Showing posts with label Mary E. Pearson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mary E. Pearson. Show all posts

Friday, May 16, 2014

There's Nothing Better Than a Good Book

On Facebook I saw several people ask for good books to read.  So I threw together this list of some of my favorite books.  Enjoy! 

Life of Pi
By: Yan Martel
Genre: Contemporary
Rated: PG-13 for some animal violence
Book Club Worthy: Yes

 If you liked the movie, you’ll the love the book!  The book goes into more detail of when Pi is in India, exploring different religions, explaining the zoo, connecting religion and zoos, and finding himself.  I suggested this book to my mom and she couldn’t put it down.
Watch for my review on this book this summer.


Till We Have Faces
By: C.S. Lewis
Genre: Mythical/Fantasy
Rated: PG
Book Club Worthy: Yes

Set in a barbaric town, Till We Have Faces, retells the Greek myth of Cupid and Psyche, this time from the point of view of on of Psyche’s sisters.  It explores the dimensions of love, both possessive and romantic.  I loved the depth of this book, the way it made me think, and the reality of the characters.  Lewis truly carves a masterpiece.  It’s a must read for everyone.


The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks
By: E. Lockhart
Genre: Young Adult Fiction
Rated: PG
Book Club Worthy: Yes

A coming-of-age book, Frankie discovers she doesn’t want to be the stereotypical girlfriend of gorgeous senior Matthew Livingston.  She doesn’t want to be told what do to, what to wear, and how to act.  So when she finds out about his male-only secret society, Frankie takes matter into her own hands, showing Matthew, his secret society, and her boarding school the power behind a female mind. 


Bridge to Terabithia
By: Katherine Paterson
Genre: Children
Rated: PG
Book Club Worthy: No


A classic children’s book, this story touched my heart.  Jess is entering the fifth grade, and he knows he’s the fastest runner in the school . . . until he gets beat by the new girl in town, Leslie.  They form an unlikely friendship and discover the land of Terabithia where they reign as king and queen.  Leslie shows Jess a new meaning to life, full of stories and adventures.
This is a great book to read with the kids. Look for the review on this book, coming soon! 

The Adoration of Jenna Fox
By: Mary E. Pearson
Genre: Young Adult, Utopia
Rated: PG (There is some swearing in it)
Book Club Worthy: Yes

Jenna Fox has been in a comma for the last year and half.  She doesn’t remember anything about her life prior to the accident, or the accident itself, and no one is willing to tell her what happened.  The Adoration of Jenna Fox explores the relationship between parents and children.  I loved this book so much I couldn’t put it down, and neither could my mom. 
After you’re done reading it, read my essay on it. 

Lemon Tart
By: Josi S. Kilpack
Genre: Mystery
Rated: PG
Book Club Worthy: No

Sadie Hoffmiller loves baking and cooking and keeps up to date with everything going on in her neighborhood.  When her new friend and neighbor, Anne Lemon, is found dead in the field behind her house, and her two-year-old son, Trevor, is missing, Sadie is one of the first to know.  Sadie is convinced she has valuable information for investigators in regards to Anne’s murder and Trevor’s kidnapping.  However, they don’t want to hear what Sadie has to say.  In fact she becomes a suspect!  Sadie bakes her way through scrumptious cookies to delicious brownies in order to find out who is really behind the murder and to clear her own name.
If you are looking for a book to simply enjoy pick up Lemon Tart.  There isn’t an underlying meaning.  It’s simply a book about a fiery widow who solves a mystery. 
Read my review on it.

I’d Tell You I Love You, But Then I’d Have to Kill You
By: Ally Carter
Genre: Young Adult Fiction
Rated: PG
Book Club Worthy: No

Cammie Morgan attends the Gallagher Academy for Exceptional Young Women.  It’s not your typical boarding school though.  Instead of learning basic math, chemistry, and English, they learn the ins and out of spydom.  They break CIA codes, learn chemical warfare, and the martial arts, just to name a few subjects. 
In the small town by their school lives a regular boy.  Cammie, a not-so-regular girl, falls for him.  What happens when a future spy does the unthinkable and starts to date a regular boy?  Her friends confirm to her that it’s riskier to fall in love than to hack into the president’s computer. 
I’d Tell You I Love You, But Then I’d Have to Kill You, is a fun and exciting read.  I’d highly recommend it if you don’t want to read a book that will make you think too hard.

Harry Potter Series
By: J.K. Rowling
Genre: Young Adult Fiction, Fantasy
Rated: PG – PG-13
Book Club Worthy: Yes

Already read the whole series?  Great!  Read it again!  Don’t have time to read seven books.  Pick your favorite one and read it. 
Haven’t read these books yet? Have you lived?  GO TO THE LIBRARY RIGHT NOW AND CHECK THEM OUT!  You haven’t lived until you’ve read the Harry Potter series.


Shackles of Honor
By: Marcia Lynn McClure
Genre: Romance
Rated: PG
Book Club Worthy: No

Though McClures writing isn't Ernest Hemingway, she can weave a great story.  If you’re looking for a fun, clean, sappy romance, this is a great choice. 
Cassidy Shea’s life is blissful. She has a secret lover, wealth, and beauty.  But when Mason comes to the Shea mansion to take Cassidy away, her life is turned upside down.  Secrets follow her wherever she goes, and uncertainty hides in the shadows.  Maybe these secrets and uncertainty are the very things that may bring Cassidy the happiness she seeks.

The Secret Journal of Brett Colton
By: Kay Lynn Mangum
Genre: LDS Fiction
Rated: PG
Book Club Worthy: Yes

If you haven’t read this book, you need to.  Warning, it can be a tearjerker! 
Kathy Colton dislikes her older brother Brett.  Though he’s dead her family talks about him all the time.  He died when she was a baby, and because of that no one remembers the first word she said, when she cut her first tooth, or even her first birthday.  Then on her sixteenth birthday she finds his journal; life as Kathy knows it changes. 
At the same time Kathy is supposed to be tutoring some stuck-up jock on the football team.  Worse is that he’s Mormon. 
Mangum laces the story of a dying brother, and a coming-of-age sister into a masterpiece that’s hard to forget.

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Releve Jenna, Releve


An Essay on The Adoration of Jenna Fox 


Ballet—the perfect art.  There is a perfect height, perfect weight, perfect grace, and perfect feet expected of every prima ballerina.  Every step is perfect, beautiful, and graceful there is no room for improvisation. Only the perfect ballerina’s can please audiences.  Jenna Fox, the protagonist in Mary E. Pearson’s The Adoration of Jenna Fox, is the ballet of her parent’s world.  Jenna feels she must do everything perfect in order to stay on the pedestal her parents have created for her.  If she falls she disappoints her audience, which will cause her to break.  She is controlled by the love of her parents until they push her too far to the edge of the pedestal.  Though she falls she doesn’t break; Jenna realizes she can find more peace in life when she does what she needs instead of living up to her parents expectations.
Jenna obeys to please.  When she wakes up from her year and a half long coma she does things only to please her mother.  “[Mother] puts her arm around me and squeezes.  I lift the corner of my mouth.  Then the other: a smile.  Because I know I am supposed to.  It is what she wants” (Pearson 3).  Because she doesn’t have a high functioning brain yet, Jenna doesn’t understand why she does things to please her parents.  But even before the accident and ensuing coma, Jenna’s body took command of her, which aimed to please her parents.
In her last ballet recital she only finished her dance gracefully to stay on the pedestal her parents had created.   On stage Jenna is tempted to “stomp and grind and swing [her] hips” (Pearson 229) instead of preforming her last releve.  But she releves.  Her mind wants so desperately to do something else, but her body won’t let her.  It is woven into her muscles to stay on the pedestal.  The “new Jenna,” upon watching her last performance, realizes how unhappy she was staying on her parent’s pedestal.  “The performance is all in her arms and legs and muscles, and none of it is in her heart” (Pearson 229).  Jenna stays on her pedestal because she is afraid of disappointing her parents;  “Maybe I was eager for a fall, the thing I feared most” (Pearson 225).  After her coma, once she realized she was placed on a pedestal, she again battles with what she wants and what her parents want.  Lily tells her, “[Your parents] won’t break, you know” when Jenna is having a hard time coming to terms with this fact. (Pearson 232). It is this assumption that leads Jenna to always releve instead of stop and grind. 
It is not only Jenna’s fault that she stayed on the pedestal before her accident and after it.  Her parents never listened to her, nor gave her what she really needed.  Jenna told Clair she wanted a red skirt (Pearson 233).  Though Clair told Jenna she would get her one, she never did because “It’s not important.  It never really was” (Pearson 236).  This suggests that what Jenna wants never was important.  It was always what her mom and dad wanted.  Jenna says,
“All of your pieces fill up other people’s holes.
But they don’t fill
your own” (Pearson 231).
It was Lily alone who saw this.  She saw what Jenna’s parents were doing to her and helped Jenna achieve what she wanted despite her parents protests.  Lily alone understood the importance of communication and letting your children have their own space.  Because Jenna’s parents never let her communicate effectively with them even after her comma, she slowly broke away from the perfect Jenna, becoming the Jenna she wanted to become—a regular teenage girl.  When Lily listens, Jenna begins to see what she failed to see her entire life—pleasing other people does not bring peace. 
At her last ballet recital, Jenna releved instead of stomping and grinding.  However, with Lily’s help Jenna finally was able to overcome her parent’s expectations and obtain what she wanted.  She released Kara and Locke, and her own trapped mind because she wanted it.  “I need to own my life” (Pearson 254) is what she needed most of all.  She wanted to be a normal girl with the same chance of survival as everyone else.  When she realized this and destroyed her backup she found peace, she found strength, and she found the real Jenna. 

Works Cited
Pearson, Mary E. The Adoration of Jenna Fox. New York: Henry Holt and Company, LLC, 2008. Print.


For more information of Mary E. Pearson click here. 
*Please note that I know the word "releve' has an accent on the last "e". My computer will not let me put one there.  So just pretend there is one.