Creepy Carrots!

Creepy Carrots! is bestselling book put out this week . Creepy Carrots! have https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgeyvw_rCtL6jdNISPs237eT5_wT4SWdu301cND-2KJZdUSj7b_0baW4QmUacLLFVl5DkmjH7kpq2oxIEXxpujoSY-N7YSlbKGzms_mUAqX8HUGmFpiZFU8oac0RqbvwGgtA3AtUS-M6jQ/s1600/rating+4.png, You might think a Creepy Carrots! show bothersome and solemn. notice these ones Review Bellow
Creepy Carrots! Details

In this Caldecott Honor–winning picture book, The Twilight Zone comes to the carrot patch as a rabbit fears his favorite treats are out to get him.

Jasper Rabbit loves carrots—especially Crackenhopper Field carrots.
He eats them on the way to school.
He eats them going to Little League.
He eats them walking home.
Until the day the carrots start following him...or are they?
     Celebrated artist Peter Brown’s stylish illustrations pair perfectly with Aaron Reynold’s text in this hilarious picture book that shows it’s all fun and games…until you get too greedy.





1442402970


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52 of 55 people found the following review helpful.
5Perfectly Scary
By Valerie A. Baute
Jasper Rabbit loves carrots. He likes to pull them from Crackenhopper Field and snack on them often throughout the day. Then, one day, Jasper gets the feeling that the carrots are following him. Will anyone believe him? What will he do to keep the evil carrots away?I was pleasantly surprised with this book. No, that's not completely true. Knowing who the illustrator was and seeing the adorable illustration on the cover, I had high hopes. I wasn't disappointed at all. The story was just as awesome as the illustrations. The ending made me chuckle while still teaching kids a lesson. Greed isn't good. Jasper was greedy, and the carrots came after him. Don't worry parents, they didn't attack him or anything scary. The ending was actually really funny.Speaking of scary, I thought this book seemed scary for a picture book. At first, that made me wonder if it was really worthy of 5 stars. My first thought when reviewing books is to see if I can read it aloud in storytime. Books that don't seem even slightly scary to me have scared small children. I could see children who are easily frightened absolutely hating this book. The thing is, the illustrations on the cover and the fact that the word "creepy" is in the title makes it pretty obvious that the book is scary. I will not be reading it in storytime for any children under the age of 6, but that doesn't mean it is a bad story. Any child who likes scary stories, or at least isn't afraid of them, will love this book. If I had a child who was easily scared, I would be able to tell that this book isn't for him.The illustrations fit the tone of this book perfectly. I love the way each page has just a touch of orange, either as the carrots or as the objects that Jasper might have thought WERE the carrots. It helps paint the story and keep the kids (and adults) guessing to see if Jasper really IS seeing carrots or just imagining them. Overall, this picture book is definitely a winner.

20 of 21 people found the following review helpful.
5Creepy Carrots Are a Tasty Treat
By Jasonb
What is the scariest vegetable of all time? Broccoli? Rutabaga? Black olives, perhaps? Kids have been debating this question for centuries. If you asked Jasper Rabbit, however, he would tell you that you're barking up the wrong produce aisle. Everyone knows that the scariest vegetable of all time is any vegetable that follows you home.At least everyone knows this who has read Creepy Carrots!, a brilliant new picture book by Aaron Reynolds and Peter Brown.Creepy Carrots! chronicles the harrowing journey of Jasper Rabbit, a young bunny whose greed for carrots proves to be his own undoing. Jasper loves carrots. He can't get enough of them, especially the ones from Crackenhopper field. But one day, as Jasper is about to help himself to another snack, he hears it - "The soft . . . sinister . . . tunktunktunk of carrots creeping."From there it goes from bad to worse. Paranoid Jasper sees the creeping carrots everywhere: in his bathtub, in the garden shed and even in his bedroom at night. Or does he? Every time a grown up enters the picture it seems that Jasper is just suffering from an overactive imagination. There's nothing to be worried about or so it seems.Is Jasper crazy or are the vegetables really out to get him? That is the sheer joy of reading Creepy Carrots! It keeps you guessing until the very satisfying end.Reynolds' tight text coupled with Brown's ominous black and white (and orange) drawings strike the perfect almost spooky tone for 4-8 year olds. It's sure to entertain any kids who love a little moody mystery in their picture books.Brown's illustrations of the carrots are certainly creepy, but probably not genuinely scary except to the most sensitive of younger kids. The exaggerated camera angles and shadowy drawings contrast nicely with the soft, cuddly images of Jasper, creating what feels like a tongue-in-cheek Twilight Zone for kids.Speaking of which, fans of this book will also want to check out Peter Brown's Vimeo video, the Creepy Carrots Zone, which chronicles the old movies and TV shows Brown watched to nail the right look for Jasper's tale.Guess what, Peter? It worked. Not only is this book a blast, but it would make a great read for parents who want an entertaining excuse to talk about their child's fears, greed or even the impact we have on the environment.But for those who are simply looking for a playful story with cool visuals, Creepy Carrots! does not disappoint.

20 of 23 people found the following review helpful.
5Hilarious and delightful!
By LHK
The other reviews are already so well detailed that I'll keep mine short and sweet. I absolutely love this book. I've read complaints that it's not scary enough - um, hello, it's a PICTURE BOOK FOR CHILDREN! It's definitely a little creepy but those elements are also conveyed in more or less intensity by the person reading the book. I read it to my 4 and 6 year old nephews and they loved it. I probably could have made it more creepy for the 6 yr old but they both thought it was funny. The story itself is clever and unexpected and the illustrations are gorgeous - a real departure from the traditional picture book color palette. Peter Brown did a great trailer explaining his process and inspiration if that kind of thing interests you. Enjoy!

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Steelheart (The Reckoners)

Steelheart (The Reckoners) is the best book published the foregoing week . Steelheart (The Reckoners) have https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh8UzAQ1fRkjS6YqGZn4aOMz3YpwBPfFrt_EoHa8mrTEL18alPZCZHBpGF-1zA9pFRP9346jA8Mi9XqC_7PMym7B-orLqiilf-Rc-jpiwBfX9SyAJOznFPJqVcE6yWSPrvDNXMMGkM2dv0/s1600/rating+4-5.png, You might think a Steelheart (The Reckoners) show dull and very serious . look this Review Bellow
Steelheart (The Reckoners) Details

Buy the #1 New York Times bestselling sequel—Firefight—today!

Brandon Sanderson, the #1 New York Times bestselling author of Words of Radiance, coauthor of Robert Jordan’s Wheel of Time series, and creator of the internationally bestselling Mistborn Trilogy, presents Steelheart, the first book in the Reckoners series, an action-packed thrill ride that will leave readers breathless.
   Ten years ago, Calamity came. It was a burst in the sky that gave ordinary people extraordinary powers. The awed public started calling them Epics.
   Epics are no friends of man. With incredible gifts came the desire to rule. And to rule man, you must crush his will.
   Now, in what was once Chicago, an astonishingly powerful Epic named Steelheart has installed himself as emperor. Steelheart possesses the strength of ten men and can control the elements. It is said that no bullet can harm him, no sword can split his skin, and no fire can burn him. He is invincible. Nobody fights back . . . nobody but the Reckoners.
   A shadowy group of ordinary humans, the Reckoners spend their lives studying Epics, finding their weaknesses, and then assassinating them. And David wants in.
   When Steelheart came to Chicago, he killed David’s father. For years, like the Reckoners, David has been studying, and planning, and he has something they need. Not an object, but an experience.
   He has seen Steelheart bleed.
   And he wants revenge.

Praise for the Reckoners series

“The suspense is relentless and the climax explosive.”—James Dashner, #1 New York Times bestselling author of the Maze Runner series
 
“Another win for Sanderson . . . he’s simply a brilliant writer. Period."—Patrick Rothfuss, author of the New York Times and USA Today bestseller The Name of the Wind
 
[STAR] “Snappy dialogue, bizarre plot twists, high-intensity action, and a touch of mystery and romance…leaves [readers] panting for the sequel.”—Booklist, Starred

"Nuance and complexity alongside the action and intrigue...will have readers counting the days to the final volume."-The Bulletin

“An absolute page-turner."—Publishers Weekly
 
“Compelling. . . . Sanderson uses plot twists that he teases enough for readers to pick up on to distract from the more dramatic reveals he has in store.”—The A.V. Club





0385743564


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115 of 125 people found the following review helpful.
5Steelheart is a fast-paced, action-filled, blast of a book
By Storm
Steelheart will be my second Sanderson book based in his younger teen fiction category, The Rithmatist being my first. Whereas I felt that The Rithmatist was a bit too corny and "cutesy," I think Steelheart will be a great "gateway" book for younger fans to discover Sanderson's other, more mature, fiction series.Steelheart is set in a world shaped by "The Calamity," a meteor in the sky which has granted comic-book superhero-style powers to random humans, now called Epics. One of the defining themes in the book being that absolute power corrupts absolutely, there are no superheroes. No X-Men, Spidermans, or Supermans. Normal humans in this world are regarded as little more than slaves. The book follows the main character David, in his quest for revenge against the ruthless, cold-hearted, ruler of Newcago (formerly Chicago) - Steelheart.While the plot and character development are pretty basic, and while David does suffer a little bit from "The Chosen One" Syndrome, the story is well-paced and makes for a very engaging read. This will probably be one of those books that you end up reading until it's way past bedtime. Fans of Sanderson will immediately recognize some of his quirks - protagonists tending to use their brains rather than brawn, numerous plot-twists, and of course, gratuitous magic system explanations. Steelheart is no exception to this formula.For the teens - Steelheart is basically a comic book in written form. There's fights, superpowers, puppy-love crushes, and explosions. In fact I could almost hear a Hans Zimmer soundtrack in my head during several of the battles. Sanderson paints a vivid picture through his storytelling, and it won't take much imagination to see the entire book unfurling before you like a movie.For the parents - Steelheart is a bit on the violent side but is clean on both language and romance. There's quite a few relatively graphic descriptions of firefights and injuries and incidental body count is pretty high. There's a big leap nowadays between Rated PG-13 and R, and I think Steelheart is probably right in between those two. It's not as bad as something you'll see on HBO/Showtime, but it's not nickelodeon-clean either. Something like primetime cable network violence.For the adult Sanderson fans - the corny language will probably be the first thing that sticks out to you; the second thing will be the bluntness. It's always amusing to read something like Steelheart after re-reading The Way of Kings - same author but completely different voices. If you're already a fan of Sanderson, Steelheart will be very familiar ground and you won't feel out of place at all. With the exception of the depth of character and plot. There's not a whole lot of subtext comparatively to his adult works, but honestly I found that a bit refreshing. It's like having to play politics at the office versus hanging out with friends.Steelheart was a great read and is a stand out in the crowded teen fiction market. For the adult Sanderson fans, I still consider this book a "buy". Honestly it reminded me quite a bit of his Mistborn Trilogy (and everything that entails). I inhaled this book in two days, and if it wasn't for that pesky need for sleep, I probably would have done it in a single sitting. It's honestly just a fun, action-packed, page-turner of a book.

113 of 136 people found the following review helpful.
4Good new series, not his best work.
By Roman
Brandon Sanderson is an very fast writer that consistently produces good book after good book. I've been a fan of him since Elantris and I always rush out to buy whatever new book he has. His work, although formulaic, is enjoyable to read and always feels high in quality.Steelheart is set in a futuristic, post-apocalyptic Chicago. The denizens of the book call this new Chicago 'Newcago' (yeah I wondered about that as well). The story follows David, a young man entranced with the world's new Epics. Epics are superhumans that used to be mortals until a meteor named Calamity appeared in the sky. David is obsessed with bringing vengeance on one particular epic, Steelheart.Now that we have the basic plot down we can go into a bit of review. I won't try to spoil anything but be warned that most reviews will have a bit of spoilers in them. Steelheart is a book with excellent pacing in the drama and action departments, but I can't help but feel it was a bit too formulaic. Its almost as if Brandon was writing this as a school project rather than trying to publish it. The main character is again a bit of a know-it-all who falls for a cute girl. There is an older, mysterious character that always saves the day. There is a mysterious magic source that no one really understands. This is all textbook Sanderson, and if you've read his previous books you will feel right at home here.Besides the obvious use of a worn formula I found this book enjoyable. The action scenes were consistent and well-paced. His New Chicago felt like an actual city and most of his characters exhibited varying personalities. The main characters were (mostly) given detailed back stories that were entertaining to read about and sometimes crucial to the plot.Overall if you're a fan of Sanderson you will most likely read this book in an afternoon. However, if you never heard of the guy's works I would recommend picking up one of his other excellent series, such as Mistborn or Way of Kings, before jumping into this one.

47 of 56 people found the following review helpful.
5Another Awesome Series Launch for Sanderson!
By Benjamin Thomas
Wowzer! Awesome! etc. etc.OK, anybody that has read any of my previous reviews of Sanderson's work knows just how much I admire his writing. I've really run out of superlatives to describe his work, both the quality of it and the sheer amount of output he generates. I don't know of any other human on the planet that can write/publish so many books and sustain such high quality. He is simply amazing.This novel is, of course, no exception. From the very first page, I was lost in this new world Sanderson has created. Yes, it's a young adult novel, but the only reason to classify it as such is that the main character, David, is 18 years old. But in every other way, this is a main-stream novel, filled with violence, action, and thought-provoking characters. In essence, this could be called a "super-hero" novel (mostly evil super-heroes) so I suppose that's another reason to classify it as YA. And we are treated to some inner thoughts from David that testify to his late-teenage attitudes towards others and self doubt. But I found them to be very true to the nature of the character, and essential to the plot.The story takes place here on approximately present-day Earth, about ten years after an unexplained burst in the sky (subsequently referred to as 'Calamity') caused the appearance of 'Epics'. Epics are humans that have abilities, amazing superhero-like powers, and tend to use them for personal gain and power. They are so powerful that nobody fights them. Nobody except the 'Reckoners'. Epics are essentially bullies (bullies with incredible destructive power) but each one has a weakness, and thus can be fought by ordinary folks like us.OK, that sounds like a plot for a YA novel for boys age 10-14. But I say 'Nay, friend.' This is a novel for all of us. The plot is only the superficial top layering of this 17-layer cake and, believe me friends, this cake has a lot of delicious calories. Sanderson is known for his unique, complex magic systems that he constructs for his novels. So, of course, the system that he has built for superheroes is equally complex and interdependent. He doesn't just come up with weird cool powers and sprinkle superheroes around. Epics' powers work the way they work for a reason and discovering just how they relate to each other is pure fun. And all through this novel (as well as in future novels in this series, I'm sure), we learn more and more about just how well thought out this system is.All of that stuff makes for fun reading and good movie entertainment but it's the characters that allow a story to rise to the top and be memorable for months and years afterwards. The core group of characters in this book are multidimensional and each one is intriguing. They are a delight to read about. I cared about each and every one, their roles, their fates. And, due to the high stakes action in this book, their fates are far from certain. Surprises await the reader at every turn; it definitely keeps the pages turning.So, once again, my hat is off to Mr. Sanderson. This is the first book of what is sure to be a great series. And although the main plot does conclude in this one book, it serves as a gateway to many more awesome books to come.

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Anything Is Possible

Anything Is Possible is bestseller the books brought out this workweek. Anything Is Possible has https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgeyvw_rCtL6jdNISPs237eT5_wT4SWdu301cND-2KJZdUSj7b_0baW4QmUacLLFVl5DkmjH7kpq2oxIEXxpujoSY-N7YSlbKGzms_mUAqX8HUGmFpiZFU8oac0RqbvwGgtA3AtUS-M6jQ/s1600/rating+4.png, You might think a Anything Is Possible seems boring and very serious . view this Review Bellow
Anything Is Possible Details

The sheep in this story is a dreamer, while her friend the wolf has a more practical disposition. One day the sheep runs to the wolf with an idea. She wants to build a flying machine! But the wolf tells her it's impossible. Eventually, however, the sheep's dream gets the better of the wolf's doubts, and they begin to work on the project together. Through perseverance and the process of trial and error, the sheep and wolf manage to create a winning design, brought to life by architecturally and mathematically inspired paper collage art. At the end of this whimsical tale, even the wolf has to admit that anything is possible!


  • Used Book in Good Condition



1926973917


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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful.
5If at first you don't succeed...
By Carole P. Roman
Lovely book about perseverance and teamwork. Two unlikely animals team up to see if they can create a flying machine. Beautiful illustrations take the reader on a journey as they work out Galileo-like formulas to make the possibility of flight a reality. "Someone once wrote that only those who dream learn to fly". A wonderful way to teach children that what may start out as a dream, with hard work and ingenuity the sky is the limit!

3 of 4 people found the following review helpful.
5We love it!
By D. Richardson
We love our books, my grandson just turned two and he loves us to read to him, and he remembers the stories too after we read! Great book!

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
4Great Message
By Callie Watts Dollar
The message of this book is truly beautiful...with true ambition and continued effort "Anything is Possible." We always buy a hard back book and inscribe it for our little boy for birthday and Christmas. While we love the message, our little boy is not that interested in the book itself - probably due to the illustrations, which I LOVE. They are of da Vinci inventions and drawings of his inventions. Hopefully our son will appreciate it some day.

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Goodnight Songs: Illustrated by Twelve Award-Winning Picture Book Artists

Goodnight Songs: Illustrated by Twelve Award-Winning Picture Book Artists is the best read books published the foregoing workweek. Goodnight Songs: Illustrated by Twelve Award-Winning Picture Book Artists has been https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgeyvw_rCtL6jdNISPs237eT5_wT4SWdu301cND-2KJZdUSj7b_0baW4QmUacLLFVl5DkmjH7kpq2oxIEXxpujoSY-N7YSlbKGzms_mUAqX8HUGmFpiZFU8oac0RqbvwGgtA3AtUS-M6jQ/s1600/rating+4.png, You might think a Goodnight Songs: Illustrated by Twelve Award-Winning Picture Book Artists visible dull and no-nonsense . look this one Review Bellow
Goodnight Songs: Illustrated by Twelve Award-Winning Picture Book Artists Details

“Baby sail the seven seas
Safely in my arms
When the waves go up and down
You are safe from harm.”


1454904461


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46 of 46 people found the following review helpful.
5Beautiful and enchanting
By Robert Busko
When I stumbled across Goodnight Songs by Margaret Wise Brown in a bookstore to say I was surprised would be a gross understatement. As a retired librarian I’ve lost my information pipeline about what is being published and when and have to rely on visits to bookstores to view the available crop.Ms Brown died the year before I was born but I can still remember my mother reading Goodnight Moon to me when I was small and my brother after me.Goodnight Songs is made up of a treasure trove of unpublished poems by Margaret Wise Brown that have now been illustrated by some of the best illustrators currently working and set to music. Artists like Jonathan Bean, Carin Berger, Renata Liwska, Christopher Silas Neal, Sophie Blackall, Dan Yaccarino, Melissa Sweet, Isabel Roxas, Sean Qualls, Zachariah O’Hora, Linda Bleck, and Eric Puybaret each designed artwork. The accompanying CD features lyrics put to music and performed by Emily Gary and Tom Proutt.My favorite three are When I Close My Eyes at Night; When the Man in the Moon Was a Little Boy; and Sounds in the Night.The story behind the discovery of this material and how it all made it’s way to the bookstores is interesting in itself. It took many years for these songs to be published and the details to be worked out. The completed product is enchanting and sure to please.It’s amazing that Margaret Wise Brown will reach a completely new generation of children with material that was written before their parents and even their grandparents were born.I highly recommend.

14 of 14 people found the following review helpful.
5This is a true treasure!
By klog
What a treasure found in a trunk in a barn! The poems, illustrations, and the CD in this book are all beautiful. I read this to my grandchildren, ages seven and four, before bed and then let them listen to the CD while they were going to sleep. The next evening they asked if they could again read the book and listen to the CD. "That helped me sleep, Nana," the four-year-old said. "Goodnight Songs" will become a tradition at Nana's house!I heard about this book on NPR; thanks, NPR, for wonderful information you share with us. Thanks, Amazon, for selling; this hardback book with CD is a steal.

11 of 11 people found the following review helpful.
5stellar cd and a wonderful all-round project
By K. Morris
This book of wonderfully illustrated poems is top-shelf, indeed, but I’m equally floored by the CD of songs that accompanies it. I’ve reviewed albums in the past, and I recall reviewing several children’s albums that were nominated for Grammys. “Goodnight Songs” is far better than any of those. Tom Proutt and Emily Gary have taken Margaret Wise Brown’s poems to new heights, turning them into songs imbued with warmth and a sense of wonder.The refreshing thing here is that Proutt and Gary have made a thoroughly accessible children’s album that doesn’t talk down to its audience. In fact, the songs are smart enough that they’ll appeal to adults as well. How often can you say that about a children’s album? That’s the beauty of this record: it’s not just for children, it’s for the whole family. And it’s darn good.Listen to “Sounds in the Night” and you’ll hear immediately what I’m talking about. You’ll also probably recognize the Brian Wilson influence on the vocals and melody line. But “Sounds in the Night” stands on its own--a lullaby with a subtly mysterious air about it. Your kids probably won’t recognize the influence of REM on the chord progression of “LIttle Donkey Close Your Eyes,” but you will, and you’ll appreciate the song even more because of it. Or maybe it’s because of Andy Thacker, whose virtuoso mandolin-playing runs through the album.The key to the record’s effectiveness is the combination of Proutt’s deft musical instincts and Gary’s appropriately sweet and motherly vocals.  They handle this material flawlessly.  “Goodnight Songs” is intelligent, evocative stuff.  The music industry has dumbed down children’s music for several decades now, to the point that they’ve practically killed what once was a vital art form.  But “Goodnight Songs” revitalizes the genre and provides a direction for the future.  This is what children’s music can be.  And what it should be. 

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Help! We Need a Title!

Help! We Need a Title! is the best read books published the foregoing week . Help! We Need a Title! has been https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgeyvw_rCtL6jdNISPs237eT5_wT4SWdu301cND-2KJZdUSj7b_0baW4QmUacLLFVl5DkmjH7kpq2oxIEXxpujoSY-N7YSlbKGzms_mUAqX8HUGmFpiZFU8oac0RqbvwGgtA3AtUS-M6jQ/s1600/rating+4.png, You might think a Help! We Need a Title! seems dull and solemn. view these ones Review Bellow
Help! We Need a Title! Details

What if you picked out a book to read, but the characters weren’t ready for you yet? A clever new picture book from the creator of the New York Times bestseller Press Here.

Take a peek inside this book and you’ll find some characters (though they’re still a bit sketchy). They’ll be perplexed to see you, so they’ll quickly try to track down their author (who has a lot more work to do). What you won’t find is a story, or a title, because — guess what? The book isn’t finished yet! But surely the author must have a story to tell? In this charming "meta" picture book, children of all ages are encouraged to interact with a book still in the process of being invented. And that’s a story in itself!





  • Interactive unfinished story book by Herve Tullet
  • Encourages early reading skills, imaginative thinking, story-telling
  • Gets kids thinking creatively about the stories they read and tell
  • Messy drawings, bright colors - creates feeling of unfinished story
  • Messy lines juxtapose with solid colors of momentary "real story"



0763670219


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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful.
3Too clever for his own good!
By Bob Walch
This picture book is rather odd. In fact it is the type of book a youngster either likes immediately or has no interest in. The child I showed it to thought it was rather dumb. So did I! Also why the author felt it necessary to include mugs shots of himself in the book is beyond me. Do we have a bit of an ego here? Oh well, perhaps I don't fully understand the French sense of humor. This book needs far more than just a title....try a storyline too!Book provided by publisher.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
3They enjoyed the story but if you are planning on doing ...
By KB Teach
Not what I expected. I planned to use this with my second graders but it is developmentally for older students. They enjoyed the story but if you are planning on doing a writing lesson using this book I would recommend it for at least fourth if not fifth grade and up.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
5interesting book
By Beata Skwarczynska
pretty interesting book, my daughter liked it but doesn't want to come back to it as much as she does with the "Press here" book of the same author

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Requiem (Delirium Trilogy)

Requiem (Delirium Trilogy) is one of the best book put out this week . Requiem (Delirium Trilogy) have https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgeyvw_rCtL6jdNISPs237eT5_wT4SWdu301cND-2KJZdUSj7b_0baW4QmUacLLFVl5DkmjH7kpq2oxIEXxpujoSY-N7YSlbKGzms_mUAqX8HUGmFpiZFU8oac0RqbvwGgtA3AtUS-M6jQ/s1600/rating+4.png, You might think a Requiem (Delirium Trilogy) seems bothersome and very serious . see this Review Bellow
Requiem (Delirium Trilogy) Details

A New York Times, USA Today, and Publishers Weekly bestseller, this exciting finale to Lauren Oliver's acclaimed Delirium trilogy is a riveting blend of nonstop action and forbidden romance in a dystopian United States. With lyrical writing, Lauren Oliver seamlessly interweaves the peril that Lena faces with the inner tumult she experiences after the reappearance of her first love, Alex, the boy she thought was dead. Named an Best Book of the Year, this sophisticated and wide-ranging novel brings the New York Times bestselling Delirium trilogy to a thrilling conclusion.

Now an active member of the resistance, Lena has transformed. The nascent rebellion that was underway in Pandemonium has ignited into an all-out revolution in Requiem, and Lena is at the center of the fight. After rescuing Julian from a death sentence, Lena and her friends fled to the Wilds. But the Wilds are no longer a safe haven. Pockets of rebellion have opened throughout the country, and the government cannot deny the existence of Invalids. Regulators infiltrate the borderlands to stamp out the rebels.

As Lena navigates the increasingly dangerous terrain of the Wilds, her best friend, Hana, lives a safe, loveless life in Portland as the fiancée of the young mayor. Requiem is told from both Lena and Hana's points of view. They live side by side in a world that divides them until, at last, their stories converge.





0062014536


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108 of 115 people found the following review helpful.
3Engaging, but disappointing ending
By Priyanka
I read Delirium and Pandemonium in a span of about two days and I fell in love. I loved the characters, premise, love triangle...it was all great. I thought it was well written too, if a bit predictable (especially the end of Pandemonium). Requiem starts out great too. The conflict between Alex and Lena is understandable considering what had happened, and there are some really good plot twists (Hana!) and overall it's very engaging. Lena's evolution as a character is one of the best aspects of the book, and for the first half, I loved where the story was going. However, Oliver is really missing one thing -she completely ignores Julian's characterization. After spending a whole book on him, she lets his character go to almost complete waste. He barely has one real conversation with Lena, he always is just simply there, with a sentence or two dedicated to his presence. The only area where he shows any growth was his stance within the group and how that evolves. Other than that, his character falls extremely flat and it's hard to remember why we loved him in Pandemonium. I understand she didn't want to focus too heavily on the love triangle, but essentially ignoring one of the book's main characters was not really the best way to go. I felt the ending is unsatisfying too, mainly because we don't understand the motivations behind Lena's pick. I'm actually very equally divided between Julian and Alex, so it wasn't that her choice dissatisfied me...it was just that we never got a real WHY (or it wasn't addressed enough) and I felt like there was very little closure. Even regarding the revolution - what comes next? It's one thing to be up for interpretation but this was just completely open ended. I feel like the series, being as good as it was, deserves better, as do the characters!

71 of 78 people found the following review helpful.
2Big Letdown
By heather tracy
As many other reviewers have complained, I too was left so unsatisfied by the ending of this book. I thought it started out great, and the switching between Lena and Hanas perspective was interesting. But then, it just felt like she had to hurry and finish writing at the end. I felt she did not resolve the love triangle, what happened with Hana, or what the results were of the resistance storming Portland. I felt like the story ended a chapter or two prematurely, and that's disappointing because the first two books were so great.

122 of 142 people found the following review helpful.
1So much for a "fight for love"...
By Patricia
This is actually my first time writing a review because I have never been so disappointed with a book as I have been with the way this series ended.There are way too many things to say about this. Where to start?SPOILERS:Let's start with the fact that the only time you actually experience Alex and Lena happily together is in the first book. You write a trilogy where the entire plot line revolves around the fight for love, the right to experience love, and all you see is Lena and Alex so infatuated with each other in Book 1... and then after that, just flimsy, undeveloped relationships between other characters. I want to see what these people are FIGHTING for! Do they even know? There's flimsy allusion to other characters being in relationships, but you sense none of the passion that you'd expect from the people battling and risking their lives to feel what they feel.Rewinding to Book 2, it wasn't bad. But I mean let's be real, we all knew Alex wasn't really dead. So I'm waiting and waiting this entire book for Alex to show up, and it's not until the very end he pops up. So the natural assumption is "Yay, he's been gone this whole book but now we have a whole book with him and things get to be resolved!" Right? Wrong. Because Alex shows up to be a mute character throughout the entirely of Requiem aside from the total of three exchanges (mostly brief) he has with Lena before the very end when he tells her very briefly that he still loves her (which okay, obviously we knew) and they kiss quickly. That's all. Two whole books of a lead up to..."it's complicated" from Lena and a "I'm not going to leave you again" from Alex. Okay Alex, that's good you're not gonna leave Lena again but I mean, that doesn't change the fact that "it's complicated"! So what happens with Julian? No one knows. What happens with Tack now that Raven's gone? No one knows. Hanna? Lena's family? The country? Fred? Nope. We just get walls getting torn down in Portland. That'd be cool if Portland were the entire United States...and that wall being torn magically killed off every regulator and uncured traitor in the world...I SO agree with the other readers here that the characters were very poorly developed in this book (especially Julian). And Alex might as well not have even been there for the lack of role he played in dialogue or anything really. He basically served just as a diterrance between Lena and Julian's relationship, which was a point so obviously made when he left and Lena claimed to finally be able to be freer with Julian when he was gone. So much for the love you claimed to feel. And let's not forget how the girl literally believed the love of her life to be dead, this supposedly strong girl, and just LET him go off with some other girl because he "said" he never loved her...even though he also said that RIGHT after claiming the thought of Lena was the only thought that kept him going while being tortured! I felt like she used him saying that as an excuse to not have to deal with her conflicting emotions, but my opinion is that if she really loved him as much as she claimed to, or really loved Julian as much as she claimed to- it doesn't really matter to me, I just wanted her to make a decision honestly- she wouldn't have just let things drop. She would have been adamant about explaining her actions despite his very obviously untrue claims about never caring about her.Overall, absolutely nothing was resolved. I spent way too much of my time reading this book hoping for a conclusion to these and many more issues...and I got none. But hey, we at least got the lecture on "tearing down the walls" by the author at the end, right? Maybe that should be changes to "tearing down the pages of this book because I'm so angry"?

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End Times

End Times is bestseller read books released the foregoing week . End Times have https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh8UzAQ1fRkjS6YqGZn4aOMz3YpwBPfFrt_EoHa8mrTEL18alPZCZHBpGF-1zA9pFRP9346jA8Mi9XqC_7PMym7B-orLqiilf-Rc-jpiwBfX9SyAJOznFPJqVcE6yWSPrvDNXMMGkM2dv0/s1600/rating+4-5.png, You might think a End Times show bothersome and no-nonsense . notice this Review Bellow
End Times Details

Carbon County, Wyoming is like a current running through Daphne’s heart.

When life gets too tough to bear in Detroit, Daphne flees to her Uncle Floyd’s home, where she believes she’ll find solace in the silent hills of her childhood summers. But Daphne’s Greyhound bus pulls over in downtown Carbon County and it’s not silence that welcomes her. It’s the sound of trumpets.

Daphne’s desire to start again in simple country comfort is instantly dashed as the townsfolk declare that the End Times are here. And incredible occurrences soon support their belief. Daphne does all she can to keep her head down and ignore the signs. She works a job at the local oil rig, helps around the house, hangs out with her pregnant cousin Janie and gets to know Owen, a mysterious motocross racer and fellow roustabout at the rig. But soon a startling discovery shatters her resolve and calls into question all her doubts and fears.
               
Daphne landed in Carbon County for a reason. She only has to read the signs—and believe.





1595147489


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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful.
5Eerie times in Carbon County, Wyoming
By nonpareil
It was all Daphne's fault. Her mother blamed her when she defended herself from her predatory stepfather and the evil dude died. No matter what she did she was wrong. Why then, are ethereal trumpets sounding when she arrives in the dusty, dried-up Wyoming town seeking refuge with her real father's family? Why do things start to go right here tho she's hiding her guilty secret, so far from Detroit? Not everything is perfect, for sure - her cousin's babydaddy is a scary bully - but at least her uncle's family cares for her and then... a miracle! The desperately poor town flourishes, she gets a good job and a most mysterious boyfriend.Anna Schumacher deftly mixes small-town Wyoming culture and the lives and language of young adults whose main passion is Motocross, with oil-strike reality and something eerie coming from a lost hippie commune, something with the power to transform everything... with a Prophecy. But how to tell who's good and who's evil? Who are the Children of the Earth? How are Daphne's talented trick-biker boyfriend Owen and his "sister" Luna who have appeared - almost vaporized - onto the scene involved with whatever this force may be? Will Daphne and Owen survive the evil of blame that would like to sweep them under? Are these End Times?Take the chapter in which we learn about a full-moon orgy years ago at the commune where Owen and Luna were conceived. It starts with the prophetic dreams both are having, goes on with Luna's explanation about what happened that night that still does not satisfy serious Owen's longing to know his origin, and includes a scene where Luna coolly acquires two twenties to pay for their oversized breakfast. The writing is hip and smooth and fun. It reads easily but is never trite.Throughout the plot is persuasive, the action riveting, and there's just the right touch of eeriness. Best yet, those of us who love serial novels can look forward to more as this, "The Prophet Emerges", is just the first in this young author's series about the Rapture.This review was written thanks to the loan of an Advance Reading Copy.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
5Looking forward to the next one
By Annie K. S.
I normally read mysteries or legal thrillers but this sounded intriguing. And it was - I found myself caught up in the strange little world of these characters. Each one had a unique personality and I loved how we got to see the different views of the same events. By the end when they started to all tie together, I was disappointed that I have to wait to read the next book!

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
5Can't wait for book two!
By Jessica H.
I'm a fan of YA books, but don't read them often--I was glad this one was recommended to me. I zipped through it and couldn't put it down! I liked the accurate depictions of small town life, the struggles of teen pregnancy, and religious fervor. I was impressed that the evangelicals in the book were not caricatures, and that the prophecy-believing religious community wasn't written about in a mocking manner (an easy trap to fall into, I suspect.)I enjoyed the slow build, as various strange things occur around town, and then they slowly all come together--and when I finished reading I wished I'd had book two in hand to start with right away! The sign of a good book, for sure.

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Alexander Calder: Meet the Artist

Alexander Calder: Meet the Artist is the most popular book brought out this week . Alexander Calder: Meet the Artist have https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh8UzAQ1fRkjS6YqGZn4aOMz3YpwBPfFrt_EoHa8mrTEL18alPZCZHBpGF-1zA9pFRP9346jA8Mi9XqC_7PMym7B-orLqiilf-Rc-jpiwBfX9SyAJOznFPJqVcE6yWSPrvDNXMMGkM2dv0/s1600/rating+4-5.png, You might think a Alexander Calder: Meet the Artist visible tedious and very serious . see this Review Bellow
Alexander Calder: Meet the Artist Details

No artist can put a smile on your face quicker than Alexander Calder. A sense of playfulness animates all of his work—from his signature hanging mobiles to his endlessly creative toys, drawings, and jewelry. Alexander Calder: Meet the Artist! is an exciting hands-on introduction to this beloved American sculptor. Calder's whimsical world is brought to life by imaginative pop-ups, pull tabs, lift-the-flaps, and cutouts. A universe of artistic possibilities opens up as young readers explore Calder's creative evolution, play with his toy designs, and even create their own sculptural circus.





1616892250


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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
5Terrific Book
By educationlover
This book is perfect for teaching and learning about this important artist. It is interactive and each page is an adventure. It has things to assemble if you are using it at home, but can be presented to a class without using the additional parts.

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
5Super book
By Stephanie Needham
This book is wonderful. i learned while i presented a great book to my kinders and then used it at all grade levels. I highly reccommend it.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
5One of a kind
By bookworm
One of the most creative, innovative art history books for kids. I have a degree in art history & can't say enough great things about this series. If you love art or your kids do, get this gorgeous series!

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Lantern Sam and the Blue Streak Bandits

Lantern Sam and the Blue Streak Bandits is the best the books released the foregoing week . Lantern Sam and the Blue Streak Bandits has been https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgeyvw_rCtL6jdNISPs237eT5_wT4SWdu301cND-2KJZdUSj7b_0baW4QmUacLLFVl5DkmjH7kpq2oxIEXxpujoSY-N7YSlbKGzms_mUAqX8HUGmFpiZFU8oac0RqbvwGgtA3AtUS-M6jQ/s1600/rating+4.png, You might think a Lantern Sam and the Blue Streak Bandits come into sight tedious and very serious . look these ones Review Bellow
Lantern Sam and the Blue Streak Bandits Details

“An atmospheric late-1930s adventure with old-time cinematic appeal. Fans of fast-paced, far-fetched action will lap it up as enthusiastically as Sam swallows his favorite brand of sardines.” —Kirkus Reviews
 
Lantern Sam is the wise-cracking, sarcastic, talking cat (for those who can hear him, that is) who lives on board the Lake Erie Shoreliner train and is one of the best detectives no one knows about. He doesn’t have much patience for humans (unless they bring him sardines), but when 10-year-old traveler Henry can’t find his new friend, the exuberant Ellie, Sam’s enlisted to help. A ransom note is soon discovered and just like that, Sam and Henry are on the case, with the help of Clarence the Conductor (who supplies Sam’s sardines). But is Ellie still on board the train? Did the salesman with his trunk full of samples sneak her off? And why does that couple keep acting so suspiciously?

Veteran middle-grade mystery author Michael D. Beil has crafted a hilarious and appealing adventure set in the 1930s that’s chock-full of quirky characters and red herrings, and all with an irresistible cat at its center.





0385753179


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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
4LANTERN SAM AND THE BLUE STREAK BANDITS is one of those rare mysteries that will keep you guessing until the end!
By KidsReads
Ten-year-old Henry Shipley figured he was in for a snooze of a train ride aboard the Lake Erie Shoreliner with his mother and little sister on their way to New York City. That was before two very different people walked into his life. The first was a girl his age named Ellie Strasbourg who came from money and could talk a mile a minute. The second wasn’t a person at all --- it was a calico cat named Lantern Sam who could talk and share his thoughts with a few select humans, Henry being one of them. Normally a talking cat would be excitement enough, but Lantern Sam also happens to be one of the greatest detectives, and a detective is exactly what Henry needs after finding himself at the center of a mystery.The Crime: Ellie Strasbourg has gone missing aboard the Lake Erie Shoreliner, and the kidnappers are demanding a very valuable necklace, the Blue Streak, for her safe return.The Suspects:· Judge Ambrose: The local law enforcement on the Shoreliner who seems to live by his own rules.· Reverend Perfiddle: The holy man whose holiness may be called into question.· Mrs. Perfiddle: Pregnant, yet seems particularly agile for someone so close to giving birth.· Mrs. Strasbourg: Ellie’s mom who appears heartbroken for her kidnapped daughter --- or is she?· Julia: The Strasbourg’s maid who seems to be good at “covering up” dirty messes.· The traveling salesman: His large suitcase full of samples that has conveniently gone missing --- with the samples left behind.· The gossip columnist: She seems to know an awful lot about everyone.· The man and woman in dark glasses: They really don’t want anyone to know they are on the train, but why?Now it’s up to Henry, Lantern Sam and conductor Clarence Nockwood to figure out who the kidnappers are, where they’ve hidden Ellie, and if there are any more sardines left on the Shoreliner. Well, the sardines aren’t as important as the first two, but you’ll have to convince Lantern Sam to work on an empty stomach, and good luck with that!I am always up for a good mystery, and LANTERN SAM AND THE BLUE STREAK BANDITS is one of those rare mysteries that will keep you guessing until the end! Everyone is a suspect and all of their stories just don’t match up. Plus, just when you think you’ve got it figured out, the twists and turns keep coming and make you rethink everything. A nice highlight to the whole book is that Lantern Sam’s life story is sprinkled throughout, giving you a chance to learn on how he got his nickname, how many of his nine lives he’s supposedly lost and how he lost them, and why in the world he’s so addicted to sardines. This fun-filled mystery will have you purring by the end!Reviewed by Benjamin Boche

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
5super fun train trip
By M. M. Ayers
Recieved book promptly. Super fun train ride withThe most clever cat detective! Fun read for the whole family! And cat lovers too!

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
5Lantern Sam and the Blue Streak Bandits (YA)
By Melissa A. Palmer
Book #108 Read in 2014Lantern Sam and the Blue Streak Bandits by Michael D. Beil (YA)This was a cute read. Lantern Sam is a cat who can telepathically speak to certain people....two of which are train conductor Clarence and train passenger Henry. Henry meets Ellie, a young girl who comes from a rich family and who eventually gets kidnapped on the train ride. Henry teams up with Sam to find her and figure out the identity of the kidnappers. I loved Lantern Sam; he was a great character. I would recommend this book upper elementary and middle school readers.http://melissasbookpicks.blogspot.com

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The Story of Buildings: From the Pyramids to the Sydney Opera House and Beyond

The Story of Buildings: From the Pyramids to the Sydney Opera House and Beyond is my favorite the books brought out the foregoing workweek. The Story of Buildings: From the Pyramids to the Sydney Opera House and Beyond has https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjrKaJp3zXUcHJM9YenLScfJJXHyr-SFkCldSgWVhVjP_kQMsnh_SnlVLei_cNljY-H6ckI3GBpAOjuWvxe1ymZ3lXeRe_UH1PImTvL5jglnkTK-d-L8Gyh7Q1PolJd-If5T9QZp-rXheo/s1600/rating.png, You might think a The Story of Buildings: From the Pyramids to the Sydney Opera House and Beyond visible shrill and very serious . look these Review Bellow
The Story of Buildings: From the Pyramids to the Sydney Opera House and Beyond Details

Aspiring architects will be in their element! Explore this illustrated narrative history of buildings for young readers, an amazing construction in itself.

We spend most of our lives in buildings. We make our homes in them. We go to school in them. We work in them. But why and how did people start making buildings? How did they learn to make them stronger, bigger, and more comfortable? Why did they start to decorate them in different ways? From the pyramid erected so that an Egyptian pharaoh would last forever to the dramatic, machine-like Pompidou Center designed by two young architects, Patrick Dillon’s stories of remarkable buildings — and the remarkable people who made them — celebrates the ingenuity of human creation. Stephen Biesty’s extraordinarily detailed illustrations take us inside famous buildings throughout history and demonstrate just how these marvelous structures fit together.





0763669903


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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful.
5Wonderful stories, beautiful illustrations
By Victor Huang
"Buildings are far more than piles of brick or frames of steel, because every one, no matter how large or small, carries the dreams of the people who made it." I loved this book because it told the story of many beautiful buildings, and brought to life the dreams of those who created these buildings. These stories are written in a simple and engaging manner meant for the junior reader, but which also charmed this grownup. The illustrations are extremely beautiful and meticulous, and explain the features of buildings that contributed to their builders' dreams. I learned how buildings can be both aesthetic and purposeful. A wonderful book for kids and grownups alike!

10 of 10 people found the following review helpful.
5Reminds me of David Macaulay Books
By Stuart Dunn
The Story of Buildings is a gorgeous hardcover book that measures approximately 12" x 10". Picking it up for the first time, it looked a bit like a coffee table book for kids, which I guess it could be used as such. The book begins with a chapter on building a house. The author, Patrick Dillon, describes how people used to live in caves because it was the most logical shelter choice available, but eventually developed tools and learned how to make homes. According to him, this is the story of buildings. He then goes on to show how dwelling places have changed both over the years and depending on where one lived. After this other types of structures came into being, like barns, factories, places of worship, etc. He stresses that "Every building has a story to tell." We then dive into the heart of the book.The remaining chapters focus on a particular building, starting with the Pyramid of Djoser and ending with the Straw Bale House in London, England. Each chapter tells background information on the place the building is located, the culture/people, and the building itself. A large foldout 2 page illustration is then provided to show finer details of the building itself. The book has a nice flow to it, because it's like reading a linear evolution of buildings. He starts with Egypt, moves to Greece, then Rome, etc. and manages to paint a beautiful picture with words to accompany the many beautiful illustrations by Stephen Biesty. This is a great book for children and adults alike and reminds me of David Macaulay's books. This is a great book for getting kids interested in architecture and engineering.

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful.
5Beautiful book
By K. Wahl
This book has beautiful illustrations and wonderful anecdotes about all the buildings it highlights. My husband and I have enjoyed it as much as the grandchildren it was given to (6 and 8 years old).

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Everybody Paints! The Lives and Art of the Wyeth Family

Everybody Paints! The Lives and Art of the Wyeth Family is the best read books issued this week . Everybody Paints! The Lives and Art of the Wyeth Family have https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgeyvw_rCtL6jdNISPs237eT5_wT4SWdu301cND-2KJZdUSj7b_0baW4QmUacLLFVl5DkmjH7kpq2oxIEXxpujoSY-N7YSlbKGzms_mUAqX8HUGmFpiZFU8oac0RqbvwGgtA3AtUS-M6jQ/s1600/rating+4.png, You might think a Everybody Paints! The Lives and Art of the Wyeth Family come into sight bothersome and no-nonsense . see this Review Bellow
Everybody Paints! The Lives and Art of the Wyeth Family Details

In this distinctive volume, acclaimed biographer Susan Goldman Rubin shares the fascinating story of the Wyeths—N.C., Andrew, and Jamie—three generations of painters and arguably the First Family of American Art. The accessible text traces the events that shaped their art and the ways their art influenced them in return, while the crisp design showcases gorgeous reproductions of the works that have made the Wyeth family legendary.





0811869849


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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful.
4Talking 'bout these generations
By E. R. Bird
For years it was my pleasure to work in the New York Public Library’s Central Children’s Room, located in the Donnell Library. The Central Children’s Room was the crown jewel of children’s literature in the city, and amongst its many treasures (which included a parrot-headed umbrella owned by Mary Poppins/P.L. Travers and the original Winnie-the-Pooh toys) were N.C. Wyeth’s original paintings from the book Robin Hood. I might be mistaken, but I’m pretty sure we owned them all. Certainly we didn’t put them all on display, but a fair number of them were available for the public and they turned out to be quite a draw for the local illustrators. Since those days the Donnell has been sold and the paintings transferred to the main branch of NYPL where they now grace the walls of the President of the library’s office. If you would like to see them it is not out of the question, but it is also not as easy as it once was. I, for my part, haven’t seen them in years. With that in mind, I think it makes perfect sense why I was drawn to Susan Goldman Rubin’s latest artistic picture book biography Everybody Paints! Not content to tell merely the story of one famous painter, Rubin dares to encapsulate the lives of three generations, with a particular focus on one painter in each. N.C., Andrew, and Jamie are presented to kids here in a clear-cut way that honestly displays their very interesting work.Meet the bronco buster. That’s one name you might give to N.C. Wyeth. Born to parents that thought he’d be better suited as a farmhand than as an artist, N.C. set about to prove himself. Before long he was apprenticed to the great Howard Pyle and became his star student. Wyeth became adept at cattle round-ups as well as painting scenes of action and adventure. His talents brought his lucrative illustration projects like Treasure Island, Kidnapped, and Robin Hood. Along the way he sired talented offspring, each of whom had some kind of talent. Andrew Wyeth pursued his art with the same fervor as his dad, but while the fine art community had never officially accepted his father, Andrew was embraced almost immediately. In his footsteps followed Jamie, a painter who could work on everything from picture books to portraits of presidents. This is their story.Writing a biography of the Wyeths for children isn’t as fraught with potential peril as writing a biography of other artists might be. Having cut her teeth on bios about Diego Rivera (Diego Rivera: An Artist for the People) and Andy Warhol (Andy Warhol: Pop Art Painter) the Wyeths must have struck Ms. Rubin as a true relief. This is not to say that there haven’t been rumors floating around them for years, but vague rumors are far easier to elide than numerous confirmed affairs and “The Factory”. The content is presented in a very nice, straightforward style. We meet each Wyeth in turn, and the narrative will slip from one to another without so much as a herk or a jerk. The sections are not particularly long. Indeed, the book itself is infinitely readable at just a scant 112 pages. That means that if a kid wants to do a bit of serious research they may need to find some additional books to cover the material more extensively. That said, Rubin provides the basic overview and allows the reader to fill in gaps on their own. Nothing wrong with that when you’re dealing with children’s book biographies.It was a Kirkus review of this book that sniffed that this particular book is “undersized and overdesigned.” The “undersized” criticism strikes me as particularly silly, perhaps in light of the fact that as a librarian I’ve seen too many art books rejected by child readers because they were “too big” to comfortably carry home. I’m a New York City librarian, so kids in my town have to lug and tote every book they take from the library themselves. There is no helpful waiting car to dump the load into. With that in mind our little patrons become quite savvy in the ways of pick up and retrieval. Imagine, if you will, that you are attempting to woo a kid with the assignment to read a book about a famous artist into reading this book. I can attest that there’s nothing worse than being cut off mid-spiel by a child who points out, quite logically, that the book is “too big”. I mean there’s no comeback to that! So yes, it’s true that the images in this collection aren’t the size that they are in real life. But that is more than made up for when it comes to the sheer number of images present.To the second criticism, that of being “overdesigned”, the book actually one in a series of artistic biographies done in a “gift book” style. Some of you may recall the rather gorgeous Sparky: The Life and Art of Charles Schulz that came out a couple years ago by Beverly Gherman. Like this book it wasn’t afraid to play around with an eclectic design. Lots of large fonts, different colored pages, and images, images, images. In this book Rubin skillfully alternates between photographs of her subjects and their families and their paintings. To an adult, I suppose the layout of this book might feel jarring but I’m quite fond of it. It kept me awake, allowed my eye to travel from text to image and back again freely, and best of all when Rubin mentions a famous photograph it’s right there for you to look at.You see, one complaint I’ve heard fielded at artistic biographies is that they don’t contain enough images of their subject’s work. How are you supposed to care about someone if you can’t see what it is that they themselves cared about? When Ms. Rubin wrote Diego Rivera I adored it. Some librarians, however, wanted a lot more images. Full paintings would be described but never seen. One might point out that in an internet age it’s fairly easy to see pictures of things whenever you want to, but the point stands. A book about an artist should do its duty and give its subject proper due. With that in mind, Everybody Paints! fairly pops with pictures. I don’t know enough about the rights to reproduce painted images in the way Rubin presents them here. What I do know is that she’s done a stand up and cheer job of it. Nothing major feels like it’s missing.In spite of the fact that there’s been a real push to promote great nonfiction books with kid readers, it can be a hard sell. Adults that are my age or older have a hard time remembering any particularly great books of nonfiction from when we were young (and no, the Childhood of Famous Americans series does NOT count). Few of us are aware that we’re in a golden age of great children’s informational titles. What Everybody Paints! does is typify this kind of book. It’s a hard subject that requires a deft hand. And with her abundance of experience in this particular area, Susan Goldman Rubin does her subjects proud. As beautiful as you would expect, and three times as fun as you might think to read.For ages 9 and up.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
5Wonderful
By RocketCityNana
Wonderful book for adults and children. My 9 year old grandson read it after we finished homeschool and was so eager to share the information with us and his 7 year old brother.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
5Five Stars
By Shopper
Nicely done!

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Dinosaur Zoom!

Dinosaur Zoom! is bestselling read books published this week . Dinosaur Zoom! has been https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh8UzAQ1fRkjS6YqGZn4aOMz3YpwBPfFrt_EoHa8mrTEL18alPZCZHBpGF-1zA9pFRP9346jA8Mi9XqC_7PMym7B-orLqiilf-Rc-jpiwBfX9SyAJOznFPJqVcE6yWSPrvDNXMMGkM2dv0/s1600/rating+4-5.png, You might think a Dinosaur Zoom! come into sight dull and very serious . look these ones Review Bellow
Dinosaur Zoom! Details

The dinosaurs are back and this time they’re revving, roaring, and racing . . . to a dinosaur birthday party! Bursting with dinosaurs and vehicles of all shapes and sizes and with a delicious surprise ending, this is guaranteed to bring a smile to the faces of small boys and girls everywhere.





0763673943


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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
5Go Dinos Go!
By J.Prather
When you put dinosaurs together with transportation and going fast, you are destined to please every preschooler in your story time audience! Penny Dale has created the perfect mix for young dinosaur and transportation fans with this bold, colorful book that even manages to teach some colors. Each two page spread features a different dinosaur driving vehicles as varied as jeeps, tractors, sports cars, cranes, and motorcycles as they race to set up for a birthday party! They go up and down hills, through forests and mud puddles with as much speed as the accompanying zoom zoom and brmm brmm text can muster.The text doesn't rhyme, but still manages to achieve a great read aloud flow while including lots of fun sound effect words such as zoom, splash, squelch, beep, brmmm and chug. These are all fun words that encourage audience participation as they speed along with these multi-colored dinosaurs. Each dinosaur is referred to by his color, such as "Green dinosaur rattling. Rattling down the hill." The dinosaur colors are well defined, making this a good resource for teaching colors and color words. We learn six different colors before the dinos all arrive at the party site. Kids will then relish the opportunity to identify each dino as they emerge from hiding to surprise their "littlest dinosaur". If you need help with identification, the front and end papers identify each dino and each piece of machinery.Dinosaur Zoom is an excellent choice for even the youngest of dino fans! This is a book that will generate lots of requests for repeat readings due to the bouncy text and the detailed, colorful illustrations. An exciting mix of two favorite preschool subjects and an enthusiastic recommend.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
4Zooming here, zooming there, what are friends for?
By Amazon Customer
This book brings together so many different elements your child will be learning and having fun at the same time! A win-win situation! Dinosaur Zoom! is filled with big, easy words, colors, an array of dinosaurs and vehicles, varying terrain and weather, and the endless possibilities that can arise with a little team work and compassion.This book has been illustrated with children in mind, using bright colors, simply detailed, and wonderfully matched to the story itself. These are the types of books children of both sexes are drawn too and will be cherished for a long time.This is a must have book for any elementary grade teacher or children's story time, as well as for your personal collection. I know my young daughter enjoyed it and I am sure your children will too!

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
5Wonderful and sweet book!
By J. M. Owens
This is a wonderful book - probably my new favorite kids' book. It hits all the right notes; it's just the right length, the text is fun to say while incorporating some advanced words, the art is wonderful, the message is sweet, and it has dinosaurs driving cars! My 3 year old son makes me read it at least twice every night, and unlike the majority of kids' books, I really don't mind. We'll be buying copies of this for our nephews (and nieces, should any come along!)

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Dark Triumph (His Fair Assassin Trilogy)

Dark Triumph (His Fair Assassin Trilogy) is bestselling read books issued the foregoing week . Dark Triumph (His Fair Assassin Trilogy) have https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjrKaJp3zXUcHJM9YenLScfJJXHyr-SFkCldSgWVhVjP_kQMsnh_SnlVLei_cNljY-H6ckI3GBpAOjuWvxe1ymZ3lXeRe_UH1PImTvL5jglnkTK-d-L8Gyh7Q1PolJd-If5T9QZp-rXheo/s1600/rating.png, You might think a Dark Triumph (His Fair Assassin Trilogy) visible bothersome and solemn. look this Review Bellow
Dark Triumph (His Fair Assassin Trilogy) Details

New York Times Bestseller


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33 of 36 people found the following review helpful.
4Sybella's story delivers
By Liviania
GRAVE MERCY was one of my favorite books of 2012 so DARK TRIUMPH, the second book in the His Fair Assassin trilogy, had a lot to live up to. Robin LaFevers does not try to repeat GRAVE MERCY, giving Sybella her own story.Sybella is a very different person from Ismae. She's more wild and vicious. At the same time, she is more self contained, careful not to let others close, because she grew up in a home full of betrayal. She can trust herself and herself alone. She never trusted the abbess and knows she was right not to when she's sent back to her home in order to spy. Her father, d'Albret, is a monster and she longs for the order to kill him. In the meantime she enjoys assassinating his underlings.DARK TRIUMPH begins with Sybella warning Ismae and the duchess, risking the exposure of her true loyalties. It is not an inviting beginning for new readers. Who the characters are, their relationships to each other, who is important and why is not explained. The religion of LaFevers alternate Brittany is not explained either, thus new readers must puzzle out who Mortain is and how is handmaidens work for themselves. I even found myself wishing for a small refresher on the world since it's been awhile since I last read GRAVE MERCY.I soon fell back into the swing of things. The scope of DARK TRIUMPH is smaller. Sybella's focus is moving past her family's history rather than the duchess and the future of Brittany. She cares about what happens, but it isn't her priority. I loved the politics of GRAVE MERCY and yet, I didn't miss them. LaFevers progresses the overarching plot of the trilogy, but she doesn't force Sybella places she doesn't belong. Some might be disappointed by how different the two books are, though I think more readers will appreciate the detail given to Sybella's character. I can't wait to see what LaFevers does with Annith in MORTAL HEART.In addition to espionage, murder, and sabotage, DARK TRIUMPH features a daring rescue and perilous flight across the countryside. Sybella finds herself accompanying the Beast of Waroch, a berserker imprisoned by her father. He's not handsome, but he is ridiculously noble and tough. He's very similar to Sybella, but different from her in ways that provide for perfect balance. DARK TRIUMPH is less steamy than GRAVE MERCY, but I found myself swooning more. Although he would not believe it, the Beast is as much a fairytale hero as his name would imply.Anyone intrigued by Sybella and her secrets in GRAVE MERCY will devour DARK TRIUMPH with relish. Her family is truly horrifying, and she deserves to find healing and absolution. LaFevers continues to make history and fantasy collide in the most delightful way. DARK TRIUMPH delivers all the action and romance His Fair Assassin fans could hope for.

16 of 18 people found the following review helpful.
4Sybella's even better than Ismae!
By Ashleigh
See more of my reviews sooner on The YA Kitten!As much as I liked Grave Mercy when I read it last year, it was hardly perfect. Pacing issues and a heroine I don't much care for in hindsight are my two most noteworthy problems with it, but neither of those are anywhere to be found Dark Triumph. LaFevers kick it out a couple dozen notches and shows everyone how writing a sequel is done. It's so good that I'm scared the next book in the series will disappoint me!Ismae's story in Grave Mercy began with her wedding and escape to the convent, which made the pacing drag a little as we saw her grow up, but Sybella's story cuts right to the chase and reveals a part of her background we never learned in the previous book: she's the daughter of D'Albret, the man trying to force Duchess Anne to marry him. Over the course of the novel, bits and pieces of what living in his household was like for her. Close to the end, we come to learn exactly what had Sybella so wild and distraught when she first arrived at the convent and met Ismae. It's... pretty bad. I don't blame her a bit.Sybella is also a more engaging narrator. Whereas Ismae is very devout and subdued, Sybella is angry, jaded, and often wonders if St. Mortain exists at all. Her voice is more natural, there's hardly any noticeable flubs in the prose (no blood singing in triumph or whatever, thank goodness), and it's difficult not to cheer her on when she has to deal with a very twisted family. There's her monstrous, occasionally-flat-but-still-terrifying father, one brother who is in love with her and rather messed up, another brother who is even MORE messed up, and two younger sisters she'd do anything to protect.While reading Grave Mercy, imagining the Beast of Waroch being with anyone was a little difficult, but he fits in well as Sybella's love interest--and especially dear to me because he isn't a handsome man at all. The way he understands her and accepts all of her secrets so readily won me over in a hurry. I didn't appreciate him knocking her out because she wouldn't go along with one of his plans later in the book, but other than that one really stupid moment, their relationship is really quite sweet.Mortal Heart won't be out until 2014, but I'll be okay with the wait as long as I can keep Sybella in the meantime.

8 of 10 people found the following review helpful.
3I want to love this series, but...
By Melissa Owens
Originally posted 4/14/13 at Melissa's Bookshelf.I know I am in the minority with this series, but I am just not as into these books as everyone else seems to be. I want to love them. I mean, who wouldn't want to love books about assassin nuns? The premise behind this series screamed to me and I couldn't wait to get my hands on this book after I read Grave Mercy last Fall. But sadly, Dark Triumph fell flat for me. I wish I had written a review of Grave Mercy so that I could remember all of my thoughts after reading it, but I do know that I enjoyed that book more than its sequel.I'll start by saying that Dark Triumph started off very slowly for me. So slowly, in fact, that I didn't find myself getting into the story until probably close to halfway into the book. Not only that, but I had no problem putting it down when I had to do something else or go to bed or whatnot. I'm not sure if the slow pace is due to the high level of detail LaFevers provides in her story-telling, or that events simply weren't happening fast enough to keep me interested, or perhaps it was a combination of the two. Like Grave Mercy, this book is written in the first person present tense, this time from Sybella's perspective. I generally don't care for first person present tense storytelling, though it has worked for me a few times, most noticeably with The Hunger Games trilogy. Well, I can't way it worked for me in Dark Triumph. I can't pinpoint what it was about it -- perhaps an awkwardness at times? Regardless, I found myself distracted by the fact that the book was written in the first person present tense, so that took away from my enjoyment of the story. Other than my issue with the point of view and tense, I do like LaFevers' writing style and her use of imagery and description.I enjoyed the way LaFevers told us Sybella's backstory in bits and pieces throughout the entire book. It was an effective way to develop her character and I will say that I probably preferred her to Ismae. In the end, though, I felt like this book was doing more to tell us about Sybella, her life, and her personal experiences, as opposed to really furthering the plot surrounding the Duchess and those working treason against her. I don't mean to imply that is necessarily a bad thing, because Sybella's story is certainly powerful, but everything involving the Duchess felt like it almost didn't belong in the book. Hands down, my favorite part of the story (minor spoiler alert) was the developing romance between Sybella and Beast. Those were the pages where my attention was truly captivated and I very much wanted to keep reading the story. But make no mistake, this book is much darker and grittier than Grave Mercy, there is nothing exactly light-hearted about the unfolding romance or the rest of the story (assassin nuns, remember), but the growing relationship between Sybella and Beast is beautiful to read.I suppose I can understand why so many people love these books, but they just are not quite working for me as a total package. The first two books feel a bit disjointed and even the stories within each book seem disconnected at times. We know so little about Annith, whose story will be featured in Mortal Heart, and what we do know doesn't spark much interest for me, so I have a difficult time seeing how her story will follow Ismae's and Sybella's and connect the three books. I'm not sure if I will be in a rush to read the final bok when it comes out next year, but I expect I will want to at least finish out the series at some point.Read this book...~ If you liked Grave Mercy -- no reason not to continue the series, right?~ If you enjoy paranormal historical fiction/fantasy~ If you liked Shadow and Bone by Leigh Bardugo or The Girl of Fire and Thorns by Rae Carson

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Glory O'Brien's History of the Future

Glory O'Brien's History of the Future is the most popular book released the foregoing week . Glory O'Brien's History of the Future has https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgeyvw_rCtL6jdNISPs237eT5_wT4SWdu301cND-2KJZdUSj7b_0baW4QmUacLLFVl5DkmjH7kpq2oxIEXxpujoSY-N7YSlbKGzms_mUAqX8HUGmFpiZFU8oac0RqbvwGgtA3AtUS-M6jQ/s1600/rating+4.png, You might think a Glory O'Brien's History of the Future visible tedious and solemn. look this one Review Bellow
Glory O'Brien's History of the Future Details

In this masterpiece about freedom, feminism, and destiny, Printz Honor author A.S. King tells the epic story of a girl coping with devastating loss at long last--a girl who has no idea that the future needs her, and that the present needs her even more.




0316222720


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13 of 15 people found the following review helpful.
2I wanted to love this book so much
By Tiffany M. Stephens
I wanted to love this book so much, but I couldn't. As a women who is not afraid of the F-word (that's feminism, not the other f-word) I was excited to see a teen book fully embrace modern feminism, but, ultimately it was the feminist message that fell flat for me. The book, in a very small nutshell, is about a young woman named Glory O'Brien who, along with her friend Ellie, gains the ability to see people's future when she looks into their eyes. From these visions, Glory learns that in the relatively near future a law will be passed preventing women from working. This law will snowball into a hellish landscape for women and spark a revolution that Glory herself will be intimately involved in.The book has a strong feminist message, but IMHO, the message gets convoluted. For starters, Glory O'Brien and her father are both self described feminists, yet none of their actions seem to support this idea. Glory's father's feminism is mentioned, but never shown. He doesn't make any overtly feminist statements or go out of his way to help the feminist cause. We have to believe he is a feminist because Glory tells us he is. Glory herself is constantly slut-shaming her friend Ellie (and other women too). She seems hung up on the idea that women are overly sexualized in this country (which they are), but fails to see any sex-positive roles a woman can embrace. Every mention of sex or sexuality in the book is painted as a negative experience.This though, wasn't my biggest problem with the book. My biggest issue was that Glory's visions of the future seemed hokey. As a teen librarian, I've read my fair share of dystopian literature. For any dystopian world to work for me, I need to buy the origin story. How did the world get this way? I like the idea that it might be caused by the dissolution of women's rights, but I just could not buy that this would happen in the near future. Perhaps if King would have spent more time building the case for the coming revolution I might have believed it, but I don't buy that some time within the next twenty or so years a law will be passed that states that women can't work and that enough people will go along with it for it to be in any way successful. I could not suspend my disbelief to that degree. It also seemed convenient that everyone whom Glory came across seemed intimately involved in this future. Seriously, everyone involved in the coming downfall of the United States conveniently goes to Glory's school or spends time at the local mall? The whole situation seemed hyperbolic and contrived, like I was being hit over the head with the message. The problem with all of this is that I don't think it leads to a thoughtful discussion about women's rights and feminism, because everyone, even people who hate the whole idea of feminism, can look at this future and say "That is horrible!" It lacks the nuance for a good discussion.Despite my bitching, there were several things I really liked about this book. I think the story line about Glory's mother and photography are lovely, and I think the language and pacing are spot on. But none of it was enough to for me to get over the overly simplified, mixed feminist message. Perhaps I had too high of hopes for this one. I will recommend it to my students, though. I am interested to see what a young person thinks of the story. My dislike for the book may be tainted by my age and experience.

6 of 6 people found the following review helpful.
5A book that demands attention
By The Compulsive Reader
Glory O’Brien is graduating from high school, and unlike her classmates, she has no idea what’s next. Both Glory and her father have been in a sort of stasis, unable to move on since the suicide of Glory’s mother fourteen years earlier. Glory’s feminist beliefs tend to ostracize her at school, and her only friend, Ellie, is self-centered heading in a different direction in life. When the girls drink the mummified remains of a bat one night, they start receiving transmissions from every person they look at, seeing their pasts and their terrifying futures.While the premise is not the weirdest thing King has come up with, Glory O’Brien’s History of the Future commands attention. The transmissions that Glory and Ellie receive are equally fascinating and chilling, and the future that Glory tells takes over the entire novel. Glory’s voice is funny, emotionally-charged, and insistent, but she’s a bit lost. Her exploration of a future where society is dismantled not by bombs or wars, but by refusing women equal rights, causes Glory to take a closer look at how she interacts with people in her life. King does a great job at showing connections between people across time and generations, a good reminder that every decision and action has a consequence that we can’t always see. King’s newest book is, as always, memorable and unique.Cover Comments: A.S. King always wins the good cover lottery. I like the black and yellow, and I love the title font. This is a fantastic and attention-grabbing cover.

8 of 9 people found the following review helpful.
3Not as Groundbreaking as I Had Hoped
By Stormy(Book.Blog.Bake.)
Glory O’Brien’s History of the Future was oddly political. Based on the summary, I assumed there would be some of that, but I wasn’t prepared for just how political the book ended up being. It felt very much like a forced message to me, which makes it difficult to evaluate Glory O’Brien’s History of the Future as a story, but I’ll try.Glory O’Brien’s History of the Future starts with Glory graduating high school and unsure of what she’s doing next. She’s not going to college(at least not right away), and she’s still dealing with her mother’s suicide, which made both Glory and her dad put their entire future on hold. During hanging out with her only friend, Glory ends up drinking petrified bat ashes(it’s strange, but part of reading a book such as Glory O’Brien’s History of the Future is just going along with the weirder elements), and finds she can see the future, but only in glimpses. As she begins to piece together these glimpses, she realizes what horrors the future might hold.Glory is a difficult protagonists, because one of her defining traits is her passivity. She doesn’t know what to do after she graduates high school, she only has a friend based on convenience, and her only real passion for anything is for photography–a passion she shares with her deceased mom. The photography takes up a lot of the book–there’s several scenes in a dark room, several passages about what Glory sees when she looks through a camera. On the whole, while I appreciate this passive character having an interest in something, the technical bits of photography got boring quickly. I understood why it was added–Glory seeing her world through the flash of a camera and still moments, and how that plays into the fact she sees the future in glimpses–but the way it was done didn’t keep me engaged.That being said, I LOVED the glimpses into the future. After glimpsing into the future via several people, Glory begins to piece together the story–or the history of the future, as it were. In the future, it turns out the Fair Pay Act–which is suppose to make it illegal to pay women and men different wages for the same work–has a loophole that some shady politicians exploit. The end result is a terrifying future in which women systemically begin to have any rights stripped away.I’m of two minds on this. Even though the future that Glory sees seems unrealistic, it’s not impossible. It would have been easier for King to just come up with some sort of whole new system, like a government being overthrown, but instead she uses the political systems and the government that’s currently in place. It makes the future seem all that much more terrifying and also shows how systems humans often think of as infallible are used by incredibly fallible humans. Considering the fact this new power of Glory’s is coming around because she drank bat ashes, there’s something incredibly grounding about this approach.On the other hand, this approach feels extremely message-driven. And it’s not a message I disagree with, by any means(I’m all for literature exploring feminist issues), but I prefer some nuance in my books. Life is often messy and complicated and things often have multiple causes. The future in Glory’s visions seems so. . . straightforward, albeit in a really awful way. It jumps around screaming “look at me! think about these issues!” instead of letting them quietly hang in the back of your mind weeks after finishing the book.To further complicate my feelings on this matter, the end result of Glory’s vision is suppose to be a feminist and empowering message, but it clashes with the high amount of slut-shaming in this book. Now, real people often do slut-shame others, so I’m not always bothered by it in books when it’s portrayed realistically. I had a HUGE problem with it in Glory O’Brien’s History of the Future, though. Not only is the future that Glory sees surrounded by women having their rights taken from them, but it’s pointed out in the book that Glory was raised by a feminist father. . . and yet she constantly slut-shames her best friend(well, her friend of convenience), Ellie. It felt out of place for Glory to do this based upon how she was raised plus the visions of the future she saw, and she never really learned from it.That being said, for the most part I actually did somewhat enjoy Glory O’Brien’s History of the Future. It was thought-provoking, if not exactly subtle. It was a fresh take on genres like Dystopia–having a main character who gains the ability to see the future and how the world comes to be that way–which kept me reading the entire time. There’s also something about King’s writing that makes her books easy to slip into, even when I find the subject matter less than fascinating(like the emphasis on photography). In the end, I just feel so conflicted about this book. There were enjoyable aspects, but then there were issues that counteracted those enjoyable parts. I think Glory O’Brien’s History of the Future will be worth it to some readers, but it’s not as groundbreaking as I had hoped.

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