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Showing posts from October, 2010

The City of Ember by Jeanne DuPrau

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Dark Rain: A New Orleans Story by Mat Johnson and Simon Gane

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Mat Johnson, author of Incognegro , has written an uncompromising tale about the immediate aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans. He also manages to twist a bank heist into the plot and somehow ends what is essentially a grim story with a note of hope for the future. I also read A.D. New Orleans After the Deluge by Josh Neufeld , and if you are interested in this part of the world (which is particularly relevant given the recent BP oil spill), you won't want to miss it, either. Read both books - then try to figure out what you can do to help New Orleans. Grade 8+

All About Lulu by Jonathan Evison

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"All about Lulu reads like Salinger for the Freaks and Geeks-meets-Wes Anderson crowd, a whip smart Gen X Lolita (sans pedophilia)" (Gerry Donaghy, Powells.com). I can't say it much better than that. This is the best book I've read since Torsten Krol's latest. It has all the features I like in a book: a guy who is absolutely smitten with an unattainable girl, a depressed female lead, a Seattle setting, and a timeframe that I can relate to. Did I mention a charming Russian entrepreneur and a hotdog stand on Venice Beach? Click here for a full review .

History Lesson for Girls by Aurelie Sheehan

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Award-winning author Aurelie Sheehan (The Anxiety of Everyday Objects) has written a beautiful story about teenage friendship set in 1975. Alison Glass, 13, has spent several years in a back brace to correct scoliosis. She moves to a new town in Connecticut with her bohemian parents the summer before eighth grade and hopes to start fresh, sans back brace. Her hopes are dashed when her doctor tells her she needs to keep wearing it. Deliverance shows up in the form of Kate Hamilton, fellow horse lover and classmate. Alison and Kate's friendship is formed around horseback riding and a need to escape their self-absorbed parents. Sheehan does a stellar job of portraying the adults, who act like children, and the resulting expedited adulthood forced on Kate and Alison. Woven into the story is a piece at the beginning of each chapter from a class project the girls are writing together about 'the lone heroine' of Connecticut, whose experiences sometimes mirror that of Kate and Alis