Fun book, but appropriateness for an entire class of 7th graders? Questionable.
Good point.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
Fun book, but appropriateness for an entire class of 7th graders? Questionable.
Good point.
I'm listening to The Dark Is Rising (people weren't kidding about Over Sea, Under Stone not being a good place to start, how boring was that?), and people keep referring to Will as an "Old One," so I am expecting him to sprout tentacles at some point.
B&N has a really long sample from Night Circus available in ebook, and I kinda forgot I hadn't bought the whole thing yet, I was enjoying myself so much.
Well played, teaser, well played.
Does Amazon let you get samples, or does it just do the "look inside this book" thing? It occurs to me (d'oh!) that you don't need to have an e-book to take advantage of this--you just need to set up an account and install the app on your computer. Then you can read the first few pages of, well, just about anything that's also sold as an ebook if you want more info to make up your mind. It's not like you can't go buy the paper version afterwards.
I love Over Sea, Under Stone. Classic quest book.
Does Amazon let you get samples
Yup. They're like a drug dealer -- first one's free, yo.
On the Kindle, it's samples. I don't know if they're the same pages as the "Look inside this book" pages on the website.
Many Amazon books have the first chapter free. I think it's up to the publisher. I downloaded the first chapter of Leviathan Wakes, which is getting billed as a Firefly-esque space opera set in the asteroid belt.
I do not understand why they keep assigning the world's most depressing books to an age group already prone to depression.
It's a shame that Roller Skates never seemed to acquire literary heft. Being one of the best books ever doesn't seem to be a criterion. Lucinda is a child of privilege, but the book is about her discovering that others are less privileged and standing up for them. Also, it set me up to love Shakespeare.
Island of the Blue Dolphins? One of Octavia Butler's books?
It doesn't have a female protagonist, and it's a completely cliched suggestion from me, but how about Something Wicked This Way Comes ?
Mara of the Nile?
Actually, that's not a bad idea. What about some of Zilpha Keatley Snyder's stuff? I was reading her in 7th grade.