Janie Face to Face by Caroline B. Cooney
I just finished this this past week. It might be the only book I read in February. School sucks!!!
I'll make up the 18 books I haven't read yet this summer, don't you worry.
So I have to introduce this book big time!
This is book five in a series that was born the same year I was.
I read them in middle school.
I'm not real sure where to start....
The Face on the Milk Carton, 1990
Janie Johnson, sees her three year old self on a milk carton while eating lunch.
Her real name is Jennie Spring.
She was kidnapped from a mall.
This first book is anxiety ridden, and abrupt.
It chronicles Janie as she finds out, researches, freaks out, double checks, and then confronts her parents about the kidnapping.
There is a logical explination.
(and also there is Reeve, the boy next door.)
The end.
Whatever Happened to Janie?, 1993
Janie/Jennie is forced to go live with her biological parents.
I do not remember as much from this book.
She isn't happy with the Spring's and decides that she has the right to move back with her adoptive parents.
There was never supposed to be a second Janie book.
This book answers much of Caroline B. Cooney's fan mail.
The Voice on the Radio, 1996
The kidnapping is old news.
Janie/Jennie's life is settling back down.
Reeve, the boy next door, is away at college.
And he has a job at the campus radio station.
He is supposed to talk inbetween songs, but he doesn't know what to say.
So he tells the only story he knows. Janie's. And Janie finds out.
He made me mad. I hated him for hurting Janie. (I get pretty caught up sometimes.)
I don't remember ever finishing this one.
There was never supposed to be a third book either. (Do you see a pattern??)
What Janie Found, 2000
Janie/Jennie is living life as best she can.
She decides to speak to Reeve again.
And then her Conneticut father has a stroke.
This leaves Janie to help her mother with the family finances.
As she get their affairs in order, she finds some information that only her and two other people know about.
I don't remember much about this book either, but it's anxiety ridden again. (This poor girl needs some meds)
There wasn't supposed to be a fourth book. (Forrealllll, it says that in the back of the fifth book)
Drum Roll Please!!!!!
Janie Face to Face, 2013
There are two sides to every story.
Janie/Jennie is away at college in New York.
She doesn't use social media. She's had enough media to last her a lifetime.
Her friends do.
Her kidnapper does.
I can't give anything else away. It hasn't even been out on the shelves for a month.
I reallllllly reallly liked it. Especially considering the other three after TFOTMC didn't really do a whole lot for me. I even tried to reread them all before Face to Face came out. Janie was making me anxious. :) It's the perfect ending for the fifth book that wasn't supposed to be written.
If you read it make sure you read the aithors note in the back, she kind of explains why there ended up beng five.
There is also a short story. I will be reading that, as soon as I remember to look for it on the eLibrary.
Credit:
Amazon - in case you're into buying
Caroline B. Cooney - author website
Read A-likes:
What Janie Saw - Caroline B. Cooney (short digital novella)
1-800-WHERE-R-YOU Series - Meg Cabot
Read on.
Jessica.
Wednesday, February 27, 2013
Monday, February 25, 2013
The Raft - S. A. Bodeen
The Raft by S. A. Bodeen
Read on.
I read this back in January. It's the only book I managed to read for fun.
I took a Winter minimester class that kicked my butt, and I only had one week day off before the Spring semester started.
This book was recommended to me by Darrell, my friend at CCPL.
Basically, he emailed me that he put it on hold for me, and one day it just showed up.
It pays to have friends at your favorite place.
When I went to see him the other day we discussed The Raft.
I personally loved it. It was a total mind eff at times, but I really really liked it.
We spent a good ten minutes trying to figure out what book is strikingly similar to this one.
But we couldn't figure out which one it is.
I had reading deja vu while reading it, but it was just published in August of 2012.
Short synopsis:
Robie (In my head I pronounced it Robbie/Robby, but who knows) lives in Hawaii. She travels frequently by herself. This particular trip though is different. The supply plane she's on goes down in the Pacific. She manages to hang on until she's rescued, but there are few twist and turns that aren't expected, and a few moments when you second guess your own comprehension of the story. It ends fairly well, as well as a plane crash book can end.
I read it in a matter of a few hours.
It is a quick read. But it's a good one.
The imagery is amazing, it does deal with quite a bit of death, but it does it gracefully.
You are rarely smacked in the face with it, even though it is a plane crash book.
I highly recommend it.
Credit:
Amazon - in case you're into buying
S. A. Bodeen - author website
Read A-likes:
(I may not always do these, but Darrell and I talked about them, so I figured I could put them up.)
The Cay - Theodore Taylor, 1969
Far North - Will Hobbs, 1996
Hatchet - Gary Paulsen, 1987
I read all three of these in elementary school and middle school, but they each are fantastic books!
Read on.
Jessica.
Hello World
I was just going to jump right on in, but I thought I'd introduce myself first.
I'm Jessica.
I read.
A lot.
Constantly.
FOR FUN.
Yeah, some people think I'm crazy.
But I don't care.
I'm 22. I live in Maryland, about an hour outside of Baltimore.
I challenged myself to read 120 books in 2013.
That's 10 books a month. I think.
So far I've read two.
But basically my purpose here is to 'review' books I've read.
I'm not talking critiques, just if I liked it or not, short overview type stuff.
I have a good friend in the CCPL system, who recommends most of the books I read.
But I'll read prettttyyyy much anything I can get my hands on.
I do have a type. Sorta like boys, I like a certain kind of book. One genre makes me happier than others.
Young Adult, or YA.
It's kindaa my FAV.
Most of what I'll review is going to be YA.
But I'm also going to use this as a platform to review anything my friend needs for the library.
Thanks for stopping by.
Jessica.
I'm Jessica.
I read.
A lot.
Constantly.
FOR FUN.
Yeah, some people think I'm crazy.
But I don't care.
I'm 22. I live in Maryland, about an hour outside of Baltimore.
I challenged myself to read 120 books in 2013.
That's 10 books a month. I think.
So far I've read two.
But basically my purpose here is to 'review' books I've read.
I'm not talking critiques, just if I liked it or not, short overview type stuff.
I have a good friend in the CCPL system, who recommends most of the books I read.
But I'll read prettttyyyy much anything I can get my hands on.
I do have a type. Sorta like boys, I like a certain kind of book. One genre makes me happier than others.
Young Adult, or YA.
It's kindaa my FAV.
Most of what I'll review is going to be YA.
But I'm also going to use this as a platform to review anything my friend needs for the library.
Thanks for stopping by.
Jessica.
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