Monday, May 26, 2014

Siren- Letter to Author

Dear Tricia Rayburn,

I really love your book siren! It's suspenseful and unpredictable. I was just looking online and I saw that you wrote two other books for this series which makes me so excited! I can't wait to read them after I'm finished with Siren. I loved how you made the disappearances personal to the characters and not just people who were washing up on shore smiling. I also think it's really cool that you wrote about Siren's because I feel so many authors now write about things like Vampires, Wear wolves, and other well known creatures. Where as, reading your book was the first time I ever heard of Sirens. I would definitely recommend your books to anyone looking for a good read. 

Siren-Best thing

Siren is such a great book. After Vanessa's sister goes missing, Simon and her begin research because they believe her death off of a cliff was no accident. It starts with all of the men washing up on shore dead; however, that isn't what is making them research so much. The thing making their hair stick up on the back of their necks is the fact that each one is smiling from ear to ear. Simon and Vanessa are becoming suspicious of some of the girls they hang out with. 

After doing lots and lots of research, they figure out that there are creatures in the ocean called sirens. They have silver eyes and are women who sing to men and lead them to their death into the water. That's why I love this book. Not because there are weird creatures that kill people, that would be creepy if that was the reason. I like it because it's unlike so many popular, typical books and most people don't know about the supposed creatures Sirens. 

Monday, May 5, 2014

Siren-Fear of Everything

    
I just started a new book called Siren; the author of Siren is Tricia Rayburn. I chose this book because I saw it on my sister’s bookshelf and the cover had me intrigued. Vanessa (the main character), has an irrational fear of just about anything you could imagine. As a seventeen year old girl she is still afraid of the dark and every night her sister helps her fall asleep with small talk and questions. A few things Justine might say are, "Did you see that cute dress Erin Klein wore today?", or "It's so bright in here," "I can see everything-my backpack, my blue glitter bracelet, our goldfish in his bowl. What can you see, Vanessa?”

So far in this book, Vanessa and Justine Sands go on their traditional summer vacation to Winter Harbor, Maine. This ends up as time spent with the Carmichael boys. Two years before this summer, Justine found a cliff called Chione Cliffs. Ever since Justine found them, the Carmichael boys (Simon and Caleb), and the Sands girls (Justine and Vanessa) go to the cliffs to hang out and dive during their summers together. However, Vanessa's fear of Oceans has not been helpful when it envying her older sister Justine, she opts out of cliff diving and stays at the top of the cliff, wishing she could be fearless.

There was one paragraph that particularly made me understand Vanessa's jealousy for her sister. "'Backflips!'" Justine exclaimed. 'No,' Simon said. 'No way.' I couldn't help but smile. This was exactly what I loved-and envied-most about Justine. While I still slept with a nightlight, couldn't read Stephen King, and was physically incapable of making a perfectly safe cliff dive, Justine lived for the same blood-pumping rush I tried my hardest to avoid. Here we were, minutes away from being drenched and fried, and she wanted to guarantee her shot at electrocution by jumping into a whirlpool-backward."(Rayburn 8). I feel as though throughout the book, Vanessa will become more fearless, she obviously wants to be. Now all she has to do is convince herself she can do anything Justine can-without fear.