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      • Get Genrefied
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So You Want to Read YA?: Guest Post from librarian/blogger Sarah Bean Thompson

April 22, 2013 |

This week’s post comes from librarian and blogger Sarah “Greenbean” Thompson!







Sarah Bean Thompson is a Youth Services Manager and loves being a librarian. She served on the 2013 Printz Committee and blogs at www.greenbeanteenqueen.com. When she’s not reading she enjoys playing board games.

Kelly asked me to write a post about reading YA and I jumped at the chance. As a librarian, there’s nothing I love more than talking about books. But can I admit something? When I was a teen, even though I was an avid reader and loved going to the library and getting books, I had a hard time finding books I wanted to read. Plus, add in the fact that I was told over and over again in school that I could read at a higher than grade level reading level and I was convinced I had to be reading adult lit, which I hated. I could never find what I wanted. And I really wanted to be reading romance. I think that’s one reason why I love YA today-they are publishing the books I wanted to read as a teen. 

So you’re wanting to read YA Romance? Here’s what I suggest:

Graceling by Kristin Cashore

This is the book I wanted to read as a teen. Fantasy, strong female character who kicks butt and is generally awesome, and Po who shares in great witty banter with our protagonist and can hold his own against strong Katsa. Katsa doesn’t need to be with Po but she chooses to be and that makes her even more awesome.

If I Stay by Gayle Forman

If If I Stay doesn’t break your heart and put it back together again, you must be made of stone. This is the story of Mia, her family, and her relationship with her boyfriend Adam. It’s beautiful, romantic and gorgeously written and the sequel is the sequel you didn’t know you needed but always wanted.

The Luxe Series by Anna Godbersen

Before Downton Abbey took over the swooning over historicals world, there was The Luxe, a gossipy, soapy, historical series that is the perfect romantic guilty pleasure. It’s tons of fun with lots of pretty dresses, pretty boys, and lots of drama.

Sean Griswold’s Head by Lindsey Leavitt

This is a book I want to give to girls who think love happens at first sight and it’s all swoony and paranormaly. I love, love, love Payton and Sean and how they grow from random classmates to friends to something more. It’s realistic and I appreciated that it’s not just about the romance but about Payton dealing with difficult family issues as well. It also has one of the cutest flirting scenes ever.

Amy and Roger’s Epic Detour by Morgan Matson

Road trips and romance? Yes please! Plus add in awesome playlists made the author, hilarious dialogue and characters and a great friendship first that becomes something more as the novel goes on-it’s one of the books where in my head the characters stay together forever.

Anna and the French Kiss by Stephanie Perkins

Ok seriously, who can resist a romance set in Paris? Anna loves movies, she’s in Paris for school and Etienne St. Clair is irresistible. It’s also a book where the friendship develops so much before the romance and I love that.

The Georgia Nicholson Series by Louise Rennison

Oh Georgia, you’re just too funny! I love her crazy antics and how she’s torn between Robbie the Sex God and Dave the Laugh. You can’t help but laugh out loud at these books each time you read them.

Song of the Sparrow by Lisa Ann Sandell

A historical novel in verse set in the world of King Arthur with a nice twist on the usual tale. Told from the point of view of Elaine of Ascolat (the Lady of Shalott) is a fantastic retelling and a great historical romance.

The Day Before by Lisa Schroeder

A fantastic mystery/romance told in verse that made me believe in the one special day romance. It’s also one of the few books that I would happily ask for a sequel and stay in the world with the characters much longer if I could.

What My Mother Doesn’t Know by Sonya Sones

This was one of the first books I read when I became a librarian and I was hooked on YA. I love the romance aspect of this book as the main character begins to fall for a boy that’s thought of as a bit of a nerd and not popular. Very sweet and the sequel, What My Girlfriend Doesn’t Know, also rocks. It was also the book that introduced me to the novel in verse format which I love.

Something, Maybe by Elizabeth Scott

I love all of Elizabeth Scott’s books, but there is just something so wonderful about the romance in this book. Maybe it’s because Hannah is at times a bit awkward and I love her for it. I also love that as readers we totally know who Hannah should be with, even if she doesn’t, and it’s so fun reading about her getting there.

Memoirs of a Teenage Amnesiac by Gabrielle Zevin

I don’t know if I can explain how much I loved this book. I think what sold me was that there was somewhat of a love triangle happening in this book, yet I didn’t hate it and it didn’t annoy me. Instead, I liked both guys and the love triangle made sense in the story. It’s also a fantastic best friends turned crush story.

Let It Snow by John Green, Maureen Johnson, and Lauren Myracle

I’m a sucker for sappy holiday romances, but this one is my favorite. I love how all three stories weave together and the whole book is just so darn cute, you can’t help but curl up with hot chocolate when it’s snowing outside and swoon over the romance.

I could go on and on, but I’d love to hear what romances everyone suggests. I need to add to my reading pile!

Filed Under: So you want to read ya, Uncategorized

Show Me the Awesome: 30 Days of Self-Promotion

April 21, 2013 |

One of the big things that’s been talked about in the library blogosphere over the last year or so has been recognition. Over the course of ALA, Liz Burns, Sophie Brookover and myself had a discussion about what we could do to allow people a chance to talk up some of their thoughts on the topic of self promotion or even more specifically, talk up the things they want to promote about the work they’re doing.

Thus, Show Me The Awesome: 30 Days of Self-Promotion was born.

During the month of May, library/librarian type bloggers are being welcomed to join in by posting about anything relating to self-promotion, be it a project they’ve worked on they love or be it talking about the topic of self-promotion itself. We’ve already reached out to a number of folks we’d love to participate, but because we want a post each day through the month, we’re opening it up even further to those who want to join in. 

Here’s the official pitch and details. We hope you consider participating or pass along the invite to those who might be interested:

This is your opportunity to share with the broader library community what you’ve got going on that you’re especially proud of. What we’re looking for: briefly, your best foot forward! This can mean actual things you are doing in your library and community. It can also mean discussing the greater ideas of promotion and self-promotion and what they mean. How can we effectively promote ourselves and librarianship itself — both within the field and with those outside the field?

This idea grows out of the broader conversation in librarianship about gender, different areas of librarianship and how they are recognized and honored in our field as a whole. We want to recognize and celebrate ALL areas of librarianship as they are practiced now: urban, suburban, rural, big libraries & small, in children’s, YA, adult and technical services, in academia or museums, in schools and public libraries, on budgets ranging from shoestring to Kardashian (hey, we can dream!).

What are you doing that is interesting, unique, innovative, practical and helpful in your community? What do you wish more people knew about you & your library? What do you hope to bring to the profession in the next five years? Ten? Twenty?

We’re reaching out to a variety of library bloggers, both to share their thoughts on the topic and to cross-promote Show Me The Awesome beyond any one area of librarianship. We’re hoping that the academic library blog readers will find useful insights from and make great connections with the children’s librarian blogs, and vice-versa. Likewise, we’d like to open this up to anyone you may think could be interested, as well. If you have a suggestion for a librarian we should approach, please let us know and we will get in touch with them.

So. Are you interested? Sure you are! What’s involved, you ask?

  • It’s pretty simple: agree to write a post that you will publish in May. Sophie will be the grand organizer of what goes up when; so if you prefer a certain day or date, leave it in the form.


  • Use the handy, chic banner image, which we will provide.


  • Include a link to the introductory explanation of what Show Me The Awesome will be about; we’ll provide the links. Both Liz and Kelly will be writing up intro posts, so you can link to one, or to both, if you’re a completist that way.


  • If you decide to tweet about this, we will be using the hashtag #30awesome

In addition to hosting the introductory posts, Liz and Kelly will publish daily posts linking to your individual posts, as well as a wrap-up post once the series concludes.

Thank you for your time and consideration. Let’s….be awesome! Together.
And if you missed the link to the form, go here. It is easy and painless. We want to know what you’re doing and what you’re thinking.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Links of Note: April 20, 2013

April 20, 2013 |

Becky Canovan, librarian at University of Dubuque, put out magnetic poetry as a passive program for her college students in the library. This awesome zombie poem is one of the resulting creations. 

This is a very short roundup this week — I think partially because it’s been quieter in the book world and partially because I’ve been working on a number of things that have limited some of my own time in blog/news reading. If you’ve seen something worthwhile in the last two weeks, I’d love to see it.

  • Over at the Quirk Books blog, there’s a nice piece about the way that YA fiction depicts tragedy. It hits on a lot of things I think about and believe in that YA fiction is a safe space for exploring these  topics and they are almost always authentic to the range of experiences teens have. 
  • I think it’s important not to stop talking about Steubenville or sexual assault, rape or awareness thereof. There’s a nice piece on Bookriot about how YA books — can help. Which leads me to wanting to post this picture, sent to me by librarian Danielle Fortin about a display she made in her library on the topic. I LOVE this: 
  • What would happen if Jay-Z decided to break into the book world? An amusing piece on what he would bring as a literary agent or by starting his own publishing house. 
  • Have you ever thought about what centuries might be the most popular ones appearing in historical fiction? There’s a really interesting breakdown and commentary over at the Historical Novel Society.
  • Brian Herzog does a post every week he calls the reference question of the week. The question from last week is one of my favorites I think because I would have never figured it out. Can you? Obviously, now I want to try this on everyone I know.
  • If you’re a fan of Game of Thrones, make sure you check out and bookmark the resources for read alikes that Becky’s compiled on RA for All. There are indeed read alike lists by episode for those so inclined. 
  • Sarah at Clear Eyes, Full Shelves wrote a really great piece about libraries and book discovery.
  • Malinda Lo has done another excellent, well-researched post on representation of LGBTQ teens, and this time, she’s looking at covers and their relationship depictions in light of David Levithan’s Two Boys Kissing. This is GREAT stuff.
  • Jen Hubert channeled a lot of thoughts I had about knowledge and experience earlier this week into a post she wrote for Library Lost & Found titled “Give it All Away.” I agree completely. 
  • It’s been a really rough week, and even though I don’t want to necessarily end on that note, I think it’s necessary because I have read a few outstanding pieces that I want to share. First and most important — this particular post resonated with me deeply because I’ve come to discover my approach to tragedy is this: it’s okay to look away. I think because we can access so much information so quickly, we feel like we MUST see it all or that we MUST share it all. But for me? I personally need to just walk away. I can’t process when bombarded with information. I prefer to go inward rather than outward. That said, two first-hand accounts of the Marathon bombing are worth reading because they convey a lot of what needs to be said and they say it well: Carrie Jones’s Boston Marathon and Tiffany Schmidt’s Boston Love. 

Filed Under: Links, Uncategorized

Truth or Dare by Jacqueline Green

April 19, 2013 |

Caitlin, Tenley, and Sydney are three girls living in the ritzy town of Echo Bay. In past years, teenage girls have drowned in the bay during a popular summer festival, which has just made a comeback after additional safety measures were put in place. A few days before the festival, popular girl Tenley, who has just moved back to town, throws a party and initiates a game of truth or dare. It used to be Tenley’s trademark, back in middle school before she moved away, and she’s eager to re-assert herself as the queen of the town.

Her best friend Caitlin, who serves as the second of three main characters, plays too. Our third main character, loner Sydney, wasn’t at this party, but she gets pulled in to the events that happen afterward.

After the party ends, all three girls start receiving messages: instructions to do increasingly nastier things or risk having the mysterious “darer” reveal all their deepest secrets. At first the girls are skeptical, thinking it’s a friend pulling a joke, but when some of the dares go ignored and people get hurt, they realize this person is not joking around. Tenley and Caitlin, as friends, work together to try and figure out what’s going on, as well as protect each other. For a while, they think it’s Sydney, but we as readers are privy to each of their perspectives, so we know Tenley and Caitlin are on the wrong track.

Truth or Dare is full of secrets, some related to the dares and some not. It’s a thick book, but it’s quick, too, since each page reveals some new twist and presents us with some new suspect. It kept me guessing, and even if I wouldn’t want to befriend any of these girls, I was interested in their plight.

I kind of loved this book. It’s not my usual fare, though I do enjoy mysteries, and this is undoubtedly one. I just normally don’t like reading about the archetypal “popular girls” and their dirty little secrets, and really, that’s what Truth or Dare is about. And yet…I really dug it. I think it’s because the author doesn’t make judgments about her three main characters. She presents them as they are, without leading us to say to ourselves “Wow, she is a horrible person” (particularly with Tenley, who is trying to assert herself as the main popular girl at the school). The story is told in third person past tense, with the perspective shifting from girl to girl, and we get a good feel of what it’s like to be in their heads. None of the girls are a cut and dry case of a “bad girl” or “good girl” and even the social outcast, Sydney, is not presented as the natural protagonist, which I assumed would happen.

I’ve read that this would appeal to readers of Pretty Little Liars, which seems apt, but as I have never read those books, I can’t make that call. It may have some appeal factors in common with Cinders and Sapphires, despite the latter’s historical setting – they’re both quite soapy, with shocking secrets (some easy to spot, some not) revealed every few pages.

I didn’t guess the culprit, though in hindsight, I could pick out the clues Green dropped. I loved that it wasn’t obvious but also that it didn’t come out of nowhere. I was a little disappointed in the very end, since I think it invalidates a lot of what happened before. It was clearly a way to set up a sequel, but it felt forced and inauthentic. Still, this was a completely fun book, and I’m glad I read it.

Review copy received from the publisher. Truth or Dare will be published May 14.

Filed Under: Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

You Can, You Will & You Do: On 4 Years

April 18, 2013 |

Kimberly and I started STACKED four years ago this week.

Four years ago come June, I accepted my first job as a degreed librarian.

The journeys through each have been interesting in that at the beginning of both, I felt like I had no idea what I was doing. And the truth is, I didn’t really know what I was doing because I didn’t have quite the experience in doing either — blogging or librarianing — to know what it was I should be doing. I just kind of did it, hoping some day to do the things that the people who were really good at blogging and being librarians did. I wanted to know as much about young adult literature as possible. I wanted to be able to recognize what book someone was asking or talking about without having to search on Google or on NoveList or any other tool out there meant to make my job easier.

It seemed impossible. That first week of full-time work as a YA librarian I remember a teen coming up to the reference desk and asking me the title of the book narrated by death and about the Holocaust and having to look it up. Of course, since I was still learning the ins and outs of working the desk, my boss (who was kind and nice and non-judgmental) was there with me and I felt so embarrassed to have to look up one of the most obvious, most well-known YA books out there. Knowing the YA department was my job and here I couldn’t call up The Book Thief.

I made comparisons among books in my early reviews that, when I look back on now, make little or no sense whatsoever. I was drawing on the small pool of knowledge I had as a reader and librarian. Sure, I took a YA lit class in grad school and sure, I read a lot outside of work. But I didn’t quite have the well of knowledge to pull from to think about what makes a book like another book. I hadn’t spent enough time thinking about or learning about what was out there and I hadn’t put in the face time to get to know readers and what satisfies their individual needs and interests when it comes to books.

Four years later, I’m deep in the throes of writing an entire book about YA fiction.

A book that will be published, that will exist on book shelves, and that pulls from the knowledge and experience I’ve acquired from reading, from writing about reading, and from working with teens (and adults) who read and like to talk about YA books.

Four years later, I feel confident in my reader’s advisory skills when it comes to working with teens (and in many respects, adults, too, even though my knowledge pool isn’t quite as deep there in terms of titles and authors, though I have a much stronger understanding of how appeal factors work and can thus better use the tools at my disposal).

In taking a step back and thinking about the amount of knowledge and change that happens in four years — the span of a high school career, if you want to look at it that way — it’s amazing. It’s only been four years since I moved from student to career orientation in nature. But even if the labels and directions have changed, I still feel every day I’m a student, as I continue to learn more, to read more, to think more about those things I’m reading and learning, and I’m applying them as I need to across contexts in my life. Sometimes those thought pieces come up in blogging and sometimes, they come up in the course of answering a question at the reference desk. Sometimes they pop up when helping a colleague or when I’m considering what it is I want to do next.

But I have never forgotten what it feels like to think I will never, ever know as much as anyone else nor that I will ever have the wealth of knowledge that they do. Because every day, I still have that little fear in the back of my head that maybe I don’t know anything and I’m just faking it till I make it. I know it’s not true, but I bring it up as a means of saying this: we all feel it, even when we’ve been doing this for four years, for ten years, for twenty-five years.

I’ve been thinking about all of those new YA readers, those new bloggers, those new YA librarians who step up and take the chance on something new. It is not easy to take on a new challenge, and when you invest time to educate yourself via those who have more experience and share it, it certainly can be intimidating. It can and it does feel like you will never, ever get to the point of knowledge and expertise and comfort with your own skills.

All things — all knowledge, all skills — start from zero. But they don’t have to stay there. Little by little, you build up your knowledge by putting yourself out there. By extending your reach, by stepping a little out of your comfort zone. You build yourself up little by little. But those little steps, those small reaches, they add up. And the way your knowledge and skills build isn’t always linear nor is it ever going to be in the same exact way that those you respect or admire have built up their own knowledge and skill sets (this is one of those lessons it took me forever to not only figure out but to accept not only as the way things are but to accept as a positive thing). The more you work at something and the more time you put into it, the more you learn. The more you grow. The more you figure out a process and more importantly, the more you figure out what it is you’re good at and what it is that makes you passionate.

There is no shame in mistake making. It happens. It’s easy to ask for apologies if you’re sincere about what it is you’re seeking apology for and if you’re willing to own up to any blame. You can change your mind about things, too. You dive headlong into thinking that you’re in love with, say, dystopian fiction and then find that really, you’re not? It’s okay to stop reading it. Even if you’re a blogger. Even if you’re a teacher or a librarian and feel like you need to know about those books. You should know about these things, but if it doesn’t light your flame, don’t waste your energy devoting your time and energy to knowing it all. Figure out the big players, then know just a little bit more — be it other books, other resources, or other people to whom you can turn to get more information when you need it.

I still have reader’s advisory challenges. I still have blogging challenges. But I don’t have to know it all because I know where I can seek out the information and the insight when I need it.

Make connections and foster them. Make connections between and among books. Make connections between and among other bloggers, other librarians, teachers, authors, other readers who aren’t in the book world. This is your network and your knowledge, developed and created and maintained by only you.

But don’t be a taker. Give back. Share your knowledge. Share your experience.

Share.

Make those connections worthwhile and nurture them because when things get tough, when you start to get down on yourself and what it is you’re doing, those are the best resources for realigning you and reminding you that you do know what you’re doing. That, even when it feels like you know nothing, you’re already a step or two or sixteen or seven billion ahead of where you were on day one, when you didn’t know the book narrated by death was Marcus Zusak’s.

Have confidence in your knowledge and your skills and your ability to grow. It’s time and effort and it’s work. That investment pays off because it’s not just an investment in a career or in a field of interest, it’s an investment in yourself.

No way did I ever expect to figure out the things I did over the last four years. No way did I ever expect that I’d feel confident, either. But when you can look back over four years or more of work and see the change and growth, it’s sort of an exhilarating and awesome and amazing thing. When you write those final words into the first draft of a book you have written about a topic you knew nothing about just a few years ago or when you’re able to put together a lengthy blog series or when you’re asking to speak at an event or when you’re thrown a reader’s advisory question, you realize not only the depth your knowledge, but how important it is to tell other people that the potential exists within them too. That you remind them and yourself, too, that there is so much more to still learn. It’s not out of reach. It’s there. You just have to work for it.

You can, you will, and you do.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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