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154. The Whole Story of Half a Girl by Veera Hiranandani
Publication: Delacorte Books for Young Readers (January 10, 2012), ebook, 224pp / ISBN 0385741286
Genre: MG Fiction

Read: November 19, 2011
Source: NetGalley

Summary from Amazon:

After her father loses his job, Sonia Nadhamuni, half Indian and half Jewish American, finds herself yanked out of private school and thrown into the unfamiliar world of public education. For the first time, Sonia’s mixed heritage makes her classmates ask questions—questions Sonia doesn’t always know how to answer—as she navigates between a group of popular girls who want her to try out for the cheerleading squad and other students who aren’t part of the “in” crowd.

At the same time that Sonia is trying to make new friends, she’s dealing with what it means to have an out-of-work parent—it’s hard for her family to adjust to their changed circumstances. And then, one day, Sonia’s father goes missing. Now Sonia wonders if she ever really knew him. As she begins to look for answers, she must decide what really matters and who her true friends are—and whether her two halves, no matter how different, can make her a whole.

This book will be released on January 10, 2012! Pre-order your copy today.

Review

This is one of those books that’s more like a quiet splash than a tsunami. Not because it’s bad, and maybe not even because vampires and werewolves and whatever are still dominating the MG/YA bookshelves. But, like Bluefish, this is one of those books that’s so complex and relatively unexciting when compared to, say, a paranormal romance, that people will probably overlook it. And that’d be a mistake. That’d be like never reading a Judy Blume or E.L. Konigsburg book because they don’t have any action scenes or high profile murders!

The Whole Story of Half a Girl sort of reminds me of Judy Blume’s Blubber, though other people have said it’s more like Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret. I haven’t actually read the latter, so I can’t say if that’s wrong or right– but I have read Blubber and I’m telling you, it’s like Blubber. It’s got the complex characters, the realistic interactions between characters both young and old, character development, and really subtle lessons about life and stuff. Add in some awesome stuff about being biracial, bicultural, and being a new kid in a new school, and you have a really good book!

The author

There’s less overt bullying in The Whole Story of Half a Girl, though that doesn’t mean that there aren’t hints of it. The thing about this book (and about life) is that oftentimes prejudice, bullying, and other wrong things sneak up on you, so that when you finally notice them, you…don’t really know what to so. That’s what happens to Sonia in this book. There’s really no obvious bullying, but there are people telling her she’s not good enough– whether it’s because of the color of her skin, because of her parents, because of where she lives or where she goes to school, or because of her personality, we don’t know. But either way, it’s pretty terrible, and if Sonia didn’t have such a supporting family (despite that family’s problems with money and depression and more) it could have gotten really bad.

Luckily, though, Sonia herself is a pretty strong person. She wobbles a bit, like any kid does when they move to a new school and want to make new friends1, but she doesn’t wobble SO far that she’s in any permanent danger. I suppose if Veera Hiranandani had wanted to ramp up the drama she could have stuck in some peer-pressured drug situations or something, but I think that would have rang false with the rest of the book. It’s too obvious, too forceful. The dangers Sonia faces are much more complicated than that, and I appreciated the delicacy VH handled tricky situations.

So! Did I like this book? Hell yeah! It’s not going to bust down the doors and kick you in the face with its awesomeness, but does it really need to? Sometimes people (kids) need to read stuff that lures them into a new way of thinking, not stuff that shouts at them until they agree. And I think that this book, like Bluefish, is one of those books that, in the right hands, can make someone’s life a little bit brighter.

Rating


Almost makes me wish I were a teenage girl again. (Almost.)

Buy

Get your own copy @ Amazon or BookDepository.com and support Birdbrain(ed) Book Blog through the power of affiliate earnings!

Other reviews

My Words Ate Me: “One aspect of this book that I especially appreciated was the different way of dealing with the popularity chain. This is a common trope in MG and YA, and I was worried the author’s approach would just be the same old typical one that I’m more than tired of. However, the situation instead felt very realistic without a straight-out dog-eat-dog hierarchy of kids but rather a more complex dilemma with dimensional characters.”

The Last Word: “This is no meek, mouse of a girl. Sonia knows what she will and won’t stand for. What she hasn’t quite figured out is who she is, something she’s never before had to explain to anyone, much less herself.”

MarjoleinBookBlog: “The story of Sonia was fun and highly entertaining, with a little sad side because of her depressed father who lost his job and suddenly goes missing. This book is also a great book about growing up between two cultures and defining what it means to you, and its about family and friends and making a new start at a very new and different school.”

Notes

Publishers Weekly and Kirkus both gave it stars! Congrats!

Credit
Author photo comes from author’s website. It’s not mine!

Footnotes

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Why I am unimpressed by Google+

 Posted by Anastasia on November 29, 2011  10 Responses »
Nov 292011
 
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I’ve been using Google+ for a few months(?) now and while I like the idea of it, so far it hasn’t wowed me. The most exciting thing has been being able to +1 someone’s blog post if I enjoyed it– it’s basically equivalent to Liking a post via Facebook– but even then I don’t know how much good that does. Can anyone even tell if people have +1′d their posts if they aren’t checking every day?1

The thing about Google+ is that it’s too much like Facebook and not enough like Twitter. Book bloggers like Twitter, on the whole. We use it for communicating about stuff. Important stuff! Personal stuff! Blogger-y stuff! And by now we’ve built a pretty decent community on Twitter that’s getting bigger every day. It’s awesome! Facebook, meanwhile, is where we put fanpages for our sites and…not much else.2

Google+ is good for sharing interesting stuff and keeping in touch with blogger friends, but it’s really hard to have conversations with people. The nice thing about Twitter is that you can nudge yourself into convos with users you’ve never talked to before, and it’s amazing and fun and sometimes you make new friends. With Google+ everything seems a lot more spread out and hard to find. I can talk to the people I’m already friends with (which is nice), but finding new conversations to join in on is way too much effort compared to doing it on Twitter.

The good thing about Google+, though, is…uh. Well, it’s easier to keep up with stuff than on Twitter? I do like being able to share things through G+, but I used to be able to do that through Google Reader anyway so it’s not THAT big of a deal. And I could still do the same thing through my Tumblr account, which syncs automatically with my Twitter account so people who aren’t on Tumblr can still see it. Can Google+ do that? (I don’t think it can. Correct me if I’m wrong.)

All in all it seems that Google+ is kinda useless– for me, anyway. It does the exact same things other social media sites already do, and it doesn’t seem to bring anything new to the table. Plus it’d be pretty hard to convince people to give up Twitter/Tumblr/Facebook and concentrate on G+, which is what needs to happen if we’re going to get any sort of new community thing going on.

Remember when Google Wave came out and we had almost these exact same problems? At least Google+ is easier to figure out how to use! Sigh.

Am I wrong about Google+ being unimpressive? Are there amazing things happening somewhere and I’m not seeing them? How do YOU, as a book blogger, use Google+? Do you use it for more personal things or for more blogger-y things?

I’m thinking that since it’s basically Facebook anyway, people are using it for more personal things, which means people who want to use it for blogger-y things should stay with Twitter/Ning/something else. Yes/no?

Footnotes

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Nov 282011
 
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137. The Time Travelers (The Gideon Trilogy #1) by Linda Buckley-Archer
Publication: Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers (September 11, 2007), originally published 2006, Paperback, 416pp / ISBN 1416915265
Genre: YA Sci-fi, Historical Fiction

Read: October 31, 2011
Source: Bought

Summary from Amazon:

Gideon Seymour, thief and gentleman, hides from the villainous Tar Man. Suddenly the sky peels away like fabric and from the gaping hole fall two curious-looking children. Peter Schock and Kate Dyer have fallen straight from the twenty-first century, thanks to an experiment with an antigravity machine. Before Gideon and the children have a chance to gather their wits, the Tar Man takes off with the machine — and Peter and Kate’s only chance of getting home. Soon Gideon, Peter, and Kate are swept into a journey through eighteenth-century London and form a bond that, they hope, will stand strong in the face of unfathomable treachery.

Review

For some reason, whenever I think about this book I can only remember the abysmal beginning, which is slow and boring and nearly caused me to get rid of The Time Travelers before I gave it a proper chance. I don’t know what it is about that beginning, but it throws a cloud over the rest of the book, which is MUCH better than that beginning would make it seem.

So, okay. Bad beginning. But after that bad beginning there is much joy to be found, and most of that joy is found in the characters. Though they were occasionally annoying and impotent, I thought that Peter and Kate were excellent kid leads. They had real kid emotions! Including crying! They didn’t have all the answers and they couldn’t fix things all by themselves. They had to connect with people and ask for help, and that’s kind of unusual in a YA action book, don’t you think? Continue reading »

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Nov 272011
 
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The Sunday Salon.com So this week has been pretty awesome! And stressful. Awesome and stressful and there was lots of turkey. I actually got all caught up on my reviews! I haven’t been caught up on my reviews since the beginning of the year. Huzzah!

The turkey, meanwhile, was really delicious. I also had a sweet potato ALL TO MYSELF. Here’s how you eat a sweet potato: you stick it in the microwave until it’s soft on the inside. You cut it open, mush around the insides a bit, and then you put butter, cinnamon, and brown sugar on top. Then you eat it. IT TASTES AMAZING.

For all of you interested: I am for sure moving to California at the beginning of January. Yay! We’ll be living somewhere near Irvine/Anaheim/around that area. Once I get out there I hope you, y’know, get a job and stuff. Or at least volunteer somewhere so I have SOMETHING to put on my resume. I also, of course, want to go to lots of book events! Where do I find those events? Anyone know?

Also! Depending on what job I get and whether or not they’re nice about taking time off, I am going to ALA for at least a day or two. ALA annual for 2012 is in Anaheim, so it’s perfect! I don’t think I’ll be going to BEA 2012, though, because of the expense and stuff. Boo.

Anyway, does anyone have any tips for ALA? And is anybody going in June? I know a few bloggers went last year, but most of the info I found is from librarians. Is there anything I should look out for, being a blogger and not a librarian?

And finally, two things:
1. The Agatha Christie tote bag and Murder in the Making ARC giveaway ends on November 29…ish. I may extend it.
2. Sign-ups for the Book Blogger Holiday Card Exchange close on November 30th! And I won’t be extending that.

Weekly Book Stats

Books read this week:
155. Nation – Terry Pratchett [rating: 5] e *

Books reviewed this week:
150. Cocaine Blues – Kerry Greenwood [rating: 4] e
151. Flying Too High – Kerry Greenwood [rating: 4] e
152. Murder on the Ballarat Train – Kerry Greenwood [rating: 4] e
153. London Calling – Edward Bloor [rating: 3] e

Books acquired this week:
None. I’m technically not expecting paper books from now until some time in February (except for John Green’s newest book which I’ve preordered), so I don’t expect I’ll get many! Should I start listing ebooks instead?

Currently reading:
I think I’ve finally settled on a book: Dust and Shadow by Lyndsay Faye. It’s a Sherlock Holmes vs. Jack the Ripper story, and so far it’s enjoyable. The author’s included some of the Victorian phrasing/slang from the original stories, which I like, but she then immediately defines them afterwords so that’s kind of weird.

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Commonplace Post (12)

 Posted by Anastasia on November 26, 2011  2 Responses »
Nov 262011
 
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Click on an image to go to its website.

Canadian’s lucky iron fish saves lives in Cambodia:

It began three years ago when this science whiz from Milton, who had just graduated from Guelph with a bachelor in biomedical science, took on a gritty little summer research gig in Cambodia. The task was to help local scientists try to persuade village women to place chunks of iron in their cooking pots to get more iron in their diet and lower the risk of anemia. Great in theory, but the women weren’t having it.

10 Things I Dislike About Your Blog @ The Story Siren

Penguin Pulls eBooks From Public Libraries Dropping it Down to 1 of the Big 6 Publishers Playing Nice With Libraries @ Librarian By Day

This captivating lamp designed by Nosigner (Eisuke Tachikawa) represents the Super Moon, the biggest full moon in a cycle of 18 years. After the tragic earthquake in Japan, many of the Japanese prayed to the Super Moon for hope. According to Nosigner, this lamp is a symbol of the moon’s “light of hope”.

The dronecam revolution will be webcast: Interview with Tim Pool of “The Other 99″ @ BoingBoing. One of the things I LOVE about the year we live in now is that anyone with a recording device can become a reporter. They don’t need press passes!

YA heroines outside the white, straight box @ Malinda Lo’s blog

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Nov 252011
 
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153. London Calling by Edward Bloor
Publication: Knopf Books for Young Readers (February 12, 2008), ebook, 306pp / ISBN 0375843639
Genre: YA Fiction, Sci-fi, Historical Fiction (sort of)

Read: November 19, 2011
Source: Singapore Public Library

Summary from Amazon:

Martin Conway comes from a family filled with heroes and disgraces. His grandfather was a statesman who worked at the US Embassy in London during WWII. His father is an alcoholic who left his family. His sister is an overachieving Ivy League graduate. And Martin? Martin is stuck in between–floundering.

But during the summer after 7th grade, Martin meets a boy who will change his life forever. Jimmy Harker appears one night with a deceptively simple question: Will you help?

Where did this boy come from, with his strange accent and urgent request? Is he a dream? It’s the most vivid dream Martin’s ever had. And he meets Jimmy again and again–but how can his dreams be set in London during the Blitz? How can he see his own grandather, standing outside the Embassy? How can he wake up with a head full of people and facts and events that he certainly didn’t know when he went to sleep–but which turn out to be verifiably real? [snipped]

Review

I’ve read a few of Edward Bloor’s other books, including Crusader which I reviewed here back in 2009. What I like best about all his books is how well he writes teenage characters. All his teenagers feel like real teenagers. They’re smart, but they do stupid things. They have prejudices, but they’re able to change. They have adventures that maybe aren’t the stuff of action movies, but are nevertheless life-changing.

London Calling is by the far the most “unrealistic” of Edward Bloor’s books, by which I mean it’s got time travel and ghosts and things to do with the afterlife. I think it’s also got the least amount of emotional punch to it, which is unfortunate because generally his books have a lot of emotional depth. While there’s plenty of emotions in this book, they don’t ring as true to life as the same emotions do in his other books. Plus, London Calling suffers from two big writing problems: it reads like a FAQ to World War II and it has a blah ending. Continue reading »

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Nov 242011
 
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The book: I’ve been flitting between several books (4 or 5!) so far this week, because I can’t seem to find something I want to stick with. Ugh! I hate when that happens. I still haven’t decided on a book for today, so here’s what I’m NOT reading:

A Marked Man by Barbara Hamilton. I’m keeping this (it’s a library book) to see if I can get back into it, since I really did like the bits that I’ve read, but I think I’ve gone off historical fiction mysteries for a little bit.
Princess of the Midnight Ball by Jessica Day George. I LOVED the other JDG books I’ve read, so I really want to give this one a chance…but! Ugh. The princess have no agency! Maybe they do later on? So I’m keeping it (library book again) until I give up on it for real or until I finish reading it.
The House at World’s End by Monica Dickens. I think it’s a pretty bad sign if you read three/five pages and still have absolutely no interest in the story. Blah.

What I MIGHT be reading: Dust and Shadow by Lyndsay Faye. A Sherlock Holmes story! I should like it, right? Let’s hope so. I’m literally one page into it, so I have no idea about anything yet.

The tea drink: I gotta tell you something. I’ve been waking up later and later this month and mostly I think that’s because I’ve been having a hard time falling asleep before, oh…4am. So right now? At 1:22pm my time? I’m drinking coffee to wake myself up. Isn’t it terrible?

Do they go together? They drank coffee in the Victorian times, didn’t they? In England? I’m sure they did. Right?

Other tea drinkers

Leave a link to your TT post in the comments and I’ll add you to the tea drinkers list!

Happy Thanksgiving to all my US readers, btw! Here’s hoping you eat lots of nice things and don’t feel too sick afterwards.

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