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Category Archives: Guest post

My Daughter’s Top 11 books of 2011

My 13 year old daughter picked her top books she read for the first time last year (she’s a voracious reader, and had plenty to choose from!).  Links point to Goodreads, except for Audition, which she reviewed here.

 
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Posted by on January 15, 2012 in books, Guest post, summary

 

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Teen Review: Audition by Stasia Ward Kehoe

Audition by Stasia Ward KehoeThis review was written by my 13 year old daughter.

From Audition:

You learn the beginning
Is first position
Heels together,
Feet pointed as far to the sides
As your rotating hips will allow

And when you are small
And at that beginning
Your body is as flexible
As your mind.

Amelia’s rating: 5 of 5 stars

Wow.

Audition was just…

I read the whole thing in one sitting. I admit it, I normally read books for their plots. These words just flowed so beautifully it worked for me. Last time I tried to read a free verse book I was very confused and completely lost the story. In Audition, I could follow the plot perfectly and found myself reading a lot of it aloud just to hear how the words sounded and the way that they flowed.

Dance was the perfect topic for a free verse, the words were like dancers themselves performing their own ballet. Stasia was a dancer herself and you could tell. There was just a power through her words that only a dancer could describe. There was also a raw passion so that you could sense both Sara’s passion and Stasia’s love for dance.

It honestly had been awhile since I read a book with a teenage girl main character that didn’t bug me to bits. Sara changed that. She was likeable, she was smart, she was talented, she was nice, she had a dream, and she followed it. Sure, she had her flaws, who doesn’t? If she had been perfect she wouldn’t have had a story. At least for me, she was somewhat relatable. I often felt the same way she did about things, so I really got into the plot. The way the story was told made me feel happy for her when she had her victories, and actually made me feel sorry for her when she had her losses. A lot of the time for me, especially with teenage girls when they have problems, I just want to yell, ”OK we get it! Your life is horrible! Can we move on now?” In Sara’s story, it was all about the small victories and losses, not just one huge problem. She had problems with school, dance, and relationships (both in Jersey and back home). Her growing connections with the people from the ballet, especially Lisette and Rem, seemed realistic to me. Also the growing friendship and sibling bond between Sara and Julio felt well put in and well thought out.

Over the course of the year Sara changes. That’s to be expected. What kind of 16 year old girl moves away and stays the same person they were before. I could just feel Sara developing, I didn’t need it to say “Sara changed over the next few months”. I could just tell from the writing. She matured, became a better dancer, a better person, AND she got a new out-look on life.

Audition really was about Sara, The other characters were very important, but this was her story. Her ups and downs in life, not just her interactions with other people. That being said, I felt that I still got to know the minor characters. I really am a person who looks for deep characters when I read a book. I was very satisfied.

I really feel a lot of the time with books I read I am learning the main character’s story, but with Audition I didn’t just read about Sara, I WAS Sara. I understood her elation, her frustration, her confusion with who she was. With a lot of the books I read I feel the main character is too set, they are too girly or too anti-girly, basically they know exactly who they want to be. This was not true with Sara, she has trouble balancing school and dance. This gets even harder when her talent for writing comes through.

As much as I loved Audition I don’t think I have EVER read a book where there wasn’t at least one thing that I didn’t like or would have done differently. For me that’s OK because I know that everyone has different opinions. I also feel even if I were writing I wouldn’t be any happier with the outcome. With Audition it was mostly when Sara didn’t notice something that I did. It wasn’t that big of a deal for me because it was almost all small details that she missed, and I was always very happy with when she made those breakthroughs.  Although I have never read a book that was perfect, this came pretty close. I don’t know how someone who had little or no dance experience would have felt about it.  For me the ballet terminology was not a problem and was interesting, I don’t know what other people will think of the way it is integrated into the plot.

For that time, I was transfixed by beautiful language and a inspiring story that makes you want to follow your dream.

Amelia is 13 years old, and in 8th grade.  If she isn’t at school, dance or practicing rhythmic gymnastics, there’s a good chance she’ll be reading a book!  Audition inspired her to write this poem of her own:

Your bare feet side across the wooden floor
In a split second you push off
In that second the energy is everywhere
Through the tips of your toes
To tingling up your spine to your scalp
And for that moment
Nothing
Matters
Not even gravity
Can stop
You

For those few seconds
You
Are
In
Control
You can
Be anyone
Do anything
When
You
Dance

 

I picked up this copy of Audition  from the publisher at NCIBA, for the purpose of reviewing it.  I hope to read it myself someday, if Amelia ever allows it out of her possession.

 
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Posted by on December 6, 2011 in books, Guest post, reviews

 

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Teen Review: Dear Pen Pal by Heather Vogel Fredrick

This is a guest post by my 13 year old daughter

Amelia’s rating: 4 of 5 stars

I really did enjoy this book. I found that it was a fun, light, and fast read. This book, along with being fun, I think was relatively well written (at least it was good enough to not take away from the fun-ness). I found the balance between the characters and the plot to be a good one.

One of the things I love about the mother-daughter book club books is how each of the girls has a different voice. I felt that the different writing styles was really good for identifying with the 5 very different girls: Emma is a writer that comes from a family full of books, who is slowly figuring that “the pen is mightier than the sword”. Jess is the smart farm girl that can sing, who recently came out of her shell and attends a boarding school where she  rooms with the snobby daughter of a senator. Cassidy is the only girl on a boys hockey team, who is having trouble with change. Megan is the aspiring fashion designer who finds herself in the middle of a war between her eco-friendly vegetarian mother and her fashionista grandmother. Becca is the Mother-Daughter book club’s newest member who, is still a “frenemy” with the most of the other girls in the book club.

I found the interaction with Savannah (Jess’s new roommate) interesting. She starts out making life for the mother-daughter book club awful. After “Operation New Roommate” backfires, she puts a very sticky surprise in the girls pillows. Later, she helps Jess, Cassidy, Megan, Becca, Zach and Darcy with a “not-so-secret-puppy” for Emma. She then ends up stealing Jess’s date to the dance. Finally she becomes good friends with Jess.

This is one of the few series where the characters age with me. When I read the first book I was about a year younger, maybe less, than the girls. When I read the second I was the same age, and in this book they are again about a year older by the end . I like how over the 3 years all of the girls have developed and changed to be a lot better of people. I also like how you can tell that the girls are getting older and how that affects their relationships with each other as they “race” to see who of the 5 girls is going to get the first kiss (not who they expected).

The book club chooses to read Daddy Long Legs by Jean Webster when Jess receives an anonymous  scholarship for a boarding school. I found the way that they always found a reason not to tell the end of the book both funny and useful in helping people become more interested in reading Daddy Long Legs. Because I haven’t read Daddy Long Legs I was then interested in reading it.

The mothers of the book club decide to become pen pals with an other mother-daughter book club in Wyoming that is also reading Daddy Long Legs. I found the addition of the pen pals was a nice change. I liked the pen pals because each girl had a different relationship with their pen pal.

This was a light fun read that over all I enjoyed.

Amelia is 13 years old, and will be entering 8th grade in the fall.  When she isn’t at school, dance or practicing rhythmic gymnastics, there’s a good chance she’ll be reading a book!

 
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Posted by on July 14, 2011 in books, Guest post, reviews

 

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Review: The Dead and the Gone by Susan Beth Pfeffer (guest post)

This is a guest post by my 13 year old daughter.

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

The Dead and The Gone is not normally the type of book that I read. I am not that big a fan of the end of the world type of book.That being said, however, I did really enjoy this book as well as Life as We Knew It.

As is it did for Miranda in Life as We Knew it everything changes when the asteroid hits the moon. I found the fact that Alex was just a normal teen with parents and two younger sisters at the beginning of the book gave the story a creepy sense of realism. Now Alex is alone in New York City with no parents and two younger sisters relying on him.

I found the balance between the creepy and corpsey-ness of the outside world and the struggles that Alex, Bri, and Julie are facing as everything they knew disappears was very well thought out.

One of the best things about this book was the characters. I really felt like I got to know each of the them. I also felt like almost all of the people had a lot of developing to do. This helped me connect with the characters as well as making them seem more real.

I found the developing of Alex and Julie’s relationship from two siblings that took every chance they could to get at each other to being at uneasy truce to finally realizing that they needed other. I found Julie’s journey from being a “12 year old baby” to a mature teenager by the end of the book was interesting and realistic and made for a good sub plot.

On the other hand I found some of the descriptions disturbing and as my friend pointed out I now have a fear of elevators.

Overall I found that this book had a good plot and was well written.

Amelia is 13 years old, and will be entering 8th grade in the fall.  When she isn’t at school, dance or practicing rhythmic gymnastics, there’s a good chance she’ll be reading a book!

 
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Posted by on June 29, 2011 in books, Guest post, reviews

 

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My Daughter’s Top 10 Books of 2010

A Guest Post by my 12 year old daughter!

Some of My Favorite Books that I read in 2010

  • Thirteenth Child By Patricia C. Wrede
  • A Stitch in Time By Ann Rinaldi
  • Deep Down Popular By Phoebe Stone
  • The Young Wizard Series By Diane Duane
  • Princess of Glass and Princess of the Midnight Ball By Jessica Day George
  • The Season By Sarah MacLean
  • If I Stay By Gale Forman
  • Mockingjay By Suzanne Collins
  • Alanna: The First Adventure By Tamora Pierce
  • The Lost Hero By Rick Riordan

This list is in not ordered and mostly represents the books of the second half of the year.

 
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Posted by on December 30, 2010 in books, Guest post, summary

 

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