Monday, December 17, 2012

Pandemonium

Pandemonium



      Pandemonium, by Lauren Oliver, is the second book in the Delirium series. In the quake of the death of Alex the book begins with Lena running in the Wilds, she has no idea where she is going, but she is doing what Alex told her to, run. Lena eventually passes out and she wakes up with people around her, she is a in an underground home. Raven, the leader of the people living there, takes care of Lena. When Lena is well enough, she begins working, hauling buckets, cleaning, although it takes much work and hassling from Raven. Lena slowly begins to feel like that is her home, until one day when she is checking for signals from the sympathizers inside the city, red, red means run, as Lena runs towards camp the bombs begin. Most of the campers survive, and Lena, Raven, and Tack, a camper who is really close to Raven, all decide to live in disguise in one of the city's. Once there, Lena is given a mission, to help out the rebels, she has to follow Julian, the son of the founder of the club that reminds people of the importance of the cure. When the scavengers, people who don't believe in the cure, but resort to violence, unlike the Invalids, attack, Julian is kidnapped along with Lena. eventually they escape, but not before they fall in love. Lena finds Raven and Tack and learn that this was all a test to see if she was deserving to really join the rebel group, of course she passed, but she isn't sure she wants in. Lena wants to take Julian and live in the Wilds with him, like she was going to do with Alex, and go back to the old camp, where she met Raven and Tack, and live with all her old friends, but Raven won't allow it. Julian is taken to be cured, and Lena need to find him to help him escape, when Lena gets to the hospital she finds Raven and Tack, who came to help  her after all. Lena breaks Julian out, and learns that her mother, who was thought to commit suicide was really alive, and had been in prison, and broke out. When Raven, Tack, Lena, and Julian are getting ready to escape the city and go back to the Wilds, Raven brings in a boy who had been in the same prison as Lena's mom, and was going to help Lena answer questions about her. It's Alex, he's alive, he was taken to prison, he was never killed. That's what Pandemonium, by Lauren Oliver, is about.

      Lena is a completely different character in this book than she was in Delirium. The pain of losing Alex has made her so much stronger, and the fog blocking the reality of the real world is gone and she knows now what confusing really is and what it really feels like to be sad. Also, I felt like it wasn't Alex that Lena fell in love with in Delirium, I think she could have fallen in love with anyone that loved her, because she didn't know what love was, it was the pure fact that Alex knew he loved her and showed her what it was like to truly love somebody. This time, Lena isn't as quick to like Julian, she doesn't have any interest in him until she really gets to know him, unlike Alex who she starts dating without knowing anything about him. Also Lena is not annoying anymore, while she toughened up in the Wilds she grew up and she isn't so fickle anymore, she is quicker to know what she wants. Lena is a better, more improved character in Pandemonium, and is completely different from what she was like in Delirium.

      One theme I found in the book is survival. I think survival is one of the themes in Pandemonium because Lena is constantly fighting for her life. One example of this is when she is thrust in the world of the Wilds, with no Alex to care for her, and be by her side, Lena must fight for herself, and when she is threatened to be kicked out of the homestead she must do her share of the work. Lena also has to fight for her life when she is very sick and must fight to get better. Another example of survival is when Lena and Julian are kidnapped, Lena must be resourceful and adapt to her new environment, and find a way to escape. Lena also has to find a way for her love for Julian to survive, and she has to keep him in love with her. While reading this book, I saw Lena in life or death situations all the time, and every time she over comes them, that's what makes her so strong. That's why I think survival is one of the themes in the book, Pandemonium.

      I loved the book, Pandemonium, even more than Delirium. Although I found Delirium to be entrapping and hard to put down, Pandemonium was even more entrapping, and harder to put down. With the Wilds included more in the book there is more violence and action, I found Delirium to be a little dull after reading Pandemonium. I definitely would recommend this book to all girls, although I wouldn't recommend a boy to read it, Pandemonium is the perfect balance between romance and action. I think almost any girl would read this book, and enjoy it. Although it's a little long to some people, it obtains much detail and a great story plot. Overall, I thought Pandemonium was amazing, and engulfing, and I can't wait until Requiem, the third book in the series comes out.

     I love Lauren Oliver's style of writing. I think she has a beautiful voice, and the way she writes the story, it's hard to describe. Lauren has some great dialog in this book that could be used as inspirational quotes. One quote I liked from the book is, "I'm pushing aside the memory of my nightmare, pushing aside thoughts of Alex, pushing aside thoughts of Hana and my old school, push, push, push, like Raven taught me to do. The old life is dead. But the old Lena is dead too. I buried her. I left her beyond a fence, behind a wall of smoke and flame." I think this quote is perfect for something Lena would say, it holds her attitude and emotions. Another quote I like from Lena is, "Everything you were, the life you had, the people you knew... dust." She shakes her head and says, a little more firmly, "There is no before. There is only now, and what comes next." I love the way Lauren Oliver writes and the quotes she says, and I hope she writes more books so I can read them.


Eve

Eve


      
 
  Eve, by Anna Carey, is a great fiction novel about a girl named Eve who unveils a great lie in her society. When Eve discovers that when girls graduate high school and supposedly go to college to learn a trade, they're really held hostage and used as birthing monkeys. It's even worse for Eve, since she's her class's valedictorian, she property of the king, meaning she will bear his children.  In this future world men are supposedly evil, except the king, and all they do is abuse and rape women, and create war. When Eve discovers the real truth about her future, she runs a way, looking for a safe camp, she comes upon a fellow classmate, named Arden, who was never nice to Eve, who's also running away. They meet a guy named Caleb, who takes them to his home, when Eve and Arden get there, Arden is very sick, Leif, the leader of the home Caleb lives in, gives Eve and Arden a room. While Arden is sick, Eve begins teaching the little kids living in the home how to read. Eve is still very frightened by Caleb, she knows deep down that he is not going to hurt her, but she has trouble shaking the base of the knowledge she had been taught her entire life. Right as Eve has fallen in love with Caleb, Leif tells someone the king is looking for her and she and Arden are taken. After she is taken, Eve must choose between true love, or life. She chooses true love, and escapes, she stays with a women and her husband who don't agree with the city's new rules and chose to live outside the city with each other, but when Eve tries to send a signal to Caleb, the police track it and find them. Eve and Arden escape, but the woman and husband are killed. Eve finds Caleb and she, Arden, and him go to a different camp, the one she starting her journey looking for. Eventually they get there, but when they do they discover it's an all girls camp and she stays there while Caleb leaves, to protect her. That's what the book, Eve, is about.

      Eve is not like any other character I've read about before. She actually listens in school, unlike most main characters in books. Eve has let the information she was taught in school sink in and, influence her life. I think Eve is really brave, she found out the truth about her city, and ran away, all in the same night. Considering how difficult it would have been to take in that fact that all she was going to do for the rest of her life was give birth the old man, she called a king's babies. Eve is also very intelligent, she survived in the wild all by herself, she had never even been camping and she was just thrust into a completely different world, and she survived. Eve has bright red hair, she is short, and small. I think Eve is an interesting person to read about, although she sometimes is sappy, I think she was a pretty solid main character. That's what Eve, the main character in the book, is like.


      One theme I found in the book, Eve, is obviously love. Eve loved her mother, even though she died, Eve explained this to one of the little kids living in the camp that Caleb lived in, "I loved my mother, too. I still do. That's the thing - it never goes away, even if the person does." Eve also loved Arden, in a way different than her mother, even though Arden was mean to her when they went to school, they bonded, in a way that they couldn't break, during their multiple near death experiences together. Another person that Eve loved was, of course, Caleb. Eve and Caleb had this conversation, "What if I still want to go?" "Then you'll go," he said. "But I wanted you to know the danger." "There's always danger." "His green eyes met mine. I was starting to see it, how it could happen-me and Caleb." Also, Eve thought this, "I loved every part of him. The smell of his skin, the scar on his cheek, the feel of his fingers pressing into my back. The way he could tell what I was thinking just by looking at me." I think that these quotes from Eve make it clear that she loves Caleb. That's why love is one themes in the book, Eve.

      I thought that Eve was a really good book. I think it had a good balance between romance and action, it wasn't round the clock romance, but not constant action either, which I though was a good thing. I would recommend this book to girls, not boys. I think girls that like romance novels would like this book, but girls that find romance sickening should not read this book. Eve is a fairly long book at 376 pages, but those pages go by fast, as you read 75 pages and don't even realize it. Although I found the novel to be overly sappy at times, the action later in the book makes up for it. Overall, I think that Eve was a really good book, and I will read the rest of the trilogy.

      Anna Carey has written other books, not just Eve. First off, there's the second book in the Eve series, Once. Then there's the final book in the trilogy, Rise. Also, Eve was put into a larger novel called Pitch Dark: Dark Days of Fall Sampler, along with books, Supernaturally, Fateful, Cold Kiss, and A Beautiful Dark. I like the things that Anna Carey writes for Eve. I think she writes beautiful quotes, that are inspirational and almost like poetry. One quote I liked from the book Eve was, "Sometimes it feels like all the things I need to know, I don't. And all the things I do know are completely wrong." Another quote from Eve that I liked is, "Loving someone meant knowing your life would be worse without them in it." Those are some other books that Anna Carey has written. 


(I edited it and put the words on it.)








Delirium

                                Delirium


   
      Delirium, by Lauren Oliver, is a great story about a girl named Lena, who's fighting between her heart and her society.In this future world, love is considered a disease, called amor deliria nervosa. The book begins with Lena counting the days until her brain surgery, to make her immune to falling in love. Lena looks at herself as an in between girl, not pretty, but not ugly. Since Lena's mom committed suicide, because the brain surgery didn't work on her, and they had done the operation on her 3 times and were coming to do it again, Lena lives with her aunt. Lena meets a guy  named Alex, who makes her question whether or not love is a bad thing. When Lena's best friend show signs of being a rebel, Lena gets scared, but she ends up going to an illegal music party with her. As she's about to leave, someone calls her name, Lena turns around to find Alex, they talk, and she agrees to meet him the next day. Lena feels safe around him, he has the procedure mark, he told her he was safe, and he couldn't giver the deliria, or could he? When they're swimming at the beach , Alex tells Lena that he's an Invalid, and lives in the Wilds. After Lena forgives Alex, and stops caring about what her society thinks of her, or if she is labeled a sympathizer they decide to run away together and live in the Wilds. When they meet to gather supplies, the police catch them, Lena is taken home, and put on lock down, but where did Alex disappear to? When Alex comes for Lena on a motorcycle, they escape, they drive to the city's border, Alex convinces Lena to jump over the fence when the motorcycle is in midair, telling her he'll jump right after her. When Lena gets over the fence she sees Alex, he's not jumping over the fence, he's being attacked by the police, Alex is dead, but before he is engulfed by the attackers, he tells Lena to run. That is what the book Delirium, by Lauren Oliver is about.

      Lena is a very interesting character. She obviously doesn't think very much of herself, she always talks about how she isn't ugly, but not pretty. Lena also cannot make up her mind, should I be with Alex, or not, or, should I break the rules? Frankly, I think Lena is a bit of an annoying character to read about. Lena is not good under pressure, "Sometimes I feel as though there are two me's, one coasting directly on top of the other: the superficial me, who nods when she supposed to nod and says what she's supposed to say, and some, deeper part, the part that worries and dreams and says 'gray.'" (Oliver,  ) Lena has dark hair, and her birthday is on September 3. I think Lena is afraid of authority in beginning of the book, because she never does anything wrong and does everything her aunt says, and doesn't act like a normal teenager. Also, when she does do something wrong she acts like she's murdered somebody, but by the end of the book, she's breaking all the rules, and sneaking out, which, I think, makes her less annoying of a character to read. That's what Lena, the main character in Delirium, is like.

       One theme I found in the book is sacrifice. I think sacrifice is one of the themes in the book because Lena sacrificed her whole life to be with Alex. She gave up her family, who would never approve, just to be with him. Also, she gave up the fairy tale of a perfect life with no problems, she could have kept on living the life she was, then had the procedure and she wouldn't even know what love felt like. If she had never agreed to meet him, then she wouldn't have had to go through the pain of losing him, but she sacrificed that too, her emotions, and she gave them to Alex.  Now the biggest sacrifice of all, Alex gave his life for Lena, He knew she would make it far into the Wilds if he distracted the police, he gave his life, knowing she would get to keep hers. That's why I think sacrifice is one of the themes in the book, Delirium.

      I thoroughly enjoyed Delirium, by Lauren Oliver. I found it to be entrapping, and hard to put down. Although some people may look at it and say it's too long, it goes by fast, and when it's over you want more. Even though I found Lena's character whinny and annoying, Delirium was still a really good read. Overall, I thought Delirium was a complete page turner. I would recommend this book to girls looking for something good to read, and doesn't mind a 450 page book. I think this book would appeal to almost any girl, because it has a little bit of everything in it, romance, sci-FY, and action. I enjoyed Delirium and hope to read more books by Lauren Oliver.

      Lauren Oliver has written a lot of books. First of all there's Pandemonium, the second book in the Delirium series. Then there's the third one, Requiem, which comes out in March next year! Lauren Oliver has also written the books Before I Fall, Hanna, Annabel, and Raven. I hope to read some of her other books and will definitely finish the Delirium series. I like Lauren Oliver's style of writing, I find it poetic like and easy to read. Those are some other books by Lauren Oliver.

Website for picture: http://empowermoments.files.wordpress.com/2011/05/no-love.gif

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Book of a Thousand Days

Book of a Thousand Days





"Book of a Thousand Days," by Shannon Hale, is a great tale about a young mucker named Dashti. Dashti finds work as a lady's maid, and on her first day on the job she finds herself locked in a brick tower where the only connection with the outside world is a small metal flap in the wall to dump their waste. They were locked in the tower because of Lady Saren's refusal to marry Lord Khasar, a man she thinks is a monster. After 3 long years of being locked in the tower Dashti finds an escape, they leave the tower and travel to Song For Evela, the realm ruled by Kahn Tegus who is also the man Lady Saren is secretly betrothed to. They decide not to tell him that Lady Saren is there and pretend to be mucker clan sisters and begin working in the kitchen scrubbing pots in Khan Tegus' house. Lady Saren forces Dashti to say she is her, and also tells Dashti the reason she fears Lord Khasar so greatly, which is because he turns into a wolf at night and sneaks into realms and kills the people living there and destroys the realm. Dashti defeats Lord Khasar, but soon faces death when Lady Vachir, Khan Tegus' betrothed before Dashti said she was Lady Saren, wants Dashti's blood for destroying her betrothal to Tegus. Khan Tegus convinces the honored chiefs to let Dashti keep her life even though she faked nobility. Since Lady Saren was betrothed to Tegus first she has the right to betroth him she keeps her right to betroth Tegus, but exacts it for Dashti and they get married. That is what "Book of a Thousand Days" is about.

One theme I saw in the book was strength. I think strength is one of the themes in the book because Dashti showed a lot of it throughout the book. She had to have a lot of strength to do everything she did. She showed strength when she defeated Lord Khasar. I have strength, but have not needed to use it in situations like Dashti did. That is why I think one of the themes in the book is strength.

Another theme I saw in the book was love. I think love is one of the themes in the book because Dashti's love for Saren and Tegus outlasted all the challenges it faced. Dashti faced death several times yet she still stood by her Lady's side. Dashti loved Saren like a sister and how I love my family. Dashti was very loyal to Saren and she loved her. That is why I think one of the themes in the book is love.

I enjoyed "Book of a Thousand Days." It was a fairly short book and although it had a bad start, I thought it had a really good ending. I think the book was pretty boring at first, but was really interesting later. I would recommend this book to kids that wouldn't mind reading a book that gets off to a slow start. Overall, I thought that "Book of a Thousand Days" was a good book.

I got this photo from:http://www.yabooklove.com/2011/04/book-of-thousand-days.html

Thursday, March 8, 2012

Fever 1793

Fever 1793




"Fever 1793", by Laurie Halse Anderson, is about a young girl named Matilda who lives in Philadelphia and during the summer a lot of people are infected with Yellow Fever. Matilda lives above her family's  coffeehouse, which she helps run alongside her grandfather, her mother, and their cook, Eliza. When Matilda's mom is infected with Yellow Fever, Matilda and her grandfather flee to the country where the air is clean. However, when they are about to enter the country they are denied access because Matilda's grandpa is coughing from the heat and is accused of having the fever. They are stranded and Matilda's mom and Eliza think they are safe in the country. While they are seeking help, Matilda blacks out. Eventually, Matilda's grandfather finds a hospital, the Bush Hill Hospital, a hospital for fever victims. Matilda is treated there and when she is strong enough to leave, her grandpa and her head back to Philadelphia, they come back to an empty coffeehouse. Matilda's grandpa is killed by thieves who are robbing the coffeehouse. Matilda later finds Eliza, who is treating fever victims and stays with her, they go back to the coffeehouse and start to run it again, and when everything is good, it gets better and Matilda's mom returns. She is very weak and can't run the coffeehouse anymore. That is what "Fever 1793" is about.

One theme I saw in the book was survival. I think survival is one of the themes because people in Philadelphia  all try to survive Yellow Fever. Also, Matilda and her mom do survive the fever. The whole book is based upon surviving the fever although not everyone does. I have survived many things in my life, but nothing quite as dangerous as Yellow Fever. That is why I think survival is one of the themes in the book.

I really like "Fever 1793". I thought it was very interesting and enjoyed reading it. Although it gets off to a slow start, when the action happens, it's really good. I think a lot of kids would enjoy reading "Fever 1793" because it is an adventurous book about Matilda and her battle to stay alive. I think a lot of students should read this book and not stop because it is a little slow in the beginning.

Laurie Halse Anderson has written more books than just "Fever 1793. I really liked the book and want to read more of her other books. A few of her other books are: "Speak", "Forge", "Chains", "Twisted", and "Catalyst". All of her books sound good and I hope I read some of them. I really enjoyed "Fever 1793" and like Laurie Halse Anderson's writing. Those are some of the other books that Laurie Halse Anderson has written.

I got this picture from: http://meredith26443.edu.glogster.com/glog-2539-9142/

Monday, March 5, 2012

Science Systems Essay: A Letter to the Human Body Corp.

Science Systems Essay: A Letter to the Human Body Corp.





Dear Human Body Corp.:

I hear that you are trying to fire me, the Nervous System. Even in my wildest dreams I could not believe that you would do something as thoughtless as that. Well, I'm sending you this letter to remind you of all the wonderful things that I do for you. First off, without me you would be an emotionless freak with no possibility of having any part in music. Also, you wouldn't be able to speak, write, read, or solve problems, and lastly you would die without the Nervous System. So, don't fire me or all these terrible things will happen to you.

If you were to fire the Nervous System you would become an emotionless weirdo who can't do music. One consequence in firing me would be that you can't even tell what you're feeling! Can you imagine that? Not being able to feel happiness, excitement, etc. Well, that's the price you'll have to pay if you fire me. Also, you wouldn't be able to take part in any type of music. Don't fire me, or you'll turn into an emotionless weirdo who isn't able to play music.

Don't fire the Nervous System, or you won't be able to speak, read, write, or solve problems. If you fired me you wouldn't be able to go to school. I know most people would think of that as a good thing, but let's think about your future if you couldn't get an education/ read, write, or even speak; obviously it's not good. You wouldn't be able to make friends or speak to the ones you have! Also, you wouldn't be able to read so if you're the kind of person who loves to read books don't fire the Nervous System or your reign of reading will be over forever.

Lastly, and I can't stress this enough, you would simply be dead if you fired me. First of all, you wouldn't be able to breathe. Secondly, without the Nervous System your heart wouldn't know how to beat. Lastly, you couldn't eat or drink because you would have no control of your body. So I suggest, if you want to live, not to fire the Nervous System.

If you fired the Nervous System you would end up emotionless and unable to do any type of music. Secondly, you would be unable to speak, read, write, and solve problems. Lastly, you would not be alive without me. So, if you want to be a dead, emotionless freak who can't even speak, read, write, or do music then be my guest, but if not then don't fire the Nervous System.

                          Sincerely,
                          The Nervous System

I got this picture from: http://faculty.washington.edu/chudler/introb.html

Friday, February 10, 2012

January 19

January 19       




        It was Sunday morning January,19 2009. The sun was shining brightly which was unusual because the weather hadn't been good for a while. Even though it was bright outside, it was not a bright day. My mom and aunt had gone over to my grandma's house because she had not called yet, something she always did on Sunday morning to see how the morning was, before going to church. My cousins had come over, Breezi, Jonah, Douglas, and Chava. My mom and aunt were gone for a while, we tried calling, but never got an answer. We could all sense that something was wrong. We called again and finally got an answer.
        "Where are you guys?" I asked, relieved we got an answer.
        "We're at grandma's house," my mom answered quietly.
        "What's taking so long?"
        "We'll be home soon, OK?"
        "OK."
        After a while we heard the door and we all ran over there, anxious to see where they'd been.
        "We're home!" called my mom
        "Finally," Chava called back.
        "Kids, sit down," my mom suggested. My aunt was crying and my mom had red eyes.
        "What's wrong? Why are you guys crying?" asked Jonah.
        "I'm sorry, but grandma died in her sleep last night," my mom said, her eyes starting to tear up.
        "What?" said Douglas, stunned by the news we had just gotten, although we were all kind of expecting it.
        "I'm really sorry," said my mom.
        My grandma and I were very close, my whole family was. We went to her house almost every day. When we were sick we would always go to her house for the day and lay on her couch. My whole family loved her very much, but we eventually got used to having her gone. For a while, all of us were sad and didn't want to see pictures of her, but eventually we liked to look at them and think about all the fun times, and hear stories from our parents. For the first little bit it wasn't all that sad because it didn't really seem real, but as time went by and we realized that she was really gone, it was really sad. I miss my grandma, but my family still has good times without her and we wouldn't have had those good times if we just thought about the bad and wished she would come back.    

I got this picture from: http://www.picgifs.com/graphics/grandma-and-grandpa/4/