May 02, 2008

Fourth book in Twilight series and Twilight movie

I have good news for those of you who have read the three Twilight books available -- Twilight, New Moon, and Eclipse -- and are eager for more. Not only has Stephenie Meyer just published her first adult book, The Host, but she has a fourth book in the Twilight series coming out in August called Breaking Dawn. We hope to have both of these books available in the library sometime after the start of the new school year.

If that wasn't enough, Twilight is being made into a movie, scheduled for release this December. Check out Meyer's movie site for cast pictures and intimate details of the production.

April 21, 2008

Heart of Stone, by C.E. Murphy

Readers who love cross-genre books will like this mixture of crime drama and supernatural romance, though I see it appealing more to women then to men. Lawyer Margrit Knight tests her mettle by running through Central Park after dark each night, aware but uncaring of the danger. There is someone watching her, however, every night she runs, and he's been watching her for years -- not to hurt, but to protect. His name is Alban, and he appears to her one night in the park just to speak with her out of curiosity, an act that ends up getting him accused of murder when a women is found murdered in the park the same night (scant hours after Margrit returns home from her run). Alban appears to Margrit again, proclaiming his innocence, and asks her to help him avoid the police while they hunt for the real killer. At first she wants to refuse, but there's something about him that she can't ignore -- and once he lets her in on his real secret, she's drawn into a world she didn't even know existed.

Alban, it turns out, is a gargoyle, one of the five Old Races who have hidden among us for centuries. And now that Margri's takes his case, gargoyles aren't the only of the five Old Races that she has to contend with -- there are also djinn, vampires, selkies, and dragons, all masked as human and walking among us.

I enjoyed Heart of Stone despite its wandering beginning (it takes a while to get to the real action). Margrit is a scrappy, smart-mouthed, tough woman, and she pretty much carries the book where it needs to go. Alban is moody and gentle, yet capable of being dangerous, which are always appealing characteristics for the supernatural romantic lead. Other characters -- her roommates; her on-again, off-again cop boyfriend Tony; and the various members of the Old Races that she runs into -- are colorful enough to be interesting while keeping the focus on Margrit and Alban. (Though I have to confess that Janx, the dragon, is my favorite out of the entire book.) The murder plot is strong enough to exist side-by-side with the romance, making this book a great blend of genre. The urban fantasy/supernatural romance genre is hot right now, and adding a murder mystery makes it even better.

This is book one of a series (the next is House of Cards) and I liked this one enough to read the next and see where it goes. We have this book in our Fiction section under call number F Murphy.

Summer Reading Announcement!

Summer is just around the corner, and it’s time to submit books to be included on the Summer Reading List!

Think of favorite books that you’d love to share with others, and take a few minutes to write down the title, author, and a short description (50 words or less). Come by the library to fill out an easy form, or e-mail your recommendations to julie.johnson@lakesideschool.org.

We’d love to have submissions by Friday, May 9th, so there’s only three weeks left to get your favorites in. And keep your eyes peeled for pictures of your teachers posing with their favorite books appearing around campus.

March 25, 2008

New Books for March

The library now has a list of the new books for March up on our Recent Acquisitions page.

New titles in fiction include Jonathan Barnes's The Somnambulist; Meg Rosoff's What I Was; and Paula Yoo's Good Enough. (For an interesting personal look at Paula Yoo's life and writing, check out her guest interview here).

New titles in nonfiction include From the Velvets to the Voidoids: the Birth of American Punk Rock; Akira Kurosawa Interviews; and The Complete Baking Cookbook: 350 recipes from cookies and cakes to muffins and pies.

To see other new titles, follow the link above to the library's web site. Books will be available for check-out today.

March 20, 2008

20th Century Ghosts, by Joe Hill

Here's the thing: I love Joe Hill. After reading Heart-Shaped Box, which is my favorite horror novel right now, I looked for other books of his and found nothing. And then along came 20th Century Ghosts. For someone like me, who wants horror to be more disquieting than disgusting, who appreciates being scared but prefers that this is accomplished by more than cheap shocks, who wants to see range . . . this book is perfect. I'm amazed at the depth and subtlety he brings to the genre, while also writing stories that are genuinely scary, spooky, unsettling, but also touching, poignant, sometimes even gentle. Of course, not all the stories are what I'd call horror, or at least standard horror: the ghosts are sometimes ghosts, but sometimes they are more (or also) metaphorical, the ghosts of lost childhoods, lost innocence, lost loves.

What I love the most about Hill is his people. Well, his people, and his weirdness. He writes very character-driven stories: beneath every monster, every horrible action, is a real person, with real feelings. He writes people you can connect with, people you can understand enough to like or, perhaps, enough to fear. And he writes weird stories, about weird people. My favorite story in the book -- "My Father's Mask" -- is so deeply, disturbingly, weird that I keep reading it again, trying to puzzle it out. I like that I can't get at all of it, and even though it's surreal, it's so unsettling and provocative that I keep thinking about it. The story resonates, for me, and perhaps it's because of all the layered-in fairy tale metaphors, what with the idea of sacrifice -- you can't get something without giving up something meaningful; and identity -- do we really know each other? ourselves?; and the masks and the woods both as metaphors of self; and whether it's better to know too much or too little, better to ask questions or just trust your parents. There's more but I don't want to write a pseudo-literary school paper like I used to be so good at. Heh. That's your job, Lakeside students!

In some of his stories, like "The Black Phone", "My Father's Mask", "Best New Horror", and "You Will Hear the Locust Sing", for example, he builds up a level of dread so intense that I was almost afraid to keep reading for fear of what will happen next. "Pop Art" and "Voluntary Committal", on the other hand, both made me shed a tear or two. "The Cape", "You Will Hear the Locust Sing", and "Abraham's Boys" made me understand and sympathize with the protagonist before he does something truly awful. And several of his stories, especially "20th Century Ghost" and "Bobby Conroy Comes Back From the Dead", have romantic themes -- these two both deal with lost chances, lost loves, though one lover is a ghost and one is not.

Hill does one of the things that I appreciate most and think is hardest to do in short stories -- he leads you right up to the edge of the ending, where you can sort of, almost, see it for yourself, and he leaves it to you to make the leap, complete the story. His stories continue on after you read the last word, because you have to think about many of them to capture the full import of What Happens Next. They're ambiguous, but powerful, and I think they stay with you long after you're done. This is definitely one for the horror lover, but also for those who just know how to appreciate a damn good story.

We have this book on display right now, but will have it available in the fiction section later. The call number is F Hill.

March 18, 2008

Magic in the Mirrorstone, ed. by Steve Berman

This collection of fifteen short fantasy stories are by some of the top names among authors who write for teens and adults: Cecil Castellucci, Holly Black, Cassandra Clare, Nini Kiriki Hoffman, and Jim Hines, among others. The stories all address familiar topics (dating, families, bullies at school and home, friendship, justice, revenge), with an element of magic added to complicate (or sometimes solve) the problems. Many of the stories are contemporary urban fantasy, though a few take place in other fantasy worlds, such as Laurence M. Schoen's "The Amulet of Winter," which tells the story of a thief who is confronted with the disquieting results of his biggest job: to steal an amulet from a city that depends upon it for survival. Some stories are retellings of familiar fairy tales, such as Eugie Foster's "Princess Bufo marinus, Also Known As Amy", which imagines the frog prince story taking place in an average high school. Some of the best stories are the revenge ones, as far as I'm concerned, such as Cassandra Clare's "Have You Ever Seen a Shoggoth?" and Sean Manseau's "Veronica Brown", where the bullies, one an entire school and one a mean older sister, meet bloody and/or horrible ends. The stories range from funny to weird to bittersweet to a little bit scary, so there's something here for everyone who enjoys fantasy and magic.

We have this book in a display on the main floor, but it will be shelved with the short story collection on the second floor later. The call number is SC M194.

March 10, 2008

Whirlwind, by David Klass

This is the second book in the Caretaker Trilogy, after Firestorm. In Firestorm, all-around normal guy, Jack Danielson, finds out that he has been sent from the future to save the world's oceans, thus averting an apocalyptic environmental hell a thousand years in the future. Despite feeling like he is not hero material, Jack manages to save the oceans and defeat Dargon, an evil Machiavellian bad guy from the future who is intentially destroying the oceans to make a lot of money. The book ends with Jack adrift on the ocean, alone, with no way of knowing if he can reclaim his once-normal life.

Fast forward six months, where Whirlwind picks up. Jack has made it back to his hometown in order to see his old girlfriend, P.J., who is the only remaining person left in Jack's life. Unfortunately, her parents, instead of welcoming him, call the police -- turns out that P.J. is missing, and everyone believes Jack is to blame. And even though Jack wants nothing more than to forget about his destiny, it won't forget about him -- the Dark Army comes for him at the jailhouse, and he narrowly escapes with the help of his old pal, Gisco (the telepathic dog from the future, and yes, it does make sense when you read the books). In order to find P.J. and avert another ecological crisis, Jack has to travel to the Amazon rain forest, where Dargon's father has taken P.J. in revenge over the murder of his son. This man is even more dangerous than Dargon was, and is destroying the rain forest in order to wreck the positive changes Jack made in the future when he saved the oceans. But that isn't the biggest problem. The biggest problem is that Jack cannot defeat this man -- another time traveler, hiding in the present, is the only one who can. Jack must find this mysterious person in order to save the girl he loves and stop the destruction of the rain forest before the damage to the future is irreparable.

Just like the first, this book is scary, suspenseful, humorous (Jack and Gisco especially are very sarcastic), and absorbing, while conveying an important ecological message that rarely comes off as preachy or didactic. We will have this book available in the library soon, but until then, read up on Firestorm at the New York Review of Books, or read about how David Klass got his information on the rain forest from this Greenpeace blog.

March 05, 2008

Catching up, sheepishly

I haven't been updating this as regularly as I'd like, and I promise to try better until the end of the school year. February was not a good month for reading, or at least, for reading books I can write about here. (You guys don't want to hear about all the picture books I've been reviewing lately, do you?)

I have two of our new books (received in February) at home, and I will get my thoughts on those books up when I have finished them. They are: Heart of Stone, by C.E. Murphy, one of those ubiquitous urban fantasies involving vampires, werewolves, and other supernatural creatures (this book adds a new one, gargoyles) living and interacting with regular people (a lawyer, in this case), sometimes hidden (as in a shadowy underworld) and sometimes right out in the open; and 20th Century Ghosts, by Joe Hill, a selection of horror short stories by the man who wrote Heart-Shaped Box, my favorite horror novel.

We have a lot of other new books and movies in the library you should check out. For example, we have Sherman Alexie's new books Flight and The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian and Ken Follett's sequel to his bestseller, Pillars of the Earth, World Without End. Updates on my reading to follow.

January 29, 2008

Whatever You Do, Don't Run, by Peter Allison

So, here is an amazing thing: my second nonfiction recommendation in a row. Though this falls more under the category of quirky but informative memoir, which is a far more appealing kind of nonfiction than that of the textbook-y variety.

The full title for this book is Whatever You Do, Don't Run: True Tales of a Botswana Safari Guide. Peter Allison took what was to be a year-long vacation in Africa when he was 19 or so, but he loved being there so much he ended up staying, becoming first a safari guide, then a safari camp manager, a guide training manager, and head guide coordinator. Eventually, after many years, he retired as a guide and explored other opportunities around the globe, but has occasionally returned to lead safaris because he missed the wildlife. This book is full of many, many stories about leading hapless tourists around in the African bush, dealing with wildlife that can easily kill you on a daily basis, trying to find a social life in a small isolated camp, and much more. Allison has survived less than genial encounters with elephants, big cats, hippos, and more, and sometimes while reading you will wonder how any safari guide manages to survive. Mostly, they survive because they are well educated about each animal, but also there seems to be a little bit of bravado and luck required to really shine.

What comes through in all of the stories is Allison's love and respect for wildlife in general and Botswana in particular. Most of the stories are funny -- actually most of the stories are hilarious -- but a few are poignant and reflective, and those are no less absorbing. Reading this book will not only entertain you -- it will also give you a glimpse at what it is like to live in one of the world's last real wild places.

The call number for this book is 916.88304 A439W.

January 15, 2008

The World Without Us, by Alan Weisman

Yikes! It's been a while since I've posted a review. Many apologies -- I didn't have as much reading time as I like in December. Anyway, here's the first review of the New Year, and it's a great one. As you may know, I am not a big reader of nonfiction. I stay away from the factual in favor of the fanciful -- why read books that make me feel like I'm in school again, cramming for a test in a subject I'm not that interested in?

This book is different. Alan Weisman's The World Without Us is one of the most important books I have ever read. It's highly readable, intelligent, influential, terrifying, poignant, and hopeful.

Weisman’s premise is simple: if humans were to disappear en masse, what would happen to Earth? More specifically, what would happen to what we leave behind on Earth? In readable and engaging prose, Weisman shows how nature would reclaim our homes, our cities, and our farms, and how long it would take. He also goes beyond such everyday places (everyday for an American audience), to examine megafauna in Africa, an old growth forest between Poland and Belarus, underground cities in Turkey, abandoned hotels in Cyprus, the DMZ in Korea, the Kingman Reef in the Pacific Ocean, even satellites in outer space.

As Weisman travels the globe, imagining a future without us, he uncovers the disturbing reality of what we’ve done in the past and what we’re doing right now. For example, we learn about the indelible nature of plastics, and what they do to our oceans; how we contain nuclear waste, chemicals, and dangerous gases, and why the current solutions are only temporary ones; and the long-lasting effects of our ever-increasing population on a finite world. While this book shows nature’s seemingly endless capacity to self-heal, it also makes clear just how much we have already changed the world, permanently.

Though this book offers a sobering picture of our effects on the world, it is not one without hope. Weisman stresses nature’s ability to adapt, survive, sometimes even flourish, in the face of ecological and environmental disasters. Weisman leads us toward asking the big questions, the questions we need to answer if we are to survive as a species on this planet.

How can we reverse the damage we’ve done? How can we learn, as a global society, to live in balance with nature? Are we too late? And if we do die out, what will our legacy be?

We have this book in our library, call number 304.2 W428W. Check it out -- you need to read it!