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Top Ten Favorite Books I’ve Read During The Lifespan Of My Blog

21st August 2012 By Julianne 4 Comments

Photo by Dee’lite

This is my ninth Top Ten Tuesday post. Top Ten Tuesday was created and is hosted by The Broke and the Bookish. I really like this week’s theme – what a great excuse to remind myself of some of the wonderful books I’ve read since I started blogging. This list is in chronological order as I found it easiest just to go through my posts and pick out my favourites.

Top Ten Favorite Books I’ve Read During The Lifespan Of My Blog 

1. All My Friends Are Superheroes, by Andrew Kaufman
All Tom’s friends are superheroes. In fact, there are 249 superheroes in Toronto, including his wife, The Perfectionist, and her ex-boyfriend, Hypno, who hypnotised her on their wedding day so that she could no longer see, hear, or feel Tom. Now they are both on a flight to Vancouver, where The Perfectionist plans to start a new life, believing that Tom left her. He only has until the plane touches down to convince her that he’s there and save their relationship. It’s adorable, clever, lovely and funny, and you should read it. I really need to rewrite my review though, it was only my sixth on this blog and I think I’ve gotten a lot better since then.

2. Notes from the Teenage Underground, by Simmone Howell
Chock full of cool cultural references, Notes is about a trio of teenage girls, primarily the sidelined Gem, that embark upon a project each summer. This year their theme is ‘Underground’ – which leads them into all kinds of trouble. I spotted this book on a library shelf, and intrigued by the title, I took it home. I’d never heard of Simmone before but after this, I devoured her second book, Everything Beautiful.

3. Memoirs of a Teenage Amnesiac, by Gabrielle Zevin
Naomi Porter falls down the steps outside of her school and when she wakes up in hospital, she has forgotten the last four years. She no longer remembers her boyfriend, her parents’ break-up, her sister, why her best friend is her best friend, or why she cared about any of the things that sixteen-year-old Naomi supposedly cared about. This is a whirlwind of a book – believable but surprising.

4. Nobody’s Family Is Going To Change, by Louise Fitzhugh
Just going to quote my full-length review: “Emancipation ‘Emma’ Sheridan (what a fabulous name) is passionately in
love with the idea of being a lawyer, like her father, but he doesn’t approve of women lawyers. Emma’s mother tells her that she needs to lose weight and grow up to be beautiful so that she can marry a lawyer. Emma watches court programmes on television, reads law textbooks, and fantasises about being older, taller, and winning cases against her father. Whilst wearing a large, dramatic hat.”

5. The Boyfriend List, by E. Lockhart
Just read my review. The Boyfriend List is one of the best teen/YA novels that I have ever read and if I start banging on about it again we’ll be here all day.

6.  If I Stay, by Gayle Forman
Beautifully written story about Mia, who has to decide whether she wants to live or die after her parents are killed in a road accident. I cried multiple times.

7. Valiant, by Holly Black
Val runs away from home when she catches her boyfriend going to bed with her mother and finds herself living in New York City with street kids that take faerie drugs. Dark, atmospheric, and generally amazing.

8. Journey to the River Sea, by Eva Ibbotson
Wonderful children’s fantasy adventure featuring bright orphan Maia and her governess Miss Minton, who is essentially me, except that I don’t think I could stand being a governess.

9. The Hunger Games, by Suzanne Collins
My only regret is that I didn’t read The Hunger Games before I’d heard all the hype.

10. Adorkable, by Sarra Manning
Hate, love, love, hate, Haribo, dogs on skateboards, feminism, and fashion blogging. Oh, just read the review!

Filed Under: Recommendation Lists Tagged With: book chat, books, Top Ten Tuesday

Monday Amusements 3

30th July 2012 By Julianne 1 Comment

I’ve been meaning to post another one of these for ages! There has been so much good stuff shared in the last couple of weeks, I just had to get my butt in the chair and put it all together. Enjoy!


Above: a working version of the Weasley family clock! (I think someone posted this on Twitter, but I don’t remember who. Sorry! If it was you, leave me a comment and I’ll credit)

I appreciate and (mostly) agree with this post In Praise of Ripening at Writer Beware. Although the lowered costs involved in self-publishing these days are a good thing in that niche or marginalised writers whose work might never have been published can do-it-themselves and get their words out there, I dislike the DIY-as-fast-as-possible idea. I love the stories I’m working on, and I want the published versions to be the best they can be, and that requires a lot of work. I can’t imagine there are any writers whose work doesn’t benefit from the eye of a good editor or at least a practiced reader.

NPR is running a readers’ poll for a top 100 list of teen novels. I voted for:

The Book Thief, by Markus Zusak
Boy Meets Boy, by David Levithan
Discworld/Tiffany Aching (series), by Terry Pratchett
The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks, by E. Lockhart
Fire and Hemlock, by Diana Wynne Jones
If I Stay, by Gayle Forman
Ruby Oliver Quartet (series), by E. Lockhart
Saving Francesca, by Melina Marchetta
and I couldn’t decide on a ninth or tenth!

The nominations are pretty good! There are loads of books I really want to read on there and only a couple that I think are totally overrated (am I the only one who feels that way about The Perks of Being a Wallflower? Maybe I need to give it another go). I didn’t vote for either the Harry Potter series, The Hunger Games trilogy, or His Dark Materials, as I’m sure they’ll get plenty of votes, and I wanted to support books that were more likely to be underdogs. Also, aren’t the Harry Potter books children’s lit? I know Harry, Hermione and Ron are in their teens for most of the series, but due to the readers-younger-than-characters rule and the fact that bookshops shelve them in 9-12 (or on their own stand, of course), I always think of them as children’s rather than teen.

As a counterpoint to the NPR list, which is rather heavy on American authors, the UKYA blog is now receiving nominations for their own top-100 of British teen novels. You have until Saturday 3rd August to leave a comment on the post linked above with your own suggestions. I know it’ll take me quite some time to decide on mine!

The Guardian books staff have started a ‘What are you reading today?’ Flickr group in which members can post images of the book they are reading that day. I’m not quite sure how discussion will evolve from this but it’ll be interesting to look at occasionally.

I know next to nothing about the Olympic athletes but Jo’s post on weartheoldcoat pairing athletes with YA audiobooks made me smile! ‘Usain Bolt reading The Hunger Games. Don’t even pretend you wouldn’t buy it.’

I’ve decided to include links to the most interesting reviews I’ve read recently from now on. I had two favourites this week. Luisa Plaja’s review of The Twice-Lived Summer of Bluebell Jones by Susie Day was really intriguing, I loved Girl Meets Cake and the idea of a Susie Day book with a darker edge has sent this one straight to my wishlist.

I was drawn to Cicely’s review of The Goose Girl by Shannon Hale because I love fairytale retellings and have never read a retelling of ‘The Goose Girl’, which is one of my favourites. It sounds similar to Robin McKinley’s Spindle’s End, which I really enjoyed.

Anything bookish you’ve seen that you think I’d enjoy? Please share it in the comments!

Filed Under: Monday Amusements Tagged With: book chat, books, Harry Potter, links, Monday Amusements, teen fiction, teenage, teenage fiction, writing, YA, young adult

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