Monday, October 31, 2011

Reading Between The Lines


Letters From The Inside by John Marsden is a gripping novel that reminds readers to look behind casual appearances for deeper, and more painful truths that are often rendered impossible to express. Mandy and Tracey are two sixteen year-olds who meet through a pen-pal ad and exchange letters that, at first, offer casual details about their daily lives. The teens seem to have many common interests: boys, music, friends, and family. Gradually, there are hints that something ominous is lurking between the lines of the letters. Tracey reveals that she is incarcerated in a maximum-security prison for a terrible crime, and Mandy slowly describes her brother's violent temper and secret stash of weapons, and her growing fear of him. As the girls begin to lean on each other for comfort and support, Mandy's letters suddenly stop, and Tracey is left to speculate on what has happened to her friend, and face her own demons, and an uncertain future, alone. This is a short, yet hard-hitting novel that delivers an unforgettable last act.  

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

When The Unthinkable Happens


Who knows what lurks behind the facade of a seemingly normal person? In The Missing Girl, prolific writer Norma Fox Mazer invites us into the mind of a nameless pedophile as he searches for, and targets a victim. The five Herbert sisters, Beauty, Fancy, Stevie, Mim, and Autumn have a variety of concerns: despair over love, the changes brought about by a parent's injury and subsequent loss of income, and the desire to escape the confines of their small town in upstate New York. However, unbeknownst to the girls, a pedophile obsessively watches them as they walk to school. One day, the youngest sister, 11-year-old Autumn, becomes lost, innocently asks this man for directions, and is kidnapped. Short, fast-paced chapters that reveal the family's strength in the face of crisis, Autumn's resourceful and triumphant escape, and the element of danger lurking beneath the surface of ordinary life will hook readers until the story's conclusion. Mazer skillfully probes the thought processes of a dangerous person who could be anywhere, or anyone we know.