Learning in Morocco: Language Politics and the Abandoned Educational Dream
Book
Learning in Morocco offers a rare look inside public education in the Middle East. While...
The Hanging Girl: Department Q 6
Eileen Cook, Jussi Adler-Olsen and William Frost
Book
In the middle of a hard-won morning nap in the basement of police headquarters, Carl Morck, head of...
The Headmaster's Wife
Book
Arthur Winthrop is a middle-aged headmaster at an elite prep school in Vermont. When he is arrested...
Midland
Book
An industrial accident in a wire factory and the chance discovery of a birth certificate. Church...
Fruits Basket: Collectors Edition Volume 4
Book
Tohru Honda's cheerful optimism acts as a balm to many in the Sohma family, who are no strangers to...
Spine Chillers: Krampus
Book
Christmas is a time for peace and good dreams, but for Nick it would soon become a nightmare. When...
scary stories scary Spine Chillers Krampus the Krampus Nancy Gray
LoganCrews (2861 KP) rated Superbad (2007) in Movies
Sep 20, 2020
The Distant Dead
Book
A body burns in the high desert hills. A boy walks into a fire station, pale with the shock of a...
Christine A. (965 KP) rated The Game in Books
Aug 4, 2020
The game is known by many names - Assassin, Tag, Human vs. Zombies. The ways to "kill" vary greatly - water gun, dart gun, steal a spoon, steal a rag, etc. The one constant is the concept of the game - people join a game in which someone is ordered to "kill" either a specific target or a different team. The winner is the one left standing.
The Game by Linsey Miller is a YA version of a 1982 movie, Tag: The Assininasion Game. In both, the game becomes deadly, when one of the players decides to "kill" the players in real life.
Miller moves the age group to High School seniors playing the yearly game before graduation. Lia has been following in her brother's shadow and knows Assassin is her opportunity to outshine her brother's record in the game. She has been planning this for years by following and gathering information about her classmates' schedules, hobbies, paths to school, etc. She makes the perfect fall guy for a killer who uses Lia's detailed notes to track down their targets.
Readers in middle school would enjoy the story. While enjoyable, the story felt short and would need "more" to attract older YA readers.
This 200-word review was published on Philomathinphila.com on 8/3/20.
Ironfoot: The Enchanter General
Book
Medieval magic, murder, and mayhem! It is 1164, and for a hundred years England has been ruled by...
Fantasy