THE CHOCOLATE WAR Quote #6
/From chapter 16:
“Worse than that, however, he had allowed Brother Leon to blackmail him. If teachers did this kind of thing, what kind of world could it be?”
- Robert Cormier The Chocolate War
From chapter 16:
“Worse than that, however, he had allowed Brother Leon to blackmail him. If teachers did this kind of thing, what kind of world could it be?”
- Robert Cormier The Chocolate War
From chapter 15: “The world was made up of two kinds of people -- those who were victims and those who victimized.”
- Robert Cormier The Chocolate War
From chapter 10: “There was nothing more beautiful in the world than the sight of a teacher getting upset.”
- Robert Cormier The Chocolate War
From chapter 3:
“Why? someone had scrawled in a blank space no advertiser had rented. Why not? Someone else had slashed in answer.”
- Robert Cormier The Chocolate War
Capturing the delicate balance between depravity and sweetness in adolescence: “The one devastating sorrow he carried within him was the fear that he would die before holding a girl’s breast in his hand.”
- Robert Cormier The Chocolate War
From Chapter VII: "By now, Ralph had no self-consciousness in public thinking but would treat the day's decisions as though he were playing chess. The only trouble was that he would never be a very good chess player."
William Golding Lord of the Flies
Learned a new word the other day: Brachiate: verb. (of certain apes) move by using the arms to swing from branch to branch
I learned this word from a friend who studied anthropology in undergrad ... wish I had known of it while writing Peter Nimble!
From Chapter One: "The coach looked like an old gangster: broken nose, a scar on his cheek like a stitched shoestring. He needed a shave, his stubble like slivers of ice."
- Robert Cormier The Chocolate Wars
While going over Peter Nimble proofs with my editor, I came across the term "interrobang," which is the name for a combined question mark and exclamation point ("?!"). In the 1960s, some typeface smartypants even tried making it into a single character:
The protagonist on his fighting parents: "I shut my door and push a chair against it, then duck for cover under my blanket. Still, it feels like every shot they take at each other passes through me first."
- Lisa Yee Stanford Wong Flunks Big Time
From Chapter One: "Allow me to warn you now that, under any other circumstances, stealing a girl is about the worst way of winning her heart you could possibly cook up. ... But because this happened long ago, in a faraway land, it seems to have worked."
- Adam Gidwitz A Tale Dark and Grimm
"Who has more pockets than a magician?A boy. Whose pockets contain more than a magicians? A boy's."
- Ray Bradbury Something Wicked This Way Comes, ch. 49
Perhaps the second greatest book dedication of all time: "For my parents. Obviously."
Adam Gidwitz, A Tale Dark and Grimm
"Neverland had always begun to look a little dark and threatening by bedtime. Then unexplored patches arose in it and spread, black shadows moved about in them, the roar of the beasts of prey was quite different now, and above all, you lost the certainty that you would win."
-J.M. Barrie Peter Pan, ch. IV
"Children have the strangest adventures without being troubled by them. For instance, they may remember to mention, a week after the event happened, that when they were in the wood they had met their dead father and had a game with him."
- J.M. Barrie Peter Pan ch. I
A nice bit of description: "Creeping eyes open against the drowsy crust congealed in their corners ..."
- D. M. Cornish Factotum
From Chapter Two: "'Well, hullo, me boy,' Craumpalin declared, making an easy showing but possessing a distinct air of a man interrupted."
- D. M. Cornish Factotum
From Chapter Thirteen: "'What did you think a life of adventure was?' She smiled condescendingly. "It is a life of violence.'"
- D. M. Cornish Lamplighter
I learned a new definition for "Fiasco:" "Rossamund had seen had seen them before. In them he knew women kept their rouges, blushes and balms: the tools of beauty ... even a young lad like himself could not help but be amazed by the simple yet profound transformation. He did not think a little rosying of the cheeks and lips and whitening of the nose could be so flattering."
- D. M. Cornish Foundling, ch. 13
A Schoolboy Before a Test: "I knew that he prayed a great deal, of course for help in the examinations. But subsequent clinical experience has convinced me that God is not particularly interested in examinations, just as he won't be dragged into the Stock Market, or being a backer in show business."
- Robertson Davies The Cunning Man, ch. 13
The Website of Jonathan Auxier
Welcome to the Fabled Stables, a magical building filled with one-of-a-kind creatures. Creatures including the Gargantula, the Yawning Abyss, the Hippopotamouse . . . and Auggie. Auggie is the only human boy at the Stables, and he takes care of all the other animals. The Fabled Stables have a mind of their own, and every so often, the building SHAKES and SHUDDERS, TWITCHES and SPUTTERS—it’s making room for a new arrival! It’s Auggie’s job to venture out and rescue a new creature from mortal danger. But will he be able to complete his mission before it’s too late? With some help from Fen (a literal stick-in-the-mud) and his animal companions, Auggie saves the day and makes a new friend in the process.
A thrilling, silly new series packed full of stunning full color illustrations by Olga Demidova. The Fabled Stables received STARRED reviews from Kirkus and Publisher’s Weekly and was named by Amazon as a Best Book of 2020. Available at your awesome local indie!
It's been five years since the Sweep disappeared. Orphaned and alone, Nan Sparrow had no other choice but to work for a ruthless chimney sweep named Wilkie Crudd. She spends her days sweeping out chimneys. The job is dangerous and thankless, but with her wits and will, Nan has managed to beat the deadly odds time and time again. When Nan gets stuck in a chimney fire, she fears the end has come. Instead, she wakes to find herself unharmed in an abandoned attic. And she is not alone. Huddled in the corner is a mysterious creature—a golem—made from soot and ash.
Sweep is the story of a girl and her monster. Together, these two outcasts carve out a new life—saving each other in the process. Sweep received six starred reviews and was the winner of the Governor General’s Award and the Sydney Taylor Book Award.
A chilling ghost story about two abandoned Irish siblings who travel to work as servants at a creepy, crumbling English manor house. But the house and its family are not quite what they seem. Soon the children are confronted by a mysterious spectre and an ancient curse that threatens their very lives. More than just a spooky tale, it’s also a moral fable about human greed and the power of storytelling.
The Night Gardener is a New York Times bestseller, a Junior Library Guild Selection, Amazon “Best Book” for May 2014, and an ABA “Indie Next” pick. It received five starred reviews and won the ILA Book Award! You can read more reviews here.
The adventure of a small, blind orphan ... who also happens to be the greatest thief who ever lived!
Peter Nimble was an ABA New Voices pick, an Indie Next List Selection, and Bookpage magazine Best Book of the year! It won the Paterson Poetry Prize, The Diamond Willow Award, and an MYRCA Honor. It was shortlisted for: the Monica Hughes Award, the Sequoyah Award, Massachusetts Children’s Book Award, The Blue Hen Literary Award, and the Canadian Children’s Book Award.
Visit PeterNimble.com for games and more info. Read the first chapter for free! Or read some reviews here. Or watch the book trailer!
The long-awaited followup to Peter Nimble! It’s been two years since Peter Nimble and Sir Tode rescued the kingdom of HazelPort. In that time, they have traveled far and wide in search of adventure. Now they have been summoned by Professor Cake for a new mission: To find a twelve-year-old bookmender named Sophie Quire. Sophie knows little beyond the four walls of her father’s bookshop, where she repairs old books and dreams of escaping the confines of her dull life. But when a strange boy and his talking cat/horse companion show up with a rare and mysterious book, she finds herself pulled into an adventure beyond anything she has ever read.
You can learn more and read some starred reviews here … or check out the first few chapters for free!
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