Sunday, August 22, 2010


Heroes Don't Run
by Harry Mazer

      Adam Pelko's father was killed at Pearl Harbor when the Japanese attacked the Hawaian naval base in December of 1941.  He's been aching to join the marines ever since, so he can fight for his country and avenge his father's death.  In 1944, the summer before his senior year in high school, he talks his mother into letting him visit his grandfather who lives across country, because he knows his grandfather will allow him to enlist in the Marines even though he is still under age.  Adam has a pretty unrealistic view of what fighting in the war will be like, and can't even imagine not coming back.  During boot camp, he gets a small taste of army discipline, but it's not until he lands on Okinawa that he finally fully understands the terror and crushing heartbreak of war.  Heroes Don't Run is a realistic historical novel of the Pacific during World War II, and Adam Pelko is a character most teens can identify with.  Chosen by the Greater Waco Chamber for its One Book One Waco community read this fall, Heroes Don't Run is a timely and appealing story.   --reviewed by Mrs. Sams


Saturday, August 7, 2010


POP
by Gordon Korman

     Sixteen year-old Marcus has moved cross country with his mother following his parents' divorce.  He wants nothing more than to make the varsity football team in the quarterback position at his new school.  The problem is that last year's team was undefeated and they lost only a few players to graduation. Everyone in town is counting on a second perfect season.  The team is set, and neither the coach nor the quarterback want to rock the boat by adding new players.  However, the coach is willing to give Marcus a shot, so he spends several hours everyday practicing his passing in a local park.  Early on, Charlie, a middle-aged local character, starts meeting Marcus at the park.  This guy obviously knows football, and teaches Marcus more about the game, especially how to tackle and be tackled, than he's ever learned before.  But Charlie is one strange guy and everyone in town just cheerfully puts up with his antics.  When Marcus finds out that Charlie is not only a retired NFL player, but also quarterback Travis Popovich's dad, he is more perplexed than ever.  Marcus makes the team, but has a running feud going with Travis, an extremely confusing relationship with the head cheerleader, and an even crazier relationship with Charlie Popovich.  Pop is a great sports read with much more than football going on.  Author Gordon Korman has written a winner with this Texas Lone Star title.    --reviewed by Mrs. Sams


Tuesday, August 3, 2010



The Case of the Gypsy Good-bye
by Nancy Springer

 In this sixth installment of the Enola Holmes mystery series, Springer has her teen sleuth investigating the disappearance of Lady Blanchefleur del Campo, a beautiful and wealthy lady who was spirited away by a begging old lady down the city subway.  In addition, Enola receives a mysterious package covered with gypsy drawings, delivered to her by her famous brother, Sherlock Holmes, with whom she has developed a fragile relationship.  The package is obviously from her mother who disappeared a year earlier, leaving 14 year-old Enola to her own devices.  The package contains ribbons of paper with writing upon them, which must be deciphered before the message can be read.   With some misgiving, Enola teams up with her two brothers, Sherlock and Mycroft, to solve the mystery of Lady Blanchefleur, which involves slogging through the filthy underground tunnels of the London subway system. She also recognizes how to read her mother's letter which contains a startling message.  Enola shows her usual ingenuity in solving the crime, and the  reconciliation with her two brothers adds an interesting subplot to an already appealing series.  This novel stands alone, but would be better if the reader is familiar  with the other titles in the series.  --reviewed by Mrs. Sams                                                                          

Wednesday, July 28, 2010




THE MAZE RUNNER
By James Dashner

When Thomas wakes up in the dark lift, he remembers nothing about himself except his first name.  When the lift doors open, he is encircled by the faces of boys, maybe 50 or 60 boys, standing in an open glade.  Thomas has a million questions, but the leaders don't seem to be too patient.  However, over the course of several days, he discovers that he has been sent to a place which is enclosed by enormous stone walls.  Every morning, huge doors in the walls open on all four sides of the enclosure, and every evening the doors close.  The boys tell him the walls are for their protection because outside the walls in the maze that surrounds the compound, roam huge terrible bio-mechanical monsters call Grievers.
        Life inside the walls is highly organized with everyone having a specific job.  Supplies come up the lift on a regular basis, and once a month, a new boy arrives.   None of the boys know why they are there, but they believe they are there to figure out how to escape from the maze.  It's all a huge test; everything rests on the ability of the maze runners to figure out where the escape route is.  When there's a new arrival to the glade just one day after Thomas arrives, the first girl ever, the Gladers realize that everything is about to change and that the stakes are higher than ever.  A science fiction novel filled with tense action and terrifying mystery, The Maze Runner is book one of a series, and the reader is left guessing what else can possibly go wrong with the Gladers.  On this year's Texas Lone Star list.  
       --reviewed by Mrs. Sams

Sunday, July 18, 2010





girlfriend material
by Melissa Kantor

Kate's mom has dragged her off to Cape Cod for the summer even though Kate was convinced this would be the best summer of her life at home in Salt Lake City practicing tennis and taking a writing class.  The one positive of this trip is that she would get to see Sarah, daughter of her mother's best friends, a girl she had a great time knowing several years ago.  Unfortunately,  Sarah let Kate know within one minute of seeing her that she really wasn't interested in being friends. 
            Kate has never had a boyfriend before and really doesn't consider herself "girlfriend material."  When she meets Adam at the club, she begins to have a different opinion of herself, and summer at Cape Cod suddenly seems like a good idea.  Told in Kate's entertaining voice, Girlfriend Material is typical chick lit which would border on silly if it weren't for the serious background story of Kate's parents' possible divorce and the struggles of a first love.  This is a quick fun read which most girls will enjoy.  On this year's Texas Lone Star list.    --reviewed by Mrs. Sams

Friday, July 16, 2010


THE DEMON KING
By Cinda Williams Chima

        A fast-paced fantasy inhabited by a strong-willed princess and an impoverished street rat constantly running from one danger to the next, The Demon King is Book One of a series which promises to be filled with evil wizards, warring clans, secret amulets, unrequited love, and powerful magic--everything I love best in a good story.  Princess Raisa has spent the last few months preparing for her naming celebration, the day she turns 16 and becomes eligible for marriage.  Suitors from all over the kingdom have arrived and sent gifts in hopes of winning Raisa's favor. Her queen mother seems to be under the influence of Gavan Bayar, the High Wizard, a man Raisa does not trust.  Meanwhile, Han Alister has had a run-in with Micah Bayer, the son of the high wizard, and takes Micah's ancient and powerful amulet.  Once he has this magical charm, trouble seems to follow Han everywhere. 
       The night of Raisa's party, after most of the guests have left, her mother sends for her and she realizes that her instincts about the High Wizard were true.  Her mother and Gavan Bayer intend to force Raisa into a secret marriage with Micah Bayer.  With trickery and a little luck, Raisa escapes the castle with Amon, her childhood friend and guard, going into exile to escape the unwanted marriage and the influence of the High Wizard.  When Han is told that silver cuffs which have been around his wrists his entire life were placed there to control his magical powers, he agrees to have them removed and to go to Oden's Ford for wizard's training.  The story ends with Raisa and Han heading toward a common destination with dangers both behind and ahead of them both.  Good news!  The sequel, The Exiled Queen is coming out in September.  The Demon King is on this year's Lone Star list.  Highly recommended.    --reviewed by Mrs. Sams

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

INCARCERON
by Catherine Fisher

     Here is a darkly fascinating tale about Finn, a young man who lives in a vast, metallic prison world of hunger, sickness, and teachery called Incarceron. Finn has no memories earlier than three years before, when Gildas, the local wise man, finds him, but Finn is convinced he's from Outside, though the prison has been sealed for centuries. When the Comitatus, Finn's ragtag gang and family, raid another group, Finn captures a woman who has seen the tattoo on his wrist, and knows of the crystal key which also has the same eagle image. Gildas believes the key will unlock the way out of the prison. He, Finn, Finn's oathbrother, Keiro, and Attia, an abused girl, begin on the the journey out of Incarceron, discovering multiple powers of the crystal key as they go. For one thing, the key is a communication device to Claudia, the privileged girl on the Outside who holds the matching key, and is the daughter of the feared Warden of Incarceron.
     While Finn and his companions make their perilous journey through the prison, Claudia is involved in an intrigue of her own, as she seeks to find a way into the prison to save Finn, and to avoid marriage to the weak heir to the throne. This story is filled with twists and unexpected turns until finally the reader is left dangling with multiple unresolved plotlines. This is a story begging for a sequel. The London Times calls Incarceron one of the best fantasy novels written for a long time. It certainly is one of the most imaginative and unusual.
                  ~reviewed by Mrs. Sams

The Case of the
Bizarre Bouquets
by Nancy Springer

In this third installment of the Enola Holmes mystery series, the famous Dr. Watson goes missing from the London streets, and 14-year-old Enola Holmes, Sherlock's precocious younger sister, investigates his disappearance.  To aid in her search, and to stay hidden from her brothers, Enola must reinvent herself into a beautiful, stylish lady.  Her disguise is perfect.  Enola passes herself off as a former patient of Dr. Watson, and visits his wife in an effort to get the information she needs to find the good doctor.  While in Watson's home, she notices a bizarre bouquet of flowers and plants which provides the clues she needs to begin her investigation.  Enola's knowledge of herbology, her street smarts, and her ability to decode ciphered messages, saves the day as she encounters a crazy woman who has no nose and travels around the city incognito.  Springer has created an appealing character in Enola Holmes and a surprisingly intricate mystery for so short a book.  It woulde have helped somewhat to have read the first two books in this series.  Questions like "why is Enola hiding from her family?" and "where does she get her money to live?" were probably answered in those first installments.  However, The Case of the Bizarre Bouquets is a fun read even without those answers. A title on this year's Texas Lone Star List.                         --reviewed by Mrs. Sams The Case of theBouquets