Kids Books - Magic
Willa of the Wood
By Robert Beatty
This is an amazingly written book by Robert Beatty! Although I did not like the Serafina series by him this book was truly..... there’s just no words about how beautiful this book is! The strong themes/messages about standing up for what you think is right, perseverance, hope, change, friendship and much more is truly what makes this book the best of the best. The strong tiny details everywhere in the book really make the story and scenes come alive! And I love that it’s placed in 1900 and in the Great Smoky Mountains! The cover art is colorful and gorgeous and it just has such a strong storyline and message! This book should probably be for readers ages 10-11+/5th grade and up, because it does have some violence, and some blood. Read it now! Please like and follow! Bye!
Survivors: The Gathering Darkness #6: The Final Battle
By Erin Hunter
This last book in the latest series of Survivors is a must-read for dog lovers. Storm is in a lot of trouble. A bad dog named Breeze is still free, while Storm is in captivity. Soon, her suspicions prove to be correct when Breeze takes the pups of the leader of the pack away. Horrified, the rest of the dogs let Storm out to help them in the search for the missing pups. Can Storm prove her loyalty to her Pack by finding the murderer Breeze and saving the pups from her clutches? Or will she fail in her quest to rescue the pups?
Survivors: The Gathering Darkness #4: Red Moon Rising
By Erin Hunter
I thought this book was a step up from book 3, which didn't really advance the main plot (in my opinion). It was a great read, and finally advanced the main plot more. However, I do have a few problems with it. At the end, I feel Lucky made a choice that seemed out of character and wrong, and I feel that it kinda contradicts with who he was in the original series. With The Wild Pack, I rooted for them in the original series, but this book made me think Storm should have left the pack a long time ago.
Survivors: The Gathering Darkness #2: Dead of Night
By Erin Hunter
A hooking, terrific story, creatively woven and awesomely fun! This will amaze you greatly...bunker up and read! Once again, Storm is trying to figure out who the bad dog in her pack is...the dog who was responsible for all the chaos and injury happening. One of her friends is dead, and she wants to get revenge for him, as much as any dog. But her packmates are turning in the wrong direction, and soon, everyone thinks they have gotten the culprit...a mistaken one. This causes a terrible war, leading to one dog going against her pack’s wishes...Storm. As the relationship between Storm and her foster father, Lucky, grows more strained day by day, she knows she has to act. But time is ticking, and the bad dog is still out there. Can she do this? Or will she fail?
Survivors: The Gathering Darkness #3: Into the Shadows
By Erin Hunter
Survivors: Into the Shadows is packed with action, love, and the importance of loyalty, a bracing read that people will surely enjoy. With unexpected twists in the winding plot, and a great, heroic ending, this story will thrill fans of the series, both old and new. I would definitely recommend this to everyone I’ve ever met, because I know they’ll love it!
A Hat Full of Sky
By Terry Pratchett
Follow Tiffany Aching as her journey to become a witch continues
Warren the 13th and the Thirteen-Year Curse: A Novel
By Tania del Rio
Medhya
I loved this novel. It is about a cursed boy Warren the 13th who had been crused about 13 years. It has a lot of mysteries and also adventures. I want to read a another book like this.
The Poison Apples
By Lily Archer
The Poison Apples is about three girls who all have stepmothers. They all get sent off to a boarding school where they befriend each other. They all come from different backrounds though so they have to learn to like each other. All in all a very good book!
Tangled in Time 2: The Burning Queen
By Kathryn Lasky
It is safe to say this seires consists of the best books that I have ever read! It is about a girl named Rose Ashley, and after her mother dies, she moves to indianapolis with her grandma. With all of the strugles at her new school, like mean girls and not many friends, she feels that her grandmas greenhouse is the only place she can escape to. Or another centry prehaps.. Once she meets september, the 3-legged time traveler cat, she travels back in time to hatfeild house, home of the banished princess Elizabeth in the year of 1543, where she meets Franny, the imobilized housemaid and starts working for Elizabeth. When Franny gives Rose a locket that she found, with a picture of maybe her potential father in it, she knows she has to find him. Until Elizabeth realizes that the locket is a tuter rose, that only queens and kings can wear, she steal the locket, leaving Rose no hope of finding her father. Every time she travel back home, she comes back to 1500-1600, and when everyone looks lder, yet rose looks her noral age, Elizabeth starts to get suspicious with Rose's math and scriving skills. And when Rose starts accidentaly bringing future items into the 1500's, the timeline starts to go wonky! Will Rose find her real father and get her locket back? And even worse, will her and her Prodestant friend Franny survive Queen Marys rain after Price Edwards tragic death? Read this trilling book to find out!
Moving Target
By Christina Diaz Gonzalez
Before I say anything else about this book, I just want to say it was a decent read. Honestly, I've read worse books, but I definitely had a lot of problems with this one. First of all, I felt that the description was misleading. Where are the thrilling, heart-in-your-throat chases and adventure and fate and great evil I was promised? I didn't even feel compelled to root for the main characters. The book itself felt very forced, passive, and bland. The concept is great but the execution fell flat. I didn't get ANY sense of the peril they were in, and there were hardly ANY cliffhangers that might have helped keep me at least a tiny bit intrigued. The only part of Moving Target that I enjoyed was the last chapter, which made me wonder what would happen to poor Cassie and Asher, but that was about it. Hopefully the second book will be a lot better in comparison to this one. Overall I recommend this to anyone, as it is very mild on violence and there is no bad language.







