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Showing posts from February, 2026

When Stars Are Scattered by Victoria Jamieson and Omar Mohamed

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I first read When Stars Are Scattered in sixth grade, because it was on the Rebecca Caudill Young Reader’s Book Award list. It’s inspired by Omar Mohamed’s real life story. When I first read it, I thought it was pretty good, but now that I have more appreciation for the deep themes inside the book, I love it even more. When Stars Are Scattered is narrated by Omar, an adolescent Somalian refugee. He lives in a refugee camp called Daadab, with his younger brother, Hassan. Hassan has a disability that limits his ability to speak (he can only say one word), and he sometimes has seizures. Hassan is also the only blood-related family Omar has left; their father was killed in Somalia, and their mother has not been found. The book follows Omar’s day-to-day life in the refugee camp as they hope and pray for a better life. The fact that it’s narrated by Omar and not in third person gives the reader a unique window into his frustrations, worries, complicated emotions as a refugee. This book conta...

Peanuts Comic Review

 Hi guys, in this blog I'll be going over the classic Peanuts comic series by Charles Schulz. Peanuts has been a world favorite ever since Schulz began writing it in 1950. Throughout my childhood, I have been reading these strips online and in The Complete Peanuts collections of the strips between the years. I have read almost every single Peanuts strip in existence, as when I was younger, I had nothing better to do during my free time. In this blog I’ll overview the strips from the 1950s to 1960s. Peanuts consists of quite a few characters: The main 2 characters showing up are Charlie Brown and Snoopy, showing up 8588 and 7744 times in strips respectively. Charlie Brown is often portrayed as a “wishy-washy” person, with a somewhat weak personality, often giving in to other people. He often has a lot of bad luck, shown in his many kite flying accidents and baseball games. A recurring pattern in these strips is when Charlie Brown chickens out of doing something, and everyone get...

Event Horizon: Dark Descent

 Hello all,      Sorry for the late post, but the book I've been working on is surprisingly long and hard to get through. Instead of doing a list of books I want to read or complaining about my long book for four paragraphs, I figured I could find a quick interesting read, and I feel that I was well rewarded.      Event Horizon: Dark Descent  is actually a prequel to Event Horizon  (1997 film) that follows a government group who have just figured out how to teleport, go light speed, or create a wormhole. I'm not entirely sure. The head scientist has been grieving the death of his wife but continues to work. He achieves breakthrough after breakthrough all because of the visits from his wife in his dream. Eventually the space shuttle is ready and the crew sets off. Every crew member but one is running from something whether it be cancer, the death of a loved one or an abusive relationship. The crew engages the fancy machinery and gets goin...