Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Vote for Your Five Favorite Books of 2012

Teenreads.com is putting out the call to all you voracious readers out there to vote for your 5 fave books of 2012. The five titles with the most votes will serve as finalists for the Teen Choice Book of the Year for 2013. So let your voice be heard! Let your opinion be known! Shout about your favorite book from the rooftops!

Vote here. There are some decidedly stellar books on the list of nominees, including The Diviners by Libba Bray, which I want to give a special shout out to because I just finished it a few days ago and I loved, loved, loved it. Smart sassy girl in the 1920s moves to New York City to escape some "unpleasantness" back at home in Ohio and ends up involved in a very creepy murder investigation along with her uncle who is curator of The Museum of American Folklore, Superstition, and the Occult (or as the locals call it "The Museum of Creepy Crawlies"). Evie is the ultimate flapper girl, and I couldn't help but be charmed by her wit, her awesome 20s slang (and how!) and her uncanny ability to step in it more often than not. Sure, there's the requisite romance angle native to all teen lit in existence, but it was pretty secondary to the main plot, which is something I very much appreciated.

Anyone else? Favorite books from this year? I've heard nothing but amazing things about The Fault in Our Stars by John Green from both teens and adults, but I have yet to read it. It's there on my long, long list of Books2Read, though.

Cheers!

Sunday, December 2, 2012

How do you stack up to your peers, reading-wise?


The fine folks over at the Pew Research Center's Internet and American Life Project recently published the results of a survey they performed to study the reading habits of younger Americans. They define "young" as under 30, which makes me wonder if they have any ties to the Hippies back in the 60's. But that's probably not important right now.

What is important, as well as interesting, is what they found out about the reading habits of the elusive wild teenager. Fully 86% of Americans 16 or 17 years of age have read at least part of a book in the past year. That's a higher percentage than any other age group except for 18-24 year olds, who clock in at 88%. So y'all are doing just fine when it comes to reading, but there's still room for improvement. If you know any of the 14% that don't read at all, though, feel free to kidnap them, tie them up and drop them off at your friendly neighborhood library. We'll take it from there.

That 86% is for any type of book, in any format. When you break it down by format you learn that only 12% of 16-17 year olds have read an e-book in the last year, despite the fact that e-books are supposedly the wave of the future.. That puts them way behind the 21% of 18-24 year olds who've read an e-book in the last twelve months. In fact, the only age group that has a lower rate of e-book reading is people 65 and older. Only 8% of them have read an e-book in the past year. All of those percentages are only going to go up as time goes by. I'm very curious to see when e-book readership surpasses print readership. It'll be awhile, but it's most likely coming.

If you're interested in reading more about the study - and who wouldn't be? - you can find a good summary here:

http://libraries.pewinternet.org/2012/10/23/younger-americans-reading-and-library-habits/

The whole report is here:

http://libraries.pewinternet.org/files/legacy-pdf/PIP_YoungerLibraryPatrons.pdf

Thursday, October 25, 2012

International Games Day at the OC Library Saturday 11/3

On Saturday November 3rd the Oregon City Public Library will join more than a thousand other libraries in celebrating International Games Day. Board gamers of all ages are invited to come to the library between 6:30 and 8 PM to play Pictionary, Scrabble, Boggle, Operation, Candy Land and many other games that will be provided. Do you think you have what it takes to destroy your fellow citizens in chess or checkers? Are you a past master of Connect Four looking to relive past glory? Did you stop playing Candy Land because of the Gumdrop Scandal of '06 but have always wanted to get back into the game? This is your chance! Come one, come all!

Wii Super Smash Brothers Thursday 11/1


It is time once again for the teens of Oregon City to congregate in the library basement and inflict simulated bodily harm upon each others' virtual counterparts. I speak, of course, of the awesomeness that is Super Smash Brothers Brawl! We'll be playing from 6:30 to 8 PM on Thursday November 1st. Everyone aged 12 to 18 is invited! Pizza will be served.

Sunday, October 7, 2012

Teen Read Week is almost upon us

This year's Teen Read Week will be celebrated during the week of October 14th through the 20th. The theme is "It Came from the Library!" in celebration of all things spooky, scary and supernatural. Eeeeekkkk!!

Teen Read Week is a way to spotlight young adult literature and encourage teens to read for the fun of it. Why do you read for pleasure? Is it for escape? To seek answers to your most burning questions? To walk in someone else's shoes for awhile? To experience the unknown? Or, like me, for all of the above?

In celebration of this most momentous occasion, we will be hosting a book swap for teens (in grades 6 through 12) at the Oregon City Public Library. The book swap will take place on Sunday, October 14th from 5:30 to 6:30pm  in the upstairs main room of the library. We encourage you to bring in your gently used books, cds, dvds, and videogames to trade with others. For each item you bring in you will receive a coupon you can exchange for someone else's item you want to take home.What better way to participate in Teen Read Week than to set your well-loved books free to be discovered and loved by someone new? Recycling literature is good for the physical AND mental environment!

We hope to see you all there. Have a great Teen Read Week, everybody!

P.S:  the Teen Reads website is looking for young-adult-literature lovers to take a survey in order to get readers' feedback about what kinds of features you want to see on their site. If you take the survey you will be entered into a contest to win a free book (450 people will win: those are pretty good odds, I'd say). Read more about it and take the survey here.

Sunday, September 23, 2012

Celebrate Banned Books Week!

Rabble-rousing readers unite!
It's that time of year again--school is back in session, the leaves are beginning to change, the air takes on a slight chill, and we here in Libraryland are gearing up to celebrate Banned Books Week, which runs from September 30th to October 6th. Banned Books Week, as you may or may not know, is an annual celebration of our freedom to read what we want without the threat of censorship. A worthy cause, no? Because we should all have the right to decide for ourselves what ideas we want to seek, explore, and express. You can learn more about Banned Books Week from this handy guide created just for tweens and teens here. And check out this cool timeline that explores how Banned Books Week has been "liberating literature" for 30 years.

The most interesting part of this celebration (in my opinion, anyway) is reviewing the past year's challenged or banned books and discovering the reasons why they were challenged in the first place. (Then, they go straight on my to-be-read list because I get a kick out of being a rebellious reader.) Below is the list of the top ten most challenged titles of 2011. Notice a theme here? Many of those that made the top ten are young adult/teen books. Why do you think that is the case? Have you read any of the books on this list? As a teen, what do you think about the issues of censorship and book challenges? What are some of the consequences of removing materials from libraries or schools? Please feel free to discuss any of these issues in the comments section. Discussion is a great way to process through the often complex emotions that tend to murkify (can I use "murky" as a verb?) this issue. We would love to hear what you think. And please join us at the Oregon City Library on Thursday, September 27th at 7:00 to hear Candace Morgan (a front-line crusader librarian for the freedom to read) discuss these issues and a whole lot more.

On to the list.... (source: http://bannedbooksweek.org/about)
  1. ttyl; ttfn; l8r, g8r (series), by Lauren Myracle
    Reasons: offensive language; religious viewpoint; sexually explicit; unsuited to age group
  2. The Color of Earth (series), by Kim Dong Hwa
    Reasons: nudity; sex education; sexually explicit; unsuited to age group
  3. The Hunger Games trilogy, by Suzanne Collins
    Reasons: anti-ethnic; anti-family; insensitivity; offensive language; occult/satanic; violence
  4. My Mom's Having A Baby! A Kid's Month-by-Month Guide to Pregnancy, by Dori Hillestad Butler
    Reasons: nudity; sex education; sexually explicit; unsuited to age group
  5. The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, by Sherman Alexie
    Reasons: offensive language; racism; religious viewpoint; sexually explicit; unsuited to age group
  6. Alice (series), by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor
    Reasons: nudity; offensive language; religious viewpoint
  7. Brave New World, by Aldous Huxley
    Reasons: insensitivity; nudity; racism; religious viewpoint; sexually explicit
  8. What My Mother Doesn't Know, by Sonya Sones
    Reasons: nudity; offensive language; sexually explicit
  9. Gossip Girl (series), by Cecily Von Ziegesar
    Reasons: drugs; offensive language; sexually explicit
  10. To Kill a Mockingbird, by Harper Lee
    Reasons: offensive language; racism
My favorite from this list? The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie. It's one of the greatest books of all time (in my ever-so-humble opinion). We have 3 copies sitting on our YA shelf right now in case you're in the mood for a rebellious read...

Keep a lookout for our Banned Books Week display (planned and designed by our very own Peter) where you can browse and check out an array of banned and challenged books.





Thursday, September 6, 2012

Book Rec! Thirteenth Child by Patricia Wrede.

Alternate history has always been one of my favorite science fiction genres. "What if?" is one of life's eternal questions. What if I'd done something different? What if things had turned out differently? Everyone's asked that at some point in their life. When writers play "What if?" they tend to go big. "What if the Nazis won World War II?" is probably the all time champion subject for writers, but there are hundreds or thousands of alternate history stories out there that explore changes both large and small. I've read one story that asked the burning question, "What if Dwight D. Eisenhower had pursued a career as a swing clarinetist instead of joining the military?" It made more sense than you'd think. My point is, alternate history is an interesting genre that allows infinite possibilities for storytelling.

Despite that, there aren't very many young adult authors who write alternate histories. So I was happy to come across Thirteenth Child by Patricia Wrede. The "What if?"is a big one, what if magic was real? That's actually a very common theme these days among writers for children, teens and adults. I've lost track of all the series where the world is just like ours except it's got vampires. Or witches. Or wizards. Or sorcerers. Or werewolves. Or angels. Or demons. Or dragons. Or anthropomorphic toasters. Or superheroes, of course, can't forget the superheroes. The point is, the basic premise of "Our world, but with magic" is not exactly unexplored in modern fiction.

Most of those settings annoy me, though, because they do it wrong. The authors aren't interested in exploring the effects the existence of magic would have on society. They just want Hot Vampires Kick Butt (tm), or more likely Hot Vampires Angst Over Love (tm), so that's what they write. They set their stories in a world exactly like our own because they can't be bothered to think about what the world would look like if vampires or demons or whatever had been around since the dawn of civilization. That's not proper alternate history, and it vexes me. It vexes me so.

Thirteenth Child is a proper alternate history. The basic premise, as I said, is "Our world, but with magic." From the very beginning, though, you see and hear about the changes that magic hath wrought on human history. The story starts in 1850 or so, but it's not our 1850. It's set in America, but not our America. The country is actually called Columbia, which makes sense, but the continent its settlers came from is Avrupa, not Europe. The Civil War has already been fought and won by the Union, and the Aphrikan slaves set free. A lot of second-rate alternate histories limit themselves to this sort of playing with names and dates and details, but when handled well they can form a solid basis for a truly worthwhile yarn, and that's what they do here.

Our heroine is Eff Rothmer. We first meet her when she's five years old, and hated by her aunts, uncles and cousins because she is her parents unlucky thirteenth child. Her twin brother Lan is only a few minutes younger than her, but he's the darling of his family's eye because he's the seventh son of a seventh son and guaranteed to be supremely lucky, magically powerful and destined for greatness. You'd think this would be a recipe for a horrible case of sibling rivalry, but Lan and Eff are devoted to each other and always have each other's backs. Their relationship, even when apart, is a major theme of this book and the two sequels.

Eff is constantly blamed for everything that goes wrong. Not by her immediate family, who love and protect her, but by her extended family who live nearby. It gets to be so bad that Eff's parents move their brood out west, to the frontier, and this is where the meat of the story begins and most of the big historical changes become apparent. For one thing, the frontier is defined by what we call the Mississippi River. There are a number of settlements to the west of the river, but they're under constant threat from the natural and magical beasts that dominate the western half of the continent. From mammoths to saber cats, from swarm weasels to steam dragons, life west of the river is a dangerous affair. That explains why there's apparently no human presence beyond those few settlements. Native Americans never achieved a foothold in the New World, and the Lewis and Clark expedition disappeared without a trace. In our world the Oregon Trail was well-established by 1850, but in this world very few humans have even seen the Rockies, and none have reached them and returned to tell the tale.

That doesn't become important to Eff and Lan until much later, though. Much of this first book is taken up by their childhood and teen years, and it reads like a particularly interesting historical fiction coming of age story. The unfamiliar historical details and magic form a natural part of the story rather than overshadowing it as they do in too many books of this sort. Which is not to say there isn't plenty of magic, because there is. From their early magical accidents up through their formal mystical training in high school, the understanding and use of magic play a huge part in both Eff's and Lan's lives. It's only when they receive extra-curricular training in Aphrikan magic that Eff really starts to come into her own and begins to understand her true power. The subtleties of Aphrikan magic fit Eff better than the ordered and logical Avrupan styles most white settlers use, and her use and integration of both traditions is a major theme of the trilogy.

I've probably bored the socks off anyone who's made it this far, but let me assure you that the book is much more than a dry study of magical theory and execution. It's also a darn good adventure story. After graduating Eff and Lan join an expedition to help settlements on the dangerous western side of the river, and only their unique powers and abilities allow them to face a thoroughly novel and fascinating threat to the settlers' way of life.

To make a long post short (too late!) this book has it all. Magical alternate history, check. Actually puts some thought into said history, check. Interesting characters, check. Absolutely fascinating magical powers and styles, check. Cool monsters, check. And the absolute best part is that there are two sequels which are each at least as good as the first! What are you waiting for? Go! Read! The first book is Thirteenth Child, the second is Across the Great Barrier, and the third is The Far West.

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Super Smash Brothers at the Library Thursday 9/6!


Come one, come all, to the library Thursday September 6th to smack the tar out of each other in a Wii-stravaganza of video game fighting prowess. We'll be playing from 6:30 to 8, and all 6th through 12th graders are welcome to come and compete for bragging rights and eternal glory. Or you could just chow down on the free pizza we're providing. It's up to you.

Sunday, August 26, 2012

Vote for the Teens' Top Ten!

The Young Adult Library Services Association (or YALSA for those of us too lazy to bother with five-word association names...) has opened the polls for their annual Teens' Top Ten. The top ten books of the year nominated and chosen solely by teen readers will be announced during Teen Read Week (October 14th - 20th). Voting is for teens only. (Adults:  you can focus all of your intense passion for young adult literature by nominating titles for the Readers' Choice Awards: http://www.ala.org/yalsa/readerschoice)

Teens can go here to vote for their favorites. The polls will remain open until September 15th, so hurry and pick your faves today!

Incidentally, in honor of Teen Read Week, the Oregon City Library will be hosting an old-fashioned book swap on Sunday, October 14th at 5:30. We invite our teen patrons to bring in all their unwanted books/cds/dvds/videogames to trade with other teens. Remember: one person's thrice-read copy of MAR: Marchen Awakens Romance Vol. 4 is another person's undiscovered treasure. More details on the book swap to come.

Monday, August 13, 2012

If you like The Hunger Games...(and who doesn't?)

Check out this awesome 5-page flowchart that shows a plethora of suggestions for what to read next if you enjoyed The Hunger Games. Thanks to the Lawrence, Kansas Public Library for putting that together and displaying it on their website. Pure librarian brilliance!

Sunday, July 22, 2012

You are what you read...

I'm Harry Potter, I'm Harry Potter...
According to an MSN blog post I read recently (and we all know that everything we read on the internet must be true, right?), you are what you read. But, what exactly does that mean? According to a study published by the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, when you read about characters in your favorite novels that you identify with, it might actually affect the way you think and behave. How cool is that? The study's researchers contend that "when people read a fictional story they vicariously experience their favorite character’s emotions, thoughts and beliefs in a process that’s been dubbed 'experience-taking'."

That means that when I'm reading Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, and I get to the part towards the end when Harry must face off with Voldemort in a stunning spectacle of bravery, that, I, too, am brave. It makes sense doesn't it? I mean, once you've gone on this journey with someone, felt what they've felt, ridden their emotional ups and downs, connected with them on a personal level, you're changed somehow. I think I'm beginning to really like this concept. As long as I never feel connected to Voldemort (which I guess would mean that I was a low-life, self-hating, dark-arts-loving meany-pants) then all will be well. I'll keep you posted...


Monday, June 25, 2012

Wii Super Mario Smash Bros. Brawl @ the library

All teens (grades 6 through 12) come join us for a Wiickedly  awesome night of Super Smash Bros. Brawl. Where, you ask? At the Oregon City Library in the children's area. When? Thursday, July 5th from 6:30 to 8:00. What else? There will be PIZZA! Video games and pizza, oh my! We hope to see you all there.

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Book Rec! Terrier by Tamora Pierce

Beka's a 16 year old girl with the ability to speak to the restless dead and an insatiable need for justice. Pounce is an extremely powerful supernatural being, the earthly avatar of a celestial constellation, who for its own reasons walks the world in the form of a cat.  Together, they fight crime!

Beka and her younger siblings were orphaned several years ago. Beka feared they would be cast into the streets, but instead they were taken in by a nobleman who was also the Lord Provost, in charge of the Dogs who make up the city watch. Beka's brother and sisters are being trained in useful trades that will allow them to support themselves, but for years Beka's had her eyes set on being a Dog and patrolling the streets of the slums they used to live in. She knows that her ability to speak to the souls of the recently dead and to other spirits of the city will help her in that work, but she still has no idea what she's in for.

Together with Pounce, the magical black cat that has adopted her for reasons of its own, she joins the Watch and is teamed up with two legendary Dogs. It will take all of their power, skill and luck to survive the mean streets of the city and bring to justice the evil forces that are preying on the poorest and most helpless citizens, the people no one cares about. No one but Beka and her comrades.

There are three books in the series, all of them great reads. Start with Terrier, and I guarantee you'll want to continue on to Bloodhound and then Mastiff.


Sunday, May 13, 2012

Book Review! Percy Jackson and the Olympians by Rick Riordan

Book review by Sara, one of our teen patrons:

Percy Jackson and the Olympians by Rick Riordan

A good book series that I would recommend is Percy Jackson and the Olympians. It has a lot to do with Greek mythology coming to life in an adventure you will be drawn into. While reading this book I couldn't put it down for anything. I felt as if I was there in the book. In the first book Percy finds out many things and fights time and gods to prove his innocence! While underneath everything there is an evil lurking, growing, and waiting for its revenge...

Monday, April 30, 2012

Win a Grab Bag of awesome YA books!


The Teenreads website gives away 5 Grab Bags full of newly published young adult books every month! How awesome is that? All you have to do to enter is fill out this online form by May 23rd. Easy as pie...

And while you're at it, check out Teenreads stellar book reviews, author interviews, and features. Those days of wondering what to read next are over, my friend.

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

LearningExpress is a lifesaver!

Ever heard of LearningExpress? No? Let me introduce you... LearningExpress is an amazing resource you can access with your Clackamas County Library card. All you have to do is go to the library's homepage, click on Online Resources, and scroll down until you see this image:


Click on the link, log in with your library card number and PIN (usually the last four digits of your phone number), and, voila! You have successfully accessed a magical portal to all the school help you'll ever need.

Why should I waste my valuable time on LearningExpress?

The LearningExpress database is an online learning platform that can help you with college test prep (PSAT, SAT, ACT, etc.) and so much more. Have you ever tried to purchase an SAT prep book? Those things cost a fortune! Plus, the library holds list on them is usually pretty huge. And you need help like last week! Have no fear...LearningExpress is here.

Yeah? And what else?

There are reading courses, math courses, science courses, logic courses, vocabulary courses, writing courses, grammar courses (the list is huge!) for middle and high school level students. Once you've created an online profile, LearningExpress will track your progress in each course. It's like a free magical genie tutor that's available anytime, anywhere. Brilliant!

I'm almost sold, but not quite...

In addition to all these awesome interactive courses, LearningExpress contains hundreds of eBooks on various topics to help you with your school work. You can peruse these books online at your leisure.

LearningExpress also has a ton of other seriously useful courses: like software tutorials (Windows, Microsoft, and Adobe programs), job searching skills, GED prep, courses for Spanish speakers, career focused help, and U.S. citizenship preparation to name just a few.

Awesome! Sign me up!

Wanna be the smartest kid in your Trig/Algebra/Biology/English/Chemistry/<Insert-Your-Class-Here> class? You don't have to be at the library to access this resource. You can do it from the comfort of your own cozy room (as long as you have internet access and a library card).


Questions? We're happy to help you get started. Just pop on into the library, email us at oregoncitylibrary@gmail.com, or give us a ring at 503-657-8269.




Monday, April 9, 2012

Young Adult Literature author showcase at the library!

April 12th, 7:00pm to 8:00pm
Oregon City Public Library
606 John Adams St.

Local Young Adult authors kick off Oregon City Public Library’s first Local Author Showcase on  
Thursday, April 12 at 7:00 PM!

Join published authors Lisa Nowak, Stacey Wallace Benefiel, Cidney Swanson and Laura Elliot at the Library. They will share their thoughts on the authentic YA voice, using life experience as research, finding the courage to write and other topics Young-Adult-Fiction readers are dying to know about.

Please note: This free event will take place after library hours. Doors open at 6:45. Regular library services will not be available during the program.

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Book Rec! Dark Life by Kat Falls

Ty's the first human born and raised on the ocean floor, where immense pressures have twisted his DNA and given him strange powers beyond human understanding. Gemma's a runaway from the oppressive, overcrowded surface world, and she'll die before she lets them drag her back without her lost brother. Together, they fight crime!

No, seriously, they fight undersea crime! Not entirely willingly or intentionally, but it still counts. Between the underwater pirates with their giant shark-shaped submarine and the meddling government agents who are trying to bankrupt the undersea colonies to feed the starving Topsiders, Ty and Gemma have their hands full finding time to search for Gemma's missing brother. Throw in Ty's need to keep his Dark Gift secret, and his overprotective parents and annoying younger sister, and they might never find him at all. But maybe it'd be better if they don't, because Gemma's brother has secrets of his own. Secrets that could kill Ty, Gemma and everyone they care about.

Dark Life is a rip-roaring adventure tale of the sort we don't see enough of anymore. It's essentially a western set under the waves, with outnumbered and outgunned heroes struggling against deadly enemies and an uncaring environment. Throw in the excellent characterization of both Ty and Gemma, and the extremely interesting depiction of life under the sea, and this book is the perfect choice for anyone looking for a great read. Plus, there's a sequel, Rip Tide, which is just as good if not better! Who could ask for more than that?

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Post Hunger Games Euphoria

Girl on fire!
Since I'm still coming down from the adrenaline rush of seeing the Hunger Games movie last night and therefore clinging to all things Hunger Game-y in nature, I wanted to share YALSA's The Hub blog's salute to said book/movie.

There's some excellent "if you like the Hunger Games, then you might also like...." suggestions in the blog post, in addition to an awesome analysis of the trends in YA lit sparked by the book. Yay for dystopian teen romance!

I'd love to hear what people thought of the movie, so let the comments commence!

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Book Review! Dead Is So Last Year by Marlene Perez


Another book review written by one of our teen library patrons! Oh happy day...


Dead Is So Last Year by Marlene Perez

This book was very enjoyable. The beginning was a little slow, but around the second chapter it started getting good. It's a typical girl likes a guy and drama, but towards the middle of the book it starts getting twisted...

If you like this book, you might also like Dead Is a State of Mind or Dead Is the New Black by Marlene Perez

I rate this book 4 out of 4 stars.

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Katsa vs Katniss

I've got my eye on you, Katniss...
I just finished reading Graceling by Kristin Shore, and I loved every minute of it. Katsa (the main character, a "Graceling" born with superior fighting/survival skills) is one of those strong, brooding female types who can beat anyone in a fight but who's resistant to feeling emotions towards other people. Because, as we all know, "feelings" only lead to vulnerability, and vulnerability leads, apparently, to very bad things. <<Insert sarcastic eye roll here.>> This premise got me thinking about another female character we're all intimately familiar with who exhibits some of these same tendencies--Katniss Everdeen. As in, Hunger Games-heroine, torn-between-two-guys, survivalist-extraordinaire, Katniss Everdeen.

This, in turn, got me wondering--Katniss vs Katsa? Who would be victorious in this most epic of fantasy battles? Of course, this being the age of information ("information" being a term associated with both useful facts and utterly useless but highly entertaining gobbledygook)  I knew that I'd be able to find and connect with others who have wondered about this very topic. And 'lo and behold...

A GoodReads discussion board has pondered this very idea: http://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/556264-katniss-everdeen-vs-katsa

A blog post much more exciting than this one has broken down every nuance of the fantasy battle between Katsa and Katniss: http://dailyfig.figment.com/2011/10/02/katsa-versus-katniss/

And finally, courtesy of YA Fantasy Showdown, a short story about what it might actually look like if Katniss and Katsa ever threw down for real: http://yafantasyshowdown.weebly.com/fan-fight-13.html
(The writing in this is not the greatest, I have to be honest. But, it's Fan Fic so one must read with a grain of salt, right?)

Now, being a pacifist at heart, I personally think it would be way cooler if Katniss and Katsa were to join forces and work for justice and equality around the land. What would that look like, I wonder? Thoughts, anyone?

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Guys Read!

Sometimes it's hard to find something good to read. Let's face it--sometimes (but not always) the books you have to read for school are too boring/too long/too "classic"/not action-y enough/unappealing for whatever reason. Well, the guys behind the awesome website Guys Read understand that all too well. That's why they put together lists of books for any possible mood you might find yourself in. Into adventure? No problem! Strange obsession with robots? We got that! Ghosts? Wrestlers? Shape shifters? You betcha!

There is no rule anywhere that says that reading has to be dull.

Check out this book trailer for the anthology Guys Read: Funny Business.

Monday, February 13, 2012

Book Review! The Thief of Always by Clive Barker


Our first book review written by an actual teen library user! Read on....

The Thief of Always by Clive Barker

The beginning started out really slow. There wasn't a lot of detail. Once you got to chapter 4, it started giving a lot more detail as well as action. Anyone that likes going into a different world should read this book.

If you like this book you might like other fantasy books such as The Spiderwick Chronicles by Holly Black and Tony DiTerlizzi.

I give this book 4 out of 4 stars.

Welcome!

Welcome to The Young Adult Blog of the Oregon City Public Library! We've chosen to call it Reading Between the Lines because it makes us sound very literary and dignified, and because none of us could figure out how to pronounce YABOCPL.

The purpose of this blog is to keep young adult patrons of the Oregon City Public Library informed about our library's materials, resources and events. To that end we'll be posting regular announcements, reviews and musings, and generally blogging about all sorts of library-related and possibly library-unrelated topics. We encourage our teen readers to submit content for the blog - reviews, links to interesting webpages or videos, anything you guys find amusing or entertaining (must be appropriate for all audiences...). If you'd like to submit something, please email it to oregoncitylibrary@gmail.com

We'd love to get your input, so make a comment, drop us a line, write us a story, send smoke signals, whatever strikes your fancy.

Enjoy!