I'll start with some of the Young Adult novels I've been reading so I can make recommendations to my kids at school. I'll be honest, when I started putting some of these books on hold, I looked at it as a bit of a chore. However...I'm starting to believe that a lot of these YA novels are just as good as any of the adult fiction I usually read. The whole dystopian theme has really taken off with The Hunger Games series (which is amazing, by the way if you haven't read them...I haven't seen the movie yet, but can't wait to do so to see how it compares). The kids are just eating up the dystopian-themed books, and to be honest, so am I. Here are some I've read:


Delirium & Pandemonium by Lauren Oliver. I put Pandemonium on hold at the library not realizing it was the 2nd book in a trilogy. Luckily, I was able to get Delirium quickly so I could read them in sequence. I was hooked right from the beginning. In Delirium, we meet Lena, who is 95 days away from getting "The Cure". You see, in her society, love is the most deadly of diseases - amor deliria nervosa - or just the "deliria". At the age of 18, everyone in society receives the cure for the disease and then is matched with someone appropriate to later marry without the heartache and stress and other health problems that can all be traced back to love. I'm sure you'll be shocked to find that before Lena gets her cure...she falls in love. Oh, the chaos that ensues...so good. In Pandemonium, Lena has escaped the society that tried to "cure" her and joins the resistance movement to try to bring freedom to those who want to love. (I don't want to give too much away if you decide to read the first one - I know that description was vague.) I can't wait until the final book in this trilogy, Requiem, is released next year.
Incarceron, for me, was not as good as Delirium & Pandemonium, but I did like it. In this book, Finn is locked in a prison-world called Incarceron. He doesn't know how he got there...he has no memories before being there, but a key with markings that match a birthmark he possesses comes into his hands and he thinks the key may lead to a way out of Incarceron. Meanwhile, in the real world, the daughter of the warden of Incarceron, Claudia, also finds a matching key, which allows her to communicate with Finn in Incarceron. They work together to try to find a way for him to escape the prison. It's exciting & adventurous and there is a second book called Sapphique that I plan to read this summer when I have more time.
Matched and Crossed are also (clearly) part of a trilogy of books. I am about a third of the way through Crossed, so I can't say much about it yet, except that it is good. :) In Matched, we meet Cassia, an upstanding memory of Society. She is on her way to her Match ceremony. In Society, teens are "matched" with their perfect counterpart for marriage in a few years. Cassia is thrilled to be matched with her best friend, Xander, until she sits down to view the information about him and a picture of another boy pops up first before disappearing. Cassia also knows this other boy and now begins to wonder...which of these boys really is her perfect match. She gets the opportunity to spend time with this other boy, Ky, and learns he is an "aberration" in Society, and is therefore, unable to be married. Romance ensues and Cassia falls hopelessly in love with Ky. Will they be able to be together, or will they stay separated. I have a feeling, I won't find the answer in Crossed, but in November when the final book in the series Reached, hits the shelves. I will be looking forward to that for sure!

For school, I read The Giver. It's one of my "book club" choices for my students to be reading currently, so I had to make sure I had read it myself. This is the story of Jonas and his community. In the community, at the age of 12 you're considered an adult and are given your job assignment for adulthood at the annual age ceremony. Jonas is selected for the most important job in the community - the receiver of memories. The Receiver is the only person in the community who has any knowledge of the events of the past. All others in the community remember only what's happened to them in their lifetimes. As Jonas begins to receive memories of things from the past, both good and bad, from the former Receiver, now the Giver, he realizes that maybe their perfect society is not so perfect if people aren't really living, and he has to decide how he's going to change that. It's a great, short read...it's not adventurous, but it is very thought-provoking.
In the world of adult novels, here's what I've been quite busy, as well.
I love the J.D. Robb In Death series. This is the 34th installment, and I think I've read pretty much every one. If you haven't read these, they take place about 50 years in the future and follow New York murder cop, Eve Dallas, and her husband, multi-gazillionaire, Roarke (no last name required - or maybe that is his last name? I've never figured that out). Anyway, Eve has to solve the homicide of an actress who is playing Eve's partner in a movie about a famous case they solved. It is action-packed and Eve is super-tough, but has a vulnerable side that you get to experience as the reader. I would recommend any of the In Death books. Love them!
Jodi Picoult's newest book, Lone Wolf, was a great read. The story is about a famous wolf researcher, Luke Warren, who is in a coma after a car accident. His brain damage is so profound that his two children must decide whether to let him go or hold onto hope that one day he might recover in some form. In true Jodi Picoult fashion, the story is told from the perspectives of the different characters in the story, so you can see everything from each character's point of view. Though Luke is in a coma and unconscious throughout the story, she also incorporates his memories throughout the novel, as well. It's a moving story of family and makes you hope that you're never in the position where you have to make a choice like this one.
I am a huge Karen Kingsbury fan. If you like Christian fiction and haven't read anything by this author, first, I'd be surprised, but second, I'd recommend her books. If you haven't read her, start with her Redemption series (First book - Redemption). Loving is the final book in her Bailey Flanagan series (after Leaving, Learning, & Longing). In the final book in the series, we learn who Bailey will spend the rest of her life with - first love, Cody, or new love, Brandon. I have to say that I've enjoyed the series, but that this one was a bit of a let-down for me. I think it's because I could see where this one was going from page one and it wasn't the way I'd hoped it would go. However, I promise you won't be let down by reading any Karen Kingsbury novel - whether you read one of her many series, or her stand-alone titles. She has a way of writing that touches the heart and moves you to want to be in closer relationship with the God who made us.So Pretty it Hurts, by Kate White is one of her Bailey Weggins mysteries. These books are a series, but they don't need to be read in any particular order. Bailey is a true-crime writer in New York City, who always manages to find herself in the middle of a mystery that needs solving. In this case, Bailey sets out to solve (what appears to her to be) the murder of a famous supermodel, who died at a weekend house party that Bailey also happened to be attending. This is an entertaining book and it keeps you guessing to the end who the guilty party is. It's definitely a "fluffy" mystery - not anything depressing or with difficult content that kind of makes you despair as you read it. This would be a great sitting by the pool during the summer kind of read.
Another Christian fiction author I love is Lynn Austin. My friend, Charla, introduced me to Lynn Austin books several years ago with A Candle in the Darkness, and I've loved this author ever since. Her latest novel, Wonderland Creek, did not disappoint. In this novel, the main character, Allie realizes that she's been living her life through the characters in the books she is always wrapped up in. However, when her boyfriend dumps her and she loses her job at the local library (due to the Depression - the Great one, that is), she realizes it is time to start really living. So...she heads to the Appalachian Mountains of Kentucky to deliver books she's collected from donations to the local library in the "town" of Acorn. When she arrives, she ends up having to do more than just help the local library and Allie learns about real faith and what it really means to live life. I loved this one...it was just a great feel-good novel.
So there you have it. I think there were a few other books in there that I read, but I figure this is enough for one post. Happy reading!






1 comment:
Holy cow... you read a lot of books!
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