The Lets-Read-and-Find-Out Science series is our best selling kids series this month and offers wonderful selections for seasonal science and beyond.
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Blog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Seasonal: Holiday Books, Teens: Young Adults, Best Kids Stories, HarperCollins, Lois Lowry, Series Books, James Dashner, featured, The Mortal Instruments, Cassandra Clare, Margaret K. McElderry Books, Jeff Kinney, Delacorte Press, Diary of a Wimpy Kid, Amulet Books, Ages 4-8, Ages 9-12, Book Lists, Science, Best Sellers, Veronica Roth, Divergent, The Maze Runner series, Best Selling Books, HMH Books for Young Readers, Best Selling Books For Kids, Series List, Let's-Read-and-Find-Out Science Series, The Giver Quartet, Add a tag
Blog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: HarperCollins, Ages 4-8, Ages 9-12, Book Lists, Chapter Books, Series Books, Scholastic, Kids Series, Richelle Mead, featured, The Mortal Instruments, Cassandra Clare, Razorbill, Margaret K. McElderry Books, Jeff Kinney, Best Sellers, Diary of a Wimpy Kid, Suzanne Collins, Roger Hargreaves, Veronica Roth, Hunger Games Trilogy, Divergent, Bloodlines, Mr Men, Teens: Young Adults, Best Kids Stories, Best Selling Books For Kids, Series List, Price Stern Sloan books, Little Miss Books, Add a tag
Wow! This month is proof of good reads, everything remains the same on our best selling kids series list; including the blast from the past ... the Mr. Men and Little Miss books.
Add a CommentBlog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Ages 4-8, Ages 9-12, Book Lists, Chapter Books, Series Books, Scholastic, Kids Series, featured, The Mortal Instruments, Cassandra Clare, Margaret K. McElderry Books, Mary Pope Osborne, Jeff Kinney, Best Sellers, Diary of a Wimpy Kid, Amulet Books, Magic Tree House, Random House Children's Books, Veronica Roth, Hunger Games Trilogy, Divergent, Spirit Animals, Teens: Young Adults, Best Kids Stories, Series List, Add a tag
Thanks to World Cup Soccer, the new Magic Tree House book, Soccer on Sunday, has the series on top of The Children’s Book Review’s best selling kids series list.
Add a CommentBlog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Series List, HarperCollins, Ages 4-8, Ages 9-12, Book Lists, Chapter Books, Star Wars, Series Books, Scholastic, Kids Series, Gift Books, featured, The Mortal Instruments, Cassandra Clare, Rick Riordan, DK Publishing, Margaret K. McElderry Books, Jeff Kinney, Best Sellers, Diary of a Wimpy Kid, Suzanne Collins, Amulet Books, Star Wars Books, Disney-Hyperion Books, Veronica Roth, Divergent, Heroes of Olympus, Teens: Young Adults, Best Kids Stories, Add a tag
Best Selling Books for Kids This month, DK Readers: Star Wars are on top of The Children’s Book Review’s best selling kids series list.
Add a CommentBlog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: The Mortal Instruments, The Hunger Games, Veronica Roth, Who Was …?, Chapter Books, Series Books, Scholastic, Kids Series, Cassandra Clare, Rick Riordan, Jeff Kinney, Best Sellers, Diary of a Wimpy Kid, Suzanne Collins, Amulet Books, Disney-Hyperion Books, Divergent, Heroes of Olympus, Teens: Young Adults, Best Kids Stories, Series List, Grosset & Dunlap Books, Ages 4-8, Ages 9-12, Book Lists, Add a tag
Best Selling Books for Kids This month, the popular Who Was …? biography series is back on top of The Children’s Book Review’s best selling kids series list. And the list of hand-selected series from the nationwide best selling Children's Series list, as noted by The New York Times, features the same popular dystopian thriller series as last month from the likes of Veronica Roth and Suzanne Collins, the adventurous Heroes of Olympus series by Rick Riordan, and the relatable Diary of a Wimpy Kid books by Jeff Kinney.
Add a CommentBlog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Ages 4-8, Ages 9-12, Book Lists, Series Books, The New York Times, featured, The Mortal Instruments, Cassandra Clare, Rick Riordan, Jeff Kinney, Best Sellers, Diary of a Wimpy Kid, Suzanne Collins, The Hunger Games, James Dean, Veronica Roth, Hunger Games Trilogy, Divergent, Heroes of Olympus, The Heroes of Olympus, Pete the Cat, Teens: Young Adults, Best Kids Stories, Best Selling Books For Kids, Series List, Add a tag
The New York Times bestselling "Pete the Cat" picture book series tops The Children's Book Review's best selling kids series list. And the list of hand-selected series from the nationwide best selling Children's Series list, as noted by The New York Times, features the same popular dystopian thriller series as last month from the likes of Veronica Roth and Suzanne Collins, the adventurous Heroes of Olympus series by Rick Riordan, and the relatable Diary of a Wimpy Kid books by Jeff Kinney.
Add a CommentBlog: The Children's Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Ages 4-8, Ages 9-12, Book Lists, Series, Series Books, featured, The Mortal Instruments, Cassandra Clare, Rick Riordan, Jeff Kinney, Best Sellers, Diary of a Wimpy Kid, Suzanne Collins, The Hunger Games, Veronica Roth, Hunger Games Trilogy, Divergent, Heroes of Olympus, Teens: Young Adults, Best Kids Stories, Best Selling Books, Best Selling Books For Kids, Series List, Who Was …?, Add a tag
The popular Who Was …? series tops The Children's Book Review's best selling kids series list. And the list of hand-selected series from the nationwide best selling Children's Series list, as noted by The New York Times, features the same popular dystopian thriller series as last month from the likes of Veronica Roth and Suzanne Collins, the adventurous Heroes of Olympus series by Rick Riordan, and the relatable Diary of a Wimpy Kid books by Jeff Kinney.
Add a CommentBlog: Read Now Sleep Later (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: movies, The Mortal Instruments, author event, WonderCon, CassandraClare, Add a tag
the cast of the mortal instruments |
lily collins |
Lily Collins was really great. I don't know much about her, having only seen Mirror, Mirror, but she was really well spoken and passionate about the movie and playing Clary. She said that she experienced a lot of emotional growth during the movie and that it will always remain special in her heart because of it. She also said that, while she wanted to be true to the character, she didn't focus too much on thinking about what people's expectations were of how Clary should be because that would only prevent her from being in the moment and really doing Clary justice.
jamie campbell bower |
Jamie Campbell Bower was seriously hilarious. He was really fun and just seemed like he was having a good time. He said that his favorite character from the books was probably Isabelle. He thinks she is pretty badass.
kevin zegers |
I don't know what rock I have been living under but I had no idea that Kevin Zegers was in this movie. I kind of loved him in The Jane Austen Book Club (yeah I own it). Anyway, Kevin was really cool and he talked about how all of the cast really bonded making this movie. He and Jamie got along really well and the cast was like family. He also talked about how the tattoos were kind of a pain and took several hours to put on each day.
cassie clare |
Blog: Young Adult (& Kid's) Books Central (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Jillian Van Leer, paranormal, The Mortal Instruments, Cassandra Clare, Add a tag
First things first, now that Clary and Jace can truly be boyfriend/girlfriend I was more at ease. Obviously their relationship didn't make me feel sick to my stomach anymore (heh heh). They are as close as ever and things are going great for them. Jace is even helping train Clary how to be a Shadowhunter. However, soon Jace starts to pull away from Clary, leaving her wonder what is going on and why he is behaving that way. Does he still love her? Does he still want her? To read more of my review, click here.
Blog: 3 Evil Cousins (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Cookies, City of Ashes, The Mortal Instruments, Cassandra Clare, Interviews, Add a tag
We are happy to present to you an interview with Cassandra Clare, author of City of Bones and the upcoming City of Ashes (you can read our review here) Enjoy! (That was obnoxious, wasn't it? Enjoy? Since when do any of us say things like enjoy?)
Interviewingly yours,
PS City of Ashes comes out on March 25! Read it, it's good! Also, Cassandra Clare is going on tour soon-- look here for dates. And now, for our feature presentation...
1. What made you want to write urban fantasy/YA?
It is quite simply the best genre there is. Okay, maybe that's entirely subjective, but urban fantasy is my favorite genre. I like the incursion of magic and the supernatural into the world we know. Urban fantasy incorporates a lot of my favorite fictional tropes: the Secret World, the Secret Society, the Alternate History, even the Creepy Town or Creepy Neighborhood.
2. Zombies or unicorns?
Team Zombie.
3. You were a popular fan fiction author before you became a popular non-fan-fiction author. What's the biggest difference, for you, between writing fan fiction and writing original fiction?
Well, fanfiction is in large part a community experience — it's an act of fanship, of appreciation for a particular canon or media property. It's a dialogue, in a way, and the readers and writers of it are by and large the same people (I'm generalizing here.) Writing original fiction is not a community experience, not in the same way. It's not about sharing a world, but creating your own world. It requires you to exercise a different writing skillset than fanfiction does — worldbuilding, character creation, etc.
4. Who would win in a fight: Optimus Prime, or Sailor Moon?
Optimus Prime would crush Sailor Moon like a bug. Also I used to have a roommate who was in love with Optimus Prime. She used to claim that he was so good-looking. I was really disappointed when I found out he looked like a truck. I mean, EXACTLY like a truck.
5. Do you have any advice for aspiring authors?
A lot of people think "learning to write" is about acquiring this one monolithic skill, but it's actually about the acquisition (and hopefully mastery) of an interlocking set of skills. So you don't have to burst out of the gate perfect at everything. Maybe you're great at dialogue, but your pacing needs work, so work on that separately.
6. What was your favorite book as a teenager?
I would like to say it was something really awesome like Jane Eyre, and I did absolutely love Jane Eyre, but when I was thirteen it was totally Flowers in the Attic. Oh, what a bad book that was.
7. What was your favorite YA novel of 2007?
I'm going to answer the question "What was your favorite YA novel of 2007 that was not written by someone you know?" instead. In which case it was probably Skin Hunger by Kathleen Duey. A better title for it might have been 'You Are So Owned, Hogwarts' except I think that would infringe copyright. It's all about the most brutal magic school in history, where the professors basically murder the students.
8. What book-to-be-released-in-2008 are you most looking forward to?
The sequel to Octavian Nothing by MT Anderson is due out this year. Also Paper Towns by John Green.
9. Create your own question! And answer it, of course.
"Do you have a demon hand?"
"Yes."
10. If you were to take over the world, how would you do so?
I'm a big fan of slipping hallucinogenic drugs into the world's water supply and then taking advantage of the resulting confusion. And then I want to rule from one of those island strongholds that's shaped like a head, except I don't want it to be my head. I want it to be someone else's head.
11. Would you prefer to travel via magic carpet or flying motorcycle? Explicate.
Carpet, so I could nap while I fly. I'm all about those fully reclining airplane seats on overnight flights.
12. If you could spend a day with anybody (living/dead/fictional, etc.) who would it be and why?
My grandfather. He died right before I sold The Mortal Instruments and I'd like to be able to tell him how great everything's been going with it. That's why I dedicated the first book to him.
13. What is your favorite kind of cookie?
Snickerdoodles all the way.
Blog: 3 Evil Cousins (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Curse of the Headless Torso, City of Ashes, Luke I Am Your Father, The Mortal Instruments, Cassandra Clare, Magic, Vampires, Werewolves, Hot Guys, Curse of the Headless Torso, ARC, City of Ashes, Cassandra Clare, ARC, Luke I Am Your Father, The Mortal Instruments, Add a tag
City of Ashes by Cassandra Clare is fast-paced, exciting, hilarious, and heartbreaking.
In City of Bones, the first book, Clary Fray’s world is turned upside-down. She has never thought of herself as being anything other than ordinary, until she sees a group of teenagers kill a demon—and finds that no one else can see them. Soon after that, Clary’s mother mysteriously disappears, and she is plunged into a world in which vampires and werewolves are real. She discovers that she is a Shadowhunter—a race of demon-slayers. To top it all off, she finds herself caught in a nasty love triangle with Simon, her best friend, and Jace, an arrogant, handsome Shadowhunter. Just as she seems to be falling for Jace, she finds out that Valentine, the villainous man who kidnapped her mother* is her father, and Jace is her brother. Oops.
As City of Ashes begins, Clary’s mother is lying in the hospital in a coma, the Clave** suspects that Jace is a spy for his father, and Clary is very romantically confused.
Valentine goes after the second Mortal Instrument, the Soul-Sword, and is more of a jerk than ever. Jace is an angry, angst-ridden teenager.*** Simon seems to be becoming more than a friend to Clary, but she’s still struggling with her feelings for Jace. And—my word! Is our love triangle becoming more of a… love… square? Indeed it is! Speaking of love shapes, Alec gets a boyfriend.****
On top of all the aforementioned drama, Clary and Jace seem to be discovering mysterious powers. And, of course, there is still the lingering question: are they really siblings?*****
City of Ashes is fabulous—at least as good as City of Bones, if not better. Also, there are more flying motorcycles.
I give City of Ashes four and one-half daggers.
*He also stole the Mortal Cup, which is used to make more Shadowhunters, so that he can build an ARMY OF DOOM.
** That’s the big scary Shadowhunter government.
*** But really, he has every right to his emo-ness.
**** No, I’m not telling who it is. I think you can figure it out if you try, though.
***** I’m hoping no.
Riding a flying motorcycle, battling Valentine, and hoping beyond hope that Jace and Clary aren't related,
PS City of Ashes comes out on March 25.
Avery adds:
Here I sit, reveling in the glorious-ness of the Advanced Reader Copy.
Very little is more satisfying than reading a book that is not yet on the shelf. That being said, City of Ashes is a particular type of ARC. Not only is it not yet available for the reading pleasure of the general public...It's really good! Vampires, werewolves, betrayal, corruption, love shapes, and Jace Wayland, all wrapped up in a lovely package of well written awesomeness.
I laughed. I cried. I ranted passionately to Aislinn about the events that transpired. (Which was rather frustrating, I might add, as I couldn't rant to her until she'd finished reading it.)
In short, City of Ashes is an awesome book.
Four and a half seraph blades...er...that is, daggers!
Shadowhunter-wannabe-ly,
You know, the first book in this series is the only one I've read... it's not that I disliked it, just haven't picked up the rest... no good reason, maybe the movie will ignite a fire in me to finish the series XD
(I even own them -_-)
New follower here!
http://littlesqueed.blogspot.com
i kind of eel the same way, heather. i have only read two books and usually i wait years in between reading them. i am supposed to read book 3 soon (and i want to) but now it's been like 2 years and i totally forgot what happened. haha maybe i will try to start up again before the film hits.