| 
A Summer Garden
of YA Books
By Hollie Parry
One of my neighbors has a beautiful
flower garden. Whenever I have the opportunity to pass by this blooming
wonder, I am constantly amazed at the many varieties of plants growing
there. It seems that there is a flower in her garden for everyone.
As I struggle to grow my own budding backyard botanicals, I find
I can always go to my neighbor for suggestions and help to find
just the perfect plants to hopefully build my perfect garden.
In the garden of July’s reviews
you will find an assortment of titles and stories. There isn’t
one theme or idea that these books surround — just a flourishing
mixture of good books and unforgettable characters that you will
surely want to add to your literature collection. Hopefully, as
you tiptoe through the reviews, you will find something that captures
your interest and fills the fleeting fragrant days of summer reading.
Megan by Jack Weyland
Although this story was released a
few years ago, when I came across it again, I was drawn to it..
Once I read Megan, I knew it was a perfect
fit for July’s column.
The story starts by introducing a young
teenage girl, Megan, who is cute, fun, smart, and seems to have
everything going for her. Despite having a great life, all she wants
is to be noticed by Eric, an older boy who seems to be the ultimate
boyfriend conquest.
In an attempt to capture his attention,
Megan lets down her guard and little by little trades in her values
for the fallacy of sin. Megan thinks that by giving in to the persuasions
of this boy, she will ensure that he will want to be with her always
and surely fall in love with her. As it becomes apparent that nothing
is farther from the truth, Megan finds that she has much bigger
problems to solve.
At the same time as Megan faces her
deep pain and confusion, 300 miles away, another woman pleads with
Heavenly Father for deliverance from the trials that she is facing.
By no fault of her own, she is dealing with a problem that she does
not know how to fix and feels hopeless.
This is a touching story of the ultimate
healing power of repentance and how each of us, no matter what our
circumstances, desperately needs the blessing of the Atonement and
Christ in our lives. I feel very impressed to recommend this book
to any teen, but especially those who may be teetering on the edge
of what is right and what is wrong.
Larklight by Philip
Reece
Click to Buy
Pirates of the Caribbean meets Treasure Planet in
this whimsical science fiction story set in Victorian times. A young
British lad, Arthur, and his coming-of-age sister, Myrtle, are suddenly
forced to flee for their lives between the known planets after large,
menacing spiders attack their space home and wrap their beloved
father into a deadly cocoon.
As the children face obstacle after
obstacle, they must rely upon the dreaded pirate Jack Havoc and
his gang of intergalactic creatures to solve a mystery that leads
them right back into the clutches of the “murderous spiders”.
Can Arthur and Myrtle escape the dreadful spiders and save themselves,
the queen, the British Empire, and space life as they know it? Find
out in this charming tale of mystery, imagination, and suspense;
Larklight.
The Life of Pi by
Yann Martel
Click to Buy
The
Life of Pi is an interesting tale of a young zookeeper’s son
who is living in India. When political unrest in the country threatens
his family’s way of life, they set off for Canada to start
a new life. After a tragic accident leaves him alone, young Pi finds
himself calling on the lessons he learned from his father and from
life at the zoo to survive the tumultuous life lost at sea with
an unlikely enemy and companion.
This story is both exciting and thought-provoking.
Through young Pi, Martel poses some interesting conclusions about
religion and shows how “everything which inviteth and enticeth
to do good and to love God, and to serve him, is inspired of God.”
(Moroni 7:13). When I reached the end of this story, I wished for
a book two because I was this book captured my attention so completely.
I recommend this book for anyone who likes to read fiction that
seems so real, it could be true.
First Light by Rebecca
Stead
Click to Buy
Peter
is a boy from New York who lives with his brilliant mother and father,
both of which are scientists. His father gets a rare chance to go
to Greenland and study global warming. After much discussion the
family decides that Peter will leave school for six weeks and go
with his parents to Greenland.
Peter is very excited about the adventure
but is a little preoccupied by the headaches that he has been experiencing
lately. As their frequency and intensity increases, he is worried
that there may be something more wrong with him than just a headache.
Thea is a girl who lives in an icy
world underground in Greenland. Her ancestors left England and traveled
to Greenland to escape the “hunters” who wanted to annihilate
her kind because of their unusual powers. Thea’s community
is threatened by their rapid consumption of their depleting food
sources. Unless they can find a way to expand their community and
grow more food, their chance of survival is doomed.
Thea’s plan to save her friends
and family involve a forbidden journey to the surface. While she
is frightened by what she might find there, she knows that it is
the only way to prevent her clan from extinction.
I was not sure whether to classify
First Light as fantasy or science fiction. Whatever the
category, First Light is a new and interesting story that I enjoyed
reading. The plot and characters are fresh and the story is unique.
I recommend this book for all teen readers.
Ellie McDoodle Have Pen,
Will Travel by Ruth McNally Barshaw
This book for young teens is a fun-loving
illustrated journal written about Ellie’s family camping trip
with her aunt, uncle and cousins. She draws and annotates the family
and their hair-brained ideas and adventures from her hilarious,
sarcastic point of view.
I enjoyed reading this book and recommend
it for everyone, especially for reluctant reader, as it is an easy
read which quickly pulls the reader into Ellie’s world.
Click
here to sign up for Meridian's FREE email updates.
© 2007 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
|