Deep Zone / Tim Green
Troy White can predict a play before it happens. Star quarterback on his state football team, Troy’s a natural for the 7-on-7 tournament. Ty Lewis is a wide receiver with exceptional speed.From the moment the two football champs cross paths, Troy and Ty begin to size each other up. Troy is suspicious of Ty’s interest in his friend Tate, while Ty worries his speed will never be a match for Troy’s game smarts. But when the two rivals find themselves somehow tangled in the same dangerous web of deceit, they discover that they have more in common than their skill at football. (Amazon.com)
Dope sick / Walter Dean Myers
Believed to have shot an undercover cop in drug deal,
17-year-old Lil J hides in an abandoned building. While trying to find a way
out, Lil J encounters a vagrant man named Kelly who is watching scenes from J’s
past and his prospective future on a television. Kelly then asks: “If you could
do it all over again and change something, what would it be?” Lil J ponders his answer while reviewing
scenes from his past. A didn't-see-that-coming ending wraps up the story on a
note of well-earned hope.
And then there were none / Agatha Christie
Ten strangers are lured to an isolated island mansion off the Devon coast by a mysterious "U.N. Owen.""Nine . . ."At dinner a recorded message accuses each of them in turn of having a guilty secret, and by the end of the night one of the guests is dead.
"Eight . . ." Stranded by a violent storm, and haunted by a nursery rhyme counting down one by one . . . one by one they begin to die.
"Seven . . ." Who among them is the killer and will any of them survive? (Amazon.com)
Five flavors of dumb / Antony John
“For the record, I
wasn’t around the day they decided to become Dumb. If I’d been their manager
back then I’d have pointed out that the name, while accurate, was not exactly
smart.” (p.1)
Piper feels invisible. Her dad refused to learn to sign when
she lost her hearing at the age of six, even though it's how she prefers to
communicate. And, worst of all, she finds out that her parents
"borrowed" money from her college fund to pay for her baby sister's
cochlear implants - surgical devices that will give hearing to Grace. And
now Piper has been hired to manage Dumb, a band she sums up as “one egomaniacal
pretty boy, one silent rocker, one talentless piece of eye candy, one angry
girl, and one nerd-boy drummer.” (www.Abbythelibrarian.com)
The book thief / Markus Zusak
This novel is set in World War II Germany and is narrated by
Death. Liesel Meminger, a foster girl living outside Munich during World War II,
scratches out a meager existence by stealing when she discovers something she
can’t resist–books. Soon she is stealing them from Nazi book-burnings and the
mayor’s wife’s library. With the help of her foster father, she learns to read
and shares her stolen books with her neighbors and with the Jewish man her
family has hidden in the basement.
This is an unforgettable story about courage, the triumph of
the human spirit, and the ability of books to feed the soul. (from the book
jacket.)
What happened to goodbye / Sarah Dessen
McClean and her father travel light. Their emotional
baggage—her mother’s affair, the divorce, her mother’s marriage to a
high-profile college basketball coach—is heavy enough. McLean has chosen to
live with her father, and his work requires them to move about every six
months. With each new location and new school, McLean establishes a new
identity, calling herself a difference derivative of her name—Beth, Eliza,
Elizabeth—and participating in different activities. She sometimes leaves
without even saying goodbye. So what happens she doesn’t want to leave again?
Poetry
The panther and the lash / Langston Hughes
Langston Hughes, African American poet, addresses the racial
politics of the sixties.
God’s trombones / James Weldon Johnson
James Weldon Johnson, African American poet, was a leading
figure of the Harlem Renaissance. This is a collection of seven inspirational sermons
of African American preachers reimagined as poetry.
No comments:
Post a Comment