Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Thirteen Reasons Why by Jay Asher

Age Level: Teen

Format: Book

 

Thirteen Reasons Why is the story of one night in Clay Jenson’s life.  Clay is a normal high school student, a good student and all around nice guy.  One day, when coming home from school, he sees a package addressed to him on the front porch of his house.  When he opens the package, Clay finds seven cassette tapes with each side marked 1 – 13 in blue nail polish.  When he pops the first tape in his father’s tape player, he hears the voice of Hannah Baker, a classmate of his who recently committed suicide.   Clay is one of 13 people to receive the tapes, which tell her story and describe why she decided to commit suicide.  He spends that night listening to Hannah’s voice, visiting the places she wants him to go to, and becoming more and more horrified with the picture her voice paints.  He is also trying to figure out why he is one of the 13.  He knows he never wronged Hannah.

 

I like to read realistic fiction, especially when it comes to teen literature, and there’s really nothing more realistic than this book.  It gives a great depiction of the life of a teen who doesn’t fit in with the rest of her peers, as Hannah doesn’t.  It shows how rumors and innuendos start and how they really ruin a person’s belief in themselves.  Hannah was a normal girl, until one rumor started about her and then that rumor just continued to build into other rumors.  It’s a very compelling story of how we treat other people and how that treatment can really spiral until finally ruining another person’s self esteem.

 

The basic format of the book is set up so the reader will be reading Hannah's voice which is shown in the book by being in italics and then Clay's thoughts and reactions to what was just said.  It is a great format for this type of book as it helps you to get into the minds of both Clay and Hannah.

 

It’s a heartbreakingly real story that will change the way you look at how you treat other people.  You won’t be able to put it down.  I wasn’t.

 

Reviewed by Sara.

Thursday, October 18, 2007

Austenland by Shannon Hale

Age Level: Adult
Format: Book

Ever wonder what it would be like to live like Jane Austen did? Well, if you're a major fan of Austen's novels, chances are you've dreamed of Mr. Darcy. In Austenland, Jane Hayes is a thirty-something magazine graphics designer in New York City who has an obsession with Pride and Prejudice, especially the BBC production starring Colin Firth as Mr. Darcy. It does not help that every relationship she has been in has ended in some awful way, making her desire the fictitious Mr. Darcy more and more. When she confides to her great-aunt about her obsession, her great-aunt bequeaths Jane the opportunity to spend three weeks in Pembrook Park, a pseudo-Austen world set in the Regency period for Jane Austen devotees. Jane decides to enter Pembrook Park to get rid of her obsession with Mr. Darcy, and men in general, once and for all. What she learns and discovers about herself may just surprise her.

As an adorer of Jane Austen, though not a truly proclaimed Janeite, I really wanted to read this book. I was not disappointed with Austenland . A very quick read, this is something to read while relaxing on a Sunday afternoon. Though the ending is predictable, I enjoyed the storyline and noted similarities between Hale's characters and Austen's characters. Readers who have not read any of Austen's novels may not understand the references to Austen's characters or to Austen's storylines that appear throughout this book.

I would recommend this book to any Jane Austen admirer. For anyone who has dreamed of a Mr. Darcy, read this book!

Reviewed by Jessica