4 Stars
A Long Walk to Water tells the true story of a young girl named Nya and a young boy named Salva, one of the lost boys of Sudan. The reader learns about life in war-torn Sudan - the fear, famine and dehydration, the desperation of the Sudanese as they are forced to flee their homes and walk thousands of miles through the hot desert in order to locate one the the refugee camps - where living conditions were also deplorable.
With the belief that his family has been killed, Salva is left alone and must fend for himself. Though he walks with the others, he is not shown much mercy by the adults. Silva loses his one friend to a lion who drags the young boy away at night. Silva knows no matter how difficult things become, he must keep walking or die. Despite his never-ending thirst, the blistering sand underneath his bare feet, and the gnawing, deep hunger which never goes away, Salva is determined to survive.
Eventually, Salva is chosen by American missionaries to come to America and be sponsored by an American family. Salva is amazed by the luxuries America can afford him and decides he must return to Sudan in order to share his good fortune and to help his people. It is during his first trip home where Salva learns his family is still alive, and his life intersects with the young Nya.
Michael Vey knew he was different. He was always teased and made fun of for his small size and the way he blinked his eyes when he was nervous. Michael had Tourettes Syndrome. That wasn't the only thing that set him apart, though. Michael also had special powers - a unusual but powerful gift that he had to keep hidden from others.
Michael tries to keep his power a secret until he finally breaks and just can't stand the abuse anymore. After yet another beating by Jake and Wade, the school bullies, Michael unleashes a powerful electric shock at his tormentors. Leaving them stunned and helpless as they lie on the ground in the front of their high school, Michael's hands release strong electrical currents throughout their bodies like a tazer. Michael knew they would never bother him or beat him up again.
Michael wasn't alone with this happened. Taylor, the impossibly beautiful and popular high school cheerleader, sees what happens. Suddenly she wants to be Michael's friend. She, too, has a secret.
Both Taylor and Michael have secret powers which set them apart from the other teens. Together, they soon discover that they are part of an elite group of 17. Seventeen teens who have unique abilities which give them the power to both save and destroy.
Tayor and Michael are being hunted. Someone knows about their talents. He won't stop until he captures them so he can ruthlessly use the electric teens in order to gain control - control of the 17 "Glows" and control of the entire world.
Nonstop action and excitement in this new series!
Michael Vey knew he was different. He was always teased and made fun of for his small size and the way he blinked his eyes when he was nervous. Michael had Tourettes Syndrome. That wasn't the only thing that set him apart, though. Michael also had special powers - a unusual but powerful gift that he had to keep hidden from others.
Michael tries to keep his power a secret until he finally breaks and just can't stand the abuse anymore. After yet another beating by Jake and Wade, the school bullies, Michael unleashes a powerful electric shock at his tormentors. Leaving them stunned and helpless as they lie on the ground in the front of their high school, Michael's hands release strong electrical currents throughout their bodies like a tazer. Michael knew they would never bother him or beat him up again.
Michael wasn't alone with this happened. Taylor, the impossibly beautiful and popular high school cheerleader, sees what happens. Suddenly she wants to be Michael's friend. She, too, has a secret.
Both Taylor and Michael have secret powers which set them apart from the other teens. Together, they soon discover that they are part of an elite group of 17. Seventeen teens who have unique abilities which give them the power to both save and destroy.
Tayor and Michael are being hunted. Someone knows about their talents. He won't stop until he captures them so he can ruthlessly use the electric teens in order to gain control - control of the 17 "Glows" and control of the entire world.
Nonstop action and excitement in this new series!
4 Stars |
4 Stars |
Feldon knew he was weird. His younger brother Andrew was obsessed with playing classical music on the piano. His hippie mother, Jerri, insisted her children call her by her first name. Feldon's father had committed suicide when Feldon was only five years' old. Most of the kids at Feldon's school teased him for being scrawny and for being different. To make matters worse, Feldon's best friend Gus was leaving for the summer and Jerri was making him take over his newspaper route. Life wasn't looking too great for the fifteen year old.
Most of the kids at Feldon's school teased him for being scrawny and for being different. To make matters worse, Feldon's best friend Gus was now leaving for the summer and Jerri was making him take over his newspaper route. Life wasn't looking too great for the fifteen-year-old.
What starts out being a lame summer, however, turns out to be the best and worst summer of Feldon's life. Feldon discovers he does have a talent. He's fast. He's not just quick on his feet and a strong runner - he's stupid fast. It doesn't take long for others to notice. Coach Johnson wants him to play Varsity Football. Though Feldon has never played in his life, his speed and agility make him a force to contend with. No longer scrawny, Feldon has a huge growth spurt and is now over 6 feet tall. Once he begins lifting weight, he becomes even bigger and much stronger than many of the other players on the team.
Suddenly, Feldon finds himself in a different world. Several of the town's popular high school athletes are now his best friends. The most beautiful girl in the world, Aleah, has moved into his friend Gus's house for the summer. Despite Feldon's goofiness, she wants to be his girlfriend.
Everything is close to being perfect until Jerri loses it. She begins drinking, hiding in her room, refusing to take care of herself or her family. Andrew has even stopped playing the piano and starts dressing in black - acting as loony as their mother. Felton just has to keep going. He lies to himself that things will get better.
Feldon knew he was weird. His younger brother Andrew was obsessed with playing classical music on the piano. His hippie mother, Jerri, insisted her children call her by her first name. Feldon's father had committed suicide when Feldon was only five years' old. Most of the kids at Feldon's school teased him for being scrawny and for being different. To make matters worse, Feldon's best friend Gus was leaving for the summer and Jerri was making him take over his newspaper route. Life wasn't looking too great for the fifteen year old.
Most of the kids at Feldon's school teased him for being scrawny and for being different. To make matters worse, Feldon's best friend Gus was now leaving for the summer and Jerri was making him take over his newspaper route. Life wasn't looking too great for the fifteen-year-old.
What starts out being a lame summer, however, turns out to be the best and worst summer of Feldon's life. Feldon discovers he does have a talent. He's fast. He's not just quick on his feet and a strong runner - he's stupid fast. It doesn't take long for others to notice. Coach Johnson wants him to play Varsity Football. Though Feldon has never played in his life, his speed and agility make him a force to contend with. No longer scrawny, Feldon has a huge growth spurt and is now over 6 feet tall. Once he begins lifting weight, he becomes even bigger and much stronger than many of the other players on the team.
Suddenly, Feldon finds himself in a different world. Several of the town's popular high school athletes are now his best friends. The most beautiful girl in the world, Aleah, has moved into his friend Gus's house for the summer. Despite Feldon's goofiness, she wants to be his girlfriend.
Some would say 15 year old June lived a privileged life. Though her parents had passed away, she and her brother Metias had done well for themselves. They were both selected as members of the Republic's prestigious military faction. Though June frequently got in trouble for being rebellious at her exclusive, private school, it was often overlooked - she was gifted, a prodigy, and her invaluable gifts destined June for great success and wealth.
When her brother Metias is suddenly killed, however, June finds herself alone and frightened for the first time in her life. Her best friend, the one she could count on, and her only family was suddenly ripped away from her. There was only one person to blame - the vigilante outcast named Day. Day had ruthlessly murdered her brother. Before, June had found this dissenter's antics slightly amusing. Angry and in shock, June makes it her personal mission to hunt Day, find him, and see that justice was served for Day's crime. The Republic agreed. June has permission to disguise herself and to track Day until she can find and capture him.
Ironically, it is Day that finds June. June, while hunting Day, becomes seriously injured in a fight with one of the locals. Imagine June's shock when it is Day, her arch enemy, who saves her life. Suddenly, June finds herself very close to Day, spending time with him while she reuperated from her injuries. June finds herself learning about Day as a man - his habits and his thoughts and begins fighting her growing attraction to him.
Instead of being elated that she has captured the man who took away her brother, June finds herself captured by Day. Though Metias's death must be avenged, June begins to wonder if Day was actually capable of murdering another person. What if the Republic was wrong?
June finds herself asking questions. The Republic doesn't like to be questioned. If June doesn't turn over the man she has begun falling in love with soon, she will be the one hunted, captured, and executed.
Winner of the 2012 Schneider Family Book Award
Jessica thinks her life is over when she loses a leg in a car accident. She's not comforted by the news that she'll be able to walk with the help of a prosthetic leg. Who cares about walking when you live to run? As she struggles to cope with crutches and a first cyborg-like prosthetic, Jessica feels oddly both in the spotlight and invisible. People who don't know what to say, act like she's not there. Which she could handle better if she weren't now keenly aware that she'd done the same thing herself to a girl with CP named Rosa. A girl who is going to tutor her through all the math she's missed. A girl who sees right into the heart of her. With the support of family, friends, a coach, and her track teammates, Jessica may actually be able to run again. But that's not enough for her now. She doesn't just want to cross finish lines herself-she wants to take Rosa with her.
From Publisher: Seventh-grader Timothy July and his new friend Abigail try to break a curse that is causing them and others to be tormented by their greatest fears brought to life.
Lina knew things were tense....her father was worried about their future in Lithuania. Who should they fear the most - Stalin or Hitler? Despite her parents' fears, Lina continued to live a normal teenage girl's life....until the Soviet Secret Police bang violently on their door. From this moment on Lina finds herself fighting to survive, protect her mother and brother, and how to deal with the one who, amongst the fear and the pain, has still captured her heart....a young man she may never even get the chance to love.
From Titlewave.com:
"After an injury ends former star pitcher Peter Friedman's athletic dreams, he concentrates on photography which leads him to a girlfriend, new fame as a high school sports photographer, and a deeper relationship with the beloved grandfather who, when he realizes he is becoming senile, gives Pete all of his professional camera gear."
From School Library Journal:
"Beginning with King Tut and moving chronologically through to Albert Einstein, Bragg explains in a conversational style what maladies brought 19 of the great ones down. Listeners will be clued in to Henry VIII's gluttony, George Washington's little mouth of horrors, and James Garfield's oh-so-slow death by ignorance. Narrator L.J. Ganser uses sarcasm, timing, pauses, and tone to wring out every last ounce of disgusting, gross misery from the deaths of Julius Caesar, Cleopatra, Christopher Columbus, Napoleon, Mozart, and others."