The weather today when I left school was wet, dreary, and downright miserable. Which made me want to curl up with a good book.
Sami Sabiri is first-generation Iranian-American. His father fled his homeland as a child and grew up in Canada. Sami's dad is strict and has high expectations for his son. Expectations that Sami doesn't find all that easy to live up to. He is the only Muslim student at his private school, which he refers to as Academy Hell because of the bullying he goes through at the hands of Eddy, a football player with a father who covers a multitude of sins with his checkbook.
Sami's dad has invited him on a trip to Toronto that will be combined with a business trip, a nice father-son getaway. But at the last minute, he has to cancel the plans for Sami to join him. Not only does this make Sami mad, but it also makes him suspicious that maybe his dad is having an affair.
Several nights after his father returns from Toronto, Sami is webcam-chatting with his two best friends, Marty and Andy (who lives across the street). Andy reports to Sami that there are people dressed in black, with dogs, outside Sami's house. Sami goes to investigate, thinking that Eddy and his cronies have actually followed through with their threats toward him. Instead, the FBI bursts into the house and hauls Dr. Sabiri out of the house in handcuffs and separates Sami and his mom for hours, questioning them, and destroys their house and much of their belongings.
It takes a while for the Sabiris and their lawyer to find out where Dr. Sabiri is being held and what the charges are. In the meantime, the arrest of a research director (Dr. Sabiri) at a lab that stores anthrax, smallpox, and other viruses and linked to an alleged terrorist group, the Brotherhood of Martyrs, is all over the news. The only person linked to the terrorist cell who was not arrested was the alleged leader, Tariq Hasan. Despite their strained relationship, Sami takes it upon himself to try to prove his father's innocence, at any cost.
This story had me hooked from the very beginning and I couldn't wait to see how it ended. There were a few surprises in store that I didn't see coming, which is always a refreshing change. This is definitely going on my list of recommendations for my students. It is a ripped-from-the-headlines story that will hopefully make them think.
Happy Reading!!!
A New Years resolution to read an average of one book a week for 2012....and this is the result....
Monday, October 15, 2012
Wednesday, October 10, 2012
#39--Eighth Grade is Making Me Sick: Ginny Davis's Year in Stuff by Jennifer L. Holm
As I was catching up on my cataloging this afternoon, this title caught my eye. The story of Ginny's 8th grade year is told through stuff--there are sticky notes, poems, journal entries, grocery lists, report cards, hand-drawn comic strips, homework assignments, bank statements, and STUFF. Over the course of the year, Ginny's family moves (twice), her mom has a baby, her older brother wreaks havoc, she writes lots of poems--for class assignments, her step-Bob loses his job, and Ginny survives 8th grade with her sense of humor still intact.
This was a cute and sometimes funny story and I think my students will like it. It was a quick, easy read and the graphics made it entertaining. I may have to go back and re-read it, just in case I missed something. :)
Happy Reading!!
This was a cute and sometimes funny story and I think my students will like it. It was a quick, easy read and the graphics made it entertaining. I may have to go back and re-read it, just in case I missed something. :)
Happy Reading!!
Tuesday, October 9, 2012
#38--The Exeter Blitz by David Rees
As I tend to dedicate much of my reading to historical fiction, I try to read about events that I don't always know much about. Today's book is an example. I have always heard about the Blitz occurring in London during WWII, and that there were other places that were bombed as well. However, I was not aware that the Blitz was carried out far to the eastern side of London. After the British destroyed the German port of Lubeck (of which there was very little point other than to try out new weapons), known for very little except its beauty and antiquity, Hitler was furious and then ordered the destruction of similar British cities: Norwich, Canterbury, York, Bath, and Exeter.
The Exeter Blitz follows one fictional family as they experience and then survive the night of May 3-4, 1942. The story is told from each family member's point of view at different times, which gives it a different feel. I enjoyed learning about a specific event that I was not previously familiar with and this was a quick (128 pages), easy read. This will be added to my list of recommendations when my students are looking for a WWII novel that is not specifically about the front or the Holocaust, so that they can get a sense of what it might have been like to live through an air raid as intensive as the bombing that destroyed much of Exeter, but, miraculously, left much of its famous cathedral in tact.
Happy Reading!!
**"Exeter Cathedral ." Exeter Cathedral. Sacred Destinations, 30 July 2010. Web. 09 Oct. 2012. http://www.sacred-destinations.com/england/exeter-cathedral.
Thursday, October 4, 2012
#37--Deadly by Julie Chibbaro
A few years ago a friend introduced me to podcasts.....and I was hooked. There are a number of ones I try to listen to regularly and most of them have to do with history---surprised, right? One of my favorites is Stuff You Missed in History Class from How Stuff Works. A while back there was one about Typhoid Mary (you can listen to the podcast by clicking on Mary's name), and I found it to be very interesting. I had heard the name thrown around growing up, but I didn't know too much about her. I enjoyed learning about her story and more about the nickname.
Today's book, Deadly, takes a another look at Typhoid Mary's story, from the point of view of a young assistant working on the case for the Department of Health and Sanitation in New York City. Prudence Galewski has left school to take a job as an assistant in a laboratory that is investigating a typhoid fever outbreak. Prudence finally feels like she is doing something to help people since she was unable to save either her father from going to war or her brother from dying. Along the way, Prudence learns many things, both about life and about herself.
As the story is told from Prudence's point of view, we only see Mary through her eyes, but we also get a glimpse of how the public viewed Mary and the case through newspaper articles and Prudence's comments about what others say and do regarding the case. I felt that the story was presented very well and in a way that the audience might be able to grasp the idea of a healthy person being a carrier of a possibly deadly disease....I know that is something that I sometimes wonder how it could have happened/does happen. Typhoid Mary is considered to be a medical mystery as there doesn't seem to be any evidence that she ever showed symptoms of typhoid.
This was a good read and I think I may have to add it to my list of books I book talk for my students!
Happy Reading!!
Today's book, Deadly, takes a another look at Typhoid Mary's story, from the point of view of a young assistant working on the case for the Department of Health and Sanitation in New York City. Prudence Galewski has left school to take a job as an assistant in a laboratory that is investigating a typhoid fever outbreak. Prudence finally feels like she is doing something to help people since she was unable to save either her father from going to war or her brother from dying. Along the way, Prudence learns many things, both about life and about herself.
As the story is told from Prudence's point of view, we only see Mary through her eyes, but we also get a glimpse of how the public viewed Mary and the case through newspaper articles and Prudence's comments about what others say and do regarding the case. I felt that the story was presented very well and in a way that the audience might be able to grasp the idea of a healthy person being a carrier of a possibly deadly disease....I know that is something that I sometimes wonder how it could have happened/does happen. Typhoid Mary is considered to be a medical mystery as there doesn't seem to be any evidence that she ever showed symptoms of typhoid.
This was a good read and I think I may have to add it to my list of books I book talk for my students!
Happy Reading!!
Labels:
book,
historical fiction,
medicine,
Typhoid Mary,
YA
Monday, October 1, 2012
#36--Me and Earl and the Dying Girl by Jesse Andrews
On the first day of his senior year of high school, Greg Gaines thinks he has survived the day intact and unobserved--about as good as he can expect from high school, so, not a bad day. Within hours of getting home, his mom drops a bomb on him....a girl he knows from Hebrew school has cancer...and his mom wants him to spend time with her. Can you say awkward? Greg and Rachel aren't really friends, but there is no way his mom is backing down on this one. Greg and Rachel start hanging out and eventually Greg's only other friend, Earl, enters the picture. Earl and Greg are amateur filmmakers, but refuse to let anyone else see what they have created....until Earl offers their movies up to Rachel as a way to try to cheer her up. Everything snowballs from there.
This is probably my least favorite book I've read all year so far. It started out with promise--I actually laughed out loud during the first few pages. But gratuitous use of off-color language pretty quickly turned me off....and I didn't really like any of the characters but Rachel by the end of the book, and Rachel wasn't really that fleshed out....so that tells you how much I really didn't like the rest of the cast. I actually contemplated putting it down and not finishing it after about 75 pages, but decided to slog through it in the hopes that it would improve. Unfortunately, that never happened. :(
This is probably my least favorite book I've read all year so far. It started out with promise--I actually laughed out loud during the first few pages. But gratuitous use of off-color language pretty quickly turned me off....and I didn't really like any of the characters but Rachel by the end of the book, and Rachel wasn't really that fleshed out....so that tells you how much I really didn't like the rest of the cast. I actually contemplated putting it down and not finishing it after about 75 pages, but decided to slog through it in the hopes that it would improve. Unfortunately, that never happened. :(
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)