Thursday, April 28, 2011

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiIO7nAj_5V8OJotm0TISJOQZ6mpGs4GJDX2lbkjmQ37QO3dihDCe8jma6hbmarzuQSVavppNu_QD6JUgx6Lt5GAIuDPOg4udRgxXsca5wnC0b6lfp5vSaEoScaW1BPyQ9tL8kfPPRkXR3-/s200/aaCC.jpg  Saving CiCi Honeycutt by Beth Hoffman


CiCi Honeycutt’s life is a nightmare, relieved only by her escape into books and the normalcy of her neighbor’s house.  Her father is rarely home, and her mother is slowly sinking into insanity.  CiCi’s mother vacillates between deep depression and manic episodes that usually end with her wearing castoff prom dresses from the Goodwill store, a tiara, and red satin heels around town.  CiCi’s mother is miserable living in Ohio and often regales CiCi with the wonders of her childhood in Georgia, where she was a beauty queen.  CiCi attempts to care for her mother, the laughingstock of the entire town, and resents the responsibility and embarrassment of the situation.  She is devastated, however, when her mother steps out in front of an ice cream truck and is killed.

CiCi’s father sends her to live with her great aunt Tootie in Savannah.  In the South, CiCi finds the family she has always longed for, friends, and adventures.  Although she encounters challenges, she finds that with the help of friends you can survive almost anything.  There are laugh-out-loud moments in this novel along, with events that will break your heart. 

I think this book would appeal to girls from middle school through high school (although there are some brief sort of racy moments).  This book is for everyone that ever felt like an outcast as well as for those who just enjoy a good story and a fascinating pack of characters.
 

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen: A Review


Water for Elephants had been in y reading pile for at least three years.  I just couldn’t get excited about it, despite the glowing reviews.  However, with the moving coming out last week, I knew I had to read it if I was going to.  Now, I wish I hadn’t waited so long.
Jacob Jankowski, in his 90s, is living in an “old folks home.”  He battles the nurses regularly for trying to take away the few pleasures he has left, like a decent meal.  When a circus comes to town, and sets up down the street from Jacob’s home, he begins to recall his own experience with the circus. 
At the height of the Great Depression, Jacob was finishing his degree in veterinary medicine at Cornell when he received word that his parents had been killed in an auto accident.  Returning home to bury them, he discovers that the bank is seizing his father’s veterinary business along with their home and all of their belongings.  Jacob attempts to return to school and take his final exams, but finds himself unable to concentrate.  Instead he leaves college and hops what he believes to be a freight train.  It turns out to be a circus train, and Jacob joins the Benzini Brothers circus as the staff veterinarian even though he keeps telling them that he never took his final exams. 
Through his experiences with the circus, Jacob learns about friendship, love, and compassion, along with brutality, greed, and a callous disregard for life.  Gruen creates a cast of characters that will stay with you long after you finish the book.  The brief, but graphic scenes of sex and violence in Water for Elephants will keep it from being on the shelves of most school libraries, but it is a shame.  This book is beautifully written, disturbing, redemptive, and haunting.


Monday, April 18, 2011

A Review of Remarkable Creatures by Tracy Chevalier

As with her previous works, Chevalier does a masterful job of bringing to life an historical period. In this novel, the period is the 19th century in coastal England when the discovery of fossils of strange and “remarkable creatures” creates a stir in the scientific and religious communities. At the center of this turmoil are the novels heroines, Mary Anning and Elizabeth Philpot. A friendship develops between these two women (who should not associate at all due to the difference in their social classes) because of their fascination with fossils.



Today’s reader will be shocked at the impotence of these women against the established society ruled by men. Their knowledge and contributions are ignored and their reputations are destroyed because they insist on meddling in men’s affairs. The trials of being a woman in a patriarchal society are fascinating. Even more riveting, however, are the events at the center of the novel, discoveries of fossils for creatures that no longer exist and the religious controversy that this raises (Does it challenge the notion that God created the heavens and the earth as described in Genesis?)






This is another fascinating piece of historical fiction from Chevalier and will appeal to secondary readers, particularly girls.

The Dark and Hollow Places: A Review

The Dark and Hollow Places is an action/adventure/dystopian novel and love story that offers something for almost any reader.  Carrie Ryan’s third book in the Forest of Hands and Teeth series focuses on Annah, living in the Dark City.  Annah has survived on her own for several years since her friend Elias left her to join the Recruiters.  She has managed to get by scavenging for food and supplies while avoiding the Unconsecrated (zombies).  Annah’s self-doubt and emotional turmoil over love will appeal to many readers.  As with the previous books, this one is action-packed and fast paced.  This book ties strongly to the second book, The Dead Tossed Waves, which was closely tied to the initial volume.  However, readers who have not read the first two will not be confused about characters or their pasts.  This book is strongly recommended for secondary readers who don’t mind a bit of gore or a touch of mushiness.


Friday, March 25, 2011

A Review of Trash by Andy Mulligan

Raphael, Gardo, and Rat are dumpsite boys. They live in the enormous dump in an unnamed South or Central American city. They survive by savaging through the garbage dumped each day by trucks from the city or by barges or train cars from other locations. Although none of them have parents, both Raphael and Gardo have relatives with whom they live. Poor Rat, whose real name is Jun-Jun, has no one and lives alone, except for the rats, in a pit that once housed equipment. They find paper, plastic, and metal, which they can sell. It is a meager existence, and they are often hungry. All of this changes when they find the little leather bag. Inside are a map and a key which will change everything.


The perilous adventure which ensues requires each boy to exercise his own skills and strengths to ensure the survival of the group. They must battle corrupt officials and police as well as other desperate, poor people. This suspenseful novel will keep the reader riveted until the last page.

There are some unpleasant scenes, including violence, that might be unsettling for younger readers. The narration shifts, sometimes mid-chapter, between the three main characters and some other minor characters. Although it is seamless, it could cause difficulty for some readers.

Overall, I would highly recommend this novel for middle school and high school students. It will appeal to both boys and girls. Mulligan manages to create characters whose honor and innate goodness rise about their horrific surroundings. These characters will stay with you a long time.


Monday, March 21, 2011

Review: A Lesson in Secrets: A Maisie Dobbs Novel by Jacqueline Winspear

Maisie finds herself enmeshed in the political undercurrents of faculty life in the latest installment of the Maisie Dobbs series. Contacted by the secret service, Maisie goes undercover as a lecturer in philosophy at a small college in Cambridge. She finds that she enjoys teaching, but her enjoyment is short-lived when the college’s president is murdered in his office. Maisie’s private investigation service is still operating under the able hands of her assistant, Billy, and her newly hired secretary Sandra, whom Maisie knows from her days in service. As Maisie tries to root out threats to the crown at the college and solve the murder of the president, she also finds herself investigating affairs connected to Sandra and worrying about her relationship with James Compton.


As usual, the war (World War I) plays a role in the mystery. In this installment, however, a new war is looming on the horizon. As always, Winspear does a wonderful job of creating the atmosphere, culture, and setting of the period. Although a number of novels preceded this one in the series, Winspear consistently presents enough background to make each book clear to the new reader without boring the fan. These books present a strong female character who succeeds because of her brains rather than her beauty. I think they would, therefore, be an excellent addition to a high school library collection.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Twins Separated at Birth: The Forgotten Garden by Kate Morton and The Lake of Dreams by Kim Edwards

First, let me say that I enjoyed both of these books immensely. If I hadn’t read them back to back, I would not have experienced the déjà vu of trying to keep the two stories straight. Both books deal with multi-generational mysteries surrounding abandoned girls. In both, a granddaughter investigates to solve a mystery. Both are set in about the same time period, although Morton’s deals with Australia and England and Edwards’ with upstate New York with just a bit of England. Both books even contain a pivotal character named Rose.


The Forgotten Garden tells the tale of four generations of spirited, rebellious women. Cassandra is surprised, upon her grandmother Nell’s death, to learn that Nell had purchased property in England when Cassandra was just a child. She begins to investigate her grandmother’s roots. Abandoned on the docks in Brisbane, Australia, Nell was taken in by a dock master and his wife who loved her dearly and raised her to the best of their ability. Still, she was haunted about what had become of her real parents. Cassandra picks up the investigation, uncovering a number of surprises. Interwoven with the tales of Nell and Cassandra are those of Rose and Eliza, the previous generation of the family. Also interwoven are Eliza’s fairy tales, which offer clues to what happened so long ago.

In Lake of Dreams, Lucy is haunted by the accidental death of her father during her senior year in high school. After his death, she travelled across the country to attend college and has traversed the world in her career as a hydrologist. She returns home to check on her mother, who has been in an accident, leaving her boyfriend in Japan, where earthquakes and changes in him have left Lucy unsettled. She is dismayed and perplexed to find all of the changes at home when she returns after a two year absence. The serendipitous discovery of some notes, old newspaper articles and pamphlets sets Lucy on a quest to discover who Rose was and how she is connected to the family.

Both novelists use descriptive language to create beautiful natural settings and to bring alive long-ago places. Both have likeable main characters, and, although each is unique, both provide satisfying mysteries. I would highly recommend both of these novels, but I would not recommend reading them back to back!

                

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Review of Bumped by Megan McCafferty

Imagine a world where society encourages teenaged girls to get pregnant, as early and often as possible. This is the world of Bumped by Megan McCafferty. The Human Progressive Sterility Virus has made a majority of adults sterile. In order to perpetuate the human race, teenagers must reproduce. Melody Mayflower is a star in this world - sixteen, tall, blond, beautiful, athletic, intelligent, artistic, socially conscious. Melody has signed an exclusive contract to reproduce for a couple named the Jaydens receiving full college tuition, a Volkswagon plug, a postpartum tummy trim, and a six-figure signing bonus. She is simply waiting for the Jaydens to select someone for her to “bump” with. Her life is proceeding as planned until her identical twin sister Harmony, adopted by an ultra-religious family, decides to reconnect. Raised in a church compound, Harmony was supposed to marry at 13, but things didn’t work out. Wearing an ankle-length, long-sleeved, high-necked dress and a veil, she arrives on Melody’s doorstep in order to help her find God.


Both girls find out a lot about themselves. Despite their very different upbringings, they are alike in more ways than they imagined. How much of who we are is determined by DNA and how much by environment? That is one of many topics this novel examines. McCafferty creates a dystopian not-too-distant future that manages to seem futuristic, yet familiar. She creates slang that sounds completely natural, and technology, including the MiNet which connects everyone at all times through contact lenses and earbuds, which seems like it might be right around the corner.

The novel ends with something of a cliff-hanger. Perhaps the author wants the reader to decide the ending for him/herself, or maybe there’s a sequel in the making. I hope it’s the latter. This novel is thoroughly enjoyable - funny, touching, and thought-provoking. It should be a big hit with teenaged girls. School libraries should be aware, however, that this novel does deal with sex, and although slangy euphemisms are used in most instances, some readers (or their parents) might find language or topic offensive.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Full Dark, No Stars by Stephen King: A Review

I nearly gave up on this collection of stories during the first one, “1922.” This tale of a farmer who puts his love of the land above everything else was a bit too graphic for my taste (let’s just say there are rats – lots of rats!). His life spirals downward into despair with such unrelenting determination that I just hoped he’d die and be done with it. The other three stories, however, were classic Stephen King.


In “Big Driver,” a write of cozy mysteries finds that she has more strength and will than she ever thought possible. “Fair Extension” portrays the usual “deal with the devil” concept as a man regains his health and tragedy after tragedy befalls his life-long friend. The interesting twist to this tale is the impact this has on the character that has made the deal. King doesn’t rely on the trite traditions of these tales. The final story, “A Good Marriage,” was my favorite. What happens when a wife discovers, after 27 years or marriage, that her husband is not the man she though?

These tales may not have the same strength as some of his earlier short works, but they will keep you turning the pages. Young adult readers who enjoy King’s work will enjoy these works too, although his novels and short stories which feature young people were always the most popular with students in my library. For those worried about challenges, this work does not contain anything not found in previous King publications; there is violence, sex, and the supernatural, but, hey, he’s a horror writer after all.


Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Art and Oppression: A Review of Clara and Mr. Tiffany: A Novel by Susan Vreeland

Clara and Mr. Tiffany tells the tale of Clara Driscoll, who works for Louis Comfort Tiffany designing windows, lamps, and mosaics. The novel gives a comprehensive view of Tiffany’s production from the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago to 1908. It also allows the reader to become immersed in New York City of the same period. It demonstrates the oppression suffered by immigrants, women, and minorities. It also gives a view of the opulent lifestyles of the wealthy during this period.


Clara designs many of Tiffany’s most famous works, and she revels in each triumph of art and beauty. Her personal life, however, is a series of tragedies beginning with the death of her first husband, who was less than her perfect mate, to the disappearance of her second love, and the deaths of close friends.

The endless descriptions of glass, windows, and works of art become a bit tedious in this book, but the events of the outside world generally compensate. Vreeland mentions a number of famous people, but Clara never has the opportunity to actually meet any of them. She does do a nice job of describing the New York City of the time and of creating a complete picture of the lives available for women in the period.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Fear and Loathing in the Library

Apologies to the late Hunter S. Thompson, but that is the best term I can find to describe my reaction to President Obama’s budget proposal. His proposed budget, which the Republicans don’t feel is nearly draconian enough, would eliminate all funds for the Improving Literacy for School Libraries grant program, the only federal funding for school libraries. With state budgets in crisis, this almost ensures that school libraries will receive little or no funding for the next school year. In Oklahoma this year, schools are not required to expend any funds for library materials or equipment. The same will be true for next school year. The state legislature also attempted to exempt them from having certified school librarians, but a last minute lobbying effort saved those positions. Chances are excellent that legislation to eliminate school librarians will be proposed again during this legislative session.


Do politicians, both at the state and national level, have no idea what a school librarian does? I believe they have a mental image of a lady in sensible shoes with a bun and glasses sitting behind a desk all day and stamping books. They need to spend a day in a school library and see what takes place. School librarians are teaching digital literacy – showing students how to find relevant, reliable information online; instructing students on how to stay safe online and avoid jeopardizing their own privacy; using Web 2.0 tools to promote literacy; creating book trailer videos; showing students how to use publishing tools; collaborating with teachers to make assignments more relevant…. Oh, and occasionally, they do check out a book, as well as selecting appropriate materials for their collections, cataloging them, and promoting them.



School libraries are also the only source of not just books, but also computer access for many poor students. It seems we are entering an age where the only concern is to hold onto every cent you have and the only response to those less fortunate is scorn. Of course, some of these poor kids may be lucky enough to have a public library near where they live. Of course, the Obama budget proposal is also cutting funds for those. The Institute of Museum and Library Services would receive $23.3 million less, and the Library Services and Technology Act would get $122.3 million less.

I’m lucky enough to have the money to buy the books I want to read and to have Internet access at home. I feel, however, that it’s important for those who aren’t so fortunate to have access to those things. That’s why I am contacting my Senators and Representatives and telling them library funding is important, both for schools and for communities. Maybe you should do the same thing.

History, Love, and What’s Lost: A Review of The Tower, The Zoo, and The Tortoise: A Novel by Julia Stuart

I hate to gush, but I LOVED this book. Laugh-out-loud funny, sweet, sad, and hopeful, Stuart’s novel takes us into the lives of residents of the Tower of London and the London Underground. Balthazar Jones has lost his will to be a beefeater. He no longer cares about the pickpockets or wants to inform the tourists of the Towers long and colorful history. Since the loss of his only child, Milo, all Balthazar cares about is rain. He is cataloging rain, in a collection of Egyptian perfume bottles and has lost all interest in his career, his wife, and his life. Out of the blue, he is contacted by the palace and asked to become the keeper of Her Majesty’s menagerie, which will be reinstalled at the Tower to increase tourism.


Meanwhile, his wife, Hebe, is also overcome with grief. Yet, she continues to pride herself on her job of reuniting people with their lost objects in the London Underground Lost Property Office. Added to this mix are a minister whose obsession is killing mice; a barkeeper who finds herself with an unwelcome addition to the family; a woman who falls in love with a heavily tattooed, vertically challenged Underground worker; the Ravenmaster; and a collection of historic spirits.

This book is part fable, part love story, part comedy or errors, and all wonderful. I would highly recommend The Tower, The Zoo, and The Tortoise

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Would You by Marthe Jocelyn and Theodore Boone: Kid Lawyer by John Grisham: Reviews

In Would You by Marthe Jocelyn, a Sequoyah Award nominee for high school, Natalie and her friends play an endless game of “Would you rather…” – “Would you rather lose all of your hair or all of your teeth?” They also engage in pool hopping, finding swimming pools in backyards and taking a quick dip before being caught by the owners. They work summer jobs, and bicycle around town. All of that changes when Natalie’s older sister Claire is hit by a car.


Natalie and her friends are likeable, believable characters. They are not the coolest kids in school and they aren’t troubled. This novel takes the reader inside a normal family in crisis. It also allows us to see how an average girl reacts to extraordinary circumstances.



Theodore Boone: Kid Lawyer is John Grisham’s first attempt at young adult literature. Although only 13, Theo Boones is something of a legal expert. The child or lawyers, he has been raised around the courthouse and is very knowledgeable about the legal system. He even provides free legal advice for students in his class at school.

In this novel, Theo is excited about being able to watch the proceedings of a murder trial. This is, by far, the most sensational trial Theo has ever been able to witness. During the proceedings, Theo becomes privy to information about the murder that is not known by the attorneys or the judge. He has to determine how to protect his source without letting a cold-blooded killer go free.

This book will grow on you. Initially, I felt that the legal information might be boring to young readers, but soon the characters, particularly Theo, and the murder trial will catch your attention and keep you reading.

Friday, April 30, 2010

The Forest of Hands and Teeth: A Review

I'd never have believed that I'd love a dystopian action/adventure/love story with zombies, but I did! The Forest of Hands and Teeth by Carrie Ryan (Delacorte, 2009) is set in a future world where things have gone terribly wrong. Mary lives in a small village surround by the Forest of Hands and Teeth. The forest is populated by thee Unconsecrated whose constant hunger for human flesh leaves them futilely shaking the fences around the village and moaning. The Unconsecrated are a constant threat. If one of them bites you, infection will course through your body causing illness, death, and return as one of them. Society survives in this village because of the Sisterhood, who makes all rules, and the Guardians, who patrol the fence line and ensure that the boundary is maintained.


Mary has reached the marrying age and is hoping that Travis will ask for her, but marriage in her village is about civic responsibility, not love. Instead of Travis, it is his brother Harry who asks for Mary. She never has a chance to tell him whether she will accept since her mother becomes infected by the Unconsecrated. Mary believes her mother has intentionally allowed this to happen so that she can join her husband who was lost to the forest some time ago. Mary finds herself alone when her mother becomes Unconsecrated and her brother refuses to take her in. She is forced to go to live with the Sisterhood.

Mary’s independent spirit and her faith that there is still a world outside the village lead her into a number of difficult situations. Will she be able to survive? Will she be able to be with Travis? Will the Unconsecrated once and for all eliminate civilization? The Forest of Hands and Teeth keeps you turning the pages to find out.

Friday, April 9, 2010

Paper Daughter by Jeanette Ingold (A Review)

In the summer before her senior year, Maggie Chen decides to take advantage of her opportunity at an internship with the Seattle Herald. Her father, a journalist, has been recently killed by a hit-and-run driver, and Maggie knows how proud he was that she was selected for the internship. She is fortunate enough after only a few days on the job to be involved in a potentially huge story about corruption at city hall involving a local builder.


In addition to her summer job, Maggie is doing her best to help her mother, an English professor, with duties around the house. While cleaning out her father’s office, she finds mysterious notes which, along with clues from his past, lead her to believe that her father may not have been who he said. The mystery of her father and the corruption at city hall seem to be related. Could he have been involved in illegal activities? Did that cause his death?

A secondary story about Fai-yi Li and his sister begins slowly, with their illegal immigration to America, but builds as he begins to become part of the new culture and falls in love. The reader is left to puzzle about how his tale relates to the main story of Maggie. All of the pieces come together nicely, however, in the end.

Maggie is a well-developed character and many teens will relate to her search for her own identity. Fascinating details about Chinese culture also enliven the story. This book will be a hit for readers who enjoy a good mystery.

Monday, March 29, 2010

Sources of Light (A Review)

In Sources of Light, Margaret McMullan revisits a tumultuous time in American history – the south in the early 1960s. Some might say that the Civil Rights movement and the struggle for racial equality that are the center events of this novel are not relevant in our modern world. They should consider recent events such as United States Congressmen being spat upon and the target of racial epithets hurled by an angry mob on the steps of the U.S. Capitol or the President of the United States being shouted at and called a liar during a State of the Union address. The bigotry and ignorance of Mississippi in the 1960s seem to be alive and well in society today.


McMullan deals with these volatile topics in a skilled and insightful manner. Samantha and her mother move to Jackson, Mississippi just before Sam begins high school as a ninth grader. Sam’s father, who is from Jackson, has been killed in action in Viet Nam, and her mother feels it’s important for Sam to be near her remaining family, his parents. Neither Sam nor her mother is used to the open prejudice that exists in the community. Both of them find themselves engaging in activities that would stamp them as outcasts if it weren’t for Sam’s father’s reputation.

Sam and her mother both fall in love, but the relationships are thwarted by the social upheaval in the community. When Sam’s mother’s boyfriend teaches her to take photographs, she begins to see the world in a different light. Her photography sets her apart from the events taking place in the community and allows her to see them more clearly.

McMullan creates likeable and believable characters and imbues the novel with a true feeling of life in the South during this period. The reader is able to understand how civil rights divided not only communities, but also families. The novel deals with conflicts both large (civil rights) and small (Sam typical adolescent angst – wanting to be accepted by the “in” crowd but not wanting to compromise who she is).

There are some minor problems with flow in this story. Great leaps in time take place with little explanation. There are also some instances of characters acting without realistic motivation. Sam’s mother will only allow her to attend the well-chaperoned school dance with the older and handsome Stone McLemore if she returns home with her mother at the end of the evening, yet she allows Sam to go stargazing with Stone a short time later, totally unchaperoned. It also seems odd that a high school student has only one teacher. These flaws do not detract from the story as a whole, nor do they decrease the appeal of this novel.

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

War Games: A Novel Based on a True Story

War Games by Audrey and Akila Couloumbis is the story of Petros, an ordinary 12-year-old boy growing up in Greece in the 1940s. Petros, his brother, and his friends, marvel at the heroic exploits of their cousin who is fighting first the Italians, then the Germans. They engage in small acts of bravery, believing they are supporting Greece in its war efforts. The war becomes only too real when the Germans invade Petros’ small home town, and the glamour and glory of war are quickly replaced by fear.


The Couloumbises impart a true feeling for daily life in occupied Greece. The characters, both Greek and German, and fully developed. The novel is based on childhood experiences of Akila Couloumbis and the novel has an air of memoir.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

The Compound

What would happen if your self-made billionaire father was obsessed with nuclear war? Eli Yanakakas finds the answer to this question in a tense, page-turner by S.A. Bodeen. Fifteen-year-old Eli has spent the past six years living in “the compound” with his parents and his two sisters. On his ninth birthday the family fled to underground safety ton escape impending nuclear attack, only part of the family, Eli’s twin Eddy and his grandmother, didn’t make it. Eli is haunted by his guilt about Eddy not making it to the compound. He is also disturbed by his growing sense that his father, Rex, is lying about the world outside. The father’s activities and plans, including the Supplements, begin to lead the reader to believe that the father may not just be lying, he may be insane. Does Rex Yanakakas have ulterior motives for brining his family to the compound or is he actually saving them from a horrible death from radiation? If he is, in fact, insane, can Eli save his family?

Bodeen’s detailed description of this alternate world is mesmerizing. The characters are fully developed and become more likeable as we get to know them. Some content maybe a bit shocking for younger readers, but the novel is recommended for grades 7 and up. It should appeal to both boys and girls. The Compound would be a great choice for any reader who loves thrillers.

Monday, March 15, 2010

And the Winner Is

There were a slew of fabulous books for children and young adults published last year. Two of my favorites recently won ALA awards.


When You Reach Me by Rebecca Stead won the Newbery Medal. This is a wonderful mystery dealing with time, friendship, and the challenges of growing up. Sixth-grader Miranda has to unravel a series of mysterious events, and she takes us along for a thrilling journey.

Libba Bray’s Going Bovine won the Michael L. Printz Award. Going Bovine is difficult to describe in a few sentences. Our hero, Cameron, is a 16-year-old with mad cow disease. He engages in a quest to save himself and the world with the help of Gonzo, a hypochondriacal dwarf; Balder, a Norse warrior who disguises himself as a garden gnome; and Dulcie, a pink-haired angel in fishnets and combat boots. Their adventures take them across the country, and, along the way, they meet a variety of bizarre characters. Will they save the world, or is the whole journey a figment of Cameron’s fevered brain? This hilarious book will keep the reader turning the pages to find out.

 

Friday, February 12, 2010

Jumping into the Digital Pool

I am about half way through This Book Is Overdue: How Librarians and Cybrarians Can Save Us All by Marilyn Johnson.  I highly recommend it to anyone interested in libraries and librarians.  In chapter one, Johnson says, "The walls of the library have grown porous now and in some cases are merely virtual, as librarians have come out from behind their desks to servce as active enablers in the digital age" (p. 10).

Do you feel as if you are an "active enabler in the digital age"?  Are you helping students, teachers, patrons, friends, and family understand, navigate, and maximize the capabilities of the digital world around them?  When was the last time you checked out the different options for accessing a real-world audience for student work?  Do you actively engage in social networking? 

Librarians have to enable themselves so that they can enable their comminuties.  The first step in doing so it to dive into the great digital pool.  Come on it! The water's fine.


Image by Klaus Nahr.