The Middle of Everywhere, by Monique Polak. This was a good book, and I'd use it for 7th and 8th grade, but about halfway through there are a few things that make me think I can't randomly promote this to kids I don't know. A great book, though.
How to Survive Middle School, by Donna Gephart. This book is a really fast read, but I'm a quarter of the way through and nothing really exciting is happening. Probably it's a good book for some kids, but this kind of introspective, non-action stuff is hard to promote.
Blood Work: A Tale of Medicine and Murder in the Scientific Revolution, by Holly Tucker. This was a good book, but a little hard to get through for me because there were so many people and we know I have a problem with that, compounded by the fact that I left this on my bedside table. 615.39
Legends: New Short Novels, edited by Robert Silverberg. I found this volume while doing my weeding project (I left it on the shelf unweeded). I only read one of the stories, "The Sea and Little Fishes" by Terry Pratchett. After a little digging, it looks like Pratchett also has a short story in Legends 3. Can anyone lay hands on that? The story in this book is a Granny Weatherwax story line addition.
Note: The cover and inside flap make it look like "Legends: New Short Novels" is the title, but the frontis piece says "Legends: Short Novels by the Maters of Modern Fantasy" and our catalog records says more simply "Legends: Stories by the Masters of Modern Fantasy."
Here's to the Ladies: Stories of the Frontier Army, by Carla Kelly. I felt I had to weed this from the Fiction Collection a few months ago, but it looked really good so I took it home. I really enjoyed these stories, and I don't usually like short stories. It is a sad fact that short story anthologies do not circulate at this library, unless we're talking a 3-novella book of romance or bonnet-busters.
A Brief History of the Future: From Radio Days to Internet Years in a Lifetime, by John Naughton. I was hoping this would by my 620s, but it's not working for me. There's an awful lot of hard technology that's difficult to follow, especially since (I didn't realize when I checked it out) it's from 1999. The sections on the internet read like a how-to from the time, but now are totally incorrect. I think it's worth keeping in the collection for historical purposes: in 15 years, no one under 30 will remember that dial-up noise.
Isle of Passion, by Laura Restrepo. Weeded. Looked interesting. Wasn't.
Keep up with the blog. Let's just hope it is from Washington state. Wherever it is, keep up the good work.
ReplyDelete