Category: Summer Learning

The Pearl (Summer Reading)

41DsxsN2b2L-1The Pearl, by John Steinbeck is yes a short book, but also an amazing story. It is the book I annotated and I am glad that I picked this one because most of the character especially the main, is a completely round character and you see so many sides of him. I just finished it and by the end I was hooked to Steinbeck . It’s about this town, somewhere in California, set around early 20th century.  I thought it was interesting how Steinbeck sometimes repeats the same word in one sentence like on page 92 when Kino, the main character is fighting the trackers,” In the moonlight he could see the frantic frightened eyes, and Kino aimed and fired between the eyes.” I am pretty sure that Steinbeck is doing this to be poetic or add emphases to bring the sentence home. I loved how this book showed that money does not bring happiness and in this case the pearl brings them sorrow. If you compare the end of the book to the begining and if you read the last page and the first page you will be astonished at how the beginning and end are polar opacities. If I was to tell you that in the beginning, everything is great and this family is just living a quit simple life and then I was to tell you that they found a priceless pearl, you would think that there life would get better, but it just goes down hill and ends in a catastrophe. I actually read Of Mice and Men after I read this book which is another Steinbeck classic, and in comparing them I saw the seams in the pearl, while I thought that everything about Of Mice and Men was amazing. I now really do love Steinbeck and I am about to start reading The Red Pony. I really loved The pearl and even though compared to  other Steinbecks its not the best, it is still a really great story and I recommend it. I haven’t read that much of Steinbeck but just from The Pearl and Of Mice and Men I have observed that he ends his stories in the most unique way. He sets the whole book up to think nothing of a certain character or even dislike the character slightly but then something  happens to that character. Something awful and sad and in one way or another he or she is gone. Even though the character was not your favorite when they leave you are really sad. It was like I had met that character and I had interacted with them before. I really have never felt so sad about a character dying and that is really why I loved The Pearl. Everything happens in the last few pages but what you don’t realize is the whole book is a very subtly a build up to the big finish.

The Beast Of Cretacea

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The Beast Of Cretacea, by Todd Strasser, is the last book I read for book camp. This happened to be my favorite book, which surprised me because it seemed very sci-fi and had to do with space. It took me about 100 pages to get into this book, and once I did I really enjoyed it. It’s actually a spin off of Moby Dick and I know that spin off is not the right term, but to me it seems appropriate. The main character is a boy named Ishmael, just like Moby Dick and a lot of the other character are the same. Its about this futuristic universe where earth is a complete mess. One of the most civilized planets in the new solar system is called Cretacia. It is basically the modern day earth and it is beautiful. Some people go to Cretacia to live out the rest of there lives, while others go on missions to fight the Cretacean Monsters. The monsters are actually just sea animals but since it’s the future they think of them as dangerous creatures. The ship that Ishmael lives on fights these kinds of animals and captures them. The books technical term for the beast of cretacia is the giant terrafin. Ishmael has a crew that help him capture the monsters and take them to the chief, Starbuck. Throughout the book different things happen separating Ishmael and his friends from the ship. They run into a group of Islanders who have secret remedies and cures for disease, pirates that take them captive and try to starve them, and a group called the gilded that trick him into thinking that they are powerful. The books course changes making it a drama, comedy, thriller, and a little bit of sic-fi.

Shadow Shapers (Summer Reading)

22295304-1Shadow Shaper, by Daniel José Older, is a book I read for book camp that was truthfuly one I did not enjoy. Out of all the books that I read for book camp, I just thought this one was poorly written. It was interesting that this was the most famous out of the four books, and the only possible reason I could think for that is that it is the most commercial and normal. I thought that the plot was not well constructed and it didn’t grab my attention. After reading this book I felt unfulfilled, like I had stopped half way through the book. The protagonist, Sierra, is a teenage girl living in New York. Her life is pretty normal despite the fact that her grandfather had a stroke one year prior, making him paralyzed and unable to speak. Sierra is an artist and paints murals around NYC and Brooklyn. One day her grandfather starts to speak to her and tells her that she has to finish the mural as fast as she can. He also tells her that the murals are fading. The shadow shapers are leaving, and a boy named Robby can help her. She not only thinks he is going crazy, but basically ignores him until she runs into Robby at a party. She asks him what the shadow shapers are, and he seems surprised that she knows. Soon after, a half dead looking man comes and starts to run after Sierra. Once she gets away, Robby realizes that she is a shadow shaper and you start to find out what that is. Robby shows her that shadow shaping is the transferring from a soul to a painting. A shadow shaper must create almost a portal for a soul to go into. The soul enters the shadow shapers body and then moves onto the painting that the shadow shaper has intended the soul to go into. Once the souls have entered the paintings they obey anything that their shadow shaper wants them to do. Sierra soon learns that a man named Wick is trying to take over the souls and cast away the shadow shapers for ever. She also learns that her grandmother, Lucinda, who had died many years prior to the setting of the book, had once been the leader of the shadow shapers, and now that she is dead, the paintings are starting to fade and disappear. Sierra fights Wick with her shadow shaping powers and attempts to save the shadow shaping world. Despite this book’s difficulties, I really did love the beginning of the book, and now I really know how much the end matters for future reference.

This Side Of Home ( Summer Reading )

01f099c0-7e68-0132-1d7e-0a2c89e5f2f5This Side Of Home, by Renee Watson, is one of the 4 books I read for Thalia Book Camp at Symphony Space. It is almost the antithesis of what we have learned in school; the structure is a new creation in itself, and the plot and obstacles are less prominent. Though this book was just a normal read for me, I respected the fact that the author changed the vibe of this book compared to the others I am reading. I loved the simplicity of it and how it was just about daily life instead of all this high speed action that I am used to. The main character is a African American teenager living in Portland. Her old neighborhood starts turning into an expensive gentrified place, and her friends start having to leave because of the constantly rising rent. The identity of her school morfs and more hispanic and white children join. This book is about change and coping with it. It is really a good easy read, and I recommend it to anybody who just wants to sit down with a book each day and relax. This Side Of Home was a great book, and I am excited to meet the author.

P.S. Book camp happens for a week in the summer where we read 4 books,  meet the authors and talk to them about their book.