I wonder if the no fines for turning in books late is a way to encourage people to get the books back. I wonder how much they'd have to spend on replacement books as opposed to how much they would gather in fines.
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
ignoring all the disturbing library talk, as she has fled the country to escape the Library Police.
In the same vein, any suggestions for first-grade girls who like to read?
Depending on how good her reading is: The Wolves In The Walls; anything by Kevin Henkes, but especially the mouse books - Jesus, they're adorable; Miss Nelson Is Missing, by Harry Allard; Holly Black's Spiderwick Chronicles; The Sisters Grimm (which is very like Bill Willingham's Fables comic, only it's a kids' series of books); anything by Roald Dahl, pretty much...er, yeah. I could go on?
well, back to library talk a [link] to the librarian song
This might seem like it belongs more in the comics thread, but I'm posting it here anyway, because it straddles books and comics.
Although I have issues with the ghettoization of girls/women who read comics, last year DC started a line of graphic novels called Minx that's aimed more or less at tween/teen girls.
Despite my problems with creating "girl" comics (not that that's a new phenomenon), I read Minx's first graphic novel, The Plain Janes. I liked it a LOT.
A sequel -- Janes in Love came out recently, and it's just as good.
The idea is nothing new -- think Pump Up the Volume -- but it's well done, and so I'm pimping it.
Tep, would you say it's aimed more tween or teen? How adult-like are the storylines? Because I'm always looking for stuff for Abby.
Barb, I'm a bad judge (I'm 37 and I dug it -- I'm SUCH a sucker for high-school plots that are done well...or even not [cough::90210::cough]).
The most distressing parts are the references to the cafe bombing that injures Main Jane, which prompts her family's move to the small town -- and that occurs right before the timeline of the first one begins. It's referred to in flashbacks, but it's mostly Jane's feelings about it (scared, helpless, etc. -- normal feelings), and nothing graphic.
If Abby's familiar with the fact that shitty people commit acts of violence that hurt innocent people*, then I think they'd be fine for her.
*(I don't mean to imply that you keep her locked in a media-free safe room; I just don't know the extent to which you and DH discuss terrorism, etc., with your kids. But like I said above, if Abby knows that shit happens, then that's the extent of what the books cover. They really deal with Jane's life post-random act of violence, and how she chooses to live in response to it.)
t edit No sex or anything; there are crushes and one (I think) kiss. And a gay character who, in the second book, laments not having anyone to crush on. So no gay lovin'. Which made me sad, because he totally needs a boyfriend!
The Minx imprint will be toast in January; I think that Janes in Love is one of their last releases. So if you're interested in any of their books, you probably ought to pick them up while you can.
I read Plain Janes, Clubbing, Good as Lily, Re-Gifters, and Water Baby. The only one I liked was Water Baby (though I must shout out to my friend, Josh Howard, whose art in Clubbing was awesome as usual). I found the rest kind of boring.
I'll go check them out-- Borders has got a coupon for a big buy one get one half price sale going on, so it might be a good time to pick up stocking stuffers. By the by, if anyone wants the coupon:
BWAH!!!! Best Beginner's Guide to Sparkly Vampires article ever. And it references cleolinda!