
Spirit Traveler: Unlocking Ancient Mysteries and Secrets of Eight of the World's Great Historic Sites
Sonja Grace and Kieran O'Mahony
Book
Spirit Traveler: Unlocking Ancient Mysteries and Secrets of the World's Great Historic Sites takes a...

Corto Maltese: Celtic Tales
Book
In this third volume in the definitive English language edition of Hugo Pratt's masterpiece, the...

DK Eyewitness Travel Guide England's South Coast
Book
Taking you from Kent to Cornwall, this is the only travel guide dedicated to England's South Coast....

FALLEN RACE: The Celestial Clock
Book
When heiress Kaira Munroe and world-renowned Oceanographer Jonathan Bell are summoned to a remote...
mystery thriller

The 50 Greatest Prehistoric Sites of the World
Book
Humanity's written history stretches back only 5,000 years, a mere blip on the timeline of our...

The Queen's Handbag
Book
With a Jon Klassen appeal, Steve Antony is the one to watch. A naughty swan steals the Queen's...

Sophia (Bookwyrming Thoughts) (530 KP) rated Dare to Dream in Books
Jan 23, 2020
But of course, the very last reviewer might be exaggerating a little. She may also be hitting the truth button at the exact same time she decided to press the "write a review in the third person" button.
In this ever so "blandly blunt dissection" of a mini-review, <i>Dare to Dream</i> is essentially divided into two parts: the first part is before the apocalypse, and the second part is the aftermath. It is really just a book that has a main character with a broken family, cries often (well, she is fourteen), and finding her place in the world all while receiving dreams of the end of the world in the same way nightly and finding out it's in connection to the demise of Stonehenge. Oh, and it is also a day by day play of events that feels more proper in a sleeptastic documentary.
Basically, it's just tales of family drama from a fourteen-year-old British schoolgirl. The whole apocalypse thing? It might as well be a subplot until you get to the second part, where the primary purpose is surviving it day by day. But the point is, middle school Sophia might like this better than high school senior Sophia, who actually likes the whole Stonehenge aspect.
<a href="https://bookwyrmingthoughts.com/chibi-views-dare-to-dream-by-carys-jones-and-red-queen-by-victoria-aveyard/" target="_blank">This review was originally posted on Bookwyrming Thoughts</a>

The A303: Highway to the Sun
Book
'A nostalgic experience, informative, humorous, charming, but pervaded by the bitter-sweet scent of...

50 Finds from Wiltshire: Objects from the Portable Antiquities Scheme
Book
Wiltshire is famed for its internationally significant prehistoric monuments, including Stonehenge...

7 Wonders 2 HD (Full)
Games
App
7 Wonders 2 transports you back in time to far away lands to complete an unbelievable mission: Build...