Tuesday, 6 November 2012

311. Underworld: Exploring the Secret World Beneath Your Feet by Jane Price and illustrated by James Gulliver Hancock

Underworld: Exploring the Secret World Beneath Your Feet by Jane Price and illustrated by James Gulliver HancockPublished September 2012  Weldon Owen Publishing
From the publisher:Just what, exactly, lies underground?
Let this book take you on a journey into the world beneath earth's surface.
  • Under Paris, Under Rome, in the Valley of the Kings
  • The Large Hadron Collider in Switzerland
  • Limestone caves and underwater sea caverns
  • Catacombs, oubliettes, burial pits, treasure troves

The subtitle of this book is very important, without it there could be many disappointed readers who were expecting a book about crime.  So if you’re not wanting a book about the criminal underworld, stick with me because this book might be for you! This is book looks at everything that is going on beneath our feet.  It starts with the science, looking into the centre of the earth, volcanoes and fossils, then it looks at animals that live underground and then it goes into mining and also what goes on underground in some of the big cities around the world.

Monday, 5 November 2012

310. Poppy Fields Mystery #10: The Will to Live by Tanya Landman

Poppy Fields Murder Mystery Book 10: The Will to Live by Tanya Landman
Published October 2012 Walker Books

From the publisher:
Tenth in the brilliantly addictive series of murder mysteries by an acclaimed and popular writer.
Poppy and Graham are staying in a grand country house for the weekend to help at a family christening party, but they're seriously unimpressed. Dull, dull, dull! Not to mention the fact that baby Marmaduke has taken a shine to Graham and won't let him out of his sight without shrieking the place down. Then events take a mysterious turn when a filthy tramp turns up in the churchyard ... dead. It isn't long before Poppy and Graham realize that his death is suspicious - as are all the others that follow.

I know the Poppy Fields books, and they have been quite popular.  I personally think the covers had something to do with that.  They looked just bloody and gory enough to attract the readers.  When I saw this book, I didn’t even recognise it as a Poppy Fields Mystery, as the cover is completely different.  See the pic to the right for Book 9, that will give you an idea how they used to look.

Sunday, 4 November 2012

309. Burning Blue by Paul Griffin


Burning Blue by Paul Griffin
Published October 2012 Text Publishing

From the publisher:
When Nicole Castro, the most popular girl at her high school, has her face splashed with acid, her classmate, loner and brilliant hacker, Jay Nazarro, does more than just gawk at her. He decides to find out who did it.  The deeper he digs, though, the more he falls for Nicole…and the more danger he’s in. Everyone is a suspect—even Nicole herself—and whoever did it seems ready to strike again.  Burning Blue is a high-stakes, soulful mystery that explores just how far love, or the other side of love, will take us.

Burning Blue wasn’t what I was expecting, I thought it would read like a thriller, and that the main part of the story would be how this once beautiful teenager copes with the new reality, but there’s a whole lot more to this story.  This book manages to be both a gripping thriller, and a more profound emotional story all at the same time. 

The burning takes place in the first few pages, and figure in a hoodie squirts Nicole in the face with battery acid, and her life is changed.  There is a brief description about the damage done, but Nicole stays bandaged up for the rest of the story, and for me it isn’t the focus of the story.

Jay is a great character, a computer genius (hacker), good looking, but a loner.  His acceptance by the general population at school is hindered by the fact that Jay suffers from a form of epilepsy, and a seizure in front of the whole school, where he lost control of his bladder, has made him quite the target.  In fact the humiliation was so bad, that he convinced his father to let him be home schooled for a year.

Jay is just returning to school, while Nicole is still at home recuperating.  Their paths cross outside the school councillors office, and while their situations are totally different, each has some understanding of what the other is going through.

The thread that runs through the whole story is of Jay’s mission to find Nicole’s attacker. Using his skills as a hacker, as well as some old fashioned detective work he is determined solve the case.  As with any good mystery, the suspect list is long, and Jay works through it eliminating as he goes, there is even a possibility that Nicole may have done this to herself.

As well as this we also have Jay’s more emotional story, that looks at the death of his mother, and the complicated relationship he has with his father.  The funny thing about Jay is that his physical appearance is not really described, apart form the fact that he refuses to get his hair cut.  The loner personality and his penchant for computers made me pigeon hole him as an ordinary looking geeky guy.  It’s not until the story develops and we see more of his personality come through, and we start to see him through other peoples eyes that he’s described as ‘hot’, and the way he deals with the local detective we see he’s more than a little bit charming.

The story is told in alternate chapters, so while this book may look quite girly from the cover I think it will appeal to teenage boys just as much as teenage girls, and that’s quite a rare thing in books for teens.

Who will like this book: Boys and Girls age 15+
Read it if you like: Skin Deep by Laura Jarratt

Saturday, 3 November 2012

308. Judy Moody and the Bad Luck Charm by Megan McDonald and illustrated by Peter Reynolds

Judy Moody and the Bad Luck Charm by Megan McDonald and illustrated by Peter Reynolds
Published November 2012 Candlewick Press

From the publisher:

Will Judy's lucky penny lead her to the nation's capital or to third-grade C-A-L-A-M-I-T-Y? And what do her spelling-bee nemesis and a pot-bellied pig have to do with it?
The lucky penny in Judy Moody's pocket sure does seem to be working. She can't stop winning-at bowling, spelling, the unbeatable Prize Claw, everything! For sure and absolute positive, she'll ride that wave of good fortune all the way to Washington, D.C. Watch out, District of Cool, here comes Judy Moody, the luckiest kid ever, until ... oh, no! Her lucky penny just did a belly flop into a porcelain bowl of yucky, blucky UN-luck. Has the coin's magic gone kerflooey? Are some people, like Jessica Finch or Stink, destined to have all the luck, while she, Judy Moody, gets stuck with a yard full of three-not-four-leaf clovers, a squealing pot-bellied pig in an elevator, and a squashed penny with cooties? ROAR!


The ever popular Judy Moody is back, and this book is all about luck.  Is there such a thing as a lucky penny?  Or do we create our own luck?  You will have to find out.

Friday, 2 November 2012

307. Devilish by Maureen Johnson

Devilish by Maureen Johnson
Published October 2012 Harper Collins

From the publisher:
Ally and Jane may not be that popular but they′re good friends...that is until they each get allocated a freshman, a ′little′ to show the the ropes to at school.
Cracks begin to show as Ally changes into a whole different person, literally overnight. She′s dressed better, making new friends, and ditching Jane more and more.
But Ally′s transformation has its price. And it′s up to Jane to save her former BF from a ponytail-wearing, cupcake-nibbling devil in disguise!


Not surprising given the title, that this is a wickedly good read.  Have you ever wondered how the cool kids in High School got to be so cool and confident, why did they never spill food on their clothes, or trip over in front of a whole school assembly?  The answer to that may well be answered within the pages of this book.

Thursday, 1 November 2012

306. Nighttime Ninja by Barbara Da Costa with art by Ed Young

Nighttime Ninja by Barbara Da Costa with art by Ed Young
Published October 2012 Little Brown
From the publisher:
Late at night, when all is quiet and everyone is asleep, a ninja creeps silently through the house in search of treasure. Soon he reaches his ultimate goal...and gets a big surprise! Will the nighttime ninja complete his mission With spare text and lush illustrations, Nighttime Ninja is a fun, adventure-filled story about the power of play and imagination.
I know we probably shouldn’t say that certain books are good for boys, and certain books are good for girls.  All books are for everyone, regardless of gender.  That’s a good theory, but when a pink sparkly picture book is published, there is no doubt as to its intended audience.  I find that there are few picture books that are real 'boy' books, and that’s one of the reasons I like Nighttime Ninja so much.

2 months to go...


November is upon me, and I only have 61 books to go.  I still find that people are surprised to hear that I am still going.  Do they not wonder why they haven’t heard a peep from me this year?  My life is pretty much work, reading and blogging.  I have no idea what is going on the world, but I have been told that’s probably a good thing!

As I am nearing the end of this challenge, I have been asked what I will do next year.  Well... I won’t be reading and writing about a book a day, but I have enjoyed this year, so I will write another blog, but maybe only limit it to the real WOW books that I read.

I haven’t decided on a name for the new blog yet, but I will post details here for anyone interested.

But…the year is not over, so let’s look at a sample of what's in my reading pile for this month.