No quote for this one because it's buried within the confines of a suitcase with is in the hold of the unfinished bathroom across the hall. Will I ever put my room back together?
Wednesday, June 3, 2009
An Abundance of Katherines : 19 and Counting...
No quote for this one because it's buried within the confines of a suitcase with is in the hold of the unfinished bathroom across the hall. Will I ever put my room back together?
Tuesday, May 26, 2009
Blue is For Nightmares : Of Wicca and white lillies.
This is the last book I have stashed away to blog about, so probably some lyrics or a painting next week. D:
Anyway, this book is the start a four-book series, all of which are fantastic books. This author is one of my favorites, because she wrote my favorite book every, Project 17.
This one is about a girl who practices Wicca. Yes, all you people who think that's terrible and witchcraft or whatever can stop reading right now. Her name is Stacey, and she keeps having these premonitious dreams about her friend, Drea being taken away. In these dreams, she sees white lillies, which are supposedly the flowers of death.
Slowly and slowly, Stacey's dreams become more descriptive, and some seem to cross over into her reality. Turns out that someone is stalking her friend Drea with phonecalls and lillies showing up at their dorm. As the day the stalker wants to present himself to Drea becomes closer, Stacey soon realizes that she's the only one who can save her.
It's a great book, I highly suggest it and any other books written by this author.
Wednesday, May 20, 2009
Unwind : Do we die? Or do we live? We do both.
Loonnnggg quote, sorry about that. It's really hard to explain the amount of awesome put into this book. It's by Neal Shusterman, who is such a creative author, he should get some award for it.
Unwind is about a futuristic America. This book dives right in to one of the most controversial topics in society today: abortion. In this futuristic world, there has been a second civil war between the two pro-life and pro-choice sides. Like the quote says, it was long and bloody, and one simple thing fixed it all; they called it The Bill of Life. This states that, if you do not want a child, you can get rid of it, just not by way of abortion. But, between the ages of thirteen and eighteen, a child can be unwound. Unwinding is the process of taking a child apart and using them for donor parts. (Gross, I know, but when the book does explain it, it's not bloody or disgusting at all, it just really sends shivers up your spine.) These children are sent to an Unwind Camp, where they basically wait to get chopped up.
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
Unfortunate English : The Gloomy Truth Behind The Words You Use.
Wednesday, May 6, 2009
The Westing Game : Sixteen Heirs, One Killer.
I have had no time to read, so I'm going with something old, again. The Westing Game by Ellen Raskin is one of those mysteries you just can't put down. The writing isn't superb, but, like Neal Shusterman books, the originality and ability to bring this story to life through words makes up for even the worst of writing styles. (And I am in no way saying that either author is terrible at what they do, I'm just saying it could get a little better.) Any one person who could come up with such a twisted plot as this one deserves and award, and bygolly, she got one.
As for the plot of this, it's about a place called Sunset Towers, a sort of fancy apartment building with maid service and doormen and such, and the people who live there. Sixteen people were invited to live in this place, which happened to be about a mile down from the mansion owned by Sam Westing, the mysterious owner of a paper product company that went missing many years before. Minus this detail, all sixteen lead normal live.
That was, until, on a casual Haloween dare, Turtle Wexler, the youngest living in Sunset Towers spent the night in the Westing mansion. What she found was not a pleasant sight. Samuel Westing was dead in his bed, peaceful as ever. Being as this was, the very next day, all sixteen people were called down to the main dining hall to read the will. Turns out, all sixteen were heirs.
Except for one. In Sam Westing's will, he makes his heirs play a masterful game of chess in order to find his killer, whom of which is hidden within the sixteen heirs.
Tried not to give too much away, sorry if I did! I suggest you read it and think about the not-obvious whilst doing so.
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Paper Towns : Viewing People in a Different Light.
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
Suite Scarlett : Droop On, My Lifeless Friends.
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Downsiders : The Woes of a Life Without Sky.
Wednesday, April 8, 2009
Devilish : Cupcakes and Evil, All Rolled Into One.
So, my friend told me to read this, due to the fact that the main character and narrator, Jane, reminded her of me. Funny enough, a lot of Jane's reactions and adventures are all things that I would probably do. Haha. I'm really glad that she recommended this, because it was really a great book. It's about Jane, the spunky, super-smart, albeit outcast, high school senior, Ally, Jane's needy, more-of-an-outcast best friend, a demon hiding the midst of their school, a dead boy, a deal with the devil, and evil cupcakes. Oh, and a plot thrown into all of that.
I really liked this because even at the parts with the most tension, Jane's mind had to think of something that could make anyone laugh; such as making plans to convince her sister that earth actually has a second moon, it's just made of glass, therefore you cannot see it. The characters weren't perfect, which is what I love in a book, because they had all of these little quirks and things that you could find unique to anyone one the street. The way it was written really got me, too, Johnson stitches together this odd story with all of these little, unbelievable things that make the story all the more believable.
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
Alice In Wonderland : Nonsensical!
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
Project 17 : The Spirits Lurk Among Us...
Thursday, March 19, 2009
I Am The Messenger : Chosen to Care.
Thursday, March 12, 2009
Need : Benign to Sinister.
Thursday, March 5, 2009
Fade : Your Dreams are Not Your Own.
Saturday, February 21, 2009
My Twilight Rant.
(And my last two were boring, as well as me being tired of the fangirls. :C )
First Off, Twilight Does Not Compare to Harry Potter!
No, never, no. Twilight and Harry Potter can't even be compared, really; they have no smiliar archetypes in them whatsoever. Nothing really can surpass or even come close to the craze that Harry Potter has become, I mean, is there such a thing as "Vampire Rock"? I've only heard Wizard Rock. I am not saying that one is better than the other (though my opinion is pretty obvious), but people should stop saying that Twilight is the new Harry Potter, because it's not; Twilight is the new Twilight and Harry Potter is the new Harry Potter, that's it.
Twilight is Great for Psychology and What Not To Do Puns!
Just about everyone in Twilight has a mental problem, seriously.
Bella is a narciccist, Edward's a stalker, Jacob (turns into) a pedophile and Reneeseme is a demon baby that tried to kill her mother before she was born. If trying to suck the life out of your mother before you were born isn't a sign of insanity, I don't know what is.
Despite that fact, most are Mary-Sues and Gary-Stus. For those who don't know what these are, (they seem to be writer's terms) they basically mean that said character has no personality whatsoever, or is completely and totally perfect and without any flaws.
Edward Cullen is a prime example. Edface is an icecube, filled with nothing but bland water, with shiny wrapping paper over it and a bow of handsome tied on top. That's it.
And, in Breaking Dawn, Mary-Sue and Gary-Stu made a Mary-Stu.
Stephen King vs. Stephenie Meyer
"Stephen King is just jealous of Stephenie! He hasn't sold 12 million copies of books! He just wants to bring his books into the limelight! He can't say that about her!!!!!1111!!"
Yeah, Stephen King said that SMeyer "can't write worth a darn," and people are having a total and complete SPAZZ about it.
Firstly, Stephen King has sold 350 million copies of his books, and that doesn't even tell you how many people have read it, considering the fact that people borrow, lend and use libraries. Stephen King is like a god in the writing world, and SMeyer is a wannabe.
Stephen King can say that about her, because he is Stephen King.
The Writing Hurts my Head.
If one was a writer like I am, you could take Twilight two ways.
A) It could be a shiny beacon of hope to the hopeful novelist; with said person knowing that this horrible work of literary suck was published, they'd get that novel they wrote for NaNoWriMo in stores sooner than you could say shiny vampires.
B) An insult to all writer kind and the start of the long, book recession. Vampire books are everywhere now. Whoopee.
Most take the latter rather than the former.
The writing is so horrible in this, I actually had a friend of mine and I go through two of the Twilight books and highlight every 'perfect,' 'brilliant,' 'angel,' and 'amazing' we could find. The number was crazy. The writing is forced and un-effortless. When you're an author, you want your writing to end up painting a picture such of Monet, not your five year old cousin.
Kay, I'm done now.
I am now ready for people to throw rocks at me. (:
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
Neverwhere : Welcome to the Truly Terrifying
So far, though, the book is really great. It’s written well, and the plot is interesting, even if I don’t have much of a clue as to what’s going on. Gaiman puts in the ambiguous little patches of moments in the story that keep me hungry for more and more, and I have a feeling that I’ll be very disappointed when it ends. Awkward blog is awkward, because I have nothing much to say about the book. D: