Sunday, October 7, 2012
OUR AUSTRALIAN GIRLS SERIES
Have you seen or read any books in this series? Watch the video clip to find out more about the girls in this great Australian series or click on the picture below to go straight to the website link where you will find lots of fun things to explore.
SLATED
by Teri Terry
What a gripping book. I sooo enjoyed this fabulous story.
What a gripping book. I sooo enjoyed this fabulous story.
Kyla is only 16 but has done wrong! A
criminal! She's been 'slated'... her memory wiped... she has a new personality
and a Levo on her wrist that monitors her emotions. If it gets too low (similar
to a diabetic) she will pass out and die. This means a new start and very last
chance or else. It should be OK now and Kyla should fit into a new family and start
a new life... but things are triggering Kyla's memory and she is experiencing a
patchwork of nightmares. What does it all mean? Who can she trust and why do
many of her friends and go missing? She confides in her friend... close friend
Ben...
I loved this book from the very first page and
hated having to put it down for a minute. I got to the very end and waited for
all to be revealed and nooooo...! There is more to follow in the next book to
be released in 2013. I will just have to wait... but I have my suspicions.
Labels:
2012,
dystopia,
Teri Terry,
YA fiction
THE BELOVED
by Annah Faulkner
I really, really loved this beautiful book. From the first page it had me and it only took a day or so to finish it... that's how much I loved it! Roberta, a young girl contracts polio and is confined to hospital for months, then forced to wear a calliper and boot. This is devastating to Roberta and her family but when she is given a set of paints she realises how much she loves art and how talented she is. She is 'special' for sure as she can see colours hovering over people she meets. Some are angry colours others are full of love and she of course paints them, but her style is very different from the 'norm' and through a set of circumstances her mother forbids her to pain any more. This is who Roberta is.... she must paint... it's what she was born to do.
In Australia she is bullied at school, because of her gympy leg, but her life changes when her family move to New Guinea. There is so much colour there she must continue her passion. Because I love to draw and paint I really felt the frustration Roberta felt from being banned to paint. When she discovers secrets in her mother's life her whole world is turned upside down and I wanted the story to go on and on. I won't give you any more of the story because there many highs and lows that come her way.
This story is so beautifully written. I felt like I was with little Roberta as she grew up, peering into her life, feeling her pain. It felt so real that I thought it must have been an autobiography but this was Annah Faulkner's first novel. I can't believe it!
I really, really loved this beautiful book. From the first page it had me and it only took a day or so to finish it... that's how much I loved it! Roberta, a young girl contracts polio and is confined to hospital for months, then forced to wear a calliper and boot. This is devastating to Roberta and her family but when she is given a set of paints she realises how much she loves art and how talented she is. She is 'special' for sure as she can see colours hovering over people she meets. Some are angry colours others are full of love and she of course paints them, but her style is very different from the 'norm' and through a set of circumstances her mother forbids her to pain any more. This is who Roberta is.... she must paint... it's what she was born to do.
In Australia she is bullied at school, because of her gympy leg, but her life changes when her family move to New Guinea. There is so much colour there she must continue her passion. Because I love to draw and paint I really felt the frustration Roberta felt from being banned to paint. When she discovers secrets in her mother's life her whole world is turned upside down and I wanted the story to go on and on. I won't give you any more of the story because there many highs and lows that come her way.
This story is so beautifully written. I felt like I was with little Roberta as she grew up, peering into her life, feeling her pain. It felt so real that I thought it must have been an autobiography but this was Annah Faulkner's first novel. I can't believe it!
Labels:
2012,
Annah Faulkner,
art,
Australian author,
family,
passion,
polio,
relationships,
secrets,
YA fiction
STEVE JOBS: THE MAN WHO THOUGHT DIFFERENT
At first I thought this book would be a little to 'techie' for me but I was surprised when reading it how easily the writer took you through the turbulent life of Steve Jobs, who some say 'changed our world'. Steve was adopted, dropped out of college, had many failures in his personal and business world but he kept going and as was his focus in life 'to live each day as if it was your last', he certainly did this. At times there were tantrums and outbursts and he could be quite rude to his colleagues and friends, however he never forgot his passion.
It is amazing to follow this story and how technology has changed in just a few decades. The timeline at the end of the book puts everything into context. It was Steve Jobs and his friend Steve Wozniack, who started the Apple Computer company in his father's garage and later became millionaires, and really changing how we think about our technology and devices. They certainly didn't agree all the time but had a great vision and had a symbiotic relationship. The book touches on Steve's personal life, his outburst with companies, his own workers, his time with Pixar and of course struggle with cancer over the past ten years and his ultimate death. He certainly didn't have the nicest personality and I thought when he married and settled down he would mature a little more, but he was always focuses on himself. Some say he stole ideas from others and made them his own, and that he was greedy and ripped off his friends. Perhaps this is true, but you cannot question his futuristic vision, his perseverance and attention to detail and design, which has surely paid off and made our lives a little easier and more portable.
It certainly was worth a read and I must say.... I just love my iPhone and iPad.... so thanks Steve!
Labels:
2012,
biography,
Steve Jobs,
technology
GIRL STOLEN
By April Henry
What a great story. We find sixteen year old Cheyenne Wilder,
suffering from pneumonia, sleeping in the back of a car while her step mother
quickly runs in to fill her script. To her shock a man jumps in the car and
drives off with her in it. To make matters worse Cheyenne is blind. Griffin who
stole the car didn’t realise she was on the backseat until he had left and now
has kidnapped a young girl. Will Griffin let her go if she hasn't seen his face. Poor distraught Cheyenne must use all her senses to
try to escape.
This is an interesting story as the author really places you
in Cheyenne’s shoes and you experience what it felt like to be blind, in
danger, alone and without her trusted friend, her guide dog. She is very brave
and the story has a few twists that will keep you intrigued. A must read!
Labels:
2012,
April Henry,
blindness,
disability,
kidnapping,
YA fiction
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)