Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Who's the scariest character you've encounted in a book ?

The scariest character I have ever encountered from a story is either Saint Dane from the Pendragon series or Voldemort. Noah O.

Who's the scariest character you've encountered in a book?

In Neil Gaiman’s book Coraline everyone in the other world has button eyes. The fake mother (the copy of Coraline’s real mother) wants to make Coraline have button eyes. I think she’s really scary. Sara

Who's the scariest character you've encountered in a book?

I think Carrion is much scarier than Shape because of the weird snake things in his case around his head. Also his mouth got sewed shut. That is so freaky~ Mark M.

Do you believe in destiny?

I don’t believe in fate because we can change our lives if we want to. Everyone has always told me that I can be what I want to be if I try hard enough and work. Mark M.

Why are there seashells on the ground?

Obviously sea shells are only found in the ocean, so someone might have scattered them there as a clue for Candy. Maybe if you looked above them the seashells would spell out a secret message or direct her to a new location. Maybe they’re special seashells only found in a certain sea and Candy needs to go there. Sara

Saturday, November 24, 2007

The Books of Abarat Web Site

Check out author Clive Barker's Abarat web site http://www.thebooksofabarat.com/content4/xbarat99.html which includes a moving map of the islands. The cursor is a ship, and when you click on an island, you "travel" to that island. There's info on the characters, info on Clive Barker, and even an audio interview with him.

Friday, November 23, 2007

Mendelson Shape


So what did you think of the first bad guy in the book, Mendelson Shape? I'm not sure which is scarier, the description of him ("almost fleshless limbs" "spiderish") or the picture. I haven't encountered many scarier images than that of Shape climbing up the tower in pursuit of Candy, singing his horrid little nursery song. Who's the scariest character you've encountered in a book?

More about the doodle


On page 52, Candy "thought of the doodle she'd made on her workbook; the way it had seemed to brighten in her mind's eye, inspiring her limbs to move. It was almost as though the doodle had been a sign, a ticket to this adventure." And then on page 63, we come across the symbol again, on the surface of the turquoise-and-silver ball Candy finds in the tower: "And elegantly engraved on its blue-green surface was a design she knew! There it was, etched into the metal: the doodle she'd drawn so obsessively in her workbook." There's a lot in this book about fate. Clearly, Candy was fated to have this adventure. How do you think the wavy-line doodle fits into this? Was it put there purposely (by someone?) as a clue to help Candy know what to do, a sign for her to follow? Or is it just a detail that is present in certain places, that Candy somehow tunes into?

Monday, November 19, 2007

What do you think the author is trying to tell us with Candy's doodling?

I think the author is trying to tell us Candy is very creative. Instead of thinking and looking at things in a simple way she builds on and makes it more complex and interesting. Noah O.

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Destiny

When Candy is trying to decide whether to help John Mischief, to risk drawing the attention of the horrifying Mendelson Shape, she thinks about destiny and fate. "In a curious way it made sense that she was here because she had to be here...Why else, after living all her life in Chickentown, should she be here - in a place she'd never been before - today?" Do you believe in destiny? Is there something in your life or in the life of someone you know personally that makes you believe in fate?

Seashells


Ah, the next clue to what's going to happen: Candy is following some inner urge, walking out of town onto the prairie, leaving behind all of her troubles (her teacher, her alcoholic father, her boring life in Chickentown), and she kicks a seashell. What is the tower doing there, and why are there seashells on the ground?

Doodling


Remember how Candy doodled wavy lines on her notebook? And she kept thinking about them as she was leaving school? I love the description of the lines, and how in her mind they changed from being black lines on gray, recycled paper to being bright, and then moving: "The wavy lines were rolling across the darkness inside her skull, rolling and breaking, the brilliant colors bursting into arabesques of white and silver." What do you think the author is trying to tell us?

Tuesday, November 6, 2007

New book - Abarat by Clive Barker


This book is the first of author/illustrator Clive Barker's promised four book series: The Books of Abarat. It took him 4 years to complete the original artwork (100 astounding, disturbing paintings) for this book, and the second book, Abarat: Days of Magic, Nights of War, contains another 100 equally bizarre original paintings. I don't want to say much about the plot of the book because I feel that half of the fun is trying to figure out what the heck is going on. But I do want to give those of you who haven't started the book yet a piece of advice: skip the prologue and jump right in to the main part of the book. The prologue will just confuse you and possibly make you think you're going to hate the rest. I promise, it's nothing like the prologue. Clive Barker's genius is his imagination, and he shows it most in his characters. Take for instance the Lord of Midnight, Christopher Carrion. The lower half of his head is surrounded by a translucent collar filled with blue fluid, in which swim bright, flickering forms, which he clearly takes pleasure in, smiling if one of them grazes his face. The shapes? "Carrion had found a way to channel every nightmarish thought and image out of the coils of his brain and bring them into this semiphysical form. He breathed the fluid, the flickering forms ran in and out of his mouth and nostrils, soaking his soul in his own nightmares." Whew! Wait until you see the picture - page 125, by the way. Anyway, it's not really a horror book, despite the grotesque bad guys. The heroine is Candy Quackenbush, who is destined to save the Land of Abarat, an archipelago of 25 islands, each existing in one distinct hour of the day, and one for "the time outside time." That's enough for now. Start reading!

Friday, October 19, 2007

Has anyone seen the movie The Seeker?

The reviews of the movie haven't been very good, but I'd love to hear from anyone who has seen it. The website has some cool stuff on it. Check it out! http://www.walden.com/walden/read/dark/index.php

Who's reading The Dark is Rising?

Hey, if you're reading the book, drop me an email and let me know how far along you are. westwoodyoungadult@yahoo.com

Monday, October 15, 2007

Midwinter's Eve


I love the way the book is divided into chapters by the day the action is taking place. A lot happens in a very short time! I also love the medieval sound of the days' names: Midwinter's Eve (which I think is the day and night before the winter solstice, December 21), Midwinter Day (the winter solstice). Poor Will! Weird things start to happen to him right away on Midwinter's Eve, which also happens to be the eve of his 11th birthday. The radio crackles when he walks by, the rabbits are restless and uneasy, the rooks are crazed. Then there's the tramp: The Walker is abroad. Wow. If you were Will, at what point do you think you would have realized that something definitely wasn't right? I made a list of the ominous things that happened to Will in the first chapter. I counted 15. Make your own list and see how many you come up with. What is the scariest thing in the first chapter? How about Mr. Dawson saying, "This night will be bad, and tomorrow will be beyond imagining."

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

The Dark is Rising by Susan Cooper


The Dark is Rising is actually the second book in this amazing series by Susan Cooper, but the first book, Over Sea, Under Stone, is really a prequel to the sequence. The series centers around Will Stanton, who, on his 12th birthday, learns that he is the last of the Old Ones, and that he is destined to play a major role in the struggle between the Dark and the Light. The plot is not the main thing here. The author plunges the reader into a setting that is so fraught with danger from unknowable sources that you are kept on the edge of your seat throughout. The weather plays a huge role in the story, and who would think that weather could be so sinister! As the Dark increases its presence, the countryside is blanketed with snow such as has never been seen before, and cold that drives the villagers to huddle together in the manor house for warmth as a supernatural ice storm rages outside. Will is the Sign-Seeker: he must find and retrieve the six ancient signs which, when joined together, will give him enough power to fight the Dark. The book has a dream-like quality that makes the character of the Rider who pursues Will even more sinister. At the same time Will is trying to understand the ancient struggle he has been thrust into, he is also living his normal life with his many brothers and sisters (he is the seventh son of a seventh son), and it's Christmas. Of course the most magical time is between Christmas and Twelfth Night, which is when the book takes place. This is the third time I have read this book, and I have to go on and read the rest of the series again.