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  • Archive for the 'Recent Acquisitions' Category

    New novels for fall

    Thursday, September 13th, 2007

    Now in the library:

    Summer Ball by Mike Lupica

    Harlem Summer by Walter Dean Myers

    Pants on Fire by Meg Cabot

    Jinx by Meg Cabot

    Girl at Sea by Maureen Johnson (my new favorite author, says Ms. A-B)

    Eclipse by Stephenie Meyer (latest in series)

    Powers by Ursula LeGuin (latest in series)

    Thief Queen’s Daughter by Elizabeth Haydon (sequel to The Floating Island)

    Cover Up by John Feinstein (latest in series, this one at the Super Bowl)

    Love, Stargirl by Jerry Spinelli (sequel!)

    Love is a Many Trousered Thing by Louise Rennison (latest in series)

    Firestar’s Quest by Erin Hunter (one of the latest Warriors books)

    Dragon and Thief by Timothy Zahn (first in Dragonback series)

    And a few copies Harry Potter book is floating around. Yes, there are TWO new books by Meg Cabot–plus Avalon High, the graphic novel edition, is on order.

    Look for new books from Scott Westerfeld, Robin McKinley, Libba Bray, Brian Jacques (new Redwall book!), Chris Crutcher, Anthony Horowitz (latest Alex Rider), and Tamora Pierce coming this fall.

    Royal Diaries series

    Thursday, March 15th, 2007

    A number of students have been reading the Royal Diaries series (international version of Dear America, so I ordered more titles, including these:

    Lady of Palenque: flower of Bacal (F KIR)
    “In 749, the Maya princess Green Jay, of the Kingdom of Bacal, writes in her diary about her arduous journey to Xukpip to meet King Fire Keeper, her future husband.”

    Weetamoo: heart of the Pocassets (F SMI)
    “The 1653-1654 diary of a fourteen-year-old Pocasset Indian girl, destined to become a leader of her tribe, describes how her life changes with the seasons, after a ritual fast she undertakes, and with her tribe’s interaction with the English “Coat-men” of the nearby Plymouth Colony.”

    Kristina: the girl king (F MEY)
    “Kristina, who became king–not queen–of Sweden when she was only a little girl, confides in her diary her feelings about her awkward relationship with her mother, her royal duties and responsiblities, and the people who surround her.”
    Written by Carolyn Meyer, author of the Young Royals series.

    Royal Diaries already in the WMS Library include Cleopatra: daughter of the Nile (F GRE), Jahanara, princess of princesses (F LAS), Nzingha: warrior queen of Matamba (F MCK), and Sondok, princess of the moon and stars (F HOL).

    It is very, very difficult not to type Royal Dairies by accident.

    So Super Starry by Rose Wilkins

    Monday, April 17th, 2006

    When C. came in and asked for the sequel to So Super Starry, I had to admit that not only did we not have the sequel, I’d never heard of the book. So I picked up SSS and its sequel, So Super Stylish, both now available in the library. SSS will definitely appeal to Princess Diaries readers, though I didn’t recommend it to my husband (a huge fan of the Princess Diaries), because it lacks the humor. Octavia is an upper-crust Londoner who feels awkward and out-of-place at her posh school where everyone, including her, is the child of celebrities. Sort of a coming-of-age story, with expensive shoes. Plus, it has a sparkly cover! It was a good spring break read.

    Contemporary fiction
    2004/2006
    230 pages/280 pages

    New fiction

    Monday, March 13th, 2006

    I’ll try to give complete reviews soon, but here’s a quick list from weekend shopping:

    Myracle, Lauren. TTFN. (sequel to TTYL)
    Namioka, Lensey. Mismatch. (Seattle author)
    Prose, Francine. After.
    Sitomer, Alan Lawrence. Hoopster.
    Sitomer, Alan Lawrence. Hip-Hop High School. (sequel to Hoopster)

    Code Talker by Joseph Bruchac

    Wednesday, March 1st, 2006

    Code Talker: a novel about the Navajo Marines of World War Two is an earnest, fact-filled story about the young Navajo men who used their native language to send top secret military dispatches. Their experiences are amazing and well worth reading about–Bruchac includes a bibliography of sources on Navajo and WWII history, several of which I plan to order for the library. Code Talker reads more like history than fiction–most of the time I didn’t even remember the main character’s name–and has a somewhat preachy tone. While it’s not gripping adventure, it adds a new dimension to WWII historical fiction.

    Historical fiction
    2005
    231 pages

    Thanks to H. (seventh grader) for recommending this book.

    The Hollow Kingdom trilogy by Clare Dunkle

    Wednesday, March 1st, 2006

  • The Hollow Kingdom
  • Close Kin
  • In the Coils of the Snake

    Rich in the mythology of goblins and elves, this trilogy gives new life to old stories. Classic elements (orphaned young girls sent to live in forbidding ancestral mansion, ugly beast seeking beautiful bride, humans trapped in underworld kingdom) are combined to create compelling and suspenseful fantasy novels. Now that the third book is out, you can have the satisfaction of reading all three. (I was very relieved, when I got to the end of Garth Nix’s Lirael, that I hadn’t read it until the third book, Abhorsen, was already out. Waiting in suspense for years–okay, it’s fun, but it’s almost unbearable.)

    Fantasy
    2003-2005