I love this book and how the new receiver deals with all the memories of the past. also one of my favorite movies!
I love this book and how the new receiver deals with all the memories of the past. also one of my favorite movies!
“The worst part of holding the memories is not the pain. It's the loneliness of it. Memories need to be shared.“
A book about a dystopian world where everyone in society is chosen their roles based on close evaluation until they are twelve. The words are easy to read, and the story is easy to follow along with although it is taken place in a completely different world.
I think this book would be a great book to teach about dystopian societies and their characteristics. You could also have your student's characterize the different characters since everyone is vastly different. There are a lot of themes such as freedom vs control, and I think these are great lessons to be taught in school.
This book is a great read about a dystopian society and ones journey battling being different than everyone else. I liked this book because it describes a world that is vastly different than the one we live in.
I blew through this quartet quickly - just kept reading because I enjoyed the universe that the author created. I love a good dystopia. These stories are related, but can be read as stand-alone books. It had been years since I last read The Giver, and I was pleased to discover the other books. All good.
Wow! What a great read! I can‘t believe I waited so long to read it.
#bookspinbingo - free space
#pop24 - a book set in the future
One of my favorite books in middle school, I decided to read it again 30 years later. I‘m not sure why I loved it so much back then, maybe it was my age and the idea that we‘re not all meant to be the same. The writing is choppy and the descriptions are lacking, but it‘s a good book. Book #47 in 2024
Yikes these are hard #wonderouswednesday @Eggs
1. Susanne Clark, Ariel Lawhon, Alan Bradley, Joanne Fluke
2. Favorite genre - magical realism
So therefore favorite book - tagged
Ok I can't pick one so...
Favorite genre - mystery
Favorite book - thirteenth tale.
Just a really well done, creepy mystery. That's my sweet spot
3. I'll go with Alan Bradley although I feel like I could say Jasper Fforde, Carlos Ruiz Zafon, Joanne Fluke.
Can't believe it is March already! I read 9 books in February, and the tagged book was my favorite read of the month. However, the scientific nonfiction "Outlive" comes in a close 2nd.
#2024Bracket
@CSeydel
I'm taking a long weekend, with Monday off, for self care reasons and planning to finish the tagged book for #Roll100 #76. I've never read it and have been intrigued lately when I saw some FB friends complaining about this being inappropriate for their kids to read in school. I'm 1/3 into it, and it seems fine for school reading to me. What am I missing?
@LitsyLove
@PuddleJumper
I‘m so glad I got to go into this one blind! I was 14 when it was released and never had it as part of my high school curriculum.
Is ignorance bliss? Is a sanitized, safe existence any more than just existing? This book is beautifully written and definitely poses some great questions. I think I will always answer that the choice can‘t be to stay asleep.
Wonderful pick to start off #AuldLangSpine, @jenniferw88 !
August's fiction and nonfiction choices for #12booksof2023 @Andrew65
Thanks #52bookclub2023! I‘ve had this book on my TBR list for years and it would have likely languished there longer if not for the #newberrymedalwinner prompt. Am kicking myself I didn‘t read it sooner!
! @LaraReads @KarenUK @britt_brooke @CarolynM @DebbieGrillo @Smarkies @Lizpixie @LeeRHarry @BookBelle84 @jenniferw88 @Deblovestoread @AshleyHoss820 @Librarybelle @triplem80 @Read4life @rmaclean4 @squirrelbrain @BarbaraBB @ravenlee
“If you were to be lost in the river, Jonas, your memories would not be lost with you. Memories are forever.”
This is a dystopian novel that some have to read in school. I was one who had to read it in seventh grade. I still remember my teacher explaining the difference between utopia and dystopia and how in most book that say they live in a utopia are actually dystopian. This book was one of the first school books that I really enjoyed and I hope to show my future students.
The giver is about a boy named Jonas who lives in a perfect world. Everything is the same for everyone so there is never any conflict. When it is time to get his job he gets “the receiver“. This is a very rare job that only one person gets every lifetime. Once he starts going to the giver to receive his training, Jonas' world changes completely.
I read banned books… and I loved them all! All rereads. I read The Giver every year and this year I added a few other banned books.
#bannedbookweek
#BookSpinBingo #Scarathlon #TeamCreepinItReal
This was another banned book from season 3 of Book Interrupted. I‘d recommend it. It was great for a book club discussion because of all the topics and themes it brought up. It was a short, fast-paced book, but I hated the end. I discovered during the podcast there‘s 4 books in this series but the 4th book “Son” is the ending of this book. So, I‘m going to read that to feel more satisfied. https://open.spotify.com/episode/6gB3LOne2QSwnTGz00DB7B
#readingbracket2023 #fiction
Tough choice between these two, but as I aim to get to Babel some point this year, I'm going with Yellowface.
@chasjjlee
Don‘t judge, but somehow, I‘ve gone my entire life without reading The Giver or The Outsiders. (Possssssibly read Outsiders in school, but if that‘s true, it didn‘t leave a strong impression on my young, not wholly developed mind 😅). Anywho, I‘ll be teaching both of these titles this year, so I‘m marking up my copy of The Giver and listening to The Outsiders. Pretty dang excited about both of them! 🤓👏
Another unexpected 5 ⭐ for a dystopian book! Thanks for sending me this book @TheAromaofBooks ! Stacking the next one (and won't put it off for so long).
#newberrymedalwinner #52bookclub2023 @Cinfhen @squirrelbrain @LeeRHarry @Bluebird @MissHel @AshleyHoss820 @Deblovestoread @RaeLovesToRead @BarbaraBB
#1993 #192025 @Librarybelle
I never read this book growing up, so I figured it was time to play catch up! I didn‘t actually know what this was about going into it, so the dystopian story was very interesting.
My daughter and I chose THE GIVER for our mama+daughter book club this month. The copy on the right is my very first copy from elementary school that I ordered through the Scholastic book club mailers they sent home from school 💕
The book club I‘m in read this book under the theme of re-reading a favorite book from childhood. I wasn‘t quite the right age so I had actually never read this before. I do remember reading Lowry‘s other Newberry award winner “Number the Stars” and really being moved by it at the time. I love that Lowry addresses challenging topics for young readers and I think this would have had an even bigger impact on me had I read it as a young teen.
I cracked open a collected edition of the four books set in this world. I blew through The Giver over three nights, though I could have easily done it in one night. I have lost track of how many times I've read this book, and it never fails to amaze. I think I read Gathering Blue once, but never the other two, so it'll be interesting to compare.
#AdventRecommends @emilyrose_x
Day 1: The Giver
I love recommending this book. It is easily one of my favorite books. I couldn‘t resist using a background with a red sled.
This is so much more intense and sad reading as an adult. I forgot all about what happened when they “released” babies and adults, and it was very graphic for me when the father “released” one of the babies. As a mom, that part gutted me. This book is a must read and a huge eye opener. I‘m so happy I read it again as an adult.
Another classic to start on this cozy and bitter night. I read this back in middle school, but I remember it to be absolutely haunting. Now that I‘m an adult, I look forward to seeing it through different eyes.
November 15 #NovemberNarrative Giving. This book is a must read in our schools. I have read the whole series and like it. It is a classic. @Eggs @Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks
#NovemberNarrative @Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks @Eggs
#Giving
It was between this book and The Giving Tree. Both wonderful!
I had already read this book around 2-3 years ago, and just now when I‘m rereading it, can I see what the true meaning of this sickeningly beautiful dystopia. There was so much hiding behind the words - or memories of the author, it was almost like I could feel the memories of pain and love within this book. All I can say is that this book is breathtaking. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️/5
Gabriel had not cried during the long frightening journey. Now he did. He cried because he was hungry and cold and terribly weak. Jonas cried too, for the same reasons, and another reason as well. He wept because he was afraid now that he could not save Gabriel. He no longer cared about himself.
“The worst part of holding memories is not the pain. It‘s the loneliness of it. Memories need to be shared.”