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   June 1&15, 2013            BOOKLIST

Spotlight on Biography
The Manley Arts: Cronkite    and Carson
He Reads . . . Librarians
She Reads . . . Librarians
Read-alikes: He Kept Us    out of War—Not!
Top 10 Biographies
Outgoing Mail: Dear    Sylvia Beach
Carte Blanche: The Man    Who Gave Freddie a Face
Top 10 Biographies for    Youth
Unpacking a Standard with    Biographies
Audiobook Showcase
Voices in My Head: What's    New with Digital    Providers
At Leisure with Joyce    Saricks: Audio Wish List
Voice of Choice: George    Guidall
Fall Audiobook Preview
Features
High-Demand Hot List
RA Corner: Robert    Burgin's Going Places
High-Demand Hot List for    Youth
Honor Roll: Celebrating    Caldecott Honor Books
The Back Page: My Aching    Back


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

Awards

Likely Stories
Book Group Buzz
Audiobooker
Bookends
Shelf Renewal

Review Of The Day

America’s Obsessives
By Joshua Kendall

Sure, there’s a link between creativity and eccentricity, but what of a link between eccentricity and extreme productivity? Noted journalist Kendall explores the existence of such a link in this engaging dive into the private lives of seven of the nation’s most productive individuals. According to Kendall, makeup maven Estée Lauder, née Josephine Esther Mentzer, never met a face she didn’t want to make over; Henry J. Heinz, of pickle fame, never met anything he didn’t want to measure . . .

    >>Read More



He Reads He Reads: Librarians
By David Wright

Was it ever common to call people like me “male librarians,” as it once was to refer to “male nurses”? The days of any profession being that bound up with either gender seem to be thankfully retreating into the past. Why, then, did I take “guybrarian” as my Facebook and Twitter handle, potentially irking both men and women on the right side of history? Masculine insecurity? One pretty safe generalization about us guybrarians is that we aren’t shy about owning and celebrating our profession, as seen in these varied titles by and about male librarians. Let the mansplaining begin!

Some years ago, two men working in neighboring library systems in South Los Angeles published warts-and-all accounts of the daily pageant of weird and wonderful that is life in an urban public library.

She Reads She Reads: Librarians
By Kaite Mediatore Stover

The world labors under two delusions regarding lady librarians. We are either the timid, bespectacled spinster (see Mary Bailey in It’s a Wonderful Life) or we’re the wild ’n’ crazy, bun-loosening fantasy babe (see most stag films from the 1960s).

Actually, we’re somewhere in between; a cross between smarty singleton Bunny (see Desk Set) and hipster fashionista Mary (see Party Girl). We can be kidnappers, ghostly readers, radicals, camel jockeys, and wartime heroes, even if we sometimes need a killer makeover. Very like the librarians in the books listed below.

On the surface, the profession appears predictable bordering on tedious . . .

Unpacking a Standard Unpacking a Standard: With Biographies
By Julie Green

Great biographies are not only introductions to fascinating subjects, they also provide wonderful opportunities to really think about the authors’ choices: what details did they choose to include, what connections did they choose to make, and what concepts did they choose to explore? By sharing the following noteworthy biographies and classroom suggestions, teachers can address these questions while implementing CCSS.ELA-Literacy RI.1.3–RI.6.3. Visit www.booklistonline.com/commoncore for an extended version of this article.

CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RI.1.3. Describe the connection between two individuals, events, ideas, or pieces of information in a text.

Top 10 Biographies for Youth Top 10 Biographies for Youth
By Ilene Cooper

Legendary figures—from Mata Hari to Mahalia Jackson, the Marquis de Lafayette to Martin Luther King—appear in these best biographies for young readers. The titles were chosen from books reviewed in Booklist between June 1, 2012, and May 15, 2013.

Bad Girls: Sirens, Jezebels, Murderesses, Thieves & Other Female Villains . By Jane Yolen and Heidi E. Y. Stemple. Illus. by Rebecca Guay. 2013. Charlesbridge, $18.95 (9781580891851). Gr. 7–10.

Girls gone wild! This attractive package rounds up some of the meanest (or perhaps most misguided) group of gals in history . . .

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Bookends

Relish by Lucy Knisley
Posted by: Cindy Dobrez and Lynn Rutan

Cindy: I’ve just finished a major kitchen remodel project and it seems that during this time my literary tastes leaned toward books that featured FOOD. I was eating lots of salads and crock pot meals in real life, but in my book world, I was a gourmand. Relish: My Life in the Kitchen (First Second [...]
Audiobooker

#JIAM Four for Freebie Friday
Posted by: Mary Burkey

Phillip Roth; Bless Me, Ultima by Rudolfo Anaya; Maggie Stiefvater’s The Raven Boys and The Explicit Gospels, ChristianAudio’s monthly freebie.   In Memory of a Friend, Teacher and Mentor is a wonderful project by author Roth that highlights the importance of teachers while raising money for the author’s public library. Download the free short piece here. More details from the Audible website: In this moving eulogy, [...]
Shelf Renewal

Web Crush of the Week: Gear Patrol
Posted by: Karen Kleckner Keefe

Looking for the perfect Father’s Day gift for the hip dad in your life? Check out the reviews on Gear Patrol for the coolest in books with high-style, guy appeal.”Gear Patrol is a gathering place for guys hell bent on making the most of their time on planet Earth in the 21st century. What we [...]
Likely Stories

Book Trailer Thursday: Belle Epoque
Posted by: Annie Bostrom

“In a city obsessed with beauty, how does a girl stand out?” Why, by hiring a less pretty girl to accompany her and make her appear irresistible by comparison. Why didn’t you think of that?! This intriguing premise sets the stage for Elizabeth Ross’s Belle Epoque, a provocative historical YA novel “ripe with satisfaction,” according [...]
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