Let me just say, this is not my type of book; would never have pulled it off the shelf; would never have read a review and thought I would enjoy it. BUT, I think highly of the teen librarian who recommended it (and it's a fairly short book) so I took it to expand my Young Adult reading....Not a horrible book.Actually, it's an interesting book that deals with an alternate/future(?) war and how the current generation might face it. Daisy is sent to live with cousins in England when a war breaks out. There, she lives a very different lifestyle to the one she's known in New York. However, this war arrives in England, and her now-family gets separated. Through starvation, abandonment, terror, and other symptoms of war, Daisy manages to get back to them, her now-home.
I liked the writing style, 1st person, where the reader is inside Daisy's teenage head. However, I was so fixated on which war was going on, that I probably missed a lot of points which flushed out the story. Regardless, the end is still ... poignant. (I hesitate to use that word but it kinda fits).Read Also:Margaret Rotkowski's After the Dancing Days is an emotional and physical look at war and how it affects the young, though not exactly the same type of book.Because I don't read this type of book, Stephan Crane's The Red Badge of Courage was comparable in emotional trauma.
Funny enough, it's a depressing version of When Irish Eyes are Smiling by Suzanne Supplee.
"Uh oh, think fast, rabbit." -Bugs Bunny
Monday, April 28, 2014
Wednesday, April 23, 2014
"Blood of Tyrants" -Naomi Novik
It's finally here. I've recommended this series multiple times for both Adult and Children's books. This is book 8 and still going strong... Temeraire, where dragons are tame. Lawrence, a naval captain, inadvertantly is bonded with a dragon upon it's hatching. He then becomes an aviator, fighting Napoleon and traveling all over the world.The last 2 books weren't as good as the first books but Blood of Tyrants starts out strong: Lawrence has amnesia and can't remember Temeraire. Oh, and he's also washed ashore in Japan. It comes back to him piecemeal, as they travel to Russia to be present for Napoleon's invasian. And remember the scorched earth policy, one of the few things I remember from social studies class? Yup, in the book!Read Also:Patrick O'Brien's Master and Commander series, though I've never read it, sounds like it reads the same. The writing style is a little more sophisticated. Also, Napoleon, naval ships, it's all there except the dragons.E. M. Forester's Hornblower series is also same sans dragons.For the kids, How to Train Your Dragon by Cressida Cowell.
Labels:
Adult,
dragons,
fantasy,
Napoleonic,
parallel universe
Monday, April 7, 2014
"Beautiful Lego" - Mike Doyle
It's a picture book for adults!! If you like LEGO... If you're fascinated by LEGO... If you play with LEGO... If you create with LEGO... This is an amazing book of what can be done with LEGO.
It's a collection of works from LEGO creators around the world. There some interview and a lot of cool pictures!By the way, that is a LEGO structure on the cover. Yeah, I had to look close when I realized that.Read Also:Logo Life by Ron von der Vlugt.Other People's Rejection Letters by Bill Shapiro.There's a book out there that I can't get at a library (yet) but I'm excited to read called Bookshelf by Alex Johnson. It's about bookshelves as art.
It's a collection of works from LEGO creators around the world. There some interview and a lot of cool pictures!By the way, that is a LEGO structure on the cover. Yeah, I had to look close when I realized that.Read Also:Logo Life by Ron von der Vlugt.Other People's Rejection Letters by Bill Shapiro.There's a book out there that I can't get at a library (yet) but I'm excited to read called Bookshelf by Alex Johnson. It's about bookshelves as art.
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