Monday 4 March 2013

Captain Underpants- still my favourite book


My favourite book of all time is Captain Underpants! I read it when

I was very young and it made me crack up with laughter and joy!

It was one of the first books I read on my own and I really enjoyed

it! It was very humorous and made me a better person. I loved

the drawings in them as they were very easy to copy but were still

very good. I also enjoyed the work book version that can also be

bought along with the other books in the series.

My favourite Book - what is yours?

If I had to take one book to a desert island it would be 'Green Eggs and Ham' by Dr Suess. The reason I would take this book is it would remind me of the great childhood I had. Its very light and easy to carry. If I were on a desert island I would me fairly depressed as it would be hard to live in such bad conditions but if you had 'Green Eggs and Ham' by Dr Suess, it may very well lighten your mood. Not just this Dr Suess book it could be any one of his book as they all contain comedy and they're all easy reads. I love Dr Suess' books for this very reason! His characters are all imaginary type creatures and the illustations in this book could entertain you for hours! This is why I would choose this book for a desert island.

My Dad is Ten Years Old


My Dad is 10 years old
 
If there was one book I would bring to a dessert island it would be My dad is 10 years old! I bought this book with my friend Hannah in Easons. I got the progress price for 2nd year and I got a €40 book voucher with it and I bought 2 books and a whole bunch of stationary!! This book really makes you appreciate life. So if I was on a dessert island and reading this book iI would be thinking really its not that bad! It is written my Mark O'Sullivan, an Irish man! Its also makes you value life and everyone you take for granted and really be happy for what you have! for at least a week after i was in such a good mood! Even though its sad at times it is still the book i would bring with me to dessert island! when i was choosing the book i read the title and i was a little confused but by the end of the book your saying oh i get it! The general story is about a dad of three kids whose in an accident and looses all his memory. Throughout the book the family go through ups and downs of tyring to cope with this man they cant even call dad anymore without him freaking out.

Why Sherlock Holmes is my favourite book


If I had to pick a book to take to a desert island I would bring Sherlock Holmes by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. I would take this because its very long and I like the way its split up into many short stories each one with a different storyline. his means it is easy to finish the individual story and find out happens in the end in one night. I got it in ibooks which means I always have it with me for any spare minute I get with nothing to do.
Each story is unique, and I really like the particular stories that come with an extra bit at the end to explain the story. It gives you a background after you know the outcome. I think this is an interesting style of writing but works in this particular series.
Each story has its own mystery which I never really bother to try and work out but enjoy unraveling in the end. Its nice to look back after finishing the story and see how all the pieces fall into place.
I would recommend this book to anyone especially people who read fast as there is plenty there and it is split up into short stories.

Harry Potter


My favourite book of all time would be Harry Potter and the Philosophers stone. I got this book when I was eight years old. It was the first proper book I read. It was first published in 1997 and written by J.K Rowling. This book was later made a movie, but some of the magic was lost in this.
This book represents my childhood and I grew up with the characters of these series’. 

Favourite Book

My favourite book is the very hungry caterpillar. It reminds of childhood and being hungry and then not being hungry. It’s the only book that can take me out of his world and take me somewhere special. That’s why I would take it to a desert island because I would probably get hungry. It also taught me that if you eat the right stuff you will turn into a butterfly

The cay

If I had to choose a book to bring with me on a desert island, I would choose 'The Cay by Theodore Taylor'. I would take this fascinating book with me because it is funny , thrilling and most of all it's page turning. I have to say that although this book is short it would have to be my favourite book of all time. This is the story of a young boy who becomes stranded on a desert  island with an elderly man and his cat. In this thrilling tale we see how this boy becomes blinded by the harsh sun and relies on the old man to guide him and teach him how to survive . Sorry got to go, the bell just went.

Airhead - my desert island book

If there was one book i would bring on a desert island it would be Airhead by Meg Cabot. I bought this with a book voucher i got and i bought the whole series at the time which three books. I loved these books they were so good. I got them when i was twelve. The books are about this girl and she never really cared about her looks, her younger sister was always wearing makeup. she brought her younger sister to a model show because her younger sister really wanted to go. The older sister and the model had to switch brains because a TV fell on the model and she had to get a brain transplant. The older sister has to live a life of a model it is really intresting I love it!!!

My favourite book ...


My favourite book would have to be ‘The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane.’ by Kate Di Camillo.  I know that it is a children’s book, but the message and story in it is so mature and so thought provoking, that  I can’t help but read it over and over again, to see if I missed any fine detail or little message.
The story is about a toy, china rabbit. Who only cares about himself and is cold hearted. One day when on a boat is thrown overboard and goes through a multitude of owners. During this he learns to care about others and not to care about himself. I won’t spoil the ending but  I think it’s amazing and perfect.
From that short description you wouldn’t think it’s anything special, but it is so much more then that! The characters are so memorable and Edward’s struggle and journey so heart breaking, that is still can read it to this day and feel completely invested in the story.
The version I have has lovely illustrations but not too many, as to make it a picture book. It is only roughly 192 it feels so much longer. I can grantee the this book will be well worth the buy.  
I would give this book a 9/10 the highest rating I give books, because in my opinion no book is perfect, but this book is as close as it gets, in my opinion. I hope you read it and love it as much as I do.

My love affair with Pride and Prejudice


My Love Affair with Pride and Prejudice
If I were to have one book in the whole world to read, it would be the battered old copy of Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen. This worn out book lives forever on my bedside locker, as it did my mother’s before she gave it to me. This novel never fails to excite me. Although the tale is well known to me now, each time I read this book I get engrossed in the characters so effortlessly portrayed by Austen. However, these are but part of the appeal to this book. To me nothing can beat her use of irony and wit providing an endless stream of humour that can never fail to bring a smile to your face. To be without this book would be like being without a closest friend. With the opening of this novel, a day can turn from lousy to exciting.
     The other thing that is truly remarkable about this novel is its characters, as mentioned above. I can never fail to fall in love with Austen’s use of dialogue to give amazing depth to her characters. This allows us to feel for her characters and creates the perfect atmosphere with which to tell her tale.
      As highlighted above I am thoroughly in love with this book. I would give it a rating of10/10, which might seem fanciful but I truly hard set to find any faults with it. I would highly recommend giving it a read!

The book that made me love reading


If I could take any book I wanted to a desert island It would have to be ‘Lord of the Flies'.

I have to say this is my favourite book of all time. When I first read this book my emotions flowed out of my like water bursting from an ancient dam that has cracked under the pressure of every tear shed while reading.

  An example of this was at the end of this book I walked into my dad’s room. He asked me if I was alright, then I shot he a look as if he had just killed my favourite character!
  Every character in this novel has a special element to them that makes me love this book. Some are the only voice on the island, others show how fast we turn to savagery.
 I love this book with all my soul, and recommend it to everyone. This is the book that made be love reading

My favourite Book - a teen review


My favourite book is a Dr. Seus book that I got when I was four years old. It was called “bedtime story” but it was always my favourite. Like all Dr. Seus books, the book was one big poem filled with stange and wonderful creatures. This particular book was about one bug who yawned. This yawn was then passed throughout the world as everyone fell asleep. It told the tale of how all of the different creatures fell asleep.
          When I was younger I always requested this as my bedtime story, so much to the point that my parents could not stand it anymore. I especially liked it if I couldn`t go to sleep. It was as if the yawn that was spread though Dr. Seus` land reached me in my bed.
          Even before I could read I would spend hours looking at this book. The pictures were so funny and colourful. I used to laugh at some of the funny beds that those strange creatures fell asleep in.
          I love all of Dr. Seus` books but this one is by far the best. Sadly I am still yet to find another person who has read this book. They don’t know what they have been missing out on!! 

Books to grow up with


 If I was going to a desert island and was allowed to bring only one book with me, I would bring my illustrated copy of ‘Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland’, by Lewis Carroll.
 I chose this book for a number of reasons, because of its’ sentimental values to me, because of the incredible, exciting story and because of the stunning illustrations, to name a few reasons. I have enjoyed this book for so long, I feel I am obligated to bring this book along with me, as a way of saying thank you to the book.
 My God mother and Aunt, Jane, gave this book to me when I was age four. Sadly, the book was too complicated for me at that age, and I left the book gather dust on my shelf for another year. It was then, however, that my ballet class decided to turn Alice in Wonderland into a dance. After I was cast as the Queen of Hearts, I diligently began the first chapter of my Auntie’s present to me.
 I found the book very hard to read, and ended up getting my mum to read it to me and explain all of the harder words and phrases. But I didn’t care, the book instantly became my favourite. I would watch the film over and over again for days, I wanted to name my little sister Alice after the loveable main character and I could almost recite the book word for word.
Another great thing about this book is that it has grown up with me. When I first read it, Alice in wonderland was a funny story about a girl in a magical world, but as I grew older, it was a mysterious book about a delusional little girl. The reader is left to decide weather of not the story was true, and each time I read it, I change my mind. This is why I would bring this book with me on a desert island, because the story is different depending on the reader, even on my mood!

How to choose a favourite book


Today my English teacher asked the question: ‘If there was one book you could take with you on a desert island which would it be?’
Now for some, this is a very easy question to answer, but I found I had a very hard time making a decision. I mean, just one book? How can I choose just one?! I would have to bring at least five, and even then I wouldn’t be able to decide which to take. Do I take a book I’ve read before? If I do that, how do I know that I won’t get bored reading it again? Or I could take a book I’ve never read, but this could be dodgy. How do I know I will enjoy it? I could end up burying it in the sand, never to be seen again, and then where would I be? Alone on a desert island with nothing to do. However, after much thought I have finally come to a decision. I would, without a doubt, have to take ‘The Perks of Being a Wallflower’ by Stephen Chbosky.
The first time I encountered this book was while browsing my local bookshop. Now, while this shop isn’t even half the size of an Eason or Hughes and Hughes, and doesn’t have nearly a quarter of the selection that’s in either of these, I find the books I have enjoyed the most have always come from this little shop.  This time was no different. I was drawn to the book. The cover was very eye catching. The black writing on top of the cream page filled with orange writing really stood out. Upon sighting it I immediately walked towards it, desperate to see if the story behind the cover would be nearly as fantastic as the cover. To be honest, when I read the blurb, I wasn’t so sure.

On a desert island with The Hunger Games


I like to think that I was one of the leaders  of the “The Hunger Games” book revolution, a bold statement, I know.  I first heard of the Hunger Games  in late 2010, at this time I didn’t realise the genius  I’d stumbled upon. In my first year of secondary school at the time, I was on a bus to a hockey match. I had happened to be sitting beside a shy girl I knew nothing about. I made efforts to make conversation, but she was deeply absorbed in a book and gave only one word answers. Rude, or so I thought.
              A few weeks later,  I was on our family’s tradition of a day out in town,  Christmas shopping . Every year my parents leave my brother and I in my favourite bookshop “ Hodghes Figgis” and it was here I saw the book that had caused the shy girl to ignore me. So I bought it. I was sure that a book couldn’t have been so good as to ignore me.
            So on Christmas Day I turned the first page of “The Hunger Games”. And ,of course, I agreed that I had been worth ignoring. To this day “The Hunger Games” would be the one book I would bring on a desert island.

In Love with Keats


Any time I’m asked a question involving one book, I instantly feel that cloying indecisiveness that is my love for a seemingly endless list of books. So being asked to write a blog post about the one book I would bring to a desert island is torment! After much deliberation between The Golden Treasury left to me recently by my grandmother, and a tatty volume of Keats, I’ve decided to go with Keats, as I’ve fallen totally in love with its decrepit charm.
The book came to me last year. Imagine the bustling streets of the town of Gorey, in Wexford, where I sometimes go to shop with my family. There’s a small café there, called “The Book Café”, if I’m remembering that right, with the kind of atmosphere that makes me want to play chess (though I’m awful) and drink hot chocolate. Go through to the back of the café and you’ll find shelves and shelves of second hand books. In short, a reader’s heaven! It was here that I found a bookcase devoted to poetry, and hiding unassumingly between some larger, sterner looking volumes was my Keats volume, and I say ‘my’ with great pride and satisfaction.
By then, the book had seen its fair share of wear and tear, the pages are browned and the denim-y cover is a little stringy along the spine, but, to me, that’s all part of the charm. It cost five euro, which I’m mentioning because it adds to my happiness around having snatched it up. I must now have read “Ode To A Nightingale” a thousand times, so I’ll close by quoting my favourite lines:
“O, for a beaker full of the warm South,
Full of the true, the blushful Hippocrene,
With beaded bubbles winking at the brim,
And purple-stained mouth.
That I might drink and leave the world unseen,
And with thee fade away into the forest dim.”