Challenge: 50 Books discussion
Finish Line 2009!
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Emily agrees with Michelle 2009
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Figured out how to add the author too, go me! Really good read.

I am a teacher (drama and social skills to Asperger Syndrome kids) It's funny how awful those school books sound when really they are fascinating to people like us!

Oh and let's go for an even dozen:
12. The Forgotten Door by Alexander Key


Whew, finishing that one means I'm almost through one of my three summer classes, hooray!

15. Love Medicine by Louise Erdrich

17. Buffy the Vampire Slayer The Long Way Home by Joss Whedon
I had forgotten about these two! Found them while I was reshelving.

I got this book as a First Read. Definitely not something I would have chosen at the bookstore, but I thoroughly enjoyed it!

20. Rules by Cynthia Lord
I read these during the semester and totally forgot about them! Seems so wrong because they are both unforgettable.

22. The Lightning Thief by Rick Riordan
23. Mouse Guard Volume One Fall 1152 by David Petersen
Enjoyed reading all of them! I'm surprised by how much I liked Springer. It's the first book by her I've read and usually just plain fantasy isn't my favorite. I think it was her style of narration that drew me in.
I'm really glad I got around to reading The Lightning Thief after all the good things I'd heard about it. It did not disappoint.
The only disappointing thing about Mouse Guard was its brevity. The mice are just adorable (even when doing very violent things), and the maps and other back matter kept me looking long after the story was over.

Short stories usually aren't my favorite, but I did enjoy these a lot. Sometimes they all seemed to blend together, and I had to work to remember where one stopped and the other started.

Woohoo for the halfway mark! I liked this book, but it was a lot darker than the Artemis Fowl series. Not that those books are all puppies and sunshine...

27. Little Brother by Cory Doctorow
28. Gathering Blue by Lois Lowry
The first I got as a First Reads, which always makes me happy. The other two are from my school library's fabulous YA collection. Little Brother was fantastic. I was kind of disappointed with Gathering Blue though, after having loved The Giver as a kid.

I read this book because it had a young adult with autism as the main character. I'd read other books with people with autism in the supporting cast, but never the main character. I thought the author did a really good job with that aspect of the book, but for me the mystery part of it sort of fell flat. Maybe I'm just overstimulated with all the fast-paced action adventure I've been reading...

Read as a book of the month for the group Wild Things, and I am so glad I did. I absolutely fell in love with this book, and I cried my eyes out at the end.

It has a good mixture of fantasy and folklore. The first hundred pages could have used some editing though...

Sometimes in historical fiction, the author's research sticks out like a sore thumb. Not so with this one. It's an excellent portrait of WWII Korea, under Japanese occupation.

Better than Gathering Blue, not as good as The Giver.
34. Leaving a Trace On Keeping a Journal by Alexandra Johnson
Honestly, just finished it so I could say I read the whole thing. It wasn't really what I was looking for.

I liked this one better than the first, but maybe that's just because I had a better idea of what to expect.

Seems like I've been reading a lot of historical fiction this summer. This one was a gem, but very different from most YA novels. An excellent look at racism and American history in a fictional work.

The second book by Iris Murdoch I've read, and I enjoyed it just as much as the first. I'm glad I didn't read the back cover synopsis before reading the book - why would they give so much away?

39. Code Talker A Novel About the Navajo Marines of World War Two by Joseph Bruchac
I am so sad I don't have any more books by Czerneda in the house. As for Code Talker, it really read as a first-person account of WWII, not fiction. I am also sad I don't have any more books by Bruchac in the house...

41. All the Lovely Bad Ones by Mary Downing Hahn
I wasn't a big fan of AtLBO, but anything would be a let down after Black Boy.

43. Lizard by Banana Yoshimoto
I only finished the first one because I won it as a first read; it is not very well written. Lizard isn't my favorite Banana Yoshimoto book, but it still has her characteristic charm.
So close to fifty I can smell it!

45. Graceling by Kristin Cashore
46. The Fold by An Na
Loved Graceling and The Fold. RtD was probably the most disappointing of that series so far.

And guess who bought the rest of the series from amazon even though she determined she was not going to spend (as much) money on books.
48. Big Mouth & Ugly Girl by Joyce Carol Oates
Another one of those great YA novels I'm not sure I would have enjoyed in high school.

49. Beast by Walter Dean Myers
50. The Adoration of Jenna Fox by Mary E. Pearson
51. Fun Home A Family Tragicomic by Alison Bechdel
52. Waiting To Score by J.E. MacLeod
53. The Eternals by Neil Gaiman
I think I finished 50 in August, but I've definitely slowed down since school started. All of these were good books; it is hard to pick my favorite of the batch!

54. The Sea of Monsters by Rick Riordan
This series is such fun fantasy fluff. Makes me happy!
55. Racism without Racists Color-Blind Racism and the Persistence of Racial Inequality in the United States by Eduardo Bonilla-Silva
An extremely readable take-down of "colorblind" rhetoric.
56. Kindred by Octavia E. Butler
I'm not sure how I missed this one when I read the bulk of her work as a teen, but it was amazing.
57. Tools of the Mind A Vygotskian Approach to Early Childhood Education by Deborah Leong
I wish my school's library had the new edition. This book has a great blend of theory and usable strategies.
58. Therefore, Repent! by Jim Munroe
I had been saving this one up, and it was more awesome than I had hoped for.
59. Fallen Angels by Larry Niven
Lame.
60. Devil Bones by Kathy Reichs
A quick fun read.
Books mentioned in this topic
Devil Bones (other topics)Kindred (other topics)
Fallen Angels (other topics)
Therefore, Repent! (other topics)
Tools of the Mind: A Vygotskian Approach to Early Childhood Education (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Deborah J. Leong (other topics)Eduardo Bonilla-Silva (other topics)
Larry Niven (other topics)
Jim Munroe (other topics)
Kathy Reichs (other topics)
More...
1. Teaching Students with Language and Communication Disabilities
2. Supporting Struggling Readers and Writers Strategies for Classroom Intervention, 3-6
3. Knowing Literacy Constructive Literacy Assessment
4. Changing Vision
5. Bones to Ashes
6. Tall, Dark & Dead
7. The Birchbark House
8. Stormwitch
9. The Mermaid Chair
10. Artemis Fowl The Arctic Incident
More to come soon, despite summer session!