About Me

I'm the school librarian at G.S. Lakie Middle School. As you can see - me, reading and comfy chairs go way back. I still enjoy Asterix and many other graphic novels. My main reason for blogging is for reviewing books for the students and anyone else that might be interested in YA literature.
Showing posts with label coming of age. Show all posts
Showing posts with label coming of age. Show all posts

Friday, January 8, 2010

How to steal a car


How to Steal a Car by Pete Hautman
Pete Hautman has given such fabulous reads as Rash and Godless, these books are entertaining, thought provoking and push at some YA boundaries. So it's no wonder that his next book How to Steal a Car once again set me up for an enjoyable, provocative read.
From the back cover-
Are you bored out of your mind? Sick of your friends and family? Wish you were somewhere (anywhere) else? Stealing a car might help.
15 year old Kelleigh enters the world of stealing cars quite by accident, finding a man's car keys in a parking lot and taking the car for a spin was just a prank, borrowing her Dad's Lexus in the middle of the night an escape from her torturous family, stealing the neighbours car was to help out a friend, but before long the sense of being alive only comes when she is driving a stolen car.
This is a short read, told in first person narrative with tight chapters and believeable characters and will make readers consider the challenges of coming of age.

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

The Shadows of Ghadames



The Shadows of Ghadames by Joelle Stolz

At the end of the 19th century, in the Libyan city of Ghadames, Malika watches her merchant father depart on one of his caravan expeditions. Malika too yearns to travel to distant cities and she longs to learn to read like her younger brother. But nearly twelve years old and soon to be of marriageable age, Malika - like all Muslim women - must be content with a more secluded, more limited life. Then one night a stranger enters her home ... someone who disrupts the order of things, and who affects Malika in unexpected ways.

This was an interesting look at the complex culture of the families of the city of Ghadames, with it's narrow alleyways, rooftops that are inhabited only by females, mysterious customs and rites of passage.

This book reminded me of my travels in Morocco and of my time spent on the tiny island of Lamu off the coast of Kenya (both places predominately Muslim), and my parents stories of their time spent in Turkey, Iran and Lebanon. It made me dream of far off places and mint tea poured from high above the glass.