Skip to main content

The Fire Sermon by Francesca Haig

Brief summary (no spoilers):
The setting is several hundred years after some nuclear showdown. The land is scorched and mostly abandoned. Fertility was greatly affected- all births are twins. One twin is the Alpha- healthy, strong, and with a complete body and mind. The other is the Omega- crippled in some way. Those that have no external abnormality have a mental one. Cass is the Omega, and she's a Seer- she has visions of the future. No one like Seers. Especially not Cass's twin, Zach.

Category:
Post-apocalyptic fiction, probably YA

Why I chose this book:
Recommended by Amazon

My personal opinion:
I enjoyed this book. The story was clean (language), the plot and premise were interesting, and the characters were lifelike. I do recommend it, but for people who are mature enough to handle death and discrimination.

Warnings
Language: none
Violence: yes, some of it mildly graphic
"Adult" situations: cuddling, kissing
Death: yes, including main character(s)

Movie rating equivalent:
PG-13

Protagonist description:
Cass is a Seer, so she has a great deal of power, but she has no idea how to use it

Point of view of story:
First person, focused on Cass

Book length:
Medium

Story flow:
Excellent

Grammar and spelling issues:
None

Character connection (no spoilers):
I would like a bit more back story on several characters

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Happily Ever After Kiera Cass

Brief synopsis (no spoilers): Short novellas and after stories from the perspective of other main characters from The Selection Series. Includes: -The Prince (with the two bonus chapters), Maxon’s novella -The Guard, Aspen’s novella -The Queen, Amberly’s novella -The Favorite, Marlee’s novella -Three scenes from Celeste’s POV -Lucy’s scene (bonus scene from The One) -The bonus epilogue -Where are they now? Category: YA Why I chose this book: Selection of novellas filling in gaps in The Selection series.  My personal opinion (the review): Of the entire series this was by far and away my favorite. I loved getting to hear parts of the stories from other perspectives. There was also additional details not found in the original story. All my questions or things I wondered about where answered through these stories.  Warnings Language: None  Violence: None "Adult" situations: As with the other novels, a few scenes with more description than I would have liked. ...

Tap the Magic Tree by Christie Matheson

Summary: Every book needs you to turn the pages. But not every book needs you to tap it, shake it, jiggle it, or even blow it a kiss. Innovative and timeless, Tap the Magic Tree asks you to help one lonely tree change with the seasons. It begins with a bare brown tree. But tap that tree, turn the page, and one bright green leaf has sprouted! Tap again—one, two, three, four—and four more leaves have grown on the next page. Pat, clap, wiggle, jiggle, and see blossoms bloom, apples grow, and the leaves swirl away with the autumn breeze. (Amazon) Attention Span/reading level: Perfect for my three year old. I would say that ages 2-10 would really enjoy something like this. It really keeps kids engaged and makes them feel like part of the story. There is one word to one sentence per page. Good uses for book in teaching: Interaction, that the reader takes part in making the story, what a tree can do (leaves, blossoms, fruit) Favorite part:      Child: The fact that ...

The Game by Terry Schott

Brief synopsis (no spoilers) What if this life is just a simulation? What if our bodies are in another world, plugged into a virtual reality game, and our entire life is just one play in that game? What would our real life be like, if we could experience several full simulated lifespans, in our teen years, and then enter adulthood? That is the premise of this story. Category Sci-Fi Why I chose this book It was either free or discounted on Amazon, and sounded interesting My personal opinion (the review) Too many inconsistencies. For example: The real world is able to view the players in the game in "real time", but time in the game is sped up, so that a week in real life is worth a decade in the virtual world. How do real world people have enough time to experience the virtual world, in real time, while still being accelerated? Danielle enters the game 3 days behind Trew, but she only ends up being 1 year younger. If a week is a decade in the game, then 3 days should have be...