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18 January, 2015

Books



Title: The Prince and the Guard.
Author: Kiera Cass
Genre: Dystopian, Romance.
Level: (YA)
Published date: February, 4th, 2014.
Publisher: Harper Teen.
Number of pages: (227).
Date read: July, 9th, 2014.



The Selection stories. The Prince & The Guard.








Goodreads description



Two novellas set in the world of Kiera Cass's #1 New York Timesbestselling Selection series are now available in print for the first time.The Prince and The Guard both offer captivating views into the hearts and minds of the two men fighting to win America Singer's love. This collection also features exclusive bonus content, including a sneak peek atThe One, the eagerly anticipated third novel in the Selection series.

Before America arrived at the palace to compete in the Selection, there was another girl in Prince Maxon's life. The Prince opens the week before the Selection begins and follows Maxon through the first day of the competition.

Raised as a Six, Aspen Leger never dreamed that he would find himself living in the palace as a member of the royal guard. In The Guard, readers get an inside look at Aspen's life within the palace walls—and the truth about a guard's world that America will never know.




I loved the whole selection Series so the bonus stories are always welcomed when i love a series. 
I have high praise for the whole series good things. 



Title: Feedback.
Author: Robison Wells. 
Genre: Science Fiction.
Level: (YA)
Published date: October, 2nd, 2012.
Publisher:Harper Teen.
Number of pages: (310).
Date read: July, 30th, 2014.


Feed Back. Book two in the Variant series.



Good reads description. 
Benson Fisher escaped from Maxfield Academy’s deadly rules and brutal gangs.

Or so he thought.

But now Benson is trapped in a different kind of prison: a town filled with hauntingly familiar faces. People from Maxfield he saw die. Friends he was afraid he had killed.

They are all pawns in the school’s twisted experiment, held captive and controlled by an unseen force. As he searches for answers, Benson discovers that Maxfield Academy’s plans are more sinister than anything he imagined—and they may be impossible to stop.

They are all pawns in the school’s twisted experiment, held captive and controlled by an unseen force. As he searches for answers, Benson discovers that Maxfield Academy’s plans are more sinister than anything he imagined—and they may be impossible to stop.

Variant blew readers away with its breakneck pacing, flawless plotting, and impossibly high stakes. It earned starred reviews from both Publishers Weekly and VOYA, which described it as “an exciting, edge-of-your-seat read that combines psychological themes from works like Lord of the Flies, The Hunger Games, and Ender’s Game in a truly unique way.”

In Feedback, Robison Wells delivers all the answers you’ve been craving—with enough twists and turns to keep readers guessing until the very last page.


Feed back is just as weird and strange as Variant, with robots being like a double of real people. A freaky school with robots, a prison and crazy happenings.


I mean i liked it, i would possibly read it again.
I look forward to seeing what happens in the third book. 





Paper Towns.


Title: Paper Towns.
Author: John Green.
Genre: Fiction.
Level: (YA)
Published date: September, 22nd,2009 originally published in October, 16th, 2008.
Publisher: Speak.
Number of pages: (305).
Date read:  August, 1st, 2014.





Goodreads Description.

Two-time Printz Medalist John Green’s New York Times bestseller, now in paperback!

Quentin Jacobsen has spent a lifetime loving the magnificently adventurous Margo Roth Spiegelman from afar. So when she cracks open a window and climbs back into his life — dressed like a ninja and summoning him for an ingenious campaign of revenge — he follows.

After their all-nighter ends and a new day breaks, Q arrives at school to discover that Margo, always an enigma, has now become a mystery. But Q soon learns that there are clues — and they’re for him. Urged down a disconnected path, the closer he gets, the less Q sees of the girl he thought he knew.

The book was broken into 3 parts, and I honestly felt completely different about each of them. I read this book as i read Fault in our Stars which is also by John Green. It was okay, by far i wont be reading it again.  It was a little confusing and had way to much sexual content for my liking.  It was funny at times, then down right depressing, I didn't like alot of the langue used. 

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