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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: squee, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 5 of 5
1. YAB Review: Dragon Age 2

Today’s Ypulse Youth Advisory Board video game review comes from Julia Tanenbaum. Our resident YAB gamer steps up to give us her take on “Dragon Age 2,” the sequel to “Dragon Age Origins.” The sequel had a lot to live up to... Read the rest of this post

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2. The Witcher--RPG anyone?


I finally went out and bought The Witcher....with the caveat I could not play it until I got some of my writing done....and reviewing done...and blogging done. But then when my son came home from college, we had to "check" it out just to make sure it's working. Got to or if I waited to late I couldn't take it back to the store, right?

Right.

And then I had to play a little of it. Just a little. Okay, well, maybe just to the next quest. Uhm, one more quest. Another quest. Well, this is going to be the very last quest! Sigh.

My daughter wants to play too...but she's better than me....too much school work she needs to finish before she gets hooked on the game.

They're addictive. What can I say? It's like reading a good book, which I also did last night and will be posting a review shortly on WritersareReaders.com, but if the story hooks you enough, you keep reading. The game hooks you enough, you keep playing.

After a very violent stormy night and a stormy day, I'm concentrating on editing Betrayal of the Wolf and writing the review of Where the Heart Leads. After that???

I'm gonna help the witchers out and learn some more powerful magic spells, I hope. :) Oh, and find something better than a rusty sword too. And solve just a quest...or two.

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3. SVH 2.0

I know the Random House book most people are clamoring for right now is Christopher Paolini's Brinsingr, but I'm not one of the clamoring. Mostly because I don't read fantasy. What I do read, however, is chick lit. Lots and lots of chick lit. Growing up in the mid-'90s, the premier chick lit franchise was the delightfully cheesy Sweet Valley High series. There's a certain camaraderie among Sweet Valley fans. We like to reminisce about the endless descriptions of out-there clothes, pick our favorite twin (I'm definitely an Elizabeth), and if Zazzle or CafePress had been around back then I'm sure we'd have a spate of t-shirts that proclaimed TEAM JEFFREY or TEAM TODD.

And now, those t-shirts can be ours.

Starting in April, Random House is reissuing the Sweet Valley High series. Everyone's favorite blonde, five-foot-six, lavaliere-wearing identical twins are back in all their identical-but-couldn't-be-more-different glory. Random, bless them, gave out galleys at ALA Midwinter, so I picked one up and read it.

What you may consider spoilers will follow. If you're spoiler-sensitive, now may be a good time to click your back button.

At their cores, the SVH books are still the same. They're still about life in sunny, middle-class Southern California. Jessica and Elizabeth's personalities are still the same. Jessica still schemes and ruins Elizabeth's clothes, and Elizabeth still prefers spending time with a few close friends over going to parties. Some details from the original series are changed. The twins no longer drive a Fiat Spider or hang out at the Dairi Burger. Elizabeth has an anonymous blog instead of an anonymous print gossip column. That's the bad news. The good news is that the plot still holds up, more or less.

The greatest thing about the SVH series is that the plots are timeless. Regardless of decade, teens still deal with issues of sibling rivalry, romance, feuding families, annoying but loving older brothers, and gossip. Those themes that drive the SVH series are still relevant today, which is why I think there's a good chance this repackaged series will find a new generation of readers. The other nice thing about the series is that there's no overt sex (at least, not in the first book), so this could be a nice recommendation for those who like "clean" romances or those who want a step up from The Clique but one down from Gossip Girl. Jessica and Elizabeth certainly like boys, but they're not hopping into bed with them. Even though Jessica likes a little danger in her life, she's not stupid enough to stay with the guy who endangers his life (and hers).

And years after I read the first books, I still want Lila Fowler's wardrobe.

crossposted at carlie@bccls

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4. Thank You, School Library Journal!

And welcome, SLJ readers!

So, there's this really nice article about PGTL: The Book on School Library Journal's website today. Needless to say, Liz & I are beside ourselves with delight. In the immortal words of our patron saint, Flavor Flav, "yeeeeah, boyyy!"

4 Comments on Thank You, School Library Journal!, last added: 8/23/2007
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5. Welcome, Slate Readers

And also: congratulations, Melissa, on being one of the bloggers linked-to from Slate's coverage of the "Hipper Brand of Shushers" kerfuffle (scroll down, we're at the very bottom of the page). We have a love-hate relationship with Slate here at Pop, largely due to their consistently wrong-headed approach to literature for children & teens. This, however, qualifies as a true love moment. Thanks to Sonia Smith for choosing to highlight Melissa's post, and happy almost birthday, Issa!

1 Comments on Welcome, Slate Readers, last added: 7/10/2007
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