Where is Central?

Tuesday, May 13, 2014

This is for a scavenger hunt being done, thanks for letting us share your IMC area!






View Larger Map

Using this map, turn east and walk to 84th Street.  At 84th Street, turn south and walk to the street named for the 19th president of the United States.  Look for the next QR code there.

2014 Teens Top Ten Nominations!

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

The nominations are out for the top ten teen reads for 2014!



We gave a number of these in the IMC right now, several were book club reads this year.  I am adding others to the book order going in right now.  You can vote for your favorites starting in August and running until Teen Read Week. 



2014 Teens’ Top Ten Nominees
(The highlighted books are all in the IMC already!)

Arnett, Mindee. The Nightmare Affair. Tor Teen. (9780765333339). Dusty Everhart, a Nightmare, (literally!), has been trying to escape the shadow of her mother's reputation, and one night, while dream-feeding, she sees the crime scene of a murder victim who attends her high school, a school for supernatural children. When she arrives back on campus, she finds, to her horror, that the dream had come true. Now she must use dreams to find the killer and save victims-to-be in order to stop an ancient darkness from returning.

Banks, Anna. Of Triton. Macmillan/Feiwel and Friends. (9781250003331). After Emma’s mother, the long lost Poseidon princess returns to the sea, the Syrena begin to bring her identity into question. When all hope seems lost, and appears the Royals have a revolution on their hands, Emma has the opportunity to use her Gift to save those that she loves. But at what cost will her choices bring to not only her, but also to those she considers her family.

Bardugo, Leigh. Siege and Storm. Macmillan/Henry Holt Books for Young Readers. (9780805094602). Alina, a sun summoner on the run from the evil Darkling, is searching for a way to increase her power and save the ones she loves. But as her power grows she falls deeper in the Darkling’s grasp and farther away from her best friend and love, Mal. When the time comes Alina must choose between her love, her power, or her lust for the Darkling and all of his power.

Block, Francesca Lia. Love in the Time of Global Warming. Macmillan/Henry Holt Books for Young Readers. (9780805096279). Penelope believes she is the last person alive in the city of Los Angeles after a massive earthquake destroyed the majority of the earth. After encountering a group of survivors, however, she begins to have hope in whatever may be left of the world, whether it be love, trust, and, just maybe, her family. Modeled after Homer's Odyssey, Pen goes on a post-apocalyptic journey filled with Giants and butterflies in an attempt to find her way home.

Charbonneau, Joelle. The Testing. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ( 9780547959108). Cia is chosen to participate in The Testing, a government program that will select the brightest graduates who show potential for becoming future leaders in this post-apocalyptic world. Cia’s excitement of being chosen soon dies when her father warns her of the experiences he faced when he was chosen. Cia must trust no one if she hopes to come back alive. However, will she be able to face the dark, unholy truth about the testing? One kept whether you leave… Or don't?

Dashner, James
. The Eye of Minds. Random House/Delacorte Press. (9780385741392). Michael is an average kid who plays video games, but this video game, the Virtnet, is different than others. You can die in it physically and mentally, and that happens to a girl named Tanya who rips out her core and commits suicide. Suddenly, Michael is whisked away by the designers of the VirtNet and is given a mission by them to find a cyber terrorist, named Kaine, who is suspected of killing gamers.

Edwards, Janet. Earth Girl. Prometheus Books /Pyr . (9780007443499). In 2788 humanity has developed technology that allows them to portal between many habitable worlds except for those are deemed "the handicapped", those who are born with a one in a thousand chance of having an immune system that cannot tolerate other planets. Jarra, a handicapped 18-year old student with a passion for history, creates a false identity for herself and enrolls in a college course for students from other planets in an attempt to get revenge for the way the handicapped are looked down upon.

Gleason, Colleen. The Clockwork Scarab. Chronicle Books. (9781452134680). The niece of Sherlock Holmes, the world’s first consulting detective, and the half-sister of Bram, the vampire slayer, are thrown together to find out why high society girls are being murdered and what a mechanical scarab beetle has to do with it.

Gray, Laurie. Maybe I Will. Luminis Books. (9781935462712).
One life-altering, life-changing event that dramatically affected Sandy will leave you thinking. And no, not in the good sort of life-changing event like winning the lottery or having a kid. Finding true friends and activities that allow Sandy to really be free and let off steam is all that keeps Sandy sane. They are also important factors in putting Sandy's life back together once again.

Henry, April.
The Girl Who Was Supposed to Die. Henry Holt Books for Young Readers. (9780805095418). Cady wakes up in a dark, torn apart cottage hearing someone tell another man to "finish her off." To make things worse, not only does she not know why she’s in the cabin or why the men are trying to kill her, she also doesn’t remember who she is. Eventually, she escapes and meets up with Ty, a boy who is willing to help her even at the risk of losing his own life. Together they attempt to figure out what happened to make her lose her memory.

Howard, A. G. Splintered. ABRAMS/Amulet Books. (9781419704284). Alyssa, a girl already struggling with life in general, is pulled into something dark and mysterious. She follows in the footsteps of her ancestor, Alice, and goes down the rabbit hole to right the wrongs that Alice caused to cure her family of their "curse". Instead of finding Lewis Carroll's Beautiful wonderland she finds a dark and twisted version with monstrous creatures that aren't as nice as the ones in the novel or as pretty.

Kate, Lauren. Teardrop. Random House.
Eureka has only ever cried once in her life and the one time she did, her mother told her to never cry again. Ever since then, she has never shed a tear; not even when her mother was killed in a tragic freak accident. Unbeknownst to Eureka, she was also supposed to die, but Ander couldn’t bring himself to let her die despite the threats that Eureka possesses because of her tears.


Konigsberg, Bill . Openly Straight.
Rafe has been out of the closet for years. After transferring to an all-boys boarding school, however, he decides to keep his sexual orientation to himself. But when he meets Ben, a teammate on his soccer team, he wonders if their friendship-turned-more is worth outing himself for.

Laybourne, Emmy.
Monument 14: Sky On Fire.
When disaster strikes in the city of Monument, 14 kids are huddled in a Greenway store for shelter and survival. They decide their only chance of living through this nationwide disaster is to make their way to Denver International Airport where the military is evacuating people to safety. Will they make it alive or will they meet their doom like others have?

Richards, Natalie D.
Six Months Later.
Chloe Spinnaker is an average student just barely making the grade. But one day spring day, after falling asleep in study hall, she wakes up to snow and an empty classroom. Six months of her life has passed and she has no clue what happened except that now she is popular and has lots of friends that is, except Maggie, the one true friend she had before everything changed. Bewildered by the sudden time lapse in her life, Chloe decides to embark on a mission where she stops at nothing to figure out what happened to her and to get her memories back.

Rowell, Rainbow.
Eleanor & Park.
The year is 1986 when Eleanor arrives in town to live with her family and abusive step-father. It's been a year since the last time she lived with them, and she doesn't expect life to be any better. Park's life, on the other hand, is going steady. He's got a spot in the popular crowd and he's about to get his driver's license. But when the two meet on the bus, things change drastically. Even though they both know high school romances never last, they're going to try everything they've got to make it work. But in end, will everything they have be enough?

Sales, Leila. This Song Will Save Your Life.
Elise Dembowski is a high school loser. After reaching the tip of the iceberg and facing suicidal thoughts just months before, Elise is searching desperately for a way out of her nearly friendless life. When she accidentally finds a dance club called Start, Elise's life finally takes off as she meets new people, makes new memories, finds a new passion, and discovers herself.

Sanderson, Brandon.
Steelheart.
Ten years ago, Calamity came; a light in the sky that appeared one day and many believe that somehow it was connected to the rise of the Epics. These beings, once human, now have all kinds of amazing and dangerous powers that have enabled them to take over the world, and one could argue the most dangerous one is Steelheart. Able to bend the elements to his will and turn any non-living substance to steel, many say he's invincible because they've never seen him bleed -- except for David, who will stop at nothing to get his vengeance and see Steelheart bleed again.

Sanderson, Brandon.
The Rithmatist.
Joel wants to be a Rithmatist more than anything. Rithmatists have the power to bring two dimensional beings called Chalklings to life and defend against the wild chalkings that threaten to overcome the Rithmatists. Joel is student at Armedius Academy, a prestigious school where Rithmatists and wealthy children go to learn. When a string of kidnappings begin to occur Joel must gain assistance from the Rithmatists at Armedius Academy in order to bring order back to the academy.

Smith, Jennifer E.
This is What Happy Looks Like.
Ellie is the girl from Middle-of-Nowhere, Maine, and Graham Larkin is the hot superstar sensation from Middle-of-Everything, California. While Ellie hides from the media, Graham is constantly being watched by the paparazzi. However, an email mistake from Graham to Ellie starts an online relationship between these two teens, marking the start of a friendship and something more. Can Ellie accept Graham despite all the publicity? Or will the media be the demise of this couple's happiness?

Smith, Andrew
. Winger. Simon and Schuster. 
 Ryan Dean West is a fourteen year old junior trying to make everyone else blind to the one thing that makes him different than everyone else, his young age. This is not easy though, as he must prove himself to everyone - the girl of his dreams, his scary roommate, his friends, and the rugby team. As Ryan Dean tries to survive his junior year, he encounters horrifying injuries, moments of ecstasy, and shattering heartbreak.

Stine, R.L. A Midsummer Night's Scream.
Claire, a girl with a dream to become an actress, finally gets her chance when her parents decide to remake Mayhem Manor, a movie that was never finished because of 3 real deaths. As the camera starts rolling on the remake, strange things begin to happen. Like the little hairy man Claire meets by the makeup trailer one day. Who or what could be the cause of these actors’ deaths?

Tucholke, April.
Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea.
Violet, a sassy, independent, and sharp-tongued young lady, rents out the side cottage on her parent's estate in the hopes of making a little extra money to pay the bills. Her easygoing customer is as dangerous as he is mysterious, and murders and madness soon sweep her little home town. She takes it upon herself to understand him and the events, but only finds a darkness she can only hope to escape with her sanity and safety.

Winters, Cat.
In The Shadow of Blackbirds.
It’s the fall of 1918: The Spanish Influenza and the horrors of World War I grip the world with terror, and spiritualist photography, as the face of death seems to greet every household in America, has become increasingly popular. After her father is arrested as a suspected traitor, Mary Shelley Black travels to San Diego, hoping to escape the flu while living with her Aunt Eva. Only a few days after arriving, Mary Shelley is told that Stephen, her sweetheart who recently became a soldier, has been killed in France. But Stephen’s spirit hasn’t left yet, and he desperately needs Mary Shelley’s help.

Yancey, Rick.
The 5th Wave.
Present day – the aliens have invaded the planet, or as Cassie likes to call them, the Others.   Almost everyone has been killed off by the 4th Wave, and now, Cassie one of the few survivors living now during the 5th wave, roams the country while trying to  stay alive to find her brother – that is, if he's still alive. When she's taken in by a boy named Evan, she realizes that he's different. He's not like her, but he's all she's got. Cassie has to overcome her doubts and trust issues if she wishes to survive the 5th wave.

May book club

Friday, May 2, 2014

We will meet Thursday, May 8th, in the IMC during CAP. Looking forwards to June, our last two books will be Code Name Verity and Swim the Fly.


Code Name Verity



Swim the Fly

April Book Club

Friday, April 4, 2014

Looking ahead to the next two books we have Grave Mercy by Robin LaFevers and Little Brother by Cory Doctorow.

March Book Club

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

March Book Club is in the IMC, Thursday, March 6th, during CAP.

Here is a preview of the books for April!!

Hold Me Closer, Necromancer







 


 
'This Is What Happy Looks Like' Author Jennifer E. Smith
 
 

On Celebrity And Swine

Posted 4/2/13 12:05 pm EST by Amy Wilkinson in Page Turners

What if amongst your inbox onslaught of Living Social Deals and Aunt Bertha's vacation photos, you received a strange email asking you to walk a pet pig named Wilbur? Would you write back? Small-town girl Ellie O'Neill does, striking up a long-distance friendship with a fellow 17-year-old she only later discovers is a movie star. Pretty much the perfect email accident, huh? It's all the set up for Jennifer E. Smith's latest YA romance "This Is What Happy Looks Like," out today. We were charmed by the thoroughly modern tale of boy meets girl, and hopped on the phone to talk with Jennifer about researching Hollywood, a potential Wilbur spin-off and which celebrity she'd like to receive an email from.
Hollywood Crush: What was the inspiration for "This Is What Happy Looks Like"? Jennifer E. Smith: Because I have a very, very, very common name, often times people send emails to me and they drop a letter, or for whatever reason, my emails tend to go astray a lot, so I started thinking about who this other Jennifer Smith is who has been getting a lot of my emails for the last 10 years. What if she actually wrote to someone who sent one of those emails? What that might be like if it sort of sparked a connection between two people. It sort of seemed like an interesting way to start a love story, and I kind of backed into the whole movie-star aspect of this because I was just sort of thinking along the lines of who would benefit from that kind of relationship the most—that kind of anonymity in an email friendship or relationship can be kind of freeing. For someone in the spotlight, it would be hugely so. The email that sparks the relationship here is about Graham's pet pig. Why a pig? It's funny—when I started writing, I was trying to think of how that first scene would be, how this connection would start. And it was just going to be that he had a dog and needed a dog walker, and literally, as I was writing that line, all of a sudden without almost even thinking about it, it became a pig. I was kind of thinking, what would a 17-year-old kid, who's living on his own—and he's a big movie star with this money and this big house—I feel like he would have a slightly more unusual pet. And who doesn't love a pig? And I'm a big fan of "Charlotte's Web," as you can tell from the book, so it was kind of fun to get to weave in little bits of that too. The biggest complaint I've gotten so far is that there's not enough Wilbur. I didn't know he was going to be such a hit. I feel like I have to write a Wilbur spin-off at some point. It's funny you say that because I wrote in my notes, "Pig spin-off?" It's just so funny to me. I enjoyed the idea of him, but he was never going to be a big part of it. Every blogger so far has been, "I loved this book, but I wanted more of the pig." I'm toying with the idea of doing a little Wilbur story right now. Much of "Happy" is set in the world of movies (something we know a little bit about). Did you have to do research before you began writing? I did. I think living in New York City, you see a lot of sets sort of everywhere. They filmed part of the finale of "30 Rock" in the park across the street from my apartment, and I watched it from the window. You're constantly sort of stumbling across these sets. But I had a friend who was working on that show "Person of Interest," and there was a day they were filming out in Greenpoint [Brooklyn] in a park, and I went and spent the day out there. It was interesting to kind of get a feel for the pacing of it, which was surprisingly slow. I was able to get a call sheet and get a better feel for how everything works. Not to give too much away, but the ending is rather open for interpretation. Was that how you envisioned it originally, or was it more an evolution as you began writing? It was kind of an evolution. I think that it's realistic fiction, even if it is sort of a fantasy situation. But once you get the initial premise kicked off, it hopefully follows a very realistic course... I really like the idea of something open-ended—I really like leaving readers to sort of decide what they like to happen from there. If you were to receive a random email from a celebrity, from whom would you want it to be? That's a really hard question. I feel like the first person that pops in my head is Seth Meyers from "Saturday Night Live." I feel like he would have really good email banter. He would probably share my aversion to emoticons. And you're working on your next book. What can you tell us about it? It's called "The Geography of Us," and it's another teen love story. It starts with two teens who get stuck in the elevator during a blackout in New York City. They meet in this elevator during a blackout, and their families both go their separate ways, and it's about them finding their way back to each other. What are you reading right now? I'm reading "Eleanor & Park" [by Rainbow Rowell] right now. It's the sweetest, most wonderful—I'm loving it so much. It's another YA love story. It just came out recently, and I'm absolutely loving it... It feels very, very real. Sometimes unsettlingly so. "This Is What Happy Looks Like" is out now!

March Book Club

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

The two books for March are: Wee Free Men by Terry Pratchett. This is a great choice for those of you who enjoyed other works by Terry, especially Good Omens! The second book is Name of the Star by Maureen Johnson. It follows an American student who is starting school in London. Unfortunately, she arrives the same day as a series of murders that copy the Jack the Ripper murders from 1888! Here is a bonus, the author Maureen Johnson on a Jack the Ripper walking tour, pointing out the site of murders and the building where you can see Rory's window.

February Book Club

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Due to January's meeting being so late in the month and the start of testing, Febraury's book club meeting will be on Thursday, February 13th, in the IMC during CAP.  Yearbook pictures are coming up next Tuesday, February 11th.  Bring a book to hold during our picture and be sure to listen to the announcements for Book Club to be called down! 
The books for February are:
Raven Boys by Maggie Stiefwater

The Fifth Wave by Rick Yancey