Selasa, 29 Maret 2016

^ Free PDF Dead is a Killer Tune, by Marlene Perez

Free PDF Dead is a Killer Tune, by Marlene Perez

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Dead is a Killer Tune, by Marlene Perez

Dead is a Killer Tune, by Marlene Perez



Dead is a Killer Tune, by Marlene Perez

Free PDF Dead is a Killer Tune, by Marlene Perez

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Dead is a Killer Tune, by Marlene Perez

High school freshman Jessica Walsh is a Virago-a woman warrior who must protect her hometown from danger. And in Nightshade, California, trouble is always lurking. At the town's Battle of the Bands, Jess's boyfriend, Dominic, and his band, Side Effects May Vary, are up against Hamlin, a band so popular, their fans follow them everywhere. Soon, the competing musicians are doing risky, illegal, and even fatal things-and claiming that they heard strange music that compelled them to do it. Can Jess and her friends track down the tuneful tyrant before it's too late?

  • Sales Rank: #60691 in Books
  • Brand: Graphia
  • Published on: 2012-09-04
  • Released on: 2012-09-04
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 7.00" h x .57" w x 5.00" l, .45 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 224 pages

Review

Praise for the Dead Is series

"[Perez] delivers a wise-cracking, boy-lusting, determined sleuth of a high school protagonist . . . this quick, lighter-than-air spoof of the undead, cheerleaders and popularity is pure pleasure."—Publishers Weekly

"A fun ride from start to finish. Perez's smart and sassy style soars."—Mary E. Pearson, author of the Jenna Fox Chronicles

"[A] quick, lively romp. . . . Teens looking for a breezy read will find plenty to like here."—Booklist

"This super supernatural murder mystery is sassy, romantic, and spooky-fun!"—Cynthia Leitich Smith, author of Tantalize

"Light romance and a paranormal plot are more tongue-in-cheek than scary, making this series a good introduction to the genre for younger readers."—Booklist

"Breezy style and comic-book plot. . . . Fun."—Kirkus

About the Author

Marlene Perez is the author of eight books in the Dead Is Series, including Dead Is The New Black, an ALA Quick Pick for Reluctant Young Adult Readers. She lives in Orange County, California. Visit her website at www.marleneperez.com.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Chapter One

The bad thing about being a virago wasn’t the mysterious whirling tattoo, my hard-as-nails trainer Flo, or even that I regularly put my life in danger to keep Nightshade safe.
   All of those things I could handle, but what I couldn’t handle was arguing with my parents for the thousandth time about why I couldn’t watch my little sisters.
   My best friend, Eva, had no sympathy. "Why not tell them the truth?" she asked when I called her to complain about their unreasonable attitudes.
   "You have met my parents, right?" I responded. I couldn’t think of two people less likely to believe that werewolves, vampires, and witches lived in Nightshade, or that it was my sworn duty to protect them. Or fight them. It depended upon the day of the week.
   A few years ago, my big brother Sean went all furry and my parents didn’t even notice.
   My mom didn’t even blink when Sean started shoveling two-pound slabs of rare meat down his gullet for breakfast, lunch, and dinner.
   She just mumbled something about growing boys and then asked me to do the laundry.
   Eva had been talking, but I’d missed half of it, probably because I was still thinking about my parents. Or maybe because her pet raven, Poe, was croaking "Nevermore!" in the background.
   "Say that last part again," I said.
   "I knew mentioning Dominic would get your attention," she replied.
   I didn’t even bother to deny it. "What about him?"
   "I asked if you and Dominic wanted to go out with Evan and me this weekend. There’s a VP triple feature."
   VP stood for Vincent Price. Eva was a serious horror movie fan.
   "I’ll ask," I said.
   "Your parents or your boyfriend?"
   "He’s not my boyfriend," I insisted. Dominic Gray was the lead singer of Side Effects May Vary—all six foot three, blond, blue eyes, and high cheekbones of him.
   We’d gone out a few times, but calling him my boyfriend was definitely premature. Especially since I had the distinct impression he’d been avoiding me lately.
   Eva lost interest in the subject of my pathetic love life and hung up a few minutes later.
   I stayed by the phone and brooded. Dominic and I had grown closer since we had saved Eva from becoming a brain-munching zombie, but I still sensed some reserve in him.
   Maybe it was because I was high-risk as a potential girlfriend. As a virago—a woman warrior—I got hit a lot, and sometimes nasty things wanted to eat me. I’d had a run-in with a hungry chupacabra a few months ago, but it had been quiet in Nightshade since then. Almost too quiet.
   When my parents came home and let me off the hook, I headed for the library. I had a new assignment from my guitar teacher. My favorite librarian, Ms. Johns, was working at the reference desk.
   "Jessica, I haven’t seen you around lately," she greeted me. Ms. Johns had a mass of curly brown hair and a smile that practically made you smile back.
   "Hi, Ms. Johns. I was hoping you could help me. Does the library have any sheet music? My guitar teacher wants me to learn a new song and she’s letting me choose it."
   She pointed me in the right direction, and I spent time thumbing through the selections. Nothing seemed right, though. I hated to part with my precious allowance money, but it looked like I might have to.
   Ms. Johns came up as I was leaving. "No luck?" she asked.
   "Not really," I said. "I’m looking for something really different."
   "I know of an estate sale on Saturday," she said. "Mr. Lindquist played several instruments for years, but he’s moving to Florida and is selling almost everything. Maybe you can find something there." She wrote down the address on a piece of paper and handed it to me.
   "Thanks for the tip," I said. "See you later."
   I liked the idea of performing something unusual, maybe even something my teacher, Ms. Minerva, had never heard before.

Saturday morning, it was foggy and rainy, which didn’t make Eva happy.
   "Remind me why we had to get up at the crack of dawn?" Eva complained as my mom dropped us off at the estate sale.
   I gestured to the dozens of cars already parked in the street in front of the house. "This is why," I told her. "Mr. Lindquist is a serious collector. Musicians from all over California are coming to this sale."
   As if to prove my point, a pasty-looking guy in leather pants and a vest without a shirt stepped out of a black town car. He groaned and fumbled for his sunglasses.
   I nudged Eva. "He’s clearly not used to getting up this early either."
   The house was a typical-looking tract home on the outside, with a two-car garage, beige paint, and a manicured lawn. Music notes had been painted on the front door and one of the hedges was in the shape of a saxophone.
   A baby grand piano stood in a position of honor in the living room, near a big bay window. Teddie Myles, the owner of the all-ages club the Black Opal, sat at the piano and touched the keys softly. Today, the purple highlights in her hair had been replaced with hot pink and lime green streaks.
   On the opposite wall, above a leather couch, hung three guitars. Three amazing guitars. I went to get a closer look.
   "Dominic would love this!" I exclaimed, pointing to a Rickenbacker guitar.
   "What would I love?" a familiar voice asked.
   I whirled around. "I didn’t know you were coming."
   "Neither did I, until about an hour ago," he replied. "Aunt Katrina wanted to check it out." Dominic and his aunt were both in the band Side Effects May Vary.
   Eva said, "I’m going to look for"—long pause while she figured out what to say—"something over there."
   After she left, Dominic and I pretended to admire the guitars.
   "I called you," I finally said, "about that triple feature tonight."
   "I’ve been meaning to call you back," he said. Another long pause.
   "It’s okay," I said, even though it wasn’t. "I already told Eva no."
   "Jessica, I wanted to talk to you about something."
   "You have a strange way of showing it."
   Harmony and Selena approached before Dominic could tell me whatever it was he wanted to say. Noel and Connor were trailing behind them. The guys were best friends, and I was pretty sure Noel and Harmony were dating. Connor and I had gone out a couple of times, but I broke things off and he’d avoided me ever since.
   That apparently hadn’t changed because he took one look at me and nudged Noel. "Let’s check out the albums in the next room."
   "What are you two talking about so intently?" Selena asked.
   "Nothing," Dominic said.
   "This guitar," I added. I pointed to the purple Fender Stratocaster on the wall.
   "Are you going to buy it, Jessica?" Selena asked. "Because if not, it would go perfectly with this outfit I just bought."
   Selena didn’t even play guitar. She was just being petty. She probably would buy it, just because she knew I wanted it.
   I glanced at the price tag and nearly gasped out loud. "It’s out of my price range," I said, trying to sound cheerful about it. "Excuse me, I think I’ll go look for some sheet music." I told myself it wasn’t practical anyway. I usually played acoustic guitar, although I had played electric guitar a few times. Ms. Minerva expected us to be well-rounded musically.
   I didn’t look back at Dominic. He knew where to find me if he really wanted to talk to me.
   I found Eva in a room lined with bookcases, full of books, magazines, and even old albums. There were three shelves crammed with nothing but sheet music. I pulled out a stack of music to examine.
   A hand-carved flute sat on a stand in the corner.
   "Jessica, isn’t this cool?" she asked. She pointed to the flute.
   "It’s beautiful." I picked it up carefully to look for a price tag, but there wasn’t one.
   "That’s not for sale." A small man stepped out of the shadows, leaning on a cane.
   I put the flute back on the stand slowly. "I’ve never seen anything like it," I replied.
   "It’s made of boxwood with an ivory inlay," he said. "I’m Mr. Lindquist, the owner."
   He picked up the flute and took it over to the only chair in the room. He brought the instrument to his lips and played.
   There was silence when he finished and then Eva and I broke into spontaneous applause.
   "What’s all the noise about?" Selena asked from the doorway.
   Mr. Lindquist put the flute back in its place. "Just a little practice," he said pleasantly. "Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’d better see how the sale is going."
   After he left, I gave Selena a dirty look and then returned to the stack of sheet music. I sat down on the floor to go through it. Harmony took a spot near me and started rummaging through another stack.
   "I’m starting a band," she said importantly. "We’re calling it Magic and Moonlight. I’m going to be the lead singer, of course."
   "That’s nice," I commented mildly. Harmony’s mom was the Nightshade High chorus director, but Harmony couldn’t sing a note.
   I’d almost made my way through the entire stack when I found something intriguing. It was a handwritten song, the paper browned by age and frayed at the edges. Just as I reached for it, Harmony snatched it away.
   "Hey!" I said. "I was looking at that."
   "Finders keepers," Harmony told me. She bounced up and ran over to Selena. "Look," she said. "This will be perfect for our band."
   "Whatever," I muttered, and returned to my stack.
   Eva and I ignored them until they finally left.
   "What’s with Selena lately?" Eva asked.
   I shrugged. "She’s been hanging out with Harmony a lot, ever since she and Dominic broke up."
   "I wouldn’t exactly call it a breakup," Eva replied. "You can’t count it as a relationship if you had to use magic to get the guy to like you in the first place."
   I didn’t want to talk about Dominic anymore. Eva seemed to sense my reluctance and changed the subject. "Let’s find you some sheet music," she said.
   I found a couple of great song possibilities and put them in my to-buy stack.
   "Did you see anything else you like?" Eva asked me. She was being a good sport about following me around. Eva wasn’t a huge music person, like me—she was into horror movies and her boyfriend Evan, in that order, but Evan didn’t seem to mind. He was almost as much of a horror buff as Eva was.
   "That purple guitar," I said. "But it’s completely out of my price range. Selena probably bought it already anyway."
   "My mom says that at estate sales, price is negotiable," Eva said. "Let’s go negotiate."
   I got to my feet. "It’s worth a try."
   But when we went back to look for it, all three of the guitars were gone. "It was too expensive anyway."
   Eva gave me a knowing look. "But you still wanted it."
   I nodded. "More than you know." We spent a few more minutes wandering around, but I didn’t find anything else I wanted and could afford. Maybe babysitting my little sisters wasn’t such a bad idea after all. It definitely paid better than being a virago.
   "Did you find anything?" I asked Eva.
   "Some cool seventies band posters," she said. "I thought I might use them in my horror film." Eva had been talking about filming her own horror movie, and her closet was filled with all sorts of props.
   We were standing in line to pay when Selena and Harmony left with Harmony’s mom. They carried a couple of huge packages. One was shaped like a guitar.
   "They got the sheet music and a guitar," I pointed out to Eva.
   "But not the talent," Eva replied. Her dimples flashed as she giggled.
   We heard gasps behind us and turned around to see Mr. Lindquist staggering, clutching his head. "My priceless flute has been stolen. Don’t let anybody leave!"
   His face was pasty and gray. I grabbed a folding chair and led him to it. "Somebody get him some water."
   He put his face in his hands. "Gone," he moaned. "It’s gone."
   "What happened?" I asked.
   "I heard the most beautiful music," he said dreamily. "A guitar, I think. And then I must have fallen asleep. When I woke up, the flute was gone."
   The police arrived and Chief Wells started barking orders. The chief was new in town. She’d been hired to replace Chief Mendez, even though everyone knew it couldn’t be done. At least not in the way that counted.
   Eva nudged me and whispered, "Didn’t you sense danger? Your swirly tattoo?"
   "It’s a whirlwind," I answered, "not a burglar alarm. It only warns me of serious danger to the city of Nightshade." Every virago had a whirlwind tattoo like mine.
   The police searched the entire house and every single person at the estate sale, but they didn’t find the flute.
   "You’re free to leave," Officer Denton told us. I remembered the sheet music I still had in my hand and went to pay.
   "Poor Mr. Lindquist," I said.
   "Poor? Even without that flute, he’s worth a fortune," the cashier told me. She handed me my change. "It’s a shame about that flute, though. It’s a one of a kind from Germany." She leaned in closer to make sure no one could hear her. "In fact, some people even say that it belonged to the Pied Piper of Hamelin."
   "You mean the creepy guy who lured all those kids away with music? No way. That’s just a myth."
   "I’m serious," she replied.
   "Mr. Lindquist played the flute today," I said. "And not a thing happened to us."
   She shrugged. "I’m only telling you what I heard."
   On the way home, Eva and I talked about the theft and the cashier’s strange comment.
   "I don’t believe it for a minute," I said. "She was just trying to scare us."
   "I don’t know," Eva said. "This is Nightshade."
   She had a point.

Most helpful customer reviews

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
Another deadly fun read from this series
By Tiffany A. Harkleroad
Jessica continues to deal with the typical trials of high school, in addition to being a virago, a female warrior, protecting her hometown of Nightshade. When a Battle of the Bands brings a band named Hamlin to town, odd things begin to happen. The fans seem to become rabid, people start doing strange things they cannot remember doing, and members of rival bands start to go missing or get hurt. Clearly, treachery is afoot, and Jessica is determined to do something to stop it.

Having recently read the previous book in the "Dead is" series, I was eager to read the next book. I ended up having very mixed feelings. First, I liked seeing more of Jessica's character, and learning more about her family specifically. It made me feel a bit more connected to her, and more interested in her story. And in terms of the overall storyline of the book, the plot was solid enough. I actually liked the whole concept of it.

These books work very well as standalone stories. A reader can jump in at any point, take that book for face value, and have a great little story. However, since I had just read the previous book, I did think there would be more flow from that story to this one, yet I found it lacking. It seemed like there were gaps where the previous story ended and this one began. I felt like I had missed an entire book between the two, particularly when it came to Jessica's relationship with Dominic. I found that a bit distracting. Similarly, it seems like all of the characters have some kind of angle. Either they are some supernatural creature, or they are part of something sinister. It makes it hard to really connect with characters when they can all be boiled down to belonging to some category of supernatural beings.

Still, the story, like all the others I have read in this series, was cute, and short. These books serve as good introduction to paranormal fiction for older middle grades and early high school readers. I doubt mature young adult readers will be too captivated with these, but they do make for nice, light, quick reads.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
Dead Is A Killer Read
By Kale
Jessica Walsh is trying to juggle her busy life as a high school freshman, responsible big sister, and the newest member of warrior women known as Virago. So Nightshade's first annual Battle of the Bands should be a welcome distraction, as the competition heats up, band members are going down. Jessica and her friends are going to have figure out what's going on before the threat consumes the city.

Marlene Perez has written another fun read. While I was disappointed at first when Daisy's leading lady status ended, I actually like Jessica's character more. A lot of books skim over a lead's role in their family but Perez makes her character's home life and family an important feature in every book of this series. The romance takes an interesting turn as well, throwing a few challenges in Jess's way for a happy heart. I can't say I didn't see the bad guy from a hundred pages away, but Dead Is never an unexpected whodunit. Regardless I still really enjoyed the mystery that was tailor made to fit Jessica.

Dead Is A Killer Tune is a killer read, great for a fun quick escape.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
Directed towards a younger audience and although its still decent the series is no longer my taste
By Jetches
It took me a month to get through this book. Normally it would take me a day or two. I'm not 100% sure if this is because since I started this series back in 2008 my taste and expectations have changed (It tends to happen when you read over 100 books a year), or because this one was much slower than the others. Either way I didn't like this book as much as the others. I found that the characters were focused more on being polite and up standing citizens compared to the actual on goings. Although this is a nice idea its not very realistic and takes away from the story. At the same time there were a lot of little side thoughts (I was going to ask them, but thought better of it, or hmm...that sounded familiar but I didn't have enough time to think about) I don't know if you get what I mean from that but I hope so. There were also moments when some things just didn't make sense. A character in the novel states that the last thing she remembered was an estate sale, yet the next sentence she says she can't perform because she doesn't sound good anymore. My observation is that she became a good singer after the estate sale not to mention she joined a band after the estate sale and join the competition after the estate sale...so how did she remember all this is she didn't remember anything after the estate sale and there were no mentions of someone explaining things to her. A lot of little things like that that perhaps only an observant reader would noticed really got to me and took away from the story line. Then I have to say that the story line was...busy. There seemed to be a lot happening and I sort of got the feeling of the book being a mystery. I know that sounds dumb because it is right...but there is a difference between a supernatural book that has a mystery like Storm by Brigid Kemmerer when you are trying to figure out who the person they sent to observe and potentially destroy them is, than compared to a Sherlock Holmes character. They directly referred to looking for clues when I felt it would have been a better storyline if we were allowed to pick up on whether or not it was a clue and sort of build the mystery ourselves. There were also a lot of coincidences, such as in a cave filled with garbage and random things she feels something plastic and has the need to put it in her pocket and later on realizes it's a clue.
I `m not trying to bash the book or the author or anything because I really liked all the other novels in the series and there were some aspects that I liked about this books as well. Not to mention this is a fantastic series for teens. I wasn't a big fan of Dominic in the beginning of the book but near the end I did. I guess I'm a sucker for romance. Jessica seems like a nice kid. Perhaps I would like her to be a little more bold and self confident but she is still a good character. And I love that Daisy (the main character from books 1-5) was in this novel as well. And of course the music and band stuff is very cool. And I love that Dominic is a Oracle that sings songs that provide warnings to what is happening. Although they seem to neglect the songs because I figured out who it was in half way through the novel where they never figured it out until they stumbled upon the bad guy in action.
Good:
Jessica--Kicks butt and a nice girl
Dominic--finally got his act together.
Bad:
I guess this series is directed towards a younger audience than myself and I've started to see where it lacks to make a novel into a great novel.
Overall (Writing style, story line, and general):
Overall the story line was decent and had potential however the writing should have been revised to remove unimportant sentences and maybe add in more detail so that the reader can get a better picture of the world of Nightshade. Overall I may no longer be continuing with this series and if I do it's for a light read when I have nothing else available.

View more of my review and others at my blog: [...]

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Senin, 28 Maret 2016

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  • Sales Rank: #1097772 in Books
  • Published on: 2011-06-23
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 64 pages

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Minggu, 27 Maret 2016

# Ebook The Ghost of Crutchfield Hall, by Mary Downing Hahn

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The Ghost of Crutchfield Hall, by Mary Downing Hahn

When twelve-year-old Florence boards the crowded horse-drawn coach in London, she looks forward to a new life with her great uncle and aunt at Crutchfield Hall, an old manor house in the English countryside. Anything will be better, she thinks, than the grim London orphanage where she has lived since her parents' death.
          But Florence doesn't expect the ghost of her cousin Sophia, who haunts the cavernous rooms and dimly lit hallways of Crutchfield and concocts a plan to use Florence to help her achieve her murderous goals. Will Florence be able to convince the others in the household of the imminent danger and stop Sophia before it's too late?

  • Sales Rank: #55047 in Books
  • Brand: Clarion Books
  • Published on: 2011-09-06
  • Released on: 2011-09-06
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.00" h x 5.25" w x .50" l, .35 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 160 pages
Features
  • Great product!

From School Library Journal
Gr 4-6–Hahn hearkens back to the Gothic horror novels of the 19th century with her latest ghost story. Crutchfield Hall is a gloomy old place, but after spending seven years in Miss Medleycoate's dour orphanage, 12-year-old Florence can only assume her new life there will be an improvement. In addition to her genial great-uncle, the manor's residents consist of Florence's severe great-aunt, Eugenie; her invalid cousin, James; and a few servants. The accidental death of James's older sister, Sophia, is believed to have triggered his current indisposition. Sophia's ghost continues to haunt Crutchfield Hall both figuratively and, as Florence soon discovers, literally. Far from the angelic creature idolized by Eugenie, Sophia proves to be spiteful, manipulative, and determined to avenge her death. While Hahn's literary references (including Dickens and the Brönte sisters) will likely go over the heads of the target age group, most kids will be too absorbed in the chilling atmosphere of the tale and Sophia's terrifying influence on the living world to care. A deliciously spine-tingling tale that even the most reluctant readers will enjoy.Christi Esterle, Parker Library, CO
© Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

From Booklist
Twelve-year-old book lover Florence is thrilled to be leaving Miss Medleycoate’s Home for Orphan Girls to live at Crutchfield Hall with her newly discovered great-aunt, great-uncle, and cousin James. Six months before, James’ sister, Sophia, died in an accident, and Florence quickly discovers that Sophia’s ghost is haunting Crutchfield to punish James for his part in her death. Sophia is full of malice and pride, and as she grows in strength, Florence fears for James’ safety, yet she feels powerless to resist Sophia’s control. As in every ghost story, readers must suspend disbelief to avoid being tripped up by the inexplicable (most notably, Sophia’s ability to touch others and control their actions), but this short tale is a good choice for reluctant readers, especially girls. Just as she did in The Old Willis Place (2004) and countless others, Hahn once again creates a brooding atmosphere and a powerful, chilling ghost in a gothic mystery that explores family, the love of reading, and the dangers of revenge. Grades 4-7. --Melissa Moore

Review

"Hahn is a master of the supernatural tale, and her legions of fans will revel in this chilling volume, reminiscent of Dickens and Poe." —Kirkus Reviews, starred review

"A deliciously spine-tingling tale that even the most reluctant readers will enjoy." —School Library Journal

"A truly scary period tale." —Horn Book

Most helpful customer reviews

11 of 11 people found the following review helpful.
"The Ghost of Crutchfield Hall" sure to keep readers reading
By Caitlin Ann
The drafty, creaky and poorly lit Crutchfield Hall makes an excellent setting for this fast-paced Victorian ghost story from Mary Downing Hahn. A short novel with a compelling plot, it keeps the reader wondering until the last page. Florence, the story's heroine, is a young orphan girl from London who moves to Crutchfield Hall to live with relatives she's never known. Her first experience in the quiet English countryside turns into a terrible ordeal when she meets the malevolent ghost of a lost cousin.

Florence is a great character. She is thoughtful and intelligent, loves reading and longs for family and stability. She is a character that readers will relate to, even in her flaws. At times, she gives into peer pressure (in this case-of a ghostly variety) and says or does things that she regrets. The novel features characters doing hurtful things to one another, but also illustrates forgiveness, growth and love. Florence's believable weaknesses may feel familiar to readers, as will her strengths and desire to do well. Florence is active, clever and ready to dive into new adventures.

The story does an excellent job of invoking historical place. The landscapes of the city and the country are well-described. The reader will be exposed to class issues from the period. In one example, Florence befriends a young servant girl named Nellie and is repeatedly told that while Florence is entitled to her leisure time, Nellie must always be working. Florence's dress is old and wool and some of the gowns at Crutchfield Hall are made of silk or other expensive cloth. Florence was given little to eat during her days at the orphanage, but now finds herself surrounded by rich food, along with a comfortable bed and endless books to read. Florence is troubled by these discrepancies. The novel features carriages, fireplaces and cooking descriptions that all help to transport the reader to another time.

"The Ghost of Crutchfield Hall" is reminiscent of Victorian era ghost stories and Gothic novels. Florence reads popular Victorian writers, including Charles Dickens, Charlotte Bronte and Wilkie Collins. While many readers today see the works of these authors as well-established classics, Florence's aunt calls them "frivolous" and "vulgar" (18). Young readers may learn for the first time that the novel was looked down upon for many years.

With a well-crafted story and well-drawn characters, Mary Downing Hahn has created a novel that is both creepy and delightful. It is sure to keep readers turning its pages.

13 of 15 people found the following review helpful.
good ghost story for 8-12 year olds
By M. Tanenbaum
Mary Downing Hahn, best known for her scary ghost stories for young people, will be sure to please her many fans with her newest creepy tale, The Ghost of Crutchfield Hall, which will be released in September.

In this new novel, set in 19th century England, we meet ten-year old Florence Crutchfield, who has been living in a London orphanage since her parents died when she was five and no relatives came forward to claim her. But, surprise! After five years a great uncle surfaces, who invites her to live with him, his unmarried sister, Eugenie, and her cousin James. In classic gothic tale fashion, Eugenie arrives at Crutchfield Hall after being soaked by a violent rainstorm. Eugenie's first impression of the house is not a positive one; although her uncle is kind to her, her aunt takes an immediate dislike to Florence, who bears an unfortunate resemblance to her cousin Sophia, who died in a mysterious accident some time before. With a nod and a wink to The Secret Garden, we learn that Florence's cousin James is so sickly that he never leaves his room, and Florence is forbidden to visit him.

All is not well in Crutchfield Hall, and before Florence is even there for a day, she has a strange sensation that someone is watching her. "A chill raced up and down my spine, and my scalp prickled." Although her uncle insists that ghosts do not exist, Florence becomes more and more convinced that Crutchfield Hall haunted by the ghost of her cousin Sophia. And what does the ghost want from Florence?

Florence soon discovers that Sophia is not the ideal child her aunt recreates, but rather an evil spirit who wants someone else to die in her place! Can she bend Florence to her will, and force her to help her in her devious plans?

It is easy to see after reading this story why Mary Downing Hahn's books have sold over 2 million copies and have received more than forty child-voted state awards. She manages to create a spine-tingling atmosphere without the novel becoming too frightening for the 8-12 year old crowd. And you have to love the deliciously macabre cover, of a photograph of two young children (James and Sophia, we assume) in Victorian garb, with Sophia's face obscured by a splash of blood. Scary stories are perennially popular with kids, and this quick read is perfect for reluctant readers as well as fans of ghost stories.

6 of 6 people found the following review helpful.
Atmospheric and creepy
By Bookphile
The Ghost of Crutchfield Hall was a story that pulled me firmly into its world from the very first page. I read fairly late into the night, and found myself thoroughly creeped out. It was a windy night, and the wind was rattling my window and my bedroom door, which just served to heighten the already very creepy atmosphere of the book. I finally made myself go to sleep and then promptly woke up earlier than usual the next morning, so that I could stay in bed and finish the book before starting my day.

Hahn has created a tale that invokes the best elements of Gothic fiction. Jane Eyre is one of my favorite books, and the parallels between Florence, the main character, and Jane are undeniable. Florence's being an orphan brought up in a harsh charity school make her instantly sympathetic to the reader, and I never stopped sympathizing with her struggles against the malevolent presence of her dead cousin, Sophia. That struggle is symbolic of the struggles that every child goes through, the temptation to do wrong at battle with the desire to do good.

However, Sophia is also something of a sympathetic character. While she is undeniably bad, she is also pitiable--and yet, I still wanted her to go away and never return. The tales that the Hall's servants and that her brother, James, told about her were truly hair-raising, and Hahn does a really wonderful job of making Sophia a very fully fleshed character in a relatively few number of pages.

The other other thing I found truly admirable about the book was the way Hahn brought the classics into it. Florence is very well-read, and she often likens her situation to those of characters from works by the likes of Dickens and Austen. Hahn does a really wonderful job of bringing the intrigue and the pull of those works into her own story, and I cherish the hope that a child who enjoys this book will want to read "Pride and Prejudice" or "Vanity Fair" to find out what Florence finds so appealing about those books.

This is a book that I would highly recommend for any child who is fond of ghost stories. The writing is wonderful, the characters are nicely drawn, and the story has some very eerie, scary moments. I thoroughly enjoyed reading it.

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Rabu, 23 Maret 2016

* Fee Download The Divine Invasion (Valis Trilogy), by Philip K. Dick

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The Divine Invasion (Valis Trilogy), by Philip K. Dick

God is not dead, he has merely been exiled to an extraterrestrial planet. And it is on this planet that God meets Herb Asher and convinces him to help retake Earth from the demonic Belial. Featuring virtual reality, parallel worlds, and interstellar travel, The Divine Invasion blends philosophy and adventure in a way few authors can achieve.

As the middle novel of Dick’s VALIS trilogy, The Divine Invasion plays a pivotal role in answering the questions raised by the first novel, expanding that world while exploring just how much anyone can really know—even God himself.

  • Sales Rank: #75614 in Books
  • Brand: Mariner Books
  • Published on: 2011-10-18
  • Released on: 2011-10-18
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.00" h x .63" w x 5.31" l, .53 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 272 pages
Features
  • Great product!

Review
'A great philosophical writer' Independent 'Really excellent entertainment' Daily Telegraph 'One of the most original practitioners writing any kind of fiction' Sunday Times

From the Inside Flap
n The Divine Invasion, Philip K. Dick asks: What if God--or a being called Yah--were alive and in exile on a distant planet? How could a second coming succeed against the high technology and finely tuned rationalized evil of the modern police state? The Divine Invasion "blends Judaism, Kabalah, Zoroastrianism, and Christianity into a fascinating fable of human existence" (West Coast Revew of Books).

From the Back Cover
God is not dead, he has merely been exiled to an extraterrestrial planet. And it is on this planet that God meets Herb Asher and convinces him to help retake Earth from the demonic Belial. Featuring virtual reality, parallel worlds, and interstellar travel, The Divine Invasion blends philosophy and adventure in a way few authors can achieve.

As the middle novel of Dick’s VALIS trilogy, The Divine Invasion plays a pivotal role in answering the questions raised by the first novel, expanding that world while exploring just how much anyone can really know—even God himself.

Over a career that spanned three decades, Philip K. Dick (1928–1982) wrote 121 short stories and 45 novels, establishing himself as one of the most visionary authors of the twentieth century. His work is included in the Library of America and has been translated into more than twenty-five languages. Eleven works have been adapted to film, including Blade Runner (based on Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?), Total Recall, Minority Report, and A Scanner Darkly.

Most helpful customer reviews

37 of 39 people found the following review helpful.
Dick's strange Gnostic vision
By P. Nicholas Keppler
The protagonist of the Divine Invasion is Herb Asher, a recluse living on a human colony on the planet CY30-CY30B. Asher spends most his time lying in bed, listening to singer Linda Fox, until one day a deity identifying itself as the Judeo-Christian God Yahweh calls him to comfort his neighbor, Rybys Rommey, who suffers from multiple sclerosis. A prophet named Elias Tate informs them that Rybys, a virgin, is pregnant with the Second Coming and the three travel to Earth where the child will finish the battle with Belial, the Adversary who banished Yahweh to CY30-CY30B thousands of years earlier and has kept the Earth under his dark cloud since.
Or at least that is the story that keeps playing in Asher's head as he is kept in a frozen state awaiting a new pancreas to replace the one that was injured in the jet crash that killed Rybys upon their return to Earth. Meanwhile, her child Emmanuel, who survived the crash but with brain damage, lives with Tate and attends a special education school with Zina, a girl who seems to know much about Emmanuel and his place in the cosmos.
Welcome to the strange, strange world of latter day Philip K. Dick. The science-fiction author, who specialized in surreal settings and complex puzzles concerning identity, questioned the cosmos as only he could in his final trio of novels of which the Divine Invasion is the middle entry. The novels were inspired by an instance in 1974 in which Dick alleged that a transcendental being briefly possessed him.
For a project inspired by such an absurd episode, the Divine Invasion has a tight, highly coherent theological underlining. Dick shows a remarkable understanding of Gnostic principles, with Asher, Fox, Rybys, Tate, Emmanuel, and Zina each representing an important component of the Christian cosmic order. Although Dick is as reader-friendly as possible (he makes no presumptions about readers' foreknowledge of these concepts), one will have to be patient as he carefully unveils and explains his characters' significance, shifting surface realities and using non-linear story telling. If you can deal with that, you will be treated to a highly imaginative and highly intelligent philosophical novel. The Divine Invasion is another instance in which the term mad genius perfectly applies to Dick.

13 of 13 people found the following review helpful.
Extremely Unique and Thought-Provoking
By Bill R. Moore
To all the would-be literary naysayers out there who say "all possible plots have already been used" and "every book is just a different version of a previously released book", I have one piece of advice for you: read a Philip K. Dick book. Particularly his Valis trilogy is highly unique and a bit eye-opening. How many books have you read that star God as a crippled, 10-year-old amnesiac? Not very many, I would imagine, but this is such a book. Setting the novel in such an off-kilter scenario allows Dick to examine, and thereby challenge, our conventional ideas of God. This book is very dense and hard to penetrate at times... many of the references escaped me, but I still found it interesting for it's novel views on theology and the nature of God. I highly recommend this book, and Dick's entire Valis trilogy, to anyone looking for theology-expanding fiction, or simply a unique read.

15 of 16 people found the following review helpful.
A Visit from the Stars
By Dorion Sagan
Divine Invasion opens with Herb Asher (do I detect a botanical reference?) "dead and in cryonic suspension" overseeing information traffic from within his dome around the binary star system CY30-CY30B. His sickly female neighbor, dying of multiple sclerosis, becomes pregnant with a virgin birth (her hymen is intact and Herb is repulsed by her sickness) that turns out to be the result of Yahweh--God of the old testament. Although only perhaps (like us all?) vividly dreaming, Asher accompanies his legal wife (Yah has insisted he sympathize with her by vengefully threatening to destroy his most treasured belongings, especially his tapes of Linda Fox, a galactically renowned vocalist) through quasi-fascistic interrogations and security back to Earth. There his life is reminiscent but different than on the world of methane crystals housing the dome where he "really is." As the "legal father" of God (as he explains to a police man who stops him in his fly-car) he meets his step-son, the Christ-like child who combines infinity from God (the alien who comes in half-human form to Earth) and the earthly from his human wife. Emmanuel, the God-child, is engaged in both a battle of recalling his true nature and playing with his elusive female playmate, Zina. Zina knows things about him that he doesn't. She is Shekhina, "the immanent Presence who never left the world...the female side of God" who remained with the immanent world when the Godhead split. Elias Tate, Herb Asher's best friend, is the prophet Elijah on the two-star system, but a black man who works at an audio components shop on Earth. Thus the inimitable and brilliant Dick establishes an overlapping confluence between the celestial (the extraterrestrial) and the mundane--he literalizes the Gnostic worldview, spiced idiosyncratically with bits of his personal life, esoteric Judaism and mystical Christianity. (The well-regarded literary critic, Harold Bloom, tried to write--wrote--a fiction book based on Gnosticism that fell far short of this brilliant effort.) Quoting Church father Tertullian on the resurrection of Jesus Christ, Asher's friend Elias, who counsels him to dump his wife and pursue his dream--Linda Fox, who in space is only a projection of artificial intelligence--explains: Et sepultus resurrexit; certum est quia impossibile est." He was resurrected from the grave; this is therefore credible, just because it is absurd. I think you have to give the benefit of the doubt not to those who cannot penetrate Dick's densely nuanced tangle of relevant references upon a single reading--but to Dick, who has instantiated Gnosticism in fiction with entertainment and story-telling acumen, imparting lodes of theological information along the way where others have failed. In Islamic culture being a writer may be considered suspect because one is competing with God. But Dick is alway competing with God--and making "Him" such as he is (here an alien with a penchant for intrauterine symbiosis) palpable and relevant for modern times. That is what great authors (e.g., Pushkin in Russia) do: they revive and re-weave culture, preserving it in their creative efforts. The devil appears as an especially stinky goat, who is killed on a rooftop (as is another goat in Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?!) But Belial (the sheep who lusts after non-existence) was created by God. As my son raps, "Good and evil are not equal; light created the darkness." A theological mini-masterpiece--pearls before swine are still pearls.

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Kamis, 17 Maret 2016

> Download PDF Holt McDougal Literature: Student Edition Grade 9 2012, by HOLT MCDOUGAL

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Holt McDougal Literature: Student Edition Grade 9 2012, by HOLT MCDOUGAL

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Holt McDougal Literature: Student Edition Grade 9

  • Sales Rank: #84399 in Books
  • Brand: Brand: HOLT MCDOUGAL
  • Published on: 2011-01-10
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 10.25" h x 8.75" w x 2.25" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 1584 pages
Features
  • Used Book in Good Condition

Most helpful customer reviews

3 of 5 people found the following review helpful.
Big honking book too heavy for backpack, bought 1 for home use for kids
By Midwest
This thing weighs close to 10 pounds, just ridiculous, with everything else to carry, my 9th grader was having shoulder & back pain within 1st week of school so I bought this. It's a new edition so my others will use it at home too. Cheap at the price considering how happy my kid was and to avoid doctor's visits! (Bonus 1: no excuse about forgetting book at school. Bonus 2: kid can mark spots with sticky notes, sticky arrows etc for later reference and they can be undisturbed until she needs to do her analytical writing.)

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Great for Text books!!
By Ashley C
From a third party seller, CarrieDragonBooks. Product was just as described and recirved it on time. I would use this seller again.

1 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
Like New
By Idelizza Homs
The book looks like new, it was a good election... My son love it, thanks for your business, order with them !!!

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Rabu, 16 Maret 2016

# Download PDF Bad Intentions (Inspector Sejer), by Karin Fossum, Jane Kirby

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Bad Intentions (Inspector Sejer), by Karin Fossum, Jane Kirby

"An intimate study of broken lives that showcases Fossum’s poet past." —Bloomberg

In this chilling addition to the internationally best-selling Inspector Konrad Sejer series, the detective must face down his memories and fears as he investigates the deaths of two troubled young men. The first victim, Jon Moreno, was getting better after a mysterious guilt had driven him to a nervous breakdown one year earlier. His psychiatrist said so, as did his new friend at the hospital, Molly Gram, with her little-girl-lost looks. So when he drowns in Dead Water Lake, Sejer hesitates to call it a suicide.

Then the corpse of another young man is found, a Vietnamese immigrant. And Sejer begins to feel his age weigh on him. Does he still have the strength to pursue the elusive explanations for human evil? A harrowing, masterfully wrought mystery from the celebrated Karin Fossum.

“Fascinatingly readable and very cleverly done.” —Colin Dexter, author of the Inspector Morse series

  • Sales Rank: #143103 in Books
  • Brand: Vintage Books
  • Published on: 2012-08-14
  • Released on: 2012-08-14
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.00" h x .59" w x 5.31" l, .50 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 224 pages
Features
  • Great product!

Review
"Fossum is one of Noridc noir's most skilled practitioners." (Library Journal)

“The seventh Inspector Sejer novel from Norway’s leading female crime writer is, like its predecessors, a gem.”

(Guardian)

From the Inside Flap
"Fascinatingly readable and very cleverly done."--Colin Dexter, author of the Inspector Morse series
In this chilling addition to the internationally best-selling Inspector Konrad Sejer series, the detective must face down his memories and fears as he investigates the deaths of two troubled young men. The first victim, Jon Moreno, was getting better after a mysterious guilt had driven him to a nervous breakdown one year earlier. His psychiatrist said so, as did his new friend at the hospital, Molly Gram, with her little-girl-lost looks. So when he drowns in Dead Water Lake, Sejer hesitates to call it a suicide.
Then the corpse of another young man is found, a Vietnamese immigrant. And Sejer begins to feel his age weigh on him. Does he still have the strength to pursue the elusive explanations for human evil?
A harrowing, masterfully wrought mystery from the celebrated Karin Fossum.
Translated from the Norwegian by Charlotte Barslund

From the Back Cover

"An intimate study of broken lives that showcases Fossum’s poet past." —Bloomberg

In this chilling addition to the internationally best-selling Inspector Konrad Sejer series, the detective must face down his memories and fears as he investigates the deaths of two troubled young men. The first victim, Jon Moreno, was getting better after a mysterious guilt had driven him to a nervous breakdown one year earlier. His psychiatrist said so, as did his new friend at the hospital, Molly Gram, with her little-girl-lost looks. So when he drowns in Dead Water Lake, Sejer hesitates to call it a suicide.

Then the corpse of another young man is found, a Vietnamese immigrant. And Sejer begins to feel his age weigh on him. Does he still have the strength to pursue the elusive explanations for human evil? A harrowing, masterfully wrong mystery from the celebrated Karin Fossum.

“Fascinatingly readable and very cleverly done.” —Colin Dexter, author of the Inspector Morse series

Karin Fossum’s Inspector Sejer series has been published in thirty-three countries. Her honors include a Gumshoe Award and the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Mystery/Thriller. She lives in a small town in southeastern Norway.

Most helpful customer reviews

41 of 42 people found the following review helpful.
Well-plotted psychological thriller/ police procedural - an Insp Sejer mystery
By Z Hayes
Karin Fossum is my favorite Scandinavian crime novelist (I also like reading the works of Johan Theorin, Ake Edwardson, Arnaldur Indridason, etc.). Her novels have a way of delving into the psyche of individuals and exposing people's innermost thoughts, desires, and flaws. Her writing style is minimalistic yet she is credibly able to convey complex characters and plots that engage the reader.

"Bad Intentions" is another novel in the Insp Sejer series. Insp Sejer is one of my favorite characters in crime fiction - a meticulous and astute policeman, he is always able to sense something amiss as he pieces the clues of a crime together in order to solve it. Sejer is a multi-faceted character which makes reading about him even more interesting, especially as readers familiar with his character are able to see him evolve as the series progresses.

The story is about friends, Axel and Reilly who have picked up their friend Jon for a trip to a remote cabin, presumably to lift their friend Jon's spirits (Jon is a very troubled young man). The trio row out on Dead Water Lake and a terrible tragedy ensues. Jon dies, and the other two try to cover things up by delaying reporting the incident to the police. When Insp Sejer and his assistant Jacob Skarre (another of my favorite characters in crime fiction) arrive at the scene, they immediately sense something amiss, even though the two young men appear to have colluded to get their stories straight. Yet with no other witnesses or clues, the case is hard to solve until the body of a teenage boy is found several weeks later in a nearby lake.

Like the other novels in the Sejer series, this is a deeply psychological novel, which probes the human conscience, and also touches on friendship and what happens when trust gives way to distrust and paranoia. Most of the Sejer novels take readers into the dark recesses of human minds, explore human frailties, and make us question our own beliefs and assumptions. This is a compelling and rewarding read.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
It's all about the characters
By Turning Man Fred
Fossum takes a tragic accident and through the deft development of several characters weaves an engaging story - and one w/o the standard mutalated young girl plot. Instead we see a top writer use plot and character to produce a worthwhile read. Maybe we see some of ourselves in the various players.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Always an Electric Read
By Kindle Customer
Once again I was enthralled by the Inspector Sejer mystery. I have never been disappointed by one of these stories

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* Free PDF Holt McDougal Algebra 2: Common Core Teacher's Edition 2012, by HOLT MCDOUGAL

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Holt McDougal Algebra 2: Common Core Teacher's Edition 2012, by HOLT MCDOUGAL

  • Sales Rank: #698391 in Books
  • Published on: 2011-06-27
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 1248 pages

Most helpful customer reviews

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
Five Stars
By Tiny Wishes Come True
5*A+ Accurate Description~Packaged with GREAT CARE in durable box~Super FAST shipping! Thank You!

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Selasa, 15 Maret 2016

~ Ebook Miss New India, by Bharati Mukherjee

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"Enchanting! Mukherjee's pitch-perfect ear for character and mood and her storytelling gifts capture the exhilarating restlessness of a young Indian woman's pursuit of happiness. Miss New India illuminates as brilliantly as it entertains." —Amy Tan

Anjali Bose’s prospects don’t look great. Born into a traditional lower-middle‑class family, she lives in a backwater town with only an arranged marriage on the horizon. But her ambition, charm, and fluency in language do not go unnoticed by her charismatic and influential expat teacher, Peter Champion. And champion her he does, both to powerful people who can help her along the way and to Anjali herself, stirring in her a desire to take charge of her own destiny.

So she sets off to Bangalore, India’s fastest‑growing metropolis, and soon falls in with an audacious and ambitious crowd of young people, who have learned how to sound American by watching shows like Seinfeld in order to get jobs in call centers, where they quickly out‑earn their parents. And it is in this high‑tech city where Anjali — suddenly free of the confines of class, caste, and gender — is able to confront her past and reinvent herself. Of course, the seductive pull of life in the New India does not come without a dark side . . .

"Each character fascinates, and every detail glints with irony and intent, as Mukherjee brilliantly choreographs her compelling protagonist’s struggles against betrayal, violence, and corruption in a dazzling plot." —Booklist, starred

  • Sales Rank: #1023786 in Books
  • Brand: Mukherjee, Bharati
  • Published on: 2012-06-19
  • Released on: 2012-06-19
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.00" h x .79" w x 5.31" l, .70 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 336 pages

Amazon.com Review
Anjali Bose is “Miss New India.” Born into a traditional lower-middle-class family and living in a backwater town with an arranged marriage on the horizon, Anjali’s prospects don’t look great. But her ambition and fluency in language do not go unnoticed by her expat teacher, Peter Champion. And champion her he does, both to other powerful people who can help her along the way and to Anjali herself, stirring in her a desire to take charge of her own destiny. 

So she sets off to Bangalore, India’s fastest-growing major metropolis, and quickly falls in with an audacious and ambitious crowd of young people, who have learned how to sound American by watching shows like Seinfeld in order to get jobs as call-center service agents, where they are quickly able to out-earn their parents. And it is in this high-tech city where Anjali—suddenly free from the traditional confines of class, caste, gender, and more—is able to confront her past and reinvent herself. Of course, the seductive pull of modernity does not come without a dark side.

Recommended Summer Reading from the Author of Miss New India

Fiction:

1) Téa Obrecht, The Tiger’s Wife

2) Jennifer Egan, A Visit From the Goon Squad

3) Karen Russell, Swamplandia!

4) Clark Blaise, The Meagre Tarmac

5) Gustave Flaubert, (translated by Lydia Davis), Madame Bovary

6) Abraham Verghese, Cutting For Stone

Non-Fiction:

1) Doug Saunders, Arrival City

2) Simon Winchester, The Alice Behind Wonderland

3) Ben Ryder Howe, My Korean Deli

4) (trans. Wheeler Thackston), The Baburnama: Memoirs of Babur, Prince and Emperor A Note from the Author

Dear Amazon Readers:

I grew up in Kolkata, India, in a large and loving, traditionally patriarchal Hindu family, headed by my father. Though my father was not the eldest male in the extended Mukherjee family, he had been co-opted as patriarch because he was the most educated, and had founded a prosperous pharmaceutical company. I watched my father accustom himself to the demands of the role of patriarch, which meant having to provide for, and to protect, scores of uncles, aunts, cousins, and strangers who claimed to be our distant relatives. For him, as with Anjali Bose’s father in my novel, Miss New India, discharging duty was the utmost expression of love.

In families like mine, a father’s greatest obligation was to marry off his daughter to a good provider. With that in mind, my father sent me to Loreto House, the school of choice for over-sheltered girls from well-off families in Kolkata. It was an English-medium school, run by Irish nuns from Galway. The nuns’ goal was to groom us to become wives of the city’s future leaders. We were being trained to be chaste and graceful young women who spoke English as fluently as we did our mother-tongue. To improve our English vocabulary, the nuns encouraged us to read British novels. My two favorite novels were W. M. Thackeray’s Vanity Fair and Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre. I was entranced by the adventures of gutsy, ambitious Becky Sharp and Jane Eyre, because they each had to make their her way in life without any help from protective, well-connected parents. My admiration for those fictional, self-made women who surmounted obstacles in their pursuits of love and happiness may have contributed to my having jettisoned myself out of my father’s patriarchal reach and the comforting familiarity of my hometown by marrying—much to my father’s consternation—--an American fellow- student after a two-week courtship at the University of Iowa’s famous Writers’ Workshop.

I became fascinated with India-based call-center employees and their dual identities (American at work; Indian at home) when, some years ago, I was activating a credit card on the phone, and the agent at the other end of the line struggled valiantly to disguise her Indian English accent and pass herself off as a mid-western American. The character of Anjali/Angie Bose jelled for me while I was visiting my first cousin and her husband, retired UN personnel in their retirement home in Bangalore, the IT hub in India. My cousin had invited a family with a twenty-something daughter who was working as a customer support agent in a call-center. The parents had wanted to meet me because they had read my novels and because they knew I lived in San Francisco and hoped that I could put them in touch with rich, Silicon Valley–-based potential bridegrooms. The afternoon started off amiably, with the parents exaggerating the accomplishments of their daughter and wondering out loud why she was still unmarried. But midway through the visit, the daughter began to show her rebellious side. She told her father to back off matchmaking, which led to an ugly shouting match. The visit had to be aborted when both daughter and father had a public “melt-down” in my cousin’s living -room. Later that week, she came to see me by herself, and talked compellingly about her conflicts with her traditional, controlling parents and about her hopes and ambitions for herself. Through her I met many of her call-center friends—, adventurous, young, working women from families of modest means, stuck in provincial towns. They talked freely to me about their hopes for themselves and the pride they took in being financially independent. They were lively women, many of them away from home and vigilant family chaperones for the first time, and eager for romance even if it didn’t lead to marriage. They inspired me with their conviction that they had an inalienable right to personal happiness. They saw themselves as pioneers of a sort, in charge of their futures, accountable for their failures as well as their successes. They shared their dreams with me, some of them said, because they saw me as an early version of themselves. I saw them as brave time-travelers moving away from the torpors of tradition and eventless adolescence, heading into a dazzling, technologically advanced future packed with events.

--Bharati Mukherjee

From Booklist
*Starred Review* Who better to capture the seismic shifts under way in India as the digital revolution takes hold than laser-precise and sharply witty Mukherjee? In each of her dramatic, slyly satirical novels, she dissects the legacy of colonialism, the paradoxes of technology, and the traditions that shackle Indian women. Mukherjee subtly continues the stories of the sisters from Desirable Daughters (2002) and The Tree Bride (2004) as she introduces Anjali Bose, a smart, rebellious 19-year-old who flees her provincial town after her father's attempt to arrange her marriage goes catastrophically wrong. With the help of her scholarly, covertly gay, expat American teacher, Anjali finds refuge in a decaying mansion, a remnant of the Raj, in Bangalore, the booming capital of call centers and electronic start-ups. There the brave country girl undergoes a crash course in urban life and the fizzing world of outsourcing, avatars, and social networks. Each character fascinates, and every detail glints with irony and intent, as Mukherjee brilliantly choreographs her compelling protagonist's struggles against betrayal, violence, and corruption in a dazzling plot that cunningly considers forms of tyranny blatant and insidious in a metamorphosing society. Mukherjee's resilient Miss New India takes as her mantra a line from her photographer friend: "Nothing in the world is as it seems--it's all a matter of light and angles." HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Acclaimed Mukherjee's take on outsourcing and India's rise will provoke lively discussion. --Donna Seaman

Review
"Enchanting! Mukherjee's pitch-perfect ear for character and mood and her story-telling gifts capture the exhilarating restlessness of a young Indian woman's pursuit of happiness. Miss New India illuminates as brilliantly as it entertains."
—Amy Tan

"A tightly woven narrative about naïvete and personal growth in contemporary India...Mukherjee explores Anjali's issues with understanding and sympathy."
—Kirkus Reviews

"Each character fascinates, and every detail glints with irony and intent, as Mukherjee brilliantly choreographs her compelling protagonist's struggles against betrayal, violence, and corruption in a dazzling plot."
—Booklist  (starred)

Most helpful customer reviews

19 of 22 people found the following review helpful.
Fabulous look at the "New India"
By Jill Meyer
Bharati Mukherjee's new novel "Miss New India" is an engaging look at the changes that have swept India in the past twenty or so years, as advances in technology have opened doors to new-found prosperity and many young, savvy, and ambitious Indians have poured through those doors.

Anjali Bose is a lucky young lady in many ways. She's smart and good with languages and very pretty. Not "Bollywood" beautiful, but playfully attractive. She draws people to her with a magnetic personality. But at age 19, she is at a crossroads in her life. Her parents are trying to arrange a marriage for her; that's what proper young middle-class women aspire to. A home with a husband and children, and very little use of the good education she has received in Guaripur. She is resisting the whole marriage-at-an-early-age, and in that she has the support of one of her teachers. Peter Champion, an American who has landed in Guaripur twenty or so years before, sees possibilities far beyond the small town world for Anjali Bose. After a botched attempt at match-making with a seemingly perfect "boy", Anjali flees her parents' home and Guaipur for the booming city of Bangalore. She's aided by Peter Champion, who gives her money and some contacts in Bangalore.

Anjali eventually reaches Bangalore and she realises that "New India" is open for her. A few adventures and those contacts help Anjali reach for the top. Bharati Mukherjee is a joyous writer and she opens up modern-day India to the reader with a richness of characters and plot in her novel. Not a "Cinderella story", we see Anjali succeed by using her wits, beauty, and charm, helped along with a good amount of luck. There's not necessarily a "Prince Charming" at the end of the book, but Anjali learns that she can make her way without one. Mukharjee's other characters are so well drawn that the reader feels as comfortable with them as they do with Anjali.

All in all, a wonderful and fun novel.

10 of 11 people found the following review helpful.
Plot Feels Thin, Slow, and Twice-Told
By Stephanie De Pue
"Miss New India," is the latest novel from award-winning Indian-American author Bharati Mukherjee. The author, who has won the National Book Critics Circle Award, has published seven previous novels, and two story collections. In MISS NEW INDIA, Mukherjee subtly continues the stories of the Indian sisters from her popular previous publications Desirable Daughters: A Novel (2002), andThe Tree Bride (2004). The writer here introduces us to Anjali Bose ("Call Me Angie"), a smart, rebellious, 19-year old, who may be considered the "Miss New India." Angie has been born into a traditional lower-middle-class family; her dad is a railways clerk, a job sanctioned and sanctified by generations of Indians; but a job with rather pinched horizons. The family lives in Gauripur, a dusty backwater town in the state of Bihar. And Angie's Dad is seeking to enforce a traditional arranged marriage on her. So Anjali's prospects don't look great. But Angie has good looks - although not traditional Indian looks-- as she is rather tall and slim, and has light-colored eyes. And a great smile. As well as ambition and fluency in the English language. All this does not go unnoticed by her expatriate university English teacher, the American Peter Champion. So champion her he does, with financial help, and by giving her introductions to powerful people he knows from his other lives, who can help her along.

Champion also stimulates Angie's ambition, and, eventually, her father's efforts at making an arranged match for her having ended in all-around disaster, she secretly sets off to Bangalore. That's India's fastest-growing major metropolis, a high-tech heaven, where an audacious and ambitious crowd of young people, just like her, who have learned how to sound American by watching shows like SEINFELD, get jobs as call-center service agents. And they quickly earn more than their parents ever did. These young people, with whom Angie falls in, of course, live high on the hog, and, as they are suddenly free from the traditional confines of class, caste, gender, and more--are able to confront their pasts and reinvent themselves. But, of course, we know that everything modern is not necessarily wonderful.

The author was born to wealthy Bengali Hindu parents in Calcutta, India. In 1947, she moved to Britain with her family, at the age of eight; they lived there for three and a half years, then returned to India. Mukherjee got her B.A. from the University of Calcutta, and her M.A. in English and Ancient Indian Culture from the University of Baroda. She was awarded a scholarship from the University of Iowa, where she earned an M.F.A. in Creative Writing in 1963, and her Ph.D. in English and Comparative Literature in 1969. While there, she met and married a Canadian student from Harvard. The pair have taught all over Canada and the U.S.A. Mukherjee, however, did not care for the way Canada treats its Indian immigrants, and is now happy to consider herself an American: she is a professor at the University of California, Berkeley.

Mukherjee does an excellent job of giving us India on the page: its sights, sounds, smells, society, flora, fauna, food, history, and clothing. She sometimes gives us almost too much loving detail - and I always love detail; and she lives up to her reputation for witty satire. The book has loads of charm, and is well-written. I'm not familiar with her previous work, however, and so cannot compare this novel to its predecessors; but I can say that the plot of this one feels kind of thin and slow-moving to me, and sometimes has the feeling of a twice-told tale. I can also say that, if there are any young Indian women reading this book, who also happen to find themselves caught up in the marital sweepstakes, for heaven's sake, don't take Angie as a role model. Her behavior is sometimes puzzling, and not particularly moral. And even the tallest, slimmest, lightest-eyed girls, with the best smiles, and the best English, really cannot expect the deus ex machina that delivers such a happy ending to our girl Angie to deliver anything similar to them.

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful.
Next stop, Bollywood?
By Tell Me A Story
This story is about a poor, small town girl seeking a new life in the newly transformed India in Bangalore (which sounds comparable to New York City) after she realizes she has no desire to pursue an arranged marriage. As she flees in the night, she realizes that her dream is fraught with challenges and dangers, she never imagined existed but Anjali will not be deterred to aspire to be a Call Center Agent.

I was disappointed in this book for a variety of reasons. Many reviewers (Hats off to Evie) have already done an excellent job assessing this novel's weaknesses, so I will mention what bothered me most.

One of the first thoughts I had is how it emulates the Horatio Alger's stories from the mid to late 1800s. These stories were formulaic in nature where poor, young men rise from their humble beginnings to accomplish success and respectability through hard work, determination, courage and honesty. Unfortunately, this story didn't incorporate these four aspects. Whatever, conflict Angali (who transforms herself to Angie) faces, she will manage to overcome all obstacles to accomplish her success but not necessarily in an honorable way.

The story has way too many characters whose sole purpose is is to get Angie through her current conflict or onto her next adventure. Had the story been better written, less characters would have been needed.

Moreover, Angie uses her connections often in an manipulative manner and a few use her too. While, her dishonesty and manipulation made her more human, it also made her less endearing; most novels can't pull it off successfully as in Gone with the Wind. Though it felt like that was what the author was attempting to do. Essentially, Angie does whatever it takes morality not withstanding.

What I liked about the book was the descriptions of Indian life both in a big city and small town. The author obviously has fond memories of her homeland and conveys the smell, taste and scenery exceptionally well. I have been to India and she captures the essence of the Indian culture with great clarity, hence, I gave the book 3 stars.

Ms. Mukherjee obviously knows the technical aspects of writing a novel (she teaches writing at UCF, Berkeley), this particular book will never go beyond a lazy day's read. The book has the feel of being written slap dash and I wonder if there was an impending contract deadline to meet. I wish she taken time to develop the characters and made the character's struggle more plausible.

Essentially, I felt like I was reading Big Business advertisement holding out hope for those trapped in the traditional female roles. The sad thing is this book has potential influence many young people, who wish to advance in a booming Indian economy; they will face challenges of getting a "big break". It concerns me that some young women may see this as a guide book to handling the bigger world awaiting them. Assuming strangers will be rescuing them when they face daunting odds. I pray, they don't seek to emulate Angie's behaviors to curry favor with powerful persons.

Also, I firmly believe that the story was written in such a way with an eye on being a potential Bollywood script. It definitely meets the thematic plot criteria. As such, they are often fast moving, feel good, song and dance stories that while not believable are lighthearted; and nearly always end with all troubles resolved and tied up neatly with a bow.

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