Showing posts with label larbalestier. Show all posts
Showing posts with label larbalestier. Show all posts

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Update on LIAR!

The cover of LIAR has been changed! Look!


I am so happy about this, if you read my last post you will see why/what I am talking about. You can buy the book here.

Kudos to Bloomsbury for making this change!

You can read about the changes and Justine's thoughts here.

PS I know this post is really late, but I was out of the country when this happened and have been too busy ever since!

Sunday, July 5, 2009

LIAR by Justine Larbalestier


Since this is an arc and the final published work does not come out until October, I will just tease you with a vague review:

Have you ever read a book where you can't trust the main character? Where she tells you part of her story, only to admit 100 pages later that she was lying? This may sound frustrating, but instead I found this book fascinating. It's broken into 3 parts, and by the end of Part One I wasn't convinced that I liked this book. It just didn't grab me. As soon as I got into Part Two - BAM! The plot drastically changed and I was completely surprised, and from then on I could not put it down. LIAR may be one of the most intriguing books I've read.

I highly recommend it and will be purchasing it for my high school library when it comes out in October! [I also think it would be a fabulous read for a discussion group - I plan to start some sort of book/movie/discussion club/group at my high school this year.]
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Sidenote: When I read this book, I was bothered by the cover because I felt the main character was misrepresented. Not only is the main character African American, she is not pretty and can pass for a boy! Not so with the girl on the cover! It's bad enough to misrepresent the character in other ways, but changing the race on the cover of the book just seems wrong.

What do you think? Does it matter if the cover doesn't match the story? Does it bother you that the race of the character is misrepresented?

For more on this [interesting? disturbing? controversial?] topic, read this article from School Library Journal:
http://www.schoollibraryjournal.com/article/CA6647713.html