
How to Survive Your Murder
By Danielle ValentineDanielle Valentine’s “How to Survive Your Murder” offers a disappointingly flat execution of an interesting concept.
Danielle Valentine’s “How to Survive Your Murder” offers a disappointingly flat execution of an interesting concept.
Malinda Lo’s “A Scatter of Light” is a coming of age novel that sadly falls flat in comparison to its semi-companion piece: “Last Night at the Telegraph Club”. This novel centers Aria Tang West, a teenager sent to live with her grandmother in California as punishment for a scandal that she caused during her last week of senior year.
Tess Sharpe’s “The Girls I’ve Been” is a fast-paced, thrilling story of survival.
Julie Berry’s “Lovely War” is a poignant, moving take on passion, young love, and the loss of innocence. The novel begins with a conversation between the Greek gods in an effort to answer why Love is always drawn to war, but quickly spirals into the tale of Hazel and James, two teenagers in a time of chaos.
Rae Carson’s “Any Sign of Life” is a survival story with a heartfelt edge.
The novel centers Paige Miller, a skilled teenage basketball player, who becomes extremely sick and passes out. When she wakes up days later, everyone is dead. She’s somehow avoided the arrival of the apocalypse, but now everyone she loves is gone.
Dahlia Adler’s Cool for the Summer is a passionate, nostalgic take on young love and identity.
Lara returns to high school after a magical summer and immediately hits it off with her longtime crush, Chase. She’s thrilled, but is suddenly caught off guard by the reappearance of Jasmine, the girl she spent the summer with. Told in both the present and in flashbacks to the summer, the novel follows Lara as she grapples with her feelings for both Jasmine and Chase.
Winter, the final book in the Lunar Chronicles, was just as amazing as I expected it would be! In this book, we finally find out all the secrets behind the royal Lunar family and the history of Cinder! We get introduced to one more important character, Winter, who is the princess of Luna who has Lunar sickness (makes her mad/crazy) because she refuses to use her Lunar gift on others.
The Lunar Chronicles does it again! The third book in this series, Cress, did not disappoint any of my expectations. This book was based on Rapunzel, and I loved how everything tied together in the end! We end up meeting (in more detail) Cress, a lunar trapped/kept in a satellite above Earth, who is an amazing hacker working for Queen Levana.
This sequel to the first book in the Lunar Chronicles, Cinder, didn’t disappoint. In this book, you get introduced to new character, Scarlet Benoit, a normal girl who lived on a farm in France. You will find out more about Queen Levana’s plans, and the past of Princess Selene. The story starts out with introducing Scarlet, but then also updates you about Cinder & Captain Thorne’s situation throughout the book, alternating between the stories (which end up getting connected later on).
This was such an amazing read; it may be my new favorite! It was such a creative idea for a book! Cinder is the first book in “the Lunar Chronicles” series, and it is so, so good. The main character is Cinder, a cyborg living in a dystopian world where many countries are merged, there are cyborgs, people living on the moon who have mind powers, and a plague called letumosis that’s killing thousands of people on Earth. She is a mechanic who lives with her stepmother & stepsisters. (Just like Cinderella).