It doesn't pay to procrastinate! Since my last list...
Dear Julia by Amy Bronwen Zemser: (young adult) Not really what I expected. A little too quirky for my tastes.
Dear Julia by Amy Bronwen Zemser: (young adult) Not really what I expected. A little too quirky for my tastes.
Little Men by Louisa May Alcott: My library was discarding a duplicate copy, and I'd never read it, so I gave it a try, even though I wasn't too keen on Little Women. Turns out, I liked the male version better. Probably because it wasn't as sappy!
Hard Gold by Avi: A juvenile fiction book about the Colorado gold rush. Kids often come into the library needing a historical fiction book, so I previewed this one. It's a good length for kids, seems to be historically accurate, and has pictures sprinkled throughout, so I think it's a winner!
A Guide to the Birds of East Africa by Nicholas Drayson: It took me a while to warm up to this, but it turned out to be good. Fans of Alexander McCall Smith would probably like it, as it's set in Africa and has a similar tone.
The Gossip of the Starlings by Nina de Gramont: This is one of those prep school books that's tinged with darkness and danger...sort of like The Secret History. Liked it.
Her Mother's Shadow by Diane Chamberlain: Really really predictable, but not bad. I've enjoyed other Chamberlain books more.
Clubbed to Death by Elaine Viets: Part of the Dead-End Job series of mysteries. They're just fluff mysteries, but I've enjoyed all of the books in the series.
Chains by Laurie Halse Anderson: (juvenile fiction) Excellent book about slavery and the American Revolution. I'm not sure how much it would appeal to the ages for which it's intended, but I really enjoyed it.
And some books I bought for ten cents each and took along on vacation. All of them mysteries, none of them outstanding:
Auntie Mayhem by Mary Daheim
Visions of Sugarplums by Janet Evanovich (I don't understand the popularity of Evanovich.)
Under Orders by Dick Francis
Her Mother's Shadow by Diane Chamberlain: Really really predictable, but not bad. I've enjoyed other Chamberlain books more.
Clubbed to Death by Elaine Viets: Part of the Dead-End Job series of mysteries. They're just fluff mysteries, but I've enjoyed all of the books in the series.
Chains by Laurie Halse Anderson: (juvenile fiction) Excellent book about slavery and the American Revolution. I'm not sure how much it would appeal to the ages for which it's intended, but I really enjoyed it.
And some books I bought for ten cents each and took along on vacation. All of them mysteries, none of them outstanding:
Auntie Mayhem by Mary Daheim
Visions of Sugarplums by Janet Evanovich (I don't understand the popularity of Evanovich.)
Under Orders by Dick Francis
3 comments:
I love Avi! I remember reading Something Upstairs and the True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle when I was in middle school. I would def recommend him as good YA fiction.
Yes! I've also read Charlotte Doyle and really enjoyed it.
I also liked Little Men and better than Little Women.
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