Friday, 20 November 2015

Books + Age = ??

When did society decide that there was an age limit to how old you can be to read a certain book and for it to still be considered acceptable?

For example, who's to say that I can't pick up a Mr Men or Little Miss book and read it from cover to cover and enjoy every word of it? This is with remembering that I am 18 years old and I could probably do that in around 5 minutes. I loved reading those books when I was younger and when I think about the stories now I still smile. I loved the adventures and the characters and how I could relate the things that they did to things that happened in real life. They made the world seem simpler and a little less scary.

The reason I was thinking about this was because I was on the bus yesterday reading Peter Pan by JM Barrie and people began looking at me strangely. I understand that it is considered a "children's classic" but the story is loved by so many people, all of a variety of ages, I just happened to be the one who decided to read it on the bus. I was reading this book not because I thought it would be a good read, I knew it would be. I was reading it because I love the story of Peter Pan. I enjoy reading it and it reminds me of my childhood.

I don't understand why there needs to be an age where you have to stop reading certain books. Who says you can't pick up a book that you read when you were 10 and read it again when you are 20 and still be just as in love with it. Who made these rules?

I mean Harry Potter is one of those books that you can read at any age. Just think about it. If you were to go into a coffee shop and see an old man sitting in the corner reading the first Harry Potter book while at the opposite end of the shop was a little girl reading the same story, how would you react?

I bet most of you would begin to think about your own memories of reading the book and how you felt when Harry, Ron and Hermione first met. I bet you think about how old you were when you first picked up the book. What if I was to tell you that the little girl was reading it for the second time while it was the first time that the old man had read those words. How would you react then? Would you judge the old man or would you smile and appreciate that he was taking the time to read it?

Ok, I understand that some books need an age restriction because of the content. I understand that it would be highly inappropriate to give a 10 year old a book like 50 Shades of Grey to read. But that is a restriction, not a limit.

Isn't one of the best things about books the fact that you can go back to them again and again and still fall in love with the story? But how can you do that if you grow up and exceed the age limit? I always find a new sense of love for a story when I re-read a book, even books that I read when I was 5 or 6 years old.

A lot of adults (I don't yet consider myself to be a fully-fledged adult) I know said that they couldn't wait until their children were old enough that they could read books to them. This was just so that they had a reason to go into a book shop and go to the children's section and pick up all of the picture books they loved while they were growing up. Yep, the truth is kids, your parents had you so that it was acceptable for them to read their favourite books again... sorry to break the news to you.

I know that the limit is just how books are categorised in bookstores and how advertising companies know how to advertise the book but it is still something that people stick to. In an ideal world people wouldn't judge others but that is not the world we live in.

The stares will just have be accepted.

Wednesday, 18 November 2015

Amy and Roger's Epic Detour by Morgan Matson


Although the cover of this book gives off the impression of a cute little romance of two people who go on a road trip, which it is, it is so much more than that too.

The book starts with a series of emails and school reports followed by Amy sitting on the front steps of her house watching the world go by. This is before she meets the handsome young man that she is going to be travelling across the country with. This is before the detour and the healing.


The reason for the road trip in the first place is because Amy is moving and someone has to take her mother's car to the new house. Amy is moving because her whole family has fallen apart. Her mother has a new job, her brother is in rehab and her father died in a car accident that she blames herself for.


Though the main reason behind the book is to watch these two strangers fall in love in the most unlikely way, I felt that following Amy's journey of reconnecting with herself and forgiving herself for "the accident" was the best part of the book.


 Amy blamed herself for the accident because she was driving when she could have easily blamed her brother as it was him that they were driving to. This shows how much Amy cared about her father. He was more of her twin than her brother was and I think that is why it hit her so hard.


I could never imagine losing my father that way and him and I are not as close as Amy and her father. Losing a parent is just something that no child wants to think about, let alone try and move on from while you are alone.


I think that is why Amy had such a hard time coming to terms with her father's death. She closed herself off from the world and her mother and bother weren't ready to talk about it with her yet. I think the detour with Roger helped her to see that talking could help and that people can help you get through difficult times even if they don't know who you are.


I think that Morgan Matson was so clever with the way that she developed the romance throughout the book while also integrating Amy's life into the story. The development was so subtle that I barely noticed it until I was nearing the end. This is such a clever and insightful read for a romance book and I would highly recommend it.

Monday, 2 November 2015

A book you can finish in a day

The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams

"Don't Panic!" This book is a great read.

Yes, I know this book is not one that is normally read by an 18 year old who spends most of her life on a bus so normally would take longer than one day to read but let's just ignore that.

The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is just one crazy adventure.

There is one Earth-man left who's best friend is an alien from another planet. The two of them get thrown off of the ship which they got picked up by when the Earth got blown up before getting picked up by another ship seconds before they died in space. On this ship they come across a depressed robot and get taken to a planet that is run by mice.

Confusing, right?

Let me explain my theory on why it is written the way that it is.

I think that The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is written in such a strange and complex way to give the reader a better idea as to how everything is being documented. It also helps the reader to understand how Arthur and Ford are seeing things. It gets across their emotions and views at a specific moment when something crazy is happening, such as talking to mice for example.

This book is definitely the kind of book that you would pick up when you wanted something fun to read. I wouldn't pick this book up thinking that it is an easy read because it isn't really. It's not that the language is complicated or that the story is hard to follow but the writing style can get confusing at times.

Overall I loved this story. I loved the crazy characters and the crazy world that they get to be a part of. I am most definitely going to pick up the rest of the books in the series.



Monday, 24 August 2015

A book from an author you love that you haven't read yet

City Of Heavenly Fire by Cassandra Clare


This is the final book in the Mortal Instruments series and what a great final instalment it was. It was a book that I had been wanting to read for so long, so when I was finally able to get the book and sit down to read it I was over the moon. 

I loved the story of this book but I felt that the second half was a lot more exciting and gripping than the first. I felt that the first half was just a lot of explanations and build up while the second half contained all of the action and major plot moments. I would also say that this book was too long. It took me 27 days to read this book and by the end all I wanted was for the book to end. I hated feeling like that because when I was reading it I loved the plot of it and how to characters to developed. 

Before I get into anything else I just want to write a little about Simon Lewis now. HOW COULD CASSANDRA ALMOST KILL OFF SIMON?!?! I sobbed like a little baby while I read the scene of Simon giving up his immortality and his memories of the shadow world to free them all from Edom. It honestly broke my heart to read about how all of his friends felt like there was something missing from their lives but when Simon said it I could have screamed I was so happy. I also loved that Magnus was able to fix Simon to an extent so that he could be a part of the shadow world again. 

I loved meeting all of the new characters in this book. Emma was really just a mixture of Jace and Clary. She was good and loving but also tough, closed-off and secretive. She and Jules were the perfect pairing but I think that she will realise that she doesn't want to be Jules' parabatai as she gets older and I hope that she realises it before it's too late for her to change her mind. I felt sorry for Emma when we first meet her because she loses her parents in such an unexplained way and nobody is willing to look into it or her to allow her to have some closure over what happened. I loved how she was awestruck by Jace and Clary too because of the stories had heard for the older Blackthorn children. It was almost how someone would feel if they met a celebrity, in a way Emma was meeting a celebrity. It just so happened that it was two Shadowhunter celebrities. 

I loved all of the Blackthorn children too. Helen and Mark are the two controversial children who are part Shadowhunter, part Fairie. Both feel that they have to prove themselves as Shadowhunters because of this. Then there is Julian or Jules as he is called by his family and Emma. Julian is a smart, headstrong boy who would do anything for the people he cares about and would protect those people with his life. Then there is the twins, Tiberius and Livia or Ty and Livvy. These two are inseparable and are really the only two people who fully understand each other. They really are stereotypical twins. The youngest two are Drusilla and Tavvy. These two are not really described much other than they are small and are typical Blackthorn children. 

Ok, so the whole heavenly fire thing... why could Clary not have just stabbed Sebastian in the last book? I mean, it could have saved a lot of lives and a lot of problems would have been avoided. Jace wouldn't have had to learn to control anything, Simon wouldn't have lost all of his memories because nobody would have had to go to Edom to fight Sebastian because he would already be dead, Jordan would still be alive, Emma's parents would most likely still be alive and the Blackthorn's would all still be together. Yes, Sebastian was heavily guarded and yes, it was easier for Clary to stab Jace but still! 

I could honestly sit here all day and write about this book and how amazing it was, how annoyed I am at some of it, how it toyed with my emotions the whole time and how I would happily read it again. I would happily read the whole series again and I cannot wait until the next series comes out. I'm just glad that it should be soon. 

Sunday, 26 July 2015

A trilogy

The Trylle Trilogy By Amanda Hocking


The Trylle trilogy follows a 17 year old girl named Wendy when she discovers that her family are in fact not her family. Instead they are a host family that her biological mother left her with in place of their own child when she was born. Not only is Wendy not related to her family, she is also not human either. She is a troll. The three books follow Wendy coming to terms with who she really is while also going through some pretty crazy stuff. 

Wendy had a rocky relationship with her biological mother in the first two books. This is what caused most of the conflict in Wendy's life while she was trying to come to terms with being a princess. Elora was a very closed-off person that rarely let someone into her life from the fear of losing them. Elora keeps Wendy at arm's length through the majority of the trilogy but in the last book the powers that Elora has finally kill her. Before dying though her and Wendy share some sweet moments. On Wendy's 18th birthday they eat breakfast together and discuss Wendy's birth and the problems that came with Wendy being born. They also share a moment the night before Elora's death when she tells Wendy how much she really does love her and how she regrets the things she did in her life, especially the things that have happened since Wendy's return. This for me was an amazing way for things to end between the pair. They had mended their rocky relationship and become a mother and daughter who loved each other and were no longer afraid to share it. 

A large part of the trilogy follows Wendy falling in love. The main love interest in the trilogy is her tracker, Finn. Finn and Wendy know that they can never be together but Wendy wants to be with Finn no matter what it costs her. Finn however, won't let Wendy give up her life to be with him. This relationship angered me. Wendy was willing to do anything to be with Finn while Finn would not fight for her. Eventually Wendy gave up waiting for Finn to fight for her and told him that she couldn't wait around for him anymore because she knew that whatever she did, he would find a way to not be with her. Their ending was very bittersweet however. Wendy and Finn still care deeply for each other but know by the end of the last book that they are not right for each other. They are both married with children in the final part of Ascend and are very happy for each other and the way their lives have turned out but neither of them expected their lives to end up the way that they did.

Wendy also has another love interest. This love interest was from an enemy clan, kidnapped her, then let her go and then continually came after her again and again until finally he gave up and decided to stay with her people instead of his own because he could not see her get hurt. His name is Loki. I love Loki for Wendy. He wouldn't give up on wanting to be with her and made it clear that this was his intention. He always made sure that she was safe but also wouldn't stand in her way when she had set her mind to something. He loved her as much as was possible and she felt the same way for him. I was so glad that these two ended up together. I felt that their love was genuine and their son was the light of their life. 

While Wendy was falling in love with Loki and ending things with Finn though, she was married to her friend, Tove. This was an arranged marriage and they both went into it knowing that they didn't love each other romantically. They also never would love each other romantically because Tove in gay. They got their marriage annulled when Tove saw how in love Loki and Wendy were and he wanted to have a chance to be in love with someone. 

Overall I found the story of the whole trilogy very entertaining and a good read but I felt that the dialogue and some of the writing was too formal. The story was supposed to be told from a 17-18 year old who had just found out that she was a troll princess. I thought that it could have been written less formally and the story would still would have been as good. Wendy afterall was supposed to be a bit of a rebel princess... 

Saturday, 13 June 2015

A book set in the future

Uglies by Scott Westerfeld



Love, friendship, truth, lies and adventure. Uglies has it all. 

The book is centred around a fifteen year old girl named Tally who cannot wait until her sixteenth birthday when she will become a pretty. Three months before her birthday however, she becomes friends with another girl named Shay. Shay is also an ugly and on her sixteenth birthday she too is meant to become a pretty but she has other plans. When Shay decides to run away it is Tally who is left to pick up the pieces. She cannot become pretty unless she brings back Shay but she also does not want to have to follow her friend into the unknown. As expected though, she does follow her friend and does find her but is conflicted about turning in her and the people she is staying with. When the truth about what really happens when becoming a pretty is revealed to Tally she finally makes her decision. This decision is followed by more conflict and problem that have to be solved. 

Through the story, Scott Westerfeld leaves the reader thinking a great deal about how we view others in society. When we first meet Tally she believes that there are ugly people and then there are pretty people but is conflicted when she reaches "the smoke". In the smoke all of the people are what Tally considers ugly until she falls in love with one. This is when she decides that although "Pretties" maybe beautiful, "Uglies" can be too. She works out that the ugliness that she witnessed growing up was just the awkward stage that comes with adolescence. Everyone knows this "stage" that she is talking about when nobody quite fits their body right and are all trying to work out who they really are. Tally finds all of this while in the smoke with her friends. 

The friendships that are created in Uglies are ones full of love. There may be mistrust amongst some, they may lie to one another on occasion and they may not always get along but they share a great love for one another. These are the friendships that everyone has and can relate to. That is what draws you into the story in the beginning. When Tally meets Shay she never intended in them being friends but by the time Shay was running away she didn't want her to go. Not out of being selfish and wanting her to stay (even thought that was part of the reason) but because she had come to care about her friend. She was worried about what may become of her and whether or not the two would meet again. 

When Tally also fell in love with David, it was unexpected. At first she could not admit to herself that she liked this young man who was neither ugly nor pretty but she could not help herself from falling for him. She was a girl who never believed she could love someone who looked the way he did. 

Westerfeld also shows his readers in his book how easy it is for people of authority to lie to those below them without them ever finding out. The people of the society Tally is part of have been lied to all of their lives, and with a little influence they do not question anything that they are told. They just accept what they are told as the truth instead of discovering what truly happens behind closed doors. 

Westerfeld has created a society that can be related to in some way by all of his readers. His writing both takes you to a new place while also leaving you in your own world to debate with yourself what he is telling you. 

Friday, 12 June 2015

The Infinite Sea by Rick Yancey


Rick Yancey did another great job on this book. The imagery he uses throughout the book really does help you to become part of the world that his characters live in. I had to put this book aside for a while to concentrate on my exams but with Yancey's writing style it barely took me any time at all to fall back into the story. I truly believe that this is what makes a good writer.

The Infinite Sea is the sequel to The 5th Wave. It continues on from the ending of The 5th Wave, where we find the group hiding out in a rat-infested hotel. The majority of the book follows the group in the hotel and the dangers they face while staying there. 

A large part of the book however, follows Ringer/Marika. Ringer was one of the members of Zombie's squad. Her story begins when she is preparing to go off without the rest of the squad to find safety elsewhere for them as she felt that they had been in the same place for too long. This leads to a series of problems that she has to get herself out of while also trying to protect all of her friends. 

Throughout the story there were often references to the title of the book. The characters would subtly mention it to describe the situation that they found themselves in. These subtle references allowed me to understand why Yancey had name the book The Infinite Sea. 

A large part of the book was made up of references to "the rats". These rats turned out not to be rats at all and the group were so obsessed with them because they simbolised human beings. To the aliens who had invaded the Earth the humans were the rats, rats who they wanted to destroy from the inside out. They don't just want to kill the rats as quickly as possible though, they want them to know that they are being hunted. They want them to be scared of their hunter. 

One thing about this book that I enjoyed less than the one before is that some of the storyline drags out. I know that is to be expected when a book is set in one building for the most part but I think that it could have been made more exciting. 

If I were to rate this book I would give it a 4/5 starts. This is just down to the slow pace that some of it had but on the most part the book it a great read. 





Wednesday, 29 April 2015

The 5th Wave by Rick Yancey



The 5th Wave is about the 5th wave of an alien invasion. On the back of the book it reads:


"THE 1ST WAVE 
TOOK OUT HALF A MILLION PEOPLE.

THE 2ND WAVE
PUT THAT NUMBER TO SHAME.

THE 3RD WAVE
LASTED A LITTLE LONGER, TWELVE WEEKS... FOUR BILLION DEAD.

IN THE 4TH WAVE,
YOU CAN'T TRUST THAT PEOPLE ARE STILL PEOPLE.

AND THE 5TH WAVE?
NO ONE KNOWS. BUT IT'S COMING."

This is what drew me in to the book. I wanted to know what this 5th wave was but was pulled deeper into the story when I met Cassie (for Cassiopeia) in the first section of the book.


Cassie was a normal 16 year old who spent her days dreaming out boys, gossiping with her best friend and fawning over her little brother. That was before the first wave hit. Now Cassie is a girl desperate to survive the invasion long enough to get her brother back from the people who put him on a big, yellow school bus full of children before killing her father while she watched from her hiding spot. All she has to go on is rumours of a camp said to be located at an old military base, a promise she made to find her brother again and his bear (who she has mixed feelings about). Her narration is full of sarcasm, wit and raw emotion which leave you wanting her to fulfil her promise.


Cassie is not the only person we hear from in the book. 


We read about what happened to Ben Parrish, also referred to as Zombie, who was Cassie's crush in high school. We hear about what he goes through when he gets rescued from his camp when it is under attack and cured of the disease that has taken out billions before him. He talks about his training and his horrible Drill Sergeant but also his squad who he cares deeply about. The squad is made up of Flintstone (who is Ben's age, "with his big head and unibrow"), Tank ("the skinny, quick-tempered farm boy"), Dumbo ("the twelve year old with big ears"), Poundcake ("the eight year old who never talks"), Oompa ("the chubby kid with crooked teeth"), Teacup ("the meanest seven year old you'll ever meet"), Nugget who is Cassie's little brother, and later Ringer who is the best shot in the camp. We find out a little about what happened to Ben when the first wave hit too and what happened to his family that left him alone in a world that no longer belonged to the people who lived there.


You also get to see Cassie's brother's story after he get on the school bus. Sammy get taken to Camp Haven, the same place that Ben was taken to . We see Sammy go through the same routine as Ben before being assigned to the squad of Private Zombie and being given the nickname of Nugget. We see Nugget and Zombie form a bond over those they have lost and when Zombie is given his first mission as a recruit, he promises that he will come back for Nugget. 


We also hear a little bit from the "Silencer", who later turns out to be Evan Walker. When we hear from Evan he has just shot Cassie in the leg and has watched her dive under a car to get away from him. We see him asking himself why he didn't kill Cassie after stalking her for some time. When Cassie comes out from her hiding place to confront Evan, he runs because he knows that he cannot kill her. Later he saves her from freezing to death and nurses her back to health in his farmhouse. Thus begins the cycle of mistrust and deceit between the two but it ultimately ends on a high note.  


The plot of this book is like nothing I have read before. Yes, it is an alien invasion and yes, there is fighting and conflict but there is also love and personal conflicts for all of the characters. It is also interesting how all of the separate stories in the book intertwine and come together at the end. Though the ending is in a way a happy one, I wouldn't consider it to such a thing. Yes, the group got away from the camp with only one suspected casualty. Yes, the death camp got destroyed. Yes, everyone kept their promises and are all together. But the conflict is not over, the aliens are still trying to destroy the human race and still have a cargo plane full of recruits and lots of equipment. There is still a threat that they group want to be safe from. 


Rick Yancey's writing is incredible. He makes you feel like you are listening to his characters talk to you and gives them all their own personalities. By the end of the book you don't feel that these characters are characters anymore, they become people. People that you don't want to let go of. He also writes in a way that makes you question your assumptions throughout the book. He slips in metaphors that you have to go back and re-read to fully understand. Rick Yancey is truly a writing genius. 


As soon as I finished this book I picked up the next one to continue reading about all of these incredible characters that Rick Yancey has created and to follow their stories further. The Infinite Sea is what I am currently reading and so far the book is almost as good as the first. 

Thursday, 2 April 2015

A book by an author you've never read before

Eleanor and Park by Rainbow Rowell


What can I say about Eleanor and Park? This has been running through my head since I finished reading the book. This is one of the few book that I have had mixed feelings about. I don't know if this is has anything to do with it taking me three weeks to read or not.

Whenever I read anything from this book it was always so sweet and relatable. These were two people my age who had found each other when they least expected it. Not only were they falling in love but they were both trying to discover who they wanted to be at the same time.

Eleanor was one of five children and was incredibly insecure. At times I felt that Eleanor's insecurities got in the way of the story. Yes, she was self-conscious; yes, she had an unhealthy home life; yes, she was a hormonal teenage girl but there comes a point where 
this being mentioned all of the time can become a bit too much. I understood it being address because it was a large part of who Eleanor was and was ultimately the reason for the ending but I felt that is was brought up too often. 

Park's background on the other hand was only briefly addressed throughout the book. I felt this allowed you to focus more on the development of the two's relationship. What little we found out about Park's family made us understand who he was and there was no more than those few details needed. It allowed me to realise that when he was with Eleanor he felt like they could end up like his parents and he liked the idea of this. 

The two's relationship was admittedly a strange one but sort of expected. Both were outcasts for different reasons but in a way found comfort in each other because of this. They bonded over their love for comic books and music and ultimately fell in love in the process. 

The ending just summed up the book for me. It was both sweet and heartbreaking at the same time. Park had written letter after letter to Eleanor with no reply and continued to do so even after he admitted to himself that no reply was ever going to come. He was slowly continuing with his life but never forgetting about Eleanor. Park did get his reply though in the form of a postcard that was "just three words long". In my opinion this simple reply seemed to remind him why he has fallen in love with Eleanor in the first place.

It has been speculated about what those three words were, however. People have questioned whether it was the long awaited "I love you" or if it was something else entirely. It could be "I miss you" or even something as simple and reassuring as "I am ok" for all we know. The author is giving readers no answer though meaning that we are all left to find our own answer to what could be on the postcard. 

What do you think those three words could be? 

Sunday, 1 March 2015

A book by a female author

Geek Girl by Holly Smale

Let's just start by saying that Holly Smale is a genius when it comes to writing. It is probably just me but I felt that this is possibly the easiest book to read. Not easy as in it is simple but just a pleasure to actually read. 

Geek Girl is about a girl named Harriet who is a really big geek, hence the title. She does however get spotted by a modelling agency and becomes the face of a large fashion company. She goes through a lot of problems after getting spotted which allows her to grow as a person. 

I would like to say that I am nothing like the character of Harriet but I really am. I actually enjoy learning new things and have a head full of totally irrelevant things. I also used to be really paranoid about what other people thought of me until I realized that the people who truly care about me really don't care all that much about things like that. These are the kind of things that allowed me to really put myself in Harriet's position throughout the book. 

The humor that is drizzled throughout the story just adds to the book. I genuinely laughed out loud at this book several times and had to put it down to digest the genius of it. I often got my mum to  read parts that made me laugh and even she found them funny too 

I loved this book for many reasons and most cannot be put into words. This is one of those books that you have to read for yourself to truly understand and I recommend that you do read it. I cannot wait to get my hands on the sequels to this book to find out what other problems Harriet gets herself into.

Friday, 20 February 2015

A book written by someone under 30

Girl Online by Zoe Sugg (a.k.a Zoella)


I, like I think most people were, was first drawn to this book because of the author. Zoe has been someone that I look to as a role model for a while now and buying her book was one thing that I felt could really show that. Though Zoe was the first thing that made me want this book, the plot was also rather intriguing. 

If you do not already know, Girl Online is about a girl named Penny who suffers from Anxiety and severe panic attacks. She finds a way to talk about these panic attacks through her blog, Girl Online. This anonymous blog allows her to talk to people about her problems and seek advice and comfort in the people who read it. She then finds herself in New York where she meets a boy and her life seems to be going in an upwards direction until she returns home and her things get hard for her again. 

Though that is the basic plot of the book, it is really about a young 15 year old girl who is trying to find where she fits into this thing we call life. It is a sweet, heart-warming story that leaves you feeling all fuzzy inside. 

While I was reading this book I found aspects of myself in Penny. She is just an average teenage girl who has her insecurities and problems much like most but she just happens to suffer from panic attacks too. I found that with this book I could really picture all of the events in Penny's life as if she was confessing it all to me face-to-face. 

Before I started to read this book, I thought that it could be quite cliche and for a while I didn't really know if it was a book that I would read. If this book was cliched however, you would never notice. The story is so well thought out and pulls you in to the point that you feel that you know the characters that you stop thinking about the plot and you just read. 

This book was a pleasure to read and I would be happy to read it again. Zoe has done a fantastic job with her first book and I cannot wait for the next one.

Friday, 13 February 2015

A book that became a movie

If I Stay by Gayle Forman


I must say this book is incredible. It made me laugh, it made me cry and it made me think about life. I know that sounds totally cliched but it's true. I think it was that Mia was my age and I have a brother who is a lot like Teddy.

The first thing that drew me to this book was the movie. Yes, I was a terrible person and watched the movie before I read the book but I cannot say that it changed how I felt while reading it. This is one of those books that you read and you realise that the movie cannot possible portray all of the emotion that is built up in the book. Not once while reading this book did I think about the movie and put the two together. The movie was amazing, don't get me wrong, but the book was that times ten. I cried to much while reading this book that I had to physically put it down several times so that I could get to grips with my emotions. 

Like I said before, I am the same age as Mia is in the book and I honestly could not imagine what it would be like to lose my parents and brothers and have to decide whether I to live my life without them or give up. I would definitely not have been able to stay in that situation. I would leave behind all of the other people who I loved because I know that I would not be able to go on without any of my immediate family.

In the back of my book there was an preview of the first chapter of the sequel "Where She Went" and from what I read it seems like it is just as emotional as this one. I cannot wait to get my hands on it to continue the story and find out where Adam and Mia end up. 

A book that became a movie

If I Stay by Gayle Forman


I must say this book is incredible. It made me laugh, it made me cry and it made me think about life. I know that sounds totally cliched but it's true. I think it was that Mia was my age and I have a brother who is a lot like Teddy.

The first thing that drew me to this book was the movie. Yes, I was a terrible person and watched the movie before I read the book but I cannot say that it changed how I felt while reading it. This is one of those books that you read and you realise that the movie cannot possible portray all of the emotion that is built up in the book. Not once while reading this book did I think about the movie and put the two together. The movie was amazing, don't get me wrong, but the book was that times ten. I cried to much while reading this book that I had to physically put it down several times so that I could get to grips with my emotions. 

Like I said before, I am the same age as Mia is in the book and I honestly could not imagine what it would be like to lose my parents and brothers and have to decide whether I to live my life without them or give up. I would definitely not have been able to stay in that situation. I would leave behind all of the other people who I loved because I know that I would not be able to go on without any of my immediate family.

In the back of my book there was an preview of the first chapter of the sequel "Where She Went" and from what I read it seems like it is just as emotional as this one. I cannot wait to get my hands on it to continue the story and find out where Adam and Mia end up. 

A book that became a movie

If I Stay by Gayle Forman


I must say this book is incredible. It made me laugh, it made me cry and it made me think about life. I know that sounds totally cliched but it's true. I think it was that Mia was my age and I have a brother who is a lot like Teddy.

The first thing that drew me to this book was the movie. Yes, I was a terrible person and watched the movie before I read the book but I cannot say that it changed how I felt while reading it. This is one of those books that you read and you realise that the movie cannot possible portray all of the emotion that is built up in the book. Not once while reading this book did I think about the movie and put the two together. The movie was amazing, don't get me wrong, but the book was that times ten. I cried to much while reading this book that I had to physically put it down several times so that I could get to grips with my emotions. 

Like I said before, I am the same age as Mia is in the book and I honestly could not imagine what it would be like to lose my parents and brothers and have to decide whether I to live my life without them or give up. I would definitely not have been able to stay in that situation. I would leave behind all of the other people who I loved because I know that I would not be able to go on without any of my immediate family.

In the back of my book there was an preview of the first chapter of the sequel "Where She Went" and from what I read it seems like it is just as emotional as this one. I cannot wait to get my hands on it to continue the story and find out where Adam and Mia end up. 

Saturday, 31 January 2015

2015 Reading Challenge

I said yesterday that I was going to post a list of books that I am planning to read for the 2015 reading challenge. Some of these books I have read before but most of them are totally new. 

  • A book with more than 500 pages - The Host by Stephanie Meyer
  • A classic romance - Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austin
  • A book that became a movie - If I Stay by Gayle Forman
  • A book published this year - The Red Queen by Victoria Aveyard
  • A book with a number in the title - I Am Number Four by Pittacus Lore
  • A book written by someone under 30 - Girl Online by Zoe Sugg
  • A book with nonhuman characters - The Jungle Book by Rudyard Kipling
  • A funny book - Angus, Thongs and Full-Frontal Snogging by Louise Rennison
  • A book by a female author - Geek Girl by Holly Smale
  • A mystery or thriller - The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern
  • A book with a one-word title - Holes by Louis Sachar
  • A book of short stories - Geektastic Stories from the Nerd Herd by Holly Black
  • A book set in a different country - Anna and the French Kiss by Stephanie Perkins
  • A nonfiction book - The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank
  • A popular author's first book - Attachments by Rainbow Rowell
  • A book from an author you love that you haven't read yet - City of Heavenly Fire by Cassandra Clare
  • A book a friend recommended - After by Anna Todd
  • A Pulitzer Prize-winning book - The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt
  • A book based on a true story - Wild: A Journey From Lost to Found by Cheryl Strayed
  • A book at the bottom of your to-read list - The Scorpio Races by Maggie Stiefvater
  • A book your mom loves - Ella Minnow Pea by Mark Dunn
  • A book that scares you - The Shakespeare Secret by J.L. Carrell
  • A book more than 100 years old - Peter Pan by J.M. Barrie
  • A book based entirely on its cover - Vampire Academy by Richelle Mead
  • A book you were supposed to read in school but didn't - Buddy by Nigel Hinton
  • A memoir - Him and Me by Jack and Michael Whitehall
  • A book you can finish in a day - The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams
  • A book with antonyms in the title - Big Little Lies by Liane Moriarty
  • A book set somewhere you've always wanted to visit - P.S. I Love You by Cecelia Ahern
  • A book that came out the year you were born - Ella Enchanted by Gail Carson Levine
  • A book with bad reviews - Matched by Ally Condie
  • A trilogy - The Trylle Trilogy by Amanda Hocking
  • A book from your childhood - Matilda by Roald Dahl
  • A book with a love triangle - The Secret Circle by L.J. Smith
  • A book set in the future- Uglies by Scott Westerfeld
  • A book set in high school - Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky
  • A book with a color in the title - Ruby Red by Kerstin Gier
  • A book that made you cry - The Fault in Our Stars by John Green
  • A book with magic - Mystic by Alyson Noel
  • A graphic novel - 
  • A book by an author you've never read before - Eleanor and Park by Rainbow Rowell
  • A book you own but have never read - Why The Whales Came by Michael Morpurgo
  • A book that takes place in your hometown - Outlander by Diana Gabaldon (It doesn't quite take place in my home town but it is as close as I can get)
  • A book that was originally written in a different language - The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas
  • A book set during Christmas - Let It Snow by John Green, Maureen Johnson, Lauren Myracle
  • A book written by an author with your same initials - Two Royal Foes by Eva Ann Madden
  • A Play - The Nerd by Larry Shue
  • A banned book - Lord of the Flies by William Golding
  • A book based on or turned into a TV show - The 100 by Kass Morgan
  • A book you started but never finished - The Guilty One by Lisa Ballantyne

Friday, 30 January 2015

Introduction

I've been trying some new things this year and one of the things that I really wanted to do was start a blog. However, I had no idea what I would write about. It is only recently that I have found something that I am passionate enough to write about. You may have guessed it already but it's books.

 I have been in love with books since before I could actually read. My nursery teacher used to say that if they ever couldn't find me the first place they would look was the reading corner. She said that I could always be sat in the big wicker chair in the corner making up my own stories to fit with the pictures in the book. My family all say that I always have my nose in a book too and to be perfectly honest, they are probably right.


I guess I have my mum to blame for my love of reading. I mean she even named me Emily because she loved Emily Bronte so much. I grew up surrounded by all of my mum's books and I was determined that one day I would have the number of books that my mum has. I've been consciously collecting my books for about 10 or 11 years now and I am still nowhere near the amount that she has (I'm a little bit jealous). 



2015 Reading Challenge

I was looking for a suitable goal to set my myself for the number of books I should read this year when I found the 2015 reading challenge. I thought that this would be a good way to widen my horizons with the books that I read. This is the challenge;




All that I have done for the challenge so far is decide what books I am going to read for each of the different challenges. I will post a copy of my list on here so that you know what books I plan on reading. I am not going to complete the challenges in order but I am going to try to do all of them and record my progress on here so that I will know when I have completed it and what I thought of all of the books.