Posts Tagged ‘young adult fiction’


Books to enjoy during our Stay-at-Home Time – Part 8

Monday, June 29th, 2020

Saving Red by Sonya Sones

I became familiar with Sonya Sones, the author, through her husband, Bennett Tramer, another famous writer (remember Saved by the Bell?) who happens to frequent the same coffee shop in Santa Monica that my friends and I go to on Sunday mornings. Cafe Zella, like many other businesses in California was in lockdown but is now open again with restrictions of course.

The action in Saving Red takes place in large part in Santa Monica, my home town, and Cafe Zella is mentioned in the book.

Here is my review:

I read this novel in one sitting, couldn’t put it down. It’s a touching but unsentimental tale of a young girl, trying to complete her community service school project by counting the homeless people in Santa Monica, CA. Before she knows it, she becomes involved in a series of turbulent adventures, trying to reunite a troubled, homeless girl with her family before Christmas. Her passion to help this girl is fueled by her genuine good heart but also by feelings of guilt about that terrible thing that happened in her own family and which she feels responsible for.

Saving Red, written in verse that captures the emotions and thoughts of these young protagonists perfectly, is a real gem. It’s the first book I read by the author, but it won’t be my last. It’s written for young adults and those older ones who are still young at heart! Highly recommended.

Check it out on Sonya Sones’ website: https://www.sonyasones.com/ or on Amazon.

More books to follow. Have a great and entertaining reading weekend!

Books to enjoy during our Stay-At-Home Time – Part 3

Sunday, May 10th, 2020

Amanda in Spain by Darlene Foster

Darlene Foster is a well-known Canadian writer of young adult fiction. Her young heroine, Amanda, loves to travel. (I think she inherited this from her creator!) Darlene, originally from Canada, lives in Spain and, as I gather from her blog posts, travels all over Europe. She also visits many schools and entertains the children with her marvelous stories.

Now, of course, she seems to hunker down like the rest of us but we all can still travel with Amanda in our imagination!

Her is my review of Amanda’s adventures in Spain:

A curious young girl, a pony, and a mysterious painting

Amanda Ross from Canada is invited by her British friend Leah and Leah’s parents on a trip through Spain. Amanda loves to travel. She is an enthusiastic, spunky, and curious young girl, always eager to learn and explore. And it is precisely her curiosity and her desire to figure things out that often get her into trouble. A painting in a museum of a beautiful, mysterious young girl, a modern real-life version of the girl, a stolen pony, and a few mean-looking men and the relaxing days at the beach Leah was looking forward to, turn into a turbulent and potentially dangerous detective story for the two friends.

Amanda in Spain is a book for the young and the young-at-heart. Vivid descriptions of the country and its customs, humorous details, and enough tension that keeps you turning the page, make this a very enjoyable reading. I look forward to Amanda’s next adventure!