Princess Academy by Shannon Hale

Princess AcademyThis one won the Newbery honor award this year, and quite deservedly so. Miri, the main character, is a young girl who lives in a mountain mining community in a kind of fairy tale time and place. One day, an announcement comes from the king that the prince’s bride will come from Miri’s town, and as such all the girls 14 to 17 are taken to an academy designed to make them more presentable (because we can’t have coarse, uneducated peasant girls meeting the prince, now can we?). Miri struggles with conflicting desires to meet and impress the prince and to potentially have an easier life, and to be with her friend, who truly cares about her. There’s more to the store than the romance, but that’s the basic idea. Miri is a strong female role model, and the rest of the characters kind of fade in comparison. It’s very good storytelling, and takes some twists and turns. Very well written, two thumbs up, five stars, yadda yadda. Just go read it (even if it is a kid’s book. Lots of great books are children’s books).

Published in: on May 29, 2006 at 3:14 pm Leave a Comment
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Witch Child by Celia Rees

Hey, first post. Everybody celebrate.

Witch ChildSo, Witch Child is kind of like Witch of Blackbird Pond or The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle, I can’t remember which. Anyway, it’s about a girl who lives in Massachusetts during the 1600s and is suspected and finally accused of witchcraft. It was a great read, very compelling. Books like this make me wonder about some of the Christian groups who were persecuted, sailed for America to escape it, and then proceeded to persecute others in the same way.

So that’s it for my first post. This is what I’m planning to write about in my blog – whatever I’m reading. The End.

Published in: on May 28, 2006 at 10:31 pm Comments (4)
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