The sequel to the previous book I read... just as cute. This time a man named Dick Tater is out to get the trio because of their irregular arrangement of an old man, ghost, and young boy living together under the same roof writing ghost stories. Tater uses this opportunity to speak out against ghosts and to attempt to cancel Halloween. Grumply gets committed to the Illinois Home for the Deranged and has Seymour sent to the orphanage until his parents come to pick him up from their tour in France. Because the next 3 chapters in their book will not be published on time they decide to publish some of Olive's old manuscripts, but it becomes a problem since she can't remember where she hid them.Of course things get ironed out in the end, and it appears that there is a third installment to this new series.
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
Monday, April 18, 2011
43 Old Cemetery Road: Dying to Meet You by Kate Klise
This was a super-quick and laughable read for young readers. The basic format of the book is set up into letters, newspaper articles, and pictures with captions. You can tell from the beginning that it is going to be a humorous read just by meeting the characters: Olive C. Spence, Seymour Hope, and I.B. Grumply. A children's author, Grumply, moves into a Victorian mansion to overcome a twenty year writer's block in order to complete his "Ghost Tamer" series. He finds out that the mansion is already occupied with a boy name Seymour and his cat, as well as a ghost of long ago deceased writer, Olive. She has vowed to haunt the house until one of her mysteries is published. The three main characters form a tight niche relationship and produce a book through collaboration. This sequel is next on my list!
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen
I had always seen great reviews about this book, but simply never got around to reading it. Finally, when I saw a preview of the movie based on this novel on television I decided to add this to my list of books to read. (I tend to do this quiet frequently, and find that the book is always better) In Water for Elephants, ninety-three year old Jacob Jankowski flashes back and forth between his present day in the nursing home and his past, when life went so wrong he joined the circus at twenty-one. Once there he does odds and ends for a place to stay on the train. Soon after they find out that he went to school to be a vet, and it was just his luck the circus had just found themselves short of one for their exotic animals. These animals are mangy, underfed or fed rotten food, and often abused. The sad part of all of this is that most of the events of the novel are based off of true circus events, and just added together into one story line. The author has definitely pulled in key information about circuses in that time that only thorough research could provide. Early on, he finds himself falling in love with the animal trainer's wife, Marlena... and also an elephant, Rosie. The characters and animals in this novel are well rounded, relateable, and detailed so that the reader can not help but feel a connection to each. I thoroughly enjoyed this book and can not wait to see how they have interpreted it in the movie coming out next week starring Reese Witherspoon and Robert Pattinson. Can Pattinson pull off a role that is not a vampire? We shall see!
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
Life Support by Tess Gerritsen
Yet another read from Tess Gerristen, this is the first one however I'm not too sure that I was a fan of. This is one of her medical suspense stand alone books, however it seemed so far-fetched at times to pass for science fiction. It is about Dr. Toby Harper that is trying to figure out why elderly Alzheimer's patients from the same retirement home start dying mysteriously at a fast rate, all with the same symptoms. She discovers they have all chosen to receive a hormone that prolongs life, which comes from fetal cells. That's where the weird part comes in, as the cells from purposely deformed and grotesque human fetus are produced for this purpose. When it goes into detail of one of these creatures, it honestly had my stomach churning as it describes a two-limbed, cyclopes, one toothed, bundle of skin and hair. Gross. I'm just hoping her other medical suspense books rise far above this one.
Monday, April 4, 2011
Milkweed by Jerry Spinelli
It's been a while since I have read a Jerry Spinelli book, but this one seems different from all the rest. It has his same writing style but the storyline is much different. One of the girls in my class who is obsessed with Holocaust novels was ranting and raving about this book. Since I share a liking for that genre of books as well, I had to read it. This juvenile novel shows the reader the view of World War II through the eyes of a young orphan who stays alive through stealing. This is why he calls himself Stopthief when meeting a group of orphan boys just like him that live together to survive. His new friend and protector Uri then gives him the life story that he will tell soldiers, who they call Jackboots, if asked. Now he is Misha Pilsudski, a young gypsy. The young boy has an uplifting attitude about everything going on at that time, only because he does not fully understand what's going on in the world around him. He must survive in the ghetto and faces the dangers that many people were unable to escape from. It's a truly captivating novel that I finished in less than 2 days.
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