David Lubar wrote over thirty books for teenagers and young readers. His novels, including hidden geniuses and sleeping new students, do not tell lies, read the lists nationwide and save countless students from intimate contact with Ms. Bovary. His novel "Dunk" won the Pennsylvania Junior Adult Book Award and was used by the New Jersey Library Association for their new books. His collection of Weenies short stories sells over 3 million copies. The life of my bad book, the first name of his chapter series, Nathan Abercrombie, a coincidence zombie is developing an anime series. He received reviews from Publishers Weekly, Bibliography, School Library Magazine, and Cocos Review for a young adult novel "People, Drive". He is a popular lecturer at schools and conferences all over the country. He also designed and wrote many video games in eight early lives, including Home Alone and Frogger. In his spare time, he took a nap on the sofa. He grew up in New Jersey, went to Rutgers, now lives with his wife in Nazareth, Pennsylvania. You can visit his website at www.davidlubar.com
A critical reception for a sleeping freshman who never tells a lie is positive and TeenReads praises Scott Hudson's personality. Kirkus commented that this book is "fresh, interesting, and very reasonable, it can be used as a demonstration of various writing exercises used in the classroom, but I like to laugh" . According to school library magazines, freshmen during sleep is said to be "the best choice for public libraries and school libraries" to "do not lie". "Publishers Weekly" wrote that this book is "too smart and bad when my head got too bad." The book criticizes a sleeping new student, saying "I will pass too much information as Scott learned one important lesson", which never tells a lie. From the danger of the first date to the danger of walking through the class hall "
As he attempted to survive in high school and attracted his attention with Julia's attention, sleeping freshman never relied on Scott Hudson's character, and Julia became beautiful recently. Scott's mother announced that there are children if school activities and growth are not sufficient. To make all these easier to manage, Scott tried to write down his daily life and high-school advice for brothers and sisters who were not born. This novel tells of the journey of Scott, he learned the balance between what he did and what he did, and the balance between his activities, homework, friendship and girls. Second graders and other Oxymorons are sequels of books released on August 18, 2015