Tuesday, April 17, 2012

A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness

A Monster Calls is a compelling and deep story centered around a young boy, Conor, and his mother’s fight against cancer. Conor’s mother is not accepting her treatments very well and Conor will very soon have to come to terms with a very likely outcome. Then one night Conor is visited by a monster, a monster that means not to harm Conor, but to help him. The story is inspired by an author who was not able to write the book herself which makes it that much more captivating and powerful. The book is very imaginative and paired with the ominous and intense illustrations it feels like reading during story-time again.

Reviewed by David Downes

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Choke by Chuck Palahniuk

Victor Mancini is a sex addicted med-school dropout who pays for his mother’s deteriorating condition by working at a colonial theme park and with money that he scams other people to give him. His risky scam includes intentionally choking on food at restaurants so that someone will save him and then, feeling responsible for his life, start sending him money. He justifies it by making those people feel better about themselves by giving them a sense of heroism. He also plays savior at the hospital his mother stays at, however he doesn’t use his medical training to do it, for this is a different kind of hospital. This hospital takes care of the elderly who have lost their minds. Thinking he is the person who ruined their lives, they unload their burdens by blaming him to give closure to their problems. Chuck Palahniuk shows his brilliance, once again, at orchestrating an edgy novel with multiple subplots that all culminate into a mind-bending, psychological thriller based on cognitive reality.

Reviewed by David Downes

Tuesday, April 10, 2012


In Kelly Keaton’s Sequel to “Darkness Becomes Her”, “A Beautiful Evil” follows up on Ari Selkirk’s journey to overcome the curse that was put on
her family so long ago by The Greek Goddess Athena. While trying to keep her powers under control, Ari travels to Mt. Olympus where she is set on
destroying Athena, but In order to beat Athena, Ari must unleash the very thing she’s trying to keep inside: The power of Medusa.

Review By Cheyenne Newberry

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

The Edumacation of Jay Baker by Jay Clark

Jay Baker is having a very complex and interesting freshman year. His parents are finally having a “trial separation” after months of a noticeably failing marriage. He is caught between feelings for his best friend since grade school, Cameo, and his new dream girl, Caroline. On top of that he is constantly in trouble at school because of his former friend who is adamant on finding new ways to express his belief about Jay’s sexuality and Jay is fed up with it. It’s a great novel with many pop-culture references and many fun made-up words. Jay is a very relatable teen surrounded by a diverse slew of characters that help remind you that your life may not be too different from others’.

Reviewed by David Downes

Monday, April 2, 2012

Water for Elephants

Jacob Jankowski is asked to step out of class. With only a few weeks until his final exams at Cornell University, after which he will graduate with the class of 1931 and join his father’s veterinary practice, he is nervously wondering what he might have done wrong, even fearing expulsion. However, the true reason he is standing before Dean Wilkins is far worse. Both of his parents were killed in a car accident.

After burying his parents, Jacob finds out the bank has taken ownership of his parent’s home. He returns to Cornell for his exams, but does not complete them. Instead, with no place to go and not a penny to his name, Jacob runs away.

Unwittingly altering his life forever, Jacob, hungry and with feet covered in blisters, jumps aboard a passing train, having no idea that it is, in fact, the train of the Benzini Brothers Most Spectacular Show on Earth, a circus. Once he meets Uncle Al, the boss, Jacob becomes the circus’ veterinarian, caring for all of the animals, including lions, tigers, giraffes, and the horses belonging to the beautiful Marlena, a star performer. Immediately enamored, Jacob soon finds out he must be very careful- Marlena is the wife of August, the equestrian director with a violent reputation.

Only a few months later, Jacob stands shocked and terrified in the menagerie tent, his eyes desperately seeking out Marlena, but equally fearful they might land upon August, disgruntled and dangerous. All the animals are loose- tigers chasing people, zebras and giraffes stampeding in fear.

Culminating in the terrifying fall of the Benzini Brothers Most Spectacular Show on Earth and told from the perspective of a ninety-three year old Jacob, living in a nursing home after
his wife precedes him in passing and none of his five children offer to have him move in with their families, this novel written by Sara Gruen is a remarkable
must-read.

Reviewed by Kayla Britt