Kids Books - Comics
The Witch Boy
By Molly Knox Ostertag
The Witch boy is so cool!! I hope the author makes a series of this. I like because the boy keeps trying his best to be a witch. I think i'm going to love it just by the cover I am loving it!! I going to look if there is a series of this . Thank you Molly Ostertag!!! Keep up the work!!!!!
Donner Dinner Party (Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales #3)
By Nathan Hale
I was in class when my teacher gave me this book to read. This book is currently one I'm reading and is about survival and hunger (and obviously about moving to California) and takes place through California in1846. There isn't much of a moral in this story but as Virginia Reed once said, *Don't take no cutoffs and get where your'e going as fast as you can.*
NewsPrints
By Ru Xu
Lavender Blue is a girl disguised as a boy that works at the Bugle and when she meets and unusual boy, named Crow, who is not what he seems, they become friends. But somebody is after Crow and now Blue must help him. I would recommend this for ages 10+ This book had really good graphics but the pace was sort of weird. While some parts were super exciting, some parts were really boring. I also found some parts really confusing. Other than that, this book was super fun to read and I would recommend it to fans of Be Prepared and Invisible Emmie.
Ms. Marvel Vol. 1 (Marvel Now! - Ms. Marvel)
By G. Willow Wison
I read this comic while I was at a Barnes and Noble, and I was completely blown away by it. The author was really able to capture the frustrations of being a teenager, (at least, in my case!) and what it feels like to not know who you want to become. Basically, Kamala Khan is the female version of Peter Parker. Even if you're not a big comic book reader (a.k.a. me), you should pick this one up! It's not quite as relatable to guys as it is to girls, but the struggles of teenagers are pretty across the board. I also loved how this comic provided diversity, along with a different religion, compared to white-washing her character, and I thought it added a neat insight on how my life doesn't differ that much from her's, despite a difference in religion and different colored skin. Because in the end, it doesn't really matter what religion we are or what skin color we have, we're all just people.
The Underground Abductor (Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales #5): An Abolitionist Tale about Harriet Tubman
By Nathan Hale
Are you ready for danger, thrills, and fun? That's exactly what Nathan Hale(the author, not the spy!) is bringing us with his Hazardous Tales. This story is about Araminta--better known as Harriet Tubman-- who shaped a way for African Americans to live as well as the rest of us. There will be humor, fright, fun, and hazardous chills all packed in one. Read at your own risk! Delightful, exciting, and full of laughs.
Raid of No Return (Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales #7): A World War II Tale of the Doolittle Raid
By Nathan Hale
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so this book is cool, it shows the struggles of Chinese in china too, in which many people don't really know that participated in well. its also shows struggles of the brave man. 10/10!
The Cloud Searchers (Amulet #3)
By Kazu Kibuishi
Isabellacanon
I love this book so far and I whant to know when are they going to get to the flying city? I would recommend the hole series plus if your not sure you should read them don't worry they are best selling books of New York times. and one more thing...THIS BOOK IS AWESOME!!!
The Stonekeeper's Curse (Amulet, Book 2)
By Kazu Kibuishi
Emily has to go to kanalis to try to find medicine for their mom . navin can not come and gets pretty mad. Emily ends up having to do more than just find medicine . Like leave now to control the stone. And when she gets to the trees to find the special fruit , she doesn't know which one to pick! One could do something bad and one could do something good. Does everything turn out ok? You'll have to read the book to find out what happens! I recommend this book to all ages and I rate this book 4/5 stars I thought it was a pretty good book! - Pizzagirl7 💋
Treaties, Trenches, Mud, and Blood (Nathan Hale's Hazardous Tales #4): A World War I Tale
By Nathan Hale
This book is about World War I. The hangman wants cute little animals. I really like the hangman because he is funny.
The Time Machine
By H.G. Wells
What if someone told you that time travel was possible; that you can journey to the past or venture into the future? The Time Traveler, whose name is never revealed, is an intelligent but extremely eccentric scientist who discovers that there are four known dimensions of space--which really only means that you can easily move up and down, left and right, forward and backwards, and through Time. As long as you have entire consciousness and speed, you can break its constraints move around it. And so the unnamed Time Traveler brings himself to the year 802,701--that’s 30 million years from his own time. When he finally finds his way to the future, he finds his home--London--to be gone. Every building that formed the city no longer stands--just structures that act as homes to a society of simple-minded and innocent creatures who call themselves the Eloi. But as he continues his stay with them, he notices strange things, things the Eloi won’t tell him about. Sinister ghost-like beings that come in the night --deep voids in the ground that lead into what seems like nothing, and why are the Eloi so deathly afraid of the dark?--but ultimately, no one tells the Time Traveler about what happened to the human race. Most science fiction books during that century--the 1800s--were centered around the entire idea of being able to travel through time, but H.G. Wells was the first to actually try to explain the science of moving through the dimension of duration. Most of you probably wouldn’t enjoy books written in 1895--that’s 119 years old-- but The Time Machine really is worth reading-- and its only a little less than a hundred pages long. You’ll find that the Time Traveler, especially, is one of the most interesting parts of the book because you get to understand the mind of a scientist--it makes you think like him when you look at the world. The Time Machine is a novel that stands the test of time and humanity. But if there’s one thing I didn’t love about this book is how Wells views the--truly haunting--fate of us. And he definitely deepened the meaning of The Time Machine with thought-provoking ideas people today haven’t really cared enough to think about--the idea that today’s problems such as rampant industrialization and especially class struggle, will carry on to the future even 800,000 years from now. And although it’s only fiction, the way Wells portrays the future can very well be true. The human race doesn’t end, of course--but something much worse happens; something inhumane. “It sounds plausible enough tonight,” says the Time Traveler, “but wait until tomorrow. Wait for the common sense of the morning...for after the Battle comes quiet.”