Posted by bookwarrior on 27th May 2008
While the book Dreamhunter by Elizabeth Knox is not a perfect book, it did get me so wrapped up in its world that I was dying to find out what happens in Book Two–Dreamquake. Lucky for me it is already out (the benefit of starting a series of books that is already published) and even better than Book One. Dreamquake picks up with the final scene of Dreamhunter and tells it from an alternative perspective, which both catches up the reader and gives a new angle to the scene. From there the plot picks up speed with Laura and her Sandman on the run for forcing her nightmare on the Dream Opera Crowd, the Dream Regulatory Body building a secret, dangerous project in the Place, and, not to be overshadowed, Rose’s debut into society. Laura and Sandy’s relationship blossoms, though her continued and deepening reliance on her Sandman causes tension with those around her. The pace is fast, the drama high, and once the pieces of the puzzle came together I was left astounded by the author’s imagination and storytelling abilities. Full of suspense, romance, and questions, this installment brings the duet to highly satisfying close.
Posted in Uncategorized, fantasy, philosophical, science fiction | No Comments »
Posted by bookwarrior on 19th March 2008
Sara Zarr’s debut novel is an emotional and realistic book about a girl whose life is not what she planned. In the novel’s opening lines, Deanna, the narrator, tells us: “I was thirteen when my dad caught me with Tommy Webber in the back of Tommy’s Buick, parked next to the old Chart House down in Montara at eleven o’clock on a Tuesday night. Tommy was seventeen and the supposed friend of my brother, Darren.”
Deanna is now sixteen and regretting the choices she has made. Her father hasn’t really spoken to her since that night, and Tommy has ruined her reputation by telling his friends what they did. At school her only protection from the slurs and inuendo are her best friends Jason and Lee, who are now dating because she set them up. This development has left her feeling jealous and even more isolated. Her consolation is her older brother, who still lives at home with his girlfriend and their baby April. When she is with them, Deanna feels needed and loved and she formulates a plan to earn money so they can all move out of their parents’ depressing, loveless home. Toward this end, she finds a job, but what she doesn’t count on is getting a job where she’ll have to see Tommy every day.
Going into this book, I expected it to be sort of a sappy, after-school special kind of story. But I am happy to report this novel is nothing of the sort; it is honest and moving and a compelling look at the effects of physical and emotional abuse on a young girl.
Posted in Uncategorized, contemporary | No Comments »