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1. Academy 7 review

Boy was I wrong about this what this book was about! Not in a bad way of course, just way off course as to where the story led and what I got from the description. A story about the a fancy boarding school it is....but not from a fairy tale era as I thought. Who knows where I got that from anyways. Oh well.

Academy 7 by Anne Osterlund is a little bit of The Luxe meets Star Wars. It has romance, lots of gossip, and it's set at an exquisite school in the universe. Lots of different planets in this solar system folks! Aerin Renning and Dane Madousin start out really disliking each other, mainly because Dane always beats Aerin at debate and she always beats him at combat.

After they get in serious trouble, they are given a joint punishment and slowly become friends, both being outcasts and new to the school and both harboring some pretty big secrets. As the secrets get out, Aerin and Dane both have a lot of explaining to do as to why they're at Academy 7 in the first place and how they're going to manage to stay.

I enjoyed the characters quite a bit, though I'm still not really sure on the plot. It seemed overly dramatic for what the actual secrets ended up being revealed as and often times I felt like I wasn't really going anywhere with the story. That being said, the description, setting, and characters alone are fantastic enough to carry the story without it having the most wonderful plot in the world.

Lots of fun for sci-fi fans, with enough gossip and romance to satisfy those fans. I haven't read the author's previous book, Aurelia, but I've heard that it's wonderful!

To learn more or to purchase, click on the book cover above to link to Amazon.

Academy 7
Anne Osterlund
272 pages
Young Adult
Speak
9780142414378
May 2009

1 Comments on Academy 7 review, last added: 5/6/2009
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2. What are the odds


of reading two novels back to back, one about the princess of Montagne and the other a princess whose cousin is the king of Montaine?

And really, I think that’s what’s going to stick out to me the most about Princess Ben and Aurelia. Both books are enjoyable enough and good enough to finish, and while I will recommend them to teens who like this kind of book, they didn’t really do much for me.

cover of Princess Ben by Catherine Gilbert MurdockI have to give Catherine Gilbert Murdock credit, though, for writing Princess Ben. It’s a huge departure from her previous two books, Diary Queen and The Off Season, and I have nothing but admiration for an author who is able to switch gears like that. In some ways, it’s a very successful change—the prose just sparkles, for example—but in other ways, not so much. The characterizations in Princess Ben never reach the level they do in Dairy Queen or The Off Season, and I say this as someone who didn’t get what the big fuss was until the second half of The Off Season (and I’m a huge football fan!), nor do the plot and worldbuilding stand out in any way. And as for the romance, because of course there’s a romance involved, I thought it mediocre at best.

Ben, short Benevolence, is the coddled only child of the prince (younger brother of the married but childless king) of Montagne. When the king and Ben’s mother are killed, and her father presumed dead, Ben becomes the heir to the throne. Nothing in her life has prepared her for this. At her mother’s insistence, the family did not live in the castle. Ben has had no training in any of the skills a future queen needs. Plus, she’s overweight, a problem Queen Sophia is determined to fix by drastically reducing the amount of food Ben is given. Ben’s problems appear to be solved when she discovers that she can move about through secret passages in the walls of the castle and figures out how to muddle through, or even better, get out of, her lessons without actually learning anything.

The problem with this is that the greatest emotion I felt during most of the book was sympathy for Sophia. Ben was selfish and self-centered, perhaps predictably so as a result of her upbringing, but by the time she came to her senses and realized that, hey, as future monarch of this country, she needs to know how to rule it, it was too late for me. At that point, I wasn’t reading because I cared about Ben; I was reading to find out what happened to the country.

Despite my antipathy towards Ben, the fact that I found the book somewhat enjoyable is a credit to Murdock’s writing. I’ve said before that I don’t mind unlikable characters, that I don’t need to like a character to like a book, and I still think that’s true. I realize that Ben’s growing up and maturing is the point of the story, but I never found Ben compelling enough to read the book just because of her (perhaps because the POV, of an older Ben looking back at these years of her life, implied that everything worked out so some of the tension was lost?), and as I said before, I didn’t find the other things that were going on particularly interesting, either. In some ways, I actually think this book is better suited for upper elementary readers than it is for teens. I don’t know about others, but I would have handled Ben’s selfishness better when I was younger, maybe fourth or fifth grade, than I would have as a teen. By that point, I would have been all, “What about your responsibility to your people?” like I am now. Not to mention that I probably would have found the romance more romantic.

cover of Aurelia by Anne OsterlundAnother thing I think I think, to quote Peter King, is that superficial is becoming my favorite go-to criticism, and it’s one of my two big problems with Aurelia. There’s a distance to the narration of Aurelia, which too often felt like mere observation, that kept me from becoming involved with the story. Anne Osterlund uses an omniscient third person narrative that describes the emotions of the characters more than it actually gets inside their heads. It’s not that I think the book would have been improved by a first person narration, because I really don’t, but that the characters aren’t fully realized as is. They’re like, I don’t know, actors or placeholders, there to fill a role and not truly Aurelia or Robert or Melony.

Still, I enjoyed Aurelia more than Princess Ben, largely because of the responsibility Aurelia felt for her citizens. She’s the princess of Tyralt, heir to the throne because her father, the king, has no living sons. Unbeknownst to her, she has been the target of several failed assassination attempts, so Robert, son of the country’s former royal spy, has returned to the capital to discover who wants Aurelia dead. Aurelia cares about Tyralt’s citizens, occasionally at some risk to herself, unlike her father, and most citizens feel she’d be a better ruler. Which is why the ending bothers me so much (big problem #2 [highlight to read]: you care about your citizens so much that after learning who wants you dead and realizing no one will be punished, you decide to travel?! WTF?). This is definitely a book I would have liked more with a different ending.

For some actual reviews of Princess Ben, head on over to: Abby (the) Librarian, The Compulsive Reader, Educating Alice, Em’s Bookshelf, Kids Lit, Kiss the Book, Read a Great Teen Book!, and Teen Book Review. And some Aurelia reviews: Dear Author, Kel’s Thoughts.

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3. The Illustration Conference - ICON5



I am happy to announce the launch of "The Illustration Conference - ICON5" web site!

This is the fifth conference by illustrators for illustrators and this incarnation of it will be held in the center of the illustration universe, the Big Apple, the city that never sleeps...New York City!

So take a few minutes and check out all the sessions and events we have in store and share this link with other illustrators you know who might be interested.

Thanks.

Von R. Glitschka
ICON5 Technology Chair

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