Summer Reading Books Review
By Caitlin Scarpa
Almost everyone can agree that most schools have a tendency to choose terribly boring books for their students to read over the summer. However, this year the choices of books were surprisingly interesting, and I enjoyed reading them. The books I chose to read this summer were The Girl on the Train, Neverwhere, and The Nightingale.
The Girl on the Train was about three different women telling the same story through their own point of views. The three main characters were Rachel, Megan, and Anna. Rachel was an alcoholic who was struggling with her divorce with her husband Tom who cheated on her with Anna. Every day she would pass Megan’s house while she was on a train to London; she would fantasize Megan's life with her husband Scott to be a perfect life, when in reality their life was far from it. This book showed the struggle of these three women and how they affected each others lives. It keeps the reader excited and in suspense throughout the entire story, especially when Megan mysteriously goes missing, and Rachel is too drunk to remember that night. I thoroughly enjoyed this book and would recommend it to anyone who is looking for a good murder mystery.
Neverwhere is about an average man named Richard Mayhew, who one day finds himself in a world of magic and mystery that was right under his feet the whole time. After Richard decides to help a bleeding girl, named Door, one night, he woke up to be invisible to the world around him. He makes his way into the Underground sewer system where he reunites with Door, and meets a group of wonderfully odd people. Door is seeking answers to who killed her family, and Richard wants nothing more than to go home. They embark on an adventure which takes them to magical and dangerous places. The concept of this book was fascinating, but the execution could have been better. The book would have been much better if it was written in a different format. The book was based on a TV show, which explains why it was structured like it was. If the story was told in first person by Richard, it would have made the book a lot better, in my opinion. The book was still very interesting even of the format of it annoyed me.
The last book I read this summer was The Nightingale. It was about occupied France during WWII. The two main characters were Vianne and Isabelle, who both dealt with the war in a different way. Isabelle was determined to make a difference and to help France in any way she could. She was told countless times that she couldn’t do anything because she was a woman. Even the Nazis didn't expect a woman to be one of the most wanted people in all of France. Isabelle became known as the Nightingale; she would bring English and American airmen over the Pyrenees mountains to Spain so they could continue fighting. She saved over 100 men by making these treacherous journeys over the mountains and risking her own life as well as her family’s lives. Vianne was a hero in her own way, she stayed home and took care of her family, making sure her daughter Sophie ate and was safe from the Nazis. She saved her best friend Rachel’s son, Ari, by pretending he was her own son. She was also able to help save about 19 other jewish children by hiding them in an orphanage until the war was over. She was brave and strong and would do anything to make sure her family was safe. Out of all of the books I have read this summer, this one was by far my favorite. The book was extremely emotional, and heartwarming. It showed the effect of woman on the war, and how women can make a difference even when everyone says they can't. I would strongly recommend this book to anyone who has a sense of adventure and who enjoys reading about a hero's journey.
I'm so glad you enjoyed the books! ~ Mrs. Kopp
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