AMKSS CLASS 2/2 2010
Wednesday, November 10, 2010 9:17 PM
Email by Mr Tan SH: Recommended books for your reading pleasure‏


Hello 2/2'10!
Some of you all might have recieved the E-mail sent by Mr Tan SH regarding the 2010 Top Ten Best Books for Young Adults. For those that hadn't, this is the content of the E-mail.

Dear Ex-2/2 pupils

How're all of you doing? Hope that everything has been fine. While you're resting and relaxing, it's important that you continue to read (EL and MT books) and learn e.g. taking a look at your sec 3 textbooks, so that you've a good head start when you're in sec 3.

I was supposed to give you this attached reading list on the last day of school, but didn't manage to print it on time. Could someone (Michelle?) please post this on your facebook so that your classmates could know about this if they didn't receive this email from me. Thank you for the wonderful two years you've spent with me. Best wishes to you in your future endeavours and enjoy the rest of the holidays!

Regards
Hiro


The contents of the attachment:

2010 Top Ten Best Books for Young Adults
In addition to the 90 titles selected for the full list of Best Books for Young Adults, the 2010 committee has selected the following as the ten best books for young adults.

• Brennan, Sarah Rees. Demon's Lexicon. Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing/Margaret K. McElderry. 2009.

• Griffin, Paul. The Orange HousesPenguin/Dial Books. 2009.

• Herlong, M.H. The Great Wide Sea. Penguin/Viking. 2008.

• Jinks, Catherine. The Reformed Vampire Support Group. Harcourt/ Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. 2009.

• Napoli, Donna Jo. Alligator Bayou. Random House / Knopf. 2009.

• Small, David. Stitches: A Memoir. W.W. Norton & Co. 2009.

• Stead, Rebecca. When You Reach Me. Random House / Wendy Lamb Books. 2009.

• Stork, Francisco X. Marcelo in the Real World. Scholastic/Arthur A. Levine Books.
2009.

• Taylor, Laini. Lips Touch: Three Times. Scholastic/Arthur A. Levine. 2009.

• Walker, Sally M. Written in Bone: Buried Lives of Jamestown and Colonial Maryland. Lerner/Carolrhoda Books. 2009.

For the rest of the 80 titles, please access this link:

http://www.ala.org/ala/mgrps/divs/yalsa/booklistsawards/bestbooksya/bbya2010.cfm

Melvin Burgess's top 10 books written for teenagers
(source: guardian.co.uk)
From supernatural big-hitters Pullman and Meyer to thrillers from Kevin Brooks and unforgettable imagery from David Almond, the author of Junk lists his favourite teen fiction.
• Melvin Burgess
• guardian.co.uk, Thursday 17 June 2010 14.46 BST

The author Melvin Burgess published his first book, The Cry of the Wolf, in 1990, but is best known for Junk, his 1996 novel dealing with the tricky and controversial subject of heroin addiction in teenagers. His latest novel, Nicholas Dane, a punchy modern-day adaptation of Oliver Twist, is out now.
"Fiction for teenagers is a comparatively new affair. When I was in my teens no one wrote any at all. You had to go straight from children's books to adult books without a pause. Even when I started writing in the 1990s, what was called teen fiction was really only for the first two or three years at high school at the most, with one or two honourable exceptions.
"Today, teenage fiction still covers a multitude of sins. It can range from books really written for children, which publishers call 'teen' for sales reasons, through books aimed at high-school students up to the age of 14 or so, to books for people nearing the end of their school careers. So here's a list of the top 10 writers who write (or wrote) especially for people of at least 14. It contains the most influential, the most popular, and in some cases simply the best."

1. The Bumblebee Flies Anyway by Robert Cormier
Cormier was writing quality fiction for teenagers way back in the 1970s, which makes him officially the granddaddy of us all. He conquered that most difficult of tricks: writing brilliant thrillers with beautiful prose and startling but believable characters. If he was writing for adults, he'd have won every prize going.

2. Postcards from No Man's Land by Aidan Chambers
Chambers's teen tales were the first that aimed to be really serious literature. His books aren't for everyone – his dialogue, in particular, clanks alarmingly – but these are intellectually and emotionally challenging books that examine the deeper things that affect teenage lives. It's not about the girl next door, or how well you're going to do in the exams. It's about who are you, why you're here – and what are you going to do about it anyway?

3. Northern Lights by Philip Pullman
Pullman's His Dark Materials trilogy is famous for its theological mirroring of Paradise Lost, but Pullman's reputation stands on his storytelling. Setting up the heavenly hordes as an enemy of life got him into trouble, but the imaginative range and wealth of characters, especially in this first book, is wonderful.

4. Junk by Melvin Burgess
My novel Junk was the first truly teenage book to attract a wide readership and deal with serious social issues upfront and honestly. There was a tremendous hue and cry when it first came out. At the time, no one really knew about teenage fiction, and the press were appalled and fascinated that a book talking knowledgeably about drugs and addiction should be awarded a children's book prize. Is it any good? I can't say, since I wrote it myself.

5. Skellig by David Almond
Almond's books contain stories of great beauty and hope – magical realism for young people, written in graceful, accessible prose. There are images in them you will never forget, and Skellig is one of his finest.

6. Noughts and Crosses by Malorie Blackman
Blackman passes the test on all counts: first black woman to sell more than a million books; an OBE; and a huge following. Plus, she manages about the best plotting of anyone writing for young people today. The trilogy of Noughts and Crosses books are thrillers, but with a sharp eye for social, personal and racial politics. No one does it better.

7. Martyn Pig by Kevin Brooks
Brooks is another thriller writer, the natural successor to Cormier. His books don't touch on society in the way Cormier's do, but they are beautifully written and stylish. His young male protagonists are at once touchingly innocent and knowing, quirky and very sexy.

8. The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time by Mark Haddon
This book, published for teenagers, became a bestseller with all ages. Like many great teen books, it is the voice of the narrator that makes it work so well. Christopher is autistic, and when he feels things aren't as they seem, he has to find out about them in his own way. Partly because we know more than him, partly because he is so brave and determined, the story makes a fascinating, funny and memorable read.

9. How I Live Now by Meg Rosoff
Rosoff's debut spawned a host of copycat efforts, but it remains ahead of the game. Daisy's voice is the key: you'll rarely meet a character with so many facets, so lucidly written. Some find Rosoff's mucking around with punctuation an irritant, but the book will be read for years to come.

10. Twilight by Stephenie Meyer
Meyer is a game-changer. For years, publishers have been looking for mass-market teen fiction, and she's the first to have broken through. There's nothing new here: Meyer is no stylist; her characters are predictable; this is really just good old-fashioned romance with a supernatural twist. But if your brain is mashed from too much studying, curl up with a Twilight and she'll do the rest.


-Bendy



Tuesday, November 2, 2010 8:10 PM
Holidays!


Hello 2/2'10,
The Holidays are here. Happy Holidays people! :D
-Bendy



AMKSS Class 22'10

2/2 '10

WE consist of 19 girls and 22 boys!
In order from index 1 - 41!
-CelesteGoh
-Chan Ruey Ying
-Chan Tin Wing
-Bendy Chua
-Denise Ho
-Maria Felicia
-June Teo
-Karin Tan
-Kek Jing Yu
-Brescia Koh
-Koh Xiu Min
-Shanice Lee
-AndreaLee
-Steffi Leong
-Michelle Leu
-Nurul Afiqah
-Tan Hui Qi
-Tan Zi Xin
-Justine Yeo
-Andrew Koh
-Bryan Lam
-Bryan Wong
-Benjamin Chew
-Dong Zhen Xin
-Ryan Hon
-Huang Jian Huang
-Huang Wei Wei
-Lee Dong Yu
-Liew Jia Jun
-Wilson Long
-Loo Tan Rong
-Lucas Tan
-Luo Shao Zhe
-Marcus Nai
-Marcus Sim
-Hassanul
-Qu Xuan Zhao
-Xin Ze
-Sean Tan
-Wong Wei Zhe
-Woon Yi Chen

They make it a complete 2/2! Not one is to be left out!



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Affliates

Class:
-2/1
-2/3
-2/4

OGLs:
-Annette

Pupils:
-Andrea
-Andrew
-Bendy
-Brescia
-Celeste
-Denise
-Jia Jun
-Jian Huang
-June
-Karin
-Marcus Nai
-Michelle
-Nurul
-Ruey Ying
-Shanice
-Shao Zhe
-Tin Wing
-Xiu Min
-Wei Wei
-Zi Xin




thankyou loads

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  • dog10394
  • blogskins
  • editor
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