Hey guys, it's Gabby and I'm back with my reading journal. Last week I had to compare my choice reading book with Night. I went in depth and talked about the difference between Night and my choice reading book. PUBLIC SERVICE ANNOUNCEMENT I figured out the name of my choice reading book. It is The Dark Hills Divide, I can't believe I forgot the name of the book lol. Well today I will be talking about my choice reading book, and to be honest it's not the most interesting book that I have read. I think this book is not interesting at all. I don't like the genre of the book because it bores me. I've never enjoyed reading books about fantasy because it's not real. It makes me think about Harry Potter and I don’t like those. Everytime I try to read the book, I can't focus. I mean when I was younger I like those type of books, but as you get older your mind doesn’t put much effort into reading books about fantasy. Even thought I didn't want to read about it, I did learn some things about the author. I learned that he is a mysterious writer and likes to add suspense to what happens with the characters. The books starts out with Alexa going on a walk through the streets of Bridewell with her adventurer friend Thomas Warvold. During the stroll, Warvold tells Alexa a fable that he heard on one of his far-off journeys. When the fable is finished, Alexa finds that Warvold is dead. The next chapter turns to an event that happened before Warvold's death. Alexa and her father, James Daley, are on the road to Bridewell from their hometown of Lathbury. During the ride, Alexa insists that the story of the walls that surround Bridewell and the cities around it be told to her. The story is of an orphan named Thomas Warvold who wandered off from his hometown on his thirteenth birthday. For years, no one knew or cared where he'd gone. After twenty years, he eventually persuaded others to join him in a place most everyone believed was haunted, dark and dangerous. But, after some time, more and more people became convinced that the place was safe to live in. The valley where Warvold settled, which is now called Lunenburg, filled up to capacity and provided no room for growth. One end of the valley was the already established town of Ainsworth. Because of the problem, Warvold decided to expand. He would build a walled road out into the unknown, and at the end of it, he would build a new town. Only, who would build the wall? People of Lunenburg were afraid of the dangers outside. So Warvold decided to borrow convicts from Ainsworth, branded with a C for criminal, to do the hard labor. There was but one condition: After ten years, Warvold could return the convicts to Ainsworth, no questions asked. In three years, the convicts built the wall to what is now Bridewell and two more walled roads were started. Over the next several years the walled roads to Turlock and Lathbury were finished, completing the kingdom. In the middle of the story, Alexa and her father have a race with a mailman named Silas Hardy whom they meet on the road. That part of the book caught my eyes because I didn’t really know what was going on when I first read the book.
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Gabby WadeThe first book that I will be writing about over these several books is Eleanor and Park. Archives
May 2017
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