Kristen Kittscher: I just finished Elise Broach’s SHAKESPEARE'S SECRET and am now beating myself up I hadn’t read it earlier. I think, from the title, I feared it would a little dry. It was anything but, and now I’ve missed out on seven years of recommending this book! Broach makes storytelling look effortless in this untraditional middle grade mystery about a girl who investigates the connection between a diamond allegedly hidden in her new house and Edward de Vere, a man some believe wrote Shakespeare’s plays. The mystery is straightforward and simple, yet the emotions Broach taps into are multi-layered. I was also especially impressed with how Broach weaves in scholarly details with a light touch. If I were still teaching middle school English, I would have added this to my reading list in a heartbeat. I can’t wait to read Masterpiece -- I already felt this was one.
Diana Renn: Intrigued by some buzz I'd heard about this book, I just bought TRAFFICKED, by Kim Purcell. The first page grabbed me right away and now I can't put it down. Its premise involves one of the most horrifying types of crime I can imagine: human trafficking. Hannah, a teen from Moldova, has suffered the loss of her parents (they were killed) and her uncle (vanished -- a mystery she hopes to solve). So she seizes the opportunity to nanny for a family in Los Angeles. A nightmare unfolds when she finds herself stranded in the U.S. with false documents and no wages, a domestic slave working 16-hour-days. She is not permitted to leave the house. This is a work of fiction based on real situations. The author is donating 20% of the book's proceeds to organizations that help human trafficking victims in the U.S. and around the world.

I haven't been reading much lately -- still recovering from a nasty eye inflammation that limits my eye usage :( -- but Trafficked looks good! I am adding that to my VERY LONG list of to-read-when-I-am-better!
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