Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Life As We Knew It by Susan Beth Pfeffer

Miranda watches with her family as a meteor hits the moon, knocking it into an orbit closer to Earth. Life as they know it quickly changes for Miranda and her family, as a chain of horrific occurances (tsunamis, earthquakes, dramatic climate changes, and volcanic eruptions) creates a life and death struggle for survival for earth's inhabitants. As life goes from bad to worse, Miranda, sixteen years old, writes in her diary.

I can't remember the last time I was so engrossed in a book, not wanting to catch a glimpse of what was going to happen next. Readers will devour this engrossing, page-turning science fiction novel, which was recommended to me by Mary M., Director at the Long Hill Public Library, in a perfect case of "librarian collaboration"!

Life As We Knew It is available at the Long Hill Library and will be available in September at the Central Middle School Library.

Other books in this genre or with similar plots that I recommend are Phoenix Rising by Karen Hesse; Z for Zachariah by Robert C. O'Brien; and Tomorrow, When the War Began by John Marsden. This is the first book I've read by Pfeffer, who also wrote The Year Without Michael. All of these books are available at the Central Middle School Library, and at the Long Hill Library.

Yellow Star by Jennifer Roy

As a middle school librarian, there are several ways I can tell if students really like a book. One way is when one student comes in with a book and says "My friend says I have to read this book, so I'm here to return this book for him/her, and check it out on my library number." So I check the book in, and then immediately check it out to the second student.

Such was the case recently with Yellow Star by Jennifer Roy. I purchased the book for our school library based on reviews in a professional journal, but hadn't yet had the opportunity to read it. Yellow Star is the fictionalized account of the author's aunt's childhood in Poland. Only four years old at the beginning of World War II, Syvvia and her family were forced by the Nazis into a Jewish ghetto in Lodz, Poland. Six years later, at war's end, Syvvia was one of only twelve children among the 800 survivors. This is an incredible tale of survival, a testament to the strength and determination of one family, and in particular, one little girl. The book concludes with an update on Syvvia and her family, and a timeline of World War II events. Yellow Star is definitely one of my top reads of the year. A must read!!

Other Holocaust books I recommend are Hana's Suitcase: A True Story by Karen Levine (non-fiction); Four Perfect Pebbles by Lila Perl and Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl (autobiographies); and Milkweed by Jerry Spinelli and Torn Thread by Anne Isaacs (fiction), all available at the Central Middle School Library.

Monday, May 14, 2007

Summer Ball by Mike Lupica

Danny the Underdog triumphs once again in Summer Ball, sports writer Mike Lupica's brand-new sequel to his popular Travel Team. Danny Walker, still struggling with his lack of height both on and off the court, goes to Right Way, a summer basketball camp in Maine owned by a pro basketball star. Joining Danny and his friends Will and Ty (also in Travel Team) is Rasheed Hill, previously their opponent but now on the same team at camp. Summer Ball is action-packed and full of suspense guaranteed to entertain and excite middle school fans of Mike Lupica and basketball.

If you liked Travel Team, you'll love Summer Ball. And if you like Mike Lupica, try Heat and Miracle on 49th Street, also by him. Other great basketball books to read are Night Hoops by Carl Deuker and Last Shot: A Final Four Mystery by John Feinstein.