|
|
Line 199: |
Line 199: |
| |summary=Zara's stepfather died in front of her after seeing a man at the window - it spooked him so much that his heart failed. Her mother is concerned about her, Zara's not herself, she's hollow after the sudden loss of the closest thing to a father she's ever had. So, she's sent away to live with her Grandmother, Betty, in Maine. However, Maine isn't the safe haven that Zara's mother thought it would be. People are going missing, young boys to be precise, the same thing that happened just before Zara, her mother and stepfather moved away from Maine to start with. | | |summary=Zara's stepfather died in front of her after seeing a man at the window - it spooked him so much that his heart failed. Her mother is concerned about her, Zara's not herself, she's hollow after the sudden loss of the closest thing to a father she's ever had. So, she's sent away to live with her Grandmother, Betty, in Maine. However, Maine isn't the safe haven that Zara's mother thought it would be. People are going missing, young boys to be precise, the same thing that happened just before Zara, her mother and stepfather moved away from Maine to start with. |
| |amazonuk=<amazonuk>1408807408</amazonuk> | | |amazonuk=<amazonuk>1408807408</amazonuk> |
− | }}
| |
− |
| |
− | {{newreview
| |
− | |author=Sophie McKenzie
| |
− | |title=The Medusa Project: Hunted
| |
− | |rating=4.5
| |
− | |genre=Teens
| |
− | |summary=Many teens (and older people, too!) wish they had a super-power or two: life would surely be easier if you could read other people's minds or move objects without touching them. But if this fascinating series about a team of crime-fighting teenagers shows us one clear thing, it is that psychic powers can bring as many problems as solutions. Dylan, the central character in this particular volume, is an angry, bad-tempered girl whose bristly exterior echoes her gift of protection her from physical harm. She is not well-liked by the other three, and this becomes a real problem when she finds herself having to deal not only with terrible revelations about her father, but with the appearance in her life of a mysterious boy, Harry. Why does he know so much about her? And can she trust him? Lonely, vulnerable Dylan is in the ideal position to make poor judgements and get herself into serious trouble.
| |
− | |amazonuk=<amazonuk>1847385281</amazonuk>
| |
− | }}
| |
− |
| |
− | {{newreview
| |
− | |author=Sally Prue
| |
− | |title=Ice Maiden
| |
− | |rating=5
| |
− | |genre=Confident Readers
| |
− | |summary=Franz isn't popular in the village. It's 1939, and the German boy is on an extended holiday in England. Unsurprisingly, the local boys don't appreciate an enemy in their midst. Franz isn't happy at home either - he mistrusts his Nazi parents and he remembers the rounding up of the disabled, the gypsies and the Jews, and the smashing glass at night. Lonely, Franz spends a lot of time on the common, observing the natural world and the wildlife, in all its beauty and cruelty.
| |
− | |amazonuk=<amazonuk>0192729659</amazonuk>
| |
− | }}
| |
− |
| |
− | {{newreview
| |
− | |author=M T McGuire
| |
− | |title=K'Barthan Trilogy: Few Are Chosen
| |
− | |rating=4
| |
− | |genre=Teens
| |
− | |summary=The Pan of Hamgee is a relatively inconspicuous fellow living in the world of K'Barth, the setting of the battle between the overbearing, alien Grongolian settlers and the fanatic Resistance, described aptly by The Pan as being 'The lesser, but only very slightly lesser of two evils, possibly.' Naturally, The Pan wants nothing to do with this political conflict but due to a number of unfortunate cases of wrong place, wrong time and disastrous luck, he has somehow been drafted in as the getaway driver of a group of bank robbers, and somehow come into possession of a magical thimble with the power to allow teleportation, an object greatly desired by K'Barth's despot ruler Lord Vernon.
| |
− | |amazonuk=<amazonuk>1907809007</amazonuk>
| |
− | }}
| |
− |
| |
− | {{newreview
| |
− | |author=Michele Jaffe
| |
− | |title=Rosebush
| |
− | |rating=5
| |
− | |genre=Teens
| |
− | |summary=Firstly, I've got to say this book was incredibly hard to put down. The plot is so absorbing I found myself trying to read a page at every opportunity I got. I was late for work on a few occasions because I couldn't pull myself away. This is one of the best books I have read in the last few months.
| |
− | |amazonuk=<amazonuk>1907410384</amazonuk>
| |
− | }}
| |
− |
| |
− | {{newreview
| |
− | |author=Laurie Halse Anderson
| |
− | |title=Forge
| |
− | |genre=Teens
| |
− | |rating=4
| |
− | |summary=We left Curzon and Isabel at the end of Chains, just after they'd escaped slavery in New York at the beginning of the American Revolutionary War. We pick up again with Curzon - Isabel has run off to find her sister - stumbling slap bang into the middle of the Battle of Saratoga. Cornered into enlisting into the Patriot army, Curzon isn't blind to the ironies in his situation as a slave fighting for the freedom of white men.
| |
− | |amazonuk=<amazonuk>1408803801</amazonuk>
| |
− | }}
| |
− |
| |
− | {{newreview
| |
− | |author=Phil Earle
| |
− | |title=Being Billy
| |
− | |rating=4
| |
− | |genre=Teens
| |
− | |summary=Billy is a 'lifer' - he's been in care for eight years. He's angry, defensive and folded up inside himself. He's prone to vandalism and violence and barely a week goes by without his careworkers needing to restrain him. He doesn't really go to school and even when he does, Billy is so far behind that there seems little point. The only joy in his life comes from the twins, his little brother and sister. Louie and Lizzie can't keep him out of trouble, but they can provide an anchor and Billy delights in caring for them. He reads them bedtime stories and sits by the door of their room until they fall asleep.
| |
− | |amazonuk=<amazonuk>0141331356</amazonuk>
| |
− | }}
| |
− |
| |
− | {{newreview
| |
− | |author=Rachel Vincent
| |
− | |title=Soul Screamers: My Soul to Take
| |
− | |rating=4
| |
− | |genre=Teens
| |
− | |summary=After Kaylee and her friend Emma sneak into an over
| |
− | 18's club, Kaylee gets unnervingly distressed by the sight of a girl
| |
− | dancing, feeling as if she needs to scream. As Emma, along with the
| |
− | mysterious Nash, try to calm her and remove her from the club, she
| |
− | tells them that she's convinced the girl is going to die. Waking up
| |
− | the next day to turn on the news, she finds out she was right. And
| |
− | then it happens again… Kaylee's convinced she's a freak and there's
| |
− | something deeply wrong with her, but Nash seems surprisingly unfazed
| |
− | by this, while her aunt and uncle are both acting strangely. What's
| |
− | wrong with her? And why does she know less about herself than they
| |
− | do about her?
| |
− | |amazonuk=<amazonuk>0778303551</amazonuk>
| |
− | }}
| |
− |
| |
− | {{newreview
| |
− | |author=Keren David
| |
− | |title=When I Was Joe
| |
− | |rating=5
| |
− | |genre=Teens
| |
− | |summary=We meet 14 year old Tyler and his young mother Nicki at the police
| |
− | station as he gives a statement about a stabbing he witnessed.
| |
− | Unfortunately for them, some of the people involved would rather not
| |
− | allow him to testify against them and he's forced to flee for his
| |
− | life, moving into the Witness Protection scheme and starting afresh in
| |
− | a new school. Despite the vicious thugs on his trail, there are
| |
− | certain compensations to life at his new school. Formerly just a face
| |
− | in the crowd at St Saviour's, the mysterious newcomer quickly becomes
| |
− | popular, especially when he gets involved in athletics and is coached
| |
− | by older teen Ellie. Not everyone's happy with the impact he makes,
| |
− | though, and he needs to worry about rivals in school nearly as much as
| |
− | he does about the gangsters who are still trying to silence him. And
| |
− | then he meets a girl with a dark secret of her own…
| |
− | |amazonuk=<amazonuk>1847801005</amazonuk>
| |
− | }}
| |
− |
| |
− | {{newreview
| |
− | |author=Rebecca Stead
| |
− | |title=When You Reach Me
| |
− | |rating=5
| |
− | |genre=Confident Readers
| |
− | |summary=Miranda has quite a bit going on in her life. Since her best friend Sal was punched on the street for no reason, he's been distant, shutting Miranda out of his life. This loss leaves Miranda somewhat adrift, as she and Sal have been inseparable since they were at day care together. So she strikes up a friendship with Annemarie, but that involves coming between Annemarie and the stuck-up Julia. And then Colin joins the group, which adds yet more complications - Miranda likes Colin, but she's worried he might like Annemarie.
| |
− | |amazonuk=<amazonuk>1849392129</amazonuk>
| |
− | }}
| |
− |
| |
− | {{newreview
| |
− | |author=Lee Monroe
| |
− | |title=Dark Heart Forever
| |
− | |rating=2.5
| |
− | |genre=Teens
| |
− | |summary=Jane Jonas has been troubled by dreams lately. Dreams so vivid, it's almost like they're real. In them is a green eyed boy who believes they are each other's destiny. But in the real world, Jane has met Evan. Charming, charismatic, damaged Evan – intoxicating, incredibly attractive and just a little frightening. Jane has never been the sort to have friends, let alone boyfriends. And Evan is perfect, isn't he?
| |
− | |amazonuk=<amazonuk>1444901893</amazonuk>
| |
− | }}
| |
− |
| |
− | {{newreview
| |
− | |author=Nnedi Okorafor-Mbachu
| |
− | |title=The Shadow Speaker
| |
− | |rating=2.5
| |
− | |genre=Teens
| |
− | |summary=Set in Western Africa in 2070, in a world which has been forever changed by Peace Bombs, released years ago by an environmental group to counteract the effects of a US nuclear bomb, teenage heroine Eiji grows up knowing she is different. The Peace Bomb has given many people superpowers, hers being to communicate with shadows. But five years ago, the warrior queen Jaa beheaded Eiji's tyrannical father, and Jaa has returned seeking Eiji's help. While her mother forbids her from leaving her town, the shadows tell Eiji that if she doesn't go with Jaa war is inevitable. What can she do?
| |
− | |amazonuk=<amazonuk>1423100360</amazonuk>
| |
− | }}
| |
− |
| |
− | {{newreview
| |
− | |author=B R Collins
| |
− | |title=Tyme's End
| |
− | |rating=4.5
| |
− | |genre=Teens
| |
− | |summary=Bibi feels like a fish out of water. She's right in the middle of the most difficult of teenage years, the ones in which you don't feel as though you belong anywhere. Bibi's feelings are exacerbated because she is adopted. Friends of the family took her in after her parents died and they have done their best by her. They love her and, despite everything, Bibi loves them. But she doesn't feel as though she belongs to this family and she thinks constantly of her real parents and her real home in the Middle East.
| |
− | |amazonuk=<amazonuk>1408806479</amazonuk>
| |
− | }}
| |
− |
| |
− | {{newreview
| |
− | |author=Anna Godbersen
| |
− | |title=Bright Young Things
| |
− | |rating=5
| |
− | |genre=Teens
| |
− | |summary=Right from the fantastic prologue, which tells us this is the story of ''the girls with their short skirts and bright eyes and big-city dreams'', this is a book which had me completely and utterly hooked straight away. Cordelia Gray and her friend Letty Haubstadt run away from their small hometown in Ohio just after Cordelia's wedding, Letty determined to become a star in New York while Cordelia seeks the infamous bootlegger Darius Grey, convinced he's her father. Meanwhile, in the Big Apple itself, flapper Astrid Donal wants to get her boyfriend Charlie to commit to her but isn't sure if she can trust him. This first book in the Bright Young Things series follows the three girls over a few weeks which will change all of their lives.
| |
− | |amazonuk=<amazonuk>0141335343</amazonuk>
| |
− | }}
| |
− |
| |
− | {{newreview
| |
− | |author=Sonya Hartnett
| |
− | |title=The Midnight Zoo
| |
− | |rating=5
| |
− | |genre=Teens
| |
− | |summary=It's Eastern Europe during World War II and orphaned Roma brothers Andrej and Tomas are journeying through war-ravaged countryside carrying a precious and secret bundle. It's an odd kind of journey because they really don't have anywhere to go. They have a great deal to avoid, however, such as soldiers with rifles, bombs, and villagers who would decry them on sight. As Andrej trudges on, worrying about Tomas, he is thinking it's just another night, just another village in ruins. But he's wrong. The boys stumble across a zoo. The cages are still standing, intact and locked. And the animals have no food and water. But they are alive. And they can talk.
| |
− | |amazonuk=<amazonuk>140633149X</amazonuk>
| |
− | }}
| |
− |
| |
− | {{newreview
| |
− | |author=Carrie Jones
| |
− | |title=Entice
| |
− | |rating=4
| |
− | |genre=Teens
| |
− | |summary=When I got this book I didn't realise it was the third book in a series, and to start with this put me off; I thought I'd be the one stood outside the window watching everyone else at the party and not understand what was going on. However, as I started to read I started to feel more included than I thought I would (there is a nice little reminder paragraph at the start that filled me on what I had missed). So, although I recommend you start with the first book in the series, Entice does have its own legs and is very capable of standing on them.
| |
− | |amazonuk=<amazonuk>1408810441</amazonuk>
| |
− | }}
| |
− |
| |
− | {{newreview
| |
− | |author=Nina Grunfeld
| |
− | |title=How To Get What You Want
| |
− | |rating=3.5
| |
− | |genre=Teens
| |
− | |summary=How To Get What You Want is a self help book aimed at young people 'at a crossroads in their life', who are unsure what to do next. The author is a Life Coach who recognises that simply knowing what you want to do is half the battle towards achieving it, and sets out to help the reader identify who they are and what they really want using self awareness type exercises like the 'Balance Chart'. Later on the book deals with how to achieve those goals by giving advice on how to focus and think positively.
| |
− | |amazonuk=<amazonuk>1406323845</amazonuk>
| |
− | }}
| |
− |
| |
− | {{newreview
| |
− | |author=Charlie Higson
| |
− | |title=The Dead
| |
− | |rating=4
| |
− | |genre=Teens
| |
− | |summary=Ok. I'm writing for two sets of readers here: those who have read the first book in the series, and those who have not.
| |
− |
| |
− | The Dead is a prequel to The Enemy but both books are set in the same post-apocalyptic world in which the adult population has been decimated by a killer disease. Those that survive roam the streets as zombies, looking for untainted human flesh to eat. The only untainted flesh belongs to children who were fourteen or under when the disease struck, and were somehow immune. The Enemy is set two years after the epidemic, when it's getting more and more difficult for children to find food and shelter by scavenging and they are beginning to realise that they need to band together to start forming the prototype for a new society.
| |
− | |amazonuk=<amazonuk>0141384654</amazonuk>
| |
− | }}
| |
− |
| |
− | {{newreview
| |
− | |author=Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl
| |
− | |title=Beautiful Creatures: Beautiful Darkness
| |
− | |rating=5
| |
− | |genre=Teens
| |
− | |summary=Growing up there, Ethan Wate always thought Gatlin was a normal enough Southern town, if you could forgive the inhabitants' obsessions with the War of Northern Aggression. That was until he met Lena Duchannes and got plunged into her family's own civil war, as her family fought to get the young Caster to choose
| |
− | either Light or Dark. If you've haven't read [[Beautiful Creatures by Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl|Beautiful Creatures]], the first novel in this sequence, break off from this review and go out and grab it now! If you have, you'll remember that Lena's 16th birthday left her with a choice to make that would kill half of her family. This book follows Ethan as he tries to support her through that choice but watches her get pulled towards her Dark cousin Ridley and a new boy in town, the mysterious John Breed. While the first novel was more of a romance, this is an adventure story which sees Ethan, his friend Link, new girl in town Liv, and a variety of others embark on a journey to save the day.
| |
− | |amazonuk=<amazonuk>0141326093</amazonuk>
| |
− | }}
| |
− |
| |
− | {{newreview
| |
− | |author=Savita Kalhan
| |
− | |title=The Long Weekend
| |
− | |rating=5
| |
− | |genre=Teens
| |
− | |summary=Sam's just moved to a new school yet again, but this time he's made a good friend really quickly. He and Lloyd get on so well together that they're spending time with each other after school a lot - until they make one horrible mistake and end up trapped in a car speeding far away from their hometown, with a strange and creepy driver. Once they reach a big house, Sam is quickly separated from Lloyd - can he figure out a way to escape alive?
| |
− | |amazonuk=<amazonuk>1842708465</amazonuk>
| |
− | }}
| |
− |
| |
− | {{newreview
| |
− | |author=David Gatward
| |
− | |title=The Dark (The Dead 2)
| |
− | |rating=4
| |
− | |genre=Teens
| |
− | |summary=We pick up exactly where we left off in this second book in David Gatward's The Dead series. Lazarus Stone has been killed (twice), resurrected (twice), been to the world of the Dead (don't ask), become a Keeper (dangerous job), got himself a personal guardian angel (Arielle, alcoholic), a Dead guide (Red, whose skin's fallen off), and has gone some way to locating his father (prisoner of the Dark and seriously not having a good time of it). Along with best mate Craig and ex-possessed nurse Clair, Lazarus has a mission.
| |
− | |amazonuk=<amazonuk>0340999705</amazonuk>
| |
− | }}
| |
− |
| |
− | {{newreview
| |
− | |author=Ally Condie
| |
− | |title=Matched
| |
− | |rating=5
| |
− | |genre=Teens
| |
− | |summary=When the Society Matches Cassia to her best friend Xander, she couldn't be more thrilled. Unlike the other girls, she knows her Match – doesn't need to read his details, go through the motions of dating as dictated by the Society, doesn't need to worry they won't get along.
| |
− | |amazonuk=<amazonuk>0141333057</amazonuk>
| |
− | }}
| |
− |
| |
− | {{newreview
| |
− | |author=Jessica Verday
| |
− | |title=The Hollow: The Haunted
| |
− | |rating=5
| |
− | |genre=Teens
| |
− | |summary=In [[The Hollow by Jessica Verday|The Hollow]], Abbey tried to cope with the
| |
− | disappearance of her best friend and her feelings for new boyfriend Caspian - only to find herself losing her grip on sanity when she discovered Caspian was dead, a Shade, rather than another real person. After a summer away from Sleepy Hollow, she returns, trying to concentrate on making perfumes and getting science tuition from nice cute Ben - but then Caspian reappears. Will the two find true love? Why are there so many other weird strangers around Sleepy Hollow who Abbey keeps meeting? What exactly DID happen to Kristen? Where do Katrina Van Tassel and Nikolas, the famous Headless Horseman of Sleepy Hollow, fit into all this? And does anyone who missed the first book have any hope of following what's going on?
| |
− | |amazonuk=<amazonuk>1847384994</amazonuk>
| |
− | }}
| |
− |
| |
− | {{newreview
| |
− | |author=Simone Elkeles
| |
− | |title=Rules of Attraction
| |
− | |rating=4.5
| |
− | |genre=Teens
| |
− | |summary=
| |
− | Carlos Fuentes isn't interested in living in America with his over-protective brother Alex, but his mother sends him there for his senior year of high school to try and keep him out of trouble. Kiara Westford is happy to help a new guy settle in - at least until the shy stutterer actually meets the bad boy. Despite their initial dislike of each other, they're thrown together when Carlos has drugs
| |
− | planted on him and her well respected father takes him in to stop him being sent back to Mexico. Will these two headstrong youngsters find love?
| |
− | |amazonuk=<amazonuk>0857070436</amazonuk>
| |
− | }}
| |
− |
| |
− | {{newreview
| |
− | |author=Sarah Silverwood
| |
− | |title=The Nowhere Chronicles: The Double-Edged Sword
| |
− | |rating=4.5
| |
− | |genre=Teens
| |
− | |summary=When Fin's guardian, Judge Harlequin Brown is murdered, life as he knows it becomes a whole lot more exciting and dangerous. In the course of one life-changing day, he learns that there is a pathway between his London in 'Somewhere', and an alternate London of a parallel world called 'Nowhere', and that the fates of both worlds are now under threat from a group of rogue Knights, who have the ability to travel between these worlds using their double edged swords.
| |
− | |amazonuk=<amazonuk>0575095288</amazonuk>
| |
− | }}
| |
− |
| |
− | {{newreview
| |
− | |author=Elizabeth Chandler
| |
− | |title=Dark Secrets 3: The Back Door of Midnight
| |
− | |rating=4
| |
− | |genre=Teens
| |
− | |summary=Like the first four novellas in the Dark Secrets series - previously released in two 'bind-up' editions - this story features a teenage girl returning to Wisteria, Maryland and trying to find closure on past events. In this case, Anna is summoned there by a letter from her uncle asking her to return to the place where her mother died so that he can tell her something important about their family, but by the time she returns her uncle is dead, his body found in the boot of a burnt out car. Her aunt seems crazy, and her first instinct is to get out as quickly as possible, but instead she's drawn into the mystery along with her cute neighbour Zack. The O'Neill women have always been said to be psychic, and Anna starts getting her own flashes which may draw her towards a solution - but also further into danger.
| |
− | |amazonuk=<amazonuk>0857070347</amazonuk>
| |
| }} | | }} |
Teens
Teens
After turning from horror comic geek to a cloned Witchfinder and saviour of humanity in the space of a few short weeks, Jake Harker's magic is understandably depleted. Try as he might, the blue light fails to ingite in his hand. But Jake has no time for recuperation or for coming to terms with the loss of his mother. His father is dying, hexed by the evil witch Marcus Crowden. And the Demon Father is at large, summoning a universal coven that will threaten everything Jake has already fought to save.
Full review...
Teens
It's been fourteen years since First Night and the zombie apocalypse. Those humans who survived the disease that created the undead live in pocket communities, fenced off from the horrors of the outside world. Resources are scarce and all citizens must find a job as soon as they turn fifteen, else their rations are cut in half. Benny Imura has just turned fifteen and so he needs work badly. He tries out as a locksmith, a fence technician, a portraitist and a carpet coat salesman. Nothing works out and so Benny has no option but the last resort - an apprenticeship in the family business of zombie hunting, under the tutelage of his older brother Tom.
Full review...
Teens
Eva Chance is used to being ignored by her family, apart from her frail grandfather, who she adores. So she's barely even surprised when they don't set a place for her at a dinner party. But when nearly everyone is ignoring her she grows increasingly concerned – and that's when she realises she's dead. Can she solve the mystery of her murder before either malevolent ghosts or human criminals can do any more damage to her family, aided only by Kyra, who bullied her when she was alive, Kyra's brother Kyle, and a ghost called Maggie she may or may not be able to trust?
Full review...
Confident Readers
Whether it's a trip to the cinema, babysitting a youngster, being a page boy at a wedding, or running away from home to take a job below stairs, the 11-year old William Brown can always be relied on to create chaos and havoc wherever he goes. This short story collection (the first of 38 books) is a wonderful introduction to a classic character.
Full review...
Teens
Robert Jacklin arrives at his new boarding school as a very reluctant pupil. He's a reluctant African, too - his family has just moved to Zimbabwe after his father has been given a diplomatic placing there. More than anything else, Robert wants to return to England.
Full review...
Teens
High school is hard enough for most kids, but for half vampire Vlad, it really bites. First there's his blood cravings – how exactly do you sneak a pint of O neg into your lunchbox? Then there's his enlarged fangs, his ever developing powers that Vlad doesn't know the extent of and the fact that his crush seems to have a thing for his best mate.
Full review...
Teens
'There were once two sisters who were not afraid of the dark because the dark was full of the others voice around the room...'
But now there's only one, because 19 year old Bailey has died and her
17 year old sister Lennie is left alone in her grief, apart from her
Gram and Uncle Big.
Full review...
Teens
Bedridden with cancer, Bilal's bapuji, or father, doesn't realise how far the plan for the Partition of India has progressed. Bilal has kept the news from him as he was worried that it would kill him – but when he accepts that death is imminent, Bilal swears to at least save him the pain of having his heart broken before he passes away. Along with his friends Chota, Manjeet and Saleem, Bilal swears to stop him from ever finding out. 1947 India, though, is a dangerous place for everyone, and there are people in their town who don't think that Muslims, Sikhs and Hindus should be doing anything together.
Full review...
Teens
In the Dark Ages, Tog is brought up by a woodcutter. Strangely, he's being taught rather more than you'd expect a woodcutter's apprentice to be learning, including how to read and write Latin. Why?
Full review...
Confident Readers
In Zimbabwe, Nice Will Silver has lived all her life with her father Nice William Silver, his employer Nice Captain Browne, and her friend Nice Simon. But when Nice Captain Browne falls in love with Nasty Cynthia Vincy, Nice Will is uprooted from her roots and sent to an English boarding school, run by Nice Miss Blake and her assistant Nasty Mrs Robinson. How will she cope?
Full review...
Teens
Meghan Chase has always found her life slightly odd. She's never fitted in at school, where bullies relentlessly target her, nor at home, where her family always seem slightly surprised to find her there – except her little brother, Ethan, they barely remember her as soon as she leaves the room. Her only friend in the world is Robbie, her happy-go-lucky next door neighbour, who can always make her laugh. Meghan thinks turning sixteen will signal a change in their fortunes – she'll be able to drive, get them out of hickville once in a while.
Full review...
Teens
The Children's Crusade is one of those extraordinary stories of the Middle Ages which have caught the imagination of historians and preachers. A young shepherd, who believed he was called by God to save the city of Jerusalem, managed to collect together an enormous horde of children and lead them all the way to the southern coast of France. There, he assured them, the seas would part; they would march straight to the Holy Land and take back the city where Jesus had died. It is hard to say how much or how little of this story is true as records are sketchy — after all, the children concerned were mostly illiterate — but the spectacle, hardship and faith of the enterprise make for a dramatic tale.
Full review...
Confident Readers
Marcus's father was a centurion in the Roman legions. After the slave revolt led by Spartacus was finally put down, he retired from the army and bought a farm on a small Greek island. Marcus has spent most of his boyhood on the farm, learning to train dogs, shoot his sling accurately and dreaming of one day becoming a fighter like his father. But the farm is in debt and Marcus's life is about to crumble...
Full review...
Teens
My usual warning when reviewing sequels, there's no way on earth I can avoid some spoilers for the breathtaking When I Was Joe so bear that in mind when reading.
Full review...
Teens
Natalie Hargrove is one half of the It couple of Palmetto High, destined to become Palmetto Princess. Her boyfriend Mike King should be a shoo-in for Prince alongside her - except Mike doesn't seem too bothered, in contrast to the loathsome - but hunky - Justin Balmer. So when she's given a chance to knock JB out of the running for the crown, who can blame Natalie for pulling a harmless prank? Except when the prank turns out to be much less harmless than she'd have expected, the It couple are left frantically trying to cover their tracks before they lose everything.
Full review...
Teens
Through the narrative of the brilliantly gutsy, yet bitter Trella, Inside Out describes the unlikely revolution provoked by the mission undertaken by our protagonists to discover the legendary Gateway – a rumoured pathway between the self-contained Inside and a utopia known only as Outside. Originally reluctant to be drawn into what she considers to be a hoax, Trella, due to her particular proficiency when it comes to travelling through the piping and ventilation system that separates the various levels of Inside, somehow becomes the figurehead of the rebellion of the Lowers against the Uppers. However, there are some people who don't approve of this newfound hope, and are keen to stifle the revolution before it even begins.
Full review...
Teens
Kyle Straker's taped testimony begins with an editor's note:
The peculiar format that you are holding - a book - was still the dominant form of information storage at the time the tapes were made. There is a reason why I insisted on this archaic format which will, I hope, become apparent as the narrative progresses.
Kyle lives in the early 21st century in a quiet village full of ordinary people.
Full review...
Teens
Scrappy's life is going absolutely nowhere. His mother has left his father. His sister is saving like mad for the deposit on a flat so that she can move out too. His grandfather is descending into senility. His school is about to be demolished. His best friend Silva gets all the girls and he's worried about the school villain, Judge, picking on him. His father, paranoid about a visit from tax inspectors, slaves over the scrapyard's books all night and so his temper is unpredictable. Very unpredictable.
Full review...
Teens
Zara, her werewolf boyfriend, Nick, and their friends Issie and Devyn think their pixie problems are over. They've trapped Zara's dad, a pixie king, and his followers in a house surrounded by iron to stop them getting out and killing more teenage boys. But, Zara's dad is growing weak in his iron prison, and his territory is ready for the taking. That's when Astley turns up, a pixie king himself, when he's around Zara's skin turns blue, the true colour of a pixie. Only being half pixie, and having not been turned, why is Zara reacting like this? But Astley isn't the only pixie king that's made his way to Maine to claim the territory, and he's certainly not the most evil.
Full review...
Teens
Calla Tor has always known where her life is heading. Grow up, become mated to Ren, lead the new pack formed of her packmates and his, serve the Keeper who they are assigned to serve. That's the way things are for alphas, and servitude is the sacred calling of the Guardians. Then Calla breaks one of the fundamental rules of her society – she saves the life of a human boy, Shay. She hopes to never see him again, but when it becomes clear that he's somehow important to the Keepers, and Calla is charged to look after him, she finds herself spending a lot of time with him.
Full review...
Teens
Zara's stepfather died in front of her after seeing a man at the window - it spooked him so much that his heart failed. Her mother is concerned about her, Zara's not herself, she's hollow after the sudden loss of the closest thing to a father she's ever had. So, she's sent away to live with her Grandmother, Betty, in Maine. However, Maine isn't the safe haven that Zara's mother thought it would be. People are going missing, young boys to be precise, the same thing that happened just before Zara, her mother and stepfather moved away from Maine to start with.
Full review...