Friday, February 17, 2012

New Arrival! Lie


Although serious in content, Lie by Caroline Bock seems to be an age-appropriate treatment of racism in the United States. Destiny says:

"Seventeen-year-old Skylar is the prime witness when her boyfriend, Jimmy, is accused of brutally assaulting two El Salvadoran immigrants from a neighboring town, but Skylar is refusing to talk to the police, until one of the victims steps up to demand justice and Skylar begins to have second thoughts about protecting Jimmy."

You can check out or hold Lie today!

Monday, February 13, 2012

BoTW: Bruiser

Bruiser by Neal Shusterman is a 2011 Lone Star book, the very first highlighted on this blog! I've read the first third of the book and I can reliably report that it's a steep departure from Unwind, though it contains some of the teenage angst found in Ansty Does Time. The book's overall theme seems to revolve around child abuse and neglect, and how children persevere against the starkest of family life.

From the beginning, Shusterman introduces some of the most unique characters in recent young adult literature. Bronte and Tennyson are twin siblings named by their literature professor parents after the famed novelist and poet. Bronte has begun dating an infamous boy at school, Brewster "The Bruiser" Rawlins. "The Bruiser" is a hulking teenager, voted by his class as "Most Likely to Get the Death Penalty." And now he's dating Tennyson's sister.

Tennyson will have none of it. He stalks Bronte and Brewster during their mini-golf date, corners Brewster, and threatens Brewster to stay away from his sister. The two nearly come to blows. Later Tennyson accidentally stumbles upon Brewster in the boy's locker room with his shirt off, his back covered with unbelievable scarring and bruising which Tennyson likens to the cratering on the moon. Curious about Brewster's bewildering disfigurement, Tennyson secretly follows him home after school. Hiding behind a nearby dumpster, he witnesses Brewster's uncle brandish a belt, threatening to beat Brewster and his little brother Cody!

Is that where Brewster's scars come from? Tennyson suspects yes. But then something strange happens. After hanging out with Brewster at his house, Tennyson notices that his scraped knuckles have inexplicably healed?

What could have caused such miraculous healing? And who (or what) is causing the scars and bruises on Brewster Rawlin's back? Read Bruiser and find out!

Friday, February 10, 2012

New Arrival! Pie


Sarah Weeks writes lots of books, including Regular Guy and So B. It. She's got a new book out, called simply Pie. Destiny summarizes it as:

"Alice's Aunt Polly passes away and entrusts the recipe for her world-famous pie crust to her cat, which she leaves in Alice's care, and as everyone, including Alice, tries to discover the secret ingredients, Alice learns some important lessons about faith, love, and family."

Check out Pie today!

Monday, February 6, 2012

BoTW: How Not to be Popular

This week's Book of the Week is How Not to Be Popular by Jennifer Ziegler, a 2009 Lone Star Award winner.

Maggie has a couple of hippies for parents. She loves them dearly, but Maggie has grown tired of constantly moving from town to town, leaving behind friends and boyfriends. The latest move to Austin, Texas is the last straw. Pained at the thought of making new friends and finding a new boyfriend, Maggie decides to do everything she can at this new school to NOT be popular, to be a loner right up until the point her parents move again. The results are as predictable as they are funny.