Sunday, September 15, 2013

Max's Reading Week 3


I read two wonderfully different books this week on the recommendation of Kam.  Both are for the more mature young adult or young adult reader, and both are wonderful!

The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstren – First paragraph:

The circus arrives without warning. No announcements precede it. It is simply there, when yesterday it was not. Within the black-and-white striped canvas tents is an utterly unique experience full of breathtaking amazements. It is called Le Cirque des RĂªves, and it is only open at night.


The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern, is a highly enjoyable book about a magic competition, taking place within the setting of a mysterious circus.  Two players are pitted against one another in a competition without clear rules or even how to win.  Marco has intelligence and hard work on his side, while Celia has natural talent makes better connections with people.  Their feats of magic are well beyond simple illusions and tricks.  When they fall in love, it could not only destroy the circus and the people within it, but each other as well.  

There is little violence, almost no salty language or significant physical romance.  But it is a book for a mature reader, who can follow the plots as it weaves in and out over thirty years with little regard for following chronological time.  However, that is some of the magic of this book, as you are given hints of what is to come and only later come to find out why.

The characters are deep and rich and full of real life.  The circus and its amazing feats draw the reader in and make the impossible suddenly seem believable.  Just like a fantastic magic act, the reader knows there must be some trick, but they want to believe and thus, they do! 



Forgive Me, Leonard Peacock by Matthew Quick, is about a senior in high school who plans to kill his former best friend and then himself by the end of the day.  It is told in the raw and uncensored voice of Leonard Peacock as he goes through his school day, giving four presents to four friends before facing his ultimate “goal.”  As the day progresses, the reader is given glimpses of his pain, his previous hopes, and background with each of the people who were important in his life.  The reader follows Leonard deep into his depression, his uncertainty, his confusion about life and his part in it.   Very mature themes are in this book including consistent curse words, abuse, neglect, sexuality confusion, and of course a student walking around school with a gun and planning on killing a fellow student and himself.  But it is a book that many young adults will connect with as well, but they need to be ready to face these issues in their reading before they read this book.  I highly recommend it, but please check in with me before you read it.  I'd like to give you and your parents a heads up about the topics within.


Next book:  I'd like to read Ender's Game or The Book Thief.  Both are highly recommended by so many colleagues and students that I feel I really should get around to it.

Monday, September 2, 2013

Week 2 - Book Review

Saenz, Benjamin. Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe. New York: Simon and Schuster, 2012. Print

The book I read last week was Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe by Benjamin Alire Saenz.  This is a realistic fiction book based in El Paso, Texas in the late 1980s.  It is 350 pages, but there are many chapter breaks and it reads shorter than that.  The reading level is not too high, but the issues within are more mature, although there is only limited violence and cursing.

 The main character is Aristotle (Ari) who is fifteen, the son of Mexican immigrants, intelligent, a little scary when angry, and never feels very happy so he mostly hides in plain sight.  He worries about everything, keeps his feelings hidden and wonders how he can learn the secrets of his family (Why is his older brother in jail and no one even acknowledges he exists? Why won't his dad talk about the Vietnam War? Was he a "mistake" since he was born eleven years after his youngest sibling?) when no one will talk about hard things.  Ari makes friends with a boy at the pool named Dante.  Together, they form an unlikely friendship that seems special from the beginning.  Neither of them has every really had a true friend, just people who they are friendly with.  They talk about real things, they question the universe and they move through that difficult zone of boys-to-men.  

This book hits on real issues about teenagers realizing who they think they should be verses who they actually are.  It also looks at family dynamics, relationships between family members who loves each other but still struggle to communicate or act perfectly all the time.  Lastly, it takes an honest and not completely surprising turn when issues of love come up and how that can affect a friendship.  It is a book for more mature young adults and it will likely make them a little uncomfortable.  But it is wonderfully written, honest and a good book for teens feeling stuck between two realities, ages, or people they want to kiss.  I highly recommend it!

Here is my TBR List

One for the Murphys by Linda Mullaly Hunt
Rules by Cynthia Lord
Clockwork Angel by Cassandra Clare
The Center of Everything by Linda Urban - Read
The Brilliant Fall of Gianna Z by Kate Messner (Organization – Alzheimer’s)
Earthbound by Aprilynne Pike (SciFY)
This Dark Endeavor by Kenneth Oppel (Dr. Frankenstein as a boy)
The Breadwinner Trilogy by Deborah Ellis (Afghanistan children)
The Matchbox Diary by Paul Fleischman
Eye of the Storm (Recommended by Gavin)
In a Heartbeat (Haley Russel)
Unremembered (HHH)
The Book Thief
A Clockwork Three (Theo)
Ender’s Game
Viral  by Kathy Riechs
The Giver
Eight Keys (Abby)
One for the Murphys (Abby)
Watership Down (JP)
Throat (Hopper)
The Chronicles of Harris Burdick (Elliott)