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275 pp.
| Simon Pulse
| June, 2014
|
TradeISBN 978-1-4424-6630-2$17.99
|
EbookISBN 978-1-4424-6632-6
(3)
YA
Visions series.
Based on prophetic visions, Jules has prevented a car crash, then (after passing the visions to her new boyfriend) a school shooting in previous installments. To prevent the next disaster, she must discover the latest vision recipient. Sleuthing and nautical peril are nestled alongside the series' ongoing family drama, and the earnest prose, swift plotting, and well-leveraged premise will draw in readers.
233 pp.
| Simon Pulse
| January, 2013
|
TradeISBN 978-1-4424-0391-8$16.99
(3)
YA
Visions series.
Jules sees the vision--a truck hitting a building and exploding--everywhere; is she seeing the future or is she insane? Hoping for the former, she risks looking crazy to try to save the people in her vision: her family's business rivals and their son, whom she secretly loves. This suspenseful series opener is fast paced and features a likable heroine.
243 pp.
| Simon Pulse
| October, 2013
|
TradeISBN 978-1-4424-6625-8$16.99
(3)
YA
Visions series.
Having passed her gift/curse of premonitory visions (first seen in Crash) to her boyfriend Sawyer, Jules must help him prevent a school shooting while processing the trauma of the visions. McMann crafts a refreshingly down-to-earth tale of supernaturally aided sleuthing, with richly nuanced family drama and warm sibling bonding rounding out the central star-crossed romance and race against time.
(3)
YA
Visions in Poetry series.
Illustrated by
Isabelle Arsenault.
In this book of seven Dickinson poems, the pictures say as much as the words. Arsenault illustrates lines of loneliness, death, and heartache with dreamlike mixed-media art. The haunting images of a pale and fragile-looking Dickinson reflect a dark yet imaginative interpretation of the reclusive poet's works.
(3)
YA
Visions in Poetry series.
Illustrated by
Ryan Price.
The tortured mind of the grieving narrator in Poe's hypnotic poem is brought to life with a nearly equal measure of nightmarish and illustrative imagery. Rendered in dry point, the art's varying shades of black underscore the menacing tone of the verse. This sophisticated interpretation will surely attract older readers who are fans of the gothic.
48 pp.
| Kids Can
| April, 2005
|
TradeISBN 1-55337-425-8$16.95
(4)
YA
Visions in Poetry series.
Illustrated by
Murray Kimber.
The romantic anti-hero in Noyes's rhythmic, haunting ballad of doomed love is re-fashioned as a sleek, motorcycle-riding gangster in this modern version of the poem, which the artist sets in art deco-era New York City. Rendered in sepia, gray, and black, the dramatic illustrations create a film noir atmosphere, but ultimately the geometric images feel mismatched to the text.
40 pp.
| Kids Can
| September, 2004
|
TradeISBN 1-55337-079-1$16.95
(4)
YA
Visions in Poetry series.
Illustrated by
Stephane Jorisch.
A sense of foreboding pervades this sophisticated interpretation of Carroll's classic nonsense poem. Washed with muted color, the scratchy illustrations reveal a dreamlike world with TVs and cameras present everywhere. The unsettling images seem to be commenting on politics, consumerism, war, the media, and more, and the book seems best suited to YA and adult audiences.