Friday, October 8, 2010
New Arrival!
John Grisham is best known for his grown-up legal-based novels like The Firm and The Chamber. Not content to rest on his laurels, John has written his first young adult novel entitled Theodore Boone: Kid Lawyer.
Destiny summarizes the book:
"Thirteen-year-old Theodore Boone, who knows every judge, police officer, and court clerk in the small town of Strattenburg, finds himself involved in a murder trial because of knowledge he might have about a cold-blooded killer."
Intrigued? Swing on by the library and either look for the book on a display shelf or under its call number FIC GRISHAM.
Destiny summarizes the book:
"Thirteen-year-old Theodore Boone, who knows every judge, police officer, and court clerk in the small town of Strattenburg, finds himself involved in a murder trial because of knowledge he might have about a cold-blooded killer."
Intrigued? Swing on by the library and either look for the book on a display shelf or under its call number FIC GRISHAM.
Wednesday, October 6, 2010
Library Tip of the Week
Did you know that you can check out a magazine? You can! Everyone at Smith can check out the following:
You also renew a book that you have already checked out and put popular titles on hold. Stop by the library and talk with Mr. Thomson for more information!
- Two books for two weeks
- One magazine for three days
You also renew a book that you have already checked out and put popular titles on hold. Stop by the library and talk with Mr. Thomson for more information!
Monday, October 4, 2010
BoTW: Peter and the Starcatchers
Looking for a great fantasy book? Love Peter Pan and Tinkerbell? Then check out Peter and the Starcatchers, a retelling of the Peter Pan story by Dave Barry and Ridley Pearson. Check out Wikipedia's entry about Peter and the Starcatchers, including summaries of the book and the major characters, comparisons between this book and the original written by Barrie, and critical opinions of the book.
And if you like Peter and the Starcatchers, read the sequels, Peter and the Shadow Thieves and Peter and the Secret of Rundoon.
Look for all three books in the Fiction section, under the call number FIC BARRY. For lots more information about the book, visit the website http://www.peterandthestarcatchers.com/
Friday, October 1, 2010
Wednesday, September 29, 2010
Library Tip of the Week
When you're putting a book on hold, keep in mind that if you put a book on hold using Destiny Quest, any book that has the ASK orange icon is a book that we don't actually have here at the library.
These two Twilight titles are in other library collections in the district, but they aren't actually here at Smith. So stick with books that have the IN or OUT icon. Those are titles we have here at Smith!
These two Twilight titles are in other library collections in the district, but they aren't actually here at Smith. So stick with books that have the IN or OUT icon. Those are titles we have here at Smith!
Monday, September 27, 2010
BotW: The Roar
Let me be upfront with Emma Clayton's The Roar: I recommend you don't read it.
Whoa! Mr. Thomson is saying NOT to read a book?
In a word, yes.
To be perfectly honest, I found The Roar to be a book with too many problems to recommend. I am surprised it was recommended as a Lonestar finalist. Normally, I wouldn't book talk a book that I cannot recommend reading, but The Roar is a 2010 Lonestar winner, and I feel obligated to warn you that the book falls short of its peers.
So what's wrong with The Roar? The books starts off well enough, with a Pod Fighter chase sequence that could easily translate into a Hollywood action movie. But it all goes downhill from there. In the first place, Emma Clayton blatantly rips off core themes from the Star Wars franchise: boy and girl twins with a telepathic connection to each other, telekinetic powers that closely resemble The Force, and Pod Fighter spaceships and flying sequences that could have easily fit within any of the last three Star Wars movies. If Emma Clayton had thought to throw in some "laser swords," George Lucas might have had grounds to sue.
Now, imitation is the greatest form of flattery and I wouldn't normally mind if an author borrowed some ideas to write a good book. But Emma Clayton never seems to tie her borrowed ideas together in a satisfyingly coherent way. Her main character, Mika, is single-minded in his quest to find and rescue is sister, but written with no depth beyond that. In fact, almost all of the book's characters are high on melodrama and cliches, low on substance. Emma Clayton often had her characters do and say things that didn't make sense within the narrative of her own story.
The Roar, the namesake of the book, falls flat, described as a noise and din that manifests in Mika's head and is fueled by the injustices perpetuated by the book's main villain, Mal Gorman (mal in Spanish and other romance languages means bad, a not-so-subtle signal that Gorman is not a good guy). I understand the author's attempt to focus outrage and injustice into telekinetic power that Mika wields against evil, but she didn't come close to pulling it off.
The book's ending was a mess, due mostly to the fact that Emma Clayton threw a lot of themes into her book, but failed to tie them together in a way that made sense. The book's finale contains a twist, but I had already deduced it halfway in and Clayton did a poor job of explaining why the twist happened and what it meant for the characters' future. The final pages came to an abrupt halt. At first, I thought the book was missing pages.
I can't tell if Emma Clayton means to write a sequel to The Roar. The ending is so convoluted, I can't tell if it's meant to segue into a continuing story. Sequel or not, I recommend you stay away from The Roar. Even if Clayton manages to salvage a compelling story in future books, The Roar simply isn't worth the time investment.
Whoa! Mr. Thomson is saying NOT to read a book?
In a word, yes.
To be perfectly honest, I found The Roar to be a book with too many problems to recommend. I am surprised it was recommended as a Lonestar finalist. Normally, I wouldn't book talk a book that I cannot recommend reading, but The Roar is a 2010 Lonestar winner, and I feel obligated to warn you that the book falls short of its peers.
So what's wrong with The Roar? The books starts off well enough, with a Pod Fighter chase sequence that could easily translate into a Hollywood action movie. But it all goes downhill from there. In the first place, Emma Clayton blatantly rips off core themes from the Star Wars franchise: boy and girl twins with a telepathic connection to each other, telekinetic powers that closely resemble The Force, and Pod Fighter spaceships and flying sequences that could have easily fit within any of the last three Star Wars movies. If Emma Clayton had thought to throw in some "laser swords," George Lucas might have had grounds to sue.
Now, imitation is the greatest form of flattery and I wouldn't normally mind if an author borrowed some ideas to write a good book. But Emma Clayton never seems to tie her borrowed ideas together in a satisfyingly coherent way. Her main character, Mika, is single-minded in his quest to find and rescue is sister, but written with no depth beyond that. In fact, almost all of the book's characters are high on melodrama and cliches, low on substance. Emma Clayton often had her characters do and say things that didn't make sense within the narrative of her own story.
The Roar, the namesake of the book, falls flat, described as a noise and din that manifests in Mika's head and is fueled by the injustices perpetuated by the book's main villain, Mal Gorman (mal in Spanish and other romance languages means bad, a not-so-subtle signal that Gorman is not a good guy). I understand the author's attempt to focus outrage and injustice into telekinetic power that Mika wields against evil, but she didn't come close to pulling it off.
The book's ending was a mess, due mostly to the fact that Emma Clayton threw a lot of themes into her book, but failed to tie them together in a way that made sense. The book's finale contains a twist, but I had already deduced it halfway in and Clayton did a poor job of explaining why the twist happened and what it meant for the characters' future. The final pages came to an abrupt halt. At first, I thought the book was missing pages.
I can't tell if Emma Clayton means to write a sequel to The Roar. The ending is so convoluted, I can't tell if it's meant to segue into a continuing story. Sequel or not, I recommend you stay away from The Roar. Even if Clayton manages to salvage a compelling story in future books, The Roar simply isn't worth the time investment.
Friday, September 24, 2010
New Arrival!
Have you ever been homeschooled? Know someone that has? If so, The Homeschool Liberation League by Lucy Frank might be the book for you! Check out Destiny's summary:
"Thirteen-year-old Katya convinces her parents to try homeschooling her for a month, but while she is finally excited about learning--and about Milo, the violin prodigy who lives nearby--not everything works out as she had hoped."
"Thirteen-year-old Katya convinces her parents to try homeschooling her for a month, but while she is finally excited about learning--and about Milo, the violin prodigy who lives nearby--not everything works out as she had hoped."
Wednesday, September 22, 2010
Library Tip of the Week
Are you using Google or Wikipedia when you do research for a class project or paper? If you are, stop! Google is a search engine, and while it does a great job tracking down hits from your keyword searches, it does not guarantee the accuracy of any information from the resulting websites.
Wikipedia is just that: a wiki that anyone can add to and edit. In general, Wikipedia does have some broad editorial control over the accuracy of its content. In reality, however, anybody can post whatever they want. The bottom line is you can't trust what you read on Wikipedia.
So where can you turn? To your very own library of course! Smith's Destiny homepage has a wide variety of online databases and encyclopedias, all of them just a click away. Best of all? You can trust the accuracy and authenticity of the information you get.
Here's how you get started:
The default home page should immediately come up. The online databases and encyclopedias list is in the middle of the page, to the right. Click on a database and begin your searching!
Wikipedia is just that: a wiki that anyone can add to and edit. In general, Wikipedia does have some broad editorial control over the accuracy of its content. In reality, however, anybody can post whatever they want. The bottom line is you can't trust what you read on Wikipedia.
So where can you turn? To your very own library of course! Smith's Destiny homepage has a wide variety of online databases and encyclopedias, all of them just a click away. Best of all? You can trust the accuracy and authenticity of the information you get.
Here's how you get started:
- Go to http://www.cfisd.net/
- Hover your mouse over "Departments" in the middle menu tab
- Click on "libraries"
- Click on "Middle Schools"
- Click on "Smith"
The default home page should immediately come up. The online databases and encyclopedias list is in the middle of the page, to the right. Click on a database and begin your searching!
Monday, September 20, 2010
BoTW: The Red Blazer Girls
The Red Blazer Girls by Michael D. Beil is a throwback to the young adult mystery books from a few decades ago. It centers around the investigative antics of three teenage girls, all of the them the best of friends. The girls attend a private Catholic high school for girls. They wear red blazers as part of their school uniform, hence their namesake. Sophie narrates the story and is the glue that holds the friends together. Margaret is the brains of the trio, an intellectual powerhouse who deduces with the best of them. Rebecca is the artist and the group's comic relief.
The three have the most active of imaginations, Sophie especially. The story begins when Sophie screams out loud in class when she sees a face peering out the window of the church across from her school. Undaunted by the scare, the three quickly agree to investigate the face and sneak into the church. Instead of a ghost or murderer, the girls discover an old lady and a decades-old mystery. The mysterious old lady tasks them with solving the whereabouts of a ring that according to legend grants wishes.
The Red Blazer Girls enthusiastically take the case and proceed to sneak into a church, hide under an alter table, and use Decartes' Cartesian coordinate system to track down the ring, among other detective activities. The girls employ a healthy dose of basic algebra and geometry to solve their case and Beil unfolds the puzzles in such a way that the reader can attempt to solve the equations right alongside the young sleuths.
I thoroughly enjoyed The Red Blazer Girls. As a kid, I read every The Hardy Boys mystery I could get my hands on. Beil's Red Blazer Girls are very much in the light-hearted, investigative spirit of Nancy Drew and The Hardy Boys. If you enjoy a good mystery and solving math problems, pick up The Red Blazer Girls today!
Friday, September 17, 2010
New Arrival!
The Return of the Emerald Skull by Paul Stewart and Chris Riddell is the latest book in the Barnaby Grimes series. Here's the Destiny summary:
"Barnaby Grimes' latest case has him tracking down the origins of a curse that is plaguing the local school, threatening students and teachers, but in the course of his investigation, Barnaby learns everything is not as it seems."
"Barnaby Grimes' latest case has him tracking down the origins of a curse that is plaguing the local school, threatening students and teachers, but in the course of his investigation, Barnaby learns everything is not as it seems."
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
Library Tip of the Week
Have a pass to come to the library during class? No problem! Just keep in mind the following:
See you in the library!
- Sign in at the circulation desk. Be sure to include the time that you arrived.
- If you see Mr. Thomson talking to a class, return to class and try coming another time.
- If you have books to turn in, hang on to them if you plan to check out more.
- If you don't see Mr. Thomson in the library at all, don't wait for him to come back! Return to class and try coming another time.
See you in the library!
Monday, September 13, 2010
BotW: Slob
When you pick up Slob by Ellen Potter and you stare at the book's cover with an Oreo cookie substituting as the title's "o," you might think you know what the book means by "slob."
To Ellen Potter's immense credit, you would be wrong.
The story opens with Owen Birnbaum, who declares at the beginning of the book that he is likely fatter and smarter than you are. Being overweight AND smart means Owen doesn't fit in well at school. He's got a friend or two, but most everyone at school makes fun of him. Bullies delight in humiliating him, especially Owen's sadistic gym teacher.
But being a social misfit isn't what troubles Owen the most. Well into the book you will find that even though Owen lives with someone he calls Mom, something happened to his real parents. Something tragic. Owen can't let go and move on from his parents' untimely death and so he works on his own personal invention, a device he calls Nemesis, to better cope.
Like Owen tells you from the start, he's smart. Genius smart. Owen knows all about satellite waves and he plans to build Nemesis so that it can grab some security camera footage of his parents the night they were killed.
Heavy stuff.
The book is also very funny and lighthearted. Owen's sister belongs to GWAB: Girls Who Are Boys and insists everyone start calling her Jeremy. The school's thug reportedly carries a switchblade in his sock. Owen's friend Nima makes tasty momos and talks about Tibetan Buddhism karma.
It's the ending, however, that makes Slob shine. The most beautiful and saddest aspect of the book is how Ellen Potter makes you think slob means one thing, only to turn it around on its head in the book's final pages. Potter artfully combines the themes of her book--loss, grief, forgiveness--and drives them home so poignently. If you don't like crying in public, read the ending in private!
To Ellen Potter's immense credit, you would be wrong.
The story opens with Owen Birnbaum, who declares at the beginning of the book that he is likely fatter and smarter than you are. Being overweight AND smart means Owen doesn't fit in well at school. He's got a friend or two, but most everyone at school makes fun of him. Bullies delight in humiliating him, especially Owen's sadistic gym teacher.
But being a social misfit isn't what troubles Owen the most. Well into the book you will find that even though Owen lives with someone he calls Mom, something happened to his real parents. Something tragic. Owen can't let go and move on from his parents' untimely death and so he works on his own personal invention, a device he calls Nemesis, to better cope.
Like Owen tells you from the start, he's smart. Genius smart. Owen knows all about satellite waves and he plans to build Nemesis so that it can grab some security camera footage of his parents the night they were killed.
Heavy stuff.
The book is also very funny and lighthearted. Owen's sister belongs to GWAB: Girls Who Are Boys and insists everyone start calling her Jeremy. The school's thug reportedly carries a switchblade in his sock. Owen's friend Nima makes tasty momos and talks about Tibetan Buddhism karma.
It's the ending, however, that makes Slob shine. The most beautiful and saddest aspect of the book is how Ellen Potter makes you think slob means one thing, only to turn it around on its head in the book's final pages. Potter artfully combines the themes of her book--loss, grief, forgiveness--and drives them home so poignently. If you don't like crying in public, read the ending in private!
Friday, September 10, 2010
New Arrival!
Bystander by James Prellar is a book about bullying in school. Here's the Destiny summary:
"Thirteen-year-old Eric discovers there are consequences to not standing by and watching as the bully at his new school hurts people, but although school officials are aware of the problem, Eric may be the one with a solution."
"Thirteen-year-old Eric discovers there are consequences to not standing by and watching as the bully at his new school hurts people, but although school officials are aware of the problem, Eric may be the one with a solution."
Wednesday, September 8, 2010
Library Tip of the Week
Did you know you can put your own books on hold? You can!
Here's how:
Here's how:
- Go to Smith's Destiny library page.
- In the upper right hand corner, click "Login."
- Enter your student id number (sxxxxxx) and password.
- If you logged in correctly, your name should display in the upper right hand corner.
- Now, do a search of the book you want to put on hold.
- When you find the book, click on its title to bring up its detailed information.
- Off on the right side, you should see a red symbol that says "Hold It."
- Click on that symbol.
- You're done! When the book comes in, Mr. Thomson will check it out to you.
Keep in mind that when you put a book on hold, you are put in a queue. There could be one or five or twenty people in front of you that get to check the book out before you do. Also, holds expire after a few weeks. So if you put a book on hold and you don't get the book in a month or so, put in another hold.
Tuesday, September 7, 2010
Book Fair Starts Today!
The library book fair begins today and runs through this Friday! 6th grade will be coming to the fair with their reading class. 7th and 8th graders can come with a pass from their teacher.
The fair is also open Thursday night during 6th grade open house.
So swing on by the library and buy a good book!
The fair is also open Thursday night during 6th grade open house.
So swing on by the library and buy a good book!
BotW: Catching Fire
Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins is the sequel to the critically-acclaimed The Hunger Games.
It picks up where the first left off. Katniss and Peeta have won the Games, but there are rumors that open rebellion lurks within every district and Kat has become a reluctant symbol for revolution against the Capital.
I found the first half of Catching Fire to be a bit on the slow side. It takes Collins some time to build the story up to the book's climatic, action-packed second half. But the next round of Games are as engrossing as they are bloody, a compelling clock mechanism that keeps the gladiators constantly on the run for their lives. I like how Collins handles the love triangle between Kat, Gale, and Peeta. She does a good job of pinging Kat back and forth between the two love interests.
Collins also does a good job of setting the story up for the inevitable third book in the series, Mockingjay. Given the circumstances surrounding open rebellion sweeping the districts and the revelation that District 13 might not be as desolate as The Capital claims, I bet Mockingjay will be an even stronger, more interesting book in the series.
It picks up where the first left off. Katniss and Peeta have won the Games, but there are rumors that open rebellion lurks within every district and Kat has become a reluctant symbol for revolution against the Capital.
I found the first half of Catching Fire to be a bit on the slow side. It takes Collins some time to build the story up to the book's climatic, action-packed second half. But the next round of Games are as engrossing as they are bloody, a compelling clock mechanism that keeps the gladiators constantly on the run for their lives. I like how Collins handles the love triangle between Kat, Gale, and Peeta. She does a good job of pinging Kat back and forth between the two love interests.
Collins also does a good job of setting the story up for the inevitable third book in the series, Mockingjay. Given the circumstances surrounding open rebellion sweeping the districts and the revelation that District 13 might not be as desolate as The Capital claims, I bet Mockingjay will be an even stronger, more interesting book in the series.
Friday, September 3, 2010
New Arrival!
The Morgue and Me by John C. Ford looks to be an exciting mystery book, if not a bit on the violent side judging by the front cover. Here's the Destiny summary of the book:
"Eighteen-year-old Christopher, who plans to be a spy, learns of a murder cover-up through his summer job as a morgue assistant and teams up with Tina, a gorgeous newspaper reporter, to investigate, despite great danger."
"Eighteen-year-old Christopher, who plans to be a spy, learns of a murder cover-up through his summer job as a morgue assistant and teams up with Tina, a gorgeous newspaper reporter, to investigate, despite great danger."
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
Library Tip of the Week
I talked about Scott Westerfeld's gripping steam-punk novel Leviathan last Monday. If you didn't already know, Scott maintains his own website and updates it often. You can find it at http://scottwesterfeld.com/blog/. He's got a ton of information about him and his books, including recent news and fan art and fiction.
On his site, Scott announced that Behemoth, the sequel to Leviathan, releases this October 5th! Here's a sneak-peak of the cover art:
Monday, August 30, 2010
BoTW: Leviathan
I raved about Leviathan by Scott Westerfeld last January (you can check the archive to read what I had to say about this new series) and I'm highlighting the book again because it's just that good!
Leviathan is a steam-punk re-imagining of World War I, full of genetically modified animals and clanker metal war machines. The plot revolves around young prince Aleksander Ferdinand, son of the Archduke Ferdinand and leader of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. When the Archduke is brutally assassinated, Alek must flee for his life and muster a plan to fight the men behind his father's death.
You need to read this book now because Behemoth, the second book in the series, comes out this October! Swing by the library and check it out!
Friday, August 27, 2010
New Arrival!
Alienated by David Russell and Andrew Auseon is one of the new books here at Smith. Read the Destiny summary below and then swing by the library to check this book out!
"Santa Rosa, California, junior high school students Gene and Vince try to become famous and popular by publishing a free tabloid about real aliens, but a clash over whether to print a certain story not only damages their friendship, it lands them in the middle of an intergalactic conflict, as well."
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
Library News
Welcome back!
The library is open for business! Swing by the library before school, between passing periods, and after school and pick up some awesome books to read.
6th grade classes will be coming to the library starting next Monday, August 30th. I'll be presenting a brief orientation on how to check out books, where books are located in the library, and how to find books in Destiny, our electronic catalog.
As for the blog, Mondays will still be devoted to Book of the Week, or BoTW for short. I will highlight a book that I've read and that I recommend you read too. Wednesdays are for Library News (like today). Fridays will be all about newly published books that I haven't necessarily read, but look promising.
So stop by often and keep up-to-date with the Smith library!
The library is open for business! Swing by the library before school, between passing periods, and after school and pick up some awesome books to read.
6th grade classes will be coming to the library starting next Monday, August 30th. I'll be presenting a brief orientation on how to check out books, where books are located in the library, and how to find books in Destiny, our electronic catalog.
As for the blog, Mondays will still be devoted to Book of the Week, or BoTW for short. I will highlight a book that I've read and that I recommend you read too. Wednesdays are for Library News (like today). Fridays will be all about newly published books that I haven't necessarily read, but look promising.
So stop by often and keep up-to-date with the Smith library!
Wednesday, July 28, 2010
Summer's End
The summer break is drawing to a close. I hope you're looking forward to the start of school as much as I am!
I've been busy reading young adult books all summer and can't wait to share them with you. A quick heads up: steer clear of The Roar by Emma Clayton, read Slob by Ellen Potter as soon as you can.
I plan to open the library for book check out as soon as possible. That could be as early as the first week of school, but unexpected start-of-school events could push that back. Rest assured, I'm as anxious as you are to check out books.
Keep in mind, we're having the library book fair a few weeks after school starts! The fair starts Tuesday, September 7th and runs through Friday, September 10th. The fair will also be open Thursday evening as part of the 6th grade open house.
That's about it for now. Enjoy the rest of your summer. We'll see you in a few weeks!
I've been busy reading young adult books all summer and can't wait to share them with you. A quick heads up: steer clear of The Roar by Emma Clayton, read Slob by Ellen Potter as soon as you can.
I plan to open the library for book check out as soon as possible. That could be as early as the first week of school, but unexpected start-of-school events could push that back. Rest assured, I'm as anxious as you are to check out books.
Keep in mind, we're having the library book fair a few weeks after school starts! The fair starts Tuesday, September 7th and runs through Friday, September 10th. The fair will also be open Thursday evening as part of the 6th grade open house.
That's about it for now. Enjoy the rest of your summer. We'll see you in a few weeks!
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
Have a great summer!
We're winding things down here at the library, but you should be revving up your reading for the summer! To help you, check out the Smith library home page here. You'll find links to CyFair's 2010 summer reading list, broken down by genre. Immediately underneath the summer reading list you'll find a link to the Lone Star website, plum full of dozens of great book recommendations.
See something you like? Visit your nearest public library or swing by Half Price Books or Barnes & Noble.
See you next August!
See something you like? Visit your nearest public library or swing by Half Price Books or Barnes & Noble.
See you next August!
Thursday, May 20, 2010
Tuesday, May 4, 2010
Rock Band Pizza Party, May 19th!
We're having another Rock Band pizza party, Wednesday, May 19th! Stop by the library before Friday, May 14th and fill out a registration slip. Only one entry per student! If I draw your name, you get to come to the party!
Here's the best party: you get to invite a friend!
The only catch is that neither of you can have any overdue library books. So get those overdue books turned in today!
Here's the best party: you get to invite a friend!
The only catch is that neither of you can have any overdue library books. So get those overdue books turned in today!
Monday, May 3, 2010
BotW: Slob
In the book Slob by Ellen Potter, the main character Owen is a twelve-year who is as intelligent as he is overweight. When his parents are murdered in a robbery attempt, Owen makes it his life's work to invent a device that allows him to replay the past. Not only does Owen grieve for the loss of his parents, he also has to contend with bullies at school who take great delight in tormenting him for being fat.
Owen can take the bullying if only he can get his invention to actually work, peer into the near-past and identify the person who killed his parents. Slob is a touching account of middle school life and of adolescent loss and grieving.
Slob is a Lone Star 2010 award winner.
Monday, April 26, 2010
Library Closed All Week for TAKS Testing
The library will be closed for TAKS testing starting Tuesday, April 27th through Friday, April 30th. The library will reopen Monday, May 3rd.
Friday, April 23, 2010
New Arrival!
Ten Things I Hate About Me by Randa Abel-Fattah is about a Lebenese-Australian girl named Jamie who tried to hide her mixed heritage at school. Here's the Destiny summary:
"Lebanese-Australian Jamilah, known in school as Jamie, hides her heritage from her classmates and tries to pass by dyeing her hair blonde and wearing blue-tinted contact lenses, until her conflicted feelings become too much for her to bear."
Ten Things I Hate About Me is the perfect book for anyone who feels they sometimes don't fit in at their school.
Thursday, April 22, 2010
Monday, April 19, 2010
BoTW: The Roar
In Emma Clayton's The Roar, a terrible plague has infected most of the world's animal population, turning them into rabid creatures that crave human flesh. To protect themselves from the The Animal Plague, humanity has fled north behind a wall. Living in cramped, squalid conditions, Mika is a twelve-year old boy whose twin sister recently drowned.
But Mika doesn't believe that she is dead and does everything he can to uncover the truth about what really happened to her. Full of pod ships, video games, zombie animals, and frantic action, The Roar is an bleak but entertaining glimpse into a fictional post-apocolyptic world. If you like a good sci-fi story, give The Roar a try!
The Roar is a Lone Star 2010 award winner.
Friday, April 16, 2010
Rock Band Pizza Party Winners!
I drew twenty names today and found sixteen winners for the April 22nd Rock Band pizza party! I had to discard four names because they had overdue library books! Oh no! Next time, get those overdue books in so that if I draw your name, you can come join the fun!
Here's the list of winners:
Madison D.
Euquan J.
Ryan L.
Samantha M.
Edward P.
Victoria P.
Maria R.
Lakhte Z.
Dwight B.
Heather R.
Jeremiah A.
Thomas B.
Austin B.
Robert D.
Taylor G.
Tiffany N.
Congrats to all of this month's winners. We'll see you afterschool Thursday, April 22nd in the library!
Here's the list of winners:
Madison D.
Euquan J.
Ryan L.
Samantha M.
Edward P.
Victoria P.
Maria R.
Lakhte Z.
Dwight B.
Heather R.
Jeremiah A.
Thomas B.
Austin B.
Robert D.
Taylor G.
Tiffany N.
Congrats to all of this month's winners. We'll see you afterschool Thursday, April 22nd in the library!
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
Library Tip of Week
The library is having a Rock Band pizza party next Thursday, April 22nd from 2:30 to 3:30! How do you get the chance to jam out and scarf down some pizza? It's easy!
- This Friday I'm going to randomly draw names from all three grades levels.
- When I draw a name, I will look up the person on Destiny. If they don't have an overdue book, they win! They get to attend the pizza party.
- If they do have an overdue book, I will discard their name and draw another.
- I will continue drawing names until I have sixteen total people.
- I will contact the winners and send them a permission slip that must be returned before they attend the pizza party.
So get your overdue books turned in today!
Monday, April 12, 2010
BoTW: The Hunt for the Seventh
The Hunt for the Seventh by Christine Morton-Shaw is a creepy thriller of a book about a teenage boy named Jim who finds himself trying to unravel the mystery of the haunted mansion he's recently moved to with his father and sister. Early in the book, Jim meets an autistic boy named Einstein who talks in riddles. He also finds a black board in an old classroom with the names of children scrawled on it, the word "deceased" next to each name. A message at the very bottom states simply, "Follow the statues." Jim does that and quickly finds himself hunting a set of clues in a mad race against time to prevent more innocent deaths.
Morton-Shaw heightens the eerie creepiness of her book with ghostly whispers, phantom reenactments of the children's freakish deaths, and the malevolent Lord Minerva, wheel-chair bound and obsessed with watching grainy security footage from the cameras spread throughout his sinister mansion.
If you like scary books, you need to read this book right now!
Friday, April 9, 2010
New Arrival!
Alibi Junior High by Greg Logstead. Here's the Destiny summary:
"After thirteen-year-old Cody and his father, an undercover agent, are nearly killed, Cody moves in with his aunt in Connecticut, where he is helped with his adjustment to the trials of attending public school for the first time and investigating a threat in nearby woods by a wounded Iraq War veteran."
Wednesday, April 7, 2010
Library Tip of the Week
The library was closed all day yesterday and today, April 6th and 7th, for 8th grade TAKS testing. The library will also be closed all day the week of April 26th through April 29th. All three grade levels are testing that week at one time or another, so be sure to have your library books checked out the week BEFORE testing begins!
Monday, April 5, 2010
BoTW: Girlfriend Material
Girlfriend Material by Melissa Kantor (another 2010 Lonestar book) is all about relationships of the teenage variety. Kate has all kinds of plans for her upcoming summer break, but has to drop them all when her Mom informs her that they are staying with some old friends on Cape Cod. The old friends include Sarah, a pretty teenager who resents Kate and her Mom crashing her summer break. To make matters worse, Kate quickly meets a handsome boy, Adam, and falls for him hard.
Does Kate manage to navigate all these different relationships and salvage her summer break? Read Girlfriend Material to find out! And if you like it, try Melissa Kantor's other book, The Breakup Bible.
Friday, April 2, 2010
Wednesday, March 31, 2010
Library Tip of the Week
We've got a three-day weekend approaching. Swing by the library and check out some books to pass the time!
Monday, March 29, 2010
BoTW: North of Beautiful
In Justina Headley's North of Beautiful, the book's main character Terra is a pretty, artistic, and intellectual young woman with a socially crippling birthmark covering one side of her face. Terra describes herself at the very start of the novel, saying "Not to brag or anything, but if you saw me from behind, you'd probably think I was perfect. I'm tall, but not too tall, with a ballerina's long legs and longish neck. My hair is naturally platinum blond, the kind that curls when I want it to and cascades behind my back in one sleek line when I don't."
On the other hand, Terra goes on to say, "Please don't get me wrong; I've got all the requisite parts -- and in all the right numbers, too: one nose, two eyes, and twenty-four teeth that add up to not a bad smile. But who notices pearly whites when a red-stained birthmark stretches across the broad plain of my right cheek?"
To make matters worse, Terra's father is a controlling, verbally abusive figure in her life. At the start of the book, Terra's sense of self-worth is at it's lowest ebb.
When Terra and her mother get into a car accident, Terra meets Jacob, an Asian teenager born with a cleft palette. They quickly become good friends and through Jacob, Terra better deals with her birthmark and learn her own worth beyond physical appearance.
North of Beautiful is a 2010 Lonestar book.
Friday, March 26, 2010
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
Monday, March 22, 2010
BotW: The Red Blazer Girls
The Red Blazer Girls by Michael Beil, a Lonestar 2010 award recipient, is a mystery story in the truest sense of the word. The novel begins with Sophie sitting in class listening to her teacher talk about a particularly creepy scene from the classic Great Expectations. When she happens to look out her classroom window and sees a strange face looking back at from a high window across the school, Sophie screams! Afterwards, Sophie teams up with her best friends, Margaret and Rebecca, and together the three agree to investigate the mysterious identity of the person in the church.
I proclaim The Red Blazer Girls to be mystery's mystery book because the book reminds me of the classic Scooby Doo cartoons I watched when I was a kid. Full of clues, mysterious villains, creepy locations, and great plots twists, the Red Blazer Girls isn't scary, but puzzling. Like Scooby, Shaggy, and the rest of the gang, the Red Blazer Girls stumble upon a case, gather clues, hide under tables, meet a strange boy, and endeavor to solve a mystery.
Intrigued? Check out The Red Blazer Girls today!
I proclaim The Red Blazer Girls to be mystery's mystery book because the book reminds me of the classic Scooby Doo cartoons I watched when I was a kid. Full of clues, mysterious villains, creepy locations, and great plots twists, the Red Blazer Girls isn't scary, but puzzling. Like Scooby, Shaggy, and the rest of the gang, the Red Blazer Girls stumble upon a case, gather clues, hide under tables, meet a strange boy, and endeavor to solve a mystery.
Intrigued? Check out The Red Blazer Girls today!
Friday, March 12, 2010
Friday, March 5, 2010
New Arrival!
Here's the Destiny summary for Somebody by Nancy Springer:
"At the age of fifteen, a girl who has spent most of her life moving around the country with her father and brother, filling the emptiness inside her with chocolate, remembers her real name, Sherica, and searches the Internet to learn the truth about her mother and her own past."
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