Monday, 8 December 2008
The Trap by John Smelcer
This made me cry a bit...its set in Alaska and is about this old man who is out checking his wolf traps, when he gets his foot caught in a trap. Meanwhile, his grandson is at home in the village growing more and more worried as his grandad fails to return, but he's reluctant to look for him in case he dents his grandad's pride. Its a really haunting tale, beautifully told, and it explains really well family relationships, the isolation of Alaska as well as the conflicts faced by native american people too. this could work for Int2 I think
Frozen in time by Ali Sparkes
This book looks like it should be awful, but the dialogue's great and it is genuinely funny! It is about a brother and sister who dicover that their great aunt and uncle were cryogenically frozen in a bunker in their back garden in the 50s. This book has intrigue (what happened to the kid's dad who froze them? why did he freeze them for so long?) , spies and a Librarian who has her eye on the 50s teenagers, and she has Cold War connections too. The way that the 50s teenagers are introduced to 2009 is well done too, as is the fact that the teenagers from 2009 grow to see some of the benefits that the 50s had.
Friday, 14 November 2008
Margaret
Thursday, 13 November 2008
I love you but you need to get out more! Before I die is a fabulous, ground-breaking work that is long overdue. If I were to die, I would want to live my final hours at the rate of knots and Yes, Johnny Depp and I WOULD get together! If you're talking about bad books on death then Life, Interrupted by Damian Kelleher IS badly written and derivative. I read Before I die and immediately lent it to my 14 year old who loved it too.
Anyone else feel strongly about this book?
Plus, we must all read every book by Jaclyn Moriarty....now they really are well written!
Love ya!
Rachel
PS Coral has taught me how to blog and is now worried about what she has released onto the WEB!
next senior reading group meeting
Di
Before I die
It is "Before I die" by Jenny Downham. I can hardly say I enjoyed this book because the subject matter was quite depressing. What can you say about a terminally ill teenager who is working her way through a list of excesses before she dies ?
I thought it was not very well written anyway, but my main problem was the morality of the main character: sex, drugs, petty crime are high on her list of things to achieve before she dies.Her friends, the boys in her life do her no favours until she meets Adam, the 'boy next door'. I do not know if this is the way a terminally ill teenager would think or behave, but I do think that this was not sensitively handled and in parts was quite gratuitous.
I would struggle to recommend this to pupils not because of the subject matter (there have been several excellent books about death and young people recently e.g. Skin and Ways to live forever) but because of the lack of hope in the main character. Okay, what hope does a dying person have ?I can believe in a rebellious reaction to a terminal illness but her recklessness makes Tessa very unlikeable for me. If anyone else has read this what do you think ?
Tell me I am being too hard on this book and that teenagers will love it !
Who might you expect to read this ?
Monday, 10 November 2008
Novel nights out!
Also there's Twilight, It’s a lurve story between a high school girl and the weird boy at school –who turns out to be a vampire! The book is brilliant. I read the first 3 in the series back to back in one week! I was seriously desperate until the next book comes out, and now I have spotted it in C2C. Imagine how happy-making that is :-) Check out the trailer for the film… www.twilightthemovie.com
Anyone fancy a novel night out or two to dispel the winter blues?
Monday, 3 November 2008
People of the book
The reader by Bernard Schlink
It was on the previous 'Free your mind' list but not the latest one , but I see it is being released as a film soon. It is beautifully written but it is also the first book I have read which attempts to talk about German atrocities during the Holocaust from an immediate post war German perspective. The relationship between the young man and the older woman with a 'past' is fascinating , almost incredible. When her past catches up with him at a later stage in his life , he struggles to balance his concern for her with his horror at her past.
It is a compelling read and would easily work for H or AH.
Crusade
Anne B
key words: Crusades; Islam; Prejudice; Conflict; Family
PS think I may not entirely have the hang of this format yet!! :-)
Sea glass
I think it would work well for Int 2 since it has the 'angle' of the different viewpoints which they could use to interpret the ongoing story. The theme of glass worn down by the sea reflects the hopelessness of the woman's situation. Apart from being suitable for a student personal study, it was a very enjoyable read .
Alexander McCall Smith
I have only got the first in the series "Sunday Philosophy Club" in the LRC, and I 'm not sure whether it's worth buying the others in the series for my book stock.
Monday, 23 June 2008
serial killers
(with some duplicates or extra votes ! )
No country for Old Men by Cormac McCarthy. Takes the theme of serial killers way above and beyond anything you’ve ever read before and leaves you feeling that the whole American Dream is now defunct, destroyed and annihilated by the existence of pure evil. It is FANTASTIC!
Bonfire of the Vanities? By Tom Wolfe
Complicity – Iain Banks
Silence of the lambs – Thomas Harris
The mermaids singing – Val McDermid
Underground - Tobias Hill
American psycho’ by Bret Easton Ellis
Lullaby by Chuck Palahniuk
Darkly Dreaming Dexter – Jeff Lindsay
American Psycho – Bret
Engleby - Sebastian Faulks
In Cold Blood - Truman Capote
The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold
Interpretation of Murder by Jeff Rubinstein
RJ Ellory - A Quiet Belief in Angels
Perfume by Patrick Suskind
Friday, 20 June 2008
Thursday, 12 June 2008
The Road
Great to hear what people are reading - keep them coming, especially if it is one you can't put down.
I am reading Wolf Totem by Jiang Rong, a fascinating fictional account based on the author's real life experiences in the Mongolian grasslands. I am now inspired to read Man's biography of Genghis Khan before seeing the new film 'Mongol'.
Oh yes, the reason for the posting. Moira says we are looking at The Road - we actually have it on the database because it is so good. It is a 'must read'.
Di
about Burma ? level
The Nostradamus Prophecy s1 - s4
Cleo
Prime of Miss Jean Brodie - Muriel Spark
The Sea - John Banville
The accidental - Ali Smith
Unless -Carol Shields
Seesaw - Debbie Moggach
9th life of Louis drax - Liz Jensen
Kafka on the shore - Haruki Murakami
Fight Club -Chuck Palahniuk
Woodlanders - Thomas Hardy
Jekyll and Hyde - RL Stevenson
People's act of love -James Meek
testament of Gideon Mack - James robertson
We need to talk about kevin - Lionel Shriver
Eyre Affair - Jasper Fforde
we're discussing 'the road' by cormac mccarthy next, and that'll probably be Higher too i think...
we've also discussed looking for JJ and Henry Tumour, but they're more Int1/2 I think
I've just read I, Coriander, by Sally Gardiner - it's a lovely story set in London in the mid 17th century, not at all dry but beautifully written and gripping. Not a new book, published in 2005, but still worth mentioning. Good for S1/2 I think.
how to use Libread blog
Just click on orange button 'Publish post' at bottom left
There is an option to 'comment' on a post but these only appear to the person who made the origianl post, I think . I'll email this as well to those who have not yet blog-ged .
Tuesday, 10 June 2008
Maybe we could put the level in the label field on the mapost and that way we could collate the suggestions. I have to admit we are not being inundated yet; from the comments on email (!) we are facing an attack of blog-a-phobia.
Monday, 9 June 2008
Thanks for initial comments. let's get those suggestions for new reading at any level posted. If we can suggest a level for any new text , that would be great. I've just read Engleby by Sebastian Faulkes which was a well thought out cliff hanger,but a bit dry in parts. The subject matter and the psychiatric analysis would make it more suitable for H if anybody could plod through the dry scientific bits.
I'm adding this here because I am not yet sure whether everyone or only Di can read my reply to her request for new senior titles so it may be a repeat !
I read lots this summer and amongst the best was "the Road home" by Rose Tremain. It is a heart rending story of an immigrant man who comes to Britain from an impoverished East European country . His wife has died but he is desperate to improve the lives of his mother and daughter back home. The book charts his physical and emotional struggle as an immigrant, trying to adjust to his loneliness and a very different culture. His journey 'home' is harrowing but beautifully told. I think it would work well for a special study (but with a fair smattering of sexual encounters it would need to be for someone with a bit of maturity)