Friday, April 30, 2010

Teen volunteer applications now available!

Hey guys! If you are between the ages of 12 & 18 and are looking for something fun and meaningful to do this summer, why don't you consider volunteering at the library?

We're looking for responsible teens to help us in the Children's Department AND in TeenSpace. You may hand out prizes, shelve books, read aloud to kids, and so much more!

Check out our informational brochure here, and then apply online before June 1, 2010. Volunteer opportunities are limited, so don't wait!

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Keep an eye out for these new books in TeenSpace!



Coming soon!

Before I Fall

By Lauren Oliver

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A terrible accident takes Samantha Kingston's life. The catch: Samantha still wakes up the next morning. In fact, she relives the last day of her life seven times, until she realizes that by making even the slightest changes, she may hold more power than she had ever imagined.

Review by Norah Piehl for BookLetters


There's something you should know: You probably won't like Samantha Kingston very much, at least not the first time you meet her. But by the time you've met her for the third, or fourth, or seventh time, you might start thinking about Samantha a little bit differently. Because she sure starts to see herself that way.


If you've seen the movie Groundhog Day, you'll be familiar with the basic structure of Lauren Oliver's debut novel, Before I Fall. Samantha relives the same day seven times. She is the only one who's aware that her life is stuck on repeat--everyone else just keeps living life, moving forward, unaware that for Samantha at least, there's no such thing as tomorrow. Before I Fall takes a darker, more serious tone than the Bill Murray comedy, however--because what prompts Samantha's string of "do-overs" is her own death in a car accident.


For so long, Samantha was one of the queen bees, someone who, by her own admission, "just followed along" in the wake of her beautiful, charismatic and sometimes mean friends. But what might happen if she makes different choices--if she takes another look at the boy she's written off, or reaches out to the outcast, or challenges her best friends' cruelty? And what will flash before her eyes in the moments before she dies? Samantha hopes it will be the best moments of her life--but what if, instead, her final hours are replayed ad infinitum, giving her the chance to make the right choices, to make amends, even to save someone else's life, if not her own?


It's remarkable that Oliver can plot the same day seven times and make each retelling engaging. But Before I Fall is not just a fascinating piece of storytelling; it’s also a thought-provoking commentary on the unintended, and sometimes profound, consequences of even the smallest actions or remarks, and a powerful testimony to people's ability to make real, meaningful changes in their own behavior and outlook--changes that can deeply affect others' lives as well.


Norah Piehl is a freelance writer and editor in the Boston area.
© 2010 BookLetters LLC

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Keep an eye out for these new books in TeenSpace!


Coming soon!

The Last Summer of the Death Warriors

When Pancho arrives at St. Anthony's Home, he knows his time there will be short: If his plans succeed, he'll soon be arrested for the murder of his sister's killer. But then he's assigned to help D.Q., whose brain cancer has slowed neither his spirit nor his mouth.
Review by Angela Leeper for BookLetters

Like last year's critically acclaimed Marcelo in the Real World, Francisco X. Stork's The Last Summer of the Death Warriors is the story of a teen faced with difficult choices before the start of a new school year. Kicked out of his foster home and recently orphaned, 17-year-old Pancho Sanchez has one more chance at St. Anthony's, an orphanage in Las Cruces, New Mexico. Unable to find a construction job for the season, he becomes the aide to fellow resident Daniel Quentin, known as D.Q., who is dying from a type of brain cancer known as diffuse pontine glioma. The immediate allusions to Don Quixote give depth to the quiet steadiness of the novel.

D.Q. has another round of treatment, which he knows he can bear because it will give him one more opportunity to confess his heart to Marisol, a young worker at Casa Esperanza, his outpatient home. And he'll even endure the two-week recovery period with the bipolar mother who turned him over to St. Anthony's as a child--if afterwards he can be legally emancipated, allowing him to die where he chooses and to follow the tenets of his Death Warrior Manifesto, a declaration to "love life at all times and in all circumstances." ("'Life Warrior' is probably more accurate because the manifesto is about life," admits D.Q., "but 'Death Warrior' is more mysterious-sounding.")

Their journey out of town provides the angry, depressed Pancho with a way to avenge the death of his mentally challenged older sister after the police, claiming she died of natural causes, filed away the case. He is also a boxing fan, and the author takes great care jabbing boxing imagery into the Hispanic teen's own fight for life. Like his literary predecessor, Pancho's observations of D.Q. illuminate his friend's idealism and his attempts to claim love in spite of the disease attacking his body and mind. In an unflinching ending, Pancho must decide between carrying out a certain death sentence or finding faith and his place in humanity--and becoming a true Death Warrior.

Angela Leeper is a librarian at the University of Richmond.
© 2010 BookLetters LLC

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Keep an eye out for these new books in TeenSpace!

Coming soon!


Borderline
By Allan Stratton
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Life's not easy for 15-year-old Sami Sabiri, especially as the only Muslim kid at his private school. And when Sami catches his father in a lie, everything he's ever known comes into question.

Review by Dean Schneider for BookLetters

Living in upstate New York with a name like Mohammed Sami Sabiri, Sami has always felt like an outsider--the school nerd, a member of his school's "leper colony" and the subject of constant taunting. His father fled Iran as a young man because of the secret police and has worked hard to fit into his community, where the Sabiris have become a respected family: original members of the Meadowville subdivision, father on the golf club's planning committee, mother in the Ladies' Invitational golf tournament. They send Sami to one of the most elite private boys' academies in upstate New York.

But Sami feels he doesn't know his father, and when Mr. Sabiri takes a mysterious trip to Toronto, he begins to wonder if his father is having an affair. So he starts to do a little undercover investigation of his father's email messages and online accounts. Before he gets too far, the FBI storms the Sabiris' residence, arrests Mr. Sabiri and confiscates all records that seem to incriminate him as part of a terrorist cell led by one Tariq Hasan. The fact that Mr. Sabiri is the research director at Shelton Laboratories, where anthrax, smallpox and other viruses are stored, escalates the hysteria about potential cross-border biological attacks.

But is Arman Sabiri a terrorist or a victim of a latter-day witch hunt, akin to the Salem Witch Trials, the Holocaust and the McCarthy hearings that Sami's history teacher, Mr. Bernstein, has been discussing in class? In the context of a thrilling suspense story, Stratton explores the many ways people are separated from each other--the yearning of people like the Sabiris to simply fit in, the distance that secrets create and the evil dance of persecutor and victim, whether the Nazis, the KKK or the bullies at school who torment Sami and maneuver the firing of Mr. Bernstein. All is not what it seems with Mr. Sabiri, and Sami's quest to clear his father's name will carry readers along for an exciting ride.

Dean Schneider teaches middle school English in Nashville.

© 2010 BookLetters LLC

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Keep an eye out for these new books in TeenSpace!


Voices of Dragons
By Carrie Vaughn
Seventeen-year-old Kay Wyatt knows she's breaking the law by rock climbing near the border, but she'd rather have an adventure than follow the rules. When the dragon Artegal unexpectedly saves her life, a secret friendship grows between them.

© 2010 BookLetters LLC

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

April 24 & 25: LA Times Festival of Books


The LA Times Festival of Books is this weekend, and if you have a way to get up to UCLA, you should definitely check it out. Find the Festival of Books on Facebook or Twitter to find out more!





The following teen authors will be around to talk and autograph books:
Saturday


YA Stage
——————
11:00 AM
WriteGirl
A Celebration of Words, Women and Girls



12:00 PM
She’s All That: Writing Contemporary Girls
Panelists: Robin Benway, Cherry Cheva, Joanna Philbin
Moderator: Aaron Hartzler



1:00 PM
Boys Will Be Boys: Guys Talk YA
Panelists: Ben Esch, Blake Nelson, Andrew Smith, and Allen Zadoff
Moderator: Cecil Castellucci



2:00 PM
Blood, Fangs, and Temptation: Everything Vampire
Panelists: Heather Brewer, Rachel Caine, Melissa de la Cruz, Richelle Mead
Moderator: Aaron Hartzler



3:00 PM
The InbeTWEENers
Panelists: Cylin Busby, Anna Hays, and Jane Smiley
Moderator: Aaron Hartzler



4:00 PM
LAYAPALOOZA
A live game show for lovers of books for teens and ‘tweens!




Sunday


YA Stage
——————
11:00 AM
The Power of the Paranormal
Panelists: Kami Garcia, Nancy Holder, and Carol Snow
Moderator: Aaron Hartzler



12:00 PM
LAYAPALOOZA
A live game show for lovers of books for teens and ‘tweens!



1:00 PM
Girls Just Wanna Have Fun: Writing Today’s Teens
Panelists: Lisi Harrison, Amy Goldman Koss and Robin Palmer
Moderator: Aaron Hartzler



2:00 PM
Young Adult: Truth and Fiction
Panelists: Cylin Busby, Davida Wills Hurwin, and Sherri L. Smith,
Moderator: Cecil Castellucci



3:00 PM
Making the Magic Happen: Writing Young Adult Fantasy
Panelists: Michael Reisman, Margaret Stohl, Tracy Trivas, and Heather Tomlinson
Moderator: Aaron Hartzler

Gearing up for summer reading...




We're hard at work getting ready for this year's TeenSpace summer reading program: Make Waves @ Your Library, however, we need your help.

That's right: we need YOU to tell US what sorts of prizes you'd like to see for YOUR summer reading program. Don't be shy! You may leave a comment here on the blog, or visit us over at Facebook and drop us a note on our wall.


Make Waves @ Your Library begins Tuesday, June 29th, 2010! Stay tuned to TeenSpace for more information, as well as summer volunteer applications, which will be available May 1st.

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Your chance to become a famous author (and win $2500!)


James Patterson is asking for teens to write the “missing” chapter in Fang, a Maximum Ride novel. The prize is $2,500!!! The deadline is May 31st.

For more details, visit James Patterson’s Maximum Ride Website.

Thursday, April 08, 2010

Iron Man 2 in less than a month!


Is anybody else eagerly awaiting the return of Tony Stark? I finally saw the trailer for Iron Man 2 this weekend, and it looks fantastic!




And while you wait for opening weekend, might we suggest checking out some Iron Man graphic novels, the first movie, or even Sherlock Holmes for a Robert Downey, Jr. fix?

Wednesday, April 07, 2010

Under Construction


Hey guys!
Don't mind us; we're just doing some tinkering around here at the Teen Space blog. Everything should be up and running smoothly by the end of the day.
And of course, if you have any suggestions for things you'd like to see here, this would be a good time to share!

Friday, April 02, 2010

How To Eat A Poem


In honor of National Poetry Month, we'd like to share with you one of our favorite poems by Eve Merriam. You can find more of her poems here at the library, or just browse the Dewey Decimal 800s to see what else tickles your fancy.


How To Eat A Poem

by Eve Merriam


Don't be polite.

Bite in.

Pick it up and eat the juice that may run down your chin.

It is ready and ripe now whenever you are.

You do not need a knife or fork or spoon

or plate or napkin or tablecloth.

For there is no core

or stem

or rind

or pit

or seed

to throw away.