Good Reads 4 Teens discussion

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Group Stuff > What book should we read?

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message 51: by Ana Sofía (new)

Ana Sofía I do too. But mine is still pretty cool. :D


message 52: by Ana Sofía (new)

Ana Sofía it's not really sad. And I didn't like it that much.. just nothing really stood out to me.


message 53: by Ana Sofía (new)

Ana Sofía have you read it? IT'S SO GOOD!


message 54: by Ana Sofía (new)

Ana Sofía oh... are you liking it?


message 55: by Ana Sofía (new)

Ana Sofía it is indeed. :D


message 56: by Ana Sofía (new)

Ana Sofía okay.
Hey, have you read Tangerine yet?


message 57: by Ana Sofía (new)

Ana Sofía okay. Well, it's super depressing and weird.


message 58: by Adriana (new)

Adriana Lol. Tangerine? As in this Tangerine:
Tangerine by Edward Bloor


message 59: by Adriana (new)

Adriana That wasn't depressing!


message 60: by Christina (new)

Christina (jaredsullinger-my-bball-hero) | 3 comments if you guys haven't read city of bones by cassandra clare yet im game for that....plus i just got done reading it and then i will finally have people to talk about it with!!! that would make me sooooo happy:)


message 61: by Adriana (new)

Adriana yeah i need to read that. i actually saw it at my school's library.


message 62: by Christina (new)

Christina (jaredsullinger-my-bball-hero) | 3 comments it is sooooo good and i cant talk to anyone about it which infuriates me so>_< that would be my angry face....lol


message 63: by Josiah (new)

Josiah (kenjenningsjeopardy74) The Summer Before Boys might be a good one to read. I read its companion novel, Anything But Typical, in 2010, and consider it to have possibly been the best book of the year.


message 64: by Adriana (new)

Adriana @Christina- hahaha! :D

@Josiah- Oh I didn't know there was a first one... Do I have to read The Summer Before Boys before I read Anything But Typical? I mean will I miss anything?


message 65: by Josiah (new)

Josiah (kenjenningsjeopardy74) Anything But Typical actually came first; it was published in 2009, whereas The Summer Before Boys came out this past year. I haven't yet read The Summer Before Boys, as it's part of my cache of potential Newbery contenders that I'm planning to read after the 2012 awards are announced in January, but I don't think that one would need to read Anything But Typical before the newer book. I understand them to be companion novels, rather than one being a direct sequel (or prequel, or midquel, I'm not sure yet about chronology) to the other.


message 66: by Ana Sofía (new)

Ana Sofía Adriana wrote: "That wasn't depressing!"

yeah, it was. The guy's brother blinds him, another guy dies because of the guy's brother, and also, the guy's brother almost ruins his life with crime. That IS pretty depressing.


message 67: by Adriana (new)

Adriana @Josiah- Oh, I'm sorry I thought you meant Anything But Typical was a companion novel of The Summer Before Boys. I would love to read it. (:

@Starburst-You are just looking at the negative side! But yeah I get it... I wasn't really thinking of all those things but I wouldn't call it depressing. I would call it extremely complex ^_^


message 68: by Ana Sofía (last edited Dec 28, 2011 06:15PM) (new)

Ana Sofía Adriana wrote: "@Josiah- Oh, I'm sorry I thought you meant Anything But Typical was a companion novel of The Summer Before Boys. I would love to read it. (:

@Starburst-You are just looking at the negative side! B..."


well, I do see your point. It is rather complex.


message 69: by Josiah (new)

Josiah (kenjenningsjeopardy74) Tangerine was my introduction to Edward Bloor as a writer, and I was truly awed by it. The conversations crackle with incredible energy, and the back-and-forth arguments among the characters are so logically spoken that I never found myself thinking that the plot would have been different if only a particular point had been argued more intelligently. Then there's the adventure story, which left me nearly breathless with its pulsating intensity, and the exciting soccer action, so skillfully rendered that I couldn't bring myself to pause while reading until I found out how the games would end. Overall, my impression of Tangerine is that it is one of the most richly imagined and tightly plotted stories I've ever read. It turned me into a permanent fan of Edward Bloor.


message 70: by Adriana (new)

Adriana Hmmm.. I've never really heard of any other of his books... Do you recommend any?


message 71: by Josiah (new)

Josiah (kenjenningsjeopardy74) Crusader would definitely be at the top of my list of Edward Bloor recommendations. It's a relatively dense novel, yet paced so perfectly that its six hundred eight pages flew by for me. I remember thinking at one point while reading Crusader that enough action, adventure, suspense, stunning revelation and in-depth character development had already been packed into the story to fill a half dozen or more full-length novels, and then I realized that I wasn't even one-third of the way finished with it. In my opinion, Edward Bloor does just about everything right in Crusader, and I think that it's essentially as good as Tangerine.

By my observation, Edward Bloor's earliest novels tend to be his greatest, so that's the general rule of thumb that I would apply in recommending them. London Calling is very good, probably Edward Bloor's third-best work. I've also heard some positive things about A Plague Year, which came out in 2011, and I plan on reading it in the new year. I was very curious about Memory Lane as well, but apparently it was only released for e-reader, so I'm not able to read it.


message 72: by Adriana (new)

Adriana Huh. The summary of those books are not what I expected. But thanks. I think I'll read London Calling. It sounds the most interesting. (:


message 73: by Meg (new)

Meg | 180 comments Mod
Pelicanz wrote: ":P
I just finished One Crazy Summer yesterday.
That was quite a quick book, wasn't it?
I liked it a lot. I don't get what's so sad about it."


What's up with that?? You told me last week that it was super hard to read, and that The Roar totally wasn't hard -- which it isn't. Hrumph. :S


message 74: by Meg (new)

Meg | 180 comments Mod
Starburst wrote: "I do too. But mine is still pretty cool. :D"

Hehe! My family got a Kindle from Santa!! I'm glad you got that e-reader, and that it works okay. God only knows my family doesn't have ENOUGH dang books already!!


message 75: by Josiah (new)

Josiah (kenjenningsjeopardy74) Adriana wrote: "Huh. The summary of those books are not what I expected. But thanks. I think I'll read London Calling. It sounds the most interesting. (:"

London Calling is a good choice. Like Tangerine, Crusader and even Story Time to a certain extent, London Calling has that uniquely eerie atmosphere about it, as if some massive veiled conspiracy could be lurking within every shadow and around every corner. In my experience, no one cultivates that feeling any better than Edward Bloor.


message 76: by Adriana (new)

Adriana You write so eloquently. Makes me want to read it more.


message 77: by Meg (new)

Meg | 180 comments Mod
Why, thank you, Adriana!! That really makes me feel good!!


message 78: by Adriana (new)

Adriana Book (aka Meg) wrote: "Why, thank you, Adriana!! That really makes me feel good!!"

Ummm... I meant Josiah.


message 79: by Adriana (new)

Adriana I don't know if she was being sarcastic.


message 80: by Adriana (new)

Adriana So happy right now.


message 81: by Adriana (new)

Adriana Yeah I don't know why I even had to write it down.


message 82: by Josiah (new)

Josiah (kenjenningsjeopardy74) Adriana wrote:

Ummm... I meant Josiah."


Well, in that case, Thank You. :-) I just tried to express the unique nature of Edward Bloor's writing style as clearly as I could. He has produced some marvelous works, especially during the earliest stages of his career.


message 83: by Meg (new)

Meg | 180 comments Mod
Oh. Sorry about that. I didn't mean -- *fake sobbing* I though you were -- *More sobbing*
HEY! That wasn't called for, Nolan! Why would you laugh at my very obvious, stupid mistake like that in such a way!! I:< (Like it? Just made it up.) AND, what do you mean, "it got better?!" Jerk.


message 84: by Meg (new)

Meg | 180 comments Mod
I kinda thought it looked more like a fat guy who has a really bad uni brow problem going on, but the bird idea's cool, too!


message 85: by Meg (new)

Meg | 180 comments Mod
Who doesn't?


message 86: by Meg (new)

Meg | 180 comments Mod
I like trains.


message 87: by Meg (new)

Meg | 180 comments Mod
Whaat? Is that a line from one of the ASDF movies that I don't remember, or is it something you just made up?


message 88: by Meg (new)

Meg | 180 comments Mod
Who are the pelicangiraffes, and why are they over inflated?


message 89: by Adriana (new)

Adriana Pelicanz wrote: "*type it out"

whatever


message 90: by Adriana (new)

Adriana Book (aka Meg) wrote: "Oh. Sorry about that. I didn't mean -- *fake sobbing* I though you were -- *More sobbing*
HEY! That wasn't called for, Nolan! Why would you laugh at my very obvious, stupid mistake like that in su..."


Sorry D:


message 91: by Meg (new)

Meg | 180 comments Mod
Adriana wrote: "Book (aka Meg) wrote: "Oh. Sorry about that. I didn't mean -- *fake sobbing* I though you were -- *More sobbing*
HEY! That wasn't called for, Nolan! Why would you laugh at my very obvious, stupid ..."


It's okay. I was being super sarcastic about the crying.


message 92: by Meg (new)

Meg | 180 comments Mod
Pelicanz wrote: "Book (aka Meg) wrote: "Who are the pelicangiraffes, and why are they over inflated?"

Who AREN'T the pelicangiraffes?
THEY HAVE A HEALTH CONDITION. DON'T DISCRIMINATE >:(."


I wasn't. Yeesh, who took a cranky pill yesterday?!


message 93: by Ana Sofía (new)

Ana Sofía wow. A lot has been going on here. I couldn't check yesterday because I was traveling all day. *content sigh* it's good to be home.


message 94: by Meg (last edited Jan 02, 2012 02:52PM) (new)

Meg | 180 comments Mod
Glad you're home safe and sound!


message 95: by Adriana (new)

Adriana Starburst wrote: "wow. A lot has been going on here. I couldn't check yesterday because I was traveling all day. *content sigh* it's good to be home."

I haven't been home since Thursday! It's great to be home too.


message 96: by Josiah (new)

Josiah (kenjenningsjeopardy74) Which Tiger's Curse is the one we're going to be reading? According to Goodreads, Tiger's Curse was originally published in 2011; however, this other Tiger's Curse first came out in 1982. I figured that the more recent book was the one we were talking about, but might I have been wrong?


message 97: by Adriana (new)

Adriana Oh! I was thinking about the book called The Tiger Rising. Ooops.

It's the 2011 one Josiah. It shows it on the bookshelf.


message 98: by Josiah (new)

Josiah (kenjenningsjeopardy74) Oh, I see. I hadn't thought to look on the group's bookshelf. Thanks, Adriana!


message 99: by Ana Sofía (new)

Ana Sofía okay. anyway, what do you guys want to read for february?


message 100: by Adriana (new)

Adriana Josiah was talking about a companion for Anything But Typical. Maybe we should read it first then the companion?


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