Showing posts with label readingforpleasure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label readingforpleasure. Show all posts

Friday, 24 April 2020

First Lines Friday

Hello, hello my lovelies,

I hope you are all well.

Today is Friday - in fact it's Good Friday so happy Easter to you.

First lines Friday is run by Wandering Words


What if instead of judging a book by its cover, its author or its prestige, we judged it by its opening lines?  If you want to make your own post, feel free to use or edit the banner above, and follow the rules below:
  • Pick a book off your shelf (it could be your current read or on your TBR) and open to the first page
  • Copy the first few lines, but don’t give anything else about the book away just yet – you need to hook the reader first
  • Finally… reveal the book!

So, here we go:

Like a man-made magic wish, the aeroplane began to rise.
The boy sitting in the cock pit gripped his seat and held his breath as the plane climbed into the arms of the sky. Fred's jaw was set with concentration, and his fingers twitched, following the movements of the pilot beside him: joystick, throttle.

Any ideas?






This is The Explorer by Katherine Rundell

The Explorer (Paperback)


Did you get it right?

If you haven't read this yet, I hope this has inspired you to.

Happy reading

Allison xx

Friday, 17 April 2020

First Lines Friday

Hello, hello my lovelies,

It's Friday so it must be time for First Lines Friday.

First Lines Fridays is a weekly feature for book lovers hosted by Wandering Words. What if instead of judging a book by its cover, its author or its prestige, we judged it by its opening lines?  If you want to make your own post, feel free to use or edit the banner above, and follow the rules below:
  • Pick a book off your shelf (it could be your current read or on your TBR) and open to the first page
  • Copy the first few lines, but don’t give anything else about the book away just yet – you need to hook the reader first
  • Finally… reveal the book!
So here is today's snippet ...

I read the sign again, glowing in front of me:

Type of organism: human female
Origin: Earth
 Age: about twelve years

This brand new exhibit will be introduced to the wider Earth Zone exhibition when emotional stability has been achieved.

There you go! Any ideas?






Today's opening is from The Kid Who Came From Space by Ross Welford.

The Kid Who Came From Space (Paperback)


I hope this has inspired you to go and read the book.

Happy reading

Allison xx




Friday, 10 April 2020

Jungledrop book review

Hello, hello my lovelies,

How are you all?

Today I am going to review Jungledrop by Abi Elphinstone

Jungledrop - The Unmapped Chronicles 2 (Paperback)

Synopsis

Eleven-year-old twins, Fox and Fibber, have been rivals for as long as they can remember. Only one of them will inherit the family fortune and so a race is afoot to save the dwindling Petty-Squabble empire and win the love of their parents.

But when the twins are whisked off to Jungledrop, a magical Unmapped Kingdom in charge of conjuring our world's weather, things get wildly out of hand. An evil harpy called Morg is on the loose. And if she finds the long-lost Forever Fern before the twins, both Jungledrop and our world will crumble.

Suddenly, Fox and Fibber find themselves on an incredible adventure in a glow-in-the-dark rainforest full of golden panthers, gobblequick trees and enchanted temples. But, with the fate of two worlds in their hands, will the twins be able to work together for once to defeat Morg and her dark magic?


Review

Meet Fibber and Fox Petty-Squabble.
Twins.
Rivals.
Hate each other.
Never hugged each other, loved each other or trusted each other.

Meet Mr and Mrs Petty-Squabble.
Parents -  although I'm not sure you can actually call them that.
Business owners.
Driven by money.

Mr and Mrs Petty-Squabble have raised their children for one thing only - to take on the business and make them millions. Unbeknown to the children they are pitted against each other. The child with the best business plan to stop the family businesses going under and get them back to making millions gets to stay. The other gets sent to Antartica forever.

Nice huh?

Until one day it all changes when they are given the pheonix tear and find themselves on the Here and Now Express being whisked off to another world - the magical, fantastical world of Jungledrop.

There are problems afoot and it is down to the twins to save Jungledrop from the evil harpy, Morg. The trouble is, as I've mentioned before, the twins have been raised not to trust anyone or each other. Not to talk to each other nicely. Not to have manners. Yet, in order to save Jungledrop AND Faraway (our world) they realise that what they have been used to, has to change.

This is the second book in The Unmapped Chronicles, following on from Rumblestar. The world-building is second to none. The scene setting and descriptions are so vivid that the ideas  Abi Elphinstone has are expertly visualised by the reader. I am in awe of how she thinks of her characters names and nouns. Amongst others are Nightcreaks, Witchcrocs, snoozenuts, Doogie Herbalsneeze, flickertug map and my two favourite characters, Heckle and Total Shambles. Pure genius!

The adventures were thrilling. I was caught in the dangers, riskiness, uncertainty and pure buzz as the twins went from one set of problems to another. As the twins flew on the back of Total Shambles, I felt the wind through my hair as I went with them. As Fox hung on for grim death trying not to fall in the pit of hog-nosed vipers, I was willing her to hold on. Just perfect story telling.

However, there is an underlying premise that is for the twins to save Faraway and Jungledrop, they have to work together. Abi Elphinstone delightfully shows how to trust, be empathetic and sympathetic. To have manners, to forgive and accept anyone or anything for what they are. Everyone has a talent. It might not be the same as yours but it is just as amazing as yours. And then finally to be proud. Be proud of your inner beauty and be genuinely proud for those that you love and hold dear.

I think you can guess that I thoroughly enjoyed this book. I would highly recommend this for children to read but I would also urge KS2 teachers to have a copy in their room. If you can't read the whole book, you could easily pick out excerpts for children to analyse and explore how Abi Elphinstone makes her writing so descriptively believable or how she creates tension. How the twins show feelings and also how their feelings and behaviour change over time. What would have happened if they didn't change? What effect did Fox showing forgiveness have on the reader? I could go on and on.

I could easily waffle for hours about this book and to be honest I've wanted to say so much more, but I've had to really reign myself in so as not to give any spoilers. I could burst holding on to what I know and not be able to share it! 

You have to read it!

A super easy ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ from me.

Happy reading,

Allison xx




First lines Friday

Hello, hello my lovelies,

I hope you are all well.

Today is Friday - in fact it's Good Friday so happy Easter to you.

First lines Friday is run by Wandering Words


What if instead of judging a book by its cover, its author or its prestige, we judged it by its opening lines?  If you want to make your own post, feel free to use or edit the banner above, and follow the rules below:
  • Pick a book off your shelf (it could be your current read or on your TBR) and open to the first page
  • Copy the first few lines, but don’t give anything else about the book away just yet – you need to hook the reader first
  • Finally… reveal the book!

So, here we go:

There was a man made of midnight and his name was Shadow Jack.
The name suited him well; his clothes were dark and his hair was darker. His eyes were pools of shadow. As he slipped through the winding labyrinth of the slums on the night our story begins, his intentions were darkest of all.


Ooh, I think this is a really good one. Any ideas?






This is the fantastic Evernight by Ross Mackenzie.

Evernight - Evernight (Paperback)

I haven't read this yet but how good is that opening paragraph! 

Hope this has inspired you to read it.

Happy reading

Allison xx




Monday, 6 April 2020

Attack of the Heebie Jeebies - Review

Hello, hello my lovelies,

I hope you are staying safe and well and managing with the social isolation. I'm lucky as I have a garden but I can't imagine how those of you who don't have one are managing.

So today I have another review for you.

Attack of the Heebie Jeebies by Tom Percival

Attack of the Heebie Jeebies - Dream Team (Paperback)

Publisher: Pan Macmillan
Published: 2nd April 2020

Synopsis:

Erika's had a bad day. But going to sleep upset means bad dreams. She finds herself stranded in the Dreamscape along with a mob of hungry Heebie Jeebies - and to make matters worse, she's being hunted by a terrifying Angermare!
Enter the Dream Team! Can they help Erika overcome her worries and get home, or will she be trapped forever? 

Review:
What a lovely book! 
Meet Erika. Erika is the older sister to her baby brother and has become VERY jealous and feels she is missing out on her parents attention. In fact, this has made her grumpy. VERY grumpy. So much so, she snaps at her brother and parents, she argues and finally, in a fit of rage tells her parents exactly what she thinks and storms off to her bedroom, where she cries herself to sleep.
This is where her adventure begins. She finds herself in another world. One that is full of Heebie Jeebies and she soon discovers that there are other creatures that she can talk to. However, there are bad things in store. Erika and her new friends have to work together, not only to defeat the nasty being, but also to get her back home.
I really enjoyed how the author has sensitively dealt with the problems that Erika has. I thought the illustrations particularly enhanced the story. They are mostly black, white and purple, which sounds boring, but actually depicts Erika's feelings and situations really well. 
I can see myself reading this aloud to my class. The book deals with anxiety, behaviour, jealousy and how to overcome these. It can be easily used within the LKS2 PSHE curriculum, being proactive, or indeed as circle time if you need to be reactive to a situation. In fact, it would also be an ideal book to give to a specific parent and child to read together, to help the child relate to Erika and then come up with their own strategies to deal with their problems.
I'd happily have this on my bookshelf at school but I would also happily recommend this for any parent to read with or give to their child to read. Not only would it help a child that finds themselves in the same situation as Erika, but it would also help those children who are lucky enough to have no worries, understand where Erika is coming from in order to empathise.
My rating is ⭐⭐⭐⭐

Tuesday, 31 March 2020

Top Five Tuesday

Hello, hello my lovelies,

How are you all?

Today I am taking part in Top Five Tuesday which is run by Shanah over at Bionic Book Worm.

This is what you have to do:

How you make your lists is completely up to you. Want to do authors first names? Go ahead! Want to do last names? Have at it! Want to do a mix of both? It’s your post and I’m not the Top 5 police who will send you to bookish jail or anything….. wait….. bookish jail? That sounds like fun…. can that be a thing? Point is, attack the alphabet as you please. I think I’ll be doing last names for these but I haven’t decided yet.
If you’re lucky enough to have your shelves organized in alphabetical order, then this will be easy! Me – I organize by genre so……. not so easy! I can’t wait for the chance to highlight a few authors I don’t talk about all that often!

Today we are finishing off authors with the letters U, V, W, X, Y, Z.
This is going to be soooo tricky!
U is for Alison Uttely who wrote The Little Grey Rabbit series.
V  has to be for Jules Verne
W is for E B White
X, Y and Z I couldn't do 😒
Have you got any suggestions?
Happy reading,
Allison xx


Monday, 30 March 2020

A book for each letter in my name


Hello, hello my lovelies,

How are you all doing stuck at home?

Just a fun post for you today. These are book titles for each letter of my first name.

As usual. I have posted links to Waterstones, however please also don't forget your local independent bookshops at this difficult time.


A is for A Pocketful of Stars by Aisha Bushby

Image result for A pocketful of stars book



L is for Letters from the Lighthouse by Emma Carroll

Image result for letters from a lighthouse


L is for The Land of Roar by Jenny McLachlan

Image result for the land of roar  book


I is for The Iron Man by Ted Hughes

Image result for the iron man

S is for Starfell Willow Moss and the Lost Day by Dominique Valente


Image result for starfell book




O is for Orphans of the Tide by Struan Murray

Image result for orphans of the tide book

N is for Nevermoor by Jessica Townsend

Image result for nevermoor


What books would you choose?


Keep safe.

Happy reading,

Allison xx

Sunday, 29 March 2020

Six For Sunday

Hello, hello my lovelies,

I hope you are feeling safe and well.

Today I am taking part in #sixforsunday, run by Steph over at alittlebutalot.

Here's what to do:

If you’re a blogger, you will find the prompts for January to March in this blog post and you can post a blog post with your six choices for that week’s prompt. If you’re not a blogger but want to join in anyway:
  • post a tweet with your choices
  • a picture on instagram showing us your choices
  • reply to my post with your choices
So on with this week's theme which is ...

6 characters I'd like to be like

Oh my this is tricky.

1. Atticus Finch

Image result for atticus finch

He seems to come up in a lot of my posts but hey, I want to be like him!

2. Tilly Pages

Image result for tilly pages

Who wouldn't want to have the ability to wander into your favourite books?

3. Milou from The Unadoptables

See the source image

I know she is an orphan and struggles not knowing who her family are, but I love the strength of her character and her drive to find answers.

4. Zinnie from The House of Hidden Wonders

See the source image

A little bit of a theme here but again, another orphan with a real strength of character.

5. Mary Poppins

Image result for mary poppins

I mean I could fly to where I want to, keep everything and more in my bag, talk to the birds, jump into art and dance with cartoon penguins. Who wouldn't?


6. Heidi

Image result for heidi the book

Just for where she lives and what she gets to live with and do.

So there you have it. My six for Sunday. What did you choose? I'd love to know.

Happy reading,

Allison xx

Friday, 27 March 2020

First Lines Friday

Hello, hello my lovelies,

How are you all doing? How is working at home going?

Today I'm taking part in First Lines Friday. I love this one as you find lots of interesting first lines that make you want to read the book!This is run by Becky over at Becky's Book Blog.All you have to do is:

  • Pick a book off your shelf (it could be your current read or on your TBR) and open to the first page
  • Copy the first few lines, but don’t give anything else about the book away just yet – you need to hook the reader first
  • Finally… reveal the book!
So, here we go.

Harrison Beck pulled a biro from the pocket of his yellow anorak, deftly turning it over his index finger so it was point down, and doodled in the central margin of the newspaper spread across the table.


Any ideas?




It's The Highland Falcon Thief by M G Leonard and Sam Sedgman

The Highland Falcon Thief: Exclusive Edition - Adventures on Trains (Paperback)

Synopsis:
Adventures on Trains is a major mystery series from the prize-winning M.G. Leonard and Sam Sedgman. First stop, The Highland Falcon Thief, a breathless train journey full of deceptions, puzzles and clues to solve.
Harrison Beck is reluctantly joining his travel-writer Uncle Nat for the last journey of the royal train, The Highland Falcon. But as the train makes its way to Scotland, a priceless brooch goes missing, and things are suddenly a lot more interesting. As suspicions and accusations run high among the passengers, Harrison begins to investigate and uncovers a few surprises along the way. Can he solve the mystery of the jewel thief and catch the culprit before they reach the end of the line?
Hear whispers in the dining car, find notes in the library, and unknown passengers among the luggage as you help Harrison to solve the mystery aboard one of the world's grandest trains. Fast-paced and packed with illustrations and clues, Adventures on Trains is a stop you won't want to miss!
Did you guess it? I am reading this at the moment and loving it!
Catch you again soon,

Happy reading,

Allison xx




Thursday, 26 March 2020

What's on my TBR

Hello, hello my lovelies,

I sincerely hope you are all keeping safe and well. Massive thanks go out to all key workers out there.

Today I am sharing what is on my TBR. The trouble is it is ever growing - do you have this problem? It seems that for every book I read, another 6 or so go on the list!

I'm not going to put pictures or anything but just write you a list. To keep the list small, I'm just going to tell you what I have on my kindle rather than my physical shelves.

Here we go!

1. The Missing and the Dead by Stuart Macbride
2. The Miniaturist by Jessie Burton
3. The Elephant in the Garden by Michael Morpurgo
4. The Mystery of Smugglers Cove by Paul Moxham
5. The Creakers by Tom Fletcher
6. The Great Brain Robbery by P.G. Bell
7. The Golden Acorn by Catherine Cooper
8. Bedtime Stories for Kids by Uncle Amon
9. Witch School by Katrina Kahler
10. Nevermoor by Jessica Townsend
11. Cogheart by Peter Bunzl
12. A Study in Scarlet by Sherlock Holmes
13. An Elf's Equations by Dianna Sanchez
14. Geraldine and the Most Spectacular Science Project by Sol Rewan
15. The Girl Who Speaks Bear by Sophie Anderson
16. Winterborne Home for Vengeance and Valour by Ally Carter
17. The Thief Knot by Kate Millard
18. The Forgotten Palace by Luke Aylan
19. Emily Winsna and the Tides of Time by Liz Kessler
20. Women Win the Vote by Nancy Kennedy
21. Tiger Heart by Penny Chrimes
22. The Spectrum Girls Survival Guide by Sienna Castellon
23. Monstrous Devices by Damian Love
24. Unexpected Super Spy by Zanib Mian
24. Scribble Witch Notes in Class by Inky Willis
24. Where the World Turns Wild by Nicola Penfold
25. A Sprinkle of Sorcery by Michelle Harrison
26. The Ninjabread Man by Stewart Ross
27. Viper's Daughter by Michelle Paver
28. Keeper of the Lost Cities by Shannon Messenger
29. Brightstorm by Vashti Hardy
30. The Highland Falcon Thief by M G Leonard
31. The Wild Way Home by Sophie Kirtley
32. Callum McBride by Mike Riding
33. The Smallest Man by Frances Quinn
34. Duncan Versus the Googleys by Kate Milner
35. Fire Boy by J M Joseph
36. Britfield and the Lost Crown Book 1 by C R Stewart
37. Attack of the Heebie Jeebies Dream Team 1 by Tom Percival
38. Orphans of the Tide by Struan Murray
39. Jungledrop by Abi Elphinstone
40. The Slug Queen Chronicles Season One by S.G. Thomas
41. Fig Swims the World by Lou Abercrombie
42. The Animalas of Lockwood Manor by Jane Healey
43. Thw Witches of Willow Cove byJosh Roberts
44. BOOT The Rusty Rescue by Shane Hegarty
45. The Vanishing Trick by Jenni Spangler

So just the 45 then 😃😃😃

Any on there you've read? Any take your fancy? Any surprises? Drop me a line. I'd love to know.

What's on your TBR?

Happy reading,

Allison xx

Tuesday, 24 March 2020

Top 5 Tuesday

Hello, hello my lovelies,

I hope you are all well and staying healthy.

Today I'm joining in with Top 5 Tuesday; however, I've joined in half way through this theme. I should be doing favourite authors with the letters P, Q, R, S and T but to catch up, I'm going to do A to T (not really a top 5 at all!).

This is run by Shanah at Bionic Book Worm so a big thank you and do pop along if you would like to join in as well.

I'm going to mix up and probably have first and surnames as the letter - just to help myself out a little but I am going to try to stick to middle grade authors.

Here we go!

A - Abi Elphinstone 
B -  Peter Bunzl 
C - Emma Carroll
D - Catherine Doyle
E - Eloise Williams
F - Fleur Hitchcock
G - Sharon Gosling
H - Konnie Huq
I - Eva Ibbotson
J - Jessica Townsend 
K - Katherine Rundell
L - M G Leonard 
M - Maz Evans 
N - James Nicol
O - Onjali Rauf
P - Phillip Pullman 
Q
R - J K Rowling
S - Sophie Anderson 
T - Lisa Thompson

Unfortunately, Q stumped me. Any suggestions?

I hope you enjoyed this.

Happy reading,

Allison xx