Free Download The Romeo and Juliet Code (Felicity Bathburn #1) Books

Free Download The Romeo and Juliet Code (Felicity Bathburn #1) Books
The Romeo and Juliet Code (Felicity Bathburn #1) Hardcover | Pages: 304 pages
Rating: 3.9 | 3181 Users | 496 Reviews

Describe Books To The Romeo and Juliet Code (Felicity Bathburn #1)

Original Title: The Romeo and Juliet Code
ISBN: 0545215110 (ISBN13: 9780545215114)
Edition Language: English
Series: Felicity Bathburn #1

Ilustration Conducive To Books The Romeo and Juliet Code (Felicity Bathburn #1)

A sudden trip to a seaside house. A boy with brown sugar eyes. And then , a mysterious letter.

Felicity's glamorous parents have a secret. When they leave her with distant relatives in Maine, far away from the battles of WWII, Felicity hopes they won't be gone for long. Her new Uncle Gideon hides things. Her Aunt Miami is star-crossed. And Derek, a kid her age, refuses to leave his room.
 
But Felicity needs Derek's help. Gideon is getting coded letters from Felicity's parents, and she's sure they're in trouble. Can Felicity crack the code, heal the family and save her parents, all while surviving her first crush? It's a tall order for a small girl, but Felicity is up for the challenge.

Be Specific About Out Of Books The Romeo and Juliet Code (Felicity Bathburn #1)

Title:The Romeo and Juliet Code (Felicity Bathburn #1)
Author:Phoebe Stone
Book Format:Hardcover
Book Edition:First Edition
Pages:Pages: 304 pages
Published:January 1st 2011 by Arthur A. Levine Books
Categories:Fiction. Childrens. Juvenile. Historical. Historical Fiction. Realistic Fiction

Rating Out Of Books The Romeo and Juliet Code (Felicity Bathburn #1)
Ratings: 3.9 From 3181 Users | 496 Reviews

Criticize Out Of Books The Romeo and Juliet Code (Felicity Bathburn #1)
This book was really, really good! It was kind of boring in the beginning, but halfway through the book it gets a lot better and much more exciting. The beginning wasn't boring enough that I wanted to stop reading, but I wasn't sure I liked this until the middle when the story got much better. It's more adventurous and things actually happen (aside from Felicity moping and being miserable). I can't wait to read the next book!

So, when this book first came out, all I head about it was people complaining about the cover, because it doesn't scream World War II historical. And I felt a little bad on it's behalf, not least of which because my mom was a kid in the forties and she totally rocked the jeans like 90% of the time, if the snapshots are to be believed. And then it took for-freaking-ever for me to get my hands on a library copy and in that interim I think my wanting-to-like-it grew to an unreasonable degree (I

I Loved this book because it was set in maine!! It was hard for me to get into the book. The start was little slow, but the overall book wasn't to bad.

I liked so much about this book: the quirky, endearing characters, the writing style that brought to mind A.A. Milne for some reason, the mysteries surrounding Felicity's parents, Felicity's charming British style, and her relationship with her bear Wink. There were two things that bothered me. The cover is attractive, yet has no apparent relationship to the book. Did the wrong cover get put on this book? It leads one to imagine they're about to read a contemporary story, not one set in the

I absolutely love this book! I found the language and descriptions beautiful and the analogies incredibly clever. However I do have to agree with a couple of criticisms from other people. The front cover had no relation to the story, Felicity did seem very unnaturally over-British at the start and the ending seemed abrupt and unfinished (I almost wrote to the author to beg her to give me additional information about the plot an ending) but recently I found out with great relief that she has

I know I would have loved this and reread it several times if I'd read it first when I was ten. The things that bother me some now, some inconsistencies and loose ends and crowding of plot, wouldn't have bothered me then.This book's been mentioned as a Newbery contender, but I don't think it's quite there. In particular, Felicity's voice often sounds TOO self-consciously "British". Like an American girl who goes to England with her parents for a week and comes back and wants to impress her

It seems unfair that my attention was first drawn to The Romeo and Juliet Code because of its cover. No book deserves to be held responsible for its misleading jacket and Phoebe Stone's latest is no exception. Set during the Second World War, the book looks like a rejected shot from a GAP catalog more than a historical novel (pink Converse?? Really??). When ire was aimed at the jacket early on I remember many a supporter saying, "It's such a pity it has that cover because the story is

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.