Tuesday, October 29, 2013

The Fault in Our Stars

I had several people recently recommend The Fault in Our Stars by John Green, and then a teenager at church lent me her copy.  This book is about 16-year-old Hazel, who is dying from terminal stage IV cancer.  It follows her life as she deals with her parents and her support group and when she meets a new friend--Augustus, a cancer survivor too.

This was a really good, addicting book.  It was one of those books that is not great to read when I am supposed to be hanging out with Emmeline because I am very distracted and want to keep reading.  The characters were very real and believable, and I became very engrossed in their stories.  It was a sad book (as can be assumed from the subject matter) but never got too depressing.  The only thing about this book is it has some language and a few bursts of questionable material in there. Normally I just put down books like, but this one was so highly recommended (including by young women in my ward) that I figured it wasn't going to be too bad so kept reading.

Rating: * * (2/3 = Liked it)

Friday, October 11, 2013

Heaven is Here

After listening to a General Conference talk by Elder Jeffrey R. Holland where he mentioned Stephanie Nielson, I became re-interested in her story. I looked her up online and saw she had written a memoir--Heaven is Here--so I checked it out from the library.  It tells of Stephanie's story--she was a young mother of 4 and a popular blogger when she was in a small plane crash with her husband.  The pilot was killed, and she and her husband survived but with burns all over their bodies.  The book chronicles her life before the crash (her life growing up, meeting her husband, starting their family) and then the crash and how her life changed after the tragedy.

This was a really inspiring book.  It was definitely very hard to read at times because of the difficulties that she went through, but she really showed how family and faith and hope can get you through times that seem impossible to overcome. Her life was really idyllic before the crash; she was the stereotypical young Mormon mom with a bunch of kids.  But I think understanding that life was important because it helped the reader better understand the devastation of the accident.  It was touching to follow her emotions from depressing and hopeless to the realization that there was still good and happiness in her life, even amid the terrible things she was going through.

Rating: * * * (3/3 = Loved it)

PS--There is also a great "Mormon Message" on youtube that tells a little bit of her story.  I just watched it last night and really liked it: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KHDvxPjsm8E

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Al Capone Does My Homework

I saw that Gennifer Choldenko had written a new Alcatraz story, so I found Al Capone Does My Homework at the library. This is the third book in a series following Moose Flanagan, a boy who lives on Alcatraz Island in the 1930s because his dad works at the prison.  In this book, his dad has been promoted to associate warden, which means that he is more at risk from problems from the inmates. Moose worries about his dad as well as his sister Natalie, especially when a mysterious fire starts in their home.

This was another great book.  I was just so engaged and by the end didn't want to put the book down.  I just love the kid characters in the book and their distinct personalities.  I love Moose and how protective he is of his older sister.  (Natalie probably has autism, but it is never really labeled in the book since it was the 1930s, when things like that just weren't understood.)  I just think this series is so fun--the time period and setting along with the fun plot twists and awesome characters.  It just makes for a great book.

Rating: * * * (3/3 = Loved it)