Brigid
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- votos útiles
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The Night Diary
- De: Veera Hiranandani
- Narrado por: Priya Ayyar
- Duración: 5 h y 55 m
- Versión completa
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Historia
It's 1947, and India, newly independent of British rule, has been separated into two countries: Pakistan and India. The divide has created much tension between Hindus and Muslims, and hundreds of thousands are killed crossing borders. Half-Muslim, half-Hindu twelve-year-old Nisha doesn't know where she belongs or what her country is anymore. When Papa decides it's too dangerous to stay in what is now Pakistan, Nisha and her family become refugees and embark first by train but later on foot to reach her new home.
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Captivating
- De Christy en 01-29-19
- The Night Diary
- De: Veera Hiranandani
- Narrado por: Priya Ayyar
depressing and boring
Revisado: 04-12-25
i think this will really resonate with some people but i guess it didn’t resonate with me so i just couldn’t really feel emotionally connected to the characters or the story.
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Starfish
- De: Lisa Fipps
- Narrado por: Jenna Lamia
- Duración: 3 h y 28 m
- Versión completa
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Historia
Ever since Ellie wore a whale swimsuit and made a big splash at her fifth-birthday party, she's been bullied about her weight. To cope, she tries to live by the Fat Girl Rules - like "no making waves", "avoid eating in public", and "don't move so fast that your body jiggles". And she's found her safe space - her swimming pool - where she feels weightless in a fat-obsessed world. In the water, she can stretch herself out like a starfish and take up all the room she wants. It's also where she can get away from her mom, who thinks criticizing Ellie's weight will motivate her to diet.
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Perfection!
- De JENNE ESTES en 07-02-21
- Starfish
- De: Lisa Fipps
- Narrado por: Jenna Lamia
pretty cool book but the main character is rude sometimes
Revisado: 02-22-25
i think the format of this book is pretty cool. i liked the neighbor character. i just think the main character was unnecessarily rude sometimes, especially to people who were trying to be supportive. ok i’m specifically thinking about the scene with her sister. i understand that her sister messed up and caused her a lot of pain, but when the sister started turning around and realizing what she had done, i felt like the main character was just pretty rude about it instead of idk acknowledging the effort and turnaround? but also these are middle schoolers so i guess they’re not the most emotionally mature. i wasn’t really happy about the resolution of the book, but i don’t really know how i would have resolved it so. i just felt like it ended kinda abruptly like not much was resolved? it ended with the main character telling her mom how she felt, but then what, the mom just cries? she doesn’t say i’m sorry and then work hard to undo her mistakes or try to show that she does love her daughter? i thought that the book would end with her going from “fat girl rules” to “fat girls rule” and it would be like an aha moment, but then she just burned the fat girl rules so it was like oh ok. idk. i think the book was good but there were parts that could have been better ig
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Karthik Delivers
- De: Sheela Chari
- Narrado por: Varun Sathi
- Duración: 7 h y 14 m
- Versión completa
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Historia
Karthik Raghavan is good at remembering things. Like his bike routes. Or all the reasons he likes Juhi Shah—even if she doesn’t even know he exists. It doesn't help that she seems to have a crush on his arch nemesis, Jacob Donnell, whose only job is to humiliate Karthik (and get his name wrong). Then Karthik's luck changes when he secretly agrees to be in a play about the famous musician, Leonard Bernstein. But he can't tell his parents. The family store is in jeopardy, and they need him delivering groceries on his bike to help save it.
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unique book
- De Brigid en 02-04-25
- Karthik Delivers
- De: Sheela Chari
- Narrado por: Varun Sathi
unique book
Revisado: 02-04-25
i liked this book, i thought it was unique. i do think there’s too much going on, though. i think there are too many characters each with their own story and each with their own arc. it got kind of tiring to keep up with everyone. i also think juhi has no redeeming qualities. i feel like she is either a perfectly fine friend or she’s a bad friend. i was never really impressed with her, so it was hard for me to see why karthik liked her so much. we just kind of start off with karthik liking her bc she’s pretty, and then… she doesn’t really do anything. she has her own arc too that’s related to her cooking and the restaurant, but it just fizzles out once the restaurant burns down. i can’t really name one good thing she did while there are definitely times where she let karthik down. so in the end where they’re holding hands, i was like, “you can find better people, karthik.” anyway ill recommend this book to my students just bc it’s so unique
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Jennifer Chan Is Not Alone
- De: Tae Keller
- Narrado por: Shannon Tyo, Carolyn Kang, Tae Keller
- Duración: 7 h y 4 m
- Versión completa
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Thanks to her best friend, Reagan, Mallory Moss knows the rules of middle school. The most important one? You have to fit in to survive. But then Jennifer Chan moves in across the street, and that rule doesn’t seem to apply. Jennifer doesn’t care about the laws of middle school, or the laws of the universe. She believes in aliens—and she thinks she can find them. Then Jennifer goes missing. Using clues from Jennifer’s journals, Mallory goes searching. But the closer she gets, the more Mallory has to confront why Jennifer might have run . . . and face the truth within herself.
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basically perfect
- De Brigid en 09-11-24
- Jennifer Chan Is Not Alone
- De: Tae Keller
- Narrado por: Shannon Tyo, Carolyn Kang, Tae Keller
basically perfect
Revisado: 09-11-24
i think this book is almost perfect like 9/10 tbh like fr the writing is SO good, the writing for all the characters and for mallory’s inner dialogue. i have a few criticisms about it:
1) i truly don’t know why this wasn’t gay. i think it was perfect for being gay. it felt like it would be perfect and perfectly appropriate for jennifer to say, “why are you doing this?” or whatever she said at the end, “why can’t you leave me alone?” and then mallory says, “because i love you,” and THAT’S the perfect key to the whole lock on mallory’s own heart and inner feelings, and that’s what jennifer wanted when she wanted to find aliens, she just wanted someone to believe in her and like her for who she is and accept her. but instead mallory said, “i don’t know,” and i was ??? also bc when mallory and reagan had that moment at the end where they’re friend breaking up, that could have just been a real breakup. there’s so much of this feeling of exes between the two now, and the loyalty that mallory felt toward reagan (sorry if i spelled her name wrong, i was just listening to the book after all) felt like a girlfriends loyalty like the insistence on best friendship didn’t make much sense to me, and it felt forced.
2) i felt like the resolution didn’t really resolve everything. what happened to tess? did reagan finally come clean? (i guess the flowers insinuate that she has?) did the girls ever get any punishment? are ingrid and kath friends with mallory now? and what about all of mallory’s inner conflicts, did they get resolved? what about mallory’s conflicting thoughts about being korean? does jennifer still believe in aliens? are kath and ingrid friends again? is mallory’s and her mom’s relationship ok again? did the whole pete having a crush on jennifer thing get resolved? so why does jennifer call her mom by her name? how does the rest of the school think about mallory now? it just felt too unresolved for me.
other than that, i really felt like this was a perfect book. the build up to the climax was perfect, and the timing of everything was perfect. i love how it wasn’t just a simple “bully means bad,” but it showed how middle school social rules are so complicated. and the relationships between asian americans are all so different too. i really like this book :)
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Iveliz Explains It All
- De: Andrea Beatriz Arango
- Narrado por: Raquel Merediz
- Duración: 3 h y 22 m
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Seventh grade is going to be Iveliz’s year. She’s going to make a new friend, help her abuela Mimi get settled after moving from Puerto Rico, and she is not going to get into any more trouble at school....
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I enjoy the story about a puertorican girl and a family and their culture and food.
- De Robert C. Horne en 06-04-24
- Iveliz Explains It All
- De: Andrea Beatriz Arango
- Narrado por: Raquel Merediz
outstanding
Revisado: 05-09-24
holy crap. i don’t know if i can put into words how phenomenal this writing is. sometimes YA sounds like an author only has skills of a teenager, and that’s why they write for that age group, and you have to kind of excuse it bc, well, the character IS 13, and the readers will also be 13, so i guess it doesn’t really matter? but you can somehow tell that arango is an EXCEPTIONAL writer despite only viewing the story through the journal of a seventh grader. i’m kind of not even really sure how she does it. i think it’s bc of the actual story rather than just how the story is presented to you and told to you? idk but it’s so impressive
this book was really good and also really sad. i kept saying that out loud, “wow this is so good and so sad.” not that it’s good BECAUSE it’s sad. arango perfectly captures the very complicated feeling of anxiety and stress within a troubled teenager. i honestly really just don’t know how she does it. i will also say that idk how much of this is bc i also felt similarly when i was in middle school, and idk if anyone who doesn’t relate would think it’s as crazy good. i feel like middle school is this big cloud of confusing emotions—still wanting to get your parents’ approval when they’ve started being harder on you bc you’re not just a cute kid anymore, and so your pure love for them is starting to fade away too, and you feel like you don’t have that support security anymore and it’s terrifying, and you don’t know how to put any of it into words, so you just sit there feeling it all, and it comes across as being stoic or rudely quiet or weird, and then you have to deal with peers who are increasingly getting more judgmental instead of “let’s all get along and share” that’s in elementary school. and arango does an EXCELLLLLLLENT job at capturing this feeling. holy freaking crap
the one thing that i did have a problem with in this book was the resolution. i think it all came together way too easily, and it felt like “remember kids, this is what you do when you see bullying” or something, when you’re watching a kids show, and you can tell “oh, the writers are trying to tell this message to kids, i get it” instead of character acting realistically anymore. i could believe amir’s forgiveness, i could believe the teachers working with iveliz, i could believe mimi saying “you’re my granddaughter no matter what (paraphrased),” and i could believe mami awkwardly trying her best through family therapy. but i could NOT believe it when iveliz told akiko, “you shouldn’t make fun of someone for their mental health,” and akiko came back the next day and said, “you’re right, i’m sorry. can we still be friends?” and then it felt like iveliz turned to the audience and was like, “and that made me wonder how many other kids out there also don’t know what they don’t know, bc people dont speak up. so that’s why we have to say our feelings, kids.” that resolution made me go oookay, yeah, this is a book for kids, there’s a lesson of the day. i really think that when akiko was like “it was just a joke,” then iveliz would have snapped and been like, “you’re a joke, and you’re not funny,” and then they would never be friends again, and i thought it would have been a message saying that like sometimes when you’re lonely, you cling onto toxic people without realizing it, and then when you take a stand, then toxic people realize they can’t just do whatever they want with you, and you’ll realize you don’t actually need them anyway, and you’re better off without them. i really thought it was gonna go there, with the whole arc with akiko, “wow i made a new friend!!” and then slowly she turns out to be crappy, but there’s this push and pull “do i like her do i not does she like me does she not” that ultimately ends with “no i’m better off without fake people who are actually just lonely and bitter.” and it felt like it was leading up to that too bc of what happened with mimi and the pills, and dr turnip saying that the people who love you will understand and stick around (paraphrased). so i’m kinda like ??? at the akiko arc but wtvr
overall gr8 book. i read this trying to find good reads to recommend to my middle school students once i finish my masters program to be a teacher, and i will wholeheartedly recommend this one
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The Assignment
- De: Liza Wiemer
- Narrado por: Emily Lawrence, Lincoln Hoppe, Julia Whelan, y otros
- Duración: 8 h y 56 m
- Versión completa
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Historia
Would you defend the indefensible? That's what seniors Logan March and Cade Crawford are asked to do when a favorite teacher instructs a group of students to argue for the Final Solution - the Nazi plan for the genocide of the Jewish people. Logan and Cade decide they must take a stand, and soon their actions draw the attention of the student body, the administration, and the community at large.
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The Assignment
- De William Carson en 11-16-22
- The Assignment
- De: Liza Wiemer
- Narrado por: Emily Lawrence, Lincoln Hoppe, Julia Whelan, Andrew Eiden, Liza Wiemer, Full Cast
great idea, i hate the execution
Revisado: 03-20-24
when i read the sample for this book, i was hooked, and i thought about it for so long before finally giving in and buying the whole thing. but as i kept reading/listening, i became more and more disappointed and frustrated. this idea is really good, and i wish the author did it justice. instead, the author is very invested in the romantic subplot that is written so cheaply. every time the shift goes from the plot to the, “and then my hand brushed against hers, sending shivers down my spine,” i roll my eyes so hard. i listened to this on the way to work, and by the end of my drive, my jaw was sore from how clenched it was from annoyance. the author also believes in the “friend zone,” and the romance is a bit who has secretly been in love with his female best friend for years; i think normalizing this actually dangerous and damaging to both young men and women, and the friendships between the two. further, i straight up don’t like the girl in the romance, the protagonist—i think logan is unimaginably, inexcusably selfish and naive. there are a million times where logan doesn’t even stop to think about what cade wants or what respects his priorities; she just says, “i want this,” and cade is too kind and in love to protect his own boundaries and values. it is accurate to say that these high schoolers don’t have the emotional maturity or awareness to properly advocate for themselves and be respectful to others, but reading about her disrespecting him over and over again while he excuses it bc of his feelings for her just leaves me with an ugly feeling in my chest. i was thinking about recommending this to my students, but after this implicit theme, i think i’ll pass. there are other young adult novels that can teach better implicit lessons about interpersonal relationships and respect.
other then the frustrating romantic subplot, there are some other examples of good ideas executed badly. switching between perspectives of characters is so cool, but it’s confusing that some of them are in first person and some are in third person. further, sometimes the switch is directly after the previous chapter, and sometimes there’s a gap time-wise between the two chapters. and sometimes the gap covers interesting material that has been built up to in the prior chapter only to suddenly skip the anticipated event. it’s very confusing to be thinking, “this is gonna happen, this is gonna happen,” and then suddenly it’s the next chapter, and it’s already happened, and we’ve moved on. what? what was the point of all that build up? and it’s confusing to go from thinking about the future to suddenly thinking about the past without ever being in the present. huh? whiplash in perspectives. it’s like in a movie if one shot is a character falling left, and then there’s a cut and a camera perspective change, and the character is suddenly falling right. it’s just confusing and unnatural
i’m pretty disappointed by this book but idk maybe i have too high standards, and i guess i’m vastly outnumbered, considering all the other high reviews
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