Monday, March 7, 2011

Readers Response 1

The Battle of the Labyrinth
Rick Riordan(this book is autographed by him) :)
the whole incredible 361 pages of it
about 2hrs.
rating: 9.5/10

     Yay, this is the first time in forever I'm doing a response before Wednesday or Thursday! This is my 3rd favorite book by my favorite author and ranks among my 10 favorite all time books which I will list here just because I feel the urge to:
1. The Lost Hero-Rick Riordan
2. The Last Olympian-Rick Riordan
3. Mockingjay- Suzanne Collins
4. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows- J.K Rowling
5. Artemis Fowl: The Eternity Code- Eoin Colfer
6. Pendragon: The Never War - D.J MacHale
7. Rangers Apprentice: The Battle of Skandia- John Flanagan
8. The Hunger Games- Suzanne Collins
9. Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix- J.K Rowling
10. The Battle of the Labyrinth- Rick Riordan
11. Pendragon: The Pilgrims of Rayne- D.J MacHale
12. Artemis Fowl: The Lost Colony- Eoin Colfer

     Okay, maybe that's a little more than ten but I figured Pendragon and Artemis needed second mentions because of how awesome they are. Anyway, I just realized I don't need to do readers responses this week because of literacy night, so I'm just gonna turn this into my first regular post in forever! On this top ten list, I spent about 20 min. just working on it and deciding which goes where, and I probably could still play around with a little more if I wanted to. Catching Fire and City of Glass deserve an honorable mention( has anybody ever noticed how we use "an" before "honorable and "honor" but they don't start with a vowel? Weird.) Try putting your own top ten list in the comments, or if you're short on time, top five. Harry Potters probably going to take the top spot, but I'll try to make a combined top ten list of all my blog readers. I would like to conclude my post with this sentence: You just lost the game.


1 comment:

  1. a word doesn't hv 2 start w/ a vowel 2 hv "an" in front of it. if it starts w/ a vowel SOUND, u put an "an" in front of the word. the h is silent in both of those words, so u use "an"

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