Showing posts with label Jax Reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jax Reviews. Show all posts

Monday, September 26, 2016

Jax Reviews ~ Sun Moon Earth ~ Tyler Nordgren

Sun Moon Earth: The History of Solar Eclipses from Omens of Doom to Einstein and ExoplanetsSun Moon Earth: The History of Solar Eclipses from Omens of Doom to Einstein and Exoplanets by Tyler Nordgren
Release Date: September 13, 2016
Genre: Nonfiction, Science
Source: I picked up an advance copy from the publisher at BEA thinking Jax would enjoy it
Rating: 4 Bookworms
Goodreads

Synopsis
On August 21, 2017, more than ten million Americans will experience an awe-inspiring phenomenon: the first total eclipse of the sun in American in almost forty years. In Sun Moon Earth, astronomer Tyler Nordgren illustrate how this most seemingly unnatural of natural phenomena was transformed from a fearsome omen to a tourist attraction. From the astrologers of ancient China and Babylon to the high priests of the Maya, Sun Moon Earth takes us around the world to show how different cultures interpreted these dramatic events. Greek philosophers discovered eclipses' cause and used them to measure their world and the cosmos beyond. Victorian-era scientists mounted eclipse expeditions during the age of globe-spanning empires. And modern-day physicists continue to use eclipses to confirm Einstein's theory of relativity.

Beautifully illustrated and lyrically written, Sun Moon Earth is the ideal guide for all eclipse watchers and star gazers alike.


***Jax's Review***

Sun Moon Earth is a delightful book about eclipses. Tyler Nordgren writes with a quasi-Bill Bryson style, as each of the nine chapters sufficiently wanders from the subject then brings it back in a conclusion where the stories and facts are proved relevant. He shows an enormous love for eclipses, yearning for the reader to understand the sensation one feels during an eclipse. The book covers subjects from the earliest records of eclipses to the cult following across the globe for a glimpse at the rare event. Most of the book is anecdotes from history, such as Columbus using an eclipse to secure dominance of the natives in the Bahamas. The author, Nordgren, is a professor and has written another book on astronomy, about stargazing in the national parks.



Monday, July 13, 2015

Jax Reviews ~ The Last Continent & Going Postal ~ Terry Pratchett

The Last Continent (Discworld, #22; Rincewind #6)The Last Continent
Discworld #22
Release Date: February 1, 2006
Genre: Science Fiction/Fantasy
Source: Borrowed from Library
Rating: 4.5 Bookworms

Synopsis
'Anything you do in the past changes the future. The tiniest little actions have huge consequences. You might tread on an ant now and it might entirely prevent someone from being born in the future.'

There's nothing like the issue of evolution to get under the skin of academics. Especially when those same academics are by chance or bad judgement deposited at a critical evolutionary turning point when one wrong move could have catastrophic results for the future. Unfortunately in the hands of such an inept and cussed group of individuals, the sensitive issue of causality is sadly only likely to receive the same scant respect that they show to one another...


Going Postal (Discworld, #33; Moist von Lipwig, #1)Going Postal
Discworld #33
Release Date: September 27, 2005
Genre: Science Fiction/Fantasy
Source: Borrowed from Library
Rating: 5 Bookworms

Synopsis
Arch-swindler Moist Van Lipwip never believed his confidence crimes were hanging offenses - until he found himself with a noose tightly around his neck, dropping through a trapdoor, and falling into...a government job?

By all rights, Moist should have met his maker. Instead, it's Lord Vetinari, supreme ruler of Ankh-Morpork, who promptly offers him a job as Postmaster. Since his only other option is a nonliving one, Moist accepts the position - and the hulking golem watchdog who comes along with it, just in case Moist was considering abandoning his responsibilities prematurely.

Getting the moribund Postal Service up and running again, however, may be a near-impossible task, what with literally mountains of decades-old undelivered mail clogging every nook and cranny of the broken-down post office building; and with only a few creaky old postmen and one rather unstable, pin-obsessed youth available to deliver it. Worse still, Moist could swear the mail is talking to him. Worst of all, it means taking on the gargantuan, money-hungry Grand Trunk clacks communication monopoly and its bloodthirsty piratical head, Mr. Reacher Gilt.

But it says on the building Neither Rain Nor Snow Nor Glom of Nit...Inspiring words (admittedly, some of the bronze letters have been stolen), and for once in his wretched life Moist is going to fight. And if the bold and impossible are what's called for, he'll do it - in order to move the mail, continue breathing, get the girl, and specially deliver that invaluable commodity that every human being (not to mention troll, dwarf, and yes, even golem) requires: hope.



*****Jax's Reviews*****
(Discworld series books can be read standalone)

This summer, the libraries in Jeffco (Jefferson County, Colorado) are holding a “Read 1,000,001 Minutes!” thing (for all of Jeffco, not for each person). As of now, we have surpassed 3 million, and the library hurriedly came up with a “Great! Now go for 10,000,000 Minutes!” To do my part, I decided a library would be a much better method of reading books I haven’t read before in bulk without buying them; not to mention that my bookshelves are so crowded I had to forgo alphabetization for fitting them on double sidedly. This turned out to be a very easy way of reading more Terry Pratchett.
I loved Douglas Adams when I was in, oh, probably third to sixth grade - so three years, but by then I had read the five-part trilogy so many times that I needed something new. And I found Terry Pratchett. The world was exciting and new, with a different twist in the voice. Also, and even better, there was a live author that could write more! (Of course, not anymore; RIP, Terry). I read the first book: The Colour of Magic, and fell in love. Later, I was enchanted by the ever twisting and connected plotlines of Unseen Academicals, and got Dodger, which takes place in Victorian London, for summer reading.
Seeing as I’ve rambled long enough, I got two books I hadn’t read yet, The Last Continent and Going Postal. First, I read the former. It’s basically a parody of Australia: Rincewind the Unlucky Wizard, the protagonist of so many of the Discworld books, somehow got to the continent of Ecksecksecksecks, mercifully known as Fourecks, where it never rains, no plants grow, and the liquor is rather, er, unstable. Back at Unseen University, the leading educational center in Ankh-Morpork, the most loved professor, the librarian (who happen to be an orangutan), is sick, and the sickness is disrupting his magical field, causing lethal instability. The only way to cure him is to find his name, and that secret resides in Rincewind. The bumbling wizards venture off to find him, but end up in a rather different millennia, and enter one of the strangest oxymorons ever: the region of the god of evolution.
Rincewind doesn’t think of escape until he gets to that part. He’s stuck on the island, but one thing at a time: he needs to survive first. Besides being out in the desert where nothing grows, a mob of policemen are out to hang him for “stealing a sheep”. And to solve every problem he’s been having, he just has to make it rain for the first time since the creation of Fourecks, which won’t be easy, as he’s the worst magician that magic ever produced.
Death keeps Rincewind’s hourglass in a special spot on his desk. Strange tubes and curves come out everywhere, and sometimes the sand flows backwards. But he knows it’s coming...
A delightful blend between two different plots, each affecting the other, makes for a great read!

Now for the second one: Going Postal. It stars the character Moist Von Lipwig, who lives a life of playing off people’s trust, hope, and general stupidity. He never thought that he could be hanged for them--they were just petty crimes!-- until he found himself being hanged, and promptly thrown into a government job. Specifically, he becomes postmaster of the Ankh-Morpork post office. Being head of the post office means a lot of things, from challenging the giant “clacks” business (something like telegraphs, but faster) to finding a way to deal with the disturbing employees, to delivering the piles and piles and piles of letters stacked everywhere in the office. Finally, he must find out who he is, while juggling a huge amount of tasks--getting the girl, fighting the monopoly, staying alive, keeping everyone happy, and making sure the letters don’t get mad at him. Oh right. The letters, little slices of history that they are, are talking, and only delivery can silence them.
A magical blend of the classic Discworld and something that hits closer to the “real world”, Going Postal contains everything from Wizards to large corporations, from orangutans to golems, and everything in between.


Friday, June 26, 2015

Jax Reviews ~ A Dark Inheritance ~ Chris D'Lacey

A Dark Inheritance
Unicorne Files #1
Release Date: May 27 2014
Genre: YA Fantasy
Source: Purchased Hardcover
Rating: 3 Bookworms
Synopsis
When Michael Malone discovers his supernatural ability to alter reality, he is recruited by an organization dedicated to investigating strange and paranormal phenomena. He joins in hopes of finding his fater, who mysteriously vanished three years earlier. Michael's first task is to solve the mystery of a dog he rescued from a precarious clifftop -- a mystery that leads him to a strange and sickly classmate and a young girl who was killed in a devastating accident. Stakes are high as Michael learns to harness his newfound ability and uncover the deadly truth about his father's disapperance.
A bold and thrilling tale of alternate realities, paranormal mystery, and extraordinary adventure.

***Jax's Review***

Once upon a time, one of my favorite book series was Christopher D’Lacey’s The Last Dragon Chronicles. Thinking back on it, it was very scattered and, well, interestingly organized. However, I loved it in fourth grade, and when I found a new book he wrote, I thought I might as well read it. It is called A Dark Inheritance, where young Michael discovers he can alter reality exactly like flipping through the pages of a book, and wants to be recruited by a secret agency.

The warning lights of a cliché were coming on. There was the boy, Michael, considered to be a delinquent by everyone now. There was his obnoxious little sister, there was the mysterious goth girl who doesn’t have a place, the guiding force. The agency that recruits him, called U.N.I.C.O.R.N.E., is dedicated to investigating the paranormal. They assign Michael the task of finding out the story behind a dog that he rescued, and this leads him to the goth girl, Freya, who is being haunted from inside her own body, in an obscure form of possession.

All in all, D’Lacey did his usual off-the-beaten-path-fiction, with the incredibly strange plot, but cliché characters, leading for a mostly enjoyable book.


Tuesday, June 9, 2015

Jax Reviews ~ The Sea of Trolls ~ Nancy Farmer

It's so nice having kids who love reading as much as I do - especially come summertime when I can put them to work writing reviews! ;) Y'all get a little variety here and I can take a little breather. Enjoy Jax's review!


***


The Sea of Trolls
Sea of Trolls #1
Release Date: June 1, 2006
Genre: Young Adult, Fantasy
Rating: 4.5 Stars

Synopsis
Jack was 11 when berserkers loomed out of the fog and nabbed him. Now in 793 AD, Jack and his little sister Lucy are enslaved by Olaf One-Brown, and his fierce young shipmate Thorgil. Alongside the crow "Bold Heart", they learn to "Just say no to pillaging."




**Jax's Review**

In one of their ill-fated attempts to make school reading likable, we were told to read a choice book that must be “at our level” and at least 200 pages. I decided, since I had just read and enjoyed The Lord of Opium, I should read the Sea of Trolls series by Nancy Farmer.
When I started reading the first book, The Sea of Trolls, the characters seemed to fit the archetypes marked out by the Hero’s Journey, which we were learning about. There was the hero, Jack, the mothering figure, his mother, Lucy, the damsel in distress, and the Bard, the one who trains him in magic and prompts him to go on the quest. This prompted a distrust of the book, as I usually find books with well established character stereotypes annoying. However, once I got a little further into it, I changed my mind.
What starts the adventure is the Northmen, basically Vikings, kidnapping Jack and Lucy for slavery. I assumed that they would be at least the henchmen for whoever the villain was, but, as it turns out, all of the Northmen turned out to be helping Jack, although not on purpose. Jack reveals his talent for magic, and voila, the Northmen keep him and take him to their village. Along the way, a shield maiden named Thorgil makes it clear that she despises Jack and Lucy, for what reason it is not given. In the village, Jack is passed into slavery, and is forced to use his Bard powers to sing for the half-troll queen of the land, Frith. He messes up in the praise-song, and Frith’s beauty is gone. Enraged, she sends him on a quest with Thorgil and Olaf-One Brow, one of the Northmen. And if they don’t complete the quest, Lucy will be sacrificed...
This was one of the books where you put it down after you’re done and you sit there, dazed, wondering if you should get up from your comfy spot on the couch or just curl up and go to sleep and have troubled dreams about dragons and trolls. It probably will make you sit quietly for a while and think.
There are two other books, The Land of the Silver Apples, where the nature of monks is put into question and they journey to the land where time never flows, and The Islands of the Blessed, where a restless spirit threatens to slaughter entire villages, and Jack must both fulfill a promise and repay a debt.


Thursday, July 10, 2014

**Jax Reviews ~ The May Bird Trilogy ~ Jodie Lynn Anderson**

*******Jax Reviews*******
The May Bird Trilogy


May Bird and the Ever After (May Bird, #1)
Most people aren't very comfortable in the woods, but the woods of Briery Swamp fit May Bird like a fuzzy mitten. There, she is safe from school and the taunts and teases of kids who don't understand her. Hidden in the trees, May is a warrior princess, and her cat, Somber Kitty, is her brave guardian.

Then May falls into the lake.

When she crawls out, May finds herself in a world that most certainly does not feel like a fuzzy mitten. In fact it is a place few living people have ever seen. Here, towns glow blue beneath zipping stars and the people -- people? -- walk through walls. Here the Book of the Dead holds the answers to everything in the universe. And here, if May is discovered, the horrifyingly evil Bo Cleevil will turn her into nothing. 

May Bird must get out.

Fast.

Within these pages, Jodie Lynn Anderson shares with us the beginning of May Bird's daring journey into the Ever After, a haunting place where true friends -- and one terrible foe -- await her on every corner.

***

May Bird Among the Stars (May Bird, #2)
May Bird has always been a bit...different. While most of her classmates were riding their bikes, she was running around the woods dressed as a warrior princess with her hairless cat at her side. And instead of spending summer vacation at birthday parties, May was discovering a mysterious lake hidden among the trees -- and stumbling into the land of ghosts, the Ever After.

A fearful and fantastic realm located among the stars, the Ever After is full of all manner of things that go bump in the night. And if May is to find her way out again, she must reach the mysterious Lady of North Farm, who lives in a cold, forbidding land that even the spooks find spooky.

With her courageous (yet melancholy) kitty and a ragtag group of spectral friends she's picked up along the way, May is determined to escape the Afterlife. But first she must face her very worst fears, and there's no telling who will make it through...or who will be left behind.

***

May Bird, Warrior Princess (May Bird, #3)
At Hog Wallow Middle School, May Ellen Bird was always slightly invisible. Then she went on a long trip to the land of the dead, where ghost towns glowed blue in the dark dusk and spooky specters dwelled in cities on the Dead Sea.

Back on Earth at last, May and her hairless cat, Somber Kitty, are now famous, their faces plastered across souvenirs and sportswear that read "May Bird Went to the Land of the Dead and All She Brought Me Was This Lousy T-Shirt." But, finally in the spotlight, May feels more than ever that she doesn't belong. Every night she sits by her bedroom window, gazing at the sky and dreaming of another place, wishing -- despite herself -- to be back among the ghosts.

And then one night she gets her heart's desire in a way she would never have wished for. Only the Ever After isn't anything like the world May left behind three years ago. The spirits have vanished, and the towns -- once full of every manner of things that go bump in the night -- are deserted. Evil Bo Cleevil has made the Ever After as cold as his own frigid soul, and put up a bunch of tacky malls to boot.

Now, with her friends missing and enemies all around her, May must find her way to the edge of the universe, where night swallows the stars, where allies are few and often have bad breath, where endings can also be beginnings, and where the truest hero lurks in the unlikeliest of souls. But Bo Cleevil's got one last trick up his sleeve -- one that no one on Earth is ready for.

With the worlds of the living and the dead in the balance, will May's courage fail her one last time? Or will she finally become the warrior she was always meant to be?


I’ve been reading a lot of different books over the last four years, and also during those four years my sister was nagging me to read May Bird. I always was busy reading something else (e.g. Fablehaven, Moby Dick, Beyonders, etc.). So this summer, with all this free time, I decided to read it. The books are ones I’m not likely to forget. Jam-packed with excitement, morals, and dead people, May Bird has made a long-lasting impression on me.
May Bird is a skinny, dark-haired girl with knobby knees and a hairless cat named Somber Kitty. One day while in the woods, she goes into the mysterious lake. On the other side, there is somewhere very much different than what she left. This is the world of the dead, ruled by the evil Bo Cleevil who will stop at nothing to fill up the emptiness in his heart. Welcome to the Ever After, where you go when you die.
Along the way, May encounters some friends, including Pumpkin, the lovable house-ghost with a huge gash of a mouth, a pumpkin shaped head, and a yellow tuft of hair.
John the Jibber is a knave- he was killed by his own crewmembers. Together, the three companions journey to open The Book of the Dead so May can make it out still alive.
The sequel is the same plot: May’s still in there and needs to get out, while avoiding the Bogey’s sucking fingers that will turn her into nothing. And that’s one of the many dangers she will face, from an evil cat called Commander Berzerko, zombies, ghouls, goblins, to even Evil Bo Cleevil himself.
The third takes its whole plot out of a plot twist in the beginning of it, so it’s hard to explain, but May is older: she’s not the girl that got stuck in the Ever After, she has gazelle-like legs instead of knobby knees, and long flowing hair instead of her bob cut. Because it didn’t bring anything but unhappiness in her house to bring up her memories, she suppresses them. Then, one day, she is back. Stuck in the Ever After Again three years later and not in the way she expects. What she finds there is frightening- and not just the tacky strip malls. The Ever After is an unhappy place, where vampires comb the skies, and ghouls and goblins call the shots (and enjoy yoga). Her friends are scattered, and if the Ever After has any hope left, she must assemble them and make a heroic last stand against the great evil that inhabits Bo Cleevil.
This trilogy is much darker than it might seem at first (Evil Cleevil? Really?). However, once you start reading it, you can’t stop. Unless, of course, you are Skyler and started reading it before the third came out and had to stop. I would rate this at (yes, I know it sounds a little over-rated, but read it) 5 worms. I rated the May Bird trilogy at 5 worms because it had wonderful characters, superb conflict, and of course, a great plot.

Jodi Lynn Anderson has a fun voice, and is obviously a talented author. The way she wrapped up the trilogy was amazing. I can’t tell it to you, dear reader, because of obvious reasons. The only way to figure out what happens, and see how good it is is to read it. My review can’t describe it half as well as the book itself.