The kid table is a easy read. It was enjoyable. Different emotions fly throughout the book and leave you wanting to read on. The book has a good ending that doesn''t leave me with any questions. I could understand all of the characters' ...read more
Jeremy Austin and the Paladin is the sequel to Rod C. Spence’s first book in the series, Jeremy Austin and the War World. Despite picking up directly where the first book left off, this story quickly catches the reader up while moving the story ...read more
I really liked this book. It is very suspenseful. At the end of each sentence, there is so much suspense that is being built up, it urges you to continue on reading.
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Ingrid Bell and her five teenage cousins are such a close-knit group that they don't really mind sitting at the kid table―even if they have to share it with a four-year-old. But then Brianne, the oldest cousin, lands a seat at the adult table and ...read more
Eleven-year-old Casey Grimes is stubbornly friendly, but he’s eternally the new kid at Vintage Woods Middle School. Students look right through him—and they’re not faking. Casey doesn’t know why he’s mostly-invisible, ...read more
Risking Exposure is a story of hope and courage in the face of danger. The book shows the inner stamina needed to go against the flow and think for oneself in a society where citizens are told how to think. Realistic dialogue between characters makes ...read more