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Showing posts from January, 2020

The Pearl by John Steinbeck

( warning: spoilers) I recently finished reading the book The Pearl by John Steinbeck, and I enjoyed reading it very much. The story takes place in a poor, small fishing town along the coast of an ocean, presumably in the early to mid 1900s. The reader follows the story of one small family, Kino, the husband/father, Juana, the wife/mother, and Coyoto, the child. The book opens on a calm and quiet morning in the family's small hut, but quickly, Kino spots a problem; A venomous scorpion is crawling into Coyoto's cradle. Coyoto sees the scorpion and tries to play with it. As Kino reaches for the scorpion, Coyoto shakes his cradle, and it falls onto him and bites him. Kino quickly retracts the scorpion, obviously to no avail, and Juana tries to suck the venom out. The family realizes the best course of action is to find the nearest doctor, in a nearby, more affluent part of town. To no surprise, when they arrive and question the doctor, he demands a high price for tre...

Prodigy (Marie Lu)

Prodigy by Marie Lu (SPOILERS) Prodigy picks up right were Legend left off, barely a week since June and Day escaped LA and the Republic soldiers still on their tail. To the Republic, Day has already been executed (thanks to the sacrifice made by his look-alike brother) and June is the new public enemy number one, the dangerous genius-turned-traitor. Desperate, Day and June flee to Las Vegas in an attempt to reach out to the Patriots, an elusive rebel group that has offered Day their help in the past in return for his famous name and unique skills. These vigilantes don’t offer Day and June sanctuary for free, however. Reluctantly they are participate the Patriot’s plans and sworn destruction of the Republic, and before they know it, they’ve been sucked into the most deadly of political schemes. There’s much at stake for both characters, from Day’s beloved little brother to the future of the entire Republic. The young protagonists face impossible choices framed in a world that Lu uses...

The Afterlife of Stars by Joseph Kertes

It’s 1956 in Budapest, Hungary. In the public square, young Hungarian soldiers dangle by their necks from cruel nooses, cold and empty eyes staring blankly into the faces of onlookers. Soviet soldiers stand at the side, the orchestrators of the chaos. 9 year old Robert Beck watches the scene at his grandmother’s side, silently watching the scene. She rushes him along, and they head home to the rest of the family, unaware of the turn their lives will take in the coming days. The Afterlife Of Stars, by Joseph Kertes, is a historical novel following the experiences of brothers Robert and Attila Beck in the midst of the Hungarian Revolution in 1956, when the Hungarian government sought to free themselves from the shackles of the Soviet Union, resulting in a devastating outcome for the Hungarians. Focusing on the protagonists’ close relationship as siblings, Kertes tells a story of how war can turn lives upside down. The story of The Afterlife of Stars is heavily character-driven, sho...

The School For Good and Evil: A World Without Princes

Reviewer: Miriam A  Soman Chainani’s second book in the School For Good and Evil series, A World Without Princes, revolves around Sophie and Agatha, two girls who thought their fairy tale was over. In the first book, Sophie and Agatha are taken to the School For Good and Evil. Blonde-haired Sophie, who has wanted for her whole life to become a princess, is taken to the school with Agatha, her homely friend, but Sophie is unexpectedly placed in the Evil half of the school to learn witchcraft while Agatha must learn how to become the heroine of a fairy tale. Sophie wants desperately to transfer schools in the beginning, but she is later convinced by Agatha that returning home is where they can have a truly “Happily Ever After.” At the end of this book, Agatha chooses to leave with Sophie instead of staying with her prince, which allows the reader to infer this is the end of their story. This bliss ends a few months later at the opening of Book 2, when Agatha secretly wish...