
A Shifting of Stars (Of Stars Book One)
Book
A squandering emperor. A handsome stranger. A reluctant heroine. And the ancient magic that will...
series YA Young Adult fantasy fiction A Shifting of Stars

Invisible (Aerling, #1)
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Olivia's best friend is not imaginary. He’s not a ghost, either. And she's pretty sure he's not a...
paranormal fantasy young adult

Saving Wishes (Wishes, #1)
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For Charli Blake, being seventeen is a tough gig. She's been branded a troublemaker, her...
contemporary young adult ya romance

A Girl From Forever (The Forever Institute #1)
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THEY’RE LYING TO YOU. The secretive Forever Institute towers over London. Some say it’s a...
Dystopian Young Adult Science Fiction Romance Thriller

Charlotte (184 KP) rated Dagger Hill in Books
Sep 10, 2021
The potential to be made into a film is definitely lurking there.
The four main characters, teenagers on the threshold of their senior year, are interesting and quirky. Each has a different personality that gels well with the others but doesn't then blend into one boring entity.
Set in 1989, a time before the internet and mobile phones (as we know them now and the actual ability to carry one) Dagger Hill has a small town charm. A charm that contrasts against the awful things that happen there.
This is at least a young adult read with themes of horror and violence. It could easily sit on a shelf with books written by such greats as King and Laymon. It's the kind of book that crawls into your thoughts when you least expect it and creates vivid scenes in your mind.
@Merissa

David McK (3547 KP) rated Ready Player One in Books
Sep 19, 2021
Have also seen the movie mentioned below. It was just OK; not great.
<original 2016 review>
Prior to reading this, I'd heard good things about it, and was aware that - like seemingly nearly all of the current Young Adult Dystopian novels - there was a movie for it in the pipeline, by none other than Spielberg himself.
Set in the near-future, I found this to be like a cross between the Bruce Willis movie Surrogates (in that nearly everybody seems to live their life vicariously through other means), The Matrix (cyber reality) and maybe even a bit of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (the MacGuffin that gets the plot rolling). it probably helps that - unlike the characters - I actually *was* a kid in the 80s, and so get plenty of the various pop-culture references made.
Plenty, but not all - this, remember, is set in America, so leans more towards the American or Japanese spectrum of popular culture than European.

Intrusion (Reflections #4)
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Jess awoke to a world she doesn’t really understand, hounded by impulses that are quite literally...
Young Adult Paranormal Romance Short Story

Sticks and Stones (The Wish Makers #1)
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Everyone has a dark side. Mandy’s just moved in with her. The last time Mandy Matteo broke a...
Young Adult Coming of Age Fantasy

Break My Bones (The Wish Makers #2)
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Everyone makes mistakes. Crissy’s just might kill her. Crissy is sure her boyfriend Brad is the...
Young Adult Fantasy

Lost (Reflections, #10)
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I felt like I'd lost everything. My home, my girlfriend, my friends, they were all washed away by a...
Young Adult Paranormal Romance