"We need to go," he told her. "Go where?" surprise rang in her voice. "I'm from the color resistance, and they have decided to consider you as a member now that you are of age." Torn from her home and family, Luna is thrown into the unknown of undercover missions, dark secrets, and the fight against evil. Will she and Stephen be able to find the true heir of Iceliar? Will the wicked king Elsiper be stopped before it's too late? With her best friends seeming betrayal and the horrible fate which threatens those she loves, will Luna be able to uphold the laws of the great book? Though hard times present themselves as well as trials, the one inch high characters in this story must keep true not only to what they believe but also to themselves and those who depend on them.
Sarah Anderson learned to knit at a very young age and has been hooked on the fiber crafts ever since. She taught herself to spin at 13, but it was not until 1992 that she became serious about her spinning. She developed a new technique she calls “wrap and roll,” which won her a cover on Spin Off magazine in 2008. She has taught at the Spin-Off Autumn Retreat (SOAR), contributed knit designs to All New Homespun and Handknit, and teaches at many venues. She lives near Snohomish, Washington.
Everything in Between by Sarah Anderson is an adventurous novel about a sixteen-year-old girl named Luna. Luna is a mixling. (A mixling is a human that has a "mix" of hair, skin, and eye colors. In the book, if a person has brown hair, dark skin, and green eyes, they would be considered a mixling, because their eyes aren't dark too.) The king Elsiper (who really shouldn't be king because his mixling brother, Elihu, is the rightful heir) thinks mixlings aren't as intelligent as "purebreds" and banishes them from Icelair, the main city. She is in hiding in Icelair until the color resistance takes her in by orders of her uncle, Matthias. The resistance is a group of people who rightfully believe that mixlings are as good as anyone else, and are willing to do something to change the way things are. They are servants of The Lord of the Book, and by serving Him, they slowly work their way up to victory. This book is Fiction, Fantasy, and Christian. I recommend this book for people ages ten to fourteen, but of course it depends on the person if it suits them or not. It got a bit predictable in the end which is the only reason why I only gave it a four star. Oh, and by the way, before you start reading this book, you should know that all the people in the book are only about an inch tall.