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S'està carregant… The Order of Odd-Fishde James Kennedy
KayStJ's to-read list (949) S'està carregant…
Apunta't a LibraryThing per saber si aquest llibre et pot agradar. No hi ha cap discussió a Converses sobre aquesta obra. This must have been the weirdest book I ever read. I couldn't make heads or tails of what was happening, yet I couldn't stop reading. The story goes from weird, to crazy, than back again. I made it through, but couldn't tell you if I would recommand it. The story follows Jo and her old aunt as their live take a turn in the mysterious when Jo received the visit of mysterious friend and a weird package on christmas day. ( ) Giving up. This just isn't holding my interest at all. I don't understand why children's and teen fantasy books are all so (a) derivative and (b) unnecessarily long. Since the runaway success of Harry Potter, nobody bothers to streamline plots anymore; nearly any fantasy book published for the 10-and-up crowd suddenly has to be pushing 400 pages, regardless of how much material has to fill it. I dunno, this might be great overall, but the first 130 pages didn't inspire me to finish. '"I thought the afterlife would be drier than this," said Jo. "Or better lit," said Sefino. "We're not dead!" insisted Aunt Lily. No one spoke for a while. Jo fidgeted uncomfortably in the wet darkness. Her body was coming back, and it ached all over. "Pretty dull afterlife," said Sefino. "I must have been more of a sinner than I thought." "I expect it picks up later," said Colonel Korsakov.' What do you think of this little snippet of The Order of Odd-Fish? Love it? This book is for you, then. Somehow, and I really can't imagine how, unless he has been working on this book his entire life, somehow author James Kennedy has written an entire four hundred page so-called children's book with this kind of repartee on every page. Absolutely delightful. With Alice in Wonderland-ish zany plot twists. And a Hitchhiker's Guide to the Universe-ish philosophical soul. I feel like I just spent a week at some kind of wacky interplanetary Disneyworld. Thank you to the author for this delightful review copy. I accepted this book for review and expected a fun read. What I didn't expect was a well-crafted, frankly brilliant novel that left me wishing for more. Though it is billed as YA, I didn't see any reason besides a teen protagonist that this couldn't be enjoyed by lots of adult readers as well. That teen protagonist is Jo Larouche, thirteen years old and an orphan, who lives with her "aunt" Lily Larouche in a bizarre, bedazzled palace in the California desert. They're celebrating Christmas Eve with a rip-roaring costume party when, well, things start happening. Not only does Jo notice a large man watching her, but she eventually ends up talking to a man-sized cockroach (not a costume). Then, at a pre-appointed time, a package falls from the sky with her name on it -- a cardboard container that contains a mysterious black box. By the next morning, Jo's life is in danger and what follows is an adventure that could only come from a very fertile imagination! I'll admit that after a couple of days of reading this book regularly, it got to the point where I simply couldn't put it down. With itchy eyes and mild regrets about the following morning, I finished reading it at 4:30 in the morning! The villain of the story was, to be honest, terrifying. But Jo and her friends and "family" were fantastic. The story heads in a direction where you truly aren't sure who will survive the madness. Though some might find this story to be a bit much, I think it certainly deserves a wider audience. http://webereading.com/2012/08/the-desert-was-empty-as-though-great.html Sense ressenyes | afegeix-hi una ressenya
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Thirteen-year-old Jo suddenly finds her humdrum life turned upside down when Colonel Anatoly Kordakov shows up at her aunt's party and announces he has come to protect her. No s'han trobat descripcions de biblioteca. |
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