Thursday 30 October 2014

Warm Bodies by Isaac Marion

Marion, Isaac. Warm Bodies: A Novel. New York: Atria Books, 2011. Print.  978-1-4391-9232-0; Paperback; $15.00.

Annotation: 
R is a lonely zombie with a crush on a real live girl he kidnaps and befriends.

Book Talk:
Just who are these warm bodies Isaac Marion is talking about in his book, they surely couldn't be the zombies roaming around after the apocalypse chewing on the leftover humans that have managed to survive?  R is a lonely zombie wandering around an dilapidated airport grunting with his fellow “fleshies” and nibbling on the occasional brain which gives him flashbacks of the deceased’s memories.  The difference between R and his brethren is that he doesn’t really like eating people, he spends most of his time listening to old records in an abandoned airplane and feeling sorry for himself.  Until one day, on a hunt for food, he meets Julie, a real live human girl, who he rescues but only after devouring her boyfriend.  He begins to fall in love with Julie and sets out to show her, and her friends and father, that zombies aren’t such dead beats after all.  Who said the dead lack warmth?

This book would be a great read for any teen interested in post-apocalyptic horror or paranormal romance.  Recommended for ages 13 and up due to the gruesome content.  If you like the book be sure to check out the movie:


Available in paperback, hardcover, ebook, and audiobook.

Wednesday 29 October 2014

The Ocean at the End of the Lane by Neil Gaiman

Gaiman, Neil. The Ocean at the End of the Lane. New York: Harper Audio, 2013. Sound recording.  978-0-06-226303-2; 5 CDs; $36.99.

Annotation: 
A young boy witnesses a tragedy and gets pulled into a magical world at the end of his lane where a family of women offer him the promise of protection.

Book Talk:
I first read Neil Gaiman’s The Ocean at the End of the Lane the moment it came out, as soon as I could get my hands on it.  Then I listened to it on audio in the car again just for the pleasure of hearing Neil Gaiman’s voice describe the incredible adventures of an introverted seven year old boy who has a worm hole in his foot, a nanny who is trying to lock him in the attic and seduce his father, a distracted mother, a contrary sister, and a family of women who live down the lane and who know that fresh baked bread, a warm cup of tea, and radical acceptance of everything that is, even when it feels like it shouldn’t be, are the very definition of home.  Gaiman’s narrator blows apart the shaky façade of adulthood and exposes people for the monsters they really are.  He writes:

“Grown-ups don't look like grown-ups on the inside either. Outside, they're big and thoughtless and they always know what they're doing. Inside, they look just like they always have. Like they did when they were your age. Truth is, there aren't any grown-ups. Not one, in the whole wide world.”

This book will appeal to anyone who is struggling with the idea of what it means to be human, what it means to be responsible for oneself or another, or anyone who likes an intelligent and philosophical swim through the metaphorical ocean of our lives.  Highly recommended.

Rumor has it they are turning it into a movie!  Stay tuned!!!

Did you know Neil Gaiman has a website for Teens?  Check it out: http://www.mousecircus.com/

Awards:
2013 National Book Awards (British), Book of the Year
2013 Kirkus Reviews, The Best Books of 2013 (100 titles
2013 Nebula Award for Best Novel, Nominee 
2013 Goodreads Choice Awards, Fantasy
2014 Locus Award for Best Fantasy Novel
2014 World Fantasy Award for Best Novel, Nominee

Presently available in paperback, hardcover, large print, ebook, and audio.

Teen quote:
"This book is like experiencing a fleeting dream."
~Jessie, age 17.

Monday 20 October 2014

The Fault in Our Stars by John Green

Green, John. The Fault in Our Stars. Brilliance Audio, 2011. CD.  978-1-4558-6974-9; 6 CDs; $24.99.

Annotation: 
Hazel and Augustus are the perfect couple, except they have terminal cancer.

Book Talk:
The title of this book is based on a Shakespeare quote from the play Julius Caesar: Cassius says, "The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, but in ourselves, that we are underlings."  In other words, we are not Gods, we are human, it is not fate that destroys us, but the human condition.  On the surface this seems to be another sappy, syrupy love story about two white, upper-middle-class, heterosexual teens who fall madly in love only to have their requisite tragic ending.  But Hazel and Augustus don't have your typical North American teen lifestyle, they have terminal cancer.  Anyone who's ever watched someone they love die from cancer knows the complicated feelings that come from wanting to see an end to their suffering and desperately needing to keep them around just a little bit longer.  Just so you can smell them and hear them laugh, and see their soul behind their eyes.  This book will also appeal to anyone who has ever loved someone and needed to let them go, for whatever reason.

Available in paperback, hardcover, e-book, audio CD, audio MP3 and it has also been made into a movie:
Check out the movie trailer below:
Award:

2013 Odyssey Award for Excellence in Audiobook Production

Friday 17 October 2014

Almost Perfect by Brian Katcher

Katcher, Brian. Almost Perfect. New York: Delacorte Press, 2009. Print.  978-0-385-73664-0; Hardcover; $17.99.

Annotation:
Logan falls in love with a girl that is almost perfect.  The issue?  She used to be a he.

Book Talk:
Logan has just been dumped by his long term high school girlfriend who has left him still a virgin at age 18 and he’s not happy about it.  When a new girl named Sage moves into town with her curly red hair, silky smooth skin and flirtatious ways, Logan decides maybe it’s time to move on.  But he quickly learns there is more to Sage than meets the eye, that she was actually born a HE, and now Logan needs to quickly figure out what it means when a straight guy has just made out with a girl who’s ALMOST PERFECT, and how no one can ever find out.

NOTE: This book is a great introduction to the difficulties facing transgender teens in North America as well as the challenges presented to their friends, family and lovers.  Brian Katcher leaves a detailed Author's Note at the end of the novel urging real-life Sages to reach out for help and know that there are special associations and support groups for them, like TNET and their friends and families, like PFLAG.

Available in paperback, hardcover, e-book, and audio CD.

Award:
Winner of the Stonewall Children's and Young Adult Literature Award, 2011.

Thursday 9 October 2014

Rage: True Stories by Teens About Anger edited by Laura Longhine

Longhine, Laura. Rage: True Stories by Teens About Anger. Minneapolis, MN: Free Spirit Pub, 2012. Print.  978-1-57542-414-9; Paperback; $11.99.

Annotation: 
Teens tell the truth about what it is like to feel intense, violent anger.

Book Review:
Rage: it’s more than anger.  You know that feeling, the one where your mind has lost all capacity for rational thought and you are left sobbing, shocked, and shaking, and so is everyone around you.  Despite your best efforts to stay calm, you hurl insults, scream, kick, bite, punch, smash things, and hurt people, including yourself.  What doesn’t bother one person can trigger Hulk-like mayhem in someone else.  Rage can be one of the most terrifying of human emotions, and yet it is something we all experience and have difficulty dealing with.  This amazing little collection of true stories told by teens that have experienced rage firsthand chronicles the raw emotions behind abuse, abandonment, poverty, racism, bullying, and feeling trapped and judged.  Watch Fred beat another guy to a bloody pulp and land in jail; Robin channel his fury into Karate kicks; and Natasha use the mask of perkiness and perfection to cover up her panic and isolation.  Brimming with courage, honesty, and real-life tips on how to handle the unimaginable, this is an essential read for any teen (or adult) who has ever felt overwhelmed by their own temper.

The Real Teen Voices series (which includes Rage, Pressure, and Vicious) come from a diverse selection of teen voices, showing that hatred and fury are not bound to certain social classes, but touch all people regardless of race, geographic location, economic situation, sexual orientation or gender.  The hard, uncomfortable edges in their writing are softened by moments of tenderness, clarity, and real love and affection, as well as hope for the future.  The book also includes an interview with therapist Toni Heineman offering practical advice on recognizing anger issues, staying calm, and removing yourself from volatile situations before you explode.  Recommended for ages 13+ due to mature content.  

Available in paperback and e-book.

You can watch a video about the struggle one of the teen authors, Natasha Santos, has with herself while writing "Bum-rushed by my past" by visiting: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b74ly0qorQ8.  You can also read her story.  

Want more?  Check out this Youth Communication teen author talking about how writing saved him from his anger and bullying.  Three cheers for literacy!!!

Sunday 5 October 2014

The Book Thief by Marcus Zusak

Zusak, Markus. The Book Thief. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2006. Print.  978-0-375-84220-7; paperback; $12.99.

Annotation:
Liesel has just lost everything: her father, her mother, her little brother, and she's about to lose a whole lot more.

Book Review:
It’s the early days of World War II and just outside of Munich, Germany Liesel Meminger wakes up on a train to find her brother dead.  Her sickly, communist mother leaves her in the care of Hans and Rosa Hubermann, in a foster home on Himmel Street, and never sees her again.  Death, The Book Thief’s omniscient narrator, is watching.  This wise-cracking, smooth-talking Death appears outwardly unflappable but is beginning to inwardly fall apart.  His work is overwhelming; there are so many souls that need transporting and so many desperate survivors he has to stare in the face.  He can’t take a vacation: Death’s one of a kind.  But there is something special about Liesel, our illiterate, earnest protagonist that catches Death’s attention, when she steals a book from her brother’s grave site and sets about to learning how to read it.  Along the way she makes friends with a fist-fighting Jew, a scrappy athlete named Rudy, a haunted mayor’s wife, and her beloved foster father, Hans.  Amid abject poverty, starvation, bombings, Hitler Youth meetings, school and bullying Liesel continues to comfort herself with stolen words, and begins to write a few of her own.  Her obsession with literature becomes her saving grace from the sorrow and confusion of war.  And in the end, it touches upon the lives of her neighbors, loved ones, and enemies.  Even her biggest enemy of all, Death himself.

Weighing in at over 550 pages with a drab brown cover, The Book Thief is not going to appeal to the reluctant reader, though you may enjoy the movie directed by Brian Percival or The Complete Maus by Art Spiegelman instead.  Unlike John Boyne’s The Boy in the Striped Pajamas, Zusak’s Book Thief never feels patronizing or didactic.  The book’s true magnificence is in its ability to capture so many points of view without making obvious judgments about any of them.  The storyline runs wide enough to encompass repentant Germans, guilt-ridden Jews, diabolical Nazis, abusive but loving parents and impulsive children.  And, of course, Death, who is far more human than we may find comfortable.  Recommended for ages 13 and up due to mature subject matter.

Available in paperback, hardcover, large print, e-book, braille book, audio CD.  They also made it into a movie:

Awards won in 2006: 
Commonwealth Writers' Prize for Best Book (South East Asia & South Pacific), School Library Journal Best Book of the Year, Daniel Elliott Peace Award, Publishers Weekly Best Children's Book of the Year; Bulletin Blue Ribbon Book.

Awards won in 2007: 
Michael L. Printz Award, Book Sense Book of the Year, Notable Book for a Global Society, Sydney Taylor Award, Notable Social Studies Trade Books for Young People.

Friday 3 October 2014

Forever...by Judy Blume

Blume, Judy.  Forever.  Scarsdale, N.Y: Bradbury Press, 1975. Print.  978-1-4169-3400-4; paperback; $8.99.

Annotation: 
Katherine falls in love with Michael and he wants them to be together forever, but she isn't so sure.

Book Review:
Written and set in the mid-1970s, Forever follows the life of suburban high school senior Katherine as she navigates the choppy waters of first love, losing her virginity, family illness, drinking and drug use and friends in emotional crisis. Katherine meets Michael at a New Year’s Eve party and isn’t quite sure how she feels about him, especially when she sees him kissing someone else, but Michael is definitely sure how he feels about Katherine.  He wants her.  He wants to be her boyfriend.  He wants to tell her everything.  He wants to teach her about sex and intimacy.  He wants them to be together forever.   When they are separated by their parents and their jobs over the summer holidays, Katherine meets a sexy, older tennis instructor named Theo and she begins wondering if maybe forever isn’t what she wants after all.

While it was refreshing to see a female protagonist grappling with questions concerning fidelity, birth control, attachment, and desire in the mid-70s, today’s teens may be looking for something a little edgier or more culturally diverse.  Katherine is an alarmingly thin, white, heterosexual teen whose father is a pharmacist and business owner and her grandparents and uncle are accomplished lawyers in New York City.  She plays tennis and skis in Vermont.  Going to university is a given.  The narrow confines of Katherine’s world may alienate many young adult readers and I would be quick to recommend something like Maryjane Satrapi’s Persepolis, Heather O’Neill’s Lullabies for Little Criminals or Eleanor & Park by Rainbow Rowell in its place.

Available in paperback, hardcover, braille book, and e-book.

Did you know this book has been banned so many times and has sparked such controversy that Judy Blume has to travel with a security guard?  All the more reason to read it and keep it in your library!



Award:
Margaret A. Edwards Award Winner, 1996