Category: Hi-Low/Quick Read


If I Stay by Gayle Forman  

Mia plays the cello and is an oddball in her family, which is made up of punk mom and tattooed, eccentric, bicycle-riding, punk band-member, record-store employee dad; and sweet little brother. While they are all blonde and blue-eyed, she is not. (And if you’ve been paying attention to the genetics unit in your science class, this should strike you as strange.) But Mia has inherited the family music talent and is headed for Julliard to train as a classical cellist. And lucky girl—she’s got a great punk guitarist boyfriend, who loves her for all that she is.

The world tilts off its axis when Mia’s family decides to take a little drive on a ‘snow day’ off from school and is involved in an accident. The scene is narrated in a heartrending mix of reality and emotion as Mia stands beside her own body and watches her dead parents as well as the paramedics who are working on her. “You hang in there,” one tells her. (Yes, you will cry.) Even while Mia’s best friend, Kim, visits her in the hospital, you laugh at her sense of humor while understanding how devastated she is. (“If you die, there’s going to be one of those cheesy Princess Diana memorials at school,” she tells the comatose Mia.)

Throughout her hospital stay—her surgeries and critical care—Mia thinks about the progress of her relationship with her boyfriend, Adam and how they fell in love over time—mostly sweet and beautiful, a little bit sexy. Though Mia is comatose, she understands all that happens around her. She knows that her family members are dead. When her grandfather visits her and tells her he would like her to stay but understands if she, too, must leave, it becomes clear that Mia doesn’t know what to do. Should she live—and stay—when there’s so little left for her and so much pain and grieving to deal with if she wakes up?

What makes a person want to live? Why should a person try to live in the face of terrible tragedy? This short novel is a lovely look at what makes life worth living, at the beauty of young romance and at the endurance of family ties. I’m kind of an old fart who’s read a lot and pretty much never cries about a book. This was a significant exception. Read it.

Note: For the entire list of Ms. W’s Young Adult summer reading, click here.

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Don’t lose those grade-level gains you worked so hard to make all year long! Reading over the summer prevents the traditional summer loss of reading comprehension and vocabulary skills. And it’s so easy—a virtually stress-free, fun way of learning. Just pick out a few good books and get started. I’ve put together a great list of summer books using recommendations from the best sources. I plan on reading and reviewing these books all summer long. 

Join me! As you read, feel free to make comments on any of the books by clicking the comment link on the review. All of the books I’ve picked out are available in multiple copies from the Ontario City Library at both the Colony and Ovitt branches. And don’t forget—any that you read will count toward the Ontario City Library’s summer reading program, so you can pick up some prizes as you go. If the title of the book is hyperlinked, I’ve already reviewed it, and you can make comments now. For the titles that are not—I’m reading! Check back soon!

This summer’s theme:

Compassion and Camaraderie

(Life is full of bullies—let’s understand each other)

Laurie Halse Anderson

Speak

Wintergirls

Twisted

Catalyst

(Don’t miss Anderson’s moving poem/tribute to the readers of Speak. She reads it here.)

John Green

Will Grayson, Will Grayson

An Abundance of Katherines

Paper Towns

Looking for Alaska

(He’s a video blogger, too—see him here.)

Jay Asher

Thirteen Reasons Why

Sarah Dessen

What Happened to Goodbye?

Lock and Key

Just Listen

Gayle Forman

If I Stay

Where She Went

. . .

Genre Fiction for Fun:

Fantasy

Incarceron by Catherine Fisher

Sapphique by Catherine Fisher (sequel to Incarceron)

Fire by Kristin Cashore (This is the sequel to Graceling)

Eon and Eona by Alison Goodman

Sword Fighting and Combat

Ranger’s Apprentice Series by John Flanagan

Horror for Guys

The Chronicles of Vladimir Tod by Heather Brewer

Sports

Heat by Mike Lupica

(and if you like the book, Mike Lupica has a lot of good sports books)

Historical Fiction

Between Shades of Gray by Ruta Sepetys

Try a Classic:

Dracula

Frankenstein

Things I Just Want to Read for No Particular Reason:

Matched by Ally Condie (VOYA best Sci-Fi of the year)

Unwind by Neal Schusterman

Bad Girls Don’t Die by Katie Alender

Ninth Grade Slays (Vladimir Tod series) by Heather Brewer  

(For the review of the first book in the series, Eighth Grade Bites, click here.)

The series is still fun with a combination of goofy loser action—Is Vlad ever going to get over being shy and get the girl? It’s pretty obvious that Meredith wants him—and some serious lessons on vampire powers and behavior as well as action-packed fighting against those who would like to slay Vlad.

Vlad’s now in high school and his troubles start with the same bullies after him—only now they are catching and beating him on a regular basis. To add to all his problems, a school outcast is figuring out that Vlad is no ordinary guy. And, according to Uncle Otis, a vampire slayer has been contracted to find and kill Vlad. As Vlad must learn to protect himself, he ventures to Siberia with Otis in order to meet Vikas, the vampire teacher who will helps Vlad both read and control thoughts. But does Vlad want to control others’ minds? He’d better if he hopes to survive both the slayer and his enemies on the international vampire council.

Then Vlad might be able to answer the question: is he the Pravus, a vampire born of a human mother, who will rule the vampire world and enslave all humankind?

Quick, campy, but with lots of twists and turns.

Dead is a State of Mind by Marlene Perez  

Book 2 in the Nightshade High series

I already reviewed the first book in this series, Dead is the New Black (find review here), so without repeating background, let me get right to the point: Also fun.

I realize that I may be holding the Nightshade High series to a lower standard than I have some of the books I didn’t enjoy (recently Fire). But I think that’s because it doesn’t take itself too seriously—each book is a super-easy, short read with high school drama and even lots of mentions of good food. (Our heroine Daisy Giordano, is quite the cook.) No pretending to solve deep philosophical problems here.

In this round, one of the best-looking, most popular teachers at Nightshade High is murdered. In a town of shape shifters (most werewolves), suspects abound. And then there’s the new kid in town, Duke Sherrad, who is fabulously good looking and a fortune teller to boot. He’s living a t Penny’s house on a student exchange program, and while she has eyes for Duke, he’s lost on Daisy, who is immune to his charms. But wait—what about Ryan? Yes, he and Daisy are still together, but he’s acting withdrawn and strange, missing dates and refusing to say what’s wrong. Daisy has only that ‘mind of its own’ jukebox at the local café to spin its own choice of songs as a way of giving her clues.

Daisy does another good job of sleuthing, and her psychic powers are developing to the point that they rival her sisters’. The three girls still have a good relationship, and so when one of them falls in love with a ghost, Daisy is there for her. But in all this prying, the question of what really happened to the girls’ father surfaces. I’m guessing we have to read book 3.

Note: If you happen to be a skilled reader who like his or her vampires to be serious, bloodsucking murderers—ones who fit traditional vampire lore, I’m going to try to review The Historian by Elizabeth Kostova. I read it a few years back when it was a wild best seller. Now that is one good read on the supernatural!

        The Chronicles of Vladimir Tod by Heather Brewer

The Chronicles of Vladimir Tod is a series recommended to me for summer reading. I figured I’d get started early and read the first book: Eighth Grade Bites. It was a lot of fun—and it doesn’t matter that the main character, Vlad Tod is in eighth grade; you’ll still be able to relate to him. If that really bothers you, you could start with Ninth Grade Slays or Tenth Grade Bleeds. But I think you’ll have fun with the whole series, which goes on to include Eleventh Grade Burns and Twelfth Grade Kills.

Vlad has a lot of the usual school problems—he’s bullied, a girl he’s crushing on seems to like his best friend, and others consider him a ‘goth’ because he’s so pale. He’s actually half-vampire (his mom was a human), but he still has to wear sunscreen to go out during the day or the sun will burn him up. Since he has to drink blood, in elementary school, his mother had brought him lunch each day. Now that his parents are dead—they perished in a mysterious fire—his adopted aunt cooks up wacky meals with blood-gel centers, such as cupcakes. (Imagine that in the middle of your Twinkie.) And Aunt has ready access to blood because she’s a nurse and takes frozen supplies of blood that are about to reach their expiration date.

The only person beside his aunt that knows his secret is Henry, the best friend mentioned above. When the friends’ English teacher disappears (you, reader, know from the first pages that he has been killed), a new teacher (Mr. Otis) comes to town, and he seems to know something about Vlad’s vampire nature. He also seems to be hunting Vlad down along with another stranger.

Lots of this is funny—plenty of gags about bloody food, jokes between the friends about coffin arrangements, accidental garlic attacks. (If you enjoy puns, this book is a must.) And that’s why I liked it so much. Too many of these vampire/gothic romance YA books takes themselves waaaay too seriously. The Chronicles of Vladimir Tod doesn’t. Even so, there’s adventure, kidnapping, some suspense, and a neat resolution.

I have a long list of books to read this summer, but I’m going to get in at least one more Vladimir Tod—Ninth Grade Slays—because it’s too fun to quit just yet. Join me in reading this summer. It’s the easiest, most fun way of keeping your mind active during the break. Make a comment on this or any of the books I’ve suggested for summer reading!

Note: For the summer reading list, go to the blog post on summer reading.

Teen Book Fest

I had a great time at the Teen Book Fest last Saturday. All five of the authors spoke about their books, about how they came to be writers and how they managed to be published. The teens asked a lot of good questions. They asked about whether people compared the authors to Stephanie Meyer and whether they were envious of her success. They started a discussion of self-publishing.

All five authors were very gracious. They read excerpts from their novels, discussed upcoming books and offered hints to teens who want to be writers. One of the books about writing that they highly recommend is one I reviewed for Colony Library Lady a while back—Stephen King’s On Writing. (I just reposted it for Chaffey Library Lady because any teen writer will want to read it!)

At the end of the presentation, authors signed their books. I had my copies of Radiance by Alyson Noel that we earned at the book fair, and Noel signed those. I also bought more books in the Nightshade High series by Marlene Perez. In fact, I was able to buy the fifth book in the series, Dead is Not an Option, even though the release date isn’t until May 2. And, after hearing all the authors speak, I realized that I need to read Bad Girls Don’t Die by Katie Alender.

No Passengers Beyond This Point by Gennifer Choldenko   

No Passengers Beyond This Point is quick, an easy read, and very creative—it’s fun and out of the ordinary.

Three siblings—India, Finn and Mouse (all named after foreign countries–Mouse is actually Switzerland)—find out that their house has gone into foreclosure and their mother, lacking any more options, and needing to stay in California to complete the year as a school teacher, is going to pack them on a plane and send them to their Uncle Red in Colorado.

Of course, no one is happy. Self-centered India is going to miss her friends. Finn is a worrier and he thinks about leaving his basketball team behind, but he also stresses out over how difficult all this must be for his mother. (The children’s father is dead.) Mouse is too young to fully grasp what’s happening, although she’s incredibly bright for a five-year-old. She relies on her imaginary friend, Bing, to get by.

I was expecting a book where the siblings would deal with being the new kids in town—maybe they’d be bullied at the new school, maybe they wouldn’t be accepted. Instead, the plane experiences turbulence and it lands, after only an hour, in a place called Falling Bird. The kids are picked up in a feather-lined taxi, driven by a twelve-year-old with a fake mustache. O-K! We are in an alternate universe.

The first thing that each of the siblings gets is a dream home of his or her own, complete with a better-than-real-life parent. But that only lasts a day. The dream houses blow apart and the kids are homeless again.

Knowing that Finn, India and Mouse are in an alternate world from which they must escape makes the reader question the purpose of all the things in their world that they must confront. After their perfect dream houses explode, they are on a clock—with a deadline to get out safely or be stuck forever. You’ll start clicking through the oddities—what are all the black birds about? The black box? The dimes in the shoe? The white cat? How about the white courtesy phones that keep popping up as temptation all over the place? Does Mouse’s imaginary friend, Bing, have a purpose?

There are many clues—and to be honest, not all of them fit into the completed puzzle at the end of the book. Still, for those that do fit, you’ll have an ‘ah-ha’ moment.

This is a book for everyone—read it out loud to a younger brother or sister. The sinister aspects of the weird world of Falling Bird are only creepy. There’s no graphic violence or scariness. And there’s a great message about brothers and sisters—one worth sharing!

Note: Gennifer Choldenko also wrote Al Capone Does My Shirts, a popular book that you may have read. If not, it’s unusual and a lot of fun, too. It discusses family, and even autism, at a time when that spectrum was unrecognized.

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These are the last of the new book fair books. Thanks for your support! Come check one out!

 

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We’ve got new book-fair books ready for check-out. Have a look at these-and then come on over and check one out.

I just read Radiance, another of Alyson Noel’s novels. It’s a quick, fun read, and it ties in to the Immortals series because the main character is Riley, Ever’s sister. If you read Evermore, you know that Riley died along with Ever’s parents and dog in the accident early in the novel. So in Radiance, we find Riley in heaven—after she has finally stopped lingering in Summerland (between earth and heaven) where she could hang around and spy on Ever.

Heaven (called “Here”) has no time and is always in “Now.” Riley is surprised to find herself before the council, reviewing her life and finding it less than commendable. She feels like she’s being ‘punked.’ But Riley died so young that she still has some growing up to do, and in order to help her, the council decides she will be a soul catcher. In Radiance, she gets an assignment to help a boy who’s been haunting an English castle for centuries. She needs to make him understand that it’s time to cross over.

Radiance doesn’t have the mature-reader-only elements that many books on the supernatural do. Everyone can enjoy it. And better yet—it’s on the shelf at our book fair. If you bought it at COHS or have the chance to buy it at Chaffey (by lunch on Tuesday), be sure to bring your copy to the Teen Book Fest on Saturday and have Alyson Noel sign it. And don’t forget your camera!

The Teen Book Fest will be at the Ontario Senior Center from 1-4 PM this Saturday, April 16. Authors will have copies of their books for sale. See you there!

 

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