Showing posts with label friendships. Show all posts
Showing posts with label friendships. Show all posts

Monday, May 9, 2011





                                                                                                                                
Fat Cat
by Robin Brande

       Catherine may be really overweight, but she's also really smart.  She is in all AP classes with most of the same students every period, including Matt McKinney, her ex-best friend.  Her hardest class of the school year will be Mr. Fizer's Special Topics in Research Science class, where she is given a picture which will be the basis for a year-long research project.  For a student like Cat, who wants to go to a top-tier college, this project could be the thing that makes the difference between just passing the class and getting an outstanding recommendation and scholarship.  When Cat looks at the picture she has chosen, her heart sinks.  It is the picture of prehistoric people, naked and eating raw meat.  They are slim and muscular.  The woman appears strong and capable of hunting and taking care of herself--everything Cat isn't.  Cat stares at this picture most of the time she has to come up with her project proposal.  Her mind is blank.  The time is nearly up when she realizes exactly what she wants to do.  She will become her own project.  She will transform herself into a prehistoric woman--eat what they ate, live as closely to their lifestyle as it was practical to do.   For 207 days, Cat would eat vegetarian, walk most places, and live without her technology.  And at the end, she knew she would be a new person!  With the help of her best friend Amanda, Cat changes in just about every way possible, and gains the self-confidence she lost four years ago when she was betrayed.
       Funny, thought-provoking, and challenging, Fat Cat is a great novel for any teen, but especially for those who want to make themselves into someone better.  On the 2012 Texas Lone Star Reading list.  
       ~reviewed by Mrs. Sams 

Friday, April 29, 2011

The Total Tragedy of a Girl Named Hamlet   by Erin Dionne

    Being invisible to anyone who might make your life miserable, or even uncomfortable, is the goal of many junior high students.  Nothing could be worse than saying the wrong thing, and opening up yourself to humiliation.  So, you don't say anything at all. You don't want to attract the negative attention of your teachers, so you do your best to pass your classes.  On the other hand, you don't want to be considered a geek by fellow students, so you certainly can't do really well in your classes. You must wear the same kind of clothes as everyone else, like the same music, watch the same TV shows, and generally do your best to fly under the radar.
     Such is the goal of Hamlet Kennedy.  Her higest wish is to have a good, normal 8th grade year.  She never could have imagined how difficult that would prove to be. It was bad enough that she has the strangest family anywhere, but now it appears that her genius 7 year-old sister will be attending her school to take some fine arts classes.  Can life get any worse?  An appearance in Renaissance garb by her Shakespeare-loving parents, a befriending of her little sister by her two worst enemies, and a secret admirer who keeps putting origami pigs in her locker say yes!
    A fun, light-hearted story, The Total Tragedy of a Girl named Hamlet, hits the nail on the head when describing the troubles and anxiety of an 8th-grade girl. On the 2011 Texas Lones Star list, and available in the library.
                    ~reviewed by Mrs. Sams
   

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

dirty little secrets
by c.J. omololu

        Lucy, a high school junior, lives every minute of the day with a shameful secret.  She spends much of her energy just keeping her real life hidden from everyone she knows.  Her secret is something she has endured for as long as she can remember.  Her older brother and sister lived with it too, until they graduated from high school and escaped.  Now Lucy just has to hang on for another year-and-a-half, and she can escape too.  But most of the time it seems like she just can't make it that long.  For almost the first time in her life, she has a best friend, and a maybe boyfriend.  She believes she would lose them forever if they found out how she and her mother live--if they saw the mounds of junk, newspapers, and rotting garbage her mother collects and refuses to throw away inside their house.
       One day Lucy comes home to find her mother's dead body lying on the hallway floor.  She realizes her carefully hidden life will be revealed to the world if she calls 911.  Her dream of living a normal life will be over when she brings in the authorities.  Lucy is just not willing to give up the dream.  It is up to her to decide what to do and to deal with the situation all alone...
              ~reveiwed by Mrs. Sams

Wednesday, December 8, 2010


The Exiled Queen
by Cinda Williamas Chima

At the end of The Demon King, Book One of the Seven Realms series, Han Alister has learned that he is a wizard whose powers have been suppressed by the silver cuffs he's always worn on his wrists.  The clan leaders take the cuffs off his wrists and promise him an education at the Wizard's school in Oden's Ford in exchange for his vow to help them fight their enemies when called upon.  His long-time clan friend, Dancer goes with him. 

Princess Raisa meanwhile, flees from a coerced marriage to Micah Bayer, son of the High Wizard.  Accompanied by her friend and guard Amon Byrne and his cadets, Raisa heads to Wein House, the military school in Oden's Ford, at the advice of Amon's father, to receive the military and political training she needs to effectively perform her duties as queen.

Both journeys are filled with dangers and discomforts, but Han and Raisa arrive safely in Oden's Ford to begin classes in their separate schools.  Though they have met in the past, neither knows the other is in Oden's Ford, and Han knows Raisa only as Rebecca Morley, a blueblood he met back in the Fells.

While at Mystwerk, Han must constantly watch his back, as Micah Bayer, Han's sworn enemy, repeatedly tries to kill him.  To protect himself, Han begins meeting with a powerful and mysterious wizard named Crow, to learn more advanced magic.  Raisa excels in her classwork and puts up with the confining rules Amon has placed on her for her own protection.  Their relationship becomes more complicated and tense as Raisa realizes that they can never marry.  Raisa constantly worries about her mother the queen and what is hppening back in her queendom.

Everything changes when Han and Raisa meet and Han convinces the princess he knows only as Rebecca Morley to tutor him in blueblood customs and history.  As Raisa teaches, Han takes on more polished speech and manners without losing his street smarts.  For her part, Raisa begins to fall in love with Han.

An abduction and impending forced marriage of Raisa by Micah Bayer, and a summons back to the clan camps of Han, delivered by Bird, sends both on separate and treacherous journeys back to their homeland.  Neither knows whether all they have learned in Oden's Ford is enough to ensure their safe arrival, or what they will find if they do manage to make it home.  Chima has given her readers a true cliff-hanger in this second installment of the Demon King series.  According to her website, we have to wait until September 2011 before The Gray Wolf Throne, the third in the Seven Realms series is published.  I love this series!  It's going to be a long year.       ~reviewed by Mrs. Sams

Monday, November 29, 2010

Mockingjay
by Suzanne Collins

In this final installment of the Hunger Games trilogy, Katniss Everdeen grudingly settles into life and training in the underground District 13 facility, accepting the role of the Mockingjay, symbol of the rebellion against the Capitol. Her agreement to be that symbol comes with a number of conditions, most of which irritate President Coin, District 13's leader. Kat's home District 12 has been destroyed by the Capitol, and she feels angry and used by leaders of the rebellion. Only two things keep her motivated--the possibility of saving Peeta who has been captured, and most of all, her intense hatred of President Snow, and her determination to kill him. Kat's life becomes even more confusing and heartbreaking when Peeta is rescued, but has been tortured and brainwashed into believing Katniss is his mortal enemy. At the same time, her relationship with Gale becomes more strained, by the day.

With political intrigue and emotional upheaval the background for this conclusion to the Hunger Games saga, Katniss and the rebel forces enter the Capitol in the dead of winter, fighting their way to the President's mansion in the city center, where finally, the carnage causes Katniss to rethink her mission and do the unthinkable. An amazing end to a an action-packed series.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

The
Hunger Games
by Suzanne Collins
It's Reaping Day again in Panem, and every person in each of the 12 districts is required by the government to dress in his or her best clothes and appear in the city square for the lottery. Two teenagers from each of the districts, one boy and one girl, will be chosen for the annual Hunger Games, a contest among the 24 teenagers from all the districts, televised across the country. The Hunger Games, is just one way that the Capitol wields its power over its citizens, for everyone is afraid their child, or their friend, will be chosen, and no one is powerful enough to resist. This year, 12--year-old Prim is chosen, but her older sister, Katniss immediately volunteers to take her place. Katniss and Peeta, the baker's son, leave that day for the Capitol, a place of unimaginable luxury, where they, along with the other contestants from the other districts are pampered and fed and coached for days before the games begin. But none of the riches they are given can really ease the terror of what they will encounter when the Hunger Games commence. For the Hunger Games is a challenge to the death, and only one teen can be the victor!
This dystopian novel is reminiscent of Shirley Jackson's story, The Lottery, with elements of Big Brother in Orwell's 1984. Panem is a frightening future North America, the land area vastly reduced because of global warming, flooding, natural disasters, and war. But the main characters are strong, appealing survivors, and the action runs the gamut from sweet and touching acts of selflessness to brutal savagery, with the government being the true bad guy. I loved this book! It has everything a good read should have, and the best thing of all is that the sequel , Catching Fire, is every bit as good as the first. The Hunger Games is on last year's American Library Association's Top Ten best books for young adults, and Mockingjay, the final installment of this trilogy, has just come out and will be available in the LVJH library. The Hunger Games trilogy is a must read! --reviewed by Dail Sams

Friday, September 3, 2010




Vampire Kisses
by Ellen Schreiber


Raven Madison is the strangest girl in town.  Goth girl and vampire obsessed, she is convinced that vampires are real and it's her highest dream to become one.  Needless to say, in a small conservative town, she doesn't have many friends.  Only painfully shy farm girl, Becky, will put up with her weird ways, and that is because Raven became her champion when the other kids tormented Becky in elementary school.   Life in "Dullsville"  is borderline unbearable for Raven until the new people move into the dilapidated mansion on the hill.  They are oviously rich because the parents are always flying off on trips, they have a butler who does all the shopping in town, and an expensive car sits in the driveway.  But to Raven, the most fascinating person in the family is the teenaged son who only comes out at night.  Devilishly handsome, Alexander Sterling has captured Raven's imagination, and she is convinced he is really a vampire.  She is determined to meet him and wants nothing more than to receive his "vampire's" kiss.  Raven gets her wish, but the result is not exactly what she expected!  Vampire Kisses is book one in a series by the same name. Read more for the further adventures of Raven and Alexander!
                   ~reviewed by Mrs Sams