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Monthly Archives: January 2014

Friday Never Leaving by Vikki Wakefield

28 Tuesday Jan 2014

Posted by truebooktalks in Young Adult

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teen readers

All of her life Friday Brown has been told by her mother that all the women in her family had died from drowning on Saturday. Her mother had named her Friday and raised her on the road – mostly in the outback to try to offset that curse.  When her mother knows she is dying of cancer, she takes Friday back to her father’s house. Friday’s mother dies by drowning in the fluid built up in her body – on a Saturday.  Friday tries, but can’t stay put, and leaves her grandfather’s home. After her mother’s death she finds out who her father was and goes to the city to find him.  Locating him was not very hard, but she can’t bring herself to tell him who she is, neither does she want to return to her grandfather’s home.

After she sees a strange young boy save a child from being hit by a train (an event in which she was credited with saving the child), she tries to find him. She runs into Arden, a cross between Fagan and Jim Jones. Arden is the leader of a gang, of which the boy, Whisper, is a part. Arden rules the group with a heavy hand and will not tolerate any type of disobedience to her wishes.  Friday doesn’t always agree with Arden, and this puts Arden’s control in jeopardy. Arden burns down the house where the gang is living and takes them to the out-back to an abandoned town to live.  Some never return.

This fast-paced story is set in Australia, but the language will not be intimidating for American readers. It will hold one’s interest right to the very end. There are some language and behavior issues, but they only serve to move the story along. I recommend it for the high school library. This was published by Simon and Schuster.

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The Hero’s Guide to Storming the Castle

14 Tuesday Jan 2014

Posted by truebooktalks in Children's Books

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Children's books, Fairy tales

Take everything you have ever thought you knew about fairy tales and their prince and princesses and chuck it out the window.  This sequel to The Hero’s Guide to Saving Your Kingdom gives all the fairy tale prince and princesses different personalities and abilities.  The princes have to band together to fight an evil power that wants to run the world.  The princesses have to help them, because, in spite of the idea that men are the best in battle, it runs out that they really can’t do anything without the women.

I found the story irritatingly inane – just the thing to appeal to elementary boys. I did get a good laugh out of the titles of the chapters: A Hero Makes It Up as He Goes Along, A Hero Has No Sense of Direction, and A Hero Knows How to Count, to name a few.

The person who wants to rule the world is a sloppy, immature, obnoxious eleven-year-old boy named Deeb Rauber. This unlikely villain is a ruler of a group of bandits and miscreants, who for some reason, give Deeb everything he wants. Evidentally Deeb had appeared in the first book, but I figured out who he was very quickly.

Deeb has an object, a piece of orange jade, that can give its holder incredible power, but he is not even aware that he has it.  The princes and princesses , of course, know what it can do  – so they set out to get it away from Deeb.  Of course, they sort of win and sort of lose, thus setting the stage for yet another book in the series.

I think it might have been a good idea to have the author edit the pictures.  For example, there is a sword fight in which Ella (that’s Cinderella for most readers) slides across a polished marble floor on her knees.  Then she gets up and says, “Thank the pants.” However, the picture opposite the scene is very clearly of a girl in a skirt.  In the same scene, she jumps up and grabs a chandelier, but the picture shows a hanging tapestry – not a chandelier.

If you have the first book, and it is circulating, I would suggest that you buy this one.  If this would be your first book in the series, you need to get ready to buy the first one also.

 

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Courage Has No Color; The True Story of the Triple Nickles

06 Monday Jan 2014

Posted by truebooktalks in Children's Books, Non-Fiction

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History, United States

Scan0025  Tanya Lee Stone has done a fantastic job writing the history of America’s first black paratroopers.  Many of us have already learned about the Tuskegee Airmen, but I dare say that few even knew that the 555th airborne division existed during World War II.

Stone starts with a discussion of the racial discrimination that was prevalent in the military at the time.  She takes the reader through the steps toward getting the all black paratroopers ready to jump. Although they never served overseas during the war, they did provide necessary service to the country here at home in the battle with forest fires.

As it turns out, military service was actually needed in the area where the forest fires were occurring.  While none of the fires that the 555th actually worked with were clearly of enemy origin, what the American public did not know was that the Japanese had actually launched balloon bombs to the U.S. One of those bombs killed a woman and five teenagers in Blye, Oregon in 1945.

The government managed to keep the news that a Japanese bomb had made it to the U.S.  out of the news, but they sent the 555th to the Northwest in case others made it to shore and were exploded. This was one of the best kept secrets of the war.  The U.S. did not want Japan to know that they had succeed.  When no news of any bomb attacks made it to Japan, they assumed that the mission was a failure, and they gave up on it.  Imagine what would have happened had they known that they really had succeeded!

The story  of the 555th continues clear up until the actual integration of the military in 1953. It is fascinating, and very easy to read. The book is well researched, fully documented and excellently illustrated with photos, drawings and maps. It is written for middle school to high school students, but I think any history buff will thoroughly enjoy reading it.

I really don’t know how much more I can say about it. The only problem I had with it was that it felt unwieldy to me.  I wanted to read the story in its entirety, which I did.  But, in doing so I had to hold the book in both hands while reading.  It is too wide and heavy to be held in one hand, even if one switches hands in the process.

For those of you who are interested, this has an A.R.of 8  With 5 pts.

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