Home
Lauren
31 December 2009 @ 05:05 pm

First off, Happy New Year!

As my first resolution, I'm going to read 100 books this year.

Sadly, I am going to have to cheat & start a day early :)


The 100 Books of 2009

1. December 31: Graceling - Kristin Cashore* * * * *
2. January 3: Rebel Angels - Libba Bray* * * *
3. January 9: Inside the Mind of Gideon Rayburn - Sarah Miller* * *
4. January 11: Outside Beauty - Cynthia Kadohata* *
5. January 18: Headlong - Kathe Koja* * *
6. January 21: Hush (an Irish Princess' Tale) - Donna Jo Napoli* * *
7. January 24: An Abundance of Katherines - John Green* * *
8. January 26: Letters to a Bullied Girl - Olivia Gardner* *
9. Janurary 28: Looking for Alaska - John Green* * * *
10. January 30 (technically because it was 2 am): Perfect Chemistry - Simone Elkeles* * * *
11. February 1: The After Life - Daniel Ehrenhaft* * *
12. February 4: The Nature of Jade - Deb Caletti* * * *
13. February 5: Jellicoe Road - Melina Mancetta* * * *
14. February 6: Living Dead Girl - Elizabeth Scott*
15. February 8: Cracked Up To Be - Courtney Summers* * *
16. February 8: What Would Emma Do? - Eileen Cook* * *
17. February 9: The Secrets of my Suburban Life - Lauren Baratz-Longsted* *
18. February 16: Memoirs of a Teenage Amnesiac - Gabrielle Zevin* * * *
19. March 4: I Love You Beth Cooper - Larry Doyle* *
20. March 5: L'engranage - Louise Turgeon* *
21. March 16: The Secret Countess - Eva Ibbotson* * *
22. March 20: The Forest of Hands and Teeth - Carrie Ryan* * * *
23. March 20: The Fetch - Laura Whitcomb* *
24. March 25: Choke - Chuck Palahniuk* * *
25. April 5: Dream Factory- Brad Barkley and Heather Hepler* * *
26. April 5: Le malade imaginaire - Molière* *
27. April 11: Something, Maybe - Elizabeth Scott* * * *
28: April 25: Love Is Hell - Melissa Marr (and 4 others)* * * *
29. April 29: Paper Towns - John Green* * *
30: May 3: Bones of Faerie - Janni Lee Simner* * * *
31. May 4: Sir Gawain and the Green Knight - author unknown* *
32. May 8: The Secret Life of Prince Charming - Deb Caletti* * *
33. May 10: Wintergirls - Laurie Halse Anderson* * * *
34. May 16: The Druid's Tune - O.R. Melling* * *
35. May 17: Stravaganza: City of Secrets - Mary Hoffman* * *
36. May 18: The Singing Stone - O.R. Melling* * * *
37. May 20: Skunk Girl - Sheba Karim* * * *
38. May 29: North of Beautiful - Justina Chen Headley* * * *
39. June 18: Suicide Notes - Michael Thomas Ford* * *
40. June 20: Tender Morsels - Margo Lanagan* * * *
41. June 24: Princess of the Midnight Ball - Jessica Day George* * *
42. June 25: The King's Rose - Alisa Libby* *
43. June 26: Along For The Ride - Sarah Dessen* * *
44. June 27: The Summer I Turned Pretty - Jenny Han*
45. June 27: Lullaby - Chuck Palahniuk* * *
46. June 28: The Great Gatsby - F. Scott Fitzgerald* * * * *
47. June 28: Alice's Adventures in Wonderland - Lewis Carroll* *
48. July 5: I Am the Messenger - Marcus Zusak* * * * *
49. July 7: A Map of the Known World - Lisa Ann Sandell* * *
50. July 8: Sophomore Switch - Abby McDonald* * * *
51. July 9: Sea Change - Aimee Friedman* *
52. June 6: The Mayor of Casterbridge - Thomas Hardy* *
53. July 17: The Bell Jar - Sylvia Plath* * * *
54. July 17: Six Steps to A Girl - Sophie McKenzie* * 
55. July 18: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - J. K. Rowling* * * *
56. July 18: Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban - J. K. Rowling* * * * *
57. July 19: Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire - J. K. Rowling* * * *
58. July 21: Harry Potter and the Order of the Pheonix - J. K. Rowling* * * 
59. July 23: Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince - J.K. Rowling* * * *
60. July 25: Impossible - Nancy Werlin* * *
61. July 26: Fairy Tale - Cyn Balog* * *
62. July 26: After the Moment - Garret Freymann-Weyr* *
63. July 28: The Other Boleyn Girl - Philippa Gregory* * * *
64. July 30: The Virgin's Lover - Philippa Gregory* *
65. August 2: Child of the Pheonix - Barbara Erskine* * * 
66. August 3: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - J.K. Rowling * * * *
67. August 7: Angela's Ashes - Frank McCourt* * * *
68. August 8: Vacations From Hell - Libba Bray (and others)* * *
69. August 11: The Last Unicorn - Peter S. Beale* * *
70. August 13: Love You, Hate You, Miss You - Elizabeth Scott* * * * *
71. August 15: Eyes Like Stars - Lisa Mantchev* * * * *
72. August 16: The Chosen One - Carol Lynch Williams * * *
73. August 16: Candor - Pam Bachorz * * * *
74. August 19: Lipstick Apology - Jennifer Jabaley* * * *
75. August 20: The Comeback - Marlene Perez* * *
76. August 21: The Treasure Map of Boys - E. Lockhart* * * * *
77. August 22: The ABC's of Kissing Boys - Tina Ferraro* * * *
78. August 23: A Little Friendly Advice - Siobhan Vivian* * *
79. August 28: This Book Isnt' Fat, It's Fabulous - Nina Beck* * * * *
80. September 1: Catching Fire - Suzanne Collins* * * * *
81. September 5: The Eternal Kiss - Anthology* * *
82. September 7: The Prophecy of the Sisters - Michelle Zink* * *
83. September 10: Fire - Kristin Cashore* * * * *
84. September 14: Hush, Hush - Becca Fitzpatrick* * *
85. September 15: Shiver - Maggie Stiefvater* * * * *
86. September 15: The Merchant of Venice - William Shakespeare* * *
87. September 23: Jumping Off Swings - Jo Knowles* *
88. September 29: Cote-des-negres - Mauricio Segura* *
89. October 2: Are These My Basoomas I See Before Me? - Louise Rennison* * *
90. October 4: Lament - Maggie Stiefvater* * * *
91. October 11: Wondrous Strange - Lesley Livingston* * *
92. October 12: Unclaimed Heart - Kim Wilkins* *
93. October 17: Catcher In The Rye - J. D. Salinger* * *
94. October 20: Haunted - Barbara Haworth-Attard* * *
95. October 24: Raven - Allison Van Diepen* * *
96. October 25: Evernight - Claudia Gray* *
97. November 14: Ballad - Maggie Stiefvater* * * * *
98. November 15: The Crucible - Arthur Miller* *
99. November 22: Nineteen Eighty-Four - George Orwell* * *
100. November 22: Perfect You - Elizabeth Scott* * * *
101. November 27: Secrets de famille - Jean-Yves Soucy* *
102. December 19: The Picture of Dorian Gray - Oscar Wilde* * *
103. December 25: The Thief Lord - Cornelia Funke* * * *
104. December 26: The Supernaturalist - Eoin Colfer* * *
105. December 27: Stravaganza: City of Masks - Mary Hoffman* * * * *

 
 
mood: dorky
music: Mykonos - Fleet Foxes
 
 

Advertisement

 
Lauren
20 September 2009 @ 04:22 pm
Also posted over at my and alex's ([info]xxhushdarling) blog, aflightofminds.

Shiver by Maggie Stiefvater


For years, Grace has watched the wolves in the woods behind her house. One yellow-eyed wolf--her wolf--is a chilling presence she can't seem to live without. Meanwhile, Sam has lived two lives: In winter, the frozen woods, the protection of the pack, and the silent company of a fearless girl. In summer, a few precious months of being human . . . until the cold makes him shift back again.

Now, Grace meets a yellow-eyed boy whose familiarity takes her breath away. It's her wolf. It has to be. But as winter nears, Sam must fight to stay human--or risk losing himself, and Grace, forever.

First Impression: Well, FIRST impression was simply upon viewing the cover, which is gorgeous, so right away I was excited. After reading the jacket description, I was even more excited. Although I am not keen on more Twilight stuff, which I'm sure goes for most of you guys, the ressemblances I could see did not turn me off the book. It seemed like an adorable plot.

It definitely was.

Shiver is a love story. The difference was that it didn't fall into a cookiecutter layout. We start out with love - they've both been in love with the other from a distance for years - and having it grow. I loved that there was never any uncertainty, no stressing over affections. This is similar to Twilight but it was also different. It seemed less intense, more human. More like Bella's relationship with Jacob - which also works because the book is about werewolves. For those of you who hate Jacob, Sam is not Jacob. He is beyond adorable though.

The conflict of Shiver is that once the weather becomes colder, the human werewolves become wolves until it gets warm once again. Their time spent as a human grows progressively smaller as the years pass, and Sam has reached the point where he will no longer turn human again. The book is Grace and Sam's desperate struggle to keep him human while time runs out.

Final Impression: I loved Shiver. It was refreshing and gorgeous (as is the cover). One of those books you want to just keep with you at all times. It feels like how I felt about Twilight before the whole craze - back when there was only one book out and no one had heard of it. It was that book you absolutely adored and wanted to share with everyone. There is intensity, but it's also refreshing and light.

Add to Shelf?: Yes but it will probably be for Christmas. I'm low on money at the moment lol... A really good book for its genre. 5.5/6 shelves - I feel as though I've been too lenient with my shelves lately. I'm getting picky. This could easily be a 6/6 though so I'll tag it under both lol. I'm torn. 


 
 
 
mood: satisfied
music: Merry Happy - Kate Nash
 
 
Lauren
29 August 2009 @ 05:50 pm
posted over at  my (and [info]xxhushdarling's) blog, aflightofminds


Queen-sized queen bee Riley Swain is not to be messed with.

Filthy rich and whip-smart, Riley thinks nothing of kissing her best friend's crush or taking incrimating photos of her future stepmom. But Riley has a secret. This school break, Riley will be crunching, dieting, and complaining her way to a thin new shape at New Horizons, a special program in Upper Nowheresville, New York.
 

Thanks Dad.

Of course, New Horizons is a nightmare: like military school without carbs. But then Riley meets adorable Eric, a boy who can go toe-to-toe with her snark, but also seems to see beyond her tough exterior. Could it be that her time away from the glitz and glamour of home will change not Riley's figure... but her heart?
 

Don't count on it.

*****

So first off, we're throwing in a couple more routinely, factual bits to our reviews. Add a little structure :) Alright, not really but we're trying to shake things up here so bear with it.


First Impression: Not crazy excited - I got a pile of books from the libary and it's the last one I picked up. Just sounds like overweight Gossip Girl.


So, not super pumped, but I am picky and there are a lot of books I just can't bring myself to read. So bonus points for make me... open it.


This Book Isn't Fat, It's Fabulous is about a girl named Riley, who lives a life pretty similar to the people in Gossip Girl. Upper East Side and whatnot. Plus, Riley is a pretty confident girl. So yes, it did start very much like Gossip Girl, but Riley is a much more entertaining character.

That was the first thing I liked. The style of writing, from Riley's POV, was very entertaining and funny. The book was comical. She was pretty synical & sarcastic, but all around very enjoyable. The book was also very believable in the sense that the way things worked, the character logic and whatnot, was plausible. Sometimes, I just can't understand reasoning behind other characters or things move too fast, but everything worked out perfectly for me.

So yes, Riley goes off to 'fat camp', where she definitely does not feel like she belongs. I liked that as well. Riley was so confident in herself (she constantly refers back to having the Fabulous factor) and I really commend her for that. I found the book to be very positive - especially towards teenage girls where there is so much pressure to be a certain way. I know I struggle with my body constantly but after reading this book, it made not want to care as much. This Book Isn't Fat, It's Fabulous was definitely a huge confidence & morale booster for me.

Final Impressions: This Book Isn't Fat, It's Fabulous is, in fact, fabulous to say the least. A great feel-good book with a cute love story behind it that encourages girls to love themselves for who they are - just not quite that cheesy lol.

Any Favorite Characters: Well, Riley of course. And Eric. They were really cute together -although he seemed a bit weird but I'm just going to try not to think about that. His assertiveness was cute.

5.5/6 shelves! Yay!






 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
♥ Lauren

 
 
mood: productive
 
 
Lauren
21 August 2009 @ 12:42 pm

Sometimes a good-bye is just the beginning…
When Emily Carson’s parents die in a plane crash, she’s left with nothing but her mother’s last words scrawled in lipstick on a tray table: “Emily, please forgive me.”


Now it’s fall and Emily moves to New York City— where she attracts the attention of two very different boys: the cute, popular Owen, and her quirky chemistry partner, Anthony. With the help of some surprising new friends, Emily must choose between the boy who helps her forget and the one who encourages her to remember, and ultimately heal.

Debut author Jennifer Jabaley has written a wonderful, feel-good romantic comedy with real emotional depth. Full of lovably wacky characters, Lipstick Apology is a heartwarming story about the true meaning of forgiveness.

I put off reading this book. Basically because I judged it by it's cover. (I know, I know, but it looked so Gossip Girl to me that I didn't want to have anything to do with it.) And once again, I'm going to give another good review - I'm not going soft, it's just been a really lucky streak I guess. Soon I'll be moaning and groaning and be back to normal.

Lipstick Apology fits into my little section of "Books I loved but there is nothing super amazingly awesome about it". You know - the difference between The Hunger Games and Sarah Dessen? They sortof fit into two different categories of amazing books. I've sortof been not-so-interested in these books recently, but I will say that I very much enjoyed Lipstick Apology.

After Emily moved to New York and got her whole makeover and popular friends, I was really hoping she'd manange to keep parts of her old life with her. I didn't want the whole story line of losing the not-so-cool best friend and turning into a huge pain. Thank God she didn't. Through everything, Emily managed to stay grounded and never made me want to smack her. Well, most of the time.

---- Sortof spoiler ahead? It's a romantic spoiler if you can't already figure out what's going to happen, don't read it... ----

And of course we all know which boy she's going to pick in the end lol but the actual romantic feelings between them, the chemistry, the "I can't stop thinking about how much I looooove him" feelings weren't there. They whole thing was kindof, "Oh I guess I like him" BAM, book is over. Spoiler? Or could you just see it coming? :/

---- That's the end of that... ----

So I liked Lipstick Apology. There was no trying to turn it into some huuge, epic novel of intensity, but it still had substance. I find sometimes that you read a novel like this and something weird happens like she has to save the world and you're like "Where did this come from??". But I definitely was entertained the entire time.
 
 
mood: good
music: 6 Months in a Leaky Boat - Split Endz
 
 

Advertisement

 
Lauren
23 May 2009 @ 08:47 am
Posted as well over at a flight of minds.


Skunk Girl by Sheba Karim

amazon summary


Skunk Girl is about a 16-year-old Pakistani girl named Nina who has no life thanks to her parents strict, religious (Muslim) views. She can't date (which extends to talking to boys), go to parties, have sleepovers etc, which has really taken a toll on her social life.

I found Skunk Girl very entertaining and funny. It was so interesting to watch as Nina struggled with trying to fit in in some way and dealing with this adorable Italian boy, Asher, who actually seemed to like her for who she was.

I have no complaints for Skunk Girl. I was entertained the entire time - dying in class to start reading it again. It's nice to have a protagonist that is such an underdog, one you can really relate to - and it's not in some heartbreaking way, like death (I'm not saying that those books aren't good either, this was just a change) and it's just all the little comical things that bring you closer to her.
 
 
music: Colours of the Wind - Pocahontas
 
 
Lauren
11 May 2009 @ 06:12 pm
31. The Secret Life of Prince Charming - Deb Caletti



amazon

I had mixed feelings about this book. The first half was slow. I was not interested at all. The book is about Quinn and her sister Sprout who discover that their player of a father has been keeping items from all his old girlfriends - trophies in a sense. The second half is their decision to join up with the half sister they've met once to return them.

Yup. That's the book.

The guy shows up just past halfway too which didn't help the beginning at all.

I feel as though Deb Caletti is kindof a smaller version of Sarah Dessen (The Truth About Forever, This Lullaby...). The books have similar concepts, the average, flawed protaganist but Caletti's seem to not be quite as real. Her plots also aren't as intriguing as Dessen's.

That's just my opinion though.


On a brighter note, I saw Star Trek and loved it lol.
Everyone thinks I'm nuts :/

review of the creepiest looking book
and a contest for it
 
 
mood: thoughtful
music: 20 Years - Augustana
 
 
Lauren
09 March 2009 @ 04:43 pm

19. I Love You Beth Cooper - Larry Doyle

I've decided to go for quality not quantity...

or quantity (of pages) not quantity (of books)

i just lost that "readabookaday" thing. :)



the movie seems pretty acurate to the book.

it's an allnighter book, like nick & norah's & is about your typical nerd boy :)
very "an abundance of katherines"-ish
 
 
music: Praan - Garry Shyman