Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Must-read book of 2009

When You Reach Me When You Reach Me by Rebecca Stead


My rating: 5 of 5 stars
I can't remember the last time I finished a book and immediately wanted to read it again from the beginning. When You Reach Me is a mystery that will confuse the reader up until the last ten pages when all will be made clear. Miranda, a young latch-key kid living in NYC in the late 1970s, is generally a good kid. She helps her mother prepare for her turn on her favorite TV game show, loves re-reading her favorite book (A Wrinkle in Time) and is beginning to figure out how to really be a good friend. When she starts receiving strange letters that don't make sense, though, she is confused and somewhat scared. The letters ask her to write a letter of her own and tell her that if she does, her friend's life will be saved. The slow unfolding of this mystery is never boring. I liked everything about this book from the characters and their development down to the chapter titles, which I usually don't pay any attention. Every detail was just right and every word belonged. Kudos to the author for making this novel work even with the time-space complications. Highly recommended for all readers.

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Monday, July 27, 2009

New Flickr pictures!

Check out pictures from Teen Tuesdays this summer!

We've been having lots of fun doing craft days (Henna! duct tape crafts! hardware jewelry!), as well as Karaoke, Game Days, Improv and more. Here are some pics from days when Ms. Laura remembered her camera... :)

Five stars...no lie!

The Song of the Lioness Quartet The Song of the Lioness Quartet by Tamora Pierce


My rating: 5 of 5 stars
The Song of the Lioness Quartet is an inspiring series about Alanna, the girl who became a powerful knight-sorceress by dressing as a boy for over five years and working her tail off. Tamora Pierce has written tons since then, but this was her first series and her first of four series about the land of Tortall. (can't wait to read the rest!) The series is VERY romantic with lots of adventure. If you liked Graceling, you'll love the books of the Song of the Lioness quartet. The series follows Alanna from the time she goes to court to become a squire until she is a full knight in her twenties. Books in the series include: Alanna: The First Adventure; In the Hand of the Goddess; The Woman Who Rides Like a Man; Lioness Rampant. The world that Pierce has created in these books is full and rich. Characters are fully developed and grow on the reader over time. I especially liked how Pierce handled the love triangle that emerged between three of the characters. This is an incredibly told tale that you'll probably want to reread again and again. (thanks, Gabi for recommending it!)

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Friday, July 17, 2009

New book!

If I Stay If I Stay by Gayle Forman


My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Mia is a talented cellist who loves her family and her rocker boyfriend. Her life is great...before. After the car accident that kills her family she must decide whether life is worth living or if she should join them. Through flashbacks and memories, readers learn all about Mia's relationship with her friends, boyfriend and family members.

Fans of Alice Sebold's The Lovely Bones will love this book. If you like to be moved to tears, this is the book for you. Make sure you have kleenex nearby! This book is available in our new YA fiction section.

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Monday, July 13, 2009

Carbon Diaries 2015...a little too realistic

The Carbon Diaries 2015 The Carbon Diaries 2015 by Saci Lloyd


My review


rating: 4 of 5 stars
I've read quite a few futuristic/we ruined the environment and the world books, but this one scared me the most...probably because this possible future isn't too far off. The year is 2015 and London has had a Great Storm that devastated the infrastructure. Now England is rationing energy in the form of individual carbon cards. All Laura wants to do is play in her band and hopefully score a date with her next door neighbor, Ravi. Her diary from the year 2015 shows, though, that the reality of her life is anything but typical for a middle class teenager. She and her family must cut back on all luxuries (including showers! and vacations!) severely and necessities like water and food are suddenly in very short supply. Laura's family has never been close and the crisis is making things even more difficult. Survival as a family and survival in general is now on the line.



I recommend this to anyone who cares about the environment and likes learning about the consequences of global warming/wasteful humans. I'd also recommend it to anyone who likes reading books about teenagers with family problems. I would love to read this with teenagers as part of a discussion about global warming and ways we can personally be "greener" and our responsibility as citizens to help our country adopt greener policies. The book seems to argue that we won't do anything about the crisis until it really is an immediate crisis...at which point it may be too late. We should definitely take preventative action!


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Friday, July 10, 2009

The Roar...dystopian sci-fi thriller...

The Roar The Roar by Emma Clayton


My review


rating: 3 of 5 stars
Mika is a twin living in a futuristic world where all of humanity lives in the northern hemisphere of Earth behind a Wall due to an Animal Plague that has made the rest of Earth uninhabitable. Mika is twelve years old and is part of the first generation born since the Plague took hold over 40 years ago. Life is uncomfortable and unpleasant for most people (i.e. the poor people) who have to live in confined spaces, eat colored mold, are terrified of the idea of animals and barely ever see the sun. Mika's twin, Ellie, is missing, but Mika senses that she is not dead, as their parents presume. When the government begins offering Mika and all his classmates FitMix and encourages them to play arcade games after school, Mika is suspicious. Once he learns that playing the game is the only way to get closer to Ellie, however, he is determined to win...no matter the cost.



I'm completely creeped out by Clayton's take on the future we're headed towards if we continue to trash our world. (I like to be creeped out by dystopian future Certain elements of the book were confusing and seemed not to fit with the story. The ending was pretty open and left room for a sequel, but I've found no indication that there will be one. I wouldn't mind having to imagine my own ending in this case. Clayton is a first-time author and I look forward to reading more. I wish I could give this 3.5 stars. I recommend this book to anyone who liked The Hunger Games by Collins, Unwind by Wasserman or Carbon Diaries 2015 by Lloyd


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Fire in the basement!

I wasn't here yesterday because it was my random Thursday off, but apparently I missed an exciting day at the library. A light fixture in the basement auditorium caught on fire and burned through the cover. The fire department came and the library was closed for about two and a half hours while things got cleaned up.

What does this mean for library programs? The only programs that will be canceled are today's movie (and possibly next week's movie) and the Teen Game Day scheduled for next Tuesday the 14th at 3 p.m. (booooo!!!) All other programs will either be outside or in the Town Hall auditorium depending on the weather and the program.

Specifically:

Pajama Storytime Monday, July 13 will be upstairs in the kids room

Toddler Storytimes on Tuesday, July 14 (9:30 and 10:15) will be either outside or in the Town Hall auditorium (depending on weather)

Summer Escapades with Diane Edgecomb (storyteller with harp! awesome!) on Wednesday, July 15 at 10 a.m. will be in Town Hall auditorium

Crafternoon/Gamernoon Wednesdays 3 - 5 p.m. will be upstairs in the youth room

Art with Sara Thursday, July 16 from 10 to 11 a.m. will be in Town Hall auditorium

Big Kid & Baby Storytimes on Fridays 10 a.m. and 11:15 a.m. respectively will be either outside or in the Town Hall auditorium (depending on weather)

It stinks, but thank goodness for beautiful Town Hall right across the street!!

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

How to Ditch Your Fairy How to Ditch Your Fairy by Justine Larbalestier


My review


rating: 4 of 5 stars
How to Ditch Your Fairy by Justine Larbalestier (who is married to Scott Westerfeld!! of the Uglies series!!) is about a girl named Charlie who is sick of her fairy. She goes to an all-sports-school and lives in New Avalon, a place where some people have specific-good-luck fairies that help them with things. i.e. a shopping fairy or a parking fairy like Charlie. Charlie hates her parking fairy and wishes she had a all-boys-like-you fairy like Fiorenze. Charlie has been walking everywhere in an attempt to freeze out her fairy, but it's taking forever. Is there a quicker way? And will she survive it?



This book is very clever and the dialogue is fast and snappy. I couldn't really predict what would happen next and it was fun to see the consequences of Charlie's choices. A good read!


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Thursday, July 2, 2009

The Chosen One The Chosen One by Carol Lynch Williams


My review


rating: 4 of 5 stars
This book takes place in a fundamentalist community where Kyra has three mothers, lots of siblings and has just been promised to her uncle as his seventh wife. The Prophet in their community, Prophet Childs, has instituted new rules that involve burning all outside influences (including books!) and keeping to a strict set of social rules. The author does an amazing job showing how desperate Kyra has become to escape her world. As the plot escalates, Kyra's emotional state becomes more and more unhinged and the reader must just go along for the ride. I read the last fifty pages of the book while walking around the house because I couldn't sit and read this book...it was just too intense. Overall, I'd say this book is horrifying, very sad and impossible to ignore.


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