4 of 5 stars.
The Basics: This
novella was published after the third book in the Lunar Chronicles
series by Marissa Meyer. The setting of the book starts before Cinder and continues to coincide with some of the events in Cinder
as well. This novella gives the reader background of Queen Levana and
her sister Channary. Throughout the series there is discussion of
Princess Celene, Queen Levana's cruelty and life on Luna. These things
are the focus of Meyer's novella...which precedes the release of the
last book in the series, Winter.
My Thoughts: Ok,
so I started to feel sorry for Levana as the novel continued. Her
sister, Channary, was really the evil one. Levana never knew what love
was. She never experienced it with her mom, dad, or sister. By the way,
the cruel way in which Levana's parents died seemed to be reflective of
the kind of kingdom they ran. Channary continued their seeming disregard
for family, selfishness, and lack of caring for the people of Luna.
It shocked me how promiscuous Channary was, which may have ended up causing her death.
Either
way, the whole royal family is a royal mess. Then, Levana made matters
worst when she fell in love with Everett and pretty much forced him to
marry her (soon after his wife died). What kind of craziness is that?
How can you force someone to love you, who clearly wants little to do
with you. Then, she manipulated her image so that she looked like his
dead wife, Solstice. This biatch is absolutely loony.
I did like
that we were able to get insight into Levana's life, because though she
is cruel, we got to learn how she got that way. I also wanted to know
about her issue with mirrors and now we know that she is probably the
most ugly person (inside and out- though what her sister did to her was
cruel and unusual). And, what she did to the rightful Princess Celene is
horrible. How can you do that to your niece?
So, these are my predictions for Winter after reading Fairest:
>Queen Levana will certainly lose her crown to Winter.
>Cinder (aka Celene) will marry Kai, making her the queen and becoming an ally to Queen Winter.
>Mirrors will be reinstated on Luna.
~Remember, teachers read fun stuff too!
Monday, September 21, 2015
Tuesday, September 8, 2015
"Chinese Cinderella" by Adeline Yen Mah
The Basics: This
short, but intriguing novel follows the story of Adeline Yen during her
childhood in Tianjin, China. I read the book last month so many of the smaller
details have escaped me (which irks me, but the busiest time of the year has
commenced-the beginning of a new school year). Adeline considers herself the
“Cinderella” of her family because her mom died after giving birth to her and
her father and siblings (specifically her older sister) seem to harbor some
resentment towards her. Her father, a rich business man, remarried quickly
after their mother died and treated her five stepchildren like… stepchildren
(eek!). Adeline chronicles her story of a father who didn’t care what happened
to her, being placed in a boarding school with little to no visits from her
family, being separated from her aunt and grandfather which are the only two
family members who cared for her well-being, and struggling to not follow the
same fate as her older sister who was married off.
My Thoughts: I
thoroughly enjoyed this book. At first, it seemed like something I would never
read. This novel was part of the summer reading list for the eighth graders at
my school. I read the book to become familiar with the novel so I could grade
my students’ papers accordingly. I ended up enjoying this book more than I
thought which lets me know that I need to expand my genre interests.
I will say this, in the beginning I thought Adeline was
being a little too self-defeating. It seemed as though her stepmother disliked
all of her stepchildren, not just Adeline. As I continued to read, it became
painstakingly obvious that Adeline’s father could care less about Adeline. He
didn’t even know her birthday. He was Ok with the decisions made by his new
wife in dealing with her stepchildren. She treated her two children
exponentially better than her stepchildren. I would like to know what happened
to Adeline’s aunt, her brothers, and even her older sister after Adeline went
away to college.
Remember, teachers read fun stuff too!
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