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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Lucy Coats, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 20 of 20
1. TURNING PAGES: PALADIN by SALLY SLATER

I am a big old sucker for girl-disguised-as-boy novels; give me a tough girl with a sword in addition to a disguise and I'm in don't-bother-me-I'm-reading mode for hours. Add to this the fact that I'd read an article this author had written on... Read the rest of this post

0 Comments on TURNING PAGES: PALADIN by SALLY SLATER as of 9/22/2015 9:02:00 AM
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2. TURNING PAGES: A SCHOOL FOR UNUSUAL GIRLS, by KATHLEEN BALDWIN

Reader, after you finished Robin LaFevers' His Fair Assasains series and powered through Julie Berry's The Scandalous Sisterhood of Prickwillow Place and frothed through the lighter Finishing School novels by Gail Carringer and plowed through... Read the rest of this post

0 Comments on TURNING PAGES: A SCHOOL FOR UNUSUAL GIRLS, by KATHLEEN BALDWIN as of 5/15/2015 8:19:00 AM
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3. TURNING PAGES: SERIOUSLY WICKED, by TINA CONNOLLY

After being seriously blown away by Tina Connolly's alternate history as depicted in her Ironskin trilogy, I was a bit surprised to see this lighthearted-looking book in my mailbox. Stripey tights and a magic book? Huh. I shouldn't have been... Read the rest of this post

0 Comments on TURNING PAGES: SERIOUSLY WICKED, by TINA CONNOLLY as of 1/1/1900
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4. TURNING PAGES: THE LUMBERJANES Vol 1, by Noelle Stevenson, Grace Ellis, Brooke Allen, and Shannon Watters

It's a truth acknowledged universally &tc. that I am not the artsy person in this blog duo. A.F. - she draws, she's Cybil'd, she has the degree, etc. - so she has the relationships with the graphic novel companies the graphics are her schtick. I...... Read the rest of this post

0 Comments on TURNING PAGES: THE LUMBERJANES Vol 1, by Noelle Stevenson, Grace Ellis, Brooke Allen, and Shannon Watters as of 4/17/2015 5:49:00 AM
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5. TURNING PAGES: THE SEVENTH BRIDE, by T. Kingfisher

Fans of Patricia McKillip, Juliet Marillier, Brenna Yovanoff, fans of Holly Black's plot twists, as well as fans of a good hedgehog will really enjoy the newest tale from T. Kingfisher, just in time to read whilst you're waiting for your root veg to... Read the rest of this post

0 Comments on TURNING PAGES: THE SEVENTH BRIDE, by T. Kingfisher as of 11/25/2014 11:56:00 AM
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6. TURNING PAGES: SILVERBLIND, by TINA CONNOLLY

I absolutely adored Ironskin by Tina Connolly, found Copperhead a mite disturbing, with its inhabited faces and blindly privileged ladies, and wasn't sure where I'd stand with this last book in the trilogy, which, though a conclusions of sorts,... Read the rest of this post

0 Comments on TURNING PAGES: SILVERBLIND, by TINA CONNOLLY as of 10/7/2014 9:37:00 AM
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7. TURNING PAGES: HOW TO FALL, by Jane Casey

Summer reading - this is a shove-it-in-your-beach-bag book for sure. A quick, non-demanding novel which will leave you feeling a little leery, and carefully observing your friends. It's a tale of falsehoods and friendship in a tiny English beach... Read the rest of this post

0 Comments on TURNING PAGES: HOW TO FALL, by Jane Casey as of 7/25/2014 12:32:00 AM
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8. TURNING PAGES: HOOP DREAMS by Lorna Schultz Nicholson

Hello, Sports Fans! It's the dog days of summer... well, the puppy days, anyway, and sports are what's on the telly. Sports are what's on the page, too. Despite my complete-klutz status, I love a good sports novel and this fab one comes to us from... Read the rest of this post

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9. TURNING PAGES: THIRTY SUNSETS, by Christine Hurley Deriso

This is necessarily going to be a short book blurb. It's hard to review a book like this one, where so much of what goes on is a secret. The author intended for the reader to be in the dark, so I'll leave you there. Just know that it's a... Read the rest of this post

0 Comments on TURNING PAGES: THIRTY SUNSETS, by Christine Hurley Deriso as of 6/3/2014 9:05:00 AM
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10. TURNING PAGES: A CREATURE OF MOONLIGHT, by Rebecca Hahn

This is an unusual YA novel. I'm quite a bit in favor of the cover -- the deeply colored night sky, the swirls of the font -- it's just striking, isn't it? I'll bet the author just happy-danced when she saw it. It says "fantasy" without adding,... Read the rest of this post

0 Comments on TURNING PAGES: A CREATURE OF MOONLIGHT, by Rebecca Hahn as of 4/22/2014 8:41:00 AM
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11. TURNING PAGES: BIG FAT DISASTER, by Beth Fehlbaum

"The truth is not always pretty. It can be disturbing, enraging, and enlightening. I found my way out of Hell by choosing Truth, and, regardless of anyone’s opinion, I am committed to telling Truth AND extending Hope, through my stories." - Beth... Read the rest of this post

0 Comments on TURNING PAGES: BIG FAT DISASTER, by Beth Fehlbaum as of 4/8/2014 11:31:00 AM
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12. TURNING PAGES/WCOB: The Changeling, by Zilpha Keatley Snyder

- Know all the Questions, but not the Answers - Look for the Different instead of the Same - Never Walk when there's room for Running - - Don't do anything that can't be a Game."The Never Grown-Up Spell, from The Changeling I have a lot of respect... Read the rest of this post

4 Comments on TURNING PAGES/WCOB: The Changeling, by Zilpha Keatley Snyder, last added: 4/7/2013
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13. Imaginary Girls, by Nova Ren Suma

The cover of Imaginary Girls immediately caught my eye. It's gorgeous: A girl in a sheer white nightgown floats just below a rippled watery surface, suspended in bright aqua blue nothingness. Her face obscured, her skin is a ghostly... Read the rest of this post

3 Comments on Imaginary Girls, by Nova Ren Suma, last added: 9/6/2011
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14. Mr. Twain Apparently Had Daughters

It's apparently a heckuva weird summer in Scotland. Bad girls are everywhere!From the New York Review of Books: an illustrated slideshow of Mark Twain's 1865 children's story, "Advice to Little Girls," which was later published as part of a larger... Read the rest of this post

1 Comments on Mr. Twain Apparently Had Daughters, last added: 7/25/2011
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15. Monday Review: BEAUTY QUEENS by Libba Bray

Dear FCC: I received an Advance Review Copy of this book from ALA Midwinter in January. What could be better for a Fourth of July review than a book about a planeload of Miss Teen Dream USA pageant contestants who crash-land on a (nearly) deserted... Read the rest of this post

1 Comments on Monday Review: BEAUTY QUEENS by Libba Bray, last added: 7/5/2011
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16. Monday Review: EXCLUSIVELY CHLOE by J.A. Yang

Today's review covers another book whose author I got to see speak at the Diversity in YA tour a few weeks ago. (You know we like to promote diversity in YA here at FW!) I checked out a copy of this book from the library.Reader Gut Reaction: Let me... Read the rest of this post

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17. Mid-September Reading Roundup: Origami, Trees, and Anger

1001 Cranes by Naomi Hirahara is one I had on my library request list recently, a middle-grade/younger YA story that focuses on themes of family--both growing closer to and apart from, on growing up Japanese-American in California, and on opening... Read the rest of this post

5 Comments on Mid-September Reading Roundup: Origami, Trees, and Anger, last added: 9/21/2009
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18. Hey Everyone: Read This Book

Okay, maybe it wouldn't be up everyone's alley. But from a personal standpoint, I feel like I could turn to almost any page in Sheba Karim's debut novel Skunk Girl and find something that makes me want to simultaneously laugh and cry, something... Read the rest of this post

5 Comments on Hey Everyone: Read This Book, last added: 9/11/2009
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19. Reviews Roundup (aka My Library Books Are Due TODAY)

I did the Bad Thing of devouring a whole load of books without doing writeups in between like I should, so here I am left with a short stack (mmm....short stack) that I really need to deal with before I take them back to their rightful home. So,... Read the rest of this post

4 Comments on Reviews Roundup (aka My Library Books Are Due TODAY), last added: 5/25/2009
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20. Books at Bedtime: The Great Flood

These last couple of weeks there has been some bad flooding in parts of the UK and I was very sad to hear from author and publisher Debjani Chatterjee that her independent Sahitya Press has been badly affected, with the loss of their books stored in a community centre in Sheffield. Our thoughts go out to her and her colleagues.

AtticusTheStorytellers100GreekMythsIn an interview with PaperTigers a few months ago, Debjani talked about how certain stories crop up in many different traditions: one of these is the Great Flood. There are many versions of Noah’s Ark, which we enjoy reading - but this week was the first time my boys had come across the story outside its biblical context and they were intrigued. We are reading Atticus the Storyteller’s 100 Greek Myths by Lucy Coats and Anthony Lewis, which we all agree is a “superb retelling of the Greek myths for younger children” and “a really lovely book for all the family to share” (Books for Keeps). Like in The Barefoot Book of Knights I mentioned a couple of weeks ago, the stories are brought together by a narrator: here it’s Atticus, who is on his way (more…)

2 Comments on Books at Bedtime: The Great Flood, last added: 7/25/2007
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