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  • STACKED
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    • Audiobooks
    • Book Lists
      • Debut YA Novels
      • Get Genrefied
      • On The Radar
    • Cover Designs
      • Cover Doubles
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      • Cover Trends
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      • Feminism For The Real World Anthology
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      • Audiobooks
      • Graphic Novels
      • Non-Fiction
      • Picture Books
      • YA Fiction
    • So You Want to Read YA Series
  • Review Policy

2011 Favorites: Jen’s List

December 20, 2011 |

While I would definitely say that the majority of the books that I read are young adult and middle grade, I still do sprinkle in the occasional adult book (one or two a month, on average). Therefore, in the process of compiling this list, while looking back on the books I read this year, I was happily surprised to find that 6 out of my top 10 reads of 2011 were actually adult books! A bumper crop! However, on second thought, this was not that surprising, as I feel that, with the exception of a few standout titles, a lot of the YA books that I read this year were fairly middle-of-the road. But here are my year’s best, a collection of spectacular books that stood out in their own ways:

10. Circle of Fire, by Michelle Zink (YA): I’ve thoroughly enjoyed Michelle Zink’s lush, gothic trilogy so far, the tale of two sisters and their fates to be both the ‘guardian’ and the ‘gate’ of an ancient prophecy. Circle of Fire was no exception. This trilogy manages to distinguish itself from other paranormal fiction in its stunning writing, strong supporting characters, and satisfactory, all-ends-wrapped up conclusion.

9. The Weird Sisters, by Eleanor Brown (Adult): When their mother is diagnosed with cancer, the now-adult Andreas sisters, Rose (Rosalind), Bean (Bianca), and Cordy (Cordelia), so named by their Shakespearean scholar father, return home to shoulder the physical and emotional load of the household. But more than their mother’s illness draws each woman home–Cordy, single and flighty, has just found out that she is pregnant; Bean has quit her high-powered job in New York City in the wake of a personal scandal; and Rose, forever the caretaker, is struggling to figure out how to move away from her family and into her new role as an engaged woman. Brown perfectly captures the unique personalities of each daughter, and the way their lives both revolve around and push away from each other. A lovely, heartfelt depiction of growth, pain, and family.

8. The Language of Flowers by Vanessa Diffenbaugh (Adult): This novel shifts back and forth between two times in Victoria’s life: the present, as an eighteen-year-old woman, just aged out of the foster care/residential home system and learning how to navigate life on her own, and the past, when as a child, Victoria was fostered by a woman named Elizabeth on her vineyard, learning about the language of flowers and trying to trust for the first time. Though it has been years since her time with Elizabeth, this experience fully informs Victoria’s present, as a Elizabeth-related tragedy and betrayal are constantly hinted at throughout the novel and the language of flowers still permeates her life. In fact, Victoria lives her life by the rules of this language (thistle represents misanthropy, sunflower represents false riches, etc.), take a job as an assistant florist, and forms a relationship with a man with a link to Elizabeth. Victoria’s growth from a broken girl to a broken woman to someone who finally begins to heal herself and love others is gradual and believable and the narrative shifts are seamless. Diffenbaugh’s gorgeous prose is rendered even more beautiful on audio, as well. A great book for teens as well as adults.

7. Then Came You by Jennifer Weiner (Adult): Jennifer Weiner is one of my consistently favorite authors, and, in my opinion, her latest novel is her strongest since her debut, Good in Bed. Then Came You weaves together the strands of three different individuals, whose lives all revolve around the birth of one tiny baby. There is Jules, the college student who donated her eggs to earn the money to help her alcoholic father; Annie, the surrogate who hopes to earn enough money to help her financially struggling family, yet hurts her relationships in the process; and India, the 43 year old trophy wife who has escaped her ignominious past and now hopes to find true happiness with her aging husband by having a baby. Weiner’s writing is sharp and incisive, the voice of each woman is unique and heartfelt, and the author is truly the master of capturing modern women, with all their desires, hopes, and insecurities.

6. What Happened to Goodbye by Sarah Dessen (YA): After Mclean’s parents’ divorce, she decides to live with her father, a restaurant consultant who moves from town to town rehabilitating failing restaurants. And at each new school Mclean attends, she changes herself–both her name and her personality–trying on various identities, since she herself is not quite sure who she is. But this latest town is different. For some reason, she told Dave, her next door neighbor in Lakeview, her real name. And now she is forced to be herself. This book is on the quiet side, but Dessen truly gets into the heart of Mclean; the reader truly feels her anger at her mother and her fear of opening up to her new friends. The supporting characters (especially Deb) are vivid and unique and the little details of daily life in Lakeview make this book truly feel homey and comfortable–exactly what Mclean was seeking all along.

5. Ready Player One by Ernest Cline (Adult): A plain old FUN read. When the creator of the virtual world OASIS dies, leaving behind a contest for all of humanity (find the Easter Egg he has hidden in the game and win full ownership of the OASIS, along with billions of dollars), 18-year-old Wade Watts (avatar name: Parzival), along with millions of others, take up the gauntlet. But to win, they must master the 80’s pop culture references, video game, movie, and music knowledge that Halliday was so fond of and beat the evil corporation Innovative Online Industries to the final reward. Another adult novel that teens will thoroughly enjoy. Full review here.

4. Divergent by Veronica Roth (YA): In a world full of The Hunger Games knock-offs, Divergent is truly one of the only original, fully captivating dystopians I have read thus far, a book that kept me turning pages frantically. Beatrice (Tris) lives in a world divided into factions, each based on some aspect of the personality: Candor (honesty), Abnegation (selflessness), Dauntless (bravery), Amity (peacefulness), and Erudite (intelligence). At age sixteen, each person must take a test and choose which faction to spend their lives with. When Tris leaves her Abnegation family members for a life in Dauntless, she is catapulted into a series of challenges to complete her initiation into this seemingly brutal faction, on the way uncovering a plot that could destroy society as she knows it. A spectacularly entertaining book that has me eagerly anticipating the sequel.

3. The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot (Adult Nonfiction): This fascinating true story by Rebecca Skloot (read by me as an audiobook), made me

want to keep driving around for hours. Henrietta Lacks, a poor black woman who died of cervical cancer, now lives on as HeLa, the name given to her tumor cells, which, unbeknownst to either Henrietta or her family, were taken from her and became the precursor to many medical treatments throughout the years, from fertility to cloning to polio. Mixing Skloot’s modern day narrative of tracking down the history of the Lacks family with the life of Henrietta herself, this book was endlessly fascinating, covering issues of race relations, poverty (the Lacks descendants did not see any money from the use of Henrietta’s cells), medical ethics, and family relations. Reading more like a novel than a nonfiction text, this book kept me rapt. Amazing.



2. How to Save a Life by Sara Zarr (YA): When Jill McSweeney’s mother decides to adopt a baby, Jill doesn’t know how to react. Her father has only recently died, and Jill feels like he is being replaced, when he has even been grieved properly yet. But things get even worse when the baby’s pregnant mother, Mandy, comes to stay with them until the birth of the baby. Mandy, on the other hand, is just grateful to find a place where she feels cared for and at home, after a lifetime of a careless mother and her revolving string of boyfriends. Sara Zarr, a master of contemporary fiction, has written a stunning depiction of two girls who could not be more different, but who still manage to navigate their own unique place within this evolving definition of family. Each girl’s voice is distinct and precisely rendered, and their evolutions throughout the novel are thoroughly believable. My favorite of Sara Zarr’s yet.

1. Faith by Jennifer Haigh (Adult): Sheila McGann grew up in suburban Boston, the daughter of an uber-religious mother and the sister of two brothers, one, Mike, who grew up to be the typical suburban father, the other, Arthur, who grew up to be a Roman Catholic priest. But when Arthur is accused of pedophilia by a single mother he has befriended, Sheila, a single English professor who hasn’t been close to her family in years, sets out to investigate the circumstances of the event and to clear her protesting brother’s name. Jennifer Haigh’s writing is captivating and the plot pulls the reader along eagerly, as we are never quite sure what the truth is. While the subject matter of Faith sounds heavy and depressing, the resulting book itself is truly a stunning character study, of Sheila, of Arthur, and of Catholicism and family themselves. My favorite book of 2011.

Filed Under: best of list, Uncategorized

2010 Year in Review: Kimberly’s Picks

December 23, 2010 |

Compared to previous years, I read a lot in 2010 – about 30 more books than I read in 2009.  Last year, I posted a run-down of the memorable books of the year, and I’m doing something similar for 2010.  Once again, these aren’t books that were necessarily published in 2010, just ones I read in 2010.

Best Book of 2010
Monsters of Men by Patrick Ness

This was an easy pick – it’s both the best book published in 2010 and the best book I read in 2010.  No other book even comes close to its combination of spectacular writing, important themes, and fascinating plot (I often say that these three things make up the Best Book Trifecta).

Best Book of 2010 – Runner Up
The True Meaning of Smekday by Adam Rex

Published in 2007, this book was such a delightful and refreshing surprise.  It’s interesting and oh so funny.  It’s not often I laugh out loud while reading, but this one made me do just that page after page.  I can still recall favorite lines, even though I’ve yet to read it more than once.  Do yourself a favor: read this book and be happy.

Best Audiobook
His Dark Materials trilogy by Philip Pullman

2010 was the year I decided to give the audiobooks of my most favorite books ever a try, and I’m glad I did.  Pullman narrates and the dialogue is brought to life by a full cast.  All the characters sounded right and everything just worked perfectly.  I’ll definitely be listening to these again soon.

Best Audiobook – Runner Up #1
Bog Child by Siobhan Dowd  

So lovely and heartbreaking – a coming of age story that breathes new life into the coming of age genre.  Wonderful combination of beautiful writing and excellent narration. 

Best Audiobook – Runner Up #2
Feed by M.T. Anderson

The story was good, but the audio production was amazing.  It’s also the only audiobook I’ve listened to that was able to use sound effects without sounding incredibly cheesy.  In fact, the sound effects made the audiobook.  Kelly raved that it was the “best audiobook ever,” and that’s pretty close to the truth.  Read her Twitter-style review here. 

Worst Narration
Tie: First Light by Rebecca Stead and Hattie Big Sky by Kirby Larson

Both pretty good stories (First Light in particular) made almost unbearable by poor narration – bad accents, voices that sound much too old for the characters, hokey inflections.  Too bad.

Best Graphic Novel
Fables by Bill Willingham

2010 is the year I really dove into graphic novels.  There have been some definite clunkers (Scott Pilgrim) but also some definite winners (Brain Camp).  My favorites by far, though, have been the Fables comics by Bill Willingham.  They’re full of clever ideas and interesting, three-dimensional characters, and I’ve been so impressed by how the story has developed.

Book I Most Look Forward to Giving to Patrons
Delirium by Lauren Oliver

This one doesn’t publish until 2011, and I’m so excited to be able to tell my patrons about it.  It’s a book whose subject matter (dystopian love story) is so in style right now, but it’s also not predictable and the writing is excellent.  Look for more on the book from us at STACKED in 2011.

Biggest Disappointment   
Across the Universe by Beth Revis

It wasn’t a bad book, but I was so psyched to read it after the stellar first chapter and so let down by the rest of it.  The concept is interesting and the cover is, in my opinion, terrific, so I know this one will sell itself, but I wanted so much more from it.

Worst Book Read in 2010

Going Bovine by Libba Bray
So bad.  Just so so bad.  I know many who love it, but no one could convince me that the book has any redeeming qualities.   The poor narration (I listened to it on audio) made it worse, but I would have disliked it intensely in print format as well.  Honorable Mention goes to Last Summer of the Death Warriors.

Most Anticipated of 2011

Clariel: The Lost Abhorsen by Garth Nix
I loved the Abhorsen Chronicles when I was a teenager and am so thrilled that a prequel about Chlorr of the Mask is planned for release in 2011.  Looks like I’d better get started re-reading.

Most Anticipated of 20??

A Dance With Dragons by George R.R. Martin
Who knows when this will be published.  Sigh.  At least I have the (what looks to be) awesome HBO series to look forward to in the spring.   

Filed Under: Adult, audiobooks, best of list, Favorite Picks, Graphic Novels, lists, Uncategorized, Young Adult

2010 Favorites: Jen’s Picks

December 22, 2010 |

I read a lot this year. At the time of this post, I’m currently on my 244th book on the year (including 32 picture books). Going back through my Goodreads list was actually a lot of fun, especially when I noticed that my favorites covered the spectrum of genres, from dystopian to contemporary and historical fiction to nonfiction. I adored books published this year and devoured older books that I finally got my hands on. And I fell in love with young adult, middle grade, and adult books alike.
As 2010 was the year I started to listen to audiobooks (also known as the year my commute improved INFINITELY), I have included my five favorite audiobooks of the year, as well. While I’m most definitely not finished reading for the year, here are my literary highlights of 2010.
THE TOP TEN:
10. Sugar and Ice, by Kate Messner
Kate Messner is rapidly becoming one of my favorite middle grade authors. This story of Claire Boucher, a small town New York girl plucked from her maple farm and dropped into the world of competitive skating, is charming. Messner truly knows how to portray middle-schoolers, and her characters and situations are realistic and vivid. I especially appreciate the ‘realness’ of Claire, her friends, and her family. Claire loves math and is fascinated with Fibonacci numbers. Her family is close and loving, all pitching in to accomplish the tasks associated with running a maple farm. And her best friend Natalie is an amateur beekeeper. In a time when so many books seem to glorify materialism, Messner provides a bright spark of warmth, love, and humanity.
9. Monsters of Men, by Patrick Ness
Ness’ conclusion to the amazing Chaos Walking trilogy was much more satisfying to me than Suzanne Collins’ Mockingjay. As Todd and Viola approach their final confrontation with the cruelly compelling Mayor Prentiss, the Spackle take a more central role in the action.
8. Drums, Girls, and Dangerous Pie, by Jordan Sonnenblick
Thirteen year old Steven must cope with both adolescence and grief when his five year old brother Jeffy is diagnosed with leukemia. A combination of sad, poignant, heart-breaking, and funny, Steven and Jeffrey will stay in your heart. (The sequel, After Ever After, is also highly recommended.)
7. The Red Umbrella, by Christina Diaz-Gonzales
Diaz-Gonzales tells the story of fourteen year old Lucia, who, with her younger brother, becomes part of Operation Peter Pan, a movement which sent more than 14,000 children to the United States to live with friends, relatives, homes, or foster familes after Fidel Castro’s regime took hold of Cuba. This book was full of heart, humor, and the simple daily events of growing up, filtered through an intriguing historical event.
6. Anna and the French Kiss, Stephanie Perkins
A charming, sparkling love story filled with realistic characters, clever dialogue, and palpable chemistry. Perkins is an author to watch. You can find my full review here.
5. Before I Fall, by Lauren Oliver
Oliver’s debut novel manages the difficult task of humanizing a mean girl, Sam, who must repeat the same day over and over in order to atone after her death. The ‘Groundhog Day’-like repetitions, while similar, each manage to have a nuance and originality of their own, making the gradual transformation of Sam ring true.

4. Mostly Good Girls, by Leila Sales
Sales writes a poignant tale of best-friendship torn apart that is so much more than the misleading pair of legs on the cover. The writing is fresh, witty, original, and utterly hilarious, and the anecdotal style of the chapters works very well.
3. Penny Dreadful, by Laurel Snyder
Magical and enchanting. Laurel Snyder creates a character to fall in love with in Penny, the young girl who can not help but wish it was magic that caused her family to move from a large, lonely house in the city to an inherited property in Tennessee when her father abruptly quits his job. As the family interacts with a large, quirky cast of characters, the reader is witness to the true power of friendship, love, and determination.
2. The Help, Kathryn Stockett
It’s shocking to read this story of 1960s Mississippi and realize how far our society has come in the past 50 years. When young Skeeter Phelan sets out to write an expose of how black maids are treated in her community, lives are rocked. I was enraptured by the 3 distinct voices in this story. Stockett truly brings Skeeter, Miss Celia and Aibileen to life.

My #1 favorite book of the year: Room, by Emma Donoghue
Stunning, heartbreaking, and emotional, Room features some of the most amazing writing and perhaps the most vivid voice I have ever witnessed in print. Narrated by 5 year old Jack, Room tells the story of Jack and his Ma, who was abducted by Old Nick seven years ago and imprisoned in his fortress-like garden shed. While this premise may sound depressing, to Jack, the room they live is his entire world, and witnessing his world-view, love for his mother, and utter innocence and honesty is an emotional journey for the reader. It is ultimately a story of love, despair, discovery, and hope, one that will stay with me forever.

AUDIOBOOKS

5. The Goose Girl, by Shannon Hale
My first experience with Full Cast Audio, this was a lush production of Shannon Hale’s adaptation of the traditional Goose Girl fairy tale. When Ani is betrayed and her identity taken over by her lady in waiting, Selia, Ani must somehow reclaim her true identity–in the meantime hiding in plain sight as a goose girl. Ani is a multi-layered character who overcomes her limitations in order to triumph, and the voice cast is top notch. Shannon Hale writes beautiful, vivid prose, and her phrasing paints stunning pictures.

4. Dairy Queen, by Catherine Gilbert Murdock
DJ Schwenk is a tomboy, not too smart, and responsible for helping run her family’s dairy farm. But everything changes when she decides to try out for the football team and starts crushing hard on the quarterback of her rival team, Brian Nelson. Narrator Natalie Moore has a fantastic Wisconsin acc
ent and an open, engaging voice.
3. Life as We Knew It, by Susan Beth Pfeffer
When an asteroid hits the moon, no one knows how much life is going to change. But Miranda tells the whole story of her family and the country’s struggle to survive in her diary, mixing the mundane concerns of adolescence with the greater food shortages and volcano eruptions threatening the world. Narrator Emily Bauer has the perfect innocent, confiding tone for this story.

2. I Am the Messenger,by Marcus Zuzak
Zuzak is simply amazing. When Ed Kennedy receives a playing card with four addresses on it, he has no idea how his life is about to change. Soon he is sent on a mission, traveling throughout his downtrodden city in order to help random strangers with their problems, serving as a guardian angel while simultaneously helping himself. You can find my full review here.

1. Born to Run, by Christopher McDougall
McDougall tells the story of the Tarahumara Indians of Mexico, an ancient tribe known for both their reclusion and their amazing long-distance running skills. Mixing together historical details with scientific facts about the benefits of barefoot running and the narrative of a modern-day 50 mile race through the Mexican desert, McDougall crafts a smart, engaging, and fascinating story. As a runner, I was riveted. As a reader, I was impressed.

Filed Under: audiobooks, best of list, Favorite Picks, lists, middle grade, Uncategorized, Young Adult

2010 Favorites: Kelly’s Picks

December 21, 2010 |

Last year, instead of a top books or ranking, I threw down a handful of books that stood out to me as a reader and gave you the reasons why.

Welcome to the end of 2010, and I’m going to do exactly the same thing. Each of these books stood out to me as a reader for some reason and are books that will linger with me far beyond this year. These are books that took my breath away and leave me thinking about them all the time. They are the books I measure other books to, and ones where I can remember each character’s name. I think about them in the shower, while driving and a song comes on the radio, where the lines are ones I’ve underlined and memorized. Unforgettable.

I’ve read, as of today, 217 books, so it was a crowded field. To be completely honest though, I was disappointed in many titles this year. More hype than substance surrounded many books and a lot of substance was overlooked for more surface issues (take a minute and reflect on this — how much did the world spend thinking about covers and issues of appearance this year than on actual content?). Although I understand and appreciate cover hype, I think this year’s obsession with covers and the “unveiling” of covers only furthered this for me. I want more discussion of content and less of cosmetics.

But I digress.

Although I’d prefer to hold off on posting this until the very end of 2010 (because we still have over a week left of the year), I know with the holidays, the forthcoming Cybils decision making discussions, writing, and other distractions this time of year, I won’t get as much reading in as I’d prefer. Some of these you’ve likely heard me talking up and others, well, maybe less so. I’m sticking with YA titles again this year, since my adult reading of fiction was quite low this year and my adult non-fiction reading was, well, limited to books that would interest only the smallest segment of people. I’m also limiting them to books published in 2010.

Without further ado, here are the books I’m vetting this year as my favorites and ones which are worth your time, your money, and — as the case seems to be this year — your tears. In no particular order:


Stolen by Lucy Christopher

I’ve reviewed this one here, but the quick and honest truth is that Christopher has written a book that leaves the reader utterly conflicted throughout. Each page leaves you questioning what’s going on and leaves you wondering if the feelings you have as a reader are right or wrong. Ty is a horrible person in this story — he does something completely vile and wrong — and yet throughout, you can’t help but think he really, truly loves Gemma and that everything he does really is good and honest and out of love. I mean, I shouldn’t want to love Ty but I just can’t help it. And it feels so wrong and so right at the same time.


The Absolute Value of -1 by Steve Brezenoff

You can read my full review here. I have a soft spot for the average kid. The kid that’s not the super star and the kid that’s not the loser. For me, Brezenoff’s book is the quintessential story of three average kids. He makes use of a convention I find challenging to master (starting the story at the end and working backwards) and he depicts three distinct voices through Simon, Lily, and Noah. For someone who’s not usually a fan of multiple points of view, I was completely taken with the three (four, actually) I got here. The male voices are spot on and our female Lily is just as strong. Brezenoff’s book is the perfect tale of the average kid navigating the tricky terrain, the painful events, and the completely normal aspects of being a teenager in high school.


Dirty Little Secrets by C. J. Omololu

You can read my full review here. I kind of overlooked this book when it first came out. It didn’t really jump out at me, but when a colleague and trusted reading friend suggested I read this one because it left her speechless, I was on it. I devoured it. Lucy’s story is actually less about her than it is about her relationship with her mother and her mother’s relationship with things. The book takes place over one day and left me as a reader sick to my stomach. I felt sick for Lucy and I felt every single emotion she felt. Each item she touched, I touched too. And the end! It was absolutely perfect. There is no other way it could have ended for Lucy. She needed it, and so did I.

John Belushi is Dead by Kathy Charles

You can read my full review here. The sights and sounds of Los Angeles make this story of Hilda and Benji work. I absolutely love how much this one reminded me of a modern day take on Paul Zindel’s The Pigman, one of my all-time favorite books. Pace, plotting, and characters are pitch perfect, but for me, it’s the setting. It’s haunting and beautiful and quirky and vivid. I could smell the city and the people and the places in this one.

—

Confession time before I continue here. I rarely reread a book. I think I can count on one hand the number of times I’ve done it. It’s not that I don’t believe in it or that there aren’t books worth rereading, but rather, it’s because there are so many other books that I want to read before I go back.

This year, I’ve reread two books by the same author.


Some Girls Are by Courtney Summers

You can read my full review here. There is not a single likable character in this book, and yet, I love each of these characters because they’re so flawed and awful and miserable and horrific to watch. Each turn in this book left me feeling sick and beat up and yet, I wanted more. There is something punishing about this book. It’s sick and relentless and brutal and won’t even give you a resolution or satisfaction at the end. I still get queasy when I talk about this book. Yet, I can’t stop talking about it.


Fall For Anything by Courtney Summers

You can read my full review here. Eddie, Milo, and Culler will live on for a long time in my mind. The pain and loss and spot-on characterization and emotion are hard to forget. Despite all of the weight in this book, the horrible things the characters endure, this is a book I want to be in. These are characters I want to know, even if it means getting nasty text messages once in a while. I’ll let yesterday’s review stand for the rest of my reasoning on this one, but you can bet I’ll be revisiting this one again down the line for a third and forth read and pretending that Milo is all mine.

—

My criteria for absolute favorites is tough, I admit, and it leaves off a number of really worthy and wonderful titles I read this year. But I’m not objective when it comes to *my* favorites and I don’t apologize for my tastes. However, I do want to spotlight a handful of other titles I read and liked a lot this year too, and these are titles I know will easily make top spots on other favorite lists. And believe me when I say there are still others I liked a lot this year but just aren’t quite top of the tops for me:

Filed Under: best of list, Favorite Picks, lists, Uncategorized, Young Adult

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