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How Do You Organize Your Books? (Follow-Up)

June 16, 2015 |

Thanks to all who answered my informal poll about organization of your personal books! I thought the results were pretty interesting, if unscientific. Because we’re clearly all nerds, I thought you’d appreciate seeing the results in graph format. I’ve also shared some of the more interesting “Other” responses below.

Click on the graph to make it larger.
A total of 111 people responded, and most of you selected more than one option, which I assumed would be the case. Leading the pack is “by genre” with 52 responses, which was pretty surprising to me as it’s never something I’ve done before (though I’ve always wanted to). I also think it’s interesting since it seems like genre separation is something public libraries are moving away from. People clearly think it’s important for their personal collections, though.
In second place was “alphabetical order by author’s last name” with 41 responses. This one doesn’t surprise me at all. It’s a really easy organizational scheme both to set up and to use for locating titles afterward. On the opposite end, almost no one organizes their books by Dewey or Library of Congress. Either this means our readers don’t have much nonfiction (I realize fiction can be classified this way too, but that’s just silly – I’m looking at you, academic libraries), or these classification schemes just aren’t that easy. Or both. (I’m in the both camp.)
If I combine “wherever they’ll fit” and “organize? What is this word organize?” into one category, it comes in third place with 38 responses. These people seem to be in the same situation I have been in for the past several years: limited space means books just get shoved where they can fit, and organization is not as important as making sure the books don’t get stored in, say, the oven.
The “other” responses were the most interesting. Many of you wrote that you organize by size, which is something I should have included in the original poll. It’s something I do, too, without really realizing it. For example, I keep all my mass markets separate from my hardbacks (which is something I’ll probably continue to do in the new house). Many of you mentioned space as a factor, and a few mentioned giving away lots of books due to space or just not feeling the need to keep something you won’t read again.
Here are a few of my favorite “other” responses, with my own comments in italics:
  • I have a shelf dedicated just to books I haven’t read yet.  (I had this at my old place where we had a ton of built-ins, but in my current place, the books I haven’t read tend to just sit on tables.)
  • My other shelf is for books I’ve read and LOVED.
  • By books I’ve read and books that are unread and then by genre. (An organizational scheme after my own heart. Perhaps something I’ll do in my new place.)
  • Importance 
  • Personal interest
  • By imprint (all NYRB together, all Penguin black spines together, etc) (By far one of the nerdiest responses, and I mean that lovingly.)
  • If they were purchased for a class, they tend to stay with their “classmates.”
  • Release date then author’s last name
  • Loosely by genre– for example, British mysteries are separate from cozy mysteries, etc, but I do keep series together.
  • By “themes” and by favourites vs. non-favourites. (Organizing by favorites was a popular reply.)
  • Crammed into boxes by size. I only have space to have out books I am actively reading. Very unhappy. (This would make me unhappy too.)
  • Stream of consciousness
  • Alphabetical and then by publishing date except for series… it’s complicated.
  • Genre first, then beauty (series are kept together, no matter what).

There were a lot of great, more in-depth comments on the original post, too, so be sure to check it out if this topic interests you.

Filed Under: organization, reading life, Uncategorized

June Debut YA Novels

June 15, 2015 |

It’s time for another round-up of debut YA novels of the month.

Like always, this round-up includes debut novels, where “debut” is in its purest definition. These are first-time books by first-time authors. I’m not including books by authors who are using or have used a pseudonym in the past or those who have written in other categories (adult, middle grade, etc.) in the past.

All descriptions are from WorldCat, unless otherwise noted. If I’m missing any debuts out in June from traditional publishers, let me know in the comments. As always, not all noted titles included here are necessarily endorsements for those titles.

Because You’ll Never Meet Me by Leah Thomas: Ollie and Moritz are best friends, but they can never meet. Ollie is allergic to electricity. Contact with it causes debilitating seizures. Moritz’s weak heart is kept pumping by an electronic pacemaker. If they ever did meet, Ollie would seize. But Moritz would die without his pacemaker. Both hermits from society, the boys develop a fierce bond through letters that become a lifeline during dark times — as Ollie loses his only friend, Liz, to the normalcy of high school and Moritz deals with a bully set on destroying him. A story of impossible friendship and hope under strange circumstances, about two special boys who, like many teens, are just waiting for their moment to shine. 

Between The Notes by Sharon Huss Roat: When Ivy Emerson’s family loses their house—complete with her beloved piano—the fear of what’s to come seizes her like a bad case of stage fright. Only this isn’t one of her single, terrifying performances. It’s her life.

And it isn’t pretty.

Ivy is forced to move with her family out of their affluent neighborhood to Lakeside, also known as “the wrong side of the tracks.” Hiding the truth from her friends—and the cute new guy in school, who may have secrets of his own—seems like a good idea at first. But when a bad boy next door threatens to ruin everything, Ivy’s carefully crafted lies begin to unravel . . . and there is no way to stop them.

As things get to the breaking point, Ivy turns to her music, some unlikely new friends, and the trusting heart of her disabled little brother. She may be surprised that not everyone is who she thought they were, including herself. (via Goodreads).

Dancing with Molly by Lena Horowitz: High school junior Becca is just a “band geek” until when her friends introduce her to molly, a form of ecstasy, and she finds herself with new friends–even a boyfriend–but soon learns there is a price to her newfound popularity.

Deadly Design by Debra Dockter: Kyle McAdams races to find out what’s killing kids conceived at the Genesis Innovations Laboratory before he becomes yet another perfect, blue-eyed corpse.

Even When You Lie to Me by Jessica Alcott: Because she sees herself as ugly and a misfit, tolerated only because of her friendship with pretty and popular Lila, Charlie dreads her senior year, but a crush on the new charismatic English teacher, Mr. Drummond, makes school bearable until her eighteenth birthday, when boundaries are crossed.

Hello, I Love You by Katie M. Stout: Grace Wilde is hoping for a fresh start from her family, famous in the music industry, and escapes to the farthest place from home she can think of, a boarding school in Korea, but when her roommate Sophie’s twin brother Jason turns out to be the newest Korean pop music superstar, Grace is thrust back into the world of fame and love.

Last Year’s Mistake by Gina Ciocca: Although Kelsey has fallen in love with her best friend, David, she cuts ties with him before moving from Connecticut to Rhode Island, believing they need a fresh start, but David moves nearby at the start of senior year, threatening Kelsey’s relationship with Ryan.

Like It Never Happened by Emily Adrian: As one of The Essential Five theater students at her alternative high school, Rebecca Rivers is preparing to become an actress and enjoying junior year with the perfect boyfriend until life-changing rumors threaten everything.

Mindwalker by AJ Steiger: In a futuristic reality, one girl falls in love with the boy whose memories she tries to erase. 

More Happy Than Not by Adam Silvera: After enduring his father’s suicide, his own suicide attempt, broken friendships, and more in the Bronx projects, Aaron Soto, sixteen, is already considering the Leteo Institute’s memory-alteration procedure when his new friendship with Thomas turns to unrequited love.

Proof of Forever by Lexa Hillyer: Four former friends are transported back in time to a pivotal summer in all of their lives during a camp reunion. 

The Sacred Lies of Minnow Bly by Stephanie Oakes: A handless teen escapes from a cult, only to find herself in juvenile detention and suspected of knowing who murdered her cult leader. 

Skyscraping by Cordelia Jensen: In 1993 in New York City, high school senior Mira uncovers many secrets, including that her father has a male lover.

The Night We Said Yes by Lauren Gibraldi: Before Matt, Ella had a plan. Get over a no-good ex-boyfriend. Graduate from high school without any more distractions. Move away from Orlando, Florida, where she’s lived her entire life. 

But Matt—the cute, shy, bespectacled bass player who just moved to town—was never part of that plan.

And neither was attending a party that was crashed by the cops just minutes after they arrived. Or spending an entire night saying “yes” to every crazy, fun thing they could think of.

Then Matt abruptly left town, and he broke not only Ella’s heart but those of their best friends, too. So when he shows up a year later with a plan of his own—to relive the night that brought them together—Ella isn’t sure whether Matt’s worth a second chance. Or if re-creating the past can help them create a different future.  (via Goodreads).

Those Girls by Lauren Saft: Eleventh grade at Greencliff, an all-girl school near Philadelphia, is momentous for long-term best friends Alex, Mollie, and Veronica, as the secrets they are keeping from each other about boyfriends, eating disorders, and more begin to undermine their relationships.

Where You End by Anna Pellicioli: Overwrought when she sees her ex-boyfriend with another girl during a class field trip, seventeen-year-old Miriam Feldman races into the Hirshhorn Sculpture Garden and pushes over a priceless Picasso sculpture, then finds herself blackmailed by the mystery girl who saw what she did.
The Witch Hunter by Virginia Boecker: Set in an alternative 16th-century England, Elizabeth Grey is the only girl in the king’s elite group of witch hunters. When she’s framed for being a witch herself, Elizabeth finds freedom at the hands of the world’s most wanted wizard and her loyalties are tested. 

Filed Under: debut authors, debut novels, debuts 2015, Uncategorized, Young Adult, young adult fiction

Links of Note: June 14, 2015

June 14, 2015 |

It’s been a long time since I’ve done a “This Week in Reading” post or a “Links of Note” post. Since I have been keeping so many of these links in Pocket for weeks (maybe months!), I thought it’d be worth a giant dump of them into a post. Most of these are book or reading related, but many aren’t. They’re things that have caught my eye or been interesting reads in their own right.

If you’ve read something interesting lately you think would be up my alley, which is pretty obvious from this collection, I’d love to hear about it in the comments.

  • First: here’s a teaser for the upcoming YA Quarterly Box I am curating for Book Riot. I LOVE this box so much. I managed to get three books inside it, along with two bookish items, and there will be exclusive content from the authors, as well. This will be well worth your $50. 
  • Did you know I’m working on a new project with librarians Faythe Arredondo, Hannah Gomez, and Angie Manfredi called Size Acceptance in YA? It’s exactly what it sounds like.  
  • John Scalzi’s post on what he is and isn’t obliged to comment or write about has been on my mind a lot lately. I’ve made significant changes in my social media lately, and I continue to think about these decisions. Scalzi hit on some of the things I’ve been mulling over here.
  • This piece at Rookie about body image and norms/standards/ideals of beauty is gutting and beautiful. 
  • The role of black dolls in American culture left me thinking about Addy from American Girl in ways I never had before. I have a complicated relationship with American Girl dolls in general, since I was a kid who could never have one because they were too expensive, but I remember Addy being my favorite when she was introduced. 
  • Cecil Castellucci talks about how anyone can be a good art ally. 
  • This is a fantastic interview between Kristin Halbook and Courtney Summers about rape culture and YA lit. If you missed it, I had the opportunity to talk with Courtney alongside legendary Laurie Halse Anderson earlier this year on the topic of rape culture, girls’ stories, and more at Book Riot. Easily, one of the most interesting and important things I’ve had the opportunity to do. 
  • If you’re an unagented YA writer, you should know about this contest Courtney Summers is having. You can win the chance for feedback from her agent on part of your manuscript. 
  • Speaking of writers without agents or contracts, I’m a judge for this year’s Elephant Rock Books Sheehan Prize. If you have a completed YA manuscript, you might want to enter this. The last winner of this prize was Jessie Ann Foley, who went on to earn a Printz and Morris honor. 
  • I love this round-up of 84 films by and about women of color. “A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night” is one of the most enjoyable movies I’ve watched in a long time and features this scene which will never, EVER not be the best. This is a skateboarding vampire: 

 

  • However you feel about Eleanor and Park — and I’ve been pretty clear that I liked the book quite a lot! — this master post about why it’s problematic in terms of its racism is a must-read. 
  • This post talking about the evolution of the cover of Me and Earl and The Dying Girl ticks all of my boxes: cover design, image evolution, and the feelings artists hope to create in a book cover. So, so good. 
  • Did you know next weekend is the 48 Hour Book Challenge? I will be participating. 
  • This year’s Kid Lit Con information has been trickling in. It’ll be October 9 and 10th in Baltimore, and you can register, pitch a panel topic, and more over here. I’m making plans to be there. 
  • Feminist noir? Yes please. 
  • This is a very, very tough read about mental illness, social media, and about how we can present one image to the world while struggling with something miserable inside. I think, though, this is important reading, especially for anyone who knows or struggles with mental illness themselves. 
  • Teen feminists who are changing the world. 
  • Finally, this piece about how horror movies are the one place where women are told their fears are real is SO good. I saw “It Follows” earlier this year, and this article sort of hit on why that movie really stuck with me and why it is I keep thinking about it. It’s about fear, about the things that follow and haunt us, and about how society doesn’t want to give credence to those very things that torment us. 

Filed Under: Links, Uncategorized

This Week at Book Riot and Elsewhere

June 13, 2015 |

Over at Book Riot this week, I had two posts — one that went up on Friday, which is why this post didn’t hit until today:

  • I rounded-up a ton of cat-centric adult fiction. This post is paw-sitively packed with puns. 
  • For 3 On A YA Theme, I talked about pets in YA fiction. All three examples happen to be dogs and one is a book that’ll hit shelves this fall. 
Earlier this week, I had the pleasure of being part of a webinar for the Massachusetts Library System with Liz Burns and Sophie Brookover. We talked about New Adult fiction, defining what it is, how it’s grown, and some of the key titles. You can tune into the webinar and access our slides and reading guide right here for free. 

Filed Under: book riot, new adult, Uncategorized, webinars

Recent Reads: Immaculate by Katelyn Detweiler, Devoted by Jen Mathieu, and The Sacred Lies of Minnow Bly by Stephanie Oakes

June 11, 2015 |

I’ve read three really solid contemporary titles recently, and one of the really fascinating threads connecting them together, aside from strong, engaging lead females, is that they all deal with the idea of faith in some capacity. In one story, there’s a very loose take on the Virgin Mary story; the second story tackles a girl’s decision to leave the Quiverfull movement; and the third explores what happens when a girl decides that following the rules of the cult her family is a part of simply isn’t her destiny.

Immaculate by Katelyn Detweiler

I’ve read almost no reviews of this debut title, which came out last month, and I’m sad about that. While the book’s description lends itself to some immediate reactions — a teen girl is pregnant, despite being a virgin — this isn’t at all a morality tale or a story with a heavy religious hand in it. Rather, this is a book about faith, both in oneself and more, faith in other people.

When Mina discovers she’s pregnant following a very strange conversation with an old woman in the restaurant she works in, she doesn’t know what to do. How does she explain to her parents, to her best friends, and to her boyfriend that she’s pregnant, even though she’s never had sex? As she begins to tell them one by one, we see the ways people react to her story. Is she worth believing? Why would a girl lie about having sex when there’s clear-cut evidence that some sort of sexual intercourse happened resulting in a pregnancy?

This isn’t entirely a Virgin Mary spin, though that’s a bit of a jumping off point for Detweiler’s novel. In fact, there’s almost nothing about religion in here at all. It’s a solid story about how we do and do not believe girls when they tell us something. At the heart of this book, and the thing that really stood out for me, was how much there was about friendship. Mina’s two best friends have wildly different reactions to her pregnancy, and those divergent reactions are the heart of the idea of how we do and don’t listen, how we do and don’t believe, and how we do or don’t choose to have faith in another human being.

Immaculate does have an almost too perfect romance in it, but because I found the story was much less about love, much less about the pregnancy, and much less about anything other than girls’ stories, it didn’t clog up the storytelling nor weigh down the overarching themes. Likewise, readers who go into this one expecting resolution or explanation for the pregnancy may be disappointed. However, that would be the point — the faith you need to take in Mina and in Detweiler’s story. This is a longer book, but it’s fast-paced, the writing is solid, and the building of a small town scandal is executed well.

Devoted by Jennifer Mathieu

For her entire life, Rachel Walker has gone along with the beliefs of her large family, which is devoted to the teachings of the Calvary Christian Church. She’s never questioned it before; she dresses modestly, takes on much of the care of her siblings, and she believes her role as a woman in life is to become a wife and a mother.

The story picks up when Rachel begins to question the teachings of her family and her church — she becomes quickly intrigued by the story of a girl who had left the movement and began her own life. As Rachel begins to ask more questions about life outside of the church world, she’s less and less satisfied by the answers she’s given. So when she reaches out to the girl who left and finds herself wanting to know more and more and more, Rachel makes the decision to leave.

I devoured Mathieu’s novel, reading the entire book in about one sitting. As a long time fan of the Duggars (and, so it’s clear, one who stopped watching the show a while ago and finds the situation going on now to be entirely disgusting and unforgivable), I felt like Mathieu explored a part of the Quiverfull movement I’ve always been curious about. What happens if someone decides to leave? What could cause a person who’d been brought up in a very specific set of beliefs to want to consider other alternatives? Why do some people do this while the rest choose to stay?

Devoted isn’t about a “bad girl” who chooses to flee. It’s about a girl who is really good but is curious and wants to know the world beyond the bounds she’s grown up in. Mathieu is exceptionally respectful to the Quiverfull movement, though she allows her characters to dig into why some of the beliefs are problematic and damaging, especially to young girls. It’d be really interesting for a reader to pick this one up now in light of the Duggar molestation knowledge; I read it beforehand, and I suspect had I waited to read it, the story would take on an even harder edge to it in light of the power of girls in social worlds such as this. Readers who loved Carol Lynch Williams’s The Chosen One should pick this title up.

The Sacred Lies of Minnow Bly by Stephanie Oakes

Minnow Bly’s story begins bloody. She’s murdered — or at least attempted to murder — someone from the closed cult community of which she’s a part. But more than that, she tries to do it while being handless. Her hands had been cut off when she chose to disobey the leader of her cult who said it was the prophecy that she’d marry him.

Oakes’s book intrigued me from the start and held me through the entire read. What I went into it expecting was a cult story, and I got that. You learn the background and the things that led to the destruction of a cult in Montana. However, I wasn’t anticipating how much of the story would take place in a juvenile detention facility and . . . that took the story from being one that checked some of my boxes to one that highlighted each and every single one of them. In many strange ways, this book is reminiscent of Nova Ren Suma’s The Walls Around Us without any of the ballet or the magical realistic elements. But rather, it’s an exploration of the walls that keep us bound into behaving or acting in certain ways and about the world (in this case, a cult) that demands certain things from girls especially.

What made this book work for me was less the background and story of the cult. Readers who love that and love the world building surrounding a cult’s structure and purpose, as well as its rules and expectations will not be let down here. What did it for me, though, was Minnow’s relentless voice and pursuance of the things she wanted for herself. It was incredible to read a story about a handless girl and how damn determined she was to do every single thing for herself — and, as I think I’ve mentioned before, I’ve come to have a soft spot for books where a teenage girl takes on a grown man without hesitation. Because it’s not about the act of violence; it’s about the act of rebellion against those who so relentlessly want to keep you down, shut you up, and cut off the tools you have at your own disposal to fight back.

Oakes is a debut to keep an eye on. I’m so excited to see what she does next, as her style really meshed with my reading tastes.

All three of these books are worth shelf space, and all three would make for some interesting discussion alongside one another. While all of them feature “strong female characters,” the strength of these teen girls emerges in very distinct, very different manners that is worth talking about in and of itself. In some cases, it’s living with the choices you don’t have control over and in some, it’s about choosing to say to hell with those choices and striking out to begin anew, even though the future may be entirely unknown.

Review copies all received from the publishers. All three titles are available now. 

Filed Under: book reviews, Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult, young adult fiction

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