Sunday, July 19, 2009

Three Songs for Courage

Three Songs for Courage by Maxine Trottier is not my favorite book. I got three chapters in and it was inappropriate and shallow. As of now I have only abandoned two books. So I'm serious about this book being bad. Don't read it. That is my advice.

Friday, July 17, 2009

Same Difference

I enjoyed Same Difference by Siobhan Vivian quite a bit. It's about a girl (Emily) who goes to a summer program for art. She begins to feel unsatisfied with her life at home and changes herself. Unfortunately her "new look" is unwelcome at home and her old one is unacceptable for art classes. Emily learns about herself, her art, and who her real friends are.
Siobhan Vivian did well to make the characters realistic and 3D. I wondered through the whole book which person Emily would be and who she would choose to be her friend. I would give Same Difference an 8 and say people 13 and up could read it.
-Jojo

Thursday, July 16, 2009

The Diary Of Mattie Spenser

I read The Diary of Mattie Spenser by Sandra Dallas while at camp. My fellow campers were constantly telling me to put my book down and join in the conversation. I would not put it down it was just that good. Sandra Dallas really is an excellent author. Her stories are complicated webs that all connect somehow and not just in The Diary of Mattie Spenser, but throughout all her books. I also listened to Prayers For Sale (which I recommend just as much as The Diary of Mattie Spenser). There are main characters in Prayers For Sale that get mentioned in The Diary of Mattie Spenser which I thought was very cool.
The Diary of Mattie Spenser is about a girl who gets married and moves to "the Colorado territory" in 1865. Mattie deals with everything a Colorado woman can imagine dealing with, from Indians to dirty neighbors. Through Mattie's diary you get to know her and grow with her during her life on the prairie. Both Prayers for Sale and The Diary of Mattie Spenser are high school through adult books.
-Jojo

Trouble

Trouble by Gary D. Schmidt was awesome. It's hard to describe, but I'll try. Trouble is about a boy who has had a very easy life until his brother gets hit by a car being driven by a Cambodian boy. Henry (the boy) tries to deal with his brother being in the hospital while a racial "war" starts at school and in the community. And thus begins the random weird paragraphs at the end of chapters that don't seem like Henry's thinking. So who is it? And what are they talking about?
Read Trouble. That's all I can really say.
-Jojo