Friday, August 17, 2012

"Harry Potter and The Deathly Hallows", by J.K. Rowling

 Have you ever read a series that reeled you in from book one and did not release you until you had read the very last word of the final book?
This is what I experienced with the Harry Potter series.
Avidly, I read my way through books one, two, three, four, five, and six. The books seemed to grow with the character. As Harry became older and discovered more of the often dangerous world around him, the books became darker and more intense.
Each one pulled back a layer of the many mysteries surrounding the person of Harry Potter, and in each one I got to know Harry better and like him even more. 
At last, partly reluctant, mostly excited, I started book seven, "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows."
I was reluctant because I did not want the series to end. I did not want to finish the book and realize that no more would follow it.
I was excited because yet another chapter in the life of Harry Potter was unfolding. I sensed the imminent climax, the feeling that everything I had read in the other 6 books, everything that had occurred in the life of Harry Potter heretofore, was about to culminate in something big…
But even these premonitions could not have prepared me for the rising action and climactic end of the Harry Potter series.
To tell you even a little of what happened would give away too much.
The book made me laugh. It made me cry. It made me bite my knuckles in barely containable excitement.
All in all, “Harry Potter” is a series that I know I will be re-reading many times in the future.
Admittedly, it’s not for everyone. (After all, if we all liked the same books the world would be a pretty boring place.)
But if you are a fantasy fan who is looking for an engrossing, magical series with colorful characters that you can relate to and who become real to you, “Harry Potter” might just be for you.

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

"The Borrowed House," by Hilda Van Stockum

Janna is an eleven-year-old girl who lives in a small German town during WWII. She is a proud member of the Hitler Youth group, and admires Hitler above all else. All of her life she has been told that the Jewish people are dangerous criminals and that Hitler is doing the world a favor by getting rid of them. She believes that the Jews are being sent to a special place where they will be treated kindly and kept from harming other people.
One day Janna is sent to Holland to live with her parents, famous German actors who she has not seen in 2 years.
During her stay in Holland, certain events occur that slowly but surely began to shake her faith in Hitler and his soldiers, and which challenge her bigotry against Jewish people.

This thoughtful, descriptive story by one of my favorite historical-fiction authors instantly grabbed my attention. It explores the lies Hitler told to his people and unearthed the reasons so many German young people admired and believed in him. During the book, instead of feeling angry at Janna and other young people for supporting Hitler, I was deeply saddened for them. They were carefully shielded from the truth and consistently spoon-fed lies, ultimately becoming brain-washed supporters of one of the most terrible and wicked tyrants who ever lived.
As you read this book you will cheer Janna on as she searches for the truth.

Inspirations 4 Writing


Write a story from the perspective of a person who holds views you do not agree with. Reveal why this person believes the way he or she does. Does this person end up changing his or her views? If so, why?