Blog Update


The NEW Teen Reading club blog will start on October 1st. The blog will have a new look and at this time we will announce how the club will run throughout the school year. In the meantime, let us know what you are reading.
At the moment, I’m reading Seraphina, it’s amazing! What’s not to love, dragons disguised as humans? And the forbidden love of a prince and a half-dragon…tragic! Don’t get me wrong, it’s not mushy and although the protagonist is a girl, I think it has enough guy appeal. Bendavis, I think you may like this one, it’s NOT paranormal, it’s fantasy. The best part? It’s written by a Canadian, who lives in Vancouver. But read it for yourself and see if you agree.
Oh, the other book I’m reading is Insignia. It’s World War III only the war is fought in virtual reality and by teens. Not bad, but no Ender’s Game.

Winners of the contests!

Sorry for the delay, but here are the results of the 2 contests this summer:

Contest #1 – Photo Representation of a book
Winner – Ashley
Honorable mention – Bendavis

Contest #2 – Alternative Book Cover
Winner – Ashini
Honorable mention – Summerstar

Thanks to everyone who entered. You all did an exceptional job and it was not an easy decision determining the winner!

Beastly, Alex Flinn


More of my reviews from the teenrc website. :)

Ok, Let me just start by saying that I love Disney. I am a huge Disney freak. I’m sure I’ve watched the ‘classic’ Disney princess movies at least 4 times each in the past few years, and I still know most of the Disney songs. My parents said that when I was younger (think 3-5), I wanted one of those $40.00 costumes from the Disney store so badly I cried for a good 30 minutes until my nana told me she’d get me one. She sewed it. Still, I got to be Ariel for a day.

-I'm not even joking. Really.-

Anyways, my point is that because I’m in love with fairy tales, my review may be slightly biased. …Very biased. Whatever.

On to the actual review: I liked this book, but I think it mainly had to do with the story. Obviously, I hated Kyle when he was introduced. He was egoistical, wrenched and a disgusting human being in general, however, no one really cares since he’s so wonderfully handsome. Scratch that, one person sees his ugly side, this is where the witch, Kendra, comes in. She places a curse on Kyle and gone is his lovely appearance, he is now nothing more than a beast. He has to find true love within a year’s time to reverse the effects, or he’s all claws and fur forever. His father is so ashamed that Kyle’s locked up. Lindy, AKA Belle, arrives and the two form a relationship together. This is the part of the book that you warm up to, when Kyle starts to slowly become human.

You get to experience his transformation from an awful person, to a tortured and depressed individual, to an actual, functioning human. When he becomes human internally by falling in love, he’s allowed to return to his actual human state externally. His outer self finally reflects what he is inside. Kyle is one of the real reasons I loved this book. You cannot help but 'love' him in the end.

Lindy was just a normal girl. I never hated her, and I don’t think I’d be able to stand it if I did. I could relate to her and the book. It's not something as fairy tale-ish as some people may perceive it to be. It happens in modern times, in a typical high school, so anyone can connect to the story and characters. Also, I thought the chat-room idea was especially clever. It really ties everyday teen life into the book.

Negatives:
The writing wasn’t necessarily poetic (some lines were VERY cheesy), and the plot itself wasn’t deep or complex in any way, but all in all, Beastly is a good re-telling of a classic fairy tale. Nothing will ever beat Disney though.

Final Verdict: 7.5 – 8.0/10

What Alice Forgot, Liane Moriarty


Figured I'd transfer over some of my reviews from the teenrc website. This was probably my favorite book this summer, so I'm bringing this one over first. :)

BTW, Congrats Ashini for the honorable mention. :D You know, I'm actually surprised some of the others on the blog didn't get mentions or win the grand prize, you guys had some great reviews. A lot made me laugh and many made me actually want to read the book. (In comparison...not to sound negative or anything, but none of the other mentions or even the winner were as good as most of the reviews you guys wrote on this site. Maybe I'm missing something? Maybe I'm biased [since you guys are awesome and what-not]? Maybe it's the truth? Am I the only one that's crazy here?!)

ANYWAYS,

If you don't feel like reading the review, this pretty much sums it up:


-Barfing that rainbow goodness all over. And guess what? You. Will. Like. It.-

Otherwise, please refer to the insane amounts of gushing from an overly emotional dork below:

What can I say about a book so exquisite, that I tear up simply thinking about it?

“What Alice Forgot” is the precious, brilliant, little treasure I’d been lusting after in a book for a long time. I was at first reluctant to begin reading, but once I began, I couldn’t stop until my eyes had consumed every last, magnificent page.

How could I not see it before? The writing is so simple, yet so wonderfully peculiar and witty. I found myself chuckling constantly throughout the book. Oh, Alice. How I love you and your quirks. This is her story.

Alice is twenty-nine years old. She’s a sweet and innocently optimistic individual that loves chocolate, her newlywed husband, Nick, and the cluster of cells inside her (the baby they call Sultana) to pieces. At least, that’s what she keeps telling everyone. When did her husband come to despise her, what happened to Sultana, and the pretty, little dream of their rickety house? Well, after slipping and bumping her head during spin class, everyone else keeps telling her she’s a thirty-nine year old mother of three. Sultana is now a fully grown little girl, Madison, Nick has developed a profound bitterness towards her and the dream of their perfect home is now complete. Alice doesn’t like her new life. She’s a once lovable, funny, awkward individual imprisoned inside the body of an alien; a power crazed, mega mom. With a decade of her memories lost, Alice has to learn what she’s become and what exactly happened to create such a different persona. Otherwise, she’ll never be able to put the pieces of her life back together again.

Alice is a gem, I loved her every bit throughout the book. Her relationships with those around her were so heartbreakingly real that you felt the devastation, confusion, happiness and love she experienced. Alice with her children – complete strangers, her own flesh and blood she should know so well, but didn’t actually know at all. Alice with her sister, Elizabeth – always the social butterfly, but ten years later the roles were reversed, her sister now an empty husk filled with bitterness. However, what touched me most was her relationship with Nick. Whenever Alice mentioned Nick, her eyes lit up with such desperate love, love that she knew he wouldn’t reciprocate. She wanted to recreate the love they felt years ago, but because Nick hated her, she simply couldn’t. Every time Alice was rejected by Nick, my heart ached for her. Rejected by the one she loved most in the world, how utterly unbearable.

And Elizabeth, my dear, my heart breaks for you as well. Elizabeth’s character and story are so overwhelmingly powerful and raw, that I couldn’t stop the rather annoying faucet of hot, salty tears and snot from running down my face. Aside from the loveliness that red, puffy eyes and mucus added to my appearance, it also clouded my vision and clogged up my nose entirely. This incident happened several times throughout the story, so I can’t even imagine how I must’ve looked when I’d finished the book. In all seriousness though, I was heartbroken. I watched the once happy, vibrant and outgoing Elizabeth, transform into a cynical woman, a wife trapped behind the devastation of infertility. After mourning for child, after unborn child, Elizabeth withdraws from the rest of the world and is pulled into her own self hatred and pity. She resentfully narrates these events through ‘homework’ for her therapy sessions, letters her therapist is never supposed to read, and becomes increasingly desperate for a child as the book progresses. I hated having to suffer Elizabeth’s pain – she acted so nonchalantly on the outside, but loathed herself for their death in secret. As each embryo was ripped away from her, a false piece of hope was replaced with a lingering bitterness, a bitterness that collected and eventually built a wall around Elizabeth’s heart. I couldn’t help but feel this same bitterness myself.

Elizabeth’s misery had effectively clutched at my heart, refused to let go, and contorted my face into an angry, red and tear-streaked mess all at the same time. This is why I love her story.

Overall, “What Alice Forgot” is lovely; it’s a book that’s sweet and sour, something you’d happily read outside on a lazy, summer afternoon. This light read has definite depth added into the writing, characters and their stories. However, what I took away most from this book is the concept of love. First loves, aged love, the kind of love I want, what true love is – it’s all demonstrated here.

First love is like champagne – it’s sparkling and bubbly, and it draws you away from everyone else in the world if you’re not careful. You can get drunk off the experience, wishing the beginning would never end. Then you wake up with a hangover, and everything goes to hell. The honeymoon phase is over and the relationship begins to falter, teetering on the edge. Anyone can feel this type of love, the giddy unawareness of a drunken state, but then there’s the love that survives. Something despite all the arguments, difficulties and obstacles, nothing would ever make you give it up. That’s what I want – a love that’s beautiful and true.

When my aged and withered husband looks at my eighty year old self, my own body old and crumpled, I want to be able to feel that wonderful sense of complete and total endearment from fifty years ago. I want to be able to return this feeling to him. I’ll know that despite the best and the worst, our love for each other has overcome it all.

It’s a real love, a shaky love. Love that quivers throughout all its faults and imperfections, but never quite manages to collapse. Instead, it’ll wind right back up, always determined to start again.

Final Verdict: 10.0/10.0

More Volunteer Opportunities...


Like origami? Then why not help out during our Cultural Day’s event. On Saturday September 29th and September 30th we will be offering origami at the Brighouse Branch of the Richmond Public Library. The event will take place from 1:30-4:30 PM on both days. If you are interested you can volunteer for either Saturday or Sunday or both. Email us at teens@yourlibrary.ca  

Special Thanks to the Librarians!

Thank you so much for this wonderful blog and helping out with all the organizing. Special thanks to Librarian Cindy and the other Librarians on the blog that took their time to help out and post reviews. :)

Let's Partaayyy!!!

So, Cindy has agreed to help us out regarding setting up a (belated) summer's end party for us. She'll book a space and provide us with prizes (maybe even set up a scavenger hunt and get some pizza money). Of course, it's up to us to bring food and games and decide when we want to have it. In response to the latter, I'm suggesting we have it on Friday September 14 from 7-9:30 PM (if it was on the weekend it would have to end by 5). How does that work for everyone? What can you guys bring?

Voting has ended!

Thank you to all those who entered the contest, and a big thank you to those who participated in voting for your favourites! We will be letting you know who the winners are very soon!

As most of you know the blog will continue, yay! There will be changes to the look of the blog, but it'll continue to be a blog about reviewing your favourites, meeting great people and winning awesome prizes!

Stay tuned...

teenrc.ca second random prize draw winner O:

So I went on teenrc.ca today and saw the update: "Congratulations to Ashley, winner of our 2nd random iPod draw!"
So congrats Ashley!
... I actually don't know if that Ashley is our Ashley... but congrats anyways :)

The Vampire Diaries: The Fury and Dark Reunion by L.J. Smith

This book was an enormous disappointment. I am not sure if the incompetency of the novel was due to drastic changes in my own tastes or a serious downfall in the quality of L.J. Smith's writing. I am betting on the former, since the period of time between reading the first volume and the second volume of the series was extensive. Yet, I am hesitant to believe I ever thought the Vampire Diaries series was an exceptionally good series when now, I cannot even bring myself to finish reading the first chapter. Seeing as I usually have a pretty high tolerance and can finish reading the book regardless, the Fury and Dark Reunion must be a disaster if I cannot even read a chapter. If you ask me what is so horrific about the book, I cannot pinpoint the issue, but what I can say is, I am definitely not going to revisit this series and will most likely keep away from Smith's other novel as well.

I know many people love the series and may be offended by my review of the book. I would love to hear how you may feel differently about the books and if you present a sound enough case, I may even give it another go; who knows?

Perfect (Pretty Little Liars #3) by Sara Shepard



"In Rosewood, Pennsylvania, four perfect-looking girls aren't nearly as perfect as they seem.
Aria can't resist her forbidden ex. Hanna is on the verge of losing her BFF. Emily is freaking out over a simple kiss. And Spencer can't keep her hands off anything that belongs to her sister.
Lucky me. I know these pretty little liars better than they know themselves. But it's hard keeping all of their secrets to myself. They better do as I say . . . or else!"

'A' keeps the story going with more suspense and a whole new thrilling plot. The Pretty Little Liars series never disappoints me, well rarely... :P and this one certainly hasn't! It is exactly what the title is, this book was PERFECT. I envy Sara Shepard's talented and adroit writing that I wish I could match up to one day. She describes each character's thoughts and feelings so well that you can totally understand how they all feel and what is really happening from their point of views. As always, the girls are again, being bothered by their miserable past. I liked the drama and the action!  Maybe it was just me, but this time, the book was unpredictable which made it way more captivating and appealing. It totally engrossed me and I would rate it a 10/10. :)

Girl of Nightmares, Kendare Blake - NOT MY REVIEW


Last time I attempted this, my computer crashed. Clearly it does not like that I'm too lazy to write my own review. Yes, this is not my review. I know, I know, shame on me, but I don't think I could capture the book's pure, unadulterated awesomeness more eloquently than Miss. Kat Kennedy. Hats off to you.

It begins...


The fol­low­ing book has been found in an aban­doned, run-down house along with a body, a pen, and a worn and tat­tered copy of Girl of Night­mares.  The walls have many words and phrases writ­ten in blood. It’s con­tents pro­vide the only clues to the events that led to the the death of a per­son and an increas­ing string of dis­tur­bances in the area.
It reads as such:
This is a jour­nal of my read­ing expe­di­tion.  I have trav­eled to this remote locale so that I may read Girl of Night­mares by Kendare Blake in soli­tude.  Rumour has it that this book is cursed and that whoso­ever reads it is doomed to have their wits scram­bled and to be left insen­si­ble.  Nev­er­the­less I bravely pro­ceed and scoff in the face of super­sti­tion.  My inten­tion is that oth­ers may ben­e­fit from the expe­ri­ences chron­i­cled within my jour­nal and use it as a ref­er­ence guide in their own read­ing expe­ri­ences of Blake’s sec­ond dip into the Anna Dressed in Blood Universe.
Page 1
I have been intrigued and sad­dened by the begin­ning.  Dear­est Anna, it seems, will likely not be a major char­ac­ter in this book, alas.  But the writ­ing remains of qual­ity and it seems there are to be some ghost.
Page 48
There have been some instances of excit­ing ghost hap­pen­ings, but also a great deal of plot set up and rela­tion­ship dynam­ics.  I rather won­der what the hype is but shall per­se­vere for now.
Page 150
It has been a dif­fi­cult slog.  There has been aver­age lev­els of awe­some recorded and long stretches between badassery.  I have grown weary of the angst and seek to end the exper­i­ment.  Per­se­ver­ance forces me onward and the ever­last­ing hope that I shall one day be reunited with Anna. Her lack of pres­ence in this novel has made it cum­ber­some and Cas’ angst, and the secrecy sur­round­ing him is weari­some.  I am start­ing to doubt the curse.  Worse yet, I am start­ing to doubt Blake.  How far I have fallen?  Tonight I shall weep tears of dis­ap­point­ment as I sleep with the lights on.
Page 235
Hark? Is this the same novel?  Surely some great charm has bewitched me.  My instru­ments do not lie, yet surely there has been a mis­take.  When I doc­u­mented the lev­els of awe­some, I was forced to nota­rize in my ledger that it was over 9000 and was unable to take fur­ther mea­sure­ments for I had inci­den­tally crushed my scouter in response.  “What? 9000?” I said in shock and awe.  “There’s no way that can be right!”
I am not sure what hap­pened next for I blacked out and was awoken the next day by hazy mem­o­ries.  There are now strange mark­ings on the wall but I know not what they mean.  I fear I have put them there.  Am I becom­ing a mon­ster?  Can this curse be true and is it tam­per­ing with my senses?
Page 291
I under­stand now.  I was fool­ish and igno­rant before, but I have been shown the way.  There is no human expla­na­tion.  Yet I real­ize now that life has no mean­ing, but for this book.  It is my only love.  My pur­pose.  It is the rea­son I have been born.  There is no curse.  Those who have not read it have been cursed.  It is all so clear to me now.  I have writ­ten a song for Blake that brings tears to my eyes as I sing it con­tin­u­ously through­out the night. It has become my only com­pan­ion through out my enlight­en­ment.  I have writ­ten it down so that this knowl­edge may be passed on through the ages.
Blake Blake Blake Blake, Blake.
Blake­Blake, Blake Blake Blake Blake Blake,
Blake Blake Blake, Blake­Blake.
BlakeBlakeBlake…Blake Blake Blake.
Blake
I hope that I am one day able to sing this song to her in per­son and that SHE WILL BE PLEASED WITH ME!
Page 332
OHTHEMOTHEROFAWESOMEITHINKICRIEDITWASJUSTSOBEAUTIFULWHYDIDITHAVETOENDCANTTHEREBEMOREHOWCUOLDYOUDOTHISTO
MEBUTITWASJUSTSOPERFECTILOVEDITSOMUCHSOMUCHWIN!
Snar­gle half-blabber!
...
My thoughts exactly. 

Most Ridiculous Book List

Containing brilliant, little treasures like the "Gangsta Rap Coloring Book" and "Natural Bust Enlargement with Total Mind Power", these books are PERFECT for anyone searching for that deep, thought-provoking piece of work you've wanted all summer.

http://www.goodreads.com/list/show/9738.Most_absolutely_ridiculous_book#231058

BONUS! For all you Twilight fans out there.
"Twilight, True Love and You: Seven Secret Steps to Finding your Edward or Jacob"

If you're not convinced it's legit - guess what, it was written by a psychologist.
http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/10913101-twilight-true-love-and-you

I am so amused by this right now. But I weep for humanity all the same.
Final Comments:

NO

Weekly Winners...

With just 2 more weeks to go until the end of our Teen Summer Reading Club blog, we just wanted to thank everyone for their well thought out comments and reviews. Whether you posted once or many times your efforts did not go unnoticed. Our goal was to create a safe place where teen booklovers could share their love of books with other like-minded teens. We hope that you have had fun and that you will continue on with our teen online bookclub starting in mid-September.  Details TBA...

The weekly prize winners for this week are: Bendavis, Summerstar, Ashley, Ashini, Tine Reader and Angelaf. The number of posts you have contributed this summer is astounding! Congratulations.  

Eternal by Cynthia Leitich Smith


Summary from the book: At last, Miranda is the life of the party: all she had to do was die. Elevated and adopted by none other than the reigning King of the Mantle of Dracul, Miranda goes from high-school theater wannabe to glamorous royal fiend overnight. Meanwhile, her reckless and adoring guardian angel, Zachary, demoted to human guise as the princess’s personal assistant, has his work cut out for him trying to save his girl’s soul and plan the Master’s fast-approaching Death Day gala. In alternating points of view, Miranda and Zachary navigate a cut-throat eternal aristocracy as they play out a dangerous and darkly hilarious love story for the ages.


REVIEW: At first, I thought this book was stupid, because it made no sense to me, but as I kept reading it actually was pretty interesting! I liked the alternating  points of view, between Miranda ( the vampire) and Zachary ( Guardian Angel). It's kind of sad, because Zachary loves Miranda and yet he can't tell her that because he is forbidden to reveal his identity to Miranda.

One night Miranda goes to the grave yard with her best friend, and she became "undead"  Zachary made his biggest mistake, he  reveals himself to her to save her. I found it touching because Zachary sacrificed his position as Miranda's Guardian Angel...just to save her!   I give this 8/10 because I wish it was longer!