Saturday, July 2, 2011
The Last Child by John Hart
Johnny Merrimon’s twin sister has been missing for a year. Johnny is still searching for her even though he believes that everyone else has given up. His father left shortly after the disappearance, his mother’s boyfriend keeps her drugged and abuses her, but Johnny won’t give up hope. After another girl goes missing, a man tells Johnny the words he’s been waiting to hear for a year: “I found her.” Is the man talking about the recent disappearance, or about Johnny’s twin sister? Johnny is convinced the man has found his sister, and no one can tell him otherwise. His search becomes more desperate after the second girl goes missing, and what Johnny finds is not what he expected.
The Last Child sucked me in immediately. 13-year-old Johnny Merrimon is a strong character who struggles to keep it together while searching for his twin sister. You can feel the tension and Johnny’s despair throughout the book. There were many twists I wasn’t expecting. This is the first book by John Hart that I’ve read, and I will be reading more.
Carrie
Tuesday, June 28, 2011
This Great Struggle: America's Civil War by Steven E. Woodworth
Civil War historian Woodworth has given us a thrilling, easy-to-read, single-volume history of the War, just in time for the sesquicentennial. All of the battle details are here, but Woodworth deftly covers the political details as well. He gives us the Congressional machinations regarding slavery that preceded the first strike at Fort Sumter, and he delineates the personal clashes between figures. Whether it's Lincoln vs. McClellan or Davis vs. Beauregard, the internecine battles are almost as crucial as the field ones. This book is essential reading for everyone who forgot most of what happened during the most critical four years in American history.
Dawn
http://catalog.bartlett.lib.il.us/polaris/search/
Dawn
http://catalog.bartlett.lib.il.us/polaris/search/
Wedding Belles by Haywood Smith
Karen
Sunday, June 26, 2011
What the Night Knows by Dean Koontz
Karen
Wednesday, June 22, 2011
SISTER by Rosamund Lupton
This debut novel is not for the emotionally faint of heart. If you have a sister, beware of its impact. The book opens with Tess already dead, but is told by Beatrice (Bee) the elder sister. She covers the time from receiving news that her sister is missing forward as a narrative addressed to her sister. There are flashbacks to earlier times in the way we do when something in the present triggers a shared memory. There are apologies and criticisms and tears. But this is no weepy-waily-oh poor me story – Bee evolves into her best, strongest self as she works to uncover the truth of her sister’s death. What grabbed me was the grinding sense of loss that permeates the narrative on an almost subconscious level – always present but not overt. This felt universal to one who has three sisters and never even wants to imagine this loss. Beautifully written and with a great twist at the end, I’m glad it’s fiction.
cas
Thursday, June 16, 2011
What Alice Forgot by Liane Moriarty
Karen
Monday, June 6, 2011
Familyhood by Paul Reiser
Comedian and actor Paul Reiser returns with the next book in his series on marriage and parenting. Familyhood picks ups 15 years after Babyhood ends. Reiser reflects on his experiences as a father in a series of short vignettes. In "The Car Door Dings" he worries about his son's penchant for being a "creative manipulator of the facts." In "Leave a Tender Moment Alone" he regales the reader with his inept attempts to photograph and record EVERY fleeting tender moment. And in "Bad Words" he agonizes over his younger son's discovery of four-letter-words. Fans of Reiser will be happy to learn that years of family life have given him more comedic moments to share.
Dawn
Find This Book in the Catalog
Dawn
Find This Book in the Catalog
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