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Ruth was deeply moved by [[The One-in-a-Million Boy by Monica Wood]]. It's the story, mostly of Miss Ona Vitkus, a one hundred and four year old lady who has a young boy scout come over to help her with jobs and how he ultimately ends up changing her life, and not at all in the way you might imagine since before we even begin the story the boy is dead. This is a book that has death and grief as its focus, yet manages to remain truly positive and uplifting and it found its way deep into Ruth's heart.
In non-fiction, John thoroughly enjoyed [[John Aubrey: My Own Life by Ruth Scurr ]]. Seventeenth-century antiquary and archaeologist John Aubrey was one of the earliest biographers, although his ''Brief Lives'' remained unpublished for more than a century after his death. Scurr's book is a fascinating work which combines biography and memoirs through arranging extracts from his writings to form a continuous journal telling his story from childhood to old age, with perceptive observations of the natural world around him, great events and the work of a scholar writing around the time of the restoration.
For teens, Jill recommends [[Chasing the Stars by Malorie Blackman ]]. Olivia - Vee - and her brother Aidan are trying to get back to Earth after a mystery virus killed everyone, including their parents, on their ship. It's been a lonely three years and a dangerous one, too, as they've tried to avoid the dangerous and xenophobic Mazons. But sometimes the Mazons can't be avoided and this is one of them. Riffing on Othello, this is a thriller and a love story combined, in true Malorie Blackman form. If Othello in space doesn't whet your appetite, nothing will!

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