Mundie Moms

Saturday, October 6, 2012

The Mortal Instruments Box Set / Clockwork Princess Synopsis


City of Fallen Angels, the 4th book in Cassandra Clare's The Mortal Instruments series was released this past week in paperback. The paperback edition comes with a BONUS!!! The paperback edition will feature Jace & Clary's 1st kiss from Jace's point of view, a teaser that Cassie shared with fans back in January!


Also available is The Mortal Instruments 4 book box set! This includes City of Bones, City of Ashes, City of Glass and City of Fallen Angels. I've heard that the box set City of Bones contains the TMI Movie sticker I shared a picture of while in visiting Simon & Schuster in Toronto. 

(this picture was taken in the offices of S&S CA). They had just gotten these stickers in.

You can purchase the box set from: Simon & Schuster | Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Books A MillionPowell's Target 


Amazon recently posted the sypnosis for Clockwork Princess, which will be released on March 19th, 2013: 


Danger intensifies for the Shadowhunters as the New York Times bestselling Infernal Devices trilogy comes to a close.
If the only way to save the world was to destroy what you loved most, would you do it?
The clock is ticking. Everyone must choose.
Passion. Power. Secrets. Enchantment.
Danger closes in around the Shadowhunters in the final installment of the bestselling Infernal Devices trilogy.

Is it March yet?
Are you planning on picking up the TMI paperback box set to add to your TMI book collection?

Banned Books Week: Book Review of ttyl by Lauren Myracle


Publisher: Amulet Books
Published Date: april 1, 2005 (reprint edition)
Source: Puchased

Rating: 4 stars - I liked it a lot.

Synopsis (from amazon): This funny, smart novel follows the friendship of three 16 year old girls as they experience some of the typical pitfalls of adolescence: boys, queen-bee types, a flirty teacher, beer, crazy parents, and more. Lauren Myracle has a gift for dialogue and characterization, and the girls emerge as three distinctive and likable personalities through their Internet correspondence. This light, fast-paced read is told entirely in instant message format, the first book ever for young adults to be written so.

I think every time I mention Lauren Myracle I have to add in how very much my almost 10 year old daughter loves her middle grade series, the Flower Power series, and I was curious to read Lauren's Internet Girls series just to get a sample of her YA writing. But then I couldn't resist reviewing the story for Banned Books Week because this series appears on ALA's Top Ten Banned Books list year after year.

When I read banned books, I always read them with a mindset of "why on Earth would this be banned?" In reading ttyl, I can see how some adults would be uncomfortable. The three girls are fast and fierce friends. They're not in the most popular clique but they stick together through some very credible situations -- a flirtation with a teacher, dealing with the mean, popular girl in school (Jana) and well, then there's Norman (you'll see what I mean when you read the book). Heavy situations? Yes. Do they happen in real life? Oh yes, they do. Should the book be banned because the language used is, at times, very sexually frank? No. I've had the pleasure of walking through our high school just recently and oh, the language! If only those students conjugated verbs in their foreign language classes as well as they swore in English. But the language in ttyl is real. Most of us went through that phase and yes, we grew out of it. For the most part.

What I loved about the story was the friendship between the girls. I loved how it changed and molded around the situations they were experiencing. And I liked how they were always there for each other. Lauren reflects reality so well because with three girls being so close, there isn't always a balance in the friendship. There's jealousy and mistakes and Lauren wrote all those in there.

The format uses IMs and chat rooms which makes it a very fast read and an excellent book for reluctant readers. I'd recommed this book to readers sixth grade and older. For my fellow parents, don't fear a book where girls are curious and discuss sexuality openly. Remember how we did that, too? Yeah, I know I see you all cringing along with me. So now, will you pick it up and read it? Please say, yes.

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