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From the pits of an ancient darkness, a new power is rising. ...
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The Hunter's Moon (The Secret Warrior #1)
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Seventeen-year-old Morgan Daniel has been in the witness protection program most of her life. But...
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No No Square
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No No Square was written to assist parents and guardians in the tough topic of educating young...
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The Burning Girl
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A bracing, hypnotic coming-of-age story about the bond of best friends, from the New York Times...
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Clock City (Realm of Elestra #2)
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Since Mom died and left me with my abusive, drunkard of a father I don’t have much of a life. My...
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Where the Gulls Fall Silent
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A small fishing village, a shunned healer, her daughter, tradition, superstition and a world set to...
Trigger Warnings: Adult themes mentioned sexual assault Historical Fiction

Ali A (82 KP) rated The Bletchley Riddle in Books
Oct 14, 2024
While the Novis siblings work hard on their tasks, messages and codes begin to arrive under their doorstep. It doesn’t help that while they try to figure out if the messages are truly for them (and possibly from their mother), that there is an inspector lurking outside the gates of the park, watching Jakob and Lizzie’s every move. They must figure out a way to put their bickering aside and work together to decipher the clues if they want to uncover the answers to the puzzle.
As usual, I will pick up anything Ruta Sepetys touches and learn about a part of history I hadn’t known about before I read the book. This book is no exception as we take a deeper dive into the codebreakers Bletchley Park during WWII. I knew there were codebreakers during WWII, but what I didn’t realize is that they consisted of mathematicians, chess champions, and librarians (which, as a librarian, this absolutely makes sense why they were needed!).
Though this book is aimed at middle grade, I will say it felt like it would be more for upper middle grade / younger high school age. Lizzie is fourteen and Jakob is nineteen so their voices were a little older, but nothing major or graphic happened that would make the novel need to be young adult.
Even as an adult, when it came to the description of the codes’ breakthroughs or the ins and outs of the Enigma machines, I would get lost, but overall I just assumed the characters knew what they were talking about and trusted them.
Overall, I loved the twists and turns that kept the pages moving for me. I know I had a hard time as an adult solving the clues, so young readers who like spies and code cracking, are sure to love this too.
*Thank you Viking Books for Young Readers and BookishFirst for an advance copy of this book in exchange for an honest review

Caitlin Ann Cherniak (85 KP) rated Like Vanessa in Books
Nov 28, 2018
Normally, I would say everything.
This book, nothing went wrong. In fact, Tami Charles did everything right.
You get an interesting main character. You have her going through real problems. You have this story take a look at a real problem with young black girls when it comes to what level of black skin is beautiful. You have major plot twists at every turn (And I don't take that sentence lightly.) And I actually don't hate the parental character this time (Because seriously, a lot of them try to make these characters awful for no reason at all). And you have the main character drop their walls to tell their vulnerable story to the audience.
In short, I love this book. One of the best middle grade and young adult novels I have ever read.