Welcome to the Book Review blog! You can use the search bar on the left hand side to search the entire blog if you're looking for something specific. There are also labels on the left hand side if you're looking for a certain genre. Under the tabs below you can find some of my favorite books in each genre.
Showing posts with label Teenage Girls. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Teenage Girls. Show all posts

06 October 2010

The Red Pyramid

By Rick Riordan
Carter, 14, and Sadie, 12, (brother and sister) have grown up apart. He has traveled all over the world with his Egyptologist father, Dr. Julius Kane, while Sadie has lived in London with their grandparents. Their mother passed away under mysterious circumstances, so when their father arrives in London and wants to take them both on a private tour of the British Museum, all is not necessarily what it seems. The evening ends with the apparent destruction of the Rosetta Stone, the disappearance of Dr. Kane, and the kidnapping of Carter and Sadie. More insidiously, it leads to the release of five Egyptian gods, including Set, who is their mortal enemy. Carter and Sadie discover the secrets of their family heritage and their ability to work magic as they realize that their task will be to save humanity from Set, who is building a destructive red pyramid inside Camelback Mountain in Phoenix.

This book is written as an audio recording that both children made. Occasionally they interrupt the story with a quip to their sibling. Funny book and full of Egyptian history.

*Warnings: Some swearing - mainly Sadie - who grew up in London and uses the English swear words.

18 August 2010

Dairy Queen and The Off Season

Catherine Gilbert Murdock
After her father is injured, 15-year-old D.J. Schwenk takes over the lion's share of work on her family's small Wisconsin dairy farm. Between milking cows, mucking out the barn, and mowing clover, this erstwhile jock takes on training Brian, the rival high school's quarterback. A monster crush and a tryout for her own school's football team ensue. D.J., a charming if slightly unreliable narrator, does a good deal of soul-searching while juggling her grinding work schedule, an uncommunicative family, and a best friend who turns out to be gay. Savvy readers will anticipate plot turns, but the fun is in seeing each twist through D.J.'s eyes as she struggles with whether she really is, as Brian puts it, like a cow headed unquestioningly down the cattle shoot of life. Wry narration and brisk sports scenes bolster the pacing, and D.J.'s tongue-tied nature and self-deprecating inner monologues contribute to the novel's many belly laughs. At the end, though, it is the protagonist's heart that will win readers over.

This sequel to Murdock's Dairy Queen (Houghton, 2006) catches readers up with narrator D.J. Schwenk as she hits her stride in her junior year of high school. She's playing linebacker for her high school football team, hanging out with Brian (the rival high school's quarterback), earning passing grades, and pulling her weight on her family's struggling dairy farm. But "a whole herd of trouble" is coming her way. First, D.J. and, by extension, Brian become the unwitting subjects of a People magazine article. Then D.J. suffers a shoulder injury that threatens her sports career, her gay best friend runs away with an older girlfriend, and D.J. notices that Brian isn't too keen on being seen with her in public. These problems are all put into perspective when D.J.'s older brother, Win, suffers a serious spinal-cord injury during a college football game. D.J. stays by his side in the hospital, a task made even tougher by Win's refusal to communicate, and accompanies him to rehab in Minnesota. There's no too-tidy ending here; readers gain a sense of the wait-and-see and grueling nature of physical rehabilitation. Though not as laugh-out-loud funny as the earlier title, The Off Season depicts a believably maturing D.J., a young woman whose character shines through even as she struggles to find her voice.


I found these books a joy to read. The author has a way of writing that makes you believe these characters.

Warnings: The main character's best friend is gay and that is a huge part of the story. It is done extremely tactfully and doesn't try to persuade the readers that one way or another is best. The first book doesn't come out and say specifically what is going on. A young teen (12) might not get what is going on. The second book it is much more open.

Also there is quite a bit of swearing.

06 April 2009

The Alchemyst: The Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel

Michael Scott
Publisher: Delacorte Books for Young Readers

Sophie and Josh Newman think their summer jobs at a coffee shop and a bookshop across the street are just perfect. Then strange things start happening - goons show up at the bookstore and kidnap the owner's wife - the owner of the coffee shop - and they also get away with a book that has important meaning to Nick Flemming, the bookstore owner (aka Nicholas Flamel). Join Sophie and Josh on an incredible adventure full of magical powers and wondrous creatures.

26 February 2009

When the Bough Breaks

Kay Lynn Mangum

Publisher: Deseret Book Company

Rachel's life is dramatically altered one night when her father dies in a car accident. Not only does she feel responsible for the accident but she also feels it is her duty to keep her family together. She must take care of her brother when he comes home drunk every night, she has to make sure her mom gets out of bed and eats something each day. Then another man comes into her mother's life. Without Rachel's permission, her mother gets remarried. This gives Rachel not only a step-father but a step-brother as well. As Rachel continues to help her brother she also creates a friendship with her new step-brother, Dallin. Can Rachel hold her family together?

A Love Like Lilly

Kay Lynn Mangum

Publisher: Deseret Book Company

Jamie - usually called James - is a tomboy. She hates dresses, loves basketball, and is nothing like her older sister. After James' grandma dies, she comes to live with her grandfather for the summer. While working on cleaning out her grandma's things, she comes across an old photo album from the 1930s. Her grandfather proceeds to tell her stories behind the pictures, while he was in the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) and about how he met her grandmother.

This book tells stories from two different families and two different time periods. The CCC stories are based off the author's grandfather's journal.

Cherry Ames Clinic Nurse

Julie Tatham

Publisher:
Grosset & Dunlap

Cherry Ames works at a clinic near her home almost every day and she is worn out. Everyone is starting to notice how tired she is. In fact, everyone thinks she is so tired that when she tells a tale of being kidnapped and helping with a surgery, most people think she only dreamed it. Can Cherry find evidence to prove she wasn't dreaming?

15 February 2009

Revenge of the Cheerleaders

Janette Rallison

Publisher: Walker Publishing Company, Inc.

Chelsea, a cheerleader, doesn't have a perfect life. Her ex-boyfriend flaunts his new girlfriend every chance he gets. To add to the hurt, her little sister, Adrian, is dating Rick, a loser who thinks he has a future in the music industry. When Rick composes some anti-cheerleader songs and performs them in front of the whole school Chelsea and her friends decide it's time for revenge. Can the cheerleaders beat Rick at his musical game?

13 February 2009

Golden

Cameron Dokey

Publisher: Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing Division

Before Rapunzel was born a deal was made between her mother and a sorceress, Melisande. The deal was that if Rapunzel's mother did not lover her child just as she was then Melisande would be able to take her. Melisande took the child when she was born and raised her almost as her own daughter.

Sixteen years later, Melisande admits that she has a daughter and she hopes that Rapunzel can free her daughter from a tower where a wizard placed her. Rapunzel has only two nights with the day in between to figure out how to accomplish this or Melisande's daughter will be trapped forever.

10 February 2009

Storm

E. L. Young

Publisher: Puffin/Penguin Young Readers Group

Will, Gaia, and Andrew are geniuses. Will invents gadgets no one has even thought of before. Gaia has a photographic memory and learns languages by reading about them. Andrew is a computer genuis who earned his first million by the time he was 10. The three of them set off on an adventure to save another genius from harming himself, and perhaps the world.

04 February 2009

Pirates!

By Celia Rees

Publisher: Bloomsbury, New York and London

Nancy Kington is the only girl in her family and somewhat spoiled. She lives a life of luxury and dreams of marrying the boy of her dreams. But everything changes when her father dies. Suddenly she is under the care of her brothers who have plans for who she should marry. When things turn sour with her intended Nancy flees along with her servant, Minerva. They join up with a band of pirates and have adventures no woman of their time would dream of.

Warnings: They are pirates and they attack ships, steal, and plunder.


23 January 2009

The Secret Journal of Brett Colton

Kay Lynn Mangum

Publisher: Deseret Book Company

Kathy doesn't remember her brother Brett who died when she was only 2. Her family however, will never forget him. Every time they sit down to dinner they start talking about Brett and the wonderful things he did. Kathy begins to resent this brother of hers that she doesn't remember.

On her 16th birthday she is given a letter that Brett left for her. Using the letter with instructions, Kathy finds Brett's journal. Through reading this she comes to know the brother she doesn't remember and learns a lot about family and how important it is.



Warnings: Written by an LDS author and this book tells of the religion. The religion is NOT pushy nor does one have to be a part of this particular religion to enjoy the book. (While it may seem this is a "girly" book I know several guys who have read and enjoyed this book.)

Rules of the Road

Joan Bauer

Publisher: G.P. Putnam's Sons

Jenna Boller loves having her driver's license and often dreams of the day she will own her own red convertible. She hopes after working at the shoe store all summer she will be able to afford it.

Then Mrs. Gladstone, who owns the store, asks, or rather demands, that Jenna be her driver for the summer. Jenna's jobs will include driving the car and spying on the other stores in the chain.

When Jenna's father returns it seems that Jenna now has the perfect escape...or is it? Will Jenna be bored to death by Mrs. Gladstone's choice of music and adult company? Or will Jenna listen to Mrs. Gladstone and learn about life, love, family and shoes?

Cross My Heart and Hope to Spy

Ally Carter

Publisher: Hyperion Books for Children

Sequel to I'd Tell You I Love You But Then I'd Have to Kill You.

Cammie Morgan is back at the start of the second semester of her sophomore year. The semester seems to be starting off strange with an interrogation from the CIA, Ms. Morgan being worried about...something she's not sharing with Cammie, and a whole wing of the school being closed off.

Then there's the CoveOps assignment which goes pretty badly...and something called Blackthorne...and Cammie still isn't sure what Josh will remember about her or not.

Luckily she has her best friends by her side. This book will send you off on an adventure with Cammie, Bex, Lix, Macey, and some exciting new characters.

22 January 2009

I'd Tell You I Love You But Then I'd Have to Kill You

Ally Carter

Publisher: Hyperion Book CH

Cammie Morgan, age 15, has lived at the Gallagher Academy for Exceptional Young Women for several years due to the fact that her mother is the headmistress of the school. But Gallagher Academy is not the private boarding school everyone seems to think it is. In all actuality it is a school for geniuses who are training to be spies.

In school Cammie becomes fluent in 14 different languages, learns several ways to kill a man, practices throwing people larger than herself over her shoulder, cracks codes and everything else a girl needs to know...except for how to communicate with a boy.

What will Cammie do when she meets a boy who can never know the real Cammie Morgan? What will she say? How will she act? To what lengths will she go to get to know this boy?


Warnings: Somewhat of a "girly" book but real men would read it!

Keturah and Lord Death

Martine Leavitt

Publisher: Front Street

Finalist for the National Book Award

16 year old Keturah has always dreamed of her one true love. She longs to be a housewife and a mother and doesn't seek riches or glory of the world. One day, while following the elusive hart, she finds herself lost in the forest. After three days of wandering helplessly around Lord Death appears.

By telling him a story - one of her finest talents - she convinces him to leave her for one more day so she can find a true love that death itself can not end.

Told as a fairytale with a twist ending this book is very imaginative.

Warnings: She often sees death as a shadow hanging over her.

13 Little Blue Envelopes

Maureen Johnson

Publisher: Harper Teen

A whirlwind of adventures is in store for Ginny, age 17, when she receives 13 little blue envelopes from her Aunt Peg. The first envelope contains a letter of money for a plane ticket, the second, instructions to a small apartment in London. Each of the 13 envelopes contains instructions and each one can only be opened after the previous task has been completed.

Along the way she meets many new friends and finds herself with an enormous crush, something she's never experienced before in her life.

A clever book with a lot of foreign culture.


Warnings: Some language and dishonesty (sneaking into bars ect.)

Fever 1793

By Laurie Halse Anderson

Publisher: Scholastic Printing

Historical Fiction about the Yellow Fever epidemic in Philadelphia in 1793.

Mattie, age 14, lives with her mother and paternal grandfather. Together the run the Cook Coffeehouse.

When rumors of the Fever start spreading some neighbors leave the city and move to the countryside. Some say the rumors aren't true and they refuse to leave. Thousands of people die from the disease, even the family at the coffeehouse can't avoid it.

Those who live through the fever set out to help others while trying to cope with the panic around them. A well written book but hard to read because of the topic.

At the back there is a guide with a lot of historical information for further reading.

Warnings: This book tells of the disease in details.