2233
Skip to main content
Lynbrook Public Library, NY
ReadSquared
|
Reading Programs & Activity Tracker
Register
Login
Home
Badges
Reading
Missions
Reviews
Explore
Kids Color Our World
This program is designed for kids aged 5 to 12 to encourage life-long reading habits. Once you've earned enough points, you'll receive a completion certificate you can print and share!
Teen Color Our World
This program is designed for teens age 13 to 17 to encourage life-long reading habits. Once you've earned enough points, you'll receive a completion certificate you can print and share!
Adult Color Our World
This program is designed for adults to encourage life-long reading habits. Once you've earned enough points, you'll receive a completion certificate you can print and share!
Login
Username:
Password:
Don't have an account?
Register now
Did you forget your password?
Get it by email
Book Reviews
Search All Book Reviews
The Quick and the Dead
by Louis L'Amour
View in Library Catalog
This is the second book I have read this summer by this author and I really enjoyed this one. It is an old time western, with the traditional “tenderfoot” family moving out west, but having no idea what they were up against which, in this case, is lack of law. Enter Con Vallian, a man who seems to live on the range with just his horse and who decides to stay around to help this family. What I liked most was how well developed the characters were, particularly Con. This author has opened up a whole new genre for me.
Excavations
by Kate Myers
View in Library Catalog
A fun academic mystery in a beautiful location. Great cast of characters to spend a little time with in the summer.
Live Fast
by Brigitte Giraud
View in Library Catalog
This was a different and very good book, and I’m not going to do it justice in the description, but here goes. A woman has lost her husband to an accident and now has to sell the house they had bought together but had not yet moved into. Each chapter then becomes a look into her perspective of “If only such and such had not happened”. And even though you know right from the beginning what the ending is, it is still an amazing descriptive journey which was originally written in French.
Wishin' And Hopin'
by Wally Lamb
View in Library Catalog
This was a fun story about a boy’s youth as told by his point of view. It is set in 1964, which for me is a time I can relate to. Unlike many stories about children growing up that focus on hardships, this one is set in a middle-class family and focuses more on fun and experiences than challenges. It’s a good read. My only problem is that based on the way the title was written, I was expecting something less polished, but I was pleasantly surprised
The Cat Who Saved Books
by Sosuke Natsukawa
View in Library Catalog
This translated book from Japanese was very interesting. A boy of high school age who works in his family’s bookstore has just lost his grandfather who he lived with. He shuts himself away in the bookstore until a strange visitor comes into the shop. I liked the different writing this book presented as well as the way it presents a different way of looking a books.
The Book Of Guys
by Garrison Keillor
View in Library Catalog
This book was absolutely hysterical! It’s done as a compilation of short stories, from the man’s point of view, about being a man. For Example, the first story is about the God Dionysus who has lost his immortality and is now 50 years old and who was previously in charge of wine and orgies, but because of his age is now only in charge of wine. If you want something to make you laugh out loud, this is it!
A Leaf On The Wind Of All Hallows: An Outlander Novella
by Diana Gabaldon
View in Library Catalog
This was an engaging story of a RAF war flyer who crashes during a mission, but he winds up in a different year. It is interesting to watch him as he realizes what has happened and then try to figure out what to do. A different type of story.
The Hotel Nantucket
by Elin Hilderbrand
View in Library Catalog
A wonderful book
Train Dreams
by Deanis Johnson
View in Library Catalog
This story follows the life of a man from young adulthood to death. It examines his work, which is for much of his life, a logger. We get to watch how he changes and views the world as he falls in love and has a family, only to lose those he loves, and with them a large part of himself. It’s about continuing on and staying put at the same time. A very enjoyable read.
Later
by Stephen King
View in Library Catalog
A wonderfully told story by a man who can see and talk to dead people as he looks back over the defining moments of his young life. A must read for all horror and King fans.