Search Results for: the luck uglies

The Luck Uglies: Rise of the Ragged Clover by Paul Durham

Rise of the Ragged Clover is the third, and I assume final, book in the Luck Uglies series. It’s been a good story from the beginning. Riley (Rye) O’Chanter and her family and friends fight against unnumbered foes, including the corrupt Earl Morningwig Longchance and his family, a multitude of Bog Noblins, the treacherous Fork-Tongue Charmers, and in this new book, Shriek Reavers and a River Wyvern. In an uneasy coalition with the Luck Uglies, outlaws who protect the town of Drowning, sometimes, Rye and her friends try to protect the weak and the innocent, but end up in dangerous and morally ambiguous situations over and over again until the final climax of the story has Rye face an impossible choice: let the Bog Noblins destroy Drowning or drown the town in a flood that might kill everyone anyway.

I really did like the story, but the moral ambiguity and ends-justify-the-means reasoning was too much for my sensibilities, which have admittedly been scarred by this election season. However, these are some of the nuggets of “wisdom” that Rye’s father drops, and I just couldn’t help applying them to our own national leadership crisis. This kind of advice (moral relativism) has led us to where we are now.

“Sometimes only the bad guys can save you. Sometimes it takes a villain to save you from the monsters.”

I can’t help it. I’m reading: “Sometimes we have to vote for the lesser of two evils. Sometimes only a strong, bad, guy is strong enough to shake things up and save us from a really evil and worse fate.” Consequentialism, blech.

” . . . a leader’s choices are sometimes impossible ones. The right decision may not be the best, and the best decision can be both right and wrong. So a real hero can only follow her heart.”

And what if “her heart” leads her to justify the killing of unwanted babies or what if “his heart” says he must kiss every girl he is attracted to? What if the hero’s heart is desperately wicked and deceptive?

“That magic, your unique abilities, they’re already within each of you. All you needed was something to believe in. And sometimes it’s easier to believe in a charm or a totem than it is to believe in ourselves.”

Again with the believe in yourself/follow your heart Disney-esque advice. And if you find it difficult to believe that you are a god and your heart is always right, make yourself a harmless little idol to convince you of your own omnipotence.

Finally in the end, Rye makes the right decision about her future, but again it’s just based on her feelings. She doesn’t feel like becoming a tough outlaw chieftain in order to bring about good for the town, the Luck Uglies, and her friends:

“I don’t want to use fear as a weapon and struggle for power. I don’t want to be the one to lead the Luck Uglies out of the dark if it means I must first step into the shadows myself.”

But the contorted, murky, and turgid moral reasoning that comes before that fine declaration is not what I needed to read in this contorted, murky, and turgid swamp of a political season. And the story itself is morally ambiguous, wth the bad guys sometimes seemingly not so bad, or least there’s always something badd-er for the villains to fight against and thereby become somewhat redeemable. I needed clear, bright lines between good and evil, lucid and rational ethical thought, and a real hero who trusts in some standard besides her own heart. I tend to believe that we all need those things, especially kids, especially now.

Maybe the timing was wrong for me to read this book. Maybe (probably) I’m loading way too much baggage onto a middle grade fantasy novel. If you enjoyed the first two books in the series, you’ll probably like this one, too. I would suggest that you read the three books in the trilogy in order. There are a lot of characters and creatures to keep straight, and I don’t think jumping into the middle (or the last third) of the story will work well for this one.

My review of the first two book in the Luck Uglies series (in which I was bothered by the moral ambiguity of the novels).

The Luck Uglies by Paul Durham

The Luck Uglies by Paul Durham.
The Luck Uglies #2: Fork-Tongue Charmers by Paul Durham.

The first book in this fantasy series for middle grade readers, published in 2014, won the Cybils Award for Middle Grade Speculative Fiction. I read it when I was on the panel for Cybils, and I thought I had reviewed it here, but it turns out that I was too busy reading to review The Luck Uglies. So, a quick re-cap:

Riley (Rye) O’Chanter lives on Mud Puddle Lane in Village Drowning with her mother, Abby O’Chanter, her little sister, Lottie, and Nightshade (Shady) Fur Bottom O’Chanter, the cat. Rye is a mischievous urchin, but she has quite a few rules to remember. There are her mother’s house rules. (House Rule Number One is: “Don’t stop, talk or questions ask; beware of men wearing masks.”) Then, there are the rather arbitrary Laws of Earl Morningwig Longchance, such as “it’s illegal to feed pigs on Market Street” and “no woman may wear blue without the express permission of the Honorable Earl Longchance.”

All rules and laws become insignificant in the face of the danger that is coming to Village Drowning: the supposedly extinct Bog Noblins are returning, and there are no more Luck Uglies to fight them off. The Luck Uglies, a secret society of outlaws who used to be Village Drowning’s protectors, are now the Earl’s enemies and hence banished from the village. How will the inhabitants of Village Drowning fight off the Bog Noblins, keep the Laws of Longchance, and figure out whose side the Luck Uglies are on?

So, the first book was an exciting and absorbing introduction to Rye O’Chanter, the Luck Uglies, and Rye’s friends and family. Book 2, Fork Tongue Charmers, introduces us to new characters, new places, and new problems for Rye and the people of Village Drowning. In this book, the Luck Uglies are divided and at odds with one another, while Earl Longchance has hired a new enforcer to bring the villagers, and the Luck Uglies, into line. Rye and her family run away to the island of Pest, her mother’s homeland, but trouble follows them there.

The story is, as I said, absorbing. If I had any issue at all with these first two books in this trilogy-to-be, it was the moral ambiguity of the characters and indeed of the entire story so far. It’s hard to tell whether the Luck Uglies, in particular, are the good guys or the bad guys or a little of both. I predict that this ambiguity will be resolved by the end of the third book in the series, and we will find that, though perhaps mistakes and misunderstandings have occurred, the white hats and the black hats are distinguishable after all. But I can’t promise, since there are a lot of unanswered questions yet to be settled.

So what did I like about this second book? I liked Rye and her penchant for going straight to the heart of a problem and solving it. I liked the family dynamics in Rye’s immediate family and in her extended family. I liked “traveling” to the island of Pest and feeling a taste of Ireland, or perhaps Scotland, in this fictional other-world setting and culture. I liked the Robin Hood echoes and the way I was reminded of Heidi’s grandfather in Swiss Alps in Rye’s island grandfather.

The Luck Uglies is good stuff. Different stuff. Perhaps, depending on how the series wraps ups, even classic stuff.

50 Best Middle Grade Novels of the 21st Century

In 2019 Booklist published their list of the “50 Best Middle Grade Novels of the 21st Century.” Go ahead, take a look.

They left off Harry Potter, Wimpy Kid, and Percy Jackson because they figured those already had enough attention. (I would leave off two of the three for reasons of poor quality and over-exposure, and HP for the reason they state.) They also “cheated” and included series as one book, so I plan to do the same. Anyway, I do have some reading background and expertise in this particular genre, and for your reading pleasure I thought I would give you my own list of the 50 Best Middle Grade Novels of the 21st Century (so far). There is some overlap between my list and Booklist’s list, so I’ll start with those books we agree on.

Booklist and Semicolon’s Best Books (14 selections):

The Girl Who Drank the Moon by Kelly Barnhill. Algonquin, 2016.

Greenglass House by Kate Milford. Illus. by Jaime Zollars. Clarion, 2014.

Last Day on Mars by Kevin Emerson. HarperCollins/Walden Pond, 2017.

Lockwood & Co. series by Jonathan Stroud. Illus. by Kate Adams. Disney/Hyperion, 2012-2017. (5 titles)

The Mysterious Benedict Society series by Trenton Lee Stewart. Illus. by Carson Ellis and Diana Sudyka. Little, Brown/Megan Tingley, 2007-2012. (4 titles)

Okay for Now by Gary D. Schmidt. Clarion, 2011.

The Penderwicks series by Jeanne Birdsall. Knopf, 2005-2018. (5 titles)

Race to the Bottom of the Sea by Lindsay Eagar. Candlewick, 2017.

Rain Reign by Ann M. Martin. Feiwel and Friends, 2014.

The Ranger’s Apprentice series by John Flanagan. I’ve only read the first book in this series, but I do plan to read more. Recommended.

A Single Shard by Linda Sue Park. Clarion, 2001. Newbery Award winning story of an orphan boy who wants to become a potter. Tree-Ear, named for a wild mushroom that grows without seed, lives under a bridge with his friend and mentor, Crane-man. His friend’s shriveled and twisted leg and foot makes him unable to work, and the two manage to eat and hold body and soul together by foraging among the garbage heaps. Then, Tree-Ear gets a job—and a dream of leaving the fringes of 12th century Korean society to become an artisan.

The Tale of Despereaux: Being the Story of a Mouse, a Princess, Some Soup, and a Spool of Thread by Kate DiCamillo. Illus. by Timothy Basil Ering. Candlewick, 2003.

When You Reach Me by Rebecca Stead. Random/Wendy Lamb, 2009.

Where the Mountain Meets the Moon series by Grace Lin. Little, Brown, 2009-2016. (3 titles)

Then, Betsy Bird at Fuse #8 chimed in with the substitutions and changes she would make to the list.

Fuse #8 and Semicolon’s Best Books (3 selections):

Rules by Cynthia Lord.

A Drowned Maiden’s Hair by Laura Amy Schlitz. Historical fiction about Maud, an orphan, who is adopted out-of-the-blue by two elderly sisters. Her new guardians lavish her with new clothes on their way home to their large home, but then make her hide in the attic when guests come. They have a plan for Maud to help them in their spiritualism business, but Maud may be more than the sister bargained for.

Ghost by Jason Reynolds.

 

And, these are my selections—33 more books that I think are outstanding and will stand the test of time:

Heart of a Shepherd by Roseanne Parry.

Cosmic by Frank Cottrell Boyce.

The Wingfeather Saga by Andrew Peterson. (On the Edge of the Dark Sea of Darkness, North! Or Be Eaten, The Monster in the Hollows, The Warden and the Wolf King) Waterbrook/Rabbit Room Press, 2008-2014.

The London Eye Mystery by Siobhan Dowd. 2008.

The Underneath by Kathi Appelt.

Alvin Ho series by Lenore Look.

The Casson Family series by Hilary McKay. (Saffy’s Angel, Indigo’s Star, Permanent Rose, Caddie Ever After, Forever Rose) Margaret K. McElderry Books, 2002-2008.

Maggie Valley novels by Kerry Madden. (Gentle’s Holler, Louisiana’s Song, Jessie’s Mountain)

Leepike Ridge by N.D. Wilson. Random House, 2007.

A Long Walk to Water by Linda Sue Park.

Sweep: The Story of a Girl and Her Monster by Jonathan Auxier.

The Hero’s Guide to Storming the Castle by Christopher Healy.

Boys Without Names by Kashmira Sheth. Eager to find work after his hungry family arrives in Mumbai, 11-year-old Gopal ends up locked in a one-room “factory” making beaded frames with five other boys so beaten down they don’t even talk to one another. The boys have no names because their boss manipulates them to distrust one another in the interest of keeping them in slavery. Heart-rending, but never preachy, and ultimately hopeful.

Bamboo People by Mitali Perkins. Charlesbridge, 2010.

Anything But Typical by Nora Leigh Baskin.

A Crooked Kind of Perfect by Linda Urban.

Clementine books by Sara Pennypacker.

Hattie Big Sky by Kirby Larson.

Books of Bayern by Shannon Hale. (The Goose Girl, Enna Burning, etc.)

Because of Winn-Dixie by Kate DiCamillo.

The Crossover by Kwame Alexander.

The Rise and Fall of Mount Majestic by Jennifer Trafton.

The False Prince by Jennifer A. Nielsen. The Ascendance Trilogy.

The Luck Uglies series by Paul Durham.

Tuesdays at the Castle series by Jessica Day George.

War Horse by Michael Morpurgo.

Chasing Vermeer series by Blue Balliet.

The Thief series by Megan Whalen Turner.

Circus Mirandus by Cassie Beasley.

Isle of Swords by Thomas Wayne Batson.

Turtle in Paradise by Jennifer L. Holm.

Any Which Wall by Laurel Snyder.

Framed by Frank Cottrell Boyce.

So, what do you think? What books would you add or take away from my list or Booklist‘s list? Or make your own list, and link in the comments.

Trends and Themes in Middle Grade Speculative Fiction 2016

Settings where (fantasy) stories come true
The town of Fortune Falls, where superstitions are the laws of nature.
An alternate universe/earth where mythological creature are real.
A congenital condition in which the words that people use to describe you appear in print on your arms and legs.
A Dream Shop in which dreams are bought and sold and made alive.
A summer camp where paranormal talents are the norm.
A wrinkled mountain village where “stories have a way of coming true.”
A world of paintings lives “behind the canvas”.
A library where books involving supernatural elements are “finished” as they are lived out in the real world.

Kids with father issues
Not as many mother issues in 2016, although they do show up in one or two books.
The Luck Uglies: Rise of the Ragged Clover by Paul Durham. Rye must decide whether to follow in her outlaw father’s footsteps or not.
My Diary From the Edge of the World. A hapless and neglectful father leads his family to the edge of the world.
Waiting for Augusta by Jessica Lawson. Benjamin Hogan Putter talks to his dead father and tries to carry out his dad’s dying wishes.
Time Stoppers by Carrie Jones. Jamie’s father is an evil troll, and Annie doesn’t have a father.
The Remarkable Journey of Charlie Price by Jennifer Maschari. Charlie’s father has “checked out” since his mother died.
The League of Beastly Dreadfuls: The Dastardly Deed by Holly Grant. Anastasia’s father is missing, and only she can find him.
Furthermore by Teherah Mafi. Alice feels rejected by her mother and abandoned by her father.
Baker’s Magic by Diane Zahler. Bee starts with no parents and ends up with two fathers, or at least two father figures.
Edge of Extinction: The Ark Plan by Laura Martin. Sky’s father fled the North Compound five years ago when she was only seven years old, but Sky is determined to find out why and what happened to him.
This Is Not A Werewolf Story by Sandra Evans. Raul feels deserted by his father, who is grieving over the loss of Raul’s mother.
Secret Keepers by Trenton Lee Stewart. Rueben is fatherless.
The Evil Wizard Smallbone by Delia Sherman.
Time-Traveling with a Hamster by Ross Welford. Al can’t accept his father’s death.
Red Moon Rising by K.A. Holt. Rae can’t relate to her father and becomes bonded instead to her captors, an alien race called The Cheese.

Death and Dying
My Diary From the Edge of the World by Jodi Lynn Anderson. The Dark Cloud of Death is coming to get someone in Gracie’s family.
Waiting for Augusta by Jessica Lawson. Ben’s dad is dead, but dad’s ashes are speaking to Ben from beyond the grave.
The Wrinkled Crown by Anne Nesbet. Linny’s best friend, Sayra, is dying, and Linny must find a medicine that will cure her.
The Remarkable Journey of Charlie Price by Jennifer Maschari. Charlie and his little sister Imogen find a parallel world where their deceased and much-missed mom is still alive.
The Nine Lives of Jacob Tibbs by Cylin Busby. Ship’s cat Jacob Tibbs loses his mother in a storm, and other lives hang in the balance when mutineers try to take over the ship.
Key to Extraordinary by Natalie Lloyd. Emma lives next to a graveyard and gives guided tours of said cemetery. She also talks to ghosts and misses her recently deceased mother with a feeling she calls The Big Empty.
Time-Traveling with a Hamster by Ross Welford. Al can’t accept his father’s death.
The First Last Day by Dorian Cirrone. Haleigh wants to keep her friend Kevin’s grandmother from dying by going back in time.
Red by Liesl Shurtliff. Red will do almost anything to find the secret of eternal life for her granny.
School of the Dead by Avi.

Science and logic versus stories and magic
Sophie Quire and the Last Storyguard by Jonathan Auxier.
The Wrinkled Crown by Anne Nesbet. People on the wrinkled, magic side of the river are in an ongoing conflict with those who live on the plain, scientific side.
Curse of the Boggin: The Library, Book 1 by D.J. MacHale. Marcus and his nerdy friend Theo argue over whether supernatural events are real or can be be explained scientifically.

Ethnic Diversity
Unidentified Suburban Object by Mike Jung. Chloe Cho is tired of being the only Asian kid in town, but things are about to get a lot worse when she finds out the secret that her parents have been keeping about her family’s true heritage.
Curse of the Boggin: The Library, Book 1 by D.J. MacHale. Marcus and his two best friends, Annabella Lu, Chinese American, and Theo McLean, African American, work together to solve supernatural mysteries and lay ghosts to rest.
Simon Thorn and the Wolf’s Den by Aimee Carter. I think the different animal kingdoms in this one are supposed to mirror human diversity, with “mixed heritage” characters.
The Mighty Odds by Amy Ignatow. A group of ethnically diverse middle schoolers gain individual and oddly specific superpowers.
Time-Traveling with a Hamster by Ross Welford. An ethnic Indian/British (Punjabi) setting and characters in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England.
The Inquisitor’s Tale by Adam Gidwitz. Jeanne, a peasant girl who has visions, William, an oblate who is half-Saracen (African) and half French, and Jacob, a Jewish boy with a gift for healing travel across France in the thirteenth century on a quest.
Rebellion of Thieves by Kekla Magoon.

Magical Child with Hidden Talents, Destined to Save the World
The Harry Potter theme.
The League of Beastly Dreadfuls: The Dastardly Deed by Holly Grant. Anastasia, recently freed from captivity in St. Agony’s Asylum, is half-morph and all-princess. Can she find the Silver Hammer which will help to free her grandfather Nicodemus who can in turn find her father, Fred McCrumpet Merrymoon?
Little D by A. ML. “In a world where magic has been all but extinguished, nine year old Donatella Lou Regent, the last of the famous Regent line, has no idea who she is or the power she holds.”
Sophie Quire and the Last Storyguard by Jonathan Auxier. Sophie and her friend Peter Nimble adventure across the Grimmwald and through the city of Bustleburgh to stop the villains who are planning to stop, destroy and immolate all nonsense (stories, magic, wonder, books!).
The Wrinkled Crown by Anne Nesbet. Linny may be the prophesied Girl With the Lourka who will save the people of the divided city of Bend from ongoing warfare.
Time Stoppers by Carrie Jones. Little Annie Nobody is the child who is destined to be a Time Stopper, find the magical garden gnome, bring it back to Aurora, and defeat the evil Each Uisge and the Raiff.
Secret Keepers by Trenton Lee Stewart. Poor, lonely Reuben finds a hidden object, an object that bestows great power on its owner, but also an object that is sought for by a lot of very, very bad people, including the arch-villain of New Umbra who is known only as The Smoke. Can Reuben unlock the secrets of his newfound magical powers and save New Umbra before The Smoke finds him and takes his discovery away?
Behind the Canvas by Alexander Vance. Seventh grader Claudia Miravista finds that she is a magically talented Artisti who can save her friend Pim from a life trapped behind the canvas of the paintings of the world.
The Lost Property Office by James R. Hannibal. Jack Buckles, finds out, by accident, that he is a Tracker, as was his father before him, and he is the only one who can save his father and the world from the evil Clockmaker.
The Lost Compass by Joel Ross. Chess, the foggy-eyed tether boy, may have a gift that will defeat the evil Lord Kodoc and save the world.
Outlaws of Time: The Legend of Sam Miracle by N.D. Wilson. Sam is the one sent to save the world from the evil Vulture, El Buitre.

Shapeshifting:
Simon Thorn and the Wolf’s Den by Aimee Carter. Simon and his family are all Animalgams, people born with the ability to change into a certain animal at will.
The Peculiar Night of the Blue Heart by Lauren DeStefano. Borderline shapeshifting.
Time Stoppers by Carrie Jones.
This Is Not a Werewolf Story by Sandra Evans. Maybe Raul is not a werewolf, but he does shift into a wolf on the weekends.
The Evil Wizard Smallbone by Delia Sherman.

Robots and Artificial Intelligence:
Fuzzy by Tom Angleberger.
Out of Abaton: The Wooden Prince by Jean Claude Bemis. A Pinocchio-like automaton.
The Wild Robot by Peter Brown.
Under Their Skin by Margaret Peterson Haddix.
The Firefly Code by Megan Frazer.

Amazon Affiliate. If you click on a book cover here to go to Amazon and buy something, I receive a very small percentage of the purchase price.

Oh, the Thinks You Can Think, or Strange Creatures of the Imagination in Speculative Fiction

Your assignment: Draw a world that contains many or all of these creatures as imagined by you. You get extra points if you can name the 2014 speculative fiction Cybils nominees that feature each one of these weird and fantastical creatures. You get even more credit for naming a qualifying imaginary being from 2014 middle grade speculative fiction that I neglected to add to the list.


Albino Ackaway.
Albino witch.
Alien Tremist.
Ashari haldani.
Augmented actualizers.
Aviars (bird people).
Ax-wielding Feuerkumpel.
Bad-tempered great grey hippokamp.
Black-eyed terragogg.
Bog Noblins (semi-aquatic lowland Nobificus).
Bombinating beast.
Carnag the Monster Semblance.
Dreaded toothy cows.
Drill sergeant fairy.
Egyptian demigod.
Extraterrestrial from Bosco in the constellation Draco.
Fangs of Dang.
Flesh-eating valravens.
Furry raccoon-shaped Dome Meks.
General Cockroach.
Giant carnivorous weeds.
Gigantic redback vole petling.
Hoppernots.
Icewing dragons.
Incorrigible howling wolf children.
Jabberwock.
Jupiter pirates.
Kampii (fishy mermaid people).
Little green or gray spacemen.
Luck Uglies.
Mangleborn.
Manglespawn.
Masked Venetian magicians.
Medieval pilgrim squirrels.
Mudwing dragons.
Neptunian blorkbeast.
Nightgaunts.
Nightmare scorpipede.
Nightwing dragons.
Ninja librarians.
Phantom fox familiar.
Pink gargoyle dudes.
Platypus police squad.
Plug-Ugly, the disappearing cat.
Rainwing dragons.
Reptilian Exorians.
Rhinebra.
Sandwing dragons.
Seawigs.
Seawing dragons.
Self-assembled artificial intelligence SmartBots.
Serpentii (snake people).
Seven-headed hydra.
Shark whisperer.
Skander-winged puck.
Skirrits.
Skywing dragons.
Soul jumpers.
Sparkers.
Spirit duppies.
Spying blue butterflies.
Sunflower skeleton eraser.
Vain vitrina.
Xanite kasiri.
Zombie hamster.

I wish I could draw.

Amazon Affiliate. If you click on a book cover here to go to Amazon and buy something, I receive a very small percentage of the purchase price.

Saturday Review of Books: December 19, 2009

“A great book should leave you with many
experiences and slightly exhausted at the end. You should live several lives while reading it.”
~William Styron

Have you read any books lately that left you pleasantly exhausted? Any books that actually required energy in the reading and left you feeling the you had “lived several lives”? I just read the award-winning Chains by Laurie Halse Anderson, and I would say that I felt a a little as if I were living in the colonies during the American Revolution, with all the confusion and divided loyalties that such a life would entail.

Welcome to this week’s Saturday Review of Books.

Here’s how it usually works. Find a review on your blog posted sometime this week of a book you’re reading or a book you’ve read. The review doesn’t have to be a formal sort of thing. You can just write your thoughts on a particular book, a few ideas inspired by reading the book, your evaluation, quotations, whatever.

Now post a link here to the specific post where you’ve written your book review. Don’t link to your main blog page because this kind of link makes it hard to find the book review, especially when people drop in later after you’ve added new content to your blog. In parentheses after your name, add the title of the book you’re reviewing. This addition will help people to find the reviews they’re most interested in reading.

Thanks to everyone for participating.

1. Semicolon (Road to Tater Hill)
2. Barbara H (American Haven)
3. Barbara H (Plain Perfect)
4. Barbara H (A Vote of Confidence)
5. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (Best Christmas Pageant Ever and other Christmas titles)
6. WordLily (Prisoner of the State)
7. Reading to Know (My Life in France)
8. Reading to Know (Lucy Maud Montgomery)
9. 5M4B (Lime Tree Can’t Bear Orange)
10. 5M4B (The Last Will of Moira Leahy)
11. 5M4B (Emily of New Moon)
12. 5M4B (Liberty Porter: First Daughter)
13. 5M4B (Nurter Shock)
14. 5M4B (Nanny Returns)
15. Sarah at SmallWorld Reads (The Lacuna)
16. Wayside Wanderer (The Man Who Invented Christmas)
17. Hope(Merry Christmas, Mr. Baxter)
18. Jen Robinson’s Book Page (Let It Snow)
19. SuziQoregon (Uglies)
20. SuziQoregon (Aunt Dimity’s Christmas)
21. Seth – Collateral Bloggage (Catching Fire)
22. Jennifer (Magic Box)
23. Framed (Silent Night / All Through the Night
24. Framed (Ella Enchanted)
25. FleurFisher (The Boy With The Cuckoo-Clock Heart)
26. FlleurFisher (Moon Behind Clouds)
27. FleurFisher (The girl With Glass Feet)
28. Petunia (The Snowflake)
29. Beth (No Place for a Lady)
30. Beth (Elvis Takes a Back Seat)
31. Beth (The Pioneer Woman Cooks)
32. gautami tripathy (Labyrinth by Kate Mosse)
33. gautami tripathy (Cold Skin)
34. gautami tripathy (Strange Pilgrims)
35. Diary of an Eccentric (Searching for Pemberley)
36. Diary of an Eccentric (The Sentinels: Fortunes of War)
37. Diary of an Eccentric (Ivy Bean: Doomed to Dance)
38. Reading Tub (Secrets of a Christmas Box)
39. Jennifer, Snapshot (The Name of This Book is Secret)
40. Brandon (review of The Great Code by Northrop Frye)
41. 5M4B (When She Flew)
42. ChristineMM (The Way of Boys)
43. Nicola (BoneMan’s Daughter)
44. Nicola (A Pioneer Christmas)
45. Nicola (The Road to God Knows…)
46. Nicola (Gunnerkrigg Court: Orientation)
47. Nicola (Any Given Doomsday)
48. Nicola (Nightschool Vol. 1 & 2)
49. gautami tripathy (Midnight Magic)
50. @Joyful (Though Waters Roar)
51. Girl Detective (The Wild Things)
52. Girl Detective (Fables: The Dark Ages)
53. Girl Detective (Peter and Max: a Fables novel)
54. Molly (Crossing Washington Square)
55. S. Krishna (Murder on the Cliffs)
56. S. Krishna (Shiver)
57. Molly (Christ, the Light of the World))
58. Amber (Magic Trixie and the Dragon)
59. S. Krishna (Karma for Beginners)
60. S. Krishna (Bird in Hand)
61. S. Krishna (Gorgeous East)
62. S. Krishna (The Gift)
63. S. Krishna (Knife of Never Letting Go)
64. Lazygal (A Rule Against Murder)
65. Heather J (Affinity)
66. Heather J (Medea)
67. Kristen (Called to Worship)
68. Lynne (THE CHRISTMAS LIST)
69. Lynne (THE CHRISTMAS DOG)
70. Lynne (A DOG NAMED CHRISTMAS
71. Lynne (THE CHRISTMAS SECRET)
72. Lynne (THE CHRISTMAS CLOCK)
73. Lynne (THE PERFECT CHRISTMAS)
74. Lynne (U IS FOR UNDERTOW)
75. Lynne (TRAVELING LIGHT)
76. Melanie (Niceman Cometh)
77. Melanie (Proust & The Squid)
78. Melanie (Love begins in Winter / The Anthologist)
79. melydia (The Geographer’s Library)
80. Mark (Dead Man’s Puzzle)
81. Mark (Kingdom Keepers II: Disney at Dawn
82. Mark (Homicide in Hardcover)
83. Mark (A Fatal Grace)
84. Fate (Andromeda Stories)
85. Fate (Archangel)
86. Darla D (Lunch Lady and the Cyborg Substitute)
87. Darla D (Destiny Kills)
88. Darla D (The Best Bad Luck I Ever Had)
89. Darla D (xxxHolic, Vol. 1)
90. Darla D (Dead Girls Are Easy)
91. Darla D (xxxHolic, Vol. 2)
92. Amykiane (Lost Mission)
93. Orchid (Meet the Austins)
94. Orchid (A House Like a Lotus)
95. Monica (The Raging Quiet)
96. CJ (Stolen)
97. Joseph Kelly (THe Priestly Vision of Genesis 1)
98. Beth FIsh (Sweeping Up Glass)
99. Kris (Superfoods)
100. Kris (Plum Pudding Murder)
101. Readingjunky (Taken)

Powered by… Mister Linky’s Magical Widgets.

Saturday Review of Books: March 28, 2009

“In reading a man converses with the wise, in action generally with fools.”
~Francis Bacon

Welcome to this week’s Saturday Review of Books.

Here’s how it usually works. Find a review on your blog posted sometime this week of a book you’re reading or a book you’ve read. The review doesn’t have to be a formal sort of thing. You can just write your thoughts on a particular book, a few ideas inspired by reading the book, your evaluation, quotations, whatever.

Now post a link here to the specific post where you’ve written your book review. Don’t link to your main blog page because this kind of link makes it hard to find the book review, especially when people drop in later after you’ve added new content to your blog. In parentheses after your name, add the title of the book you’re reviewing. This addition will help people to find the reviews they’re most interested in reading.

Thanks to everyone for participating.

1. Biblauragraphy (Swim the Fly)
2. caribookscoops (Wintergirls)
3. caribookscoops (Grace for President)
4. caribookscoops (With Courage and Cloth)
5. SuziQoregon (Susannah\’s Garden)
6. SuziQoregon (The Cross-Country Quilters)
7. Carrie, RtK (Instructing a Child\’s Heart)
8. hollybookscoops (Gregor the Overlander)
9. Carrie, RtK (Breach of Trust)
10. Carrie, RtK (Train Picture Books)
11. 5M4B (Collapse of Distinction)
12. 5M4B (Novel in a Year)
13. hollybookscoops (10 Ways to Make Your Sister Disappear)
14. 5M4B (If Tomorrow Never Comes)
15. 5M4B (Just Another Girl)
16. 5M4B (Undress Me in the Temple of Heaven)
17. Book Psmith (Blandings Castle)
18. 5M4B (Greek Myths)
19. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (They Shall See God by Athol Dickson)
20. Framed (S is for Silence)
21. Framed (Ladder of Years)
22. Carrie K. (Uglies)
23. Laura (A World Lost)
24. Laura (Espresso Tales)
25. Laura (Love over Scotland)
26. Framed (The Kissing Hand)
27. caribookscoops (Dolphin\’s Rescue)
28. Framed (Daisy Fay and the Miracle Man)
29. Terri B. (Sea of Poppies)
30. MFS @ Mental multivitamin (On the nightstand)
31. MFS @ Mental multivitamin (Sky Above and Worlds Beyond)
32. Fate (Inamorata)
33. pussreboots (Tiger Burning Bright)
34. pussreboots (Beyond the Blue Event Horizon)
35. pussreboots (The Secret of Lost Things)
36. pussreboots (The Importance of Being Earnest)
37. pussreboots (Jane Austen Ruined My Life)
38. pussreboots (Alphabet Mystery)
39. Maw Books (Emiko Superstar)
40. Maw Books (Jellaby)
41. Maw Books (Chiggers)
42. Maw Books (Fade)
43. Maw Books (Peace, Locomotion)
44. Lazygal (Marcelo in the Real World)
45. Lazygal (The Dark Volume)
46. Lazygal (Skeleton Creek)
47. Lazygal (Skunk Girl)
48. Lazygal (Softwire: The Worm Hole Pirates of Orbis 3)
49. Lazygal (Al Capone Shines My Shoes)
50. Lazygal (Breathing)
51. Lazygal (Absolutely Maybe)
52. Lazygal (Also Known as Harper)
53. Lazygal (Operation Redwood)
54. Lazygal (The Well Between the Worlds)
55. FleurFisher (The Manual of Detection)
56. FleurFisher (Knights of Love)
57. FleurFisher (The Paris Enigma)
58. Hope (Tanglewood Tales by Hawthorne)
59. Janet (The Mysterious Benedict Society)
60. Inquirer (Phonics Pathways)
61. LuAnn (The Shack)
62. Deanna (Outlander)
63. Lynne (THE INQUISITOR)
64. Deanna (Graceling)
65. Lynne (LIVING DEAD GIRL)
66. Deanna (Dragonfly In Amber)
67. Lynne (FIREFLY LANE)
68. Deanna (Voyager)
69. Mo (The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood)
70. Joy (The Help)
71. Just One More Book! Children\’s Book Podcast (Duck Tents)
72. Just One More Book! Children\’s Book Podcast (Before You Were Here, Mi Amore)
73. PisecoMom (Zookeeper\’s Wife)
74. PisecoMom (Emergency)
75. PisecoMom (Watchmen)
76. PisecoMom (Kids\’ books based on songs)
77. Belinda (The Art of Mending – Audio)
78. Stephen (Red Riding series)
79. Stephen (The Girl on the Landing)
80. Page Turner (Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress)
81. Page Turner (Red Scarf Girl)
82. Sherrie(Swiss Family Robinson)
83. Books and Other Thoughts (Scott Pilgrim vs. the World)
84. Books and Other Thoughts (Kitty and the Midnight Hour)
85. Books and Other Thoughts (Miki Falls: Summer)
86. Books and Other Thoughts (The Dark Hills Divide)
87. Books and Other Thoughts (The Ghost\’s Grave)
88. Books and Other Thoughts (Flora Segunda)
89. Books and Other Thoughts (The Light Fantastic)
90. Belinda (Cold Sassy Tree)
91. Josette (An Ocean Apart, a World Away)
92. Sarah at SmallWorld Reads (Paula)
93. Margot (5 Minute Mysteries)
94. Margot (Zig-Zagging)
95. Margot (Summer by the Sea)
96. Nymeth (What it Takes to Pull me Through)
97. Nymeth (Heartbreak Soup)
98. Nymeth (The Lost Years of Merlin)
99. Nymeth (Gorillas in the Mist)
100. CoversGirl (A Maggot)
101. CoversGirl (The Night Manager)
102. gautami tripathy (A Climb Through Altered Landscapes)
103. gautami tripathy (Sputnik Sweetheart)
104. Word Lily (The Manual of Detection)
105. Word Lily (Pardonable Lies)
106. Book Chatter (Drood)
107. Florinda – The 3 R\’s (Never Let Me Go)
108. S. Krishna (Wake)
109. S. Krishna (This Year\’s Model)
110. S. Krishna (Everyone is Beautiful)
111. S. Krishna (Saffron Dreams)
112. S. Krishna (Descartes\’ Bones)
113. S. Krishna (Salaam, Paris)
114. Heather J. (The Castle of Otranto)
115. Heather J. (The Game)
116. Lightheaded (Spike: After the Fall)
117. Lightheaded (Nick and Norah\’s Infinite Playlist)
118. Lightheaded (BtVS: No Future for You)
119. Lightheaded (BtVS: Wolves at the Gate)
120. Lightheaded (The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao)
121. Lightheaded (Thirteen Reasons Why)
122. Noel (Marcelo in the Real World)
123. Noel (Dandelion Fire)
124. Carol (The Herb of Grace)
125. Homespun Light (Greasy Rider)
126. Homespun Light (Clean books for pre-teens)
127. Sarah M., Library Hospital (Reading Lolita in Tehran)
128. Sarah M., Library Hospital (Betsy-Tacy and Tib)
129. Mytwoblessings (The Seven Storey Mountain)
130. PapuaGirl (Guerrilla Hostage)
131. Dana(Culture Matters)
132. BOOKIE WOOGIE (Tale of a Tail)
133. Memory (The Dangerous Alphabet)
134. Memory (Bogus to Bubbly)
135. Memory (Renegade\’s Magic)
136. Memory (The Year\’s Best Fantasy, First Annual Collection)
137. Jen Robinson (Streams of Babel)
138. Becky (Little Oink)
139. Becky (Lullaby and Good Night)
140. Becky (Duck Rabbit)
141. Becky (Big Rabbit\’s Bad Mood)
142. Becky (Wee Little Chick)
143. Jew Wishes (Wandering Stars)
144. Becky (Bedtime Sing To Me)
145. Becky (Pride and Prejudice and Zombies)
146. Becky (Streams of Babel)
147. Becky (Maus II)
148. Becky (Maus I)
149. Noel (Gullstruck Island/The Lost Conspiracy)
150. Becky (Wuthering Heights)
151. Becky (Mansfield Park Revisted)
152. Becky (The Love We Share Without Knowing)
153. Becky (Fireflies in December)
154. Ruth (Reading Update)
155. Amber (Kitty and the Dead Man\’s Hand)
156. Amber (Kitty Raises Hell)
157. War and Peace (My Two Blessings)
158. Bermudaonion\’s Weblog (The Horse Boy)
159. Janet (The Golden Key)
160. She is Too Fond of Books (Usborne Book of Science Activities)
161. She is Too Fond of Books (Tomato Girl)
162. Melanie (Heave)
163. Melanie (La\’s Orchestra Saves the World)
164. Melanie (Miss Chopsticks)
165. Rebecca @ The Book Lady\’s Blog (My Little Red Book)
166. Rebecca @ The Book Lady\’s Blog (The Purity Myth)
167. Vasilly (Hansel and Gretel)
168. Vasilly (Reading Journal)
169. Sophisticated Dorkiness (The Bullfighter Checks Her Makeup)
170. J.C. Montgomery (A Lucky Child)
171. J.C. Montgomery (The House of The Spirits)
172. krin (Six Moon Dance)
173. Farm Lane Books (The Winner Stands Alone)
174. Farm Lane Books (The Glimmer Palace)
175. Jena (Water Ghosts)
176. VioletCrush (Cutting Loose by Nadine Dajani)
177. Kristi (Yesterday\’s Embers)
178. Kristi (Deadly Charm)
179. Serena (Pat\’s Review of The Lucky One)
180. Serena (Deep Dish)
181. Hermie\’s Mom (The Reader)
182. Diary of an Eccentric (Willing Spirits)
183. Diary of an Eccentric (Deep Dish)
184. Diary of an Eccentric (The Little Giant of Aberdeen County)
185. Diary of an Eccentric (Everyone Is Beautiful)
186. Carol\’s Notebook (I Loved, I Lost, I Made Spaghetti_
187. Bookeywookey (The Talented Mr. Ripley)

Powered by… Mister Linky’s Magical Widgets.

Saturday Review of Books: September 1, 2007

It is not true that we have only one life to live; if we can read, we can live as many more lives and as many kinds of lives as we wish.”
S.I. Hayakawa

Welcome to this week’s Saturday Review of Books. Here’s how it works. Find a review on your blog posted sometime this week of a book you’re reading or a book you’ve read. The review doesn’t have to be a formal sort of thing. You can just write your thoughts on a particular book, a few ideas inspired by reading the book, your evaluation, quotations, whatever.

Now post a link here to the specific post where you’ve written your book review. Don’t link to your main blog page because this kind of link makes it hard to find the book review, especially when people drop in later after you’ve added new content to your blog. In parentheses after your name, add the title of the book you’re reviewing. This addition will help people to find the reviews they’re most interested in reading.

1. Laura (Great Heart: The History of a Labrador Adventure)
2. Veronica (Pigeon Pie)
3. Carrie K. (The Eyre Affair)
4. gautami tripathy (Portrait of an artist as an young man)
5. gautami tripathy (Death of A salesman)
6. gautami tripathy (Nectar in A sieve)
7. gautami tripathy (Frankenstein)
8. gautami tripathy (outlaw–historical romance)
9. Stephen (Engleby)
10. Sage (Subduing Satan)
11. Lynne (Straight Man)
12. Stephen (If You Liked School, You\’ll Love Work)
13. Laura (Arthur and George)
14. Laura (Heat and Dust)
15. Joy (The Tortilla Curtain)
16. SFP (Butcher\’s Crossing)
17. Mama Squirrel (King of Shadows)
18. MFS (Writing to Learn (Zinsser) and “Why I Write” (Orwell) embedded in a meta-blogging post
19. Julie (Eggs)
20. Mindy Withrow (review essay of 6 novels with spiritual significance)
21. CoversGirl (Rebecca)
22. blest(This Is Your Brain on Music)
23. Lauren@Baseballs&Bows(Emma)
24. Chicken Spaghetti
25. Nicola (Secret Seven Adventure)
26. Nicola (Rebel Angels)
27. Nicola (I Know What You Did Last Summer)
28. Barbara H. (The Potluck Club Takes the Cake)
29. Musings of a Lady (Water Street)
30. Framed (East)
31. Framed (English Creek)
32. Barbara H. (Sometimes I Prefer to Fuss)
33. Clean Reads (Uglies)
34. Diana
35. Diana (Education of a Wandering Man)
36. Wendy (The Country of the Pointed Firs)
37. Gina (The Brief Wonderous Life of Oscar Wao)
38. Phil (The Chess Machine)
39. Carol (The Pearl)
40. DeputyHeadmistress (Charlotte Mason How-to Books)
41. Becky (Dragon\’s keep)
42. Becky (Among the Enemy)
43. Becky (War of the Worlds)
44. Becky (Frankenstein)
45. Becky (While We Were Out)
46. Becky (The Invisible Man, H.G. Wells)
47. Becky (Vampirates: Tide of Terror)
48. Becky (Journey to the Center of the Earth)
49. Becky (The Island of Dr. Moreau)
50. Becky (Feathers)
51. Becky (The Gorilla Did It)
52. Becky (Does My Head Look Big In This?)
53. Becky (A Woman\’s Place)
54. Becky (The Boy Who Would Not Go To School)
55. Miss Erin (Constance Savery)
56. Miss Erin (Elisabeth Kyle)
57. Dana (The Judgement of Paris)
58. Em (Boy Toy)
59. SmallWorld (The Book Thief)
60. ChristineMM “The Thinking Mother” (The Over-Scheduled Child)
61. J.R. (Walking on Water)
62. Valentina (The Giver)
63. Mo (The Third Secret)
64. Mo (North of Montana)
65. Chris (Crime & Punishment)
66. Chris (The Thirteenth Tale)
67. Ariel (Ain\’t Too Proud to Beg)
68. Lisa (How to Improve your Marriage without Talking about It)
69. 5 Min for Mom (The Other Mother)
70. 5 Min for Mom (Meghan Rose early chap books)
71. Verbivore (Falling Man)
72. Lydia (Billy Bathgate)
73. Stephanie(Marley & Me)
74. Robin (A Study in Scarlet)
75. patti digh (Us and Them)
76. Sam Houston (Don\’t Look Back)
77. Sam Houston (The Thursday Night Letters)
78. Benjie (Skin)
79. NyssaNeala (Ahab\’s Wife)
80. Becky (Our Seasons)

Powered by… Mister Linky’s Magical Widgets.

Thanks to everyone for reviewing, blogging, and linking.

Peruse past Saturday Reviews.

Saturday Reviews: Alphabetical by Title. (an unfinished list)

Don’t forget to join in on the Saturday Review of Books Reading Challenge.