We are deep within the 95th regular season of the National Football League! 256 games to be played out over a seventeen week schedule leading up to Super Bowl XLIX on February 1, 2015, with 3 games on 3 networks on Thanksgiving Day: the Detroit Lions will host the Chicago Bears on CBS; the Dallas Cowboys will host the Philadelphia Eagles on Fox; and on prime-time NBC, the San Francisco 49ers will host Seattle Seahawks (championship rematch). Will you be watching? For the first time ever, no AFC (American Football Conference, one of two conferences of the NFL) teams will appear on Thanksgiving.
There are other sporting events of note in November, including the New York City Marathon, Barclays ATP World Tour Finals, rivalry games in college football, NASCAR Ford Ecoboost 400 (the championship round of the Sprint Cup), the Trampoline and Tumbling World Championships, the XXII Central American and Caribbean Games, PSA Men's World Squash Championship, the group stages of the UEFA Champions League, and World Weightlifting Championships; and in December, the World Swimming Championships and the International Rugby Board Women Sevens World Series are happening.
Who knew late fall was so chockablock with sporting events? Even if you can't catch all your favorite sports live this season, perhaps you'd like to use the upcoming holidays to kick back with some reading about sports - here are some titles we think you might enjoy! We even have a couple of books to get your sporty kids reading.
Adults
Blood Aces: The Wild Ride of Benny Binion, The Texas Gangster Who Created Vegas Poker by Doug J. Swanson
Collision Low Crossers: A Year Inside the Turbulent World of NFL Football by Nicholas Dawidoff
The Magnificent Masters: Jack Nicklaus, Johnny Miller, Tom Weiskopf and the 1975 Cliffhanger at Augusta by Gil Capps
The Noble Hustle: Poker, Beef Jerky, and Death by Colson Whitehead
Pete Rose: An American Dilemma by Kostya Kennedy
Ping Pong Diplomacy: The Secret History Behind the Game that Changed the World by Nicholas Griffin
Slow Getting Up: A Story of NFL Survival From the Bottom of the Pile by Nate Jackson
Why Football Matters: My Education in the Game by Mark Edmundson
Against Football: One Fan's Reluctant Manifesto by Steve Almond
Parcells: A Football Life by Bill Parcells and Nunyo Demasio
Season of Saturdays: A History of College Football in 14 Games by Michael Weinreb
Football: Great Writing About the National Sport edited by John Schulian
Newton's Football: The Science Behind America's Game by Allen St. John, Ainissa G. Ramirez, PH.D
I Am Zlatan: My Story On and Off the Field by Zlatan Ibrahimović with David Lagercrantz
Children
The Crossover by Kwame Alexander
Fourth Down and Inches: Concussions and Football's Make-or-Break Moment by Carla Killough McClafferty
Muckers by Sandra Neil Wallace [eBook]
The Soccer Fence by Phil Bildner
Soccer Star by Mina Javaherbin
So, You Want to Work in Sports?: The Ultimate Guide to Exploring the Sports Industry by Joanne Mattern
Stealing the Game by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Raymond Obstfeld
Tuesday, November 25, 2014
Saturday, November 22, 2014
Taylor Swift: Country artist turned pop star and literacy advocate
Taylor Swift's newest album, 1989, was released on October 27 of this year. Industry experts predicted the album would sell over 1.3 million copies through November 2, according to an article on Billboard's website. Swift, who finally admitted in a Rolling Stone article that she's no longer a country artist and is now a pop artist, was thrilled when her album did better than predicted, if her Instagram video is any indication. 1989 became the first platinum album of the year, selling 1.287 copies in the first week (which is also the most successful record debut since 2002), according to The Washington Post.In addition to being a powerhouse in the music industry, Swift has proven herself a philanthropist as well. While she has donated money to many organizations, I'm going to focus on her support of literacy. According to Wikipedia, Swift has done the following (in chronological order):
In 2009, Swift donated $250,000 to schools that she had ties to. The money went to purchasing books, funding educational programs, and helping pay teacher salaries.
In 2010, she participated in Scholastic's live webcast, Read Now! With Taylor Swift, to help celebrate Scholastic's Read Every Day campaign.
In 2011, Swift partnered with Scholastic Books to donate 6,000 books to Reading Public Library, in Pennsylvania.
In 2012, she donated 14,000 books to Nashville Public Library, in Tennessee. Some of the books she donated to Nashville Public Library went into circulation, while others were given to children from low-income families, preschools, and daycares. Swift also partnered with Scholastic again in a second live webcast, where she promoted reading, and she co-chaired the National Education Association's Read Across American campaign, which included recording a public service announcement encouraging kids to read.
In 2013, Swift donated 2,000 Scholastic Books to the early literacy program Reading Hospital Child Health Center.
In 2014, she appeared in a READ campaign, sponsored by the American Library Association, and she participated in a third Scholastic webcast.
Want to know more about Taylor Swift, or to just check out her music? The library has plenty of things you can check out!
Taylor Swift's albums
Taylor Swift
Fearless
Speak Now
Speak Now Deluxe Edition
Red
Taylor Swift biographies
Taylor Swift by Holly Cefrey
Taylor Swift: Secrets of a Songwriter by Amy Gail
Taylor Swift: Love Story by Amy Gail Hansen
Taylor Swift: Every Day is a Fairy Tale: The Unofficial Story by Liz Spencer
Thursday, November 20, 2014
LEGO: For the Child in All of Us
Are you a LEGO fan? Those ubiquitous toy bricks have found their way into the library system! You can search the catalog using the word "Lego" to find all varieties of goodies, but we've also rounded up a list of some of the latest titles below.
We have books!
For Children
Dolphin Rescue adapted by Tracey West
LEGO Star Wars: The Dark Side by Daniel Lipkowitz
Robot Rampage by Greg Farshtey
Tribes of Chima by Ruth Amos
Build Your Own Galaxy: The Big Unofficial Lego Builder's Book by Joachim Klang, Oliver Albrecht, Lutz Uhlmann, Tim Bischoff
The LEGO Ideas Book: Unlock Your Imagination by Daniel Lipkowitz
The LEGO Book by Daniel Lipkowitz
For Adults
Brick City: Global Icons to Make from Lego by Warren Elsmore
LEGO Build-It Book: Volume 1 - Amazing Vehicles by Nathanael Kuipers, Mattia Zamboni [also an eBook]
Beautiful LEGO by Mike Doyle
The Cult of LEGO by John Baichtal, Joe Meno
Brick by Brick: How LEGO Rewrote the Rules of Innovation and Conquered the Global Toy Industry by David C. Robertson with Bill Breen
Make: Lego and Arduino Projects by John Baichtal, Matthew Beckler & Adam Wolf
We have DVDs!
Lego - Ninjago and Friends
The Lego Movie
Lego Batman the Movie: DC Super Heroes Unite
Star Wars Lego: The Empire Strikes Out
Legends of CHIMA: The Lion, the Crocodile and the Power of Chi
We have items in Spanish for kids!
Las Leyendas De Chima: Comienza la leyenda by Trey King
¡A reparar ese camión! by Michael Anthony Steele
Los discos de poder by Greg Farshtey
And, last but certainly not least, if you got kids who'd like to get their hands on some bricks, our library system has 9 LEGO Clubs! Visit our Library LEGO Club page to find one near you! Age ranges vary (6-12, 2-14, 5+), so check with individual libraries for clarification.
Links
Bricks and Minifigs Albuquerque
Lego Is for Girls [Businessweek]
Tuesday, November 18, 2014
Featured Author: Margaret Atwood
Happy birthday to one of our favorite authors, Margaret Atwood, who turns 75 today! She is an extremely prolific Canadian author, winner of the Arthur C. Clarke Award and Man Booker Prize (for which she has been shortlisted 5 times), among other accolades. Best known as a novelist, she has also written short stories, poetry, children's books, and non-fiction. She has even written the libretto to a chamber opera! Her novels span different genres, including speculative fiction (which she sometimes calls social science fiction), feminist fiction, and literary fiction. Her website includes online only content, BookTour Comix, videogames (MaddAddam Games: Intestinal Parasites), and more. You can also find her on Twitter, where she is a very active tweeter.
Here's a sampling of her works, available in the library catalog:
Fiction
Maddaddam Trilogy - Oryx & Crake, The Year of the Flood, MaddAddam
Cat's Eye
The Handmaid's Tale
Alias Grace
The Robber Bride
The Blind Assassin
The Penelopiad [Myths Series]
Lady Oracle
The Edible Woman
Bodily Harm [eAudiobook]
Short Fiction
Stone Mattress: Nine Tales
Moral Disorder
Bluebeard's Egg and Other Stories
Wilderness Tips
The Tent
For Children
Princess Prunella and the Purple Peanut
Bashful Bob and Doleful Dorinda
Up in the Tree
Poetry
The Door [eBook]
The Circle Game [eBook]
Morning In the Burned House
Miscellaneous Non-Fiction
In Other Worlds: SF and the Human Imagination
Payback: Debt and the Shadow Side of Wealth
Writing with Intent: Essays, Reviews, Personal Prose, 1983-2005
Negotiating with the Dead: A Writer on Writing
Also find her work in:
Seeing Further: The Story of Science, Discovery, and the Genius of the Royal Society
Four Letter Word: Invented Correspondence From the Edge of Modern Romance
First Words: Earliest Writing from Favorite Contemporary Authors [eBook]
I'm With the Bears: Short Stories From a Damaged Planet
Links
"Margaret Atwood's new work will remain unseen for a century" [Guardian]
"The Long Pen: From World-Famous Novelists to High-Tech Entrepreneur" [Daily Galaxy]
"Want to be a character in a Margaret Atwood book?" [Toronto Star]
Here's a sampling of her works, available in the library catalog:
Fiction
Maddaddam Trilogy - Oryx & Crake, The Year of the Flood, MaddAddam
Cat's Eye
The Handmaid's Tale
Alias Grace
The Robber Bride
The Blind Assassin
The Penelopiad [Myths Series]
Lady Oracle
The Edible Woman
Bodily Harm [eAudiobook]
Short Fiction
Stone Mattress: Nine Tales
Moral Disorder
Bluebeard's Egg and Other Stories
Wilderness Tips
The Tent
For Children
Princess Prunella and the Purple Peanut
Bashful Bob and Doleful Dorinda
Up in the Tree
Poetry
The Door [eBook]
The Circle Game [eBook]
Morning In the Burned House
Miscellaneous Non-Fiction
In Other Worlds: SF and the Human Imagination
Payback: Debt and the Shadow Side of Wealth
Writing with Intent: Essays, Reviews, Personal Prose, 1983-2005
Negotiating with the Dead: A Writer on Writing
Also find her work in:
Seeing Further: The Story of Science, Discovery, and the Genius of the Royal Society
Four Letter Word: Invented Correspondence From the Edge of Modern Romance
First Words: Earliest Writing from Favorite Contemporary Authors [eBook]
I'm With the Bears: Short Stories From a Damaged Planet
Links
"Margaret Atwood's new work will remain unseen for a century" [Guardian]
"The Long Pen: From World-Famous Novelists to High-Tech Entrepreneur" [Daily Galaxy]
"Want to be a character in a Margaret Atwood book?" [Toronto Star]
Sunday, November 16, 2014
Life with Pets: Human-Animal Relationships
We love our pets. They become an integral part of our lives, we cherish them and sometimes make them famous - witness Grumpy Cat, Dewey the Library Cat, Boo the World's Cutest Dog, etc. There are countless stories about animals in fiction, but also in non-fiction - a genre that perhaps rose to fame with authors like James Herriot, Gerald Durrell, and Farley Mowat. Here are some stories about pets who made a difference, in the lives of one person or many, and a few other pet-related titles.Human-Animal Memoirs
Sergeant Stubby: How a Stray Dog and His Best Friend Helped Win World War I and Stole the Heart of a Nation by Ann Bausum
The World According to Bob: The Further Adventures of One Man and His Street-Wise Cat by James Bowen
Gabe & Izzy: Standing Up for America's Bullied by Gabrielle Ford with Sarah Thomson [Children's]
Saving Simon: How a Rescue Donkey Taught Me the Meaning of Compassion by Jon Katz.
Top Dog: The Story of Marine Hero Lucca by Maria Goodavage
My Animals and Other Family by Clare Balding [eBook]
Once Upon a Flock : Life with My Soulful Chickens by Lauren Scheuer
Dogtripping: 25 Rescues, 11 Volunteers, and 3 RVs on Our Canine Cross-Country Adventure by David Rosenfelt
Pure Joy: The dogs We Love by Danielle Steel
A Dog Walks Into a Nursing Home: Lessons in the Good Life From An Unlikely Teacher by Sue Halpern
Weekends with Daisy by Sharron Kahn Luttrell
Julia's Cats: Julia Child's Life in the Company of Cats by Patricia Barey, Therese Burson
Oink: My Life with Mini-Pigs by Matt Whyman
Cherished: 21 Writers on Animals They Have Loved and Lost edited by Barbara Abercrombie
Miscellaneous
The Secret Language of Dogs: Stories from a Dog Psychic by Jocelyn Kessler
Traveling With Your Pet: The AAA Petbook
The Secrets of Lost Cats: One Woman, Twenty Posters, and a New Understanding of Love by Dr. Nancy Davidson
Citizen Canine: Our Evolving Relationship with Cats and Dogs by David Grimm
The Thing with Feathers: The Surprising Lives of Birds, and What They Reveal About Being Human by Noah Strycker
For Fun
How to Make Your Cat an Internet Celebrity: A Guide to Financial Freedom by Patricia Carlin [eBook]
Metal Cats photography by Alexandra Crockett
If you are inspired to welcome a pet into your life (adopting or fostering), or interested in volunteering at a shelter, there are lots of opportunities in Albuquerque! Consider:
Animal Welfare [City of Albuquerque]
Animal Rescue Groups [City of Albuquerque]
Animal Humane New Mexico
Friday, November 14, 2014
Reading Around Moby-Dick
Moby-Dick - we've heard it referred to as "The Great Unread American Novel". People tend to shy away from the size, the subject matter (though many people have a working knowledge of the book's themes), the ponderous writing style (although some base this opinion mostly on the book's opening line, "Call me Ishmael", having not progressed much further). Okay, full disclosure: we haven't read it.
But Melville has been in the news recently - there's a new movie coming out about the whaling voyage on which Melville based the book, and an 1841 crew list for a whaling ship has been found that numbers Melville amongst its band. (Apparently, he deserted after 4 months, but the voyage inspired his maritime novels.) We thought, maybe it's time to give Melville's whale of a story a look-see!
How did this Moby-Dick come about, anyway? Melville was born in New York City in 1819 and lived there until 1850, except for 5 years at sea. His first book, Typee, was published in 1845, and based on his South Seas experiences. In 1850, already working on Moby-Dick, he moved to Massachusetts and met Nathaniel Hawthorne, an intense friendship which proved pivotal to his novel. During this time, he had also married and started a family. In 1857, Melville gave up writing prose for poetry, though he was not successful in this endeavor. In his later years, Melville worked as a customs inspector for the City of New York. He died in 1891.
But back to Moby-Dick. On November 14, 1851, the American edition of Moby-Dick was published. (The English edition, titled The Whale - there had been a last-minute title change - had already been published the month before.) Melville had spent a year and a half writing the book, now considered a classic, and it was dedicated to Hawthorne, though the friendship did not last. Even in the 1870s, one reader called it "the strangest, wildest, and saddest story I have ever read". However, only 3,200 copies were sold in Melville's lifetime and it was out of print when he died. Melville already had been acclaimed for earlier works and considered Moby-Dick to be his magnum opus, so he was wounded by its reception.
Though the novel was re-published shortly after Melville's death, it was not until the 1920s that it reached its current standing in the canon of American literature, with Carl Van Doren calling it "the pinnacle of American Romanticism". Moby-Dick's first cinematic adaptation also came in the 1920s - the dramatically retitled The Sea Beast, but the most famous adaptation was John Huston's in 1956 (with a screenplay by Ray Bradbury!).
Answer us truthfully - have you ever read Moby-Dick: Or, The Whale? And if so, did you read it because you had to, or for pleasure? Did you finish it? What did you think? Did you read Nathaniel Philbrick's In the Heart of the Sea: The Tragedy of the Whaleship Essex, about the shipwreck that inspired Melville?And finally, are you more likely to read Melville (or Philbrick) now that there's a major motion picture based on In The Heart of the Sea coming out next year?
If this new attention give to the novel and a little backstory hasn't inspired you to pick up all 420 pages of it, there are other options! Whether you love Moby-Dick and want more, or are looking for a a way to work your way into it, here are some reading suggestions from the library catalog:
Moby-Dick in Pictures: One Drawing For Every Page by Matt Kish
Moby Dick by Herman Melville; adapted by Will Eisner [YA]
Why Read Moby-Dick? by Nathaniel Philbrick
Moby-Dick, or, The Whale by Herman Melville, presented by Jan Needle [YA; an abridgement with illustrations]
Railsea by China Miéville [Children's]
Ahab's Wife, or, The Star-Gazer by Sena Jeter Naslund
The Graphic Canon: Volume 2 - From "Kubla Khan" to the Brontë Sisters to The Picture of Dorian Gray edited by Russ Kick
Leviathan [DVD]
Set aboard a hulking fishing vessel as it navigates the treacherous waves off the New England coast-the very waters that once inspired Moby Dick, the film captures the harsh, unforgiving world of the fishermen in starkly haunting, yet beautiful detail.
You can also find Melville's novel in Audiobook and eAudio formats.
Links
Moby Dick Big Read
The Moby-Dick Big Read: an online version of Melville’s magisterial tome - each of its 135 chapters read out aloud, by a mixture of the celebrated and the unknown, to be broadcast online in a sequence of 135 downloads, publicly and freely accessible.
Moby-Dick Marathon
Annual 25-hour, non-stop reading of the novel.
"The Picnic That Turned Moby-Dick Into a Masterpiece" [WGBH]
How to Read a Hard Book [Oprah.com]
Classic Literature Turned Into Comic Books [Short List]
"Whaling Ship Crew List Shows Melville Embarking on a Journey That Inspired Moby-Dick" [Slate]
"The Harrowing True Story that Inspired Moby-Dick Gets the Ron Howard Treatment" [Slate]
But Melville has been in the news recently - there's a new movie coming out about the whaling voyage on which Melville based the book, and an 1841 crew list for a whaling ship has been found that numbers Melville amongst its band. (Apparently, he deserted after 4 months, but the voyage inspired his maritime novels.) We thought, maybe it's time to give Melville's whale of a story a look-see!
How did this Moby-Dick come about, anyway? Melville was born in New York City in 1819 and lived there until 1850, except for 5 years at sea. His first book, Typee, was published in 1845, and based on his South Seas experiences. In 1850, already working on Moby-Dick, he moved to Massachusetts and met Nathaniel Hawthorne, an intense friendship which proved pivotal to his novel. During this time, he had also married and started a family. In 1857, Melville gave up writing prose for poetry, though he was not successful in this endeavor. In his later years, Melville worked as a customs inspector for the City of New York. He died in 1891.
But back to Moby-Dick. On November 14, 1851, the American edition of Moby-Dick was published. (The English edition, titled The Whale - there had been a last-minute title change - had already been published the month before.) Melville had spent a year and a half writing the book, now considered a classic, and it was dedicated to Hawthorne, though the friendship did not last. Even in the 1870s, one reader called it "the strangest, wildest, and saddest story I have ever read". However, only 3,200 copies were sold in Melville's lifetime and it was out of print when he died. Melville already had been acclaimed for earlier works and considered Moby-Dick to be his magnum opus, so he was wounded by its reception.
Though the novel was re-published shortly after Melville's death, it was not until the 1920s that it reached its current standing in the canon of American literature, with Carl Van Doren calling it "the pinnacle of American Romanticism". Moby-Dick's first cinematic adaptation also came in the 1920s - the dramatically retitled The Sea Beast, but the most famous adaptation was John Huston's in 1956 (with a screenplay by Ray Bradbury!).
Answer us truthfully - have you ever read Moby-Dick: Or, The Whale? And if so, did you read it because you had to, or for pleasure? Did you finish it? What did you think? Did you read Nathaniel Philbrick's In the Heart of the Sea: The Tragedy of the Whaleship Essex, about the shipwreck that inspired Melville?And finally, are you more likely to read Melville (or Philbrick) now that there's a major motion picture based on In The Heart of the Sea coming out next year?
If this new attention give to the novel and a little backstory hasn't inspired you to pick up all 420 pages of it, there are other options! Whether you love Moby-Dick and want more, or are looking for a a way to work your way into it, here are some reading suggestions from the library catalog:
Moby-Dick in Pictures: One Drawing For Every Page by Matt Kish
Moby Dick by Herman Melville; adapted by Will Eisner [YA]
Why Read Moby-Dick? by Nathaniel Philbrick
Moby-Dick, or, The Whale by Herman Melville, presented by Jan Needle [YA; an abridgement with illustrations]
Railsea by China Miéville [Children's]
Ahab's Wife, or, The Star-Gazer by Sena Jeter Naslund
The Graphic Canon: Volume 2 - From "Kubla Khan" to the Brontë Sisters to The Picture of Dorian Gray edited by Russ Kick
Leviathan [DVD]
Set aboard a hulking fishing vessel as it navigates the treacherous waves off the New England coast-the very waters that once inspired Moby Dick, the film captures the harsh, unforgiving world of the fishermen in starkly haunting, yet beautiful detail.
You can also find Melville's novel in Audiobook and eAudio formats.
Links
Moby Dick Big Read
The Moby-Dick Big Read: an online version of Melville’s magisterial tome - each of its 135 chapters read out aloud, by a mixture of the celebrated and the unknown, to be broadcast online in a sequence of 135 downloads, publicly and freely accessible.
Moby-Dick Marathon
Annual 25-hour, non-stop reading of the novel.
"The Picnic That Turned Moby-Dick Into a Masterpiece" [WGBH]
How to Read a Hard Book [Oprah.com]
Classic Literature Turned Into Comic Books [Short List]
"Whaling Ship Crew List Shows Melville Embarking on a Journey That Inspired Moby-Dick" [Slate]
"The Harrowing True Story that Inspired Moby-Dick Gets the Ron Howard Treatment" [Slate]
Wednesday, November 12, 2014
Swoon Reads: Publication By Crowdsource
The Swoon Reads site could be the cheeriest site we know. "Swoon" means "to be overcome by joy", and Swoon Reads seems bursting with joy already, from the opening tagline "Fall in love with falling in love" to "Thank you for visiting Swoon Reads. We hope you found something that made you swoon!"
What is Swoon Reads, you ask? It's a novel idea from Macmillan: a crowdsourced romance imprint for teens. It's a community of writers and readers; both can make a Swoon Reads account and sign in, either to upload their manuscript to the site or to read uploaded manuscripts. Submissions should be 50,000-70,000 word romances written for readers aged 14 and older, in any sub-genre (historical, dystopian, mash-up, etc.), and gay and lesbian romances are welcome. Readers can rate (0-5 hearts, from "Did Not Finish" to, you guessed it, "Swoon-Worthy") and comment on the manuscripts they read, and the submissions that have the highest ratings will be passed to an editorial board - if the board concurs that the manuscript is "SW♥♥N-worthy", it gets published!
Swoon Reads' first title, A Little Something Different: Fourteen Viewpoints, One Love Story is in the library catalog, so place your holds now! Written by Sandy Hall, a librarian from New Jersey, it's a romance with an interesting twist - the novel's 14 viewpoints don't include the love story's protagonists, Lea and Gabe! Instead, the reader learns about their "meet-cute" and all that follows from viewpoints that include a roommate, a professor, a brother, a classmate, a friend, a barista, a bus driver, a squirrel, and a bench. Reviewers have called it "a sweet, quick romance" [VOYA Reviews] and a "good choice for reluctant readers" [School Library Journal]. "Swoonworthy Extras" include "A Coffee Date" with the author and editor, discussion questions, and a short preview of the next title to be published. Watch for more from this new imprint!
Links
Swoon Reads: The Next Romance Bestseller, Selected by You [NPR]
Swoon lets YA readers choose which books get published [CNN]
Quote Roundup: A Little Something Different by Sandy Hall [Mac Teen Books]
Swoonworthy Manuscripts Selected for Publication [Swoon Reads]
What is Swoon Reads, you ask? It's a novel idea from Macmillan: a crowdsourced romance imprint for teens. It's a community of writers and readers; both can make a Swoon Reads account and sign in, either to upload their manuscript to the site or to read uploaded manuscripts. Submissions should be 50,000-70,000 word romances written for readers aged 14 and older, in any sub-genre (historical, dystopian, mash-up, etc.), and gay and lesbian romances are welcome. Readers can rate (0-5 hearts, from "Did Not Finish" to, you guessed it, "Swoon-Worthy") and comment on the manuscripts they read, and the submissions that have the highest ratings will be passed to an editorial board - if the board concurs that the manuscript is "SW♥♥N-worthy", it gets published!
Swoon Reads' first title, A Little Something Different: Fourteen Viewpoints, One Love Story is in the library catalog, so place your holds now! Written by Sandy Hall, a librarian from New Jersey, it's a romance with an interesting twist - the novel's 14 viewpoints don't include the love story's protagonists, Lea and Gabe! Instead, the reader learns about their "meet-cute" and all that follows from viewpoints that include a roommate, a professor, a brother, a classmate, a friend, a barista, a bus driver, a squirrel, and a bench. Reviewers have called it "a sweet, quick romance" [VOYA Reviews] and a "good choice for reluctant readers" [School Library Journal]. "Swoonworthy Extras" include "A Coffee Date" with the author and editor, discussion questions, and a short preview of the next title to be published. Watch for more from this new imprint!
Links
Swoon Reads: The Next Romance Bestseller, Selected by You [NPR]
Swoon lets YA readers choose which books get published [CNN]
Quote Roundup: A Little Something Different by Sandy Hall [Mac Teen Books]
Swoonworthy Manuscripts Selected for Publication [Swoon Reads]
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