Sunday, May 31, 2009

Must Read: Thirteen Reasons Why by Jay Asher

Hello again. It's me, Cindy from the Valley Library and I'm wearing my teen hat today. I just finished re-reading THIRTEEN REASONS WHY by Jay Asher the better to prepare for a booktalking event on Wednesday and MUST share.



Clay comes home one afternoon to find an unassuming shoe-box sized package addressed to him sitting on his doorstep. There's no return address. Curious, he opens the box and discovers it to be empty aside from seven loose cassette tapes, their sides numbered 1-13. Still curious, he plops the 1st tape into his dad's stereo and presses play...only to hear a voice from beyond the grave: "Hello, boys and girls. Hannah Baker here...I'm about to tell you the story of my life. More specifically, why my life ended. And if you're listening to these tapes, you're one of the reasons why."

Hannah, you see, committed suicide two weeks previously. And apparently she still has a score, make that 13 scores, to settle. But Clay, well, Clay doesn't know WHY he's been included in Hannah's head games. Clay has secretly liked Hannah for years and was hurt by her death. But not as hurt as he's about to be as he forces himself to listen to the tapes and learns things about his classmates and supposed friends he never suspected and never wanted to know.

This is an amazingly painful and powerful story. It's not comfortable to read. Or listen to--the audio is amazing and the Hannah segments give me chills. There's a lot of heavy stuff being discussed here--suicide, date rape, teen drinking, bullying, harassment, the list goes on. But ultimately, this story illustrates how our actions or lack thereof profoundly impact the people around us. How we're all connected, whether we want to be or no. As such, I think it's a MUST read for teens (let's say grade 9 and above) and people working with teens. Go check it out now.

Your Mission Should You Choose to Accept It: Must Reads!

Hello. Cindy Benson from Spokane Valley Library here. To get the discussion ball rolling, I thought I'd suggest an initial topic: MUST READS. You know the ones, the books you re-read on a regular basis, the books you push on every customer who comes along, the books you buy for all your friends and family, the books you'll rave about to anyone who'll stand still long enough to listen? Yeah, those.

So, what are your must reads? Share, do! There are no limits here--adult, children's, teen, fiction, non-fiction, you name it.

Summer reading is almost upon us and we're about to be descended upon by a horde of folks who are dying for a good book. What would YOU recommend?

Welcome to SCLD's Book Discussion Blog!

A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away...

Okay, not THAT long ago. Back when the libraries were closed on Friday mornings we used to booktalk our favorites at joint regional meetings. And Region II staff met monthly to discuss youth books. In those meetings we'd pick genres or award categories (challenging ourselves to read outside of our comfort zones) and get together over lunch to rant or rave about what we'd read. It was a great opportunity to pick up new titles for readers' advisory and to practice our booktalking and book discussion skills. Open hours change, though, and our monthly bookclubs and joint booktalking sessions came to an end.

Then along came Learning 2.0...and lo, this blog was born.

This blog has been created to provide SCLD staff with a forum to show off their mad 2.0 skillz, share what they're reading, to comment on what others are reading, and to recommend titles. In short, to discuss something near and dear to our hearts--books!

For those of you who've been blogging as part of Learning 2.0, this format shouldn't hold any surprises. Post about what you're reading, or comment on others' posts. (If you want to post a new topic, you'll need to be an author. If you aren't one already, please contact Cindy at cbenson@scld.org and she'll add you to the author list. You'll need to have a Gmail account to participate, so be sure to set one up in advance if you don't already have one.) As a courtesy to others, please use a descriptive title for your entry so folks following along won't have to guess what you're writing about.

Now get to reading, sharing, and discussing!