Monday, December 12, 2011

17. Good Girls

This book is about a "good" girl who does something "bad." Audrey has never done anything wrong, she gets good grades, her parents trust her, etc. And then a picture is taken of her at a party in a compromising position with a boy. And that picture causes her a ton of trouble, as one would expect. Everything resolves itself, culminating in an annoyingly happy and perfect ending.


I liked the book because it was a quick read. Audrey's group of friends was likable; they had very authentic voices and were described so perfectly that I could imagine the group sitting at a lunch table. However, the syntax of the book was very simple; just, easy writing. This normally wouldn't phase me, but I think it created a problem in this book. It felt like the writing was aimed at a younger group than the subject matter. And to me, that just felt weird. I liked the use of flashback. I think Ruby worked it into the 


While I didn't immensely enjoy this book, I didn't hate it either. I don't think I'd read it again and I wouldn't recommend it to anyone, especially with all the other amazing YA books out there.


Visit Laura Ruby's website *** Buy this book on Amazon

Thursday, November 24, 2011

16. The Book Thief

So I just finished reading Mark Zusak's The Book Thief. And omg. It was so good. I absolutely loved it. Zusak has an amazing way with words. I do love a book with quotable passages and this book abounded in them. There are also lots of bits where the narrator takes a step back to directly address the reader. I love that.


I absolutely give it a 5/5.






















Sunday, October 30, 2011

15. Scrambled Eggs at Midnight

My love for this book cannot be put into words. Suffice it to say that these two authors write perfectly together and that this book is about the mixture of Jesus fat camp and a Renaissance Faire. Also lots of quotable quotes. Loved it.

14. Foreign Exposure: The Social Climber Abroad

As with the first book in this series, I felt that I was a bit older than the target audience. I enjoyed this one quite a bit more, though. Perhaps it was the setting of first Berlin and then London. I do love London. Like the first book, this one definitely took advantage of its European location. I also loved the descriptions of Mimi's job at a gossip newspaper.

13. Wintergirls

A masterpiece by Laurie Halse Anderson. I lovelovelove Speak and I found Wintergirls to be similar to it. They both featured female narrators who were suffering. Both narrators had trouble with what they were going through. In Wintergirls, I particularly liked Lia's voice. She lied to both herself and the reader and the lies were clearly visible by the thoughts she had that were crossed out. I liked the ending - hopeful, uplifting, but not exceedingly happy.

12. Mockingjay

The third book in The Hunger Games series. I finished it with a sense of love for the characters that I haven't felt since Harry Potter. I liked that it wasn't a perfect ending. I liked that the epilogue didn't tie up all the strings with a nice little they-lived-happily-ever-after bow.

11. Catching Fire



The second book in the Hunger Games trilogy. I liked the first one more than the second, but this one was still very good all around.

10. Splendor

The final book in Anna Godbersen's Luxe series.


I loved the series, although this book seemed to be full of a lot more improbable details than the first three.


A great series, all in all.

9. Envy

The third book in Anna Godbersen's Luxe series.

8. Rumors

Finished Rumors, the second book in Anna Godbersen's Luxe series.

Monday, October 17, 2011

An update

Current status of my life: SO. BUSY. Omg. So much work.

Finished reading since last blog post: Rumors by Anna Godbersen; Foreign Exposure: The Social Climber Abroad by Laura Moser and Lauren Mechling; and Scrambled Eggs at Midnight by Brad Barkley and Heather Hepler. (That's books 8-10 of the challenge.)

Currently reading: Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins; Envy by Anna Godbersen; and City of Golden Shadow by Tad Williams

On the to-read list: Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins and Splendor by Anna Godbersen.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

7. The Luxe

The Luxe by Anna Godberson is the first book in a four-part series. I read this book and about half of its sequel about a year ago, but never quite had the time to finish the series. Last week, I saw all four books of the series sitting together on the library shelf. I knew I had to get them. So I got all four of them. This one took me about two days to read. I've already begun the second.

The Luxe is about the elite society of 1890s New York City. The main characters are two sisters, Elizabeth and Diana Holland; Henry Schoonmaker, Elizabeth's fiancee, who actually loves Diana; Will, a Holland family servant and Elizabeth's real love; Penelope Hayes, Elizabeth's best frenemy, who loves Henry; as well as a host of other minor characters like their servants and friends. Basically, everyone is in love but no one is allowed to publicly be in love with who they actually love. The Holland family is facing financial problems that are threatening to ruin them and their reputation - and in this time period of 1899, reputation is everything. Henry proposes to her because he needs his family to stay in the city's good graces; Elizabeth accepts because her family desperately needs money. As a result, Will leaves the Holland family to seek a fortune in California, telling Elizabeth to join him if she truly loves him. Penelope begins to develop a plan to get rid of Elizabeth so she can marry Henry. Diana doesn't know about Penelope's love for Henry, so she does her best to get Henry for herself. I guess that the entire book is a long, rather complicated love story.

I liked it.

I'm not usually one for love stories, but I liked these characters. I love the use of location in this book and I loved how descriptive it was. I had no problems imagining what the Hollands' dresses looked like or how Penelope's mansion looked.The chapters rotate points of view between the main characters, which I liked. It was interesting to see how the different characters reacted differently to everything that happened. Something I really didn't like was that the flow of the book got confusing at some times. On occasion, a character would say something and then immediately Godberson would spend a couple of paragraphs explaining scenery or an event or something and only then would the other character respond. In some parts, it read very much like a first novel, which it is. I can only hope that Godberson's writing improves over the next three books.

I'd give this book a 4/5. It was very good, but seemed at some time to be filled up with fluff.

Monday, October 10, 2011

6. The Hunger Games

What a freaking amazing book. I can't believe I haven't read it sooner. I picked it up on Friday night, round about 8pm and didn't get up until I had finished, at about 11pm. It was that good.

I'm completely exhausted, so I'm not going to leave a review tonight - I'll write it tomorrow.

Long story short: This book is fantabulous.

5. The Name of the Star

Okay, so I'm a little bit late on this review, but that's okay. I've just been crazy busy lately, especially since Yom Kippur was yesterday. Anyway. This is the first book in the Shades of London series. It's a paranormal story, which I'm not usually very fond of, but considering my love for MJ, I bought it. And not only did I buy it, but I pre-ordered it from Books of Wonder in NYC and received a signed copy of the book, a magnet set made by MJ herself, and a pin reading 'YA Saves.' To be quite honest, if not for the gifts and the excitement of having a book signed by MJ, I would have waited until the book was published, borrowed it from the library, and then buy it if I liked it enough. I would have bought it. I absolutely would have bought it.

I don't really like paranormal books. They're usually too Twilight-esque, with vampires and werewolves and stupid girls falling in love with said vampires and werewolves. There were no vampires or werewolves to be found in The Name of the Star. There were, however, plenty of ghosts, murders, and BRITISHNESS. I've talked before on this blog about how much I love location. This book most definitely made good use of its location in London, UK.

So it's about this girl named Rory from Louisiana who is going to school in London for a year while her parents do a residency at an English university. Everything is all fine and dandy and British until this serial killer shows up. He's murdering people in exactly the same way as Jack the Ripper did in 1888. The biggest problem is that even though there is a plethora of CCTV cameras around each murder site, no murderer is seen. I don't want to say anymore, for fear of ruining the rest of the book ;]

I had a couple of issues with this book that I've noticed before in MJ's books. There are occasions where the narrator mentions something that happened as a result of something else, except I don't remember reading about the first thing. Case in point: At some point in the book, Rory says something about her throat hurting from the vomiting. I had to flip back several pages to find the line where she was sick. It's not a big plot point, there wouldn't have been anything wrong with ignoring it and continuing the book, but I had to find the line where Rory first vomited. I don't know if this is an MJ problem or a me problem, but it bothered me nonetheless. Another problem I had with the book was cliche - the idea of having a British boarding school with a fun, quirky roommate, a mean girl who has some kind of power, and a hot British love interest just seems so overdone. But I still love those books. I can't put them down. It's just overdone.

Okay. This book gets a 4/5. I would recommend it to anyone who likes paranormal books that are not romances. Also anyone who likes YA literature.

Sunday, October 2, 2011

Berlin Nightlife

The train finally pulled into our station, and [Dagmar and I] stepped out into Ostbahnhof, a succession of brightly lit streets thrumming with elegant couples and teenage girls in short, expensive-looking dresses. On every street corner, men stood behind little carts, peddling aromatic pretzels. Though Mom and the Meyerson-Cullens were still in the same city, or at least one of its unprepossessing suburbs, right then I felt very far away from them, delightfully so.

The scenery grew dingier as we neared Friedrichshain, where nineteenth-century limestone buildings gave way to tan apartment complexes and shabby minimarkets. We passed a few places that seemed sool, including the Lee Harvey Oswald Bar, which was painted red and white and filled with monitors playing a loop of Kennedy's assassination. "That's where all the Americans conspire," Dagmar said with a note of disgust.

A few blocks later, I flipped for the Astro-Bar, a little hole in the wall with ancient computers hanging from the ceiling. "Look!" I said, peering inside. "This is so geeky - I love it! Can we go in?"

Saturday, October 1, 2011

4. The Rise and Fall of a 10th-Grade Social Climber

Okay, so this was kind of a cute book. I gotta admit, I'm a sucker for books that take place in exclusive private schools. And this one does feature a private school pretty heavily, although it's more ultra-progressive than exclusive. (No grades, people. No grades.) I also love that it used its setting of NYC so prominently.

So the book is about this girl, Mimi, who moves from Houston to NYC to live with her dad. She starts going to this school called Baldwin. She makes a bet with her childhood friend, Sam, to befriend the cool girls at Baldwin. So Mimi does just that, skipping school, smoking pot, drinking, and buying a fake ID to get herself into the good graces of the popular girls. She also keeps a journal of her endeavors - predictably, this journal ends up published online. But of course, Mimi is forgiven by the end of the book and it all ends happily ever after.

I really liked Mimi's difficult relationship with her mother; although it was very, very difficult, it was, to me, one of the most realistic parts of the book. I also liked that the popular girls at Baldwin didn't have the typical blonde, all-American look that popular girls in books usually have. Instead, they were very diverse. However, on the flip side, they had the same typical problems that rich girls in books always seem to have - f'ed-up family life, drug problems, etc. Not one of these girls was at all realistic. Also, secretly? I think Mimi's dad was gay. But that's just me.

My favorite character was Quinn, Mimi's dad's assistant. I also love that Mimi's dad is a photographer; I'm not sure why, but I really liked it.


All in all, I think this book gets a 3/5. It was a quick read and funny, but also very predictable.


(Can't find a website for Laura Moser now. Will update when I have one.)

Friday, September 30, 2011

Look-ee-loo

[Context: There is a flood. Cal (the narrator), has just seen many objects floating past her second-story window.]

"Not much we can do, I guess," [Abe] says, running a hand across his bare head. "The wall seems to be keeping the water out of here. At least for now." Someone shouts into a bullhorn, but it's too far away to hear the words. "Want to go look-ee-loo with me?"

"Want to what?" I ask, staring at him.

"You know, what to go up the street and stand around and say things like 'So, what's the situation?' and 'What are y'all doin'?'"

"Well, yeah," I say. "I'm sure they love that."

Fireworks

"I watched as he bent over the last one, my firework, and I fought the urge to tell him not to, to just leave it. I held my breath as he touched the glowing ember to the fuse and watched as the flame slowly crawled up the length of it and into the body of the firework. With a flash of light it launched into the sky, whizzing overhead in front of the moon and out over the lake. I heard the pop of the containment tube bursting from the pressure of the flame. I watched as one by one fountains of colors burst from the tube, first red, then white, then green, before the tube began to fall back to earth, gaining speed as gravity pulled at it. It disappeared behind the trees, making me lose sight of it, but I swear I felt its impact throughout my body as it hit the ground."

The Moon

"The moon is always falling toward us. It falls, gets caught in its orbit, falls, gets caught, falls, caught, all the time, constantly."

"Sounds like what people do."

Thursday, September 22, 2011

3. Confessions of a First Daughter

Okay, so I finished reading Confessions of a First Daughter by Cassidy Calloway over the weekend, but haven't had time to write about it until today. I got this book about two years ago, I think. It was on sale and looked interesting. I'm definitely not the target audience, though - even when I first bought the book, I was probably pushing it. It's a more middle-grade read.

The book is about a girl named Morgan who is the daughter of the youngest and female president of the US. It's about how she deals with being in the public eye, having a boyfriend who pushes her boundaries, and her budding feelings for her Secret Service Agent. My main problem with this book is that even though Morgan is eighteen, I feel like she's more of a tween-type character. Her only age-appropriate problem is her boyfriend pressuring her to have sex. In addition, her voice throughout the book seems much younger than eighteen. Morgan and her mom look very similar and when her mom, the president, needs to get away to deal with some African politics, Morgan stands in for her. It's a cute premise, if totally unrealistic. My favorite character in the book is probably Hannah, Morgan's best friend. She just seems very fun and a much more relatable and realistic character than Morgan herself.

The book is a quick read. Like I said, I'm not the target audience, and I think that made me read through it faster. I liked that it featured the presidency and the White House - I'm kind of drawn to that type of book.

All in all, I'd give it a 3/5.

(Also, I really like the shoes on the cover. I don't think I could pull them off, but still.)


Thursday, September 15, 2011

2. Will Grayson, Will Grayson

Okay, so this was my second time reading Will Grayson, Will Grayson. The first time I read it was about a month ago when I bought it. It's written by John Green and David Levithan; each wrote one character and the chapters switch back and forth between those characters' points of view. I've read books by both authors before and liked them, particularly Green's An Abundance of Katherines and Levithan's How They Met and Wide Awake. To be perfectly honest, I like Levithan's writing more. I liked Green's books, but Levithan's are the ones that I return to again and again. There's just something there that I feel Green's books lack, although I don't really know what that is.

Anyway. Will Grayson, Will Grayson. As the title suggests, the book is about two boys named Will Grayson. At first, their lives seem totally separate. Will Grayson (Levithan's character) is best friends with Tiny Cooper, who is "the world's largest person who is really, really gay." Then, you've got will grayson (written by Green)*. One night, Will Grayson goes into Chicago with Tiny to use his fake ID for the first time. That same night, will grayson goes to Chicago to finally meet a boy he's been talking to online for months. Their paths collide and will ends up spending the night wandering around Chicago with Tiny. Throughout the book, Tiny is writing and staging a musical about his life and how he grew up gay. The musical, entitled Tiny Dancer, is a source of contention between Tiny and Will, who is uncomfortable with how he is portrayed in the musical. In the end, Will Grayson comes to terms with the fact that he is a crucial part of Tiny's life and therefore must be in the musical; in addition, Tiny realizes that the musical will not be successful if it's solely about him and, as a result, he does some rewrites to make it about love. In the end, the musical is put on. Tiny and Will get into a fight, and so does Tiny and will. In the end, though, the relationships are healed and will grayson has a friend help him show Tiny just how much he is loved.

This book is about relationships. It's about Tiny Cooper falling in love with will grayson and about Will Grayson coming to terms with his friendship with Tiny. But the relationship I found most poignant was that of will grayson and his mother. Early on in the book, it seems like will is the typical teenage character who dislikes his parents - as the book continues, I slowly began to realize how much will and his mother care for each other, as messed up as both of their emotions are. The scene where will comes out to his mother is touching, but I think there was a more touching scene - toward the end of the book, will desperately needs to talk to someone. He calls his mom and there's just this sense of desperation. I don't really know how to explain it. It was just a touching scene.

Other aspects of the book that I enjoyed were the lyrics for Tiny's songs. The ones provided were very funny and I found myself wishing that it was a real musical. Just like in Dessen's Along for the Ride, I also enjoyed the multitude of quotable quotes. And finally I just have to say this: I. Freaking love. Tiny Cooper. What a fabulous character. He's just so confident and fabulous and caring and yet... he has flaws. He knows that he has flaws. At the end, he finally pours out his fears to will grayson. I love Tiny as a character.

I thoroughly enjoyed this book. It's a fun read and easy, although its simplicity is deceiving. On the surface, it's just about two boys with the same name. But underneath, it's about so much more. Both authors are very very good at writing for teens and their voices show through in this book.



* As Green says, will is a "lowercase person." As such, all chapters told from will's point of view are totally lowercased.

Falling

tiny: ... because everyone thinks it should be possible to just keep falling and falling forever, to feel the rush of the air on your face as you fall, that air pulling your face into a brilliant goddamned smile. and that should be possible. you should be able to fall forever.

and i think: no.

seriously. no.

because i have spent my life falling. not the kind that tiny's talking about. he's talking about love. i'm talking about life. in my kind of falling, there's no landing. there's only hitting the ground. hard. dead, or wanting to be dead, so the whole time you're falling, it's the worst feeling in the world because you have no control over it. because you don't know how it ends.

i don't want to fall. all i want to do is stand on solid ground.

and the weird thing is, i feel like i'm doing that now. because i am trying to do something good. in the same way that tiny is trying to do something good.

Doors

I'm waiting for him. To come out and apologize. Or else to come out and yell at me... I'm waiting for those dark wood double doors to open and for Tiny to blow through them and start talking.
I know it's immature, but I don't care. Sometimes you need your best friend to walk through the doors. And then, he doesn't.

Monday, September 12, 2011

Superstitions; love and truth

[original will grayson]: i know it sucks, but in a way, it's good.

this is about as inspirational as a movie of hitler making out with his girlfriend and having a good time. it runs afoul of what i call the birdshit rule. you know, how people say it's good luck if a bird shits on you? and people believe it! i just want to grab them and say, 'dude, don't you realize this whole superstition was made up because no one could think of anything else good to say to a person who'd just been shit upon?' and people do that all the time - and not with something as temporary as birdshit, either. you lost your job? great opportunity! failed at life? there's only one way to go - up! dumped by a boyfriend who never existed? i know it sucks, but in a way, it's good!

i'm about to strip o.w.g. of his right to be a will grayson, but then he goes on.

o.w.g.: love and truth being tied together, i mean. they make each other possible, you know?

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Good-bye

i do not say 'good-bye.' i believe that's one of the bullshittiest words ever invented. it's not like you're given the choice to say 'bad-bye' or 'awful-bye' or 'couldn't-care-less-about-you-bye.' every time you leave, it's supposed to be a good one. well, i don't believe in that. i believe against that.

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

1. Along for the Ride, by Sarah Dessen



So let's be clear on this. This is most definitely not the first time I've read Along for the Ride. It is, in fact, one of my favorite books by Sarah Dessen. It's got that mysterious male love interest, lots of quotable passages, and a girl riding a bike in a prom dress. There's a beach setting, a baby, and a trouble father/daughter relationship. Not to mention that it's set in Colby, a beach town in DessenWorld, and has several references to Dessen's other books.

The basic gist of the story is that Auden, the protagonist, is spending her last summer before college with her dad, 26-year-old stepmother, and half-sister. Auden's mother is a very respected professor at the university and a very judgmental feminist. She is the foil to Heidi, Auden's stepmother. There is a memorable scene about halfway through the book where Auden's mother shows up in Heidi's store where Auden is working and is disdainful of the abundance of pink, bikinis, perfume, makeup, etc. It is the moment in the story where Auden (finally!) realizes the differences between herself and her mother. Another key figure is Eli, Auden's love interest. Both insomniacs, Eli and Auden begin spending their nights together on a quest to give Auden childhood experiences she missed out on. Eli is mysterious; he pops up a couple times before Auden even knows who he is and there is none of that nonsense of the reader knowing more about him than Auden does. In typical Dessen fashion, there is a fallout between them and then a happy reunion.

Like all of Dessen's books, I loved the references to her other books. Two of Auden's close friends are characters from Keeping the Moon; the restaurant Auden goes to with her dad is where the main character from Keeping the Moon works. The necklaces from Lock and Key pop up; Heidi and Thisbie, her daughter, first showed up in What Happened to Goodbye. I love finding these references. I love how Dessen has created this whole world where all the characters are sort of connected through a Six Degrees of Separation-type thing. It's fun. I liked Dessen's characters. Even though she and I have no particular similarities, I found myself relating to Auden. I understood some of her problems, could even see myself in some of the same situations. Auden's friends, Isabel and Maggie and Leah and Adam, were very realistic. I have friends who are Adams, friends who are Maggie; I know people who are Isabels and people who are Leahs. Auden's brother, Hollis, was one of my favorite characters. Although he's not present for a lot of the book, I liked his interactions with Auden; he clearly loves her and they are good friends - similar to my relationship with my older brother.

I didn't have any major problems with this book. A lot of people often grow tired of Dessen's formula for her books, but I didn't find that a problem in this book. I liked it as a nice summer read. One thing I disliked was the choppy transitions from present-time to a flashback. At some points, I had to flip back and reread a page to figure out what train of thought led Auden to a flashback.

Monday, September 5, 2011

Company

"Auden?"
I jumped, then turned my head to see Maggie standing beside me. Her hair was blowing in the breeze, her bag over her shoulder. Behind her, the boardwalk was a row of lights, one right after the other.
"You okay?" she said. When I didn't respond, she added, "You seemed kind of sad when you left."
I had a flash of my mother, the dismissive way she'd looked at Maggie, the bikini bottoms, the Booty Berry [perfume], and then me, all of grouped in the category of Not to Her Liking. But it was vast, that place I'd struggled to avoid for so long, as wide and long as the beach where we were right then. And now that I finally found myself squarely in it, I realized I was kind of glad to have company.
"No," I said to her. "I don't think I am, actually."
I don't know what I expected her to do or say to this. It was all new to me, from that second on. But clearly, she'd been there before. It was obvious in the easy way she shrugged off her bag, letting it fall with a thump onto the sand, before sitting down beside me. She didn't pull me close for a big bonding hug, or offer up some saccharine words of comfort, both of which would have sent me running for sure. Instead, she gave me nothing but her company, realizing even before I did that this was, in fact, just what I needed.

The Best of Times

"Because you don't want The Best of Times to be just one thing, forever. You have to have lots of bests of times, each one topping the last."

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Okay, so what is this?

We've all heard of the 50-book challenge: Set a goal to read a set number of books in one year. All you do is read those books and keep a running list. If you still don't understand, go here.
Tonight, I clicked on a link from the Bookfessions tumblr page that took me to the above page. And I thought to myself, "hmm, I really would like to do this." Back in seventh grade, I had done this. I recorded the title and author of every book I read for a full year. But I haven't done it since then. And looking at people's lists on that link above, it made me really want to do this challenge. I knew I'd lose interest by the time the New Year rolls around. I also knew that starting now and going until September 2012 would annoy my OCD tendencies. (Not to mention, that I'd probably read half of the books or more over the summer!)

SO. Here's what I'm doing. I'm reading ninety books in nine months. September to June. That's my school year. That's an average of ten books a month. I'm a senior in high school, so things like college applications and homework will get in the way. That's okay, though. I'm pledging to read ninety books in nine months. That means I can read any number of books in any given month. I'm going to short review of the book when I finish and during the course of the reading, I'll probably also post quotes or other fun stuff.

Please feel free to email me with any questions! Also, explore the links on the sidebar, comment away, and don't be afraid to contact me. I'm nice, I promise ;)