Diveregent, Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children, This Star Won't Go Out, Eleanor and Park, Will Grayson Will Grayson, Fangirl, Heaven is for Real, and Skinny
Thursday, February 27, 2014
Reading Wishlist
My book list:
Diveregent, Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children, This Star Won't Go Out, Eleanor and Park, Will Grayson Will Grayson, Fangirl, Heaven is for Real, and Skinny
Diveregent, Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children, This Star Won't Go Out, Eleanor and Park, Will Grayson Will Grayson, Fangirl, Heaven is for Real, and Skinny
Wednesday, February 26, 2014
Tuesday, February 25, 2014
Book#3 Review
The books I have read
are both realistic fiction. The first book is Thirteen Reasons Why by Jay Asher and the second book is An
Abundance of Katherines by John Green.
Thirteen Reasons Why is a
about a girl named Hannah Baker that committed suicide; she leaves tapes
explaining why she committed suicide and each person on the tapes will receive
them and listen to all of them. One day
they showed up at Clay’s house and when he started to listen to them all he
could think about was what did he do to her to be on the tapes. He wanted to know why “you don’t belong in
the same way as the others” and that is why he needs to listen the
tapes before he gets to his. The story
is told in a very unique way allows the reader to hear the tapes and see what Clay
thinks and feels. In An Abundance of Katherines, the story
revolves around a boy named Colin who has dated nineteen Katherines; he doesn’t
date anyone that has a different name.
Each Katherine also has to be spelled the same. Colin is always the one that gets dumped and
after the nineteenth Katherine he goes on a road trip with his best friend
Hassan to try to forget Katherine nineteen.
They end up in Gutshot, Tennessee and they meet Lindsey Wells and they
stay with her and her mom, Hollis for a couple of weeks. For those couple of weeks they work for Hollis
by interviewing people at the factory about what they liked about Gutshot. When they are there, Colin tries to figure out
the Theorem that predicts what the relationship will look like and who will be
the Dumper and the Dumpee;“he hadn’t gotten Katherine III on paper, and one
cannot take an equation that predicts eighteen out of nineteen Katherines to
the Nobel Prize Committee,” when he figured out the Theorem, only Katherine III
didn’t work and he didn’t know why. He tries to figure out why it didn't work on her,but then he finds out the missing piece that happened with Katherine III.
Clay
and Colin are very similar because they both change throughout the book; both
characters choose to change their outlook on life. Hannah’s tapes change Clay’s life because he
learns her perspective. Clay learns to be more empathetic, to take a chance on
getting to know someone different. While Colin is in Gutshot he is tries to
break away from being a nerdy genius and lets himself have a little fun; he
might even break away from his dating ways.
Colin learns to break free from some of his habits as well, allowing for
a less structured life. Both start out
as quiet kids who keep to themselves, but each, through different circumstances
learn to change. The main difference is
that Clay changes because of a painful event and Colin changes because of an
event that turns out to be positive.
Clay tends to think with his heart, while Colin tends to think with his
brain even though both just want to be normal.
In Thirteen Reasons
Why I really liked about that it had a very strong message to it and it
made you really think about people who are going through a hard time or people
that are getting bullied at school. You
see kids in the halls that are getting bullied and you don’t do anything about
it, but after you read this book it changes you. You don’t want anyone to be bullied and you
don’t want it to go so far that they want to commit suicide. This book doesn’t only change Clay and the
way he looks at life, but it also changes the reader as a person.
I give Thirteen Reasons Why 5/5 stars because I really liked the message to the reader and I would recommend it to anyone and people who like fast pace books. For An Abundance of Katherines I give it 4/5 stars because it was a little boring in the begining and I though it wasn't one of the best books John Green has written. I would recommend it to any teen or young adult reader and if you like to read realistic fiction.
I give Thirteen Reasons Why 5/5 stars because I really liked the message to the reader and I would recommend it to anyone and people who like fast pace books. For An Abundance of Katherines I give it 4/5 stars because it was a little boring in the begining and I though it wasn't one of the best books John Green has written. I would recommend it to any teen or young adult reader and if you like to read realistic fiction.
Thursday, February 13, 2014
Post #9
I think that my narrator in An Abundance of Katherines is likable because even though it’s told
in third person you can see that he enjoys writing and that he can relate to
the Colin Singleton. The characters that are in my book are Colin Singleton and
Hassan; they are best friends and they are nerdy. At first you feel a little sad for Colin
because he doesn’t have many friends and he has been dumped a lot by Katherines. Colin and Hassan are on a road trip because
Colin is trying to forget about Katherine 19.
They stop in Gutshot, Tennessee and they meet a girl named Lindsey Lee
Wells. Lindsey is very likable because she
always has a smile on her face and she is nice and kind to others and that is
why everyone in town loves her. You can
relate to Colin because he is nerdy kid in school and doesn’t have very many
friends. He is trying to get away from
being a genius all the time and become a normal kid. He wants to branch out and do more things other than just studying and working on his theorem.
Colin and Hassan are hired by Hollis, Lindsey’s mom to interview people
at the factory in town. Throughout this time, Lindsey and Colin bond while she is trying to teach him how
to tell an exciting story that happened to him.
Thursday, February 6, 2014
Post#8
In
my opinion, the book has to be 100% the truth to be non-fiction because if it’s
not a true story it shouldn’t be called a non-fiction book. People will believe the author that they are
telling the truth and not a 95% the truth and the rest is made up. If it’s not 100% the truth it should be
considered as a fiction book not a non-fiction book. I know they won’t know exactly what happened
and what was said, but they should try to create a similar scene for the
readers. If they change a small detail that’s fine, but if they change a big
detail like Fray said he killed the girl and in real life he didn’t. They shouldn’t change big scenes, but
changing small minor details is fine and no one would really care.
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