
lollibooks
Wednesday, August 29, 2007
Twilight

Thursday, August 2, 2007
Mystery on Echo Ridge, by Mary C. Jane

There are many things going for this book. It's a mystery story for children (fourth or fifth graders i suppose?) starring a boy, his best friend, and his sister. It's copyright 1959; there is a spooky old mansion that was empty for a long time; and it takes place in November. The plot: the boys are determined to solve the mystery of who stole the money from the rich man when he died, in order to clear the best friend's father so that he won't be shamed into moving his family to another town.
My main complaint is that i prefer girls' mysteries. There's a sister but she's a tomboy. But it was fun to read and it only took me an hour anyway.
Thursday, June 14, 2007
Anne of Green Gables, by L.M. Montgomery
Anne of Green Gables, by Lucy Maud Montgomery
♥♥♥♥♥
Anne of Green Gables in the heart-warming story of a young orphan who is adopted by a
brother and sister who live on Prince Edward Island (Canada). Although they originally wanted a boy, when Matthew and Marilla Cuthbert met Anne, "spelt with an 'E' ", she became an irreplacable part of their lives. Anne Shirley is a red-headed, gray-eyed dreamer, whose greastest woe is her hair, as well as her freckles. In this first book of an 8-book series about Anne's life, she is introduced to life on P.E.I. As well as attending school, Anne gets herself into various "scrapes", including a scene where she is forced to accept rescue from her arch-rival, Gilbert Blythe, who earned her eternal enmity by calling her "Carrots" on account of her red hair. Another one of Anne's "scrapes" occurs when she, longing for hair "as black as a raven's wing", buys some hair dye from an Italian peddler. Unfortunately, this dye, which was "guaranteed" to turn her hair balck, actually turns it a hideous shade of green. Anne is forced to let Marilla chop off all of the now-green hair, leaving her shorn and unhappy. One more dilemma that Anne gets herself into
happens when she invites her "bosom friend", Diana Barry, over for an elegant tea. Sadly, Anne, not knowing the difference, gives Dianna currant wine instead of raspberry cordial. Diana becomes drunk, stumbles home, and proceeds to be sick in the Barry garden. Her mother, convinced that Anne have her alcohol purposely, forbids Diana to be friends with Anne. Later, this harsh sentence is retracted when Anne saves Minnie May, Diana's younger sister, from dying of croup. All in all, this book is chock-full of good old-fashioned values. It's a very comfortable story, and one that you will want to read again and again. I highly recommend this book!

Tuesday, June 12, 2007
The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan
♥♥♥♥♥
After reading various excerpts from The Joy Luck Club in English classes, i finally got around to reading the entire thing. This well-known bestseller is centered on four Chinese mothers and their American daughters, and the ways in which they finally learn to understand each other. June, who begins and ends the book, must grow to understand her recently deceased mother as she prepares to go to China to meet her long-lost twin sisters in place of their mother, who had spent her life searching for them.
As the mothers recall their youth in China, their mothers, the ways they found strength, and the hope they had, the daughters recall their own sorrows and pressures as children in California. The daughters grow up to face unhappy marriages, divorce, and introducing a fiance to a mother for whom no one could ever be good enough, they struggle against their mothers reactions and manipulations. Meanwhile, the mothers marvel over and ache from how little their daughters understand them, and how awkwardly their hopes for their daughters translated into their lives as adults. By the end of the book, each daughter finally begins to understand her mother, sometimes in very subtle ways; but their new insight into who their mother is gives them each new insight into who they themselves are. The book begins with an expression of enormous hope; life is difficult, but the telling of each family's tale ends with hope, too.
I had a slightly hard time sorting out who was whose daughter and who is she married to, and had to check the little mother-daughter chart at the beginning of the book quite often. But even so, each tale is fascinating and powerful; i especially enjoyed the mothers' stories of their lives in China. I recommend it.
After reading various excerpts from The Joy Luck Club in English classes, i finally got around to reading the entire thing. This well-known bestseller is centered on four Chinese mothers and their American daughters, and the ways in which they finally learn to understand each other. June, who begins and ends the book, must grow to understand her recently deceased mother as she prepares to go to China to meet her long-lost twin sisters in place of their mother, who had spent her life searching for them.
I had a slightly hard time sorting out who was whose daughter and who is she married to, and had to check the little mother-daughter chart at the beginning of the book quite often. But even so, each tale is fascinating and powerful; i especially enjoyed the mothers' stories of their lives in China. I recommend it.
Ella Enchanted by Gail Carson Levine
♥♥♥♥♥

Ella Enchanted is your basic twisted story of Cinderella, but definitely my favorite so far. The story takes place in the imaginary land of Frell, ruled by King Jerrold and Queen Daria. This book starts off with Ella being given a gift of obedience by the fairy Lucinda. Lucinda does not realize what a curse this truly was,("That fool of a fairy did not intend to lay a curse on me. She meant to bestow a gift.")and when Ella's mother and cook Mandy beg her to take it back she simply laughs at them, thinking she's given a wonderful gift.
Ella, for having to be obidient, is a rather stubborn girl. She tries to see how far she can get before having to comply with the curse many times.
Sadly Ella's mother dies when she is 15. Her father remarries, and her step-mother brings along with her two obnoxious daughters. Ella meets the prince Char and befriends him and a unspoken romance begins to kindle between the two. Then Ella is sent off with her step sisters-Hattie and Olive-to finishing school. Ella becomes friends an Aythorian, Areida, but Hattie figures out Ella's secret and forbids her to talk to Areida again. Ella is devastated and runs away to try to find the fairy Lucinda. She battles ogres and goes to a giant's wedding and finally does find Lucinda, but to no avail.
Her father is there and brings her back home and tries to marry her off. He is unsuccessful and goes on a long business trip. The evil stepmother of course treats Ella like a servant now that her husband is gone. Ella and Char begin to exchange letters, but she hides the fact that she is now a servant in her own household. They fall in love of course but Ella realizes what a threat she would be to the kingdom with her curse so she sends a letter to Char saying that she is married. He returns to Frell from an extended trip, and 3 masked balls are thrown in his honor. Mandy, who we discover is a fairy herself, helps Ella go to the balls. She goes under the name of Lela, and the prince is quite taken with her. As all the Cinderella stories go, on the third night she wears a glass slipper and loses it while running home. Char chases after her and the normal scene plays out and he asks her to marry him. The curse of obedience battles her good sense, and she ends up defeating the curse and saying no. Rid of the curse, she marries Char, and they of course live happily ever after.
I do recommend this book, for I've read it many times and never grown tired of it. I do not however recommend the movie because it was poorly done, and the only things that hadn't changed were the names.

Ella Enchanted is your basic twisted story of Cinderella, but definitely my favorite so far. The story takes place in the imaginary land of Frell, ruled by King Jerrold and Queen Daria. This book starts off with Ella being given a gift of obedience by the fairy Lucinda. Lucinda does not realize what a curse this truly was,("That fool of a fairy did not intend to lay a curse on me. She meant to bestow a gift.")and when Ella's mother and cook Mandy beg her to take it back she simply laughs at them, thinking she's given a wonderful gift.
Ella, for having to be obidient, is a rather stubborn girl. She tries to see how far she can get before having to comply with the curse many times.
Sadly Ella's mother dies when she is 15. Her father remarries, and her step-mother brings along with her two obnoxious daughters. Ella meets the prince Char and befriends him and a unspoken romance begins to kindle between the two. Then Ella is sent off with her step sisters-Hattie and Olive-to finishing school. Ella becomes friends an Aythorian, Areida, but Hattie figures out Ella's secret and forbids her to talk to Areida again. Ella is devastated and runs away to try to find the fairy Lucinda. She battles ogres and goes to a giant's wedding and finally does find Lucinda, but to no avail.
Her father is there and brings her back home and tries to marry her off. He is unsuccessful and goes on a long business trip. The evil stepmother of course treats Ella like a servant now that her husband is gone. Ella and Char begin to exchange letters, but she hides the fact that she is now a servant in her own household. They fall in love of course but Ella realizes what a threat she would be to the kingdom with her curse so she sends a letter to Char saying that she is married. He returns to Frell from an extended trip, and 3 masked balls are thrown in his honor. Mandy, who we discover is a fairy herself, helps Ella go to the balls. She goes under the name of Lela, and the prince is quite taken with her. As all the Cinderella stories go, on the third night she wears a glass slipper and loses it while running home. Char chases after her and the normal scene plays out and he asks her to marry him. The curse of obedience battles her good sense, and she ends up defeating the curse and saying no. Rid of the curse, she marries Char, and they of course live happily ever after.
I do recommend this book, for I've read it many times and never grown tired of it. I do not however recommend the movie because it was poorly done, and the only things that hadn't changed were the names.
Bloody Jack: Being An Account of the Curious Adventures of Mary "Jacky" Faber, by L.A. Meyer
Bloody Jack, by L.A. Meyer
♥♥♥♥♥
Bloody Jack is a rip-roaring tale of adventure, intrigue, and survival of the fittest. Mary, or little Mary as she is known to her gang, is an orphan in one of the street-urchin gangs of 18th century London. Her
family is killed by the plague, and their bodies are carted away by Muck, the "ghoul", who brings bodies to scientists for study. All the poor of London know that their bodies will eventually belong to "science", and will be carted off in the same way. Mary is determined that this will not be so. When the leader of their gang, Rooster Charlie, is murdered by Muck, Mary strips him of his clothes (an urchin tradition which shows some form of respect), and passes herself off for a boy. Eventually, she winds up at the docks, where a Royal Navy ship is preparing to sail. Mary, or Jack as she has named herself, decides that she wishes to be on that ship. Whilst a large group of boys are clamoring for passage, she calls out that she can read. This allows her to become a ship's boy, along with 4 others. They become good friends, for 3 out of the 4 are street urchins like Jacky. The 4th, James, whose name is shortened to Jaimy. is from a noble family that has hit hard times. The 5 of them perform duties as ship's boys, enjoying their work. They are all taught by "sea dads", sailors who show them the ropes of a Royal Navy ship. Not long after Jacky boards, they come across their first pirate ship. The crew, including the ship's boys, board. A pirate is about to run Jaimy through and make off with the treasure, but Jacky shoots him, and is drenched in the resulting blood, thus earning "him" the nickname, "Bloody Jack." Later, she is accosted by a vile sodomist named Sloat. In self-defense, she sticks her shiv into him, to "give him a little poke, get him off me." This "little poke" is actually a fatal wound, and Sloat goes over the side. Eventually, Jacky is cleared of guilt and is not sentenced to death by hanging, which is her greatest fear. Eventually, Jaimy is told, by Jacky, that she is, in fact, female. A budding romance results, and Jaimy promises to marry Jacky later on. When the Dolphin, their ship, fights the Pirate LeFavre and is damaged, Jacky is hoisted up, as the smallest crew member, on a kite. Before Jacky goes up, the captain tells her, "When your feet next touch land, it will be as Midshipman Jack Faber!" This is an honor that Jacky has been longing for: unfortunately, her kite's anchorage system is faulty. The purpose was merely scientific, but Jacky ends up without an anchor and stranded on an island. Eventually, both the Dolphin and LeFavre meet at this island. LeFavre takes Jacky hostage, and soon everyone knows she is a girl. She is hung almost to death by the pirates, and Jaimy is barely able to revive her. She is then put in the brig, nad it is decided that she will be sent to the Lawson Peabody School for Young Ladies in Boston. Jaimy promises to come get her soon, and the story ends with Jacky leaving the ship to cheers and applause for the "most beautiful middy (midshipman) to ever grace the decks of His Majesty's Navy!"
♥♥♥♥♥
Bloody Jack is a rip-roaring tale of adventure, intrigue, and survival of the fittest. Mary, or little Mary as she is known to her gang, is an orphan in one of the street-urchin gangs of 18th century London. Her

Eeeee!
Ah, yokatta, Mishka-chan! I just read your reading list, and Oliver Twist is on it! :D Hurray!
By the way, I've read about 1/2 the books on there. -_-'
By the way, I've read about 1/2 the books on there. -_-'
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