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    May 15, 2013              BOOKLIST

Spotlight on    SF/Fantasy
Top 10 SF/Fantasy
Story behind the Story:    Samantha Shannon's The    Bone Season
Carte Blanche: Suspending    the Old Disbelief
Another Look At: William    Sleator's Singularity
Top 10 SF/Fantasy for    Youth
Reference Showcase
Outstanding Reference    Sources
Focus: Inside the 2013    Dartmouth Medal Winner
Features
What's New with . . . Sage
Voices in My Head:    Summertime and the    Listening Is Easy


WEB EXCLUSIVES

Sleuths on Screen: 15    Famous Detectives and    the Actors Who Played    Them
Everybody Must Get    Stoned: 8 Mysteries That    Will Give You a Killer    Contact High
No Clue Where to Shelve    These: 6 Women’s    Fiction Novels That    Think They’re Mysteries
Sniffing Out Clues: 12    Children's Mysteries    Solved by Animal    Detectives
My Raygun Is Quick: 8 of    the Best SF Mysteries
And Then There Were 2:    Which of These 4 Cozy    Queens Is Still Worth    Reading?
There Are No Higher    Stakes: 11 Ecothrillers    That Are Anything but    Recycled
Ladies in Waiting: 5    Authors Who Would Kill    to Be Ruth Rendell
Digging Deeper: Erin    Hart's Research for The    Book of Killowen
Trapped! 7 Thrillers That    Are a Claustrophobic's    Nightmare
You Can Always Count on    Crime: Mystery by the    Numbers
Take the Funny and Run:    14 Mystery Spoofs on    Page and Screen
Criminal Cliches: 7    Deadly Sins of Mystery    Writing
Hard-Boiled Eggheads: 16    Novels by Literary    Authors Who Really    Want to Play Detective

From BookLinks

April 2013

April 2013 Issue
Web Connections
Classroom Star

Common Core Resources

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Likely Stories
Book Group Buzz
Audiobooker
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Review Of The Day

The Rules of Wolfe
By James Carlos Blake

Building on his leisurely, quasi-autobiographical saga Country of the Bad Wolfes (2012), Blake uses the characters of his sprawling Mexican American clan to offer a new spin on the kind of hard-edged outlaw tale he’s better known for. The Wolfes are engaged in the “shade trade”: a wide range of illegal activities, mostly cross-border smuggling, but not, as a rule, drugs or people. The Wolfes have a lot of rules, and to that they owe their success.

    >>Read More



Mystery Month Stick a Fork in It: 10 Cozy Titles of Questionable Taste
By Sarah Hunter

We sift through thousands of book titles every year, and if there’s one thing that sears a title into our memory, it’s an awesomely bad pun. The authors most worth their salt in the pun game are cozy writers, and, boy, do they ever take the cake. The author of Long Quiche Goodbye, for instance, has dedicated an entire series to cheese-shop mysteries with such groan-worthy titles as Lost and Fondue and To Brie or Not to Brie. Elsewhere we find equally cornball capers: Arsenic and Old Cake, A Killer in the Rye, Assaulted Pretzel, Fonduing Fathers (a kitchen cozy set in Washington, D.C.), Going Going Ganache, A Killer Maize, Butter Safe than Sorry, Gruel and Unusual Punishment, The Hand That Rocks the Ladle, Between a Wok and a Hardplace—the list goes on.

Mystery Month It’s Rough Being Stuffed: 8 Picture-Book Mysteries about Missing Toys
By Ann Kelley

Whether it’s named Huggy, Fluffy, or Bear, a child’s favorite stuffed animal is not to be messed with. But, alas, toys always go missing—and it’s always cause for panic. In these eight picture books, all terrific whodunits for the blankie-loving crowd, there are stuffie snatchers on the loose, including the obvious suspect (family dog) and a surprise delinquent (pink bear).

Babbit . By Lydia Monks. Illus. by the author. 2013. IPG/Egmont, paper, $8.99 (9781405254236). PreS–Gr. 1.

Babbit, a stuffed blue rabbit, lives with the Big One and the Little One—the latter of whom is “not really very good” at looking after him.

Unpacking a Standard Unpacking a Standard with Mysteries
By Julie Green

Mysteries are adventure and challenge wrapped up together. The best mysteries for youth draw young readers in right away with exhilarating intrigue. They present a problem fairly quickly in the text, and then give readers a chance to solve it all on their own as they follow the clues dangled tantalizingly throughout the story. Mysteries also provide opportunities for students to read closely, pay careful attention to story details, and to make inferences—all activities that are emphasized in the Common Core State Standards! Below are suggestions for implementing CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RL.4.1–6.1 with notable youth mysteries.

Mystery Month One Last Job: 6 Crooks Who Should Have Quit While They Were Behind
By Bill Ott

Advice to all good-hearted crooks who want to get out of the game: don’t do “one last job.” It won’t work. Never Does. Never. It doesn’t matter what the reasons may be—help the kids you abandoned, get back together with the ex-wife you still love, put together a stash and hightail it for Costa Rica—by the end of job, you’ll either be dead or worse off than when you started. The chimerical one last job offers only a one-way ticket on the Oblivion Express. Don’t believe it? Follow the thin red line of these noir heroes from illusion to reality.

Boot Tracks . By Matthew F. Jones. 2006. 208p. Europa, paper, $14.95 (9781933372112).

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Following the Clues–Links for Mystery Lovers
Posted by: Neil Hollands

In honor of Mystery Month, I’ve been out strolling the internet in search of new websites for the avid mystery lover. I’m going to assume that you are already familiar with the pleasures of sites like Stop You’re Killing Me, the Independent Mystery Booksellers Association, Deadly Pleasures, and Mystery Scene Magazine. Here are a few [...]
Likely Stories

Agatha Awards
Posted by: Liz Teahan

We’re a little late in recognizing these Agatha Award winners, but, considering it is Mystery Month here at Booklist, we thought it would be a crime—a crime!—to not pay them some attention. Following is a list of the winners published in the calendar year of 2012, awarded by Malice Domestic, Ltd. to books best typifying the works of [...]
Audiobooker

Freebie Friday
Posted by: Mary Burkey

2 stories from Neil Gaiman & 5 best-sellers from Random House Audio. Download these FREE audiobooks for a summer’s worth of listening! You’ll love Random House’s terrific Try Audiobooks promotion. Tailored to give suggestions to first-time listeners as well as audiobook fans, the site targets your “listening style,” whether you listen while you are crafting, [...]
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