Showing posts with label Book Gorge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book Gorge. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Book Gorge (21)

Book Gorge is a list of "to-be released" books that I want to read. This is a great opportunity to grab a pen and jot down these books! Till next week, wish big and happy reading...
February 
Strings Attached by Judy Blundell
(Read my review of What I Saw and How I Lied)
Mystery; New York 1950s; mob lawyer
Anya's War by Andrea Alban
This book in a few words:
World War II; Jewish girl; Shanghai; Amelia Earhart
Fallen Grace by Mary Hooper
Victorian London; fraud and scandal; sisters; funeral parlor
Trapped by Michael Northrop
Blizzard; seven trapped teens; one decision
March
(You can find my review of the first book HERE)
Pirates; disguised cabin boy; brutal adventure 

---Book Gorge is in original creation by BLT

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Book Gorge (20)

I'm still alive and blogging! Yesterday I went to the Phoenix Library which is five stories high and has an entire half a floor dedicated to teen books! Gaaa! I can't wait to go back and sign up for the summer reading program. I'll talk more about what I saw and did there on Reader Rally next Sunday. Didn't have too much time to put this post together so I randomly picked some reads that I just found to include. I don't know, maybe last minuet finds are even more exciting. What about you? See anything that you've never seen before?
The Healing Spell - Kimberley Griffiths Little (July 1, 2010)
Twelve-year-old Livie is living with a secret and it's crushing her. She knows she is responsible for her mother's coma, but she can't tell anyone. It's up to her to find a way to wake her momma up.
Stuck in the middle of three sisters, hiding a forbidden pet alligator, and afraid to disappoint her daddy, whom she loves more than anyone else, Livie struggles to find her place within her own family as she learns about the powers of faith and redemption. Livie's powerful, emotional, and sometimes humorous story will stay with readers long after the last line is read.
Set in the lush bayou of Louisiana, Kimberley Griffiths Little brings Livie's story to life with power and grace.

Blindsided - Priscilla Cummings (July 8, 2010)
[author of Red Kayak]
In many ways, Natalie O’Reilly is a typical fourteenyear- old girl. But a routine visit to the eye doctor produces devastating news: Natalie will lose her sight within a few short months.Suddenly her world is turned upside down. Natalie is sent to a school for the blind to learn skills such as Braille and how to use a cane. Outwardly, she does as she’s told; inwardly, she hopes for a miracle that will free her from a dreaded life of blindness. But the miracle does not come, and Natalie ultimately must confront every blind person’s dilemma. Will she go home to live scared? Or will she embrace the skills she needs to make it in a world without sight?


The Fool's Daughter - Celia Rees (July 20, 2010)
[author of Pirates!]
Young and beautiful Violetta may be of royal blood, but her kingdom is in shambles when she arrives in London on a mysterious mission. Her journey has been long and her adventures many, but it is not until she meets the playwright William Shakespeare that she gets to tell the entire story from beginning to end. Violetta and her comic companion, Feste, have come in search of an ancient holy relic that the evil Malvolio has stolen from their kingdom. But where will their remarkable quest—and their most unusual story—lead? In classic Celia Rees style, it is an engrossing journey, full of political intrigue, danger, and romance. This wholly original story is spun from Shakespeare's Twelfth Night, and includes both folly and suspense that would make the Bard proud.


Heart of a Samurai - Margi Preus (August 1, 2010)
In 1841, a Japanese fishing vessel sinks. Its crew is forced to swim to a small, unknown island, where they are rescued by a passing American ship. Japan’s borders remain closed to all Western nations, so the crew sets off to America, learning English on the way. 
Manjiro, a fourteen-year-old boy, is curious and eager to learn everything he can about this new culture. Eventually the captain adopts Manjiro and takes him to his home in New England. The boy lives for some time in New England, and then heads to San Francisco to pan for gold. After many years, he makes it back to Japan, only to be imprisoned as an outsider. With his hard-won knowledge of the West, Manjiro is in a unique position to persuade the shogun to ease open the boundaries around Japan; he may even achieve his unlikely dream of becoming a samurai.
Hothouse - Chris Lynch (August 24, 2010)
[author of Inexcusable]
Hundreds of YA books deal with the loss of a parent, but few situate that grief within a community as expertly as Lynch's latest. When we meet 17-year-old Russ, his dad is already dead. A member of the beloved local firehouse known as the Hothouse, he was one of two firefighters killed during an attempted rescue. The town opens its heart to the men's two sons: their money is no good anywhere, beers are handed to them at parties, and the word hero is applied not just to their fathers but to them as well. But did the town rush to lionize its fallen? As the truth of the fatal incident begins to eke out, Russ finds himself staring down a very different possibility. Lynch fully commits to the first-person voice, giving into Russ second-by-second conflicts and contradictions. The author also has a strong grasp of the garrulous slaps and punches that make up many male relationships Russ's friendships are so real they hurt. The story hurts, too, but that's how it should be.

Book Gorge is an original feature created by Books and Literature for Teens.


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Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Book Gorge (19)

Book Gorge is a list of "to-be released" books that I want to read. This is a great opportunity to grab a pen and jot down these books! Till next week, wish big and happy reading...(Book Gorge is in original creation by BLT
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It's such a nice day today–no wind [yes!]. Despite my terrible allergies I went for a walk this morning, drank some Irish Breakfast Tea (yes, the Irish have their own tea), and now I don't feel like working on my English paper. I think I'll give my poor itchy cat a bath instead......then maybe I'll consider sitting back down in front the computer screen. Hope you find some books that interest you; I know I have:
The View from the Top by Hillary Frank (May 13th, 2010)
Eighteen-year-old Anabelle’s last few months in her coastal hometown are bittersweet. Instead of the quiet precollege summer she expects, Anabelle makes some surprising discoveries about herself as she navigates romantic entanglements and changing friendships. Through shifting points of view in seven interconnected stories, we glimpse the limits of how well her friends really know Anabelle . . . and how little she grasps about the way they see her.
With wry observations and quirky humor, critically acclaimed novelist Hillary Frank gives voice and depth to six unique characters whose stories intertwine to form a complete picture of one shared summer.
Choppy Socky Blues by Ed Briant (now in bookstores!)
Jason Smallfield's dad is every kid's ultimate role model—a movie stuntman with a black belt in karate. But to Jason, he's a top-ranking creep for lying and chucking his family. To help make sure he ends up nothing like his dad, Jason is doing all he can to be as different from him as humanly possible. And that means giving up the one thing he loves most: karate.
His plan to be a non-creep is going well until he meets Tinga, a beautiful girl who tells him that she's testing for her blue belt soon. After sputtering that he's about to test for the same rank, Jason realizes he's in deep trouble. Because there's only one person who can get him ready in time . . . 
Motorcycles, Sushi, and One Strange Book (Real Life series #1) by Nancy Rue (May 1, 2010)
Four girls are brought together through the power of a mysterious book that helps them sort through the issues of their very real lives. While family dinners and vacations to touristy destinations are ordinary events for her 'normal' friends, fifteen-year-old Jessie Hatcher's normal life means dealing with her ADHD and her mother's bipolar disorder. So why is Jessie shocked when the unexpected happens? Now her 'normal' includes living in Florida with the father she always thought was dead and learning the secrets of sushi from a man who teaches by tormenting her. Life isn't any saner with her dad, but a cute guy and a mysterious book might just be the crazy Jessie needs.
Boyfriends, Burritos, and an Ocean of Trouble (Real Life series #2) by Nancy Rue (May 1st, 2010)
A mysterious book unites four teen girls and unlocks the secret that will get each of them through the real-life struggles they face in their lives. Bryn O'Connor is good at keeping secrets. But when a car accident reveals the marks of her boyfriend's physically abusive behavior, the truth is unleashed. And it starts a tidal wave of trouble in Bryn's life: enemies who were once friends, a restraining order violation, and her world unraveled. If that weren't enough, her grandmother Mim arrives, attempting Mexican cuisine and insisting that Bryn try surfing. It's all too much! Even Bryn's habit of daydreaming won't offer an escape this time. But could a mysterious old book she found hold the secret to riding a tsunami like her life?
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Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Book Gorge (18)

Book Gorge is a list of "to-be released" books that I want to read. This is a great opportunity to grab a pen and jot down these books! Till next week, wish big and happy reading...(Book Gorge is in original creation by BLT


I haven't done a Book Gorge in awhile–thought I'd do a little more digging for my readers this week :) Let's see what I found:

Vulture's Wake by Kristy Murray

Even though he is half dead, Callum is lucky. It is Bo's roboraptor who finds him--not the rogue Outstationers from whom the boy has escaped. But even as Bo nurses Callum back to health, the Outstationers are homing in. The two barely escape capture when Callum discovers something incredible: Bo is a girl, maybe the last girl in a world in which females are thought to be extinct. And now, by helping Callum, she has put her own life at risk. With the Outstationers in hot pursuit, the two set off across a dangerous continent in hopes of finding haven in the city of Vulture's Gate. But nothing can prepare them for what they encounter at the end of their journey.

In this page-turning futuristic novel, a young woman finds out what it means to be living in a world destroyed by war, and a young man discovers that his only chance of survival is to question everything his parents taught him.
April 1, 2010

Joe Speedboat by Tommy Wieringa

A sparkling coming-of-age novel that has sold over 300,000 copies in Holland, in which the inhabitants of a sleepy rural town are awakened by the arrival of a kinetic young visionary, Joe Speedboat. 
After a farming accident plunges him into a coma for six months, Frankie Hermans wakes up to discover that he’s paralyzed and mute. Bound to a wheelchair, Frankie struggles to adjust to a life where he must rely on others to complete even the simplest tasks. The only body part he can control is his right arm, which he uses obsessively to record the details of daily life in his town.
But when he meets Joe—a boy who blazed into town like a meteor while Frankie slept—everything changes. Joe is a centrifugal force, both magician and daredevil, and he alone sees potential strength in Frankie’s handicaps. With Joe’s help, Frankie’s arm will be used for more that just writing: as a champion arm-wrestler, Frankie will be powerful enough to win back his friends, and maybe even woo P. J., the girl who has them all in a tailspin.
Releases April 8, 2010

The Keeper's Tattoo by Gill Ar

Ten years ago, Alaric, leader of the Shadowmen, killed most of the Keepers--teachers of ancient knowledge that threatened his barbaric rule. Young Kit was captured, but his twin sister, Nyssa, escaped. Only later will she learn that both she and her lost brother bear the secret words of their people: three lines each of strange, unintelligible writing tattooed on their scalps. Now the Shadowmen are on the attack again, determined to quell a growing rebellion. Nyssa must find her brother, and together they must unlock the meaning--the power--behind the mysterious words.
Releases May 1, 2010

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Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Book Gorge (17)



Book Gorge is a list of "to-be released" books that I want to read. This is a great opportunity to grab a pen and jot down these books! Till next week, wish big and happy reading...(Book Gorge is in original creation by BLT)

Great picks this week (I think anyway). Can't wait to read each of these! How about you?

Anxious Hearts by Tucker Shaw (May)
When I first searched the web for this book I came up with this website. Want to see how a book cover photo is taken? Check it out!


Dark Life by Kat Falls (May)


Faithful by Janet Fox (debut author) (May)


A Love Story Starring My Dead Best Friend by Emily Horner (debut author) (June)

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Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Book Gorge (16)

Book Gorge is a list of "to-be released" books that I want to read. This is a great opportunity to grab a pen and jot down these books! Till next week, wish big and happy reading...


(Book Gorge is in original creation by BLT)
This week's books are a little different. They're not as fun and light as the other books I've featured, but hold more serious subjects. Be on the look-out for these books in the upcoming months!





Out of My Mind by Sharon M. Draper (March)
In A Heartbeat by Loretta Ellsworth (Feb.)



Split by Stefan Petrucha (March)
Will Grayson, Will Grayson by John Green & David Levithan (April)




The Secret to Lying by Tod Michell (June)

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Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Book Gorge (14)

This Book Gorge is a bit shorter than usual and I've downsized the pictures because the post was getting waaaaay too long. If you want to see a close up of the book covers, just click on them.
These books have some interesting colors and graphics. I think Mercury has the coolest cover by far because it's simple, yet eye catching because you have to take a double look. I think I'm most excited to read either Mercury--which is a graphic novel--or Three Rivers Rising which is written in verse. What about you? See anything eye-catching?


Three Rivers Rising by Jame Richards (April)
A Little Wanting Song by Cath Crowley (June)
 
Light Beneath the Ferns by Anne Spollen (Feb.)
Happyface by Stephen Emond (March)

Albatross by Josie Bloss (Feb.)
Mercury by Hope Larson (Jan.)
(Graphic novel)


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Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Book Gorge (13)

I found some really neat books this week! I even went back and scoured the web for books I missed that are due out in January and February! I'm really excited to read all of these books and I'm going to put them ALL on my wishlist! I also included links to Amazon (whoo-hoo) that should lead to synopsis--which is kinda rare especially for the May and June books at the bottom. Enjoy guys!
>I've also been debating wether or not to feature Book Gorge every week  (currently I'm featuring it every other week). If you'd like to see Book Gorge every week on Wednesday OR if you only like to see it every other week, please leave a comment or tweet! Always grateful for feedback :)

Runaway Storm by D.E. Knobbe (Jan. 2010)



The Good Girl's Guide to Getting Kidnapped by Yxta Maya Murray (Jan. 2010)



Alice I Have Been by Melanie Benjamin (Jan. 2010)



The Clone Codes by Patricia, Fred, & John McKissack (Feb. 2010)



To Come and Go Like Magic by Katie Pickard Fawcett (Feb. 2010)



Epitaph Road by David Patneaude (March 2010)



Raven Speak by Diane Lee Wilson (April 2010)



Caleb + Kate by Cindy Martinusen-Coloma (May 2010)



My Double Life by Janette Rallison (May 2010)



Everlasting by Angie Frazier (June 2010)










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