Friday, April 8, 2011

Book Review: Where She Went: Gayle Forman


“Where She Went” is the sequel to the book “If I Stay” by Gayle Forman.  I read that there was going to be a sequel a couple of months ago.  I was not entirely pleased to hear this because (a) it was a great stand-alone and (b) I had decided what had happened to Mia and Adam and did not want the author to mess with my vision.
If you have not read the first book, I highly encourage you to read it as you will not understand where Adam is coming from in this book.  In the first book, we have the point of view of Mia and what she is going through.  Through her descriptions, we met Adam her boyfriend.  Let me state right here that Adam was amazing throughout the crisis that she was going through.  His love was Mia was so incredible that he made my “top YA boyfriends” list.
“Where She Went” focuses on Adam’s life three years later.  He is nothing but a shell of the person that he was.  Why?  Well, because Mia dumped him.  This is where I started getting a little peeved with the author.  This was certainly not my fantasy ending.  However, Forman has this knack of weaving a story that leaves you pondering every aspect of the life that Adam and Mia have lived since the tragedy three years ago.  And once we get to hear Mia’s side, it starts to make sense.  Although I did not cry as much as the first book, there are certainly some weepy moments.
Overall, I think Foreman did a fantastic job writing Adam’s side of the story.  She was able to create for the reader a range of emotions that certainly tie you to this book.  At times, I was downright sad and then was very angry but at the end of it all I walked away feeling okay with this book.  BTW, I bought the book last night and finished it early this morning.  I was so restless that here I am at close to 3 am blogging about the book because I cannot stop thinking about it.

Sunday, April 3, 2011

New genre in the Department!



Over the past few months, we have had a practicum student from McGill creating a new genre area in the department. In order to make it easier to find books for our patrons, we separated all the fantasy chapter books out of the collection and gave them their own area.


So, if you are looking for some fantasy chapter books, the new call number is JFAN and they follow the regular chapter books. The books also have a purple sticker with a dragon on the bottom of the spine.






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Tuesday, March 15, 2011

New Picture Books for the Week

The Red Hen

By: Rebecca Emberley and Ed Emberley
Red Hen finds a recipe for a Simply Splendid Cake and asks her friends the cat, the rat, and the frog to help with the preparations. But it seems as though her friends want no part in the cake until it's ready to eat. Will they decide to pitch in, or let Red Hen do all of the hard work?

Let's Count Goats!
By: Mem Fox
The reader is invited to count goats of many shapes, sizes, hobbies, and professions.



A Bedtime for Bear
By: Bonny Becker
A small but effervescent overnight guest tries the patience of a curmudgeonly bear who needs absolute quiet to fall asleep.



Interrupting Chicken
By: David Ezra Stein
Little Red Chicken wants Papa to read her a bedtime story, but interrupts him almost as soon as he begins each tale.



Calvin Can't Fly
By: Jennifer Berne
A young starling chooses to read books when his cousins are learning to fly, and the knowledge he acquires comes in handy when a hurricane threatens the flock's migration.



Dinosaur VS the Potty
By: Bob Shea
Dinosaur doesn't need to use the potty. Even when making lemonade, running through the sprinkler, splashing in puddles, playing in the water... But wait, is that a victory dance or something else?



Emily's New Friend
By: Cindy Post Senning
Emily and a new neighbor become friends by treating one another with generosity, kindness, and good manners. Includes a note for parents on the importance of teaching principles of etiquette at home.



My Mommy Hung the Moon
By: Jamie Lee Curtis and Laura Cornell
A hard-working mother's extraordinary accomplishments are listed by her devoted child.



Where are you Bear?
By: Frieda Wishinsky
Sophie is excited to visit her Grandma in Vancouver. But when it comes time to leave home in Newfoundland, she cant find her best friend Bear. Bear watches her departure sadly from the window and vows to find her again one day. For the remainder of the book, Sophies travels, depicted on the left-hand page, are parallelled by Bears own on the right-hand page.

Monday, March 14, 2011

Realistic Fiction for Teens

Are you tired of fantasy, sci-fi and all those paranormal romances? Here are a few book suggestions of stories that take place in the normal world.

Mockingbird (mok'ing-bûrd)
By: Kathryn Erskine

Ten-year-old Caitlin, who has Asperger's Syndrome, struggles to understand emotions, show empathy, and make friends at school, while at home she seeks closure by working on a project with her father.



Speak
By: Laurie Halse Anderson

A traumatic event near the end of the summer has a devastating effect on Melinda's freshman year in high school.



Godless
By: Pete Hautman

When sixteen-year-old Jason Bock and his friends create their own religion to worship the town's water tower, what started out as a joke begins to take on a power of its own.



Dairy Queen
By: Catherine Murdock

After spending her summer running the family farm and training the quarterback for her school's rival football team, sixteen-year-old D.J. decides to go out for the sport herself, not anticipating the reactions of those around her.


If I Stay
By: Gayle Foreman

While in a coma following an automobile accident that killed her parents and younger brother, seventeen-year-old Mia, a gifted cellist, weighs whether to live with her grief or join her family in death.


Along for the Ride
By: Sarah Dessen

When Auden impulsively goes to stay with her father, stepmother, and new baby sister the summer before she starts college, all the trauma of her parents' divorce is revived, even as she is making new friends and having new experiences such as learning to ride a bike and dating.

13 Reasons Why
By: Jay Asher

When high school student Clay Jenkins receives a box in the mail containing thirteen cassette tapes recorded by his classmate Hannah, who committed suicide, he spends a bewildering and heartbreaking night crisscrossing their town, listening to Hannah's voice recounting the events leading up to her death.


Confessions of a Serial Kisser
By: Wendelin Van Draanen

After reading her mother's secret collection of romance novels during her parent's difficult separation, seventeen-year-old Evangeline Logan begins a quest for the perfect kiss.


The Absolute True Diary of a Part time Indian
By: Sherman Alexie

Budding cartoonist Junior leaves his troubled school on the Spokane Indian Reservation to attend an all-white farm town school where the only other Indian is the school mascot.




Perfect Chemistry
By: Simone Elkeles

When wealthy, seemingly perfect Brittany and Alex Fuentes, a gang member from the other side of town, develop a relationship after Alex discovers that Brittany is not exactly who she seems to be, they must face the disapproval of their schoolmates--and others.

Hate List
By: Jennifer Brown

Sixteen-year-old Valerie, whose boyfriend Nick committed a school shooting at the end of their junior year, struggles to cope with integrating herself back into high school life, unsure herself whether she was a hero or a villain

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

We received a new picture book this week that I absolutely love. “It’s a Book” by Lane Smith is about monkey who loves books, a donkey who is obsessed with computers and a straight talking little mouse. I love how the donkey keeps trying to understand the concept of the book and relating it to technology. To top it off, there is a fantastic book trailer to go with it. I first saw the trailer a couple of months ago when one of my friends posted it on Facebook. Check it out:


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x4BK_2VULCU

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

I am the Messenger by Markus Zusak


Plot:


The story begins Ed Kennedy, a down-and-out underage taxi driver who is hopelessly in love with his best friend Audrey. She, however, does not have the same romantic feelings towards him. One day, Ed is standing in a bank line when a robbery takes place and forever changes his life. He accidentally foils the robbers' escape, and is proclaimed a hero. Shortly after, he receives a playing card,an ace, in the mail. Ed does not know who has sent the ace but on it is written a list of addresses and times. This is where the adventure truly begins.

My thoughts:

I am the Messenger by Markus Zusak has been on my reading list for a couple of years now. I had read the Book Thief by him and wanted to see if he was indeed a wonderful author or he just hit the jackpot with the Book Thief. Over the holidays, I decided that enough was enough and grabbed the book from the library. Needless to say, I was not disappointed! This book was really good. Zusak has a way of grabbing the reader and pulling them into the story. I especially like the fact that he never sugarcoats anything, he just tells it like it is. Once you finish the book, you are left with thoughts on how you perceive your life and how you can affect others. I highly recommend this book!


On a side note, I AM THE MESSENGER won the 2003 Children's Book Council of Australia's Book of the Year Award.

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Storytime Ideas: Penguins

There are so many activities that you can do with penguins. Here are a few suggestions:


Books:

Cuddly Dudley              by Jez Alborough
Penelope Penguin : the incredibly good baby     by John Bianchi
A penguin pup for Pinkerton                             by Steven Kellogg
Tacky the penguin         by Helen Lester
Penguin moon              by Annie Mitra
Penguins                      by Liz Pichon
A penguin story           by Antoinette Portis
Pink!                          by Lynne Rickards
Little Penguin’s tale     by Audrey Wood


Movies:
March of the Penguin
Happy Feet


Craft Ideas:

DLTK penguin crafts:
http://www.dltk-kids.com/animals/birds-penguins.html

Easy Penguin craft:
http://familycrafts.about.com/gi/o.htm?zi=1/XJ&zTi=1&sdn=familycrafts&cdn=parenting&tm=9&gps=94_609_988_551&f=02&tt=14&bt=0&bts=0&zu=http%3A//www.dltk-kids.com/animals/measypenguin.html

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Storytime Ideas: Winter

Well, we can no longer avoid the fact that it is winter so have some fun with these books and activities!

Books:

Winter Games by Roger Paré
Elephants Cannot Dance by Mo Willems
Totally Polar by Marty Crisp
Snow by Manya Stojic
The Mitten by Jan Brett
Perfect Snow by Barbara Reid


Fun Movement Activity:

Get the kids all warmed up with this!

Have the kids repeat the rhyme after you -

Brr, Brr, Brr
It’s cold! cold! cold!
It’s time to warm up, by jumping.
Jump on one foot,
Now on the other foot,
Now with both feet.
Turn and turn, now stop!
Now we are warm.



Craft ideas:

Build a snowman:
http://www.daniellesplace.com/images/snowman-pattern.gif



Igloo craft:
http://www.dltk-holidays.com/winter/migloo.htm

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Reading Resolutions for 2011

I do not generally make any sort of resolutions but this year I wanted to motivate myself to read books that have been piling up on my bedside table. I also wanted to venture back into reading books outside the Children's Department. So, here I am publicly declaring that I will clear all the books (and by that I mean read them, not put them away) piled up on my table. I also plan on reading 1 adult fiction book a month. So far, I have that one covered. I read Room by Emma Donoghue at the beginning of January. What a fantastic but horribly tragic book. If you have not read it, I highly recommend it! I also cleared off 2 books from my table - The House of Scorpion by Nancy Farmer (which I did not like so did not venture past page 50) and I am the Messenger by Markus Zusak (absolutely incredible read).




Wish me luck!