48) "Wintersmith" -Terry Pratchett
I decided to continue the goal I'd had of re-reading all the witch books by following through with reading all the Tiffany books, because they are really witch books. This one is actually further down in the stack than "The Tin Woodman", so I may have swapped the weeks I read them.
I love the Tiffany books, but I can't figure out what I want to say about this one, right now. Tiffany lets herself do something stupid out of teenage rebellion and spends the rest of the book waiting until she has the opportunity to fix her mistake. But I'd say the more important theme is expressed in the sub-story - that getting an important job done right is more important than your feelings about the person who got the position you thought you should have had.
I decided to continue the goal I'd had of re-reading all the witch books by following through with reading all the Tiffany books, because they are really witch books. This one is actually further down in the stack than "The Tin Woodman", so I may have swapped the weeks I read them.
I love the Tiffany books, but I can't figure out what I want to say about this one, right now. Tiffany lets herself do something stupid out of teenage rebellion and spends the rest of the book waiting until she has the opportunity to fix her mistake. But I'd say the more important theme is expressed in the sub-story - that getting an important job done right is more important than your feelings about the person who got the position you thought you should have had.