Review: Joe Roberts lives a life that sorely lacks adventure. He helps his mother with the general store they run and tries to get along with his despised cousin, Lucas. So when the Civil War begins and people begin to rally and enlist, his patriotic spirit gets the better of him and he signs up to fight in the war, unknowingly joining the same Company that his cousin Lucas is in. Positive content: The whole entire moral of the story has an awesome message, but I'll let you figure that out for yourself. Violent content: Uh...it's a war...Nothing gory or anything. A brief description about the blood covered field. Sexual content: None Language: The only thing is that Lucas refers to something as h---ish. Overall Opinion: This was an amazing book, although I was skeptical at first. The character arc was masterfully done. It was short and sweet and I read it in a day. And I cried. Need I say more? I would highly recommend this book to anyone who likes historical fiction (or even someone who doesn't. I don't tend to like historical fiction and I loved it.) The writing could have been better with the word usage and sentence structure and all, but everything else was masterfully done.
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Review: With an upcoming interview at the Manhatten music conservatory, Finley needs to compose her audition piece. But her creativity disappeared with the death of her older brother, Will, who died in a terrorist attack. She decides to study abroad in Ireland so she can follow Will's travel journal. Since his death, she's shut God out and now, when she needs him, she feels as though he's ignoring her. Since, it's the place he felt closest to God, and she's hopeful being there will help her make peace over losing him. On the plane from America to Ireland, she meets Beckett Rush, teen heartthrob and Hollywood bad boy, who is flying too Ireland to finish filming his latest vampire movie. She's the one girl who seems immune to his charm. Undeterred, Beckett convinces her to be his assistant in exchange for his help as a tour guide. Once in Ireland, Finley starts to break down. The loss of her brother, the pressure of school, her audition, and whatever it is that is happening between her and Beckett, leads her to a new and dangerous vice. When is God going to show up for her in this emerald paradise? Warning! There may be spoilers beyond this point!
Forced to choose between military school and a Christian spy organization, Spencer Garmond chooses the spy organization, thinking it's some sort of Bible club. Before he even boards the plane to go on a mission's trip to Moscow, he can tell that it's not a normal Bible study. As time goes on he begins to have strange prophetic visions and gets mixed up with a gang of homeless boys, a mysterious tattoo and a suspicious woman and finds himself in the middle of a mess that he's not sure he can solve. Warning! May be spoilers beyond this point. Review: Hadley missed her flight by four minutes and at the time it seemed inconvenient, but looking back, she realizes that if she hadn't missed that flight, she never would have met Oliver--a cute British guy who happens to be on the flight she had to reschedule for. She's on her way to her dad's wedding to a woman she's never met. She doesn't want to go, but she's kind of forced to. She meets Oliver when he helps her with her suitcase and he keeps her company for the three hours waiting for her next plane and distracts her from her claustrophobia on the seven hour flight to London. Okay, so yes, this is a love story. So if you hate romance, this is definitely not a book for you. But for a romantic sap like me, I loved it. Warning! There may be spoilers beyond this point.
This book is about a ten-year-old girl who is trying to discover whether God is real after the death of her dad, a man loved by everyone, a man who she calls Prince Tennyson, because of his chivalry and the fact that he was a handsome soldier and that he looked like a prince in his uniform. Her mom had a mental breakdown after he died and so they moved to live with her grandma. Chelsea wants to know if God's real, because if he isn't, when her dad died, he wouldn't have gone to heaven and she would never be able to see him again. I probably would have cried if I hadn't been in the living room with my dad and my sisters, as well as one of my cousins. Such a good book. I walked over to the little dresser. It had a shelf above it, and on that shelf there were a bunch of pretty ballerina figurines. One of them was broken. She was wearing a purple tutu and both of her arms were off and lying next to her. Warning: There might be spoilers beyond this point. Continue at your own risk. But remember, I warned you.
Reapers: Review: Phoenix is a reaper, which means that, when a person dies, he takes their soul and transports them to their final resting place at the Gateway. He meets two other Reapers named Singapore and Shanghai and they start to suspect that the Gateway isn't all it's supposed to be. They're not sure if they are actually bringing the souls to a safe resting place, like they always tell the grieving family members. When a friend of Phoenix is accused of medicine smuggling and is taken to a labor camp, he decides to try and save them and find out what is really beyond the Gateway with his two friends. But can he trust them? Sing seems to be keeping secrets. Warning: There may be spoilers beyond this point. Review: The Name of this Book is Secret is meant for younger readers, but that doesn't mean it's not a fun read for teens. The author says it better in the inner flap of the book, so I'll just quote him: You see, not only is the name of this book secret, the story is, too. For it contains a secret--a big secret-- that has been tormenting people like you for over...oh no! Did I just mention the secret? Then it's too late.. ------------------------------------------------Cassandra and Max-Ernest are average eleven-year-old kids who go to the same school, but never really cared to talk to each other. That is until Cass finds a box called the Symphony of Smells that was supposedly found in a magician's house who died in a fire in the kitchen of that very house. Cass doesn't believe that the magician's really dead though, and goes with Max-Ernest to investigate his house. When she finds a secret room with the magician's diary, it launches her and Max-Ernest on an adventure, neither of them would have never dreamed of. Read the first part here: Warnings: There may be spoilers beyond this point.
Review: Raising Dragons follows Billy Bannister as he begins to notice strange changes in himself. His breath is getting abnormally hot. After he sets off the fire alarms at school with his breath one day, he finally figures out that his father was a dragon, turned human. Now running from blood-thirsty dragon slayer, Devin, he meets Bonnie Silver, a young lady who has been hiding dragon wings in a backpack for years. There may be spoilers beyond this point. |
Book ReviewsHere are reviews for books Pluggedin style. I have categories for positive content, sexual content, violent content, language, and other negative content. My overall opinion is at the bottom. Beware, the reviews may contain spoilers. Archives
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