Sunday, March 18, 2012

TWISTED - Laurie Halse Anderson

TWISTED by Laurie Halse Anderson


Tyler Miller was an unnoticed "Nerd Boy" until he did something that he shouldn't have.


TWISTED tells the story of this young man's trials and tribulations (mirrored through his interactions with a video game, in which he travels through the 66 layers of hell) during his senior year in high school. He can't seem to stay away from trouble; he contemplates that his only escape from trouble might be to escape from life. 

This book was quite fast paced, facing a myriad of areas such as parent relationships, sibling relationships, school, sex, crime, bullying, drugs, alcohol, abuse and then some. I truly couldn't put it down and read it within one sitting. On a scale of one-to-ten, this book registers about a seven-and-a-half, due to its almost hurried sense of dealing with such heavy issues. Recommended for high school students and those who would interact with high school students in great capacities.

Friday, March 16, 2012

Stardust by Neil Gaiman

After having a somewhat love/creepy relationship with Coraline by Neil Gaiman, I was particularly interested in this title when I picked it up at Books-a-Million. It is different from his other novels, being that it is written in an old-timey English language. It was published originally in 1997 as a comic book, and was later released in 1999 as a conventional novel by Harper Teen Publishers. It is primarily considered a part of the romance genre, with a little bit of romance thrown in as well. I would recommend this book to at least juniors and seniors in high school. There are some adult themes and some words of profanity involved in the telling of the story, but nothing too obscene.

The story takes place in the city of Wall, and we are first introduced to Dunstan Thorne. He travels past the huge wall that runs through his town into the land of Faerie, where there is a magical market held every nine years. There he meets an imprisoned princess and unexpectedly fathers a baby that is later delivered to his doorstep. The nameplate on the basket says Tristran Thorne.

Seventeen years later, in an effort to secure the love of the beautiful Victoria, he promises to bring her back a certain falling star.

In the meantime, we are introduced to three old witches who need the heart of a young star in order to regain their youth, and three princes are ordered by a dying king to retrieve a certain stone from the star in order to succeed their father for the throne. In other words: there are others who wish to get their hands on this star besides Tristran.




He sets off on an incredible journey and realizes that this star has the same form as a young woman. Together they travel through incredible circumstances, meet a unicorn, travel with pirates on their sky-ship, and escape the clutches of an evil queen. It is a story that takes you to places you can only imagine.

The pictures are from the movie that was adapted from the book and released Istarring Charlie Cox, Ben Barnes, Michelle Pfeiffer, and Claire Danes. It was released on August 10th, 2007, and has earned over $135,553,760 worldwide.



What I Saw and How I Lied is the story of a girl who, due to her circumstances, is forced to grow up.


The story takes place in 1947. World War II has just ended and Evie's stepfather has just returned from the war. Oftentimes, Evie struggles to feel noticed and loved by her friends and family. Until one evening, she meets Peter...

Peter also served in the war and remains a mysterious character. He gives Evie the attention she needs and flatters her with his charm. 


Peter's Car

Peter is several years older than Evie but she doesn't care. She is in love and no one can tell her any different. She is taken with him and wants him and his affection more than anything.


Eventually, the people around Evie begin to change, including Peter. He doesn't notice her as often anymore and she works so hard to win his affection. She refuses to see the harmful changes taking place in her family. Their lack of communication is damaging beyond her understanding. Evie recognizes the issue, but by now it is too late.


Tragedy strikes when her mother, stepfather, and Peter go out for a boat ride. They refuse to heed the weather warnings and leave Evie behind at the hotel. Evie worries people are being evacuated due to a hurricane. She fails to realize it will be a while before she sees her family again. She breaks down when she finds the love of her life has disappeared.


In a matter weeks Evie's life has spiraled out of control. Everyone she has ever loved is broken or breaking and it is up to her to restore what dignity her and her family may sustain. Evie is now responsible to salvage a happy life the only way she knows how...lies.







More Wrinkles in Time...with Unicorns!

In my previous post, I wrote about Madeleine L'Engle's A Wrinkle in Time. Now I've read its second companion, A Swiftly Tilting Planet, which narrates the story of Charles Wallace who, now an intelligent adolescent, was introduced as a sheepish boy in the first novel. An interesting theme that L'Engle threads through each book is the idea of time travel, altering the past for the sake of a better future.

Charles Wallace, the youngest son of a family of world renown physicists who chat with the President more often than the average rocket scientist. After a chance meeting with a time-traveling unicorn on Thanksgiving day, Charles Wallace finds himself on an adventure back in time to save the world from nuclear warfare.

Without divulging any more plot details and possibly spoiling it, I want to explore some of the science common to L'Engle's novels, which, written in the 1960s and 70s, were on the cutting edge of scientific theory.

At the time the book was written, physicists were just beginning to note the hypothetical possibility of time travel. In quantum mechanics, the study of the microscopic fundamental components that make up all matter, physicists hypothesized due to faulty equations the possibility of quantum unpredictability. This concept is centered around the necessity for these particles to act spontaneously, wherein the cause of their coordination is unpredictable. This unpredictability implies that results in the quantum realm are not predictable based on formulaic function but operate in a paradigm of multiple possibilities. For theorists, it has become necessary in recent years to integrate this concept into Newtonian physics (the physics of large objects).

As a result, string theorists are incorporating multiple dimensions. Hypothetically, these dimensions would operate under the same laws but would be invisible to the other yet in some way pertinent to the whole. Essentially, these ideas, if true, would promote a constantly changing present reality. For instance, if I throw a rock through a window and it disrupts the lives of those inside the building, in another timeframe their lives go on as if the event never happened. While mathematically complicated and philosophically dense, these possibilities exist and elude to the reality of time travel. Methodically, this is not the same idea of time travel that functions in the novel, but the implications are the same.

In each dimension, actions are reverberating toward different futures. This is the concept that allows the protagonist to "travel" throughout time and alter the reality of certain events occurring in the novel's "real time."







bUMPED
                                  BuMPED 
                                     BUmPED 
                                        BUMpED 
                                           BUMPe
                                             BUMPEd



once uPon a time in the futuRe....

tEenaGers were rewarded for getting pregNANT



The best PREGGERS are the most famous celebrities.
There is an epidemic virus that causes everyone over the age of 18 to be infertile....
This made any teenager who is able to get bumped and get prego is the most prized members of the society. 





Matching: 

"FERTILICIOUS"                            *                                     * SEX

"BUMP"                                              *                                      * PREGNANT


"Pregging"                                         *                                      * CELEBRITY

"QUICKwiki"                                    *                                     * FABULOUS

"reproductive professional"     *                                      * WIKIPEDIA







There is an IDENTical twin...

One was HARMONY
and the other was  MELODY









MELODY: "One thing I appreciate about Harmony is that I don't have to worry about encryption. Her immediate intentions are totally clear: She's here to make me get religion." 



HARMONY:"Melody and I came into this life together and i'll do whatever it takes to see her in the next one. But, by grace, she's not making it easy."   

What does joy stand for? 

Harmony answers...

Jesus first
Others next
Yourself last





"ONLY you can choose how and when you want to pregg. the POWER is YOURS!"  -Veronica


LEtter from Harmony and Melody 10 years later...


Dear girls... and boys...

Do not listen to what the world says about....
what is cool and not cool, 
what is FERTILICIOUS or not,
what determines someone's worth...

It is up to yourself to decide who you should be.
It is up to yourself to decide what you want to be.

DO NOT let someone tell you what you are worth by their standards.
because we are... 
we all are....


"We are smart

we are stunning

we are strong

we are everything we need to be (pg 302)" 


sincerely,
Melody and Harmony
















A Wrinkle in Time

I read A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L’Engle, which is the first book in this particular series. This book that is now famous in middle and high school classrooms reflects its excellence with the fact that it is a Newbery Award winner. A Wrinkle in Time follows Meg Murry and her brilliant, yet unconventional, family. Meg’s weird baby brother, Charles Wallace, forms some mysterious relationships with three old ladies down the road. Charles Wallace and Meg quickly find another friend in Calvin, an older boy from school who considers himself a misfit, like the Murry children, but who is viewed by everyone else as a superstar. 
A Wrinkle in Time is the story of the children’s journey to find Meg and Charles’ missing father, a scientist who has been out on a mysterious mission for years. They team up with Mrs. Which, Mrs. Who, and Mrs. Whatsit, as well as many other creatures of the universe, to travel beyond the entire galaxy in just a short amount of time. Meg has a difficult time understanding everything that is happening. Unlike Charles Wallace, she is not so brilliant that she can basically read people’s minds. It takes her time to understand things, especially when she gets frustrated and upset when she is misunderstanding. A continuing theme throughout the story ties into a quote that says, “But you see, Meg, just because we don’t understand, doesn’t mean the explanation doesn’t exist.” This is something that all of the characters battle, but it takes a particular tole on Meg as she is trying to find all the right answers at all the right times and sometimes comes up short. 
The story continues as the children are left alone on the planet Camazotz to battle IT. No one knows exactly what IT is yet the children have to battle this thing in order to get their father back anyways.The only way these three young children can battle IT is by outsmarting it - a very difficult task to do - and finding the one thing that it does not have. This requires the children to look inside themselves for all the gifts they have been blessed with and acknowledge some things they would like to overlook. 
Meg, Charles Wallace, and Calvin all learn their individual lessons by traveling this journey. They are able to realize what their strengths and weaknesses are and how to use these things in their favor, regardless of the circumstance. Each one finds out what it truly means to love and it is expressed in many different ways throughout the text. The characters learn lessons they would have not otherwise learned while on Earth  because their extreme circumstances force them to reach outside of themselves and find a stronger person. A person who maybe, just maybe, can help save their dad.

Fever, 1793


Fever, 1793
by Laurie Halse Anderson


Since the main characters of this book live and work in a coffeeshop, I decided to drink some coffee in order to get a full sensory experience. I unfortunately could not make it to Philadelphia, where the coffeeshop is located, but I found pictures of it and it looks like a lovely place.







  • Published in 2000, Fever has won many awards, including:

  • American Library Association Best Book for Young Adults
  • International Reading Association Teacher's Choice
  • Parent's Guide to Children's Media Award
  • Junior Library Guild Selection
  • Children's Book-of-the-Month Club selection
  •                                                                                      The New York Public Library's Best 2001 Books for the Teenager
This novel follows the story of a fourteen-year-old girl named Mattie over the course of a yellow fever outbreak in Philadelphia in the year (you guessed it) 1793. She watches as family and friends fall ill and die all around her, and at one point she even contracts the disease. Mattie eventually is left completely alone and has to find a way to survive. 

I would absolutely recommend this book. It is a historical fiction which does a good job of integrating actual people and events, for example, the yellow fever epidemic, which actually happened. The characters are well-developed and depict normal human emotions within the context of a historical story.







The House of the Scorpion



The House of the Scorpion
 
Nancy Farmer    

The House of the Scorpion was published by Atheneum/Richard Jackson Books in September 2002, and has won a National Book Award, a Newbery Honor, and a Michael L. Printz Award. The original hardcover edition is 380 pages, but the novel is fast-paced and the adventure draws readers into the story. The House of the Scorpion is geared for ages 11 and older, but it is a lengthy chapter book that may have a higher reading level than some sixth graders may be prepared for. Though the book may attract boys, due to the mix of science fiction and action genres it embodies, girls will also enjoy the romance woven into the plot as Matteo tries to get back to María, his only companion in a household that despises him for being a clone. 


Readers who enjoyed The Giver or Ender’s Game may enjoy The House of the Scorpion, which combines the futuristic science fiction world of Ender’s Game with the heavy burden of the knowledge of freedom in The Giver. Matteo Alacrán, the protagonist of The House of the Scorpion, shares both Jonah’s will to live and feel emotion as well as the pain of Ender’s intense isolation.



If The House of the Scorpion were being made into a film: 

Press Release 16 March 2012

“The House of the Scorpion,” a new film that will be released in theaters next month, features Gabriel Velasquez as Matteo Alacrán, a young boy isolated in an opium field who discovers that he is actually the clone of a powerful drug lord. Based on Nancy Farmer’s novel of the same name, director Andrew Gordon plans to re-create Farmer’s science-fiction thriller in the deserts of Arizona, a disconnect from the typical sci-fi settings of outer space or the laboratories of mad scientists. Set in a fictional nation called Opium, a strip of land between Arizona and Mexico, Matteo is given anything he could want by El Patrón, a 140-year-old drug lord and patriarch of the Alacrán family. The rest of the Alacrán family are not too pleased with Matteo’s status as clone, or his high standing with the powerful El Patrón, so things turn sour for Matteo when El Patrón dies. Alone and totally ignorant about the world outside the opium fields, Matteo now must escape and survive in the Communist futuristic Mexico known as Aztlán.
“We’re really excited about this film,” says Joan Snyder, co-producer of “The House of the Scorpion,” “though the action and adventure target middle and high school male audiences, we’re hoping the threads of romance and science fiction will lure girls and adults into the theater as well. Though the novel is technically a sci-fi, we’ve done a lot with the screenplay and the characters, and it should appeal to a wider audience.”
You won’t want to miss “The House of the Scorpion,” coming soon to a cinema near you. 


Thursday, March 15, 2012

She Said Yes by: Misty Bernall

The book "She Said Yes" written by Misty Bernall was written as a tribute to her daughter Cassie Bernall. Cassie died in the Columbine shootings on April 20, 1999. The book talks about her life before she became a Christian as well as after. Cassie was asked the question "do you believe in God" and when she replied "yes" she was shot point blank in the head.
The book tells about her life before she was saved. She lived a dark life very much like her killers. In her journals she wrote several times about wanting to kill her parents and how she would do it. She wore black clothing and got involved with a crowd. Cassie and her friends talked about satanic rituals, drew graphic pictures of killing their parents and smoked pot on regular occasions. Until her parents found out and called for a stop in her activities.
Cassie got involved in a church youth group and met new friends who were very accepting and loving toward her. On March 8, 1997 she talks about how she was "reborn." In the book her mom gives several accounts from her perspective as well as her husbands. She quotes many of the things Cassie told her and quotes several of Cassie's close friends.
The book shows that even after becoming a Christian Cassie went through many struggles with hurting herself, and having dark thoughts. However the way Cassie died shows that she was ultimately sold out to Christ.
I like that this story can be read in a private or public school environment. The book is just a history of the Columbine shootings and the life of a girl who was killed in the shootings.









The story also gives inspiration, hope, and warning signs to parents who may have a teen going down a similar road. Teens can also relate to the book because they can connect with many of the feelings Cassie had. The feelings of "hating your parents" and feeling like the world is going to end. However, Cassie gives a hope to teens that their lives can be changed.



Dear Cassie,

There have been so many people who's lives have been changed just by reading about your life. Sometimes in life God allows things to happen for His honor and glory. Your life left behind a hope that no matter how far down the road you have gone God can still save. What an inspiration to teenagers as well as parents of teenagers. You showed courage by saying yes to the question "do you believe in God." You left a resonating question in the minds of young people throughout America, if I was asked that question would I have the bravery to be able to say yes. I remember being in high school and asking myself that question. Could I look my killers in the face knowing I would be killed and saying yes I believe in God. Thank you Cassie for your challenge and truly inspirational message.

Sincerely,
Tiffany

A Summer of Kings

A Summer of Kings by Han Nolan
Published in 2006 by Harcourt Books

"Last summer a murderer came to live with us."

Summary: During the summer of 1963 King-Roy Johnson, an 18 year old black man accused of killing a white man, comes to live with the family of 14 year old Esther Young. She is the outcast of her family with no special talent like her siblings. Esther wants this summer to be exciting and is interested in King-Roy's story. She wants to get to know him, although she likes him as more than a friend - "I decided this would be the summer of a new me, a more mature me, a more mysterious and exotic me, and I was determined that our new houseguest, the murderer, was to play a starring role in my new life." (page 4)  King-Roy has turned to following Malcolm X after a horrible incident back in Alabama. Esther is drawn to MLK's views and wants all the violence to stop. Their oposing views bring conflict to the friendship and together they must figure out how to make things work while still doing what they can to stop racial discrimination. The ending is very sad - it made me angry at first but it makes the story all the more powerful.


Screen shot 2010-03-17 at 9.17.17 PM.png





Tuesday, March 13, 2012

The Professor's House by Willa Cather - A Letter That Would Have Changed The Professor


Dearest Professor,
There were so many plans I had. There were so many things I wanted to do; for myself, for your daughter, and for you. I'm sorry that it had to be cut short. I'm sorry that I couldn't give your daughter everything she could ever want. I only hope that the vacuum's success is indicative of the amount time that went into creating it. If it is, then at least I was able to leave your daughter with something. I loved her. I hope that she is happy and I hope that you can find happiness in her and in your wife. Do not  be sad or depressed that I am gone, but instead live in a way that reflects our relationship. Live in a way that utilizes the genius that is Godfrey St. Peter. I am sure that your book, although never finished, is changing the world and the minds of many people. Nobody is as much a scholar as you when it comes Spanish Adventures in North America, and I am honored that I was able to be involved in your eternal impact on the genre of history.
There are so many things I would love to ask you. Did you move into your new house yet? How is it? How is your family? How is your relationship with your wife? How is Rosamund? Is she happy? How was the book received? Did it win any awards?
I only hope that one day I will see you again. This is my hope so that you can tell me all about your life and also that I would one day, again, get to meet with a man that has had a great and everlasting impact on my life. I thank God that I had the opportunity to meet you let alone come up under your teaching. Be happy and live long.

Your student,
Tom Outland