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Friday, December 10, 2010

Send Me Down a Miracle

     The small town of Casper, Alabama, will never be the same after Adrienne, an artist from New York, visits her hometown. She befriends the preacher's daughter, Charity Pittman, who loves God, but adores Adrienne. Charity desires to be an artist like Adrienne and to travel to New York and Paris. She visits Adrienne often until Adrienne decides that she needs a time of deprivation so that she can find inspiration for her artwork. Charity's father, a hell, fire and brimstone preacher, believes that Adrienne is doing the devil's work, as she claims to have visions of Jesus sitting in a wooden chair in her living room during her time of meditation and food deprivation. The town is divided in two between those who believe in Adrienne's visions and the "power" of the "Jesus chair" and those who do not believe. People from all over the town see the chair as a sort of medium to God and visit the chair at Adrienne's house, making it the focal point of their prayers. They even see Adrienne as a modern day "Saint Mary" and petition her for miracles on their behalf. However, fourteen-year-old Charity is caught in the middle, left questioning her faith in God, her father, and practically everything that she's ever believed. On top of everything else, she is trying to understand why her mother has supposedly left on a trip but has not returned home.

     I liked this book because the book is chock full of strange characters such as Miss Tuney Mae, Old Higgs Holkum, and Mad Joe, the town drunk. Other than that, this book also has a plot that is very interesting and suspenseful.

"Send Me Down a Miracle"; a novel by Han Nolan

Ways to Live Forever

examples covers of book "Ways to Live Forever" in different versions
     Sam Oliver McQueen is an eleven-year-old child, terminally ill with leukemia, who, during one of his special education sessions decides to write a book about his life. In that book, he will include stories, amusing facts, lists, and his own diary. One of the lists is entitled "Things I Want to Do". With the help of his best friend Felix Stranger, an ill 13-year-old child, he will make all his wishes come true. Sam makes numerous lists of questions. With the help of his teacher, they conduct various experiments, Sam and Felix break world records (including the world's smallest night club). However things take a turn for the worst and Felix dies in hospital. This leaves Sam devastated. Eventually, the doctors realize the medication isn't working as well and Sam makes the decision to stop all medication. Sam dies in his sleep about a month later; he has given his parents a form to fill in about his death so he could finish his book. The last comment is made by his mother, who says, "Sam died quietly in his sleep. He was in no pain."
     I liked this book because the story and the depiction karakater said Sam was flowing. There are some scenes that are very personal to me and described so beautifully. When the father-figure father-which during the cold and apathetic (as he himself always denied the fact that Sam's health will deteriorate) menajdi father who was so warm and affectionate when accompanied Sam asleep.

Saturday, October 23, 2010

The Railway Children


     I liked this book because this book tells about the cohesiveness of siblings, and the warmth of a family. Sometimes we think the family is not important because we are too busy with our own affairs, such as schools, tests, homework, problems in love, finances, and we even forget to make time to gather with family. Therefore, sometimes we need a problem befall us so we woke up and remembered in our family. Yes, sometimes, because of a problem, we become 'slapped' and become better.
     This is a story of three children, Roberta, Phyllis, and Peter, who live in a respectable suburban villa with a wonderful mother and father and a cook and servants, until one day great disgrace and poverty befalls them. Father is taken away to prison (but they do not know this at first), and they have to move to a poor cottage in the country near a railway line. Mother writes stories to earn what little they live on and they get used to being poor and have to learn not to steal coal from the railway station, even if they have so little to keep warm by. Sometimes they argue and have crises, as one does, but in time they make many new friends, and amusing adventures aplenty happen near the railway and the canal. They develop the habit of waving to the train as it goes past and sometimes the people in the coaches wave back. Their friendly habits makes them one special friend in particular, who although he mostly just goes by in the train, eventually gets to know them, and helps them out in various ways. They have various adventures like stopping a train when a landslide covers the tracks, preventing a scraggly and penniless foreigner from arrest and taking him home, saving an infant and dog from a barge canal on fire, finding an injured older boy in the train tunnel and getting help. And somehow all the good things that they do add up together and end up coming back to them, and there is happy ending to it all. 
Indonesian version
England Version