Library Visits

You must have a school ID and a library pass signed by your teacher to check out books or use the computers.

Showing posts with label city of heavenly fire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label city of heavenly fire. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

Ms. D just finished reading ... City of Heavenly Fire

City of Heavenly Fire
City of Heavenly Fire is book 6 in Cassandra Clare's The Mortal Instruments series. I had been waiting for this one. I'd loved 1-5. This one, however, was lackluster. It wrapped everything up with a nice little bow and that's not how I expected this series to end. Clare hadn't been afraid to make unredeemable villains or to kill off characters. I feel that in Heavenly Fire, she stayed her hand and preferred a happier ending.

That being said, I'm glad I read it. It is a suitable ending for this series (which I honestly will re-read probably over the summer). Maybe the long wait between 5 and 6 is what made me disappointed and not the story itself.







Up next: Clockwork Prince and Clockwork Princess.

Friday, May 30, 2014

Library Word of the Week

The final Cassandra Claire Mortal Instruments book came out this week: City of Heavenly Fire

No, we do not have a copy yet. Yes, we have 2 copies ordered. We are waiting on them. 

In honor of this conclusion, today's word of the week comes from City of Bones (also an SAT Top 10 word). 

Deride

laugh at or make fun of--while showing a lack of respect

Spiderwebbing cracks fissured the glass-that-was-not-glass; the last thing Clary heard before the Portal dissolved into a deluge of ragged shards was Valentine's derisive laughter. 


Samples from Other Sources
  • Critics derided her as unprofessional.

  • He derided his student`s attempt to solve the biggest problem in mathematics

  • The famous "holy club" was formed by John`s younger brother, Charles Wesley, and some fellow students, derisively called "Methodists" because of their methodical habits.
    John Wesley - Wikipedia  --  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Wesley(retrieved 05/20/06)

  • they admire the clarity of his wit, the fine edge of insult and derision.
    Don DeLillo  --  Underworld

  • Hermione laughed derisively.
    J.K. Rowling  --  Harry Potter (#7) and the Deathly Hallows

  • Putting all the derision he could into his voice, he jeered, "How did you like being shot?"
    Christopher Paolini  --  Eragon