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Friday, October 3, 2014

zombies! Just in time for Hallowwen...

You probably already know how popular zombies are right now.  Just turn on the TV, go to the movies, play video games.  Zombies are everywhere!  There are even studies looking at WHY zombies are so huge in our popular culture right now.

And, to satisfy your zombie addiction, there are plenty of zombie books in the Youth Services room (NOT plenty of ZOMBIES; plenty of zombie BOOKS!)  Here are just a few:

Zom-B by Darren Shan


 
When the news starts reporting a zombie outbreak in Ireland, B's father thinks it's a hoax; but even if it isn't, the two of them joke, it's only the Irish, right? That is, until zombies actually attack the school. B is forced on a mad dash through the serpentine corridors of high school, making allegiances with anyone with enough gall to fight off their pursuers. But when they come face-to-face with the ravenous, oozing corpses, all bets are off. There are no friends. No allies. Just whatever it takes to survive.



Alice in Zombieland by Gena Showalter  


 
When her entire existence is shattered in the blink of an eye, Ali is forced to partner with secretive bad boy Cole Holland to avenge the deaths of her loved ones by returning an undead army to their graves.



Zombie Baseball Beatdown by Paolo Bacigalupi


 
While practicing for their next baseball game, thirteen-year-old friends Rabi, Miguel, and Joe discover that the nefarious activities of the Delbe, Iowa, meatpacking plant have caused cows to turn into zombies.



Undead by Kirsty McKay


 
On a school trip to snowbound Scotland, several students become infected and turn into hungry zombies, leaving a small band of survivors to take refuge in the school bus.



Broxo by Zack Giallongo


 
In this graphic novel, Broxo, the only surviving member of a tribe of barbarians, spends his time on a mountain hunting and avoiding the man-eating walking dead until everything changes when Zora, a foreign princess, arrives on the mountain seeking Broxo's lost tribe.



Ashes by Ilse Bick


 
Alex, a resourceful seventeen-year-old running from her incurable brain tumor; Tom, who has left the war in Afghanistan; and Ellie, an angry eight-year-old, join forces after an electromagnetic pulse sweeps through the sky and kills most of the world's population, turning some of those who remain into zombies and giving the others superhuman senses. The first in a trilogy. 


 



Happy reading and good luck sleeping,
Connie






Sunday, September 21, 2014

The most dangerous man in America!





        Captain Underpants isn’t really the most dangerous man in America, is he?  But the Captain Underpants books frequently are  challenged by people who object to them and would like them to be removed from libraries.  

      Banned Books Week is an annual event celebrating the freedom to read. Typically held during the last week of September, it highlights the value of free and open access to information. This year Banned Books Week is September 21-27.  The week raises awareness that books can be challenged or banned, but also celebrates the fact that books most often remain on the shelves for people to choose to read. Libraries in particular support the freedom to read what we want to read.  


     I bet you would be surprised to learn some of the picture books that have been challenged.  

 
Winnie the Pooh and Charlotte’s Web (talking animals are an “insult to god.”)
James and the Giant Peach (includes the word “ass”)
Where the Wild Things Are (promotes witchcraft and supernatural events)
Green Eggs and Ham (promotes homosexual seduction)
The Three Little Pigs (pigs as food might offend the Muslim community)

     I could go on and on.  Check the American Library Associations’ Banned Book Week website for list of books that have been challenged.  http://www.ala.org/bbooks/frequentlychallengedbooks



Here is a list of the most challenged books of 2013:

 

Out of 307 challenges as reported by the Office for Intellectual Freedom
1.    Captain Underpants (series), by Dav Pilkey
Reasons: Offensive language, unsuited for age group, violence
2.    The Bluest Eye, by Toni Morrison
Reasons: Offensive language, sexually explicit, unsuited to age group, violence
3.    The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, by Sherman Alexie
Reasons: Drugs/alcohol/smoking, offensive language, racism, sexually explicit, unsuited to age group
4.    Fifty Shades of Grey, by E.L. James
Reasons: Nudity, offensive language, religious viewpoint, sexually explicit, unsuited to age group
5.    The Hunger Games, by Suzanne Collins
Reasons: Religious viewpoint, unsuited to age group
6.    A Bad Boy Can Be Good for A Girl, by Tanya Lee Stone
Reasons: Drugs/alcohol/smoking, nudity, offensive language, sexually explicit
7.    Looking for Alaska, by John Green
Reasons: Drugs/alcohol/smoking, sexually explicit, unsuited to age group
8.    The Perks of Being a Wallflower, by Stephen Chbosky
Reasons: drugs/alcohol/smoking, homosexuality, sexually explicit, unsuited to age group
9.    Bless Me Ultima, by Rudolfo Anaya
Reasons: Occult/Satanism, offensive language, religious viewpoint, sexually explicit
10.    Bone (series), by Jeff Smith
Reasons: Political viewpoint, racism, violence


So, celebrate your Freedom to Read! 


Read a banned book!




Happy reading,
Connie


Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Bookworms!



      What is “Bookworms?”  It’s a fun book group for middle school kids who love to get together with friends, laugh, talk about books they’ve read and books they want to read, eat snacks, and just have a great time together at the library.





      We’ve had a break for the summer, but we are starting our third year and we want YOU to join!


      We meet on Wednesdays from 3:00 to 4:00 in the Meeting Room at the library.  Our first meeting will be on Wednesday, September 17th.  That day we will look at a bunch of books and vote on the one we want to read first. We read books that interest kids and we have fun talking about them.  


     This is not school!  No tests, no wrong answers, no pressure.  Just bring a love of books and reading, a smile and a snack if you want!

     Stop by the Youth Services room to sign up or call us (883-4723 option 3) to register. Or just stop by on September 27th, or any Wednesday, and see if you like Bookworms.  I’m betting you will!


Have a great start to the new school year!

Happy reading,
Connie

Monday, August 25, 2014

One more book (or maybe two) to read before school starts!



Have you seen the movie If I Stay, based on Gayle Forman’s book by the same title?  The book and especially the movie require BOXES of tissues! 









If I Stay is the story of Mia, a seventeen year old who is close to her family and is a very accomplished cellist.  She has a boyfriend, Adam, who plays guitar in a rock band.  On a snow day from school, her family decides to go for a ride to visit some friends.  There is a catastrophic accident.  Mia is outside her body, watching the dead bodies of her family.  She must decide if she wants to “stay,” in other words, to live, or to “go”…to die. If she stays she will be without her whole family.  Maybe she could see them in some sort of afterlife is she dies?  Her body lies in the hospital in a coma as she wrestles with this dilemma.

The movie is being compared to John Green’s The Fault in Our Stars.  The book is similar to Before I Fall by  Lauren Oliver, author of Divergent.  All great choices if you need a good cry!

If you have read If I Stay and seen the movie, did you know that Gayle Forman wrote a sequel to it that just might be adapted as a movie, too?  Its title is Where She Went.  I can’t tell you anything about the second book because if I did it would ruin the first book for you!  I guess you’ll just have to read it.





All of these books are available at the Scarborough Public Library or through our awesome Minerva system.


Grab a book, a box of tissues, and enjoy the end of summer with a good cry!

Happy reading,
Connie

Thursday, July 24, 2014

Frequently Challenged books


        One of the squares on the Lucky 10 Challenge in the Teen Reading Log asks that you read a challenged book. I bet you will be surprised to know that you have probably read many challenged books, as picture books are challenged, too  

       Book banning is censorship and goes against our the First Amendment rights of freedom of expression. Books are rarely banned in American schools, bookstores and public libraries, but often books are challenged by people who object to something in the book, usually something religious, political, sexual or due to language.  

       The American Library Association and all librarians promote your freedom to choose the books you want and to express your opinions and views.

You can search online and find many banned and challenged books lists.  Here are some of them:  

Alexander - The Prydain Chronicles
Alexie - The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian
Anderson - Twisted
Anonymous - Go Ask Alice
Armstrong - Sounder
Asher - Thirteen Reasons Why
Blume - Forever
Bronte - Wuthering Heights
Chbosky - The Perks of Being a Wallflower
Collins – The Hunger Games
Cormier - I Am the Cheese
Cushman - Midwife’s Apprentice
Curtis - Watson’s Go To Birmingham—1963
Dahl - The BFG
Friend – Lush
George - Julie of the Wolves
Green - Looking for Alaska
Harris - It’s Perfectly Normal
Henkes – Olive’s Ocean
Hinton - The Outsiders
Hopkins – Crank
Howe - Totally Joe
Huxley – Brave New World 
Lee – To Kill a Mockingbird  
L’Engle - A Wrinkle in Time  
Lewis - The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe       
Lowry - The Giver Things               
 Mackler – The Earth, My Butt, and Other Big, Round Things
Meyer - Twilight
Myers – Fallen Angels
Myracle – ttyl, ttfn
Naylor – Alice (series)
Nix - Shade’s Children
Orwell - Animal Farm
Parnell – And Tango Makes Three
Paterson – Bridge to Terabithia
Paulsen - Nightjohn
Pilkey – Captain Underpants (series)
Picoult – My Sister’s Keeper
Pullman- His Dark Materials trilogy
Ringgold - Tar Beach
Rowling – Harry Potter (series)
Sachar - Sideways Stories from Wayside School
Salinger - The Catcher in the Rye
Schwartz – Scary Stories (series)
Sendak – In the Night Kitchen
Silverstein - Giving Tree
Smith – Bone (series)
Snyder - Egypt Game
Steig - Abel’s Island
Steinbeck – Of Mice and Men
Taylor - Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry
Twain - The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
VonZiegesar - Gossip Girls (series)
Wilder - Little House on the Prairie
Winthrop - Castle in the Attic   



DON'T FORGETAll reading logs are due August 2nd!  If you turn your log in by or on August 2nd, you get to come to the Teen Summer Reading Finale Party.  Ice Cream and a free book that you chose!  Don’t miss this!

Also, finish up your entry for the Writes of Summer writing contest.  They are due August 1st!

I’d love to hear what challenged book you read!

Happy reading,
Connie

Thursday, July 10, 2014

The Wednesday evening fun continues with more great Teen Programs at the Scarborough Public Library!


       We had a great time learning all about Forensics with Officers Nelsen, Weed and Landry. We dusted soda bottles for fingerprints, used oblique lighting to find footprints and swabbed blood for DNA samples.  Each participant got a mask, gloves and booties, just like those worn by real detectives.

       A huge THANK YOU to the three officers who so willingly gave their time to our teens!

      Here are some pictures of the evening.












      Next week (July 16) don’t miss Improv with David LaGraffe.  What is Improv?  Acting…on the spur of the moment!  David will lead us in some improvisation games and exercises.  Come get in touch with your inner actor! 

      And on July 23rd we’ll watch the movie “Back to the Future.”  Popcorn provided by the library.  July 30th will be about Aeronautics.  We’ll be launching straw rockets and foam gliders.

      Don’t miss out on all the fun.  Call the Youth Services Room (883-4723 option 3) or stop by to sign up.

      And don’t forget to keep reading.  Bring in your reading logs and share with us what you are reading!

Connie

Tuesday, July 1, 2014

Our Box City!

       A group of teens had a blast last Wednesday night at our first Teen Program of the summer: Let’s Build a Box City!  



        Karen Martin, who works at SEDCO and has a Master’s degree in City Planning, helped the kids think about what buildings they might want in their town.  The teens worked in groups, with each group deciding which buildings they would create from all kinds of boxes brought in by the staff at SPL.  We had a library (of course!), a huge mall, a nuclear power plant, police and fire station, farm, town hall, church, school, beach, bus – and even the last phone booth in America!  At the end of our time together, the kids assembled their town, deciding, with Karen’s help, what buildings went together and how best to layout a community.  






       Lots of good thinking and great creativity happened! 


       Karen Martin was very impressed and had a blast with the teens.  A big “thank you” to her for sharing her time and knowledge with us.

      More great summer Teen Programs are scheduled!  Teen Board Games will be happening July 2nd, Let’s Get a Clue, with Detective Ron Nelsen on July 9th, Improv with David LaGraff on July 16th, a showing of the great movie, “Back to the Future” on July 23rd and learning about flight on July 30th with Trent Schreiber from 4-H.  



       And of course there is the final Teen Party (free book and ice cream! )for all participants in the Summer Reading Program  on August 6th!

There is lots going on in the Youth Services Room at Scarborough Public library this summer. Stop by!

Happy reading,
Connie