Showing posts with label teens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label teens. Show all posts

Saturday, October 11, 2014

Teen Entrepreneurs

Lately, I've been addicted to the TV show Shark Tank. The premise of the show is that entrepreneurs pitch their companies and/or products to five "sharks," a panel of five potential investors. What has surprised me the most about the show are the teenagers who pitch their products and companies to the investors. Most notable are:

Henry Miller, who was sixteen when he appeared on Shark Tank, made a deal with Mark Cuban and Robert Herjavec for his company Henry's Humdingers. Miller was offered $300,000 for 75 percent equity in his company. The deal eventually fell through, but what's important is that Miller had an idea that investors were interested in.

Carter Kostler, who was fifteen when he appeared on Shark Tank, pitched his product, The Define Bottle, a reusable water bottle that allows people to add fresh fruit to their water. Carter asked the sharks for $100,000 in exchange for 20 percent equity in his company. Robert Herjavec countered his offer with $100,000 in exchange for 40 percent equity. After trying to negotiate $100,000 for 30 percent equity, Kostler ended up leaving the show without a deal. Revenue from Carter's company was approximately $150,000 before going on the show; since being on Shark Tank, revenue has increased to over $225,000, according to an interview Carter did with Inside Business.

Then, I started thinking about other teen entrepreneurs I've heard about. The biggest name that came to mind is Bella Weems, who started a jewelry company called Origami Owl when she was 14 years old. She started the company to earn money to buy a car; in 2012, the company generated $24 million in revenue, according to an article in Forbes.

It's obvious that teens are creative, and that their ideas have the potential to be extremely successful. These stories started me thinking about how teens can be encouraged to take their ideas and try to build them into products and companies. The library has books that can help. The books listed are a mix of young adult books about starting businesses and adult books that provide advice and good information that can be applied to starting businesses and being a business leader.

How to Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie

The Other 90%: How to Unlock Your Vast Untapped Potential for Leadership and Life by Robert K. Cooper

The 7 Habits of Highly Effective Teens by Sean Covey

Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson

Founders at Work: Stories of Startups' Early Days by Jessica Livingston

Be a Changemaker: How to Start Something That Matters by Laurie Ann Thompson

Know of any other good resources, books or otherwise, for teens who want to create their own products and businesses? Let us know in the comments!

Monday, October 21, 2013

Recommended by Cory Doctorow!

Looking for books for teens?  If your teen enjoys the fiction of Cory Doctorow, get them to try the books from this list!  NoveList Plus notes that Doctorow, a Canadian blogger interested in copyright reform, writes compelling, thought-provoking novels usually involving technology and humor, set in the present and near-future.  Readalike authors include Connie Willis, Margaret Peterson Haddix,  and Andrew Klavan.  Check in with NoveList Plus for more book recommendations - it's a free eResource with your valid library card!

Planesrunner by Ian McDonald

Impulse by Steven Gould

Akata Witch by Nnedi Okorafor

Bushman Lives! by Daniel Pinkwater

Immortal Lycanthropes by Hal Johnson

Team Human by Justine Larbalestier and Sarah Rees Brennan

Welcome to Bordertown: New Stories and Poems of the Borderlands edited by Holly Black and Ellen Kushner 

The Chronicles of Harris Burdick: Fourteen Amazing Authors Tell the Tales by Chris Van Allsburg et al.

Rotters by Daniel Kraus

Scored by Lauren McLaughlin

Going Under by Kathe Koja

Zoe's Tale by John Scalzi

Struts & Frets by Jon Skovron

The Boneshaker by Kate Milford [eBook]

The Unidentified by Rae Mariz       

The Freedom Maze by Delia Sherman  [eBook]


Titles suggested by "My favorite young-adult book reviews" by Cory Doctorow.

  

Sunday, June 2, 2013

Duct Tape Crafts

Crafting with duct tape is such a fun idea that Duck Tape has its own page of "Ducktivities". So popular that Project Runway made prom dresses from duct tape. So popular that "Duct Tape Crafts" has its own Pinterest page with more than 4,000 followers.  So popular that the Duct Tape World Art Workshop will be a featured teen activity for the Summer Reading program at Alamosa, Cherry Hills, East Mountain, Erna Fergusson, Ernie Pyle, Juan Tabo, Lomas Tramway, Los Griegos, Main, and North Valley Libraries!  Make sure to bring your own duct tape!

Have you never crafted with duct tape? You can use festive duct tape (it's not just silver anymore!) to make jewelry, decorate your boots,  make party favors, spruce up an old recliner, make yourself a new wallet, and more!  Intrigued? Consider checking out one of these books from the catalog before or after the workshop for your teen!

Dazzling Duct Tape Designs: Fashionable Accessories, Adorable Décor and Many More Creative Crafts You Make at Home by Tamara Boykins

Go Crazy with Duct Tape by Patti Wallenfang

Just Duct Tape It! by Patti Wallenfang

Ductigami: The Art of the Tape by Joe Wilson


Monday, May 27, 2013

Summer Reading: Can You Dig It?


The reviews are in!


Biggest summer sensation since "Dream Big, Read!" 

The talk of Albuquerque libraries!

Amazing sights to be seen!
Delightful sounds to be heard!
A good time to be had by all!


What is it, you ask?  It's Summer Reading 2013! Here's a little ditty we've composed to give you an idea of this summer's infotainment:


This summer Dig into Reading's the theme
As the good times unfold, your happiness will be extreme!
But lest you think you've heard it all before,
Here's a sampling of some of the treats in store!
 
Kids will find there's nothing tragic
About John Polinko's magic.
They'll find it easy to get into the mood
With the music of Ticklefish Dude.
There will be fun without end
With Wings of Enchantment's Lepidoptera friends.
At East Mountain you can try Cave Painting with Dirt,
At Lomas Tramway we promise Miss Cheryl's Stomp, Stomp Roar! won't hurt.
The Recycle Man will be stopping by
Also Sean Etigson, Indiana Bones, and Loren Kahn's puppets, oh my!
 
Teens can make sushi charms
And use zombie make-up on their arms.
There will be recycle bracelets to make and upcycle collage,
Wire wrapped words and Mod Podge Decoupage!
 
Grownups, we haven't forgotten fun stuff for you
There are concerts with Ian Cooke, Tortilla Junction, The Casualz too!
 
There will be prizes of all sizes for all ages
All you have to do is read a few pages!
Your picture could even be on our website, if you are a sport
Just visit all the libraries in the city with your Library Passport!
This is only a bit of what's in store for those who enroll -
Lest you think that I'm exaggerating the pleasures I extol
Just visit our home page, abclibrary.org, for a full program listing
Or stop by your local branch, and tell them you need assisting.



 
 
As always, ABC Library thanks its Summer Reading partners.
 

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Featured Author: Patricia C. Wrede

Patricia C. Wrede is an American writer from the Midwest.  Growing up, her whole family read voraciously - she lists some of her childhood favorites as Oz, Narnia, & fairy tales - and even after she began her career as a financial analyst, she wrote in her spare time.  Wrede's first book, Shadow Magic, was published in 1982 and in 1985 she took up writing full-time.  Since then, she has created many works of fiction for children and teens.  Find out more about Patricia C. Wrede on her website.

The Enchanted Forest Chronicles



This series follows the adventures of Cimorene, "a fairy-tale princess who finds her expected duties boring and therefore runs away to become the 'captive' princess of a dragon" and Cimorene's son Daystar. Interesting, the first book Wrede wrote in this series, Talking to Dragons,  was the story of Daystar, and she continued with prequels about Cimorene, beginning with Dealing with Dragons.

The Frontier Magic Trilogy



This trilogy is narrated by Eff Rothmer, the child referenced in the title of the first book in the series, The Thirteenth Child. In Eff's world, "Columbus discovered a New World populated solely by dangerous wildlife, both natural and magical. Only modern magic has made colonization possible, and while steam dragons, mammoths, spectral bears, saber-tooth cats, and other deadly animals have been cleared out of the eastern states, they are still a formidable obstacle in the unsettled territories of the West." [from the author's website]

Kate and Cecilia (Regency Magic - with Caroline Stevermer)


Wrede and Stevermer started this series as a game, writing to each other in character (Wrede was Cecy, Stevermer Kate). The two girls are cousins in an alternate Regency England, where magic is an accepted part of society.  Begin with Sorcery and Cecelia or The Enchanted Chocolate Pot: Being the Correspondence of Two Young Ladies of Quality Regarding Various Scandals in London and the Country.

Mairelon the Magician (Regency Magic)



Also set in a Regency England where magic works, these books are the story of a wizard called Richard Merrill.  Applying the "hiding in plain sight" principle, Merrill uses his magical talents as a stage magician, calling himself  Mairelon.  Mairelon travels with Kim, a young street waif, who acts as magician's assistant while learning magic and helping Mairelon out of sticky situations.  Mairelon the Magician is the first book.

Friday, July 27, 2012

Adventure Stories For Young Adults Of All Ages

Some of the best adventure fiction written today is published as being for "Young Adults", tweenagers and teenagers. These stories find an audience far beyond that age range, since everyone can appreciate a good story well told!




For classic "old-school" adventure with a modern twist it is hard to do better than Kenneth Oppel's Matt Cruse series.


The series starts off in grand midshipman style: Matt, in the crow's nest, spots a derelict vessel. Only the crow's nest is the observation dome on a zeppelin, and the derelict vessel is a ragged balloon carrying a dying man and a journal hinting at adventures to come...

Throw in a spunky and brilliant young woman, hair-raising peril, and - yes! - pirates, and you have page-turning stories with a steampunk twist that will have you wanting the next book in the series immediately.

Wonderful adventure stories for the whole family to read together.

The Matt Cruse series:

1. Airborn (2004)
2. Skybreaker (2005)
3. Starclimber (2009)

Kenneth Oppel also writes the popular Silverwing series, fantasy about an ancient rivalry between bats and owls.


 


The name James Bond has been synonymous with action adventure since Ian Fleming created the character in 1953. Fleming's fourteen books about the character have been the material for many popular movies, and several other authors have written further Bond adventures since Fleming's death.

Author Charlie Higson presents the Young Bond Adventures, revealing that young James had an adventurous life long before serving the Crown.


1. Silverfin (2005)
2. BloodFever (2006)
3. Double or Die (2007)
4. Hurricane Gold (2007)
5. By Royal Command (2008)


Danger Society: The Young Bond Dossier (2009)





It seems unlikely that an adventure story could start with the theft of a bag of sand. Unless the sand is very special sand, and the story is in the capable hands of Brandon Sanderson.

Even more unlikely is the name of the hero of the stories: Alcatraz Smedry, a 13-year-old boy with a knack for breaking things. And more unlikely yet are the villains of the piece: librarians! Evil librarians? Surely not!

But in Alcatraz versus the Evil Librarians all manner of unlikely things seem possible, from Crystin Knights to Oculators. And in the rest of the Alcatraz Smedry series the adventures come fast and furious. And always unlikely.


The series is also something of a handbook for writing; Sanderson tells you just what he is going to do with the story and why, making a partner of the reader even as he develops the tale. And there's all sorts of wonky humor throughout.

Join Alcatraz, Grandpa Smedry (whose talent is arriving late), Alcatraz's cousin Sing (whose talent is falling down at the right moment), and Crystin Knight Bastille in a series of wild adventures that keep you guessing and gasping.


1. Alcatraz Versus The Evil Librarians (2007)
2. Alcatraz Versus the Scrivener's Bones (2008)
3. Alcatraz Versus the Knights of Crystallia (2009)
4. Alcatraz Versus the Shattered Lens (2010)

Brandon Sanderson also writes the Mistborn series, has written books in the Robert Jordan Wheel of Time series, and has published the first book in the Stormlight Archive series.

Brandon Sanderson is scheduled to be the Guest of Honor at Bubonicon, Albuquerque's own annual science fiction and fantasy convention, August 24-26, 2012. 

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Got a reluctant teen reader? Have them give these Edgar Award winning mysteries a whirl!

Sometimes it's hard to get teens reading.  They read for school, & then when they're not at school, they have so many other activities!  If you have a teen who's reluctant to crack open a book that's not assigned, some librarians recommend hi/lo fiction, particularly if  the teens "read below grade level and can’t find books they can read that interest them".  Also you might consider the titles listed below, winners of the Edgar Awards' Best Young Adult category. Some titles may also be available in alternate formats (eBook, audio). Notes by the title such as "eBook only" refer to ABC Libraries' holdings. As always, concerned parents may want to preview the book's subject matter to test its appropriateness for their teen!


The Silence of Murder by Dandi Daley Mackall

The Interrogation of Gabriel James by Charlie Price

Reality Check by Peter Abrahams

Paper Towns by John Green

Buried by Robin Merrow MacCready

Last Shot: A Final Four Mystery by John Feinstein

In Darkness, Death by Dorothy and Thomas Hoobler

Acceleration by Graham McNamee

The Boy in the Burning House by Tim Wynne-Jones

Never Trust a Dead Man by Vivian Vande Velde


For more Edgars' Young Adult winners & nominees, visit their database.

Saturday, May 5, 2012

Got a reluctant teen reader? Have them give these books about everyday & epic dangers a whirl!

Sometimes it's hard to get teens reading.  They read for school, & then when they're not at school, they have so many other activities!  If you have a teen who's reluctant to crack open a book that's not assigned, some librarians recommend hi/lo fiction, particularly if  the teens "read below grade level and can’t find books they can read that interest them".  Also you might consider the titles listed below, recommended by Voice of Youth Advocates (VOYA) magazine. Some titles may also be available in alternate formats (eBook, audio). Notes by the title such as "eBook only" refer to ABC Libraries' holdings. As always, concerned parents may want to preview the book's subject matter to test its appropriateness for their teen!

Not for the Faint of Heart: Rude Language, Challenging Authority, Physical Violence

"And now I write books for teenagers because I vividly remember what it felt like to be a teen facing everyday and epic dangers. I don't write to protect them. It's far too late for that. I write to give them weapons - in the form of words and ideas - that will help them fight their monsters. I write in blood because I remember what it felt like to bleed." ~Sherman Alexie


The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie
The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins

The Knife of Never Letting Go by Patrick Ness

One Hundred Demons by Linda Barry

Fat Kid Rules the World by K. L. Going

Looking for Alaska by John Green

Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi

Blood Red Road by Moira Young

The House of the Scorpion by Nancy Farmer

The Curse of the Wendigo by William James Henry; edited by Rick Yancey

Divergent by Veronica Roth

Where Things Come Back by John Corey Whaley

Ship Breaker by Paolo Bacigalupi


*Most books in this post were suggested by articles in Voya magazine (2/12, vol 34, # 6)

Monday, April 23, 2012

Got a reluctant teen reader? Have them give these adult romance titles a whirl!

Sometimes it's hard to get teens reading.  They read for school, & then when they're not at school, they have so many other activities!  If you have a teen who's reluctant to crack open a book that's not assigned, some librarians recommend hi/lo fiction, particularly if  the teens "read below grade level and can’t find books they can read that interest them".  Also you might consider the romance titles listed below, recommended by Voice of Youth Advocates (VOYA) magazine. Some titles may also be available in alternate formats (eBook, audio). Notes by the title such as "eBook only" refer to ABC Libraries' holdings. As always, concerned parents may want to preview the book's subject matter to test its appropriateness for their teen!


Some Steam Ahead: Adult Romance Titles for Teens
"Here are a few suggestions of romance and romantic suspense authors with lighter levels of sensuality that may still appeal to teen readers." ~Amy Alessio

Classics
Jane Austen, the Brontes (Charlotte, Emily, & Anne), Daphne DuMaurier - definitely throbbing with romantic elements, but may turn-off teens who have to read them for school

Similar to Teen Books
Ann Brashares - Sisterhood Everlasting; My Name is Memory
Meg Cabot - Queen of Babble series (zany) or Insatiable series (vampires)
Melissa De La Cruz - Beauchamp series

Bridget Jones Read-Alikes
Sophie Kinsella - Can You Keep a Secret?; Undomestic Goddess; Twenties Girl; Remember Me
Jennifer Crusie - The Cinderella Deal [eBook & eAudio only]; Maybe This Time

Emotional Wringers
Jodi Picoult
Nicholas Sparks

Diverse Romance
Terry McMillan - Waiting to Exhale
Kimberla Lawson Roby
Alisa Valdes-Rodriguez


*All books in this post were suggested by articles in Voya magazine (2/12, vol 34, # 6)

Saturday, March 24, 2012

Got a reluctant teen reader? Have them give these sci-fi titles a whirl!

Sometimes it's hard to get teens reading.  They read for school, & then when they're not at school, they have so many other activities!  If you have a teen who's reluctant to crack open a book that's not assigned, some librarians recommend hi/lo fiction, particularly if  the teens "read below grade level and can’t find books they can read that interest them".  Also you might consider the sci-fi titles listed below, recommended by Voice of Youth Advocates (VOYA) magazine. Some titles may also be available in alternate formats (eBook, audio). As always, concerned parents may want to preview the book's subject matter to test its appropriateness for their teen!

When Technology Goes Wrong
"Are we ever going to be sorry we've let technology woo us?" ~Karin Perry

Feed by M. T. Anderson

Candor by Pam Bachorz

Wither by Lauren DeStefano

Scored by Lauren McLaughlin

A Long, Long Sleep by Anna Sheehan [eBook only]

Unwind by Neal Shusterman

Memento Nora by Angie Smibert

The Softwire: Virus on Orbis 1 by PJ Haarsma


Tough Guys of Science Fiction Fantasy: Guys You'll Want in Your Reading Corner


Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card

The Maze Runner by James Dashner

Little Brother by Cory Doctorow

Ship Breaker by Paolo Bacigalupi



*Books in this post were suggested by articles in VOYA magazine (2/12, vol 34, # 6)

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Teen Read Week 2011



Are you a young adult? Or someone who enjoys young adult literature? If so, help us celebrate Teen Read Week 2011. This year's theme is Picture It @ your library®, which encourages teens to read graphic novels and other illustrated materials, seek out creative books, or imagine the world through literature, just for the fun of it. Teen Read Week runs from October 16 - 22.

You can celebrate Teen Read Week in a number of ways, including:
Several library branches are celebrating Teen Read Week by offering programs just for teens. Sign yourself or your teen up for one! Click the links for more information on any of these programs.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Welcome to Teen Read Week

Okay, so it's officially been Teen Read Week since Sunday, but hey, we'll go with it.

This year's theme is "Read Beyond Reality," so I figured I'd open up the discussion for everyone's favorite science fiction/fantasy/horror books. Here are my top ten--what are yours?

10. Foundation - Isaac Asimov
Using psychology as a base science, Isaac Asimov's Hari Seldon sets out a plan to save the galaxy from itself. Not the most engaging characters in the genre, but an undisputed classic, and definitely worth a read on the pure idea front.

9. The Talisman - Stephen King and Peter Straub
Jack Sawyer is the modern American version of a prince--the son of a movie star. Unfortunately, she's dying, and when she flees to the east coast in an attempt to avoid the duplicitous Morgan Sloat, a frightened and depressed Jack stumbles onto the magical world of the Territories--both wondrous and terrifying, and populated by "Twinners" of people in his world. He makes a daring trek across the Territories--and the United States--in search of the magical Talisman, which will save his mother, and both worlds in which she is queen. Excellent character work.

8. Animal Farm - George Orwell
Orwell's short allegory of the Russian Revolution features pigs who decide that they've had enough of being ruled over by humans--four legs good, two legs bad!--and lead the animals of Manor Farm in a successful revolt. But as the revolution grows darker and the pigs become more like the humans, even the basic tenets of Animalism come into question. A great, quick read that will make you think... but which is also an entertaining story in its own right.

7. The Hobbit - JRR Tolkien
While The Hobbit's famous sequel, Lord of the Rings, rightly holds pride of place, The Hobbit itself is worth reading on its own merits. Initially meant to entertain children, it is the story of a comfortable hobbit who--much like Tolkien himself--loves tea parties, stories, and a good smoke in the garden. When adventure overtakes him, he goes along unwillingly as a burglar for a troop of dwarves trying to reclaim their treasure from a dragon. But Bilbo the hobbit has greater reserves of strength than he suspects, and his kindness and fairness ultimately save more than his own skin. As he travels, he never loses his love of his home, but can he ever be truly comfortable there again?

6. The Chronicles of Narnia - C.S. Lewis
Some books in this series are better than others (I can live without The Last Battle), but the power of Lewis's story is unshakeable. Four children, at the height of the Blitz, are taken to the country. There, they find a wardrobe that leads to the magical world of Narnia, and its mystical creator, Aslan--who is not, after all, a tame lion. As the books progress, others join the Pevensies, even replacing them in later books, as they fight through battles both physical and moral. A note on the numbering: At some point, the publishers decided to re-number the books in chronological order of their events. This makes very little sense, as in the original order--which began with The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, the reader discovers Narnia along with the characers, while in the chronological order, the prequel, The Magician's Nephew comes first, and there are many things in it that refer to books that are technically later in the series. In my opinion, it's better to read these books in the original order.

5. Lord of the Flies - William Golding
Not quite as visibly SF/F as some of the others (but very much in the horror tradition), Lord of the Flies is still speculative fiction. A plane carrying schoolboys away from a war crashes on a paradisical island, leaving the boys on their own. Set up as a contrast to boys' adventure stories where everything works out, in Golding's view, everything goes wrong. The boys carry a seed of their own destruction with them, and when, at the end, the adult world comes to rescue them, the reader is left wondering if they're any better off.

4. The Stand - Stephen King
Very few plot ideas are simpler to explain than The Stand: Virus wipes out 99% of humanity, and the survivors regroup. How does that go on for 1100 pages? Because King delves into how it would feel to the survivors to go through the now barren landscape, in which magic is starting to reassert itself. Not for the fainthearted, the extended version of The Stand contains some occasionally questionable segments, but the powerful vision at the core--the haunting idea of the empty world and the resurgence of wild magic--carries this through as a classic of speculative fiction.

3. Ender's Game - Orson Scott Card
Ender Wiggin is a genius born among geniuses. A third child in a world of two-child limit laws, Ender was requested by the government in order to save the world from a race of invading aliens. Sent to the elite battle school, he finds himself twisted into increasing complex "games" meant to train him for the war, and losing means more than dropping a point or two in the statistics. In the life and death world of battle school, Ender is forged into a soldier in this story where questions of what we ask of our children take the forefront.

2. Harry Potter series - JK Rowling
(Link to first book in the series.)
Oh, the horrors! It's a children's series! Let's create a whole new bestseller list so it doesn't crowd out "real" books!
:eyeroll:
When JK Rowling set out with her bespectacled boy wizard to tell a modest story about saving the world while drinking pumpkin juice and flying Firebolt brooms in Quidditch games, she probably had no idea what she was getting into. A worldwide phenomenon that got kids and adults reading together--and reading long and fairly challenging books, at that--Harry Potter has earned its place as a fantasy classic. Beginning with eleven year old Harry having a fun adventure involving a three-headed dog named Fluffy and a dragon named Norbert, the series grows up with Harry, evolving into a story about the sins of the past, the power of love, and the mystery of death. If you've discounted Harry Potter as a kiddie phenomenon, give it a try--you'll be surprised.

1. Lord of the Rings - JRR Tolkien
(Link to first volume.)
In the end, as they say in The Highlander, there can be only one, and in the world of fantasy that "one" is Lord of the Rings. It's the taproot of modern fantasy.

Picking up a few decades after The Hobbit left off, Bilbo's nephew, Frodo Baggins, inherits the ring of invisibility Bilbo found... which belongs to Sauron, the dark wizard who once enslaved all of Middle Earth, and who now wants it back, to call all of his minions to him and send his shadow armies marching across the face of the world. While Aragorn, the king-in-exile, leads great battles to reclaim his throne, Frodo and his companion, Samwise Gamgee, take a long, thankless trek across the dark realm of Mordor, to destroy the Ring in the fires where it was forged. As they go, the power of the Ring acts on everyone who comes into contact with it, no one more devastatingly than Frodo.

But even as they fight their large battles, there is another one waiting at home. Will the hobbits find the strength to defend their own beloved Shire, or will all be lost in the end?

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Teen Reads-But Not Just for Teens!

For fans of dystopian fiction, or adventure stories and who don't mind reading Young Adult fiction, put your name on the waiting list for "The Hunger Games" by Suzanne Collins. While it is not for the faint of heart, it is still a story to be savored, with characters who draw you inside and make you want to see the book to its conclusion. If you click on the book jacket after bringing up the title, you can click on reviews to get a feel for what this book offers to readers of all ages. The second book in the trilogy "Catching Fire" is already out and has a long waiting list of eager fans. If you like this book, you might want to try the Scott Westerfeld series "Uglies", "Pretties", and "Specials", which is also hugely popular with library customers, young and old alike.