Showing posts with label reading suggestions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reading suggestions. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Day 28: Favorite Title

I am taking part in the 30 Day Book Challenge.  Click the link to do it too (and add your blog to my meme)!  *could someone please tell me why my draft page reads "30 Day Book Challenge" and my actual blog page reads "96 Day Book Challenge"?  How do I fix this*

Most of the time I browse book shelves and pull out books based upon their titles.  Then I read the back (or the book jacket) for the synopsis.  If I like what I see, I might flip the book open and read a random page here and there.  If I don't like what I see then I put it back on the shelf.  A good title though--that's what initially piques my interest.  


A good title is essential to book sales.  It's so important to have a title that will grab a reader's attention and inspire curiosity.  And there are so many great titles out there!  It's hard to just pick one, but I'm going to try.



I only picked this book up because it had "Grimm" in the title.  I love Grimm's Fairy Tales.  I especially enjoy the original grisly tales.  The "Legacy" part of Polly Shulman's title insinuates a connection to those darker stories.  I glanced at the book jacket and I was hooked.  I bought it.  I read it.  I loved it.  But I don't think I ever would have even pulled it from the shelf if not for the title.

Shulman's title addressed a particular audience.  It was aimed at people like me--people who are interested in the original Grimm tales.  This title is effective because it markets to a particular audience.

If you're intrigued by the title, then read it.  It's worth it.

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Reader Wednesday: 3 Great Books To Check Out (at your library)

Apology:  This entry is a total cop out.  I have the flu and don't feel up to much.  As a result I'm going to give you three book recommendations (1 picture book, 1 YA, 1 adult). These books should be available at your local library, and if they aren't then all three can surely be found at your local bookseller!

Picture Book:

Scaredy cat is back, and he's on a mission!  He wants to scare someone, anyone, but he has a problem...he keeps scaring himself!

Young Adult:


Evie is  no normal teenager.  She has no family and works for the International Paranormal Containment Agency (where she also lives).  Her best friend lives in a tricked out aquariam and she thinks she might be in love with a boy who isn't a boy at all--in fact, he's not even human.  Oh yeah--and she can see through glamours to the monsters underneath! 

Adult:


The Sparrow women are different.  Each are born in the fickle month of March, each spend time in Cake House, and each receives a strange "gift" upon her thirteenth birthday.  Stella's grandmother can literally smell a lie, her mother can dream other people's dreams, and Stella is about to turn thirteen...

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Reader Wednesday: Books For All Ages

Today's Reader Wednesday post is all about books!  I was looking for some emerging authors to spotlight on my blog, but since I didn't find any I decided to do something else.  (If you are an emerging author and would like to be spotlighted please email me and we'll talk). 

I always like it when people suggest a good book for me to read.  Today I'd like to do that for you.  I have suggestions for picture books, middle grades, and young adult.  The first book under each heading is an older book you may have forgotten all about (or maybe don't even know about).  The second book is a newer book.

Picture Books

James Herriot was an English veterinarian with a life long love of all things furry. Herriot's love of animals translates to his masterfully written children's stories.  Peter Barrett provides some of the most beautiful illustrations ever seen in a picture book.  Moses the Kitten tells the story of a lost kitten who is near death when he is found by a veterinarian.  The kitten finds the will to live and a new home in this children's classic!






Halloween Night by Marjorie Dennis Murray is the best Halloween themed picture book I've seen in a long time!  Murray offers a new spin on a classic poem, reworking Twas the Night Before Christmas for Halloween.  This book is almost as fun to look at as it is to read.  Brandon Dorman's digital art is amazingly detailed and each page is filled with bright and colorful illustrations.





Middle Grades

I first read Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird in my advanced 7th grade English class.  I read a lot of absolutely amazing books that year, books that stuck with me.  Lee's one and only novel, To Kill a Mockingbird is sure to stick with anyone who reads it.  It tells the moving story of Scout Finch, her brother Jem, and their father Atticus--a lawyer who instructs them never to shoot mockingbirds because all they do is sing pretty songs.  Set during the depression, the story exposes real life issues when a black man is accused of raping a white woman and Atticus decides to serve as his defense attorney.  Beautifully written and surprisingly relevant, To Kill a Mockingbird is an excellent read for any age.




Riordan, who tackled Greek mythology in his famous "Percy Jackson" series, brings ancient Egypt to life in The Red Pyramid.  The story opens with Carter (14) and Sadie (12), a brother and sister who have been raised apart, going on a private tour of the British Museum with their Egyptologist Father, Dr. Julian Kane.  When something goes horribly wrong at the museum Sadie and Carter must unearth family secrets, learn magic, and yes, defeat a God, all just to save the world!  Riordan is a master storyteller and The Red Pyramid is sure to become a classic read.




Young Adult


Written in 1922 The Great Gatsby still resonates with readers nearly 90 years later.  F. Scott Fitzgerald weaves an intricate tale of love, lust, greed, and grief.  Self made millionaire Jay Gastby is the title character and his love for beautiful, eccentric and married Daisy Buchanan drives the plot.  Gatsby and Daisy embody the lavishness of the Jazz Age and lavishness often leads to tragedy.  The Great Gatsby was evocative when I read it ten years ago, and it's still a page turner.





Michael Scott's The Alchemyst: The Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel is the first book in an exciting new series (new being relative--book four was released this summer).  Flamel is the stuff of legend, literally, and Scott brings him to life.  The Alchemyst follows Josh and Sophie Newman, 15 year old twins with surprising abilities even they are unaware of.  When Josh takes a job at a rare book store across the street from the cafe where his sister works the last thing he expects is to witness a robbery.  When the bookstore is attacked by weird creatures with "dead-looking skin" and an important rare book is swiped, the twins learn the book is actually a Codex and the Codex mentions them! Are Josh and Sophie the twins mentioned in an ancient prophesy?  Can they learn magic?  Can they save the world? Check out The Alchemyst and find out for yourself!

If you have enjoyed this post be sure to let me know with a comment, email, or by writing on the wall of my facebook page!  If you are an author who would like to be spotlighted in an upcoming post, please email me at jenniferwelbornwrites@gmail.com.  If you're a reader with suggestions, or you'd like to see a similar post with adult books, please let me know.  Feel free to comment with some of your favorite reads! Here's wishing you all Happy Reading!

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Reader Wednesday: Favorite Books/Authors

I didn't get any prompts or writing suggestions today so I decided to give my readers some suggestions instead.  I wanted to keep with the theme "Reader Wednesday" and this is what I came up with. 

Today I am going to give you a list of some of my current favorite authors and books.  If you decide to try something on the list and you like it too then please let me know.  I love it when I help a person discover a great read!

Fiction:

1. Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman
2. The Probable Future by Alice Hoffman
3. The Surgeon by Tess Gerritsen
4. Ghouls Gone Wild by Victoria Laurie (a light, easy read: no real depth, but fun)
5. The Lost Hours by Karen White

Nonfiction:

1. Eat, Pray, Love by Elizabeth Gilbert (this book really is as good as people say it is)
2. What Color is Your Parachute 2010 by Richard N. Bolles (great for job-hunters)
3. Playing the Game: The Street Smart Guide to Graduate School by Fred Frank and Karl Stein
4. Mysteries of the Middle Ages by Thomas Cahill
5. 2011 Writer's Market (ed.) by Robert Lee Brewer

Teen:

1. Hex Hall by Rachel Hawkins
2. Valiant by Holly Black
3. Speak by Laurie Halse Anderson
4. The Necromancer by Michael Scott
5. The Lost Hero by Rick Riordan

Children:

1. Fancy Nancy by Jane O'Connor and Robin Preiss Glasser
2. Lilly's Purple Plastic Purse by Kevin Henkes
3. The Giving Tree by Shel Silverstein
4. Chicka Chicka Boom Boom by Bill Martin, Jr.
5. Waking Up Is Hard to Do by Neil Sedaka

Happy reading!