Showing posts with label matt de la pena. Show all posts
Showing posts with label matt de la pena. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 8, 2015

On My Hold List (102)


My Librarian friend Jess from I Read to Relax came up with a great idea.  It's to highlight the books on hold at the library. I usually have 20-40 items checked out at the library and another 20 items on hold. 


The Hunted: Can't wait to see what happens next in this gripping trilogy. 

Saint Anything: the start of summer is always time for a new Sarah Dessen book

City Love: Looking forward to this new trilogy from Susane Colasanti

School for Unusual Girls: Regency England school to reform young girl into marriage material is just a cover for lady spies - how perfect!

What books are you waiting on?

Wednesday, March 18, 2015

Books I'm Dying to Read: May Edition

So many good books are coming out in May- here are the ones I can't wait to get my hands on!


Lois Lane: Fallout (Lois Lane, #1)Scarlett Undercover
Lois Lane: Lois Lane, reporter, wants to solve mysteries
Scarlett UndercoverMuslim American Veronica Mars (Enough said)

A School for Unusual Girls (Stranje House, #1)The Huntress of Thornbeck Forest
School for Unusual Girls: Regency England - spies - and romance!
Huntress of Thornbeck Forest: Swan Lake meets Robin Hood in a forbidden love story

The Novice (Summoner, #1)Tracked
Novice: A trilogy with a fight for good vs evil - and the powers of summoning.
Tracked: Fast and the Furious set in the future

The Wrath and the Dawn (The Wrath and the Dawn, #1)Nil Unlocked (Nil, #2)
Wrath and the Dawn: Inspired by One Thousand and One Nights
NIL Unlocked: Back on the island - and back in danger

The Hunted (The Living #2)Hold Me Like a Breath (Once Upon a Crime Family, #1)
The Hunted: Sequel to The Living - can't wait for more of this trilogy.
Hold Me Like a Breath: A mob family that controls the black market for organ donations and a girl who desperately wants her freedom.

Saint AnythingOff the Page
Saint Anything: Anything by Sarah Dessen is a must read for me.
Off the Page: Companion to Between the Lines - fairy tale that comes right from the pages of a book

The Summer After You and MeP.S. I Still Love You (To All the Boys I've Loved Before, #2)The Fill-In Boyfriend
Summer After You and Me: Summer on the boardwalk after superstorm Sandy hits - how will this summer go?
PS. I Still Love You: Pretend boyfriend turned into something more?
Fill In Boyfriend: I've been meaning to read her books because they all look fantastic and perfect for summer.

If I Were YouThe Forget-Me-Not Summer
If I Were You: Freaky Friday scenario for two BFFs
Forget Me Not Summer: 3 Sisters spend the summer on Cape Cod

You're Invited (RSVP #1)Best Friend Next Door
RSVP: 4 BFFs start a party planning business - but nothing goes right
Best Friend Next Door: Tween books about the power of friendship 

Summer on Lovers' Island (Jewell Cove, #3)A Matter of Heart
Summer on Lover's Island: The third book in the Jewel Cove series - Loved the first one, still need to read the 2nd books.
Matter of Heart: A swimmer with dreams of the Olympics - with a heart condition. 

The Heir (The Selection, #4)The Eternal City
Heir: I can't wait to see how American's daughter's own Selection turns out!
Eternal City: Romantic thriller set in Rome.

Sparks in ScotlandKissing in America
Sparks in Scotland: While vacating on Scotland, Ava learns more that just about her heritage - she learns about love.
Kissing in America: A romance reader meets a boy - will it be like the  books she adores?

Tiny Pretty ThingsThe Improbable Theory of Ana and Zak
Tiny Pretty Things: Elite ballet school filled with lots of drama
Improbably Theory of Amy and Zak: An accidental first date could lead to...something

Killer Within (Killer Instinct, #2)
Killer Within: I tore through the first book, excited to see what happens next


I already read and LOVED:
Wild Hearts (If Only . . ., #4)A Court of Thorns and Roses (A Court of Thorns and Roses, #1)

Monday, February 16, 2015

Review: The Living

Shy's happy to work on a cruise ship, earning much needed money until a man jumps overboard. Shy tried to save him, but it was no use.

On his next week shift, the weather turns deadly. An earthquake hits the west coast. As the ship heads to Hawaii, tsunamis endanger everyone. When they hit, the ship goes down.

Now Shy's fighting for this life as he attempts to reach land with little water, no food, and burning under the heat of the sun. Shy doesn't want to die, but if he has to die then he wants to figure out why people are so interested in the conversation he had with the man who jumped to his death.

My Thoughts: I loved this book. I couldn't put it down, although I will think twice about going on a cruise. I loved the layers of this story. I loved the connections between the passengers. I loved the camaraderie amongst the crew. From friendship to almost romance in a little over a week, these friendships were cemented with tight bonds over their work and similarities.  

The class distinction and the boat reminded me immediately of the Titanic. As the boat sank, it struck me how much the world hasn't changed in over 100 years.  Everyone struggled to get off the boat - feat, entitlement, and the desire for survival made people react.

I loved how the plot twisted and turned. At first, I thought it was about the suicide of the man, then about survival, and then about the dangers of the plague. Lots of danger, lots of action, and lots of fast turning pages. I can't wait to read what happens next to these characters.

Cover Thoughts: This is the paperback version, but both are great
Source: My Library
Fun Fact: Read this as a judge for the Cybil Awards

Final Thoughts: Not only a great book that kept me turning the pages, but the depth of this book makes it perfect for book discussions too.

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Review: Dash & Lily's Book of Dares

Two teens alone at Christmas in New York City - discover a new world.

Lily's parents went on vacation without her at her favorite time of year. Her grandfather left for Florida. Her brother's supposed to be watching her. He's in love. So in order to get her out of her shell, he writes down a set of instructions for a boy in a notebook and leaves the notebook in The Strand.

Dash finds the notebook and unravels the clues. Instead of playing along, he adds a dare to the notebook.

Lily sees the notebook for the first time and responds.

Chaos ensues. Dares are followed. Inner most thoughts reveal. Dash and Lily come to understand each other - on paper. Should they ever meet and see if they mesh in real life?

My Thoughts: I loved this book. What a great romance, but it's much more than a romance. Which is why for me, it wasn't a quick read. There was so much depth to the novel - the exchange of revealing thoughts, the pop-culture references, the book references, the obscure references that I probably didn't understand. I loved the dares: especially the one involving Santa Claus. I loved the exchange of the notebook. I loved the idea of Jane Austen thumb-wresting. I loved how the first meeting was terrible and the second meetings was hilarious. I laughed, I sighed with happiness, and I wanted my own Dash.

Cover Thoughts: Adorable! I love the heart-shaped snowflakes and the street signs.


Source: My Library


Fun Fact: I met the authors last week at R.J. Julia's. They were charming and hilarious. I cried from laughing several times. They were sweet enough to pose for a READ poster for me. Here's the creation:

Matt de la Pena was also there. He also posed for me - check out his poster.


Challenge: Holiday Reading Challenge

Saturday, October 4, 2008

Matt de la Pena

He's a favorite here in my library with his book

and his new book



Interview from Random Teen

Author Spotlight


Do you love sports? Find out how Matt de le Pena grew from an athlete into a writer, and why basketball will always be important to him.

Matt de la Pena

Matt de la Pena

It’s raining in Brooklyn today, and I’m at a coffee shop, writing.

Man, I always seem to be writing these days. I’m here at a coffee shop, or I’m at the Writers Space, or I’m solo in my room late at night, in the dark, writing inside undecorated white walls, writing under a Brooklyn-style skylight that's more tar than starry sky.

Guess I've traveled a million miles from how I was as a kid. Used to be just me and basketball. Pick up games and talking head with the fellas. But these days hoop is a little smaller in the rearview mirror. The jumper isn't quite so trustworthy. The first step doesn't hurt as many feelings. Instead of hip hop and R&B, it's Sufjan Stevens, M Ward, Iron & Wine. Elliott Smith. These days come a little more literary, a little more solitary.

But early this morning I went back in my head for a sec. Went back to the face of the first girl who told me she loved me. Jen. This was way back in San Diego. We were both 15 and fresh-faced, sitting on my buddy's couch–his parents' couch. We were so awkward, so overwhelmed by having just kissed for the first time. Man, I hadn't seen her face in years. But there she was. In my mind. Every beautiful detail. Her eyes so big and brown and pure, dark hair so straight and long. And the look on her face . . . man, this girl actually dug me!

We were like that for a good 15 minutes. Silent. Unaware of how to act in our brand-new romantic skin. She circled a finger around my right kneecap, cleared her throat and brought her face up to mine. “Guess what,” she said.

“What?”

She took the basketball out of my hands and set it in her lap. She spun it around and pointed at the “I” in “Spalding.” She looked up at me and smiled, then pointed at the “L.” She shifted the ball around to the word “Official,” pointed at the “O.” She searched and pointed, searched and pointed, until she had completely spelled out the phrase “I love you.”

I felt something move in my chest and asked her if she wanted to be my girl. She blushed, nodded. We grabbed a hold of each other and kissed again, this time a little less awkward.

This morning, when I woke up remembering this, it hit me how deeply rooted the game has been in my life. Here I was holding my basketball while I kissed my first girlfriend. She used it to spell out that she loved me.

No matter how far I move away from the game, into this new life as an author, no matter what strange direction my literary interests lead me in next, or where I go, or who I meet, I will always carry the game of basketball in my chest. This game was my best friend growing up. It was my confidant. My passion. My ticket to college, to education, to books and words, the rhythms of poetry.

Soon the day will come when I can no longer dunk, when I can no longer scoot around the skinny kid at the Y with the big head. Eventually my skills will deteriorate to the point that a basketball court stops feeling like a haven and starts feeling more like a prison cell. But I will never forget you, Basketball. You were with me every step of the way. You gave me the confidence to try and be somebody (an author!). You gave me this incredible life.