon Temps starts to wake up with the revelation of the reality of vampires (they’re “coming out of the coffin”). With the development of a viable synthetic blood, vampires no longer have to feed on humans to survive, and many are seeking a more human lifestyle.

When one such vampire, oh-so-scarily named "Bill", moves to town and, incidentally, next door to Sookie, her life suddenly gets turned upside down. Bill is tall, dark and handsome - and definately dangerous - but, most appealing of all, Sookie cannot hear his thoughts. Around, she does not have to endure the aching strain required to simply afford people their privacy. She is free to just relax.

But when a local woman dies under suspicious circumstances, Sookie finds herself dating a prime suspect. At what cost does her freedom come?

Vampire romances are a dime-a-dozen at the moment. Everywhere you turn you find yet another one creeping up behind you. Despite this, I found Dead Before Dark, the first of the Sookie Stackhouse series, to be an enjoyable light read. While still maintaining the romantic coupling of the moment - a (relatively) normal human girl with the dark scary vamp - it does mix it up a bit by ensuring that she herself is not entirely normal. Sookie doesn't belong in Bill's world ... but she doesn't really fit in her own either.

Harris' writing was a little slow in places; I felt like I was wading through it at times to get to the next part. Having said that, I would still recommend it to fans of the genre. Harris' humour comes into play quite strongly, leaving the book with a slightly oddball air to it, only to be effectively cut down when some of the darker elements come to the surface.

A fun read, the sequel of which I'm looking forward to reading. 3.5/5

Other Reviews

Second star to the right...

Posts have been a little sparse lately, sorry bout that. Being on prac, means I haven't really had the time to read (sad) let alone review, but I've got some done, so I'm gonna try to spread them out to cover my time away.



Peter and the Starcatchers
Dave Barry and Ridley Scott
463 pages; published 2006
Peter was the leader of the boys, because he was the oldest. Or maybe he wasn’t. Peter had no idea how old he really was, so he gave himself whatever age suited him, and it suited him to always be one year older than the oldest of his mates. If Peter was nine, and a new boy came to St. Norbert’s Home for Wayward Boys who said he was ten, why, then Peter would declare himself to be eleven. Also, he could spit the farthest. That made him the undisputed leader. (13)
The first in a trilogy chronicling the events before J.M. Barrie's Peter Pan, Peter Pan and the Starcatchers is a suprisingly delightful read. Why suprising? Well, as a firm believer in the 'original is always best' school of thought, I had not expected this prequel to be both as interesting and charming as it was.


Peter and his band of loyal friends (the origins of the Lost Boys) are wards of London's St. Norbert's Home for Wayward Boys. Taken away from the home in an mystery only achievable by unexplained midnight outing, the young boys are boarded on a ship, the Never Land. They soon learn that they are being tansported to the island of Rundoon, to be slaves to island's ruthless king - a man more likely to feed the boys to his snake than offer them any real or home or employment, let alone kindness.


But even before they get to Runddon things are prety rough. The Never Land's crew runs the gamut from incompetent to downright villainous, their quarters are cramped, and the food literally has things living it - not exactly a luxury liner. The only source of friendship found onboard by Peter is in the form of Alf, a kindly deckhand and the curious secretive young passenger, Molly.


Downtrodden and disgusting the voyage may be, but it doesn't lack for excitement - for it is not long before a pirate ship, captaied by the infamous 'Black Stache', starts to run them down, determined to retrieve a crumbling trunk in the Never Land's cargo.


Why are these pirates so intent on retrieving the trunk? What is inside it? And just how is Molly involved?


As I said, Peter and the Starcatchers was a lovely read - both funny and moving in equal parts. Young Peter and the others were true enough to their original counterparts to be a faithful retelling, yet fresh enough to be of interest. There were times that I felt the story to be a little on the long side - at over 400 pages, it is rather long for the start of a children's trilogy - yet despite this, there was no real dragging of the story.


My only real issue ith teh book - and it was an extremely light one at that - was that the almost ultra-realistic tone of teh start led me to beleive that it was going to be a realistic reinterpretation of the book. It's magical elements returned quickly and, while executed well, I thought it would have been interesting to have it go down the other route.


A wonderful read for lovers of Peter Pan and new readers like. 4/5







Other Reviews
Have you written a review for this book? I would love to include it, comment below and I'll add your link!

Weekly Geeks #18

This week's topic is 'catching up' ... which so defines my life at the moment. Catch up, catch up, catch up. If I close my eyes, I may just see the words scrolling across the inside of my eye lids.

I could list the hundred or so things I'm supposed to be catching up on this week for uni or prac, but, in true Rebecca fashion, I am going to pretend they don't exist long enough to write up the bookish catch-up things I need to do. Much more fun.


  • Write up the meeting notes for the last month's book club (I'm running very behind)

  • Read Tim Winton's Cloudstreet for NEXT month's bookclub

  • Write up some reviews for the 42 challenge

  • Start building up a bank of reviews so I have some "emergency posts" for when prac wipes me out in a few weeks time

I think that's about all I have time for this week (*sigh*). If I manage to hit any of those I'll be very happy.

Answers to this weeks quotes

Firstly, a big thanks to everyone who played this week, it was a lot of fun to get your answers :)

Everyone did pretty well. We do, however, have a clear winner! Congratulations to:
Serena

Head on over and give her your congratulations.


For those interested, the answers were:

1. The Time Traveller's Wife - Audrey Niffenegger
2. Great Expectations - Charles Dickens
3. Wicked - Gregory Maguire
4. Wuthering Heights - Emily Bronte
5. The Female of the Species - Rudyard Kipling
6. The Colour of Magic - Terry Pratchett
7. Peter Pan - J.M. Barrie

Quote of the Day: Saturday

My way of celebrating Book Blogger Week. Guess each day's quote and maybe win a prize!

See here for more information.


To die would be an awfully big adventure.



NOTE: It would be great if you could email me at rebeccajohnson47@gmail.com with your answers (though, please, feel free to comment below) so as to keep your answers to yourself.

Quote of the Day: Friday

My way of celebrating Book Blogger Week. Guess each day's quote and maybe win a prize!

See here for more information.


It was all very well going on about pure logic and how the universe was ruled by logic and the harmony of numbers, but the plain fact of the matter was that the disc was manifestly traversing space on the back of a giant turtle and the gods had a habit of going round to atheists’ houses and smashing their windows.



NOTE: It would be great if you could email me at rebeccajohnson47@gmail.com with your answers (though, please, feel free to comment below) so as to keep your answers to yourself.

Quote of the Day: Thursday

My way of celebrating Book Blogger Week. Guess each day's quote and maybe win a prize!

See here for more information.


She who faces Death by torture
for each life beneath her breast
May not deal in doubt or pity -
must not swerve for fact or jest.



CLUE: This is not from a book but a piece of poetry ... yep, not a huge clue but what can I say? I'm mean.


NOTE: It would be great if you could email me at rebeccajohnson47@gmail.com with your answers (though, please, feel free to comment below) so as to keep your answers to yourself.
Sword of the Rightful King
Jane Yolen
351 pages; published 2003


"I am careful with everyone," Arthur said. "It is part of what High King is all about, being careful. I am careful because everyone - even you, my dear brother - would be king in my place."

Kay had the grace to look embarrassed and once again blushed red. "Not I, Arthur," he said, but they both knew it was a lie.

"Everyone wants the throne," Arthur repeated and walked back up the steps to the high wooden seat. He sat down on it heavily [...] "Everyone wants it but me." (p 45)


Everyone knows the story of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table. Everyone knows of noble Arthur, beloved king of Camelot. And everyone knows of Merlin, his ancient and wise advisor. There has, of course, been countless books and films on the subject. Jane Yolen's YA novel, however, doesn't merely retell the legend, but recreates it.
Young Arthur, barely 23 years of age, is the High King of Britain, so titled because of the power and influence of the man who put im there, his advisor and former tutor Merlinnus. However, he is far from the figure found in Arthurian legend. While kind, generous, and a natural-born leader, he does not have the confidence and support required to make him the great king he has the potential to be. His place in this position is, if not widely protested then at least widely questioned - by everyone including even himself.
His greatest rival and contender for the throne is Morgeuse, the North Queen, who desperately desires to rule through one of her one sons. When she sends four of her sons to court, including the upstanding Gawain and his aggressive brother Agravaine, their arrival coincides with several other arrivals: firstly, the rumour of as assassin coming to remove Arthur from the throne, and secondly, a young boy, Gawan, whose suspiscious intelligence and unknown background cause Merlin to keep him close to himself.
Deciding that the best thing to do the face of such uncertainty is to solidify Arthur's claim on the throne once and for all, Merlinnus sets about to do just this. His plan includes the removal of a sword, Caliburnus, from a strategically placed bit of stone. But will it be enough? Will the people accept Arthur as the rightful king?
I quite enjoyed the careful reworking of the well-known legend. It was just a careful shifting of the story, seeing everything in just a slightly different position. While enjoyable throughout, however, the story itself wasn't terribly exciting. It was more Gawan's story than Arthur's and the biggest mystery was in trying to decern Gawan's background. I'd recommend it to a fan of Arthurian legend, but for a newbie I'd probably recommend something a little more mainstream. 3.5/5




Other Reviews
Have you written a review for this book? I would love to include it, comment below and I'll add your link!

Quote of the Day: Wednesday

My way of celebrating Book Blogger Week. Guess each day's quote and maybe win a prize!

See here for more information.


"Why, she's a liar to the end! Where is she? Not there - not in heaven - not perished - where? Oh! you said you cared nothing for my sufferings! And I pray one prayer - I repeat it till my tongue stiffens - [name removed], may you not rest, as long as I am living! You said I killed you - haunt me, then! The murdered do haunt their murderers, I believe - I know that ghosts have wandered on earth. Be with me always - take any form - drive me mad! only do not leave me in this abyss, where I cannot find you! Oh, God! it is unutterable! I cannot live without my live! I cannot live without my soul!"



NOTE: It would be great if you could email me at rebeccajohnson47@gmail.com with your answers (though, please, feel free to comment below) so as to keep your answers to yourself.

Teaser Tuesday (Sept. 16)

TEASER TUESDAYS asks you to:
  • Grab your current read.
  • Let the book fall open to a random page.
  • Share with us two (2) “teaser” sentences from that page, somewhere between lines 7 and 12.
  • You also need to share the title of the book that you’re getting your “teaser” from … that way people can have some great book recommendations if they like the teaser you’ve given!
  • Please avoid spoilers!

Everything you do is intentional. Even if your tray trips over and you spill your entire lunch all over yourself, remember: You meant to do that. (p. 21)

When It Happens. Susan Colasanti.

First thing I did was steal a body...

Repossessed
A.M. Jenkins218 pages; published 2007
I don't like the term "demon". It carries quite a bit of negativity with it. It implies a pointy tail and cloven hooves. I prefer the term "fallen angel". That is, indeed, what we are. The difference between us and the angels who didn't fall from grace is that the Unfallen were, are, and always will be faithful, stalwart, and obedient. That is their nature, just as it is their nature to rejoice in worship and contemplation of the vastness of the Creator's perfection. We, the Fallen, wondered, questioned, confronted, eventually demanded, and in general, pushed the edges of the envelope until the envelope burst.

[...] the Unfallen don't hang out with us peons much anymore.

I've never really liked those guys. (p 9/10)


Kiriel is one of the Fallen, one of the angels who supported Satan in his uprising. But after spending millenia in the bowels of Hell, reflecting the sorrows of the sinners under his jurisdiction while living out his own eternal punishment, things have become a little stale and he decides to take a little vacation.

In order to take this vacation, Kiriel hijacks the body of the unassuming Shaun seconds before he dies - Kiriel thinks this perfectly acceptable, after all, he was going to die anyway, and his possession merely eliminated much of the pain the boy would have felt anyway. Taking over his body, however, also means taking over his life and Kiriel finds himself immersed in the sensations and emotions of human life - and more specifically, the world of a seventeen year old.

Kiriel knows that his 'vacation' won't go unnoticed forever though - it is, after all, completely against the rules - but he intends to enjoy it for as long as 'humanly' possible.
angeloftheLord: Kiriel, you are trespassing in direct contravention of the Creator's wishes. This is a warning: Return to your duties or you will be punished.

All the warmth had left my fingertips.
trojanxxl: who is this?

Bloo-bloo-bloop!
angeloftheLord: You must return to your duties immediately.
An eternity of wishing to speak directly to my Creator, I thought in despair - and this is how He finally contacts me? Through AOL Instant Messenger? (p 97/8)


While I loved the premise of the novel, and found it cute funny in places, I did have my issues with it. For instance, it took less than twenty pages for Kiriel to turn to his first major exploration of humanity: masturbation. This leads into his central (not only, but major) quest for the novel: sex. He sets his sights on one girl and pursues her for the entirely with little (some but not much) regard for the reality of the situation or the fact that this is a real person he's trying to catch here. Perhaps this would appeal more to a male, seventeen-year-old audience, but, for me, it had quite a large negative impact on what should have been a good book.

That said, however, it did have it's redeeming qualities. The presentation of Kiriel as a fallen angel (as opposed to a 'demon') who, despite his backing of Satan ("The Boss"), sincerly and desperately wishes to retain the communication with, and love of, God ("The Creator") was both fascinating and moving. Similarly, the unrecognised acts of redemption Kiriel undertakes during his illicit 'vacation' are quite touching.

It was an okay book - shifting to quite good in places - but overall I feel that the story had the potential to be much better than it was. 2.5/5



Other Reviews
Have you written a review for this book? I would love to link to it, comment below and I'll add your link!

Quote of the Day: Tuesday

My way of celebrating Book Blogger Week. Guess each day's quote and maybe win a prize!

See here for more information.


People who claim that they're evil are usually no worse than the rest of us ... It's people who claim that they're good, or anyway better than the rest of us, that you have to be wary of.



NOTE: It would be great if you could email me at rebeccajohnson47@gmail.com with your answers (though, please, feel free to comment below) so as to keep your answers to yourself.

Quote of the Day: Monday

My way of celebrating Book Blogger Week. Guess each day's quote and maybe win a prize!

See here for more information.


That was a memorable day to me, for it made great changes in me. But it is the same with any life. Imagine one selected day out of it, and think how different its course would have been. Pause you who read this, and think for a moment of the long chain of iron or gold, of thorns or flowers, that would never have bound you, but for the formation of the first link one memorable day.



NOTE: It would be great if you could email me at rebeccajohnson47@gmail.com with your answers (though, please, feel free to comment below) so as to keep your answers to yourself.

Weekly Geeks 17

This week's Weekly Geeks is an ongoing one in celebration of Book Bloggers Week. Our task is to post a 'Quote of the Day' for the entire week.
I'm still pretty new to the wonderful world of book-blogging, and, while I was eager to participate in Book Blogger's Week, I didn't really know where to start. Luckily for me, WG has given me a great opportunity to play along.
I've decided to pull out some of my favourite passages from books ... but I'm not going to tell you what they are from. Play along at home and I'll give the person who gets the most right at the end of the week, a prize.*
So I hope you enjoy some of my favourite passages! Check back next Sunday for the answers.
FIRST QUOTE:
When I am out there, in time, I am inverted, changed into a desperate version of myself. I become a thief, a vagrant, an animal who runs and hides. I startle old women and amaze children. I am a trick, an illusion of the highest order, so incredible that I am actually true.
*I'm thinking a shiny new bookmark.
NOTE: It would be great if you could email me at rebeccajohnson47@gmail.com with your answers (though, please, feel free to comment below) so as to keep your answers to yourself. Thanks!

Weekly Geek #16

Last week's Weekly Geek required us to pair up and interview a partner on a book we were reading and then post both interviews.

I had a great time interviewing Gautami about the novel she is currently reading, Novel About My Wife by Emily Perkins. Below is her interview, as well as my interview on Charlaine Harris' Dead Until Dark.





~*~





What was it that made you pick up this novel in the first place? I personally find the title to be quite intriguing; did this play a part?
I did not pick it up. It is gift from a friend of mine who lives in UK. He knows about my love of books and gifted it to me along with a few others. Yes, the title intrigued me! The protagonist is writing a novel about his wife, in flashbacks.


For those not in the know, why don't you give us a brief run-down of the novel so far.
It is about being married, the intricacies of it, the intimacy of it. Tom is very much in love with his wife, Ann, who is pregnant. They move to a new house and she sees a man stalking her. Is he real or just an imagination of her mind?


This novel is told through the narrative perspective of the character Tom, a bitter, middle-aged man (who is, obviously, telling the 'novel about [his] wife'). Do you find Tom to be an interesting character? Is his voice compelling?
Tom is not bitter. He is very much in love with his wife. Yes, I found Tom interesting, his thoughts compelling. One continuously needs to know his thoughts about Ann, their relationship and their friends.


What do you think of Perkins' writing? How would you describe it to someone who has not read her work before?
Perkins has a way with words. Her writing has many layers to it. I found the novel almost surreal and mystical at places. Intense too. I couldn't put it down after halfway through.


I've seen it written that Perkins "writes brilliantly about dismal people". In your reading of this novel, would you agree with that assessment?
In a way, she does. However, she makes those dismal people likeable and endearing. That drew me into the novel as soon as I started reading it.


They always say you should never judge a book by it's cover, but what the hey, what are your thoughts on the cover of Novel About My Wife?
I think I would have picked it up for the cover and the title. I found those arresting.


Would you recomend this book to others (why/why not)? If so, to what audience would you present it to?
Yes, I would. For couples. Who are in the verge of a relationship or committed to each other. Also to single persons who need to know the finer nuances of marriage, love, relationships and the feelings and emotions that go with it. Understanding is another aspect of it. Frankly I liked reading it.






~*~




Tell me something about the author. Have you read a lot of her books?
I've never actually read anything by Charlaine Harris before, nor had I heard of her before I picked up the book in the library (naturally one right smack-back in the middle of the series). She's written several other series, but this is the first series of hers I've really looked into.




Did you like the book?
I did, actually; I quite enjoyed it. I didn't really know what the series was about before I started reading - only that, in the world of Sookie Stackhouse, vampires were 'out' and trying to live an ordinary life. With the spate of vampire fiction currently available (most of which I find to be hit-and-miss), I was suprised at how original the story was.


Sookie can read minds. In what way?
Sookie was born with the gift of telepathy. There was no radio-active spider involved, nor any strange and unusual lineage - she just can. After living through an early childhood of parental disbelief and many therapy sessions she (after her parents' death) comes to live with her sympathetic grandmother in, it turns out, a much cookier town. Sookie doesn't advertise her gift, in fact she goes out of her way to block out the constant thoughts of others (her family, her friends, her co-workers), living with the endless strain of maintaining these blocks ... until the day she meets Bill, a vampire, whose mind is peacefully silent.

Is Sookie a lovable character?
I'm not so sure I'd go as far as 'lovable' - though she is certainly likeable and you do really feel for her at times; her life is far from easy. Sookie is strange enough to always be interesting, but normal enough to be relatable. At the end of the day, however, there were other characters in the book that I found to be more loveable.


Are vampires interesting characters? Did you like Bill? Why or why not?
The vampires in this book (series) are VERY interesting - I don't think I've seen vampires presented in such a manner before.

As I mentioned, vampires have come "out of the closet" - their identity has been made public (thought they are maintaining the more palatable line of having contracted a 'disease' rather than actually being dead), and they are adjusting to a normal way of life ... and the normal way of life is adjusting to them. Bars and restaurants are stocking synthetic blood and vamps are getting their own little following - everything from specialist prostitutes to a roaring business in the nightclub scene.


Some aspects of the vampires (even the 'good' vamps), however, are more traditional. Bill for instance is quite the gentleman, despite his associations with more intimidating vampires. You couldn't help but like Bill. For a vampire, he was just an all-around nice guy.


What did you like about the book?
I liked the book's sense of humour and fun - specifically in places where Sookie peppered Bill with questions about what it's like as a vampire ("Do you have a phone... do you shave ... do you watch TV?"). But mostly I liked the unique yet up-front approach: yes there are vampires, yes she can read minds, why? well because it makes a good story, that's why.


What did you hate about the book?
I did feel in time that the writing was a bit weighed down, as if I had to occasionally wade through a heavy paragraph to get back to the story. Having said that however, it by no means stopped me from enjoying the novel as a whole, nor would it prevent me from recommending it.


Can you tell us an interesting episode?
Hmmm ... there are so many interesting little parts, but what to tell that wouldn't give something away. Okay. Well, at one point Bill arranges for Sookie have a bodyguard watch her and her house while he's out of town for a few days. This bodyguard is a very strange vamp (there was a problem with his transformation) ... and he is somewhat familiar. Might have something to do with his Graceland t-shirt, and oh, that voice. Don't mention his name though, he goes by "Bubba".


How do you rate it? And why?
I'd give it a four out of five stars - I really enjoyed it and am very much looking forward to getting the next in the series. There were just a few little things that stopped it from being perfect.


I have never read any Vampire books. Is Charlaine Harriss a good author to start the genre?
I think it's a nice place to start. It's a nice easy read, not too heavy on the horror or the horror of vampire myths, and you're guaranteed a few laughs. I've not read a lot of vampire books myself, but if you're looking for an in to the genre without going down the currently rampant path of the Twilight series, then this would be a good bet.






Other Reviews
Have you written a review for either of these book? I would love to incude it, comment below and I'll add your link!
Almost Forever
Maria Testa
69 pages; published 2003


The four of us
gathered
with other families,
we all gathered
in a building
on the Army base,
all in a special room
set aside
for saying goodbye.

One year
is not
such a long time,
Daddy said,
kneeling on one knee
in front of me,
squeezing
my shoulders.

In one year, Baby
you'll be in
second grade,
not first,
and you'll be
seven years old,
not six,
and then
I'll be home.
One year
is not
such a long time.

I did not
tell Daddy
that he was wrong -
that second grade
was half a hallway
and a whole world
away from first,
that seven
was everything
six was not,
and that one year
was forever.


There are literally hundreds of war books told through the voice of the soldier. Almost Forever, however, speaks through the unique (to me at least) voice of the soldier's child.

The innocent, six-year-old narrator watches as her father, a doctor, goes off to fight in Vietnam. Far from the horrors her father is undoubtedly witnessing, his young daughter is dealing with the impact the war has had on her and her family back home: moving house, letters from her father, seeing her mother cry, and, worst of all, starting to forget what her father really looks like.
This book is told entirely through verse, short beautifully simple poems that convey both her sense of loss and hope to see her father again. 3/5


Other Reviews
Have you written a review for this book? I would love to include it, comment below and I'll add your link!
The Adoration of Jenna Fox
Mary E. Pearson
265 pages; published 2008



On the eighth day Father had to return to work in Boston. He and Mother whispered, but I still heard. Risky … have to get back … you’ll be fine. Before he left he cupped my face in both of his hands. “Little by little, Angel,” he said. “Be patient. Everything will come back. Over time all the connections will be made.” I think my gait is normal now. My memory is not. I don’t remember my mother, my father, or Lily. I don’t remember that I once lived in Boston. I don’t remember Jenna Fox.


Father says it will come in time. “Time heals,” he says.


I don’t tell him that I don’t know what time is. (7)



Her mother gave her a box of discs, all labeled. Jenna Fox/Year One ... Year Two ... Year Sixteen. "Watch them," she suggests. "Maybe they'll help you remember."
That's the problem. Jenna doesn't remember. She doesn't remember her mother, her father, even herself. She doesn't remember why her grandmother seems to hate her and she doesn't remember the accident that left her in a coma for over a year. She doesn't remember anything at all. What's more, the little bits that are coming back to her piece by piece are leaving her with the awkward suspicion that something is not quite right.


There is something curious about where we live. Something curious about Father and his nightly phone calls with Mother. And certainly something curious about me. Why can I remember the details of the French Revolution but I can’t remember if I ever had a best friend? (12)


Why is she not allowed to leave the house? Why did they move from Boston to California? How did they time their move to her waking up so perfectly? And, if California is their new home, why does her father spend all his time in Boston, keeping his job at the large bio-engineering research hospital?

What aren't they telling her? What doesn't she remember? 4/5



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Life As We Knew It
Susan Pfeffer
339 pages; published 2006


Sometimes I think about how things used to be. I’d never been anyplace, not really. Florida once and Boston and New York City and Washington and Montreal and that was it. I’d dream of Paris, of London, of Tokyo. I wanted to go to South America, to Africa. I always assumed I could someday.

But my world keeps getting smaller and smaller. No school. No pond. No town. No bedroom. Now I don’t even have the view out the windows.
I feel myself shrivelling along with my world, getting smaller and harder. I’m turning into a rock, and in some ways that’s good, because rocks last for ever.
But if this is how I’m going to last for ever, then I don’t want to. (237)


When astromers start talking excitedly about an asteroid hitting the moon, sixteen-year-old Miranda sees it as little more than an opportunity for her teachers to pile on extra homework. Sure, it's not everyday you can the moon being hit with the naked eye, but at the end of the day she'd much rather be watching TV or reading posts on her favourite online message board.

What the astronomers don't anticipate, however, is that the asteroid is much denser than originally thought, dense enough to actually knock the moon slightly out of orbit. Suddenly the moon is playing havoc with Earth's tides, resulting in wipe-out level tidal waves, and the increase of it's gravitional pull is creating volcanoes where there never was before. Life as everyone knew it is over, and the Earth's population is in serious trouble.

I guess I always felt even if the world came to an end, McDonalds would still be open. (47)

Chronicling her family's struggles to survive in her diary, Miranda finds her life completely changed. Suddenly no access to internet or television isn't the problem. There is now no heat, no hot water, no phone. There is limited ways of cooking food - and that's if you have food in the first place, and then there's water to consider. Volcanic ash is covering the sky, making it near impossible for any amount of the sun's heat to get through.
Somehow it's harder to focus (though she gives it her all) on the regular teen things like keeping up your grades, dating, and arguing with your mother when you're wondering if you're going to be able to eat tomorrow, or, out of you and your two brothers, which is more likely to survive.
Life As We Knew It was an incredibly moving book; I found myself openly crying in several places, especially towards the end. Miranda's voice was just so real, so completely honest and the things she and the rest of her family have to deal with are just astounding. An excellent read. 4.5/5


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