Friday, July 31, 2009

The Thief by Megan Whalen Turner

Another book about thieves. :) Seems like I'm reading a lot of those lately.

Gen likes to think of himself as a master thief. He can steal anything. Except himself out of the king of Sounis's prison. One day, the king's magus comes to pay Gen a visit. He wants him to steal something for him. A legendary stone, said to have been dipped in the water of immortality. It is said that whomever the stone is willingly given to is the rightful king or queen of Eddis and becomes immortal. Gen agrees (not that he has a choice), and so he, the magus, Pol, and the magus's two apprentices Ambiades and Sophos head out to only the Gods (and the magus) know where.

The Thief is now one of my favorite books, up there with Harry Potter, Twilight, Eragon, and the like. One of my friends recommended it after she had read it, as well as Queen of Attolia and King of Attolia. The Thief starts out like any other book. There's a main character, a problem, a journey, etc., etc. The journey takes up more than half the book, but if you can keep up and pay attention, you'll be rewarded in the end. From p. 155 to the end, there are at least seven different major twists in the plot and surprises. You won't believe who Gen really is.

Sunday, July 26, 2009

The Thief Lord by Cornelia Funke

Prosper and Bo have run away from their aunt, Esther, after their mother has died. They run to Venice, of which they have heard so many enchanting stories of from their mother. A group of orphans and runaways take them in and give them a place to stay. The group consists of Hornet, Mosca, Riccio, and their leader, Scipio, otherwise known as the Thief Lord. One day, the Thief Lord gets a request to steal something for the conte. He wants Scipio to steal a wooden wing for five million lire, or about $3,650.83. Who pays over $3000 for a wooden wing? Why is it so important to the conte? Who is the conte?

The Thief Lord is the kind of book that starts slowly and gains speed and mystery and suspense as you keep reading. The magic of Venice is really brought out in this book. The description on the back of the book is so vague and unrevealing that you just have to see what happens.


Friday, July 24, 2009

Songs for Books

As you can see, I have a new playlist of songs that remind me of certain books. "Hedwig's Theme" for Harry Potter and "River Flows in You" by Yiruma for Twilight. But I can't think of any others. So, if you know of any other songs that remind you of books or are from movie adaptations of the books (like Harry Potter), and you're willing to help me, please, do tell.

P.S. - If you don't like the colors, too bad. I kinda don't like them either, so I'll try to work on that.

Plant Art!

Another midnight art idea. :)

Saturday, July 18, 2009

The Dinosaur Mystery by Gertrude Chandler Warner

The Aldens are going to a museum! Yay! Now, a lot of people find museums boring, but this museum has a very interesting exhibit. An entire Tyrannosaurus Rex skeleton. At least, it used to be an entire Tyrannosaurus Rex skeleton. One day, Henry, Violet, Benny, Jessie, and Soo Lee find out that some bones from the skeleton are missing! Who could have taken the bones? Could they have been damaged? What happened to them?

This is one of those mysteries that just plays itself out. There's not really much figuring out on the Aldens' part.

Just saw HP6!

Well, not really. I saw it at 1:10, but when I got home, I had this stabbing headache. I could barely think, let alone go on the computer. Anyway, on to more important things.

The movie was AMAZING! I loved it! I really liked the part when Dumbledore and Harry are on the small island in the huge crystal cave, and Dumbledore scares away the skeletons with this huge magical pyrotechnics show.


Oh my God. Theaters should get more comfortable seats. I mean, my butt hurt almost the entire movie! I had to keep moving around to make sure I could still feel it. You sit in a large, dark room for 2 hours, the least they could do is put in more comfortable seats. My dad's car's seats felt better!

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Mraëd

This is the fishy I drew at 2 o'clock in the morning. (I really should stop drawing in the middle of the night.)

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

The Mystery of the Lost Mine by Gertrude Chandler Warner

Henry, Jessie, Benny, Violet, and their grandfather are taking their grandfather's friend's RV to RV Haven in Arizona. Grandfather helps the owner of the RV fix up his cabin while the four children go exploring. One day, they learn of the story of the Lost Dutchman's Mine, and the story of Jake, the old prospector searching for it. Every morning, Jake comes and gets his supplies from the local diner, the Chuck Wagon, but one day he doesn't show up. The Aldens start getting worried. Where was Jake?

The Mystery of the Lost Mine is a classic Boxcar Children book. It's got a mystery that's not too serious, but isn't too trivial either. It's not that long, and it's just the kind of book I like finishing before I go to bed.

Monday, July 13, 2009

Harry Potter Playlist!

I made a Harry Potter play list to commemorate the unveiling of the new Harry Potter movie! Yaaaaaaaaaaaaaayyyyyyyyyyyy!!!

New Playlist!

Hey all! My friend Anna gave me the idea to put a playlist on my blog. (Check out her blog! It's really sweet! But if you suffer from seizures, you might not want to, what with the awesome flashing lights and all: http://annassuperawesomepage.blogspot.com/)

The playlist is gonna be changing every once in a while, in accordance to any major holidays/events and stuff. So check back often!

HBP movie coming soon!

OMG. The new Harry Potter movie is coming out this Wednesday! (Darn it! Why couldn't it be on a weekend??) I'm gonna beg my parents to go see it. I wonder if it'll be on at Jordan's Furniture.... Hmmm....

Here's a trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QdJMUbThoaQ (It's comforting, what Dumbledore says at 1:25, isn't it?)

I can't wait!!!! (click on the little HD button in the corner for a bigger screen thingy)

http://harrypotter.warnerbros.com/harrypotterandthehalf-bloodprince/ (Drat, it's only going to be partly in 3D on July 29. I can't wait that long! Guess I'll go see the normal one.)

Saving the World and Other Extreme Sports by James Patterson


Max, Fang, Iggy, Nudge, Gazzy, and Angel are all your "average kids," driving across the country. If, you know, super strong avian hybrids with science-fiction-like powers were considered your "average kids". But why are they driving? I mean, couldn't they just fly across the country? Why take a car if they have wings? Probably because it's less noticeable. And yet, they go back to flying anyway. So, while they're resting in a canyon in Texas (don't ask), Max gets a message from the Voice. (Yes, she hears a voice in her head, but just one. Hence the big capitalized "V". And it's not hers. It's actually her ******'s. Oops. That was close. Anyway, I should probably finish before I give away something REALLY big, like, for example, that her parents are ******** ******** and *** **********. I really should stop.) I should also stop talking in those parentheses. After all, they can only stretch so far.

So. The flock decides to find a home. You know, one with real beds and hot showers, that sort of thing. Max and Fang decide to go out and scout out possible locations. While they're gone, these creepy android things in Eraser skins (no, not the erasers on your pencils, although that would be really weird) capture Iggy, Nudge, Gazzy, Angel, and Total. (Did I forget to mention Total? Well, he's Angel's talking dog. That's right. Talking dog.) When Max and Fang get back, they see that the others are missing, and start looking for clues as to where they are. They finally (and by finally, I mean within seconds) find a set of clear tire tracks leading to a long, straight road going in only two directions. The two find the semi that Nudge, Iggy, Gazzy, and Total are in (that's right, no Angel) in minutes. But isn't this a little too easy? I mean, come on. A clear trail, leading directly to their missing friends? That's like telling someone to find a good book and giving them one of the Maximum Ride books. :)

Saving the World and Other Extreme Sports is the kind of book that will keep you up all night reading. I finished this 405-page book in two days, reading it on and off (mostly at night). I'd read like 20 chapters and look at the clock, and only 45 or 60 minutes had passed. You can feel like you've been reading for forever, and you look up and it's only been an hour or two.

Everything in this book is on the verge of extreme, from the plot line to the fights to the humor. I would be up reading in the middle of the night, and I would crack up at something that Max or one of the others had said or done. Especially during chs. 47 and 101, when they're being "questioned" by the scientists at Itex.

There's a website: http://www.max-dan-wiz.com/ that talks all about James Patterson's books. You can sign up and talk about all sorts of things. Like the apocalypse, whether or not Kristen Stewart should play Max in the movie, that sort of stuff. It's actually pretty cool. Also, Fang used to have a blog: http://maximumride.blogspot.com/, but it was moved to http://www.max-dan-wiz.com/profiles/blog/list?promoted=1. I gotta say, it's way cool. There's stuff there from the flock, but also stuff from other people, like Daniel X.

(Wow. This has got to be my longest post about a book. Ever. Four paragraphs. My English teacher would be proud. Probably not. Oh well.)

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Erratum by Walter Sorrells

Jessica Sterhagen is different from other kids, but probably not the way you're thinking. She's just, different. She's always been different. One day, she walks into a bookstore, and its strange owners give her a book: Her Lif. "Her Lif"? That's not right. It must be an erratum, an error. When she starts reading the book, she realizes that it's about her life, her entire life, from when she was born to right now, when she's sitting in the bookstore; about to be stabbed???? Jessica runs away just in time. But when she looks back into the book, it's changed. There's an erratum sheet, and it tells exactly what happened to her in the bookstore. Weird. And what's all this about "saving the universe"? What's going on? And what in all the universes is the Battle of Bluntwick?

Erratum is one of those I-know-you-have-to-go-do-something-else-but-you-have-to-come-read-what's-going-to-happen-next books. It's kinda slow at the beginning, but it's like a roller coaster. There's the thrill of excitement at the beginning, then it goes along slowly to let you get settled and relaxed, but there's always that little bit of fear or adrenaline that keeps you on your toes. Then there's the sudden, unexpected drop, and everything starts going up and down. It turns in on itself, and you lose complete sense of direction. You get lost in the book, and you never know what'll happen next. Just when you think you know exactly what's going to happen, the unexpected happens.

Friday, July 10, 2009

Summer Reading

Hey all! Anyone have any summer reading they need to do? I already read my two required books for school. This is my summer reading list:

The House of the Scorpion, by Nancy Farmer

Kissing Doorknobs, by Terry Spencer Hesser

A Northern Light, by Jennifer Donnelly

Romiette and Julio, by Sharon M. Draper & Adam Lowenbein

The Rules of Survival, by Nancy Werlin

or

Any one of the Maximum Ride books by James Patterson

I've already read The Angel Experiment, School's Out - Forever, and The House of the Scorpion. If anyone's read any of the others, or the ones I've read, let me know if you liked it or not. If it's a good book, if you would recommend it, or you think it's ****, stuff like that. :) (But if you're gonna swear about the book, can you try to censor yourself?)

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

The Great Bicycle Race Mystery by Gertrude Chandler Warner

Henry, Jessie, Violet, Benny, their cousin Soo Lee, and their grandfather all decide to participate in a bicycle race to save Eagle Mountain. They're all excited about the race, but the day before the race starts, Henry can't seem to find his bike. When he does, it's trashed. The Aldens take it to Greenfield Wheels to see if it can be fixed. It can, but not before the race. So Benny and Henry ride a tandem instead. But when the race starts, everything seems to go wrong. At the first water stop, all of the water in one of the trucks has leaked out of the jugs onto the floor of the truck. Jessie, Violet, and Soo Lee find fake signs that are leading cyclists the wrong way, someone pours glue in the lock of one of the food cabinets, and a whole row of tents collapse, all on the first day! All of these problems lead to one conclusion: Sabotage!

The Great Bicycle Race Mystery is full of clues, suspects, and even a stakeout. It's one of those books that has one clue that reveals the entire solution to the mystery, with a little thinking. If you keep your eyes open, you might even solve the mystery before the Aldens do.

Monday, July 6, 2009

My dragons died

Well, as you can tell from the title, my dragons died. :( Oh well.

Funny Funny Funny :)

I got bored on YouTube today, so I started looking at random videos about optical illusions and stuff, and I found this one:


I'm glad I'm not smart enough yet for the CIA to want to assassinate me :)

Saturday, July 4, 2009

Quests

Hey everyone! I couldn't sleep (again) last night, so I started drawing (again). This is the finished product. I even gave it a name and a history.

If you can read the writing in the corner, it says "Quest for Peace". Quests are little fox-like, horned creatures that are about as tall as a jar of tomato sauce. Since they're blind, a Quest's long whiskers help them move around. Their horns curve around like a ram's, and they have small cloven hooves, like a goat's. Its throat and stomach are covered in short, thick fur.

Every Quest has a symbol or idea that it stands for. It's markings are based on its idea or symbol. Many Quests have patterns like stripes or spots. The symbol can be found on its left hindquarters. On its left shoulder are its initials.

A Quest has three names: its first, its middle, and its last: Quest. Its first name is an anagram of a word representing its idea or symbol. Can you guess what Rowan is an anagram of? Quests' middle names go down the alphabet, from the first Quest, whose middle name was Alexandria, to the current one, whose middle name is Xavier. The middle names also alternate girl-boy.

Quests have been on this Earth since human civilization had its first major disaster. When the Quests reach Z, human civilization will either live in peace for the rest of its existence, or any evidence of its existence will be wiped off the face of the Earth. Fortunately, Quests can live to be hundreds, sometimes even thousands of years old, until the danger is past, and they can leave.

Every Quest has lived in a different major city. Rowan currently lives in a cozy little cave under Vatican City.

Thursday, July 2, 2009

Listen to your Heart

It took me dozens of tries to find this version of "Listen to Your Heart" by D.H.T. I absolutely LOVE this song!!!

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Found by Margaret Peterson Haddix

A plane appeared at an airport. No one saw it arrive, except for Angela DuPre. It appeared out of nowhere, and when she boarded the plane to look for the pilot or the passengers, she discovered that there were no adults on board. Just 36 babies. Thirteen years later, Jonah and Chip both get strange messages in plain white envelopes saying, "You are one of the missing." One of the missing? Missing from where? And then Jonah's parents take him and his sister Katherine to the office of FBI agent James Reardon, who might have new information about Jonah's adoption. While they're there, Katherine takes pictures of some strange documents on Reardon's desk, documents titled "Survivors" and "Witnesses." Jonah's and Chip's names are both on the Survivors list. But what did they survive?

Found is the first book in The Missing series by Margaret Peterson Haddix. It's the kind of book that drags you along for the first 150 pages, and then all of a sudden, everything's happening too quickly. You can't keep, and it feels like everything's going too fast.

Found is an MCBA book for 2009-2010.

No more book of the month

I've decided I'm not going to do a book of the month or a theme of the month. Instead, I'm going to stick with just doing an author of the month.

By the way, any constructive criticism you guys could give me would really help. Don't be afraid to tell me that one of my summaries are terrible, or that one of the books I read are horrible. I promise that anything you say, especially if it's something I can do to improve my blog, will be very much appreciated. :)

Margaret Peterson Haddix

Margaret Peterson Haddix was born on April 9, 1964 in a farm near Washington Court House, Ohio. She attended Miami University in Ohio, and graduated with degrees in creative writing, journalism, and history. Almost every job she has had before becoming an author has had something to do with writing. She now lives in Columbus, Ohio with her husband and their two kids.


Margaret Peterson Haddix is the author of many science-fiction books, such as the Shadow Children and Double Identity, but she's also written books about the past, like Running Out of Time, which is about a 13-year-old girl named Jessie who has lived in the 1800s for her entire life, only to find out that it's really the 1990s, and that she has lived in a frozen time period for the first 13 years of her life, and Uprising, which is a book I haven't read yet, but I'm hoping to soon. She's also written children's books like Say What? and Dexter the Tough.

Some books written by Margaret Peterson Haddix that are going to be out soon are:
For more news about books by Margaret Peterson Haddix, check out: http://www.haddixbooks.com/news.html

Double Identity by Margaret Peterson Haddix

Bethany has lived with her over-protective parents for her entire life. Never once that she can remember have they left her alone for more than a few minutes. All of a sudden, her father brings her to an aunt she has never even heard of before and tells her that she has to stay there. While her aunt and her dad are talking, Bethany hears her dad say, "She doesn't know anything about Elizabeth." Who's Elizabeth? And why does Aunt Myrlie seem so happy to see a niece she's never met before? Why do Bethany's parents have to leave? Where are they going? Will Bethany ever see them again?

Double Identity is a science-fiction book about a 12-year-old girl who's trying to find out who she really is. What's the science-fiction part? Well, that's a surprise. I'm pretty sure it's set around the same time as right now, give or take about ten years or so. In fact, about the only thing somewhat science-fictiony about this book is that Bethany is a . (If you want to know, look at the comments. If you don't and want to find out for yourself and read the book, ignore the comments.)

Double Identity was a 2008-2009 MCBA book.