Friday, February 12, 2016

Books + Valentine's Day = LOVE

I have not had many opportunities to update my book blog lately, so it's high time I recommend a few books for your 2016 reading list!  Hopefully, you'll see something that catches your interest...something you might "fall in love" with perchance as Valentine's Day nears...

Let me start with The Wrong Side of Right, by Jenn Marie Thorne.  This is a stand-alone realistic fiction novel.  Kate Quinn lost her mother in a car accident a year ago, and her dad was never in the picture.  In fact, Kate never even knew who her father was.  She's been living in South Carolina with her aunt and uncle, and has just finished her junior year when she arrives home to a shock.  Her father is waiting for her there...and he's one of the nominees for U.S. President in the upcoming election.  Kate goes from a quiet life where no one knows her to the center stage in the upcoming political race.  She wants to get to know her father and his family and help him win the election, but her friendship...and budding romance with their opposing candidate's son may not help the campaign.  This book was funny, heart-wrenching, and heart-warming all in one.  I highly recommend this one!  I got my copy from MCPL's Overdrive, or you can find it on their shelves.

If you're more into a suspenseful thriller, you might like The Fixer, by Jennifer Lynn Barnes.  This is the first book in the Fixer series.  You might remember that I have a copy of this book and shared it in class...before I actually read it.  Now that I've read it, I can tell you...it's really good!  In this story, Tess Kendrick has been living with her grandfather on his ranch in Montana for the last several years.  For the last few months, her grandfather has been showing signs of developing Alzheimer's Disease, and Tess tries to hide it for as long as possible, but eventually the truth comes out and Tess's older sister shows up.  Tess has no choice but to move to Washington DC with Ivy, who is a powerful "fixer".  If someone in power has a problem, they call Ivy...and she fixes the problem and makes it disappear.  When Tess starts at her new school, her new classmates expect her to follow in her sister's footsteps and fix their problems too.  Eventually the problems Tess is trying to fix collide with problems Ivy is trying to fix, and things turn deadly for both of them.  This was a really fun read.  It kept me guessing and I can't wait to read the second book in the series, The Long Game, due out on June 7th.  You can borrow my copy if you're interested, or get this from MCPL's shelves or Overdrive.

Another recent favorite that I've read is A Step Towards Falling, by Cammie McGovern.  In this story, Emily and Lucas witness a classmate with special needs being assaulted at a football game.  Emily tries to get help, but in the excitement of the game, she gets overlooked.  When she sees that police arrived, she assumes Lucas got someone to help, which wasn't actually the case.  When the incident is investigated, both Emily and Lucas receive consequences for being bystanders who did nothing, and are required to spend several weeks volunteering in a community education class for young adults with special needs.  This story is told alternately in Emily's point of view, and that of Belinda, the girl who was assaulted.  I thought this story was incredibly touching as Emily explores the fact that she didn't act and get help when she knew she should, and as Belinda tries to cope and deal with what happened to her.  This story was really emotionally moving on a lot of levels.  I highly recommend this title!  You can get a copy from MCPL's shelves or Overdrive.

If you're more into a ghost story, you might want to check out Katie Alender's (Marie Antoinette, Serial Killer & Famous Last Words) latest, The Dead Girls of Hysteria Hall.  In this stand alone novel, 17-year old Delia inherits her Aunt Cordelia's home.  After Delia makes a really foolish decision, her parents decide that this summer is the perfect time to drive up to Delia's inherited house and get it cleaned up and ready to sell.  As soon as they arrive and Delia learns that the "house" is actually a former mental hospital for troubled girls and all kinds of people have died in the house, she's not so sure staying.  As she explores the house, really strange things happen and Delia thinks they should leave, but her parents aren't for that...I don't want to say much more, or I will give away something that is a huge twist in the storyline.  If you want to find out, you can check this out from MCPL's shelves or Overdrive.

For those of you have enjoyed the Lunar Chronicles series, make sure you check out Winter (#4). This wraps up the story of Cinder, Scarlet, Cress, and now Winter.  This story is a fractured fairy tale based off of Snow White.  It was a fantastic ending to an awesome series.  And not only that, you can get Stars Above, a collection of 9 novellas about several of the different characters from the story.  You can borrow Winter from me or find both of these books on MCPL's shelves or Overdrive.



Finally, I'll wrap up with the book I'm currently reading - also #4 and final book in a series.  Manners and Mutiny continues Sophronia Temminick's finishing school education.  She and her classmates are back & ready for even more espionage missions and intrigue as they work through their final year as students at Mademoiselle Geraldine's Finishing Academy for Young Ladies of Quality.  A mystery and plenty of spying are sure to ensue.  If you haven't read the first 3 books in this series - Etiquette & Espionage, Curtsies & Conspiracies, and Waistcoats & Weaponry, you should definitely check them out!  This is a fun series...full of very dry humor!  You can borrow #1 from me, the CMS library has #1 & 2, and of course, MCPL shelves & overdrive contain them all!

Enjoy your 3-day weekend and spend some time reading!

Sunday, January 3, 2016

2015 Wrap-Up

Here are my book stats for 2015:

  My goal was 200 & I'm happy to report that I exceeded it.  I read 222 books!  Most of the books I read were pretty good...this graphic is thanks to Goodreads.  The longest book I read was 896 pages.  I've already started on working toward this year's goal of 210 books.  I've got 2 down & only 208 to go!  Happy new reading year!

Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Christmas Break Reads

This is a long overdue post...but thank goodness for a break so we can all read as many books as possible, right?

Let me start with Not if I See You First, by Eric Lindstrom.  Parker Grant has been blind for several years.  She lost her sight after a car accident in which her mom was killed.  Now she is reeling because her father has also recently passed away and her aunt and family have moved in so that Parker doesn't have to adjust to a new home and new school on top of everything else she's dealing with.  When a former friend who betrayed Parker in 8th grade reappears in her life, she's content to continue to block him out and pretend as if he doesn't exist.  But as Parker attempts to move on, she starts to re-evaluate her past and wonders if what she thought was betrayal wasn't a betrayal at all.  Parker is a sassy (and - warning - somewhat foul-mouthed at times) narrator, but she does not fail to make you feel some of what it must be like to navigate life without the gift of sight that we take for granted.  I was able to read an advanced reader copy of this title thanks to NetGalley.  You can find Not if I See You First on the shelves at MCPL.

Another book I was able to read courtesy of NetGalley was This Raging Light, by Estelle Laure.  Seventeen year old Lucille thought the worst that could happen already did when her dad went crazy and ended up in a mental institution a few months ago.  It turns out that things can get worse. Now, her mom has left and doesn't seem to be returning anytime soon.  Lucille decides she has to hold it together for her 9-year-old sister and somehow hide the fact that they have no parents taking care of them.  On top of this, Lucille is dealing with her long-time crush on her best friend's brother.  Can Lucille hold it together and be both parent and sister?  If you like emotional roller coasters, you'll like This Raging Light.  You can find copies of title at MCPL soon...this title was just released today!

If you're a fan of The Selection series, you will want to read The Favorite, another novella by Kiera Cass that tells Marlee's story.  Marlee was America's closest friend in the Selection...this give a behind the scenes look at how Marlee's story unfolded.  You can check it out through MCPL's Overdrive or in our CMS media center with the other 3 novellas (The Prince, The Guard, & The Queen) in the series in a bundle called Happily Ever After.







If you're more into historical fiction, you might want to pick up A Night Divided, by Jennifer A. Nielsen (author of the False Prince series).  In this story, we meet Gerta, who is 12 when the Berlin Wall goes up separating herself, her mother, and brother in the east with her father and other brother who were visiting in the west.  After 4 years of no contact, Gerta sees her brother and her father on the other side of the wall on her walk to school one morning.  Her father seems to be dancing and acting silly, but Gerta knows he's trying to tell her a way she and the rest of her family can escape.  The question is, can they do so without being killed?  This was a fascinating look at what it might have been like to live in Berlin at the heart of the cold war when the Berlin Wall went up.  You can find this on MCPL shelves and Overdrive.  We also have a copy in our CMS media center, and I have a copy you can borrow, as well.

If you're more interested in a mystery-thriller type read, you might want to check out Jennifer Lynn Barnes', The Naturals, the first in series. In this story, we meet Cassie, who is a natural at reading people.  She's been living with her father's family since her mother's death a few years ago, but she's never really felt like she fit in.  When she's recruited by an FBI agent, to become a part of an elite group of teenagers who also have natural abilities, Cassie jumps right in.  She wants to be a part of helping solve murders...especially the murder of her mother.  But when a serial killer sets his eyes on Cassie, she's going to have to work fast in order to protect her own life.  You can find this title at MCPL or through Overdrive.



For those of you who want to read a good fantasy title, you might want to check out The Warrior Heir, by Cinda Williams Chima.  This is the first in a 5-book series about a boy named Jack who was living out a normal life in Ohio, completely unaware of the role he is about to play in a centuries old war.  Jack is a warrior - gifted  with incredible fighting abilities that have been suppressed by "heart medicine" that he's been taking since he was a baby.  When he forgets a dose and inadvertently uses some of his supernatural powers, the race is on from two opposing forces to find Jack and claim him as their warrior in a fight to the death for control.  If you like a lot of action with some magic thrown in, you'll want to check out this book.  You can find it at MCPL, through MCPL's Overdrive, or on the shelves in our CMS Media Center.

Finally, let me tell you about a book that was a potential Truman Nominee for next year.  This title wasn't selected, but I thought it was really good.  Extraction, by Stephanie Diaz is a dystopian fantasy about a future Earth where those who live the planet Kiel's surface live in constant danger from the acid dripping from the moon.  Clementine is about to turn 16 and have the opportunity to be "extracted" from the dangerous surface to live in the interior of the planet in relative safety and luxury.  When she is selected, Clementine is thrilled, except for having to leave behind her best friend and secret crush, Logan.  But when Clementine goes below the surface, she starts to see a society that is built on lies and deceit.  She knows that she has to find a way to save herself, Logan, and all those who are on the surface from a dangerous plan to destroy them all.  This is the first book in a series.  You can find copies of all three books in this series at MCPL.  Our CMS Media Center has copies of Extraction, as well.

I wish you all a Merry Christmas and many happy days of reading over the rest of this break!


Wednesday, December 16, 2015

2016-17 Truman Nominees!

The Truman Nominees for next year were announced today!  If you want to get a head start on reading them, here is the list!


Tuesday, November 17, 2015

A Western, Chess, Adventure, & Mockingbirds?

As usual, I've been churning through book after book.  In fact, I just finished my 200th book of the year over the past weekend!  That means I'm overdue to make a few recommendations to you.

Let me tell you, I really like a good Western.  Seriously...and Vengeance Road, by Erin Bowman was a good Western.  Kate Thompson comes home from hunting to discover that her father has been murdered by a notorious gang, and she sets out across the Arizona desert intent on getting vengeance for her father.  Kate plans to hunt down every member of the gang and kill them.  Only then will her father be avenged.  Along the way, Kate picks up allies who join her to help her in her cause.  As Kate gets closer to hunting down the guilty gang, she discovers some surprising information about her family that she never knew about her dead mother and a secret, lost gold mine that some people will do anything to find.  Will Kate's thirst for vengeance heal the wound left by her father's murder?  You'll have to read Vengeance Road to find out!  You can check out a copy from MCPL or through MCPL's Overdrive.

Next up is the highly anticipated second book in Marie Lu's Young Elites series - The Rose Society.  I don't want to give away too much, but I will tell you this - Adelina Amouteru decides to embrace her badness and goes completely over to the dark side in this story.  I'm not usually a fan of a bad main character, but there is something about Adelina that keeps you rooting for her, even though you know you wouldn't want to run into her in a dark alley yourself.  If you liked The Young Elites, you'll definitely want to read this book to see how the story continues.
If you're looking for a good historical fiction mystery, you might want to give These Shallow Graves, by Jennifer Donnelly a try.  In this story that takes place in 1890, young socialite Josephine Montfort is close to graduating from her finishing school, and is likely to be engaged to the most eligible bachelor in New York when her father suddenly dies after accidentally shooting himself.  Jo, who is an aspiring writer, knows that in her society she has no chance of getting to be a reporter, but her inquiring mind can't accept that her father would accidentally shoot himself.  When she inadvertently overhears someone say that her father committed suicide, she can hardly believe that either, so she decides to investigate.  With the help of handsome reporter, Eddie Gallagher, Jo pieces together evidence that her father was actually murdered and it was staged to look like a suicide.  Now Jo has to figure out who murdered her father and why...before her own time runs out.  If you like a fun historical read with an interesting mystery, you'll like These Shallow Graves.  I received an advanced copy of this novel thanks to NetGalley.  You can find copies at MCPL or through MCPL's Overdrive.  

I've also been reading lots of prospective Truman nominees for next year.  One of those possible nominees is Grandmaster, by David Klass.  I admit, I know pretty much next-to-nothing about playing chess, but despite that, I really liked Grandmaster. Freshman Daniel Pratzer decides to join the chess club when he starts high school.  He's not much of an athlete, and he really doesn't know a whole lot about chess, but he wants to get involved in something.  When he's invited by two seniors to travel to New York for a parent-child chess tournament, he can't figure out why they'd invite him...until they tell Daniel that his dad was classified as a chess grandmaster as a teenager.  As far as Daniel knows, his dad has never even played chess, because his dad has never mentioned a word about it.  When Daniel's dad admits the truth and reluctantly agrees to play in the tournament, Daniel has to do his best to hold his dad together as he faces a past he'd rather forget.  If you like chess, and even if you don't, but you like a good story about relationships, then you'll like this book.  You can find copies at MCPL.

Another potential Truman nominee is The Girl Who Never Was, by Skylar Dorset.  This is the first in at least a 2-book series.  In this story, Selkie Stewart, who has been raised by her two elderly aunts, because her mother left and her father is in a mental institution, discovers that her whole life is one big lie.  When Selkie decides to try to find her mother, everything in her life falls apart...because it turns out that if her mother finds Selkie...she's going to kill her.  When Selkie discovers that Ben, the boy she's secretly in love with, has been captured by her mother, she knows she has to save him, even if it puts her own life at risk.  If you like fantasy and lots of adventure, you'll like The Girl Who Never Was.  You can follow it up with The Boy with the Hidden Name, where the story continues.  You can find copies of this in our CMS library and at MCPL.

Since we're currently reading To Kill a Mockingbird in reading class, you might enjoy this next potential Truman nominee;  I Kill the Mockingbird, by Paul Acampora.  In this story, Lucy and her two friends, Michael and Elena want to pay tribute to their teacher who died earlier in the school year.  They know that this teacher wanted his students to read To Kill a Mockingbird over the summer and they want to make sure that everyone WANTS to read this book.  So, they devise a campaign called "I Kill the Mockingbird".  They go into book stores and libraries and remove all the copies off the shelves and creatively shelve those copies elsewhere.  They leave flyers with links to a website and social media sites they've set up and start a sensation across the country and suddenly everyone, everywhere wants to get their hands on a copy of To Kill a Mockingbird.  Since you're reading TKAM (you are reading it, right?), you'll appreciate all the references to the original story in I Kill the Mockingbird.  This was a really fun and entertaining read, plus it's pretty short!  You can find a copy of this at our CMS library and at MCPL.

Another potential Truman nominee is Midnight Thief, the first in a series by Lyvia Blackburne.  Kyra has been growing up on the rough streets of the Forge and has learned to survive as an orphan on the streets.  She's become an excellent thief and prides herself on being able to get into any building and steal just about anything.  When she's invited to join a group that is supposedly working for the greater good of the people, she gets to put her skills to further use.  But after awhile, Kyra begins to suspect that this group may not be all she thought they were.  In fact, they may be using Kyra to do things she is absolutely against, but she's not sure how to get out.  When she's arrested, she gets thrown together with knight Tristam of Brancel, who is out to find the Demon Riders, who murdered his friend.  Tristam and Kyra have to work together to stop Kyra's group and the Demon Riders from wreaking havoc on their town.  This is another fantasy, adventure story.  If you like this book, you'll want to read the second book in the series, Daughter of Dusk. You can find a copy at the CMS library or at MCPL.
Finally, let me tell you about a final potential Truman nominee, Codename Zero, by Chris Rylander.  Seventh grader Carson Fender is bored in his North Dakota town.  Nothing ever happens there...ever.  To keep himself entertained, Carson is always planning his next big prank.  In the midst of one of his elaborate pranks, though, a man in a suit who is being chased by strange, pale men hand Carson a wrapped box and asks him to deliver it to a Mr. Jensen and tells him that whatever he does...don't unwrap the box.  So what do you think Carson does...of course, he unwraps the box!  One thing leads to another and Carson ends up the newest agent for a top secret agency that is at work right there in his own town.  His job...befriend and protect the newest student at school.  Can Carson fulfill his mission, project this student, and maybe even save his town?  You'll have to read Codename Zero to find out.  If you like this one, you can check out book #2 Countdown Zero and a third book, Crisis Zero, will release in February of 2016.  You can find copies of Codename Zero at the CMS library and at MCPL.

There are lots of books that you can choose from here!  We're heading to the library later this week, so make a note of any of these you want to read!

Sunday, October 25, 2015

Gold, Monsters, Thieves...and more!

I have been busy, busy, busy trying to keep up with all the books that keep ending up on my shelves.  Let me tell you, I've read some pretty good stuff over the last couple of weeks.  Here are seven new recommendations I have for you.

First up, is Walk on Earth a Stranger, by Rae Carson.  I absolutely loved Carson's Girl of Fire and Thorns trilogy, so I was really excited to read this first book in a new series, and it did not disappoint.  Lee Westfall is an only child growing up in the mid-1800's with her parents.  But when her parents are murdered, Lee isn't sure what to do.  When she realizes her uncle, who has become her guardian, is behind her parents' deaths because he wants to use Lee, she knows she has to get away.  You see, Lee has the ability to sense gold...and her uncle wants to use her to make him rich, because the California Gold Rush is beginning.  Lee runs away, but can she make it to California on her own and escape her evil uncle?  I love a good Western - and with the paranormal element of Lee's unusual ability added in, it made for a great story. I am already highly anticipating the next book!  You can find this book on MCPL's shelves or through MCPL's Overdrive.

Next up is Library of Souls (Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children #3), by Ransom Riggs.  This book is the highly-anticipated last book in this well-loved series.  I won't say much, because I don't want to give anything away, but Jacob and the peculiar children are still hunting for Miss Peregrine, and they're running out of time.  Jacob discovers that he has another peculiar ability that might be able to help them.  Can they save her and all of Peculiardom?  You'll have to read Library of Souls to find out!  You can find this title on MCPL's shelves or through MCPL's Overdrive.




A potential Truman nominee I recently read was Matthew Jobin's The Nethergrim, the first book in a series.  In this fantasy story, the town of Moorvale celebrates their freedom from the evil nethergrim every year. The story of how the knight, Tristan, and the wizard, Vithric, defeated the nethergrim is known and celebrated by all.  But when darkness returns to the land and animals and then children start to disappear, Edmund believes the nethergrim has returned.  When his brother is taken, Edmund knows that he has to try to get him back.  Edmund is a self-taught student of magic...but does he know enough to save his brother, and himself, from the nethergrim?  You can find copies of this story in our Congress Media Center or at MCPL.



If you prefer a more humorous story, you might enjoy another potential Truman nominee - Also Known as Elvis, by James Howe.  Skeezie Tookis is about to spend a few weeks of his summer alone, because his three best friends are leaving town.  When his mom tells him he has to get a job to help out with the bills, Skeezie, who is also known as Elvis by some because of the leather jacket he wears at all times, isn't too excited.  But when his dad, who left two years ago, shows up and seems to want a second chance, Skeezie is really unhappy.  Having to navigate through all this without the help of his friends may prove to be his undoing.  If you like a good heartwarming story that will make you laugh along the way, AKA Elvis is a good book for you.  You can find a copy of this title at our Congress Media Center and at MCPL.

If you're looking for a post-apocalyptic dystopian story, you would probably really like Amy Engel's The Book of Ivy, first in a new series.  Ivy Westfall (no relation to Lee from Walk on Earth a Stranger) is in a bad situation.  After the nuclear war that led to much of the destruction of the U.S., Ivy's grandfather founded the town of Westfall.  But after the town was established, another family, the Lattimers took control and began their rule over the town. In the town of Westfall every May, girls from the losing side of town are chosen to marry boys from the winning side of town.  And this year, Ivy has been chosen to marry the president's son, Bishop.  But what Bishop and his family don't know is that Ivy is part of a plot to kill him and help her own father take back control of their town.  But once Ivy gets to know Bishop, she's not sure if she can follow through.  This story was a page-turner, and of course, it ends with a huge cliffhanger that will leave you waiting with anticipation for the next book in the series, The Revolution of Ivy, which is due out early next year.  You can find a copy of this book at MCPL or through MCPL's Overdrive.

If you read Leigh Bardugo's Grisha trilogy (Shadow and Bone, Siege and Storm, Ruin and Rising), then you'll love the first book in her new series called Six of Crows.  I just finished this book today and I'm still trying to catch my breath.  Though this book has a new cast of characters, the setting is the same world as in the Grisha trilogy.  Kaz Brekker is a lieutenant of the Dregs, a gang that is part of Ketterdam's streets.  When Kaz is approached to pull off what appears to be a nearly impossible heist, he puts together a team of six who just might be able to pull it off.  Their job: break into one of the best and most well-guarded prisons in the world and kidnap a prisoner.  This book is told from the perspectives of most of the six players in this fantastical Ocean's Eleven - like story.  I absolutely loved it and am a little devastated that I'm going to have to wait about a year for the next book in the series to come out.  Because, yes, giant cliffhanger at the end of this one.  You can find this title at MCPL or through MCPL's Overdrive.

Finally, if you're up for an action-adventure, alternate history thrill ride, then Wolf by Wolf, by Ryan Graudin is a must-read for you.  I got to read this book thanks to NetGalley. It was just published last week.  This story takes place in 1956 in a world where Hitler and the Axis powers won World War II and are in power.  Yael, a Jewish girl who was imprisoned in a death camp and experimented on as a child, escaped and is determined to get her revenge.  Because of the experiments done on her in the prison camp, Yael has the ability to skin-shift - to take on the identity of anyone she sees.  After escaping, Yael falls in with a resistance group and has been given the most important job they have.  She is to join the Axis Tour, an annual motorcycle race to commemorate the Axis' victory.  She must impersonate last year's winner, Adele Wolfe, and win the race.  If she wins, she'll be able to get close enough to Hitler to kill him, get her revenge, and start a revolution.  But she doesn't count on Adele's brother, Felix, and another former race winner, Luka, who make this job harder than she ever expected it to be.  This book was dark, but such an interesting look at how the world could have been had the Allies not won the World War.  It seems that there will be another book following Wolf by Wolf.  I hope so, because I don't think Yael's story is really over yet.  You can find this book on the shelves at MCPL.

That's it for now.  With a long weekend ahead due to parent-teacher conferences coming up, there's no better time to pick up something good to read over that break!

Sunday, October 4, 2015

Fall Reads

The air is starting to get chillier and you know what that means...time to snuggle up with a good book!  Let me tell you about a few I've read recently.

First up, is a potential Truman nominee for next year called Popular: Vintage Wisdom for a Modern Geek, by Maya Van Wagenen.  This is a memoir that Maya, who is currently 15, wrote about her eighth grade year when she embarked on a huge social experiment.  When a popularity guide written in 1951 turns up when cleaning out their house, Maya's mom suggests to her that she try following the advice of the author to see how well it would work in today's day and age.  Maya, who proclaimed herself to be at the very bottom of the social ladder in her school, decided to give it a try.  Each chapter is dedicated to a month in which she follows advice in areas such as: hair, makeup, posture, and more.  I think this is a must-read for every teen-aged girl.  It was hilarious, yet brought back so many memories of how awkward and completely unpopular we all feel during middle school (and sometimes even adulthood!).  If you're interested in this title, you can pick it up at MCPL or in our own CMS Media Center.

Another potential Truman nominee I recently read is Minion, by John David Anderson.  The main character Michael Morn was abandoned as a baby in a fast food restaurant and lived his first nine years in an orphanage.  Adopted at age 9 by a mad scientist sort-of-guy, Michael is getting along just fine, even when he realizes that the little black boxes his dad invents are being sold to the mob-like criminals who run his town.  Michael knows that he and his dad aren't the good guys, but they're definitely not evil either - just doing what they have to do to get by.  But when a super hero comes to town...one who is working to clean up the criminals, Michael worries that he and his dad are no longer safe.  They're going to have to decide - stay or go.  This was an entertaining book and is a companion book to Anderson's Sidekicked, another super hero story.  You can find this title at MCPL or in our CMS Media Center.

A final potential Truman nominee I've read is called Falls the Shadow, by Stefanie Gaither.  In this book, Cate's sister, Violet, died a few years ago and was immediately replaced by her sister's clone.  After a devastating plague wiped out a large chunk of the population when her parents were younger, they decided to clone their children in case the worst happened.  But when Violet's clone is accused of murdering a classmate and disappears, Cate knows she has to find her.  The anti-cloning community wants everyone to believe that clones are violent and unpredictable, but Cate feels a responsibility to find and defend her "sister".  She ends up caught in the crossfire of a battle between two sides that both think they're right.  This is a science-fiction action-adventure that will keep you turning the pages as you read it.  You can find a copy at MCPL and in our CMS Media Center.

Let me also tell you about two books that are set to release this coming Tuesday, October 6th.  I was able to preview both books thanks to NetGalley.

First up is A Thousand Nights, by E.K. Johnston.  This is based on the story known as 1001 Nights or Arabian Nights.  This was a fascinating story, but I will warn you that it is a slower-paced story.  It is beautifully written and thought-provoking story, though, if you're willing to give it the time.  In this story the only named character is a ruler named Lo-Melkhiin, who has married and killed 300 girls by the time he arrives at the main characters village looking for his next bride. Our main character knows her sister is likely to be chosen and in order to save her sister, she makes herself stand out and is chosen. She manages to survive one night, then another until she becomes the longest-surviving bride of Lo-Melkhiin because of the stories she weaves for him. And as she survives, strange things start to happen and she starts to develop her own strange magic that just might save her people if she can survive her husband.



For a faster-paced read, you might enjoy Spinning Starlight, by R.C. Lewis. This is a futuristic science-fiction action-adventure in which the major planets in the world are known as the Seven Points and they are connected through portals called conduits. When Liddy Jantzen, the heiress to the most powerful tech company in the galaxy is nearly attacked in her home, she learns that the person running her family's company, Minala Blake, is responsible. The conduits are failing and Minala has trapped Liddy's 8 brothers within the conduits and then implants Liddy with a device that will kill her brothers if she tries to get help for them. Liddy manages to escape to what everyone believed was the lost eighth point where she meets Tiav, who may be the only person who can help her. But she has to find a way to communicate without her voice. This is a page-turner of a book, and it will keep you guessing. My only complaint about this one is that it gets quite technical at times, which can be a little confusing, but the story is a good one.


That's it for now. More to come in the future!