I am a Bruchac fan! Whisper in the Dark is full of legend and mystery. Readers won't be sure whether Maddy, the protagonist--(oh yeah, she's an orphan), is dealing with a bad guy or with a legendary Native American Ghost! This book is pretty creepy--so if you like to be scare, read this one! Here's what the card catalog says: "An ancient and terrifying Narragansett native-American legend begins to come true for a teenage long-distance runner, whose recovery from the accident that killed her parents has stunned everyone, including her guardian aunt in Providence, Rhode Island."
The 2001 winner of the Delacorte Press Prize for a First Young Adult Novel tells the story of a girl who while preparing for her 15th year celebration--her "quince"--probes into her Cuban roots and unwittingly unleashes a hotbed of conflicted feelings about Cuba within her family.
Cinder by Marissa Meyer Cinder is part robot and doesn't know why. The people of New Beijing are not in favor of having cyborgs around, so Cinder hides this part of herself as much as she can. Many suspect cyborgs are the cause of the plague which is killing lots of people. As the title suggests, Cinder has an evil stepmother and two stepsisters (one awful, one sweet). Cinder is a very good mechanic--possibly because she is part machine herself. Enter the prince, who has a mystery problem with his nanny robot. He seeks Cinder because she is the best. Meanwhile, Cinder's sweet stepsister gets sick and the Prince gets engaged to the horrible Queen of the Moon, whose people seem to be just waiting to attack. Cinder soon realizes that her past, shrouded in mystery, is related to the mysterious lunar people and she may be the only person who can save the earth. I read all the books in this science fiction inter...
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