Tuesday 13 November 2012

Twilight zone



Breaking Dawn Part 2



  Hi everyone

Your friendly Readers Library likes to invites you to the Twilight zone on the 14 of Nov. If you are a fan of the twilight books and know the answers to all of Question of Who, Where, What! Then come and join us and win free tickets for the new movie (Breaking Dawn part 2) of the Twilight saga and get some cool T-shirts for free. You can also being any book of the Twilight saga with you. So tell everyone and being anyone with you to this Twilight zone.


Are you a fan of theLord of the Rings?

Do you want to wins some free movie tickets?

Then you’re in the right place. Your friendly Readers Library likes to invites you for fun evening activity on new movie The Hobbit: The Enchanting Prelude to The Lord of the Rings. We will review book and ask Question about it. And one luck winner will win two tickets to new movie of The Hobbit in Hoyst on 16 Dec.

Bungawitta

Hello Books lover
Your friendly Readers Library is back again.  Let us ask you! Have you ever had one of those books that are light and funny?
No!
Well here is a new book just for you called Bungawitta by Emily Rodda Set in a fictional Australian country town, with a raft of colourful characters; Bungawitta is a humorous story for readers aged 8 to11.
Here is little storyline, Jay lives with his parents and little sister Glory-Alice in a small town called Bungawitta. He comes up with the idea of a festival to raise money: the very first Bungawitta Earth Sculpture Festival. He suggests they encourage tourists from the city to visit and compete in a clay sculpture building competition. The locals love the idea, and begin work on planning and promoting the festival.
But when Festival Day arrives, the locals must struggle with their own private doubts.
After all their hard work, will anyone even come? Does their humble town have what it takes to entertain a city crowd? Why on earth has the ABC promised ‘Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Back?’ And will the ABC TV crew turn up to film the awarding of first prize, as promised?
The story takes delightful twists and turns as the Bungawitta Earth Sculpture Festival progresses, culminating in an outcome that nobody would have expected.
The themes in Bungawitta includes the problems Australian country towns are facing, the city/country divide, problem-solving, the power of teamwork, cooperation, community, friendship and individual talent.


The Three Doors Trilogy


Hello Books lover 


 This week is all about fiction books, such as quests and imaginary/mythical creatures. If you love books as The Hobbit or Lord of the Rings or even such as Emily Rodda’s Deltora Quest or Rowan of Rin series. Then you will love this book that Readers library is promoting for you. It is called The Three Doors Trilogy, The Golden Door by EMILY RODDA.
If you enjoy books that lead you into other places and other worlds. Then this book is for you. Here is just a little story outline for you.
Rye lives in a walled city called Weld, on the island of Dorne, with his family. They know very little of what is outside the Wall; only that it is a dangerous world from which they are wise to shelter. However, for several years their city has been besieged in summer by skimmers: savage, bat-like creatures that fly in hordes over the Wall from somewhere outside Weld, looking for human and animal prey. The Warden of Weld offers a large reward to any young man who can find and defeat the Enemy sending the skimmers. Rye is not old enough to volunteer. Little does he know that a very strange series of events will force his hand? He will have to lie about his age, and choose one of Weld’s three secret magic doors to go through. He will have to put up with a companion he didn’t bargain for. He will be flung into a fantastic and dangerous adventure in the quest. And he will learn that nothing he has believed, about his world, or about himself, is the truth.
The themes of The Golden Door include quest, journey, friendship, trust, family ties and self-confidence. This book is all about the ideas that our choices lead us along different paths in life. After all many old legends and fairy tales are based on the theme of choice.
The Golden Door is a fantasy novel in chapter form. The language is at a level aimed at readers 8-12, and most of the characters speak in the formal, old-fashioned way often associated with fantasy.