Tuesday 24 July 2012

Killer heels

As mentioned before, I am a sucker for a good cover and I think this one is fabulous. I'm not a wearer of heels but that doesn't mean to say I don't appreciate them and, yes, I was drawn to this book by the killer heel on display.

Then there's the intriguing glimpse of an apparently metallic skeleton inside the leg, and a hint of an old, old story. It also indicates that it is the first of a series ... The Lunar Chronicles. So, does Marissa Meyer make something of the Cinderella story in this book?

Well I think she does. Cinder lives in a future time when vast swathes of earth have been devastated and individual countries no longer exist. She lives with a cruel stepmother who despises her partly because she is a cyborg - part human, part machine.

And yes, there is a handsome prince who asks Cinder to a ball. There is much more too so the author is not just ticking off the appropriate Cinderella boxes. There is a terrible, deadly plague that is killing off the citizens of earth and trouble with the lunar colonists who seem to have amazing mental powers.

Then there's the fact that there seems to be some mystery about just who, and what Cinder is. There's plenty to think about in this book and I found it most enjoyable. Cinder has great character, she is no wimpy princess who relies on others, she is a self-assured mechanic who faces up to her problems.

Roll on the next books in The Lunar Chronicles.

(Cinder by Marissa Meyer is a Puffin paperback and costs £6.99.)

Saturday 21 July 2012

Seraphina - meaning fiery or ardent - very apt

I read Seraphina by Rachel Hartman partly on the tube on the way home from a buying expedition to Foyles in Charing Cross Road. It was powerful enough to hold my attention from Tottenham Court Road to my home station in the western 'burbs and then that journey in reverse the next day when I went to a CILIP meeting at Library HQ.


Seraphina lives in a world where dragons and humans co-exist in an uneasy fashion. Dragons are able to assume human form but lack, and despise, human emotions.
There have been forty years of a truce between the species, but something is amiss and Seraphina gets herself involved in the heart of it all. She is a great character, full of power and energy and lives up to her name.

Early on, we discover a secret about her birth and about her family that she is unable to tell her friends - usually I find this plot device infuriating but this time, it is believable and works well.

There is loyalty and love and treason and adventure and plenty of action. Seraphina is tried and tested as are many others. A traitor is unmasked and emotions run high even amongst the dragons.


This is Rachel Hartman's first (published) novel. I am looking forward to many more.

Summer in the city

I was delighted to receive a cheering text on Friday from my daughter-in-law (who resides in bonny Scotchland) - school's out for summer - a celebration of the prospect of six weeks to hope for better weather, i.e. much less rain and much more sun. Yes, indeed, the summer holidays have started as has the summer reading.

I am refusing to think of the horrors of moving the school library from its old home - two former technical rooms - into a spanking new block. The books and shelves have made the transition, albeit unpacked but we may not do anything with them until September. Sadly, all our other bits and bobs have gone awol ... Lost in the abyss of the old gym, the hall, somewhere behind the bike sheds. Who knows.


So, thinking positively, summer reading. I intend to read as many new books for children and young adults as possible whilst also keeping up with a goodly amount of adult novels.
Today, I have just finished Team Human by Justine Larbalestier and Sarah Rees Brennan and jolly good it was too. It's set in contemporary USA and its characters are vampires, humans and zombies. However despite there being something of a lurve story there is also mystery, intrigue and an exploration of friendship that had me engrossed. I even put aside my Saturday crossword in order to finish it. I forgot to mention that it avoids having a feeble heroine, a tedious love triangle and sparkles with wit and humour.

I've read several books by Justine Larbalestier* (and enjoyed them all very much) but none yet by Sarah Rees Brennan, something I shall rectify over the holidays.


*LiarHow To Ditch Your Fairy, and the Magic Or Madness Trilogy

Thursday 5 July 2012

CWCS Battle of the Books 2012 - FINAL ROUND!


The time has come to let everyone know which book has won our BoB.
The judge for this round was T. Daly whose first response was to thank us for asking him to read the three books because "they were amazing."

What We Keep is a beautiful novel that I read with my heart. There was a lovely quirkiness about it. In the end I suspect that Angela would have made the same mistakes as her mother and would have gone all the way to destruction with Jesse except that the heavy hand of the author gave her such good sense. I hope she and Noah will be happy for a while.
I read Nothing with my stomach. As the heap of meaning grew so did my mounting sense of dread. This was one of the best horror stories I have read.

Fishtailing, I read with my mind - wondering at the strange format. By about the second page I was completely engaged. The terse sentences drew me into poor wounded Natalie's web of evil. I needed the coming together of Kyle and Tricia at the end. I needed the smell of spring.


My winner is Fishtailing.


Hooray! We have a decision ... and next term in the new Library, in the new Block we shall have a party to celebrate not just this wonderful book but all the others too.