Monthly Archives: October 2009

Readathon: The Professor’s Daughter, by Joan Sfar

Hm. Well. This is a graphic novel love story between a professor’s daughter and that same professor’s ancient mummy. One day, the woman, Lillian, lets the mummy, Imhotep IV, out of his case, and the two go off for a … Continue reading

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Protected: In a Perfect World, by Laura Kasischke

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Rebecca, by Daphne du Maurier

When the unnamed narrator of this story meets Maxim de Winter, whose wife drowned and left him a widower a year previously, she doesn’t imagine that he will ask her to marry him and take her back to his home, … Continue reading

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Uncle Montague’s Tales of Terror, by Chris Priestley

Edgar goes to visit his eccentric Uncle Montague, who tells him scary stories about children and the things that happened to them. It’s a collection of short stories tied together by a central narrative frame. I read this book mid-October … Continue reading

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Protected: What I Saw and How I Lied, by Judy Blundell

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The Last Olympian, by Rick Riordan

This is a joint review with Morrigan, my son who will turn 9 on Sunday. You’ll see – we have very different opinions for the most part. Of course, he’s much closer to the intended age group for this series. … Continue reading

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Blue Moon, by Alyson Noel

As this is the sequel to Evermore, I can’t do this review without giving away spoilers for the first book. So, if you haven’t read Evermore and plan to do so, it’s probably best you skip this. On the other … Continue reading

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Suite Scarlett, by Maureen Johnson

Scarlett Martin is a fifteen year old New Yorker whose family runs a quirky-though-rundown hotel. Her family is not well off despite their business, and Scarlett jumps at the opportunity of a summer job acting as an assistant to a … Continue reading

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A Passage to India, by EM Forster

This is such a difficult book to describe. It’s a sketch of the conflict between India and Britain, both in the overarching Britain-is-policing-India sort of way, and in a specific-individual sort of way. The two parallel each other. The main … Continue reading

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