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Tag Archives: teen readers

Sandrider by Angie Sage

04 Wednesday May 2016

Posted by truebooktalks in Fantasy, Young Adult

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Angie Sage, Fantasy, Fiction, teen readers

sandrider

This second book in the Todhunter Moon series is well-written and is a pleasure to read.  Alice Todhunter Moon is a novice magician in the Castle when a young girl accidentally enters the lives of the people in the Castle through the Ancient Ways. The inhabitants of the Castle already know about the Egg of Orm which had been stolen by an evil sorcerer named Oraton-Maar. But, they have no idea where he is keeping it until it hatches.  Of course, the girl can help them, but she doesn’t trust them, and they soon learn they can’t trust her either.

How Alice and her friends manage to get to the egg before the baby Orm hatches and whom the Orm will imprint on when it does hatch makes this a very fast-moving tale that will appeal to the middle-school reader.

Reader of the Septimus Heap series will enjoy this new series.  It continues with Septimus Heap now being in charge of the Castle.  This book may stand alone, but the reader will want to go back and read the first book if she begins with this one.

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Black River Falls by Jeff Hirsch

13 Wednesday Apr 2016

Posted by truebooktalks in Science Fiction, Uncategorized, Young Adult

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Sci-Fi, teen readers

black river falls Cardinal Cassidy is one of the lucky ones in Black River.  He has managed to escape the virus that has ravaged the town.  This virus causes amnesia of events in people’s lives without destroying their scholastic ability.  Families have been torn apart because they no longer recognize each other, and Cardinal’s family is no different.  No one, except Cardinal, remembers who they are, where they worked, or what the world outside of Black River is like.

The National Guard has been sent in, wearing haz-mat suits, to keep the town in quarantine until the scientists can come up with a cure or, at least, a vaccine so that the rest of the world will not be infected by contact with the survivors.  If no cure or vaccine is found, the National Guard is going to insure that no living human being leaves Black Falls.

Hector Gonzolez finds Cardinal living outside of the town.  He realizes that Cardinal is not infected, so he gives him a breathing mask to enable him to go into the town and look for his family.  The mask also enables Cardinal to help little children who cannot remember their families, but they are so young that they need help in surviving.

Cardinal takes these children to his hideout on the mountain because it is not safe for them to be in the town.  Hector keeps Cardinal’s secret, and even helps him with some necessary supplies, but one day the National Guard is ordered to pull out and a private company comes in to take over the control of the quarantined town.  This new group has a totally different approach to solving the problem of the memory virus.

This is a very good sci-fi story, and will cause the reader to examine the possibility of a man-made dangerous virus.  It is written for middle school and/or high school readers.  I definitely recommend it for those readers.

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Forbidden by Eve Bunting

06 Wednesday Jan 2016

Posted by truebooktalks in Ghost stories, Historical Fiction, Young Adult

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Fiction, movie material, teen readers

forbiddenBunting has told us a chilling tale based on events that really happened off the coasts of northwestern Scotland. In the story, Josie Ferguson goes to live with her father’s brother and his wife in an isolated village that people from other towns have little to do with.  Her relatives are emotionally cold to her, but they have accepted the responsibility to care for her until she reaches eighteen – not out of any sort of love, but because they will get money for doing so.

A young man named Eli shows up at her uncle’s home and she is drawn to him because he has a way of dealing with the family’s dog – a dog that had bitten her when she tried to go outside one night. Eli takes her to his aunt’s home to get the bite treated before it can get infected.  His aunt, rather cryptically, tells her that she cannot get emotionally involved with Eli because he is a “reporter” and is “forbidden.”

She manages to isolate the dog one day when her aunt and uncle are out on their fishing boat and goes into town to see if she can find at least one sympathetic ear.  She finds that the townspeople are as strange as her aunt and uncle, and that they have  some sort of secret which ties them together.

The entire town engages in “wrecking,” the practice of stripping wrecked ships of all saleable items that can be saved from ships that have been wrecked on the rocks of the firth.  Technically nothing can be salvaged as long as an animal or a man from the wreck was still alive.   That did not stop the “wreckers;” they just made sure that no one was breathing.

Josie finds out that her uncle and aunt are tied into the wreckers, and they actually lead ship to their destruction, but with Eli’s help, she manages to escape their grasp before she must take part in “wrecking.”

This is a fantastic ghost story, one of the best I have read lately.  The setting reminds me of Wuthering Heights, but the plot is different.  I think teen readers will greatly enjoy this tale.

 

 

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Assassin’s Masque by Sarah Zettel

17 Tuesday Nov 2015

Posted by truebooktalks in Historical Fiction, Mystery and Suspense, Young Adult

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Fiction, History, teen readers

assassin's masque

Just when Peggy Fitzroy thinks that things might be going her way, what with her father turning up and her ex-fiancé finally out of the picture,  a new problem arises in the form of a mysterious woman. This woman seems to be known by her uncle’s mother, and Peggy believes that she could definitely be dangerous.
The Jacobites are coming ever closer to causing a rebellion that would remove George II and his family. Peggy has pledged her loyalty to the royal family, but events occur which make them doubt her allegiance. She begins to mistrust Mr. Tinderflint, the man who got her the position as a spy in the court. Who is really trustworthy, and who is lying about everything, is the point of this novel of the Palace of Spies series.
I recommend its purchase for those who already have the first two books, but this story can stand alone if the others are not available.

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17 Tuesday Nov 2015

Posted by truebooktalks in Historical Fiction, Mystery and Suspense, Young Adult

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Fiction, History, mystery, teen readers

Peggy Fitzroy continues her spy game for the court of King George II as a lady-in-waiting. She finds that the man who was betrothed to her, and who tried to rape her, has returned. She tries to find out who are the real dangers to the royal family and to herself. Her uncle is still trying to run her life – even though he had kicked her out of his home and a strange man, named Johnny Leroy becomes an unexpected part of her life. This second novel of The Palace of Spies is a stand alone, but it will make the reader want to go back and read The Palace of Spies, the first book of the series.
I think teens who are interested in strong female characters, and who like spy stories will enjoy this series.
dangerous deceptions

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Dearest by Alethea Kontis

16 Monday Nov 2015

Posted by truebooktalks in Fantasy

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Fairy tales, Fantasy, teen readers

dearest

This book is a continuation of the tale of the Woodcutter sisters from Knotis’s book Enchanted.  Friday Woodcutter takes in all the children who are left after her sister Saturday broke the world.  Among those at the castle, unknown by the other inhabitants, are seven brothers who, by day, are swans, but who become men again each night.

Of course, Friday falls in love with Tristan, one of the brothers, but she tries to keep their existence a secret because they are still being hunted the evil Mordant, the person responsible for turning them into swans in the first place. Can Friday save the brothers and the rest of the world before Mordant takes over completely? A strange little man by the name of Mr. Humbug comes to help Friday.

This is an interesting retelling of two fairy tales: The Wild Swans and The Goose Girl. It is a good story for middle school readers of fantasy.  I recommend it for grades 5-8.

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Public Enemies by Ann Aguirre

16 Monday Nov 2015

Posted by truebooktalks in Fantasy, Mythology, Young Adult

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Fantasy, teen readers

public

This is the second book of a series entitled The Immortal Game. Readers of the first book, Mortal Danger will be waiting in line to get their hands on this one.  The story of Edie Kramer, a mortal who has been pulled into a game played by immortals makes a very exciting tale. Kian, the boy who saved her from destruction at the hands of the immortals now awaits his death. Can Edie save him, her father and herself?  That is the problem in this book.

It is a mystery/horror mashup based on religion and mythology.  I waded through the first few chapters and finally had enough understanding of the first book to really get into the storyline.   I recommend the purchase of this book ONLY if you already have, or are intending to purchase, Mortal Danger.  The characters are not given enough backstory in this book for the reader to easily figure out who they are.  The events that took place in the first book are mentioned, but not enough pieces are given to put them  together until near the end of the book.

I also cannot recommend this for any parochial school or for middle school libraries.  There is a very graphic sex scene near the end of book which would not be acceptable for most parents of those students. Optional purchase for high school or college age readers IF you have the first one.

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My Basmati Bat Mitzvah By Paula J. Freedman

06 Thursday Aug 2015

Posted by truebooktalks in religious fiction, Young Adult

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Bat Mitzvah, religious fiction, teen readers

my basmati bat mitzvah     Tara Feinstein is fast approaching the time for her Bat Mitzvah. She has been studying hard for it at Hebrew school after regular school and with her rabbi in private study sessions. Tara is part Hindi and part Caucasian, so even inviting her family to her event may prove to be a problem. Her Hindi grandparents were none too happy about the marriage of Tara’s mother to a Jewish boy, and the feeling is mutual on her father’s side of the family.

Tara also has boy problems; the one boy she would like to have as a boyfriend is not Jewish; and the other boy is the class clown that she is stuck with as a partner in a robotics project. Her best friend, Rebecca, is starting to get friendly with snotty Sheila Rosenberg.

Tara doesn’t always make good decisions. She ruined her mother’s red silk sari which had been in the family for years by getting too close to a candle while dancing around in it. And, to top it all off, Tara isn’t even sure she wants to have a Bat Mitzvah.

What Tara learns from her experiences and how she survives makes this a delightful coming of age tale. I recommend it for middle school and upper elementary readers.

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What Waits in the Woods by Kieran Scott

06 Thursday Aug 2015

Posted by truebooktalks in Horror, Young Adult

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Fiction, Horror, teen readers

what waits in the woods   Callie Valesquez is forced to move to a small town when her father takes the family away from Chicago to live in upstate New York. Callie has always been thought of as a nerd in her old school, but she is determined to find friends and fit into their lives, which explains why she agreed to go on a camping trip with them one weekend even though she is a city girl.

The fact that her new boyfriend, Jeremy, was going also didn’t hurt. She has never been camping, never slept outdoors, and is basically scared to death of the idea. And, that was before her friends tell her a horror story of a maniacal murderer who is said to inhabit the woods. Things begin to happen, and one of the group gets killed. Now she has to try to get out of the woods and learn who she can really trust before she ends up dead also.

This is a great horror story for teens. I definitely recommend it for any high school reader. In spite of the possibilities of sex and drinking that one might associate with a group of teenagers out in the woods, nothing of that nature occurs. What awaits in the woods is a lot more dangerous.

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Heir of Fire by Sarah J. Maas

27 Saturday Jun 2015

Posted by truebooktalks in Fantasy

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Fantasy, Sarah J.Maas, teen readers

Scan0077

This, the fourth in The Throne of Glass Series, continues the saga of Celaena Sardothian and her struggle to find herself in a world that is filled with monstrous enemies. She must go to the fairy world to find her true origins and powers.

Although the king is trying his best to eliminate magic use by anyone, Celaena knows she needs to conquer and use what magic she has – even if that means she may face death.  Celaena is to be taught about her skills by Rowan, a Fairy sent by Maeve, the Queen of the Fairies.  Celaena is not sure she can trust Rowan, but she has no other choice.

She is not the only being with magical powers that must fly under the king’s radar. Other beings, such as the witches of the world are aligning themselves with the king, but only to decrease other magic users and thereby increase their hold on the world. And, in the capital itself, the son of the king begins to exhibit his magical powers.

What will be the outcome of the inevitable confrontation of good and evil?  This tale is sure to please readers of the series in grade 10 and up. I recommend it only as an optional purchase because, unless the library already has the first three books, it may not move off the shelves. Or, it might incite the reader to insist on getting the other three books into the collection.

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