Showing posts with label wolves. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wolves. Show all posts

1/6/12

Wolf Storm by Dee Garretson - Ages 9+


What's the Story?





This is Stefan’s big break. He’s on location in the mountains far from home for his first movie role, filming a blockbuster sci-fi adventure. The props, the spaceships, and the trained wolves on set should add up to a dream job, but acting turns out to be much tougher than he ever imagined, and he feels like his inner loser is all that’s showing through. From the way his famously stuck-up co-star, Raine, treats him, he’s pretty sure she thinks so too. And worst of all, no one will believe his claim that there are wild wolves haunting the forest around the set.

When a blizzard strikes, isolating the young co-stars and bringing hungry feral wolves into the open, Stefan must take on his biggest role yet—working together with his co-stars to survive. With no second takes, they only have one chance to get it right.

Lights,
Camera,
Action!

What's the Buzz?

"This is a great story, because the kids get to be the heroes. They have to figure out how to solve their problem and have to overcome all the obstacles thrown their way." - 5 Minutes for Books

"Wolf Storm had me on the edge of my seat and holding my breath until I got to the end of the chapter. Where there I'm taken back to the top of the roller coaster. What a ride!" - Spades High Reads

"Wolf Storm is a great middle reader story with themes that include survival and nature." - Stuck in Books

"I loved the survival scenes. I felt the biting cold, the desperation, the helplessness, and danger." - YA Book Nerd

"You will (literally) cheer these characters through the storm." - Barbara Ann Watson

"I see this book being a big hit with the boys." - Coffee for the Brain

More Reviews @ ... GoodReads

Is That It?
Official Author's Site - Dee Garretson

You can read a few pages of Wolf Storm at the Author's site or read a longer excerpt at the publishers website

At Middle-Grade-Mayhem, Garretson talks about how she created Stefan's character

11/9/11

Into the Woods by Lyn Gardner - Ages 10+


Into The Woods
Book 1
What's the Story?
Storm, Aurora, and Anything Eden live in a decaying mansion on the edge of the wilds with their erstwhile father and indolent mother. When an accident leaves them orphaned and at the mercy of the sinister Dr. DeWilde, these three courageous and eccentric sisters are forced to flee into the woods, where they encounter kidnappers, sweets-filled orphanages, mountains of ice, diamond mines, and some ravenously hungry wolves.

Taking inspiration from numerous fairy tales and weaving them into a wholly original story, Into the Woods is a whirlwind of a novel, full of imaginative happenings and dastardly deeds.

What's the Buzz?
"...  although the book has three female characters as leads, it is a very boy-friendly book, from the adventure aspect of it all, along with the creepiness that sometimes rears its head. And there is fighting and explosions." - My Favourite Books
"It was so much fun to put all the pieces together and guess the fairytale being depicted. Especially to guess which character is from which tale. To fully appreciate the nuances of the plot I think you need a good knowledge of traditional fairy-tales." - Book Angel Booktopia
"Into the Woods could be classified as a fantasy family fiction and might be a good book for the animated film industry to consider." - Curled Up Kids
"...with Into the Woods, the magic just really didn’t seem to be there. The novel was too busy, trying too hard, too derivative, and, apparently for me, lacking that je ne sais quoi. That is, apparently, French for “an ending that isn’t so cheesy it makes me want to hurl.” - Too Cool For School Books
"This book, if it is about one thing in particular, is about the way in which an appetite, whether for sweets, stories, love or home, can send one off on adventures that lead, quite often, back to the place where the characters (and the reader) first started. There's a hint too, that this book may have a sequel - the words "The End" are followed by a question mark, and I'd be interested to see if Gardner could sustain the same intertextual mix for a sequel." - Scholar's Blog