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Dodie Ownes, editor of SLJTeen couldn't keep quiet about Printz honoree A. S. King's latest title, Reality Boy, and reviews it alongside teen-approved This is How I Find Her by Sara Polsky.
Both of our featured titles have ties to journalism. In Famous Last Words, Sam is the obituary writer for a local paper, while Holly is the copy editor for the high school newspaper in Since You Asked. Teens taking the summer off from writing may be inspired to return to the keyboard and see what kind of stories they can cook up themselves.
Bookmarked, SLJ's teen review group, comes up with three terrific titles to recommend, each completely different from each other, but all compelling stories. Get Stephanie Kuehn's Charm & Strange, Maurene Goo's Since You Asked, and Robyn Schneider's The Beginning of Everything on your library shelves-your teens will thank you for it.
There's something for everybody in this roundup of reviews from the teen book group, Bookmarked. Shawn Goodman's Kindness for Weakness is a contemporary coming-of-age story, much of which takes place in a juvenile detention center. Global warming meets mythological monsters and gods in Solstice, by P. J. Hoover. Kara Taylor's whodunit, Prep School Confidential, explores the obstacles a teen encounters as she tries to track down her roommate's murderer. Put these on your summer reading list!
Emily Murdoch explores kidnapping, selective mutism, and drug abuse in her debut novel 'If You Find Me'. Which group will get school funding, cheerleading or the robotics club? In Prudence Shen’s 'Nothing Can Possibly Go Wrong' the two cliques take the fight to the school election. If you never thought the Burning Man Festival would show up in teen fiction, think again—a local boy and a gypsy girl connect there in Elana K. Arnold's 'Burning'. Does R.L. Stine still have his horror chops? Read our reviewer's take on 'A Midsummer's Night Scream', and decide for yourself.
Teens from the Patrick F. Taylor Science and Technology Academy review new entries from YA author standbys Sarah Dessen and Frances Lia Block, and Aussie writer Jaclyn Moriarty's quirky new novel.
Nobody's Secret, the latest offering from Michaela MacColl, continues to get rave reviews. School Library Journal's reviewer says, "The fast-moving plot makes this a well-crafted page-turner. The dialogue rings true, both to the historical time and to the chronological ages and social status of the characters." And SLJTeen's reviewer agrees. M.G. Higgins's Bi-Normal is going on my to-read list. I just finished listening to David Levithan and John Green's Will Grayson, Will Grayson, and I'm wondering what advice their openly gay jock Tiny Cooper would give Higgins's protagonist, Brett Miller.
The leader of our Bookmarked review group, Elizabeth Kahn, is always looking for new ways to keep her students engaged and entertained. Elsewhere in this issue of SLJTeen you can read about a recent visit to her library by Ruta Sepetys, author of the award-winning Between Shades of Gray (Philomel, 2011). She also recently wrangled a stop from Cory Doctorow, who is on the road promoting his latest title, Pirate Cinema (Tor Teen, 2012). Her advice on getting authors to visit your school or library? Just ask—the worse they can so is "No," and odds are, eventually you are going to hear "Yes."
Last month, the Patrick F. Taylor Science and Technology Academy's juniors were treated to a talk by Ruta Sepetys, the author of the New York Times bestseller Between Shades of Gray (Philomel, 2011)—and it was engrossing from beginning to end. In fact, we didn't even want to return to class because we were so enthralled by her.