Monday, June 1, 2015

Alienated

Alienated by Melissa Landers      

Cara has mixed feelings about hosting a student from the planet L'eihrs.  On the good side- it will provide her with tons of opportunities.  She will get a scholarship for college.  Her blog is getting lots of hits.  She has even has press engagements!  The downside- most of her friends can't stand the thought of aliens on the planet, much less in school.  When Cara meets her exchange student Aelyx, she is even less sure how she feels.  He's handsome.  And articulate.  And smart.  And also arrogant.  And secretive.

Then Cara and Aelyx begin to develop feelings for each other but he is still hiding something from her.  Their respective planets have a lot riding on this exchange program being successful and there is intense scrutiny from the media.  Cara finds herself fighting with her boyfriend and her best friend.  Next thing she knows, there are protestors outside of her school and she has to be escorted everywhere for her own safety.  Now, Cara and Aelyx find themselves together on an uncertain path.

This has romance, mystery, and conflict.  What would you give up for your planet?  For love?


 
Climbing the Stairs by Padma Venkatraman

Vidya has a happy life with her parents and brother Kittya.  She loves her school and is an excellent student.  She's proud of her father, who is very progressive and believes Indians should be free of British rule.  This all changes in a heartbeat when she and her father wind up in the middle of a protest.  In the excitement, Vidya is separated from her father and she sees him being beaten when trying to help a protester.  He has permanent brain damage.  As a result, Vidya and her family must go to leave in the home of her grandfather and uncles.  They live a completely different lifestyle in their new home.  Vidya's new teacher is not very nice.  Vidya doesn't get along with her cousins.  Vidya's father is called "the idiot" and she never sees her brother anymore- Men and women are housed on separate floors

Vidya's only escape is when she is taking care of her niece and climbs the stairs to the library. Here, she enters the world of words and education.  She discovers authors and philosophers.  She even meets a somewhat mysterious and interesting young man.  Will Vidya be allowed to continue her education or will she be forced to abide by her family's old fashioned expectations?



Thursday, February 26, 2015

Port Chicago 50: Disaster, Mutiny and the Fight for Civil Rights by Steve Sheinkin




Mutiny!  Discrimination!  Explosives!
All of these words are at the heart of this powerful book by Steve Sheinkin.  During World War II, sailors were working on the Navy base at Port Chicago, California.  The men were not supposed to be segregated, but in fact the only men required to work on the munitions were black men.  The goal for the work they were doing was to safely load munitions onto the Naval ships to prepare for battle.  This was dangerous work, but there was tremendous pressure to go faster and get the work done more quickly.  Eventually, this became an unsafe situation.  The men warned the commanders that the encouragement to be faster led to safety issues.  This was ignored and there was a huge explosion.  Over 300 men were killed and dozens more were injured. 

You would think this tragedy would result in changes so things would be safer, but the black sailors were told to report back to the dock and resume the munitions work.  They knew this was too dangerous and so they refused to go back.  The problem was that they didn’t have the right to refuse to go back because they were sailors in the Navy.  This meant that they could be (and were) charged with mutiny.  This could mean serious results- many years in prison.  The sailors knew there was no real choice in the matter- they could lose their lives if they had to go back to the munitions work without any changes made to ensure safety.  This is the story of what the men did and how they were treated as a result of their decisions.  




Steve Sheinkin did an excellent job of making the reader aware of how dangerous this work was and the consequences for the men.  There is a sense of imminent danger and the despair because of the men's lack of choice.  They asked questions like if this work wasn't dangerous why were only black men doing it?  The danger and civil rights rights violations were at the heart of the issue.  

Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Fairest by Marissa Meyer

Fairest
Marissa Meyer


This fourth installment in the Lunar Chronicles was a short novel, almost more of a novella.  Though the book was 150 pages long, the story is only 113 pages, with a excerpt from the next novel, Winter, at the end.  Obviously disappointing!  For this novel, we are thrown back in time to when Queen Levana was Princess Levana.  The novel opens to her parents dying and her sister being crowned as Queen.  It was a great look at the background of a queen that we know as an evil dictator.  She wasn't always the person that we have come to know in the first two books of the Lunar Chronicles.  Though it was a letdown that we didn't hear more of the story of Cinder and her crew of misfits, it was fascinating to see how a villain becomes the person we all hate.  This prequel could even be read before the other three books without it giving away too many important details from Cinder, Scarlet, or Cress To hear the final installment of Cinders story, we have to wait until the fall.  This is a good novella to tide fans over, but definitely leaves the reader wanting more.