
Showing posts with label runaways. Show all posts
Showing posts with label runaways. Show all posts
Wednesday, November 9, 2011
"The Summer I Learned to Fly" by Dana Reinhardt

Thursday, October 27, 2011
"Ivy" by Sarah Oleksyk

Labels:
art,
coming-of-age,
graphic novel,
runaways
"Wonderstruck" by Brian Selznick

Tuesday, July 19, 2011
"Displacement" by Thalia Chaltas

Vera is determined to make a new life for herself. After her sister's accidental drowning, she finds her mother absent from their lives, and her older sisters is tired of looking after her siblings. Vera finds herself in the small town of Garrett, a deserted mining town in the vicinity of Death Valley. The town is mostly abandoned, and Vera goes about making herself useful. She obtains work with a local potter at his kiln, and does some bookkeeping for an Indian boy, Lon, who is a local art dealer. He also attracts Vera's attention as a potential love interest. Vera soon learns that small towns have no secrets. As she tries to escape her grief from her sister's death, she is constantly haunted by her ghost, and reminded how far she is from home. Thalia Chaltas does a remarkable job of telling Vera's story of independence and grieving. This is Chaltas's second novel-in-verse, after her debut "Because I am Furniture" in 2009 chronicled the patterns of an abusive father. Quick, thoughtful, eloquent reads. And this cover is fantastic.
Labels:
desert,
grief,
novel in verse,
runaways,
sisters
Thursday, September 2, 2010
"From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler" by E.L. Konigsburg

Claudia is extremely bored with her normal routine. She wants to feel different and grown-up. She convinces her younger brother Jamie to run away with her. Claudia has the plan, and Jamie has the piggy bank, so together they should make a great team. They take the train from their small Connecticut town into New York City, where they take up residence at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Living at the museum is harder than you'd think. They have to hide from security guards, take baths in strange places, and they're on a fixed income. But they have plenty of time to admire and learn about art. Claudia becomes transfixed by one statue in particular, called Angel. Claudia suspects it was created by the famous artist Michelangelo, and she is determined to solve the mystery and find out the truth.
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