Welcome to Read Your Way Homewood. We are pleased to share our staff reading activity with you in the hopes that it will help you find your next favorite book.
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Title: Pretty Guardians Sailor Moon by Nako Takeuchi Premise of Series: Usagi is an 8th grade student and is fourteen years old. She is loyal, clumsy, a terrible student, and crybaby. She discovers, after meeting Luna the cat, that she is a Sailor Scout and is tasked with saving the universe. Her journey begins when she saves her best friend and accepts her new responsibility. The second book in the series: Ami is a genius who has transferred to the same school Usagi attends. Usagi befriends her hoping that her grades will improve. Both girls are caught by a monster and it is at this time that it is revealed that Ami is the second Sailor Scout. Ami is Sailor Mercury and is happy because it means she has a finally made a friend and has a purpose outside of studying. Third book introduces Rei. Rei is a miko and has psychic abilities that allow her to sense the presence of evil. Her path crosses with both Ami and Usagi when ...
I grabbed this book based on the title. I had to know what it meant and how relevant to the story it was. Ally Hughes, when the novel begins, is working as college professor at Brown and is a single mother who is having the worst time of her life. She has so much on her plate and doesn't see it getting better or going away. She has a meeting with a student that not only changes a weekend in her life but the next 10 years. The story changes from that time to ten years later after Ally is re-introduced to the student who changed her life and is now a major celebrity. There are secondary characters that really aren't great and kinda feel like an afterthought but reading about the weekend Ally spends with her student makes up for it. The end is a little too far fetched in terms of the secondary characters but it is a nice ending for Ally. I liked the book and would recommend it as a fun, beach read. Title: Ally Hughes Has Sex Sometimes: A Nove...
Let me preface this review by saying I'm a big fan of YA author Laurie Halse Anderson. I've read each of her books, cover to cover, and have enjoyed every word of each. Needless to say, I love her latest offering, The Impossible Knife of Memory. At the beginning of the book, we're introduced to Hayley Kincaid and her dad, Andy. They have moved back to Andy's hometown after years on the road so Hayley can finish her senior year of high school. As the story continues, it becomes clear that Andy is suffering from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, as a result of his time in the Gulf War. Hayley must take care of her father and keep their little family from ripping apart at the seams, all while navigating the travails of high school. Like Anderson's other books, The Impossible Knife of Memory contends with heavy subject matter in a way that is both witty and tender. This book is more than just a sad story about PTSD. We get to see Hayley deal w...