Showing posts with label historical fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label historical fiction. Show all posts

Sunday, September 26, 2010

The Season
by Sarah MacLean


Seventeen-year-old Lady Alexandra Stafford is about to undergo her first "season" in London, along with her two best friends, Vivi and Ella.  Alex's mother insists that she be perfectly dressed and perfectly well-mannered at all times, especially while at the many balls and dinners she must attend in order to catch a rich and noble husband.  Marriage is something that Alex is not at all ready for, and proper behavior not her strong suit, but there is nothing to be done but to go along.  Fortunately, Alex and her friends can have occasional intellegent and witty conversations with her older brothers and their friend, Lord Blackmoor, whom Alex has known all her life.   And the season becmes positively enthralling when the girls become involved in solving the possible murder of Lord Blackmoor's father.  Add to that the intense and surprising attraction Alex feels for Lord Blackmoor, and the London season becomes unexpecatantly fascinating.  On this year's Texas Lone Star list, The Season is a fun Regency romance perfect for girls of all ages.

Sunday, August 22, 2010


Heroes Don't Run
by Harry Mazer

      Adam Pelko's father was killed at Pearl Harbor when the Japanese attacked the Hawaian naval base in December of 1941.  He's been aching to join the marines ever since, so he can fight for his country and avenge his father's death.  In 1944, the summer before his senior year in high school, he talks his mother into letting him visit his grandfather who lives across country, because he knows his grandfather will allow him to enlist in the Marines even though he is still under age.  Adam has a pretty unrealistic view of what fighting in the war will be like, and can't even imagine not coming back.  During boot camp, he gets a small taste of army discipline, but it's not until he lands on Okinawa that he finally fully understands the terror and crushing heartbreak of war.  Heroes Don't Run is a realistic historical novel of the Pacific during World War II, and Adam Pelko is a character most teens can identify with.  Chosen by the Greater Waco Chamber for its One Book One Waco community read this fall, Heroes Don't Run is a timely and appealing story.   --reviewed by Mrs. Sams