Posts Tagged ‘Best of 2011’

The Alex Awards, 2012

Tuesday, January 24th, 2012

YALSA’s 2012 Alex Awards were announced yesterday morning at the ALA Media Awards. The winners are (with links to the AB4T review of each title):

First, a huge congratulations to the Alex Awards committee members on their hard work, and on a wonderful mix of titles.

To my mind, three titles were obvious choices — The Night Circus, Ready Player One, and Robopocalypse. A few of the other titles were surprises to me, but I like to think of that as a reflection of the vast number of titles published for adults each year. And let’s face it —  teen appeal is subjective. Teens and their tastes and interests are as varied as those of adults. The fact that a few of these titles were not on our radar for best of the year shows just how diverse the possibilities are. Frankly, I was relieved that we had reviewed all ten titles!

The Alex committee also published their list of nominated titles yesterday, which includes 2 of the 3 titles I would have bled on the table for this year. The two included among the nominations were Among Others by Jo Walton and Once Upon a River by Bonnie Jo Campbell. I think I have expressed my love and enthusiasm for these two books often enough here, so I will leave it at that. Please take a look at the original reviews for more. The third is Little Princes by Conor Grennan, which is a wonderfully accessible, life and love-filled nonfiction title which I had been considering a natural choice. I also miss When She Woke by Hillary Jordan, which does not appear on the nomination list.

The list of  winners introduces a list of wonderful books to teens and the  librarians serving them. Publishers know that a nod from the Alex committee increases sales of a book, at times sending them to additional printings. The Talk-Funny Girl, In Zanesville and Big Girl Small are most likely to profit from this bump because I doubt that teen librarians were as aware of these books as they were of the others.

What about teen appeal? The Lover’s Dictionary is very, very popular in my library. National Book Award winner Salvage the Bones has a small but intense following — each reader has passed the book to a friend. And The Scrapbook of Frankie Pratt does very well on the display table; it is often read or browsed by students during a free period, if rarely checked out. Fans of Robopocalypse have a new book to look forward to — Amped is coming in June.

Let’s take a look at the overlaps among the three best of the year lists that address adult books for young adult readers: Best Adult Books 4 Teens 2011, Booklist Editors’ Choice Best Adult Books for Young Adults and the Alex Awards:

3 lists
The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern
Ready Player One by Ernest Cline

2 lists
Big Girl Small by Rachel DeWoskin
Girls Like Us by Rachel Lloyd
Jamrach’s Menagerie by Carol Birch
The Lover’s Dictionary by David Levithan
Once Upon a River by Bonnie Jo Campbell
Robopocalypse by Daniel H. Wilson
Swamplandia! by Karen Russell
When She Woke by Hillary Jordan

I look forward to reading your comments on the Alex selections!

Booklist Editors’ Choice

Thursday, December 22nd, 2011

Booklist Magazine released its Editors’ Choice lists earlier this week, including the annual Best Adult Books for Young Adults. Booklist is the only other review journal that creates a list sharing our criteria — books published for adults that have interest for young adults — so it is always fun to compare the two.

Booklist chose 18 titles; we chose 24.

The overlaps between the two lists are:

Jamrach’s Menagerie by Carol Birch
The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern
Once Upon a River by Bonnie Jo Campbell
Ready Player One by Ernest Cline
Swamplandia! by Karen Russell
When She Woke by Hillary Jordan
Girls Like Us: Fighting for a World Where Girls are not for Sale, an Activist Finds Her Calling and Heals Herself by Rachel Lloyd

Booklist includes three titles that we did not review here: Wingshooters by Nina Revoyr, The World Beneath by Cate Kennedy, and Earth: The Operators’ Manual by Richard Alley. I had all of them on my list to consider. We did not receive review copies of the first two, and I failed to review the third myself. (Yes, I do sometimes assign books to myself then get side-tracked. I’m working on that!)

The others, those that we did review here but did not choose for our Best list, were all reviewed very positively. They simply did not stand out to their SLJ reviewer as a best. And I think I may reveal that Zahra’s Paradise was reviewed too late. It would probably have found a place on our list too.

I mentioned earlier what a strong year it has been for adult books with teen appeal. I am looking forward to the last of the triumvirate – the Alex Awards – to be announced at the Youth Media Awards during ALA Midwinter in Dallas on Monday, January 23rd. My observation is that the Alex Awards tend to emphasize appeal. To my eyes, the Booklist Best list tilts toward the literary. So I expect differences. And, of course, the Alex committee is only allowed to honor 10 titles. I can’t imagine narrowing the field to just ten this year. Of course, that’s why it’s a committee process.

What might be considered Alex shoe-ins?  Oh, how I would love to speculate! I know what I would be fighting for, and I think I know what I would fight for in vain (if past experience is any indication). But it all comes down to those final discussions at the Midwinter conference itself. At least the Alex committee is now allowed to reveal a nominations list as well as the ten winners, which gives everyone more titles to recommend to teens.

Best Adult Books 4 Teens, 2011

Thursday, December 1st, 2011

The purpose of AB4T is to help librarians and other readers learn about books published for the adult market that have appeal to teens.

Currently, nearly 20 librarians review for the blog. All work with teens in either public or school libraries, in a variety of settings across the country. We began work on the Best list in September. I invited the reviewers to “nominate” titles they found to be among the best of the year. In order to make the final list each title needed at least two enthusiastic readers, so once we had a preliminary list together we signed up as second readers, many of us discovering new favorites among the titles reviewed by others.

2011 was a particularly strong year for adult books with appeal to young adult readers. In the end I narrowed down the long list to the titles displayed here, and that was a challenge. Truth is, I was asked to come up with a list of 15-20. You might notice that there are 24 here. Love that SLJ is flexible, because it would have been too painful to let even one of these go!

It’s hardly surprising that genre fiction is well represented here, as are debut authors. What stands out this year is the number of literary fiction titles with teen appeal. For example, three of our titles are among the five fiction choices on the New York Times “10 Best Books of 2011″. That’s unusual.

And finally, I’m very pleased to add that the list is back in the print magazine this year — the December 2011 issue is in the mail as we speak.

FICTION

Jamrach's Menagerie BIRCH, Carol. Jamrach’s Menagerie. (Doubleday)
Jaffy leaves behind his life on the streets of 19th-century London for an adventure to the Pacific Islands aboard a whaling ship in search of a mythical–yet far too real–dragon in this enormously satisfying novel of friendship, survival, and redemption.

Once Upon a River CAMPBELL, Bonnie Jo. Once Upon a River. (Norton)
Sixteen-year-old runaway Margo Green creates a new life on the river. Guided by a biography of Annie Oakley and an astounding ease with the natural world, Margo struggles to navigate the perils of human nature while she searches for the mother who abandoned her long ago.

Ready Player One CLINE, Ernest. Ready Player One. (Crown)
Imagine if Willie Wonka had been a video game designer. Now imagine a world where most people spend their time as avatars in a virtual reality. The founder of this virtual reality leaves his fortune to the first to win a contest, comprised of puzzles and tasks based on 1980s popular culture. Three teens compete to win against an evil conglomerate.

The Maid CUTTER, Kimberly. The Maid. (Houghton Harcourt)
This thrilling, visceral retelling of the life of Joan of Arc follows the rise of a poor, abused, illiterate girl who leaves her family and follows fervent belief and conviction to victory in battle and renown. Readers will yearn for a different story this time, to avoid the betrayal, abandonment and death at its end.

The Language of Flowers DIFFENBAUGH, Vanessa. The Language of Flowers. (Ballantine)
Alternate chapters weave Victoria’s past as a foster child and her present as a semi-homeless 18-year-old in Diffenbaugh’s moving debut. Victoria finds her first job in a florist shop, putting to use the language of flowers she first learned from her only real family, the foster mother she lost 10 years earlier.

The Glass Demon GRANT, Helen. The Glass Demon: A Novel. (Bantam)
In this creepy gothic novel, Lin’s family moves to a German village so her father can study the legend of the Allerheiligen Glass – medieval stained glass windows said to have been cursed by a demon, bringing death to those who gaze upon them. A brilliant combination of horror, fairy tales, mystery, and romance.

The Magician King GROSSMAN, Lev. The Magician King. (Viking)
Fillory is a magical utopia. With little for a monarch to do, Quentin goes on a quest. Alternating chapters relate his old friend, Julia’s backstory. While Quentin enjoyed life at Brakebills, Julia learned magic on the streets. Her journey is powerful and horrifying in this follow-up to The Magicians.

Alice Bliss HARRINGTON, Laura. Alice Bliss: A Novel. (Viking)
Alice’s idyllic small-town life is interrupted when her father’s army reserve unit is called up for active duty in Iraq. After he is declared missing in action, she turns to her best friend, the boy next door, for support.

Ten Thousand Saints HENDERSON, Eleanor. Ten Thousand Saints. (HarperCollins)
It begins with the drug-fueled last day in the life of 15-year-old Teddy McNicholas, and spirals from there into the lives of those who were closest to him. Henderson’s depiction of late-1980s New York is impressive–from the Straight Edge scene to the gay community’s grappling with HIV.

Blind Sight HOWREY, Meg. Blind Sight. (Pantheon)
When he is invited to live with his biological father for the summer, 17-year-old Luke is amazed to discover that the man is a famous television star. Chapters begin with the teen’s wonderfully witty college application essays, which reflect a new understanding of family dynamics and the workings of the human brain.

When She Woke JORDAN, Hillary. When She Woke. (Algonquin)
Reproductive freedom, racism, and the separation of church and state are only a few of the issues explored in this character-driven dystopian novel that bears parallels to The Scarlet Letter.

The Night Circus MORGENSTERN, Erin. The Night Circus. (Doubleday)
Le Cirque des Rêves appears without warning on the outskirts of cities around the world. Only open at night, it is filled with magic and theater, each tent a sensory experience, manipulated and sustained by two young people locked in a mysterious competition.

The Tiger's Wife OBREHT, Téa. The Tiger’s Wife. (Random)
In a war-torn Balkan country, a young doctor remembers her grandfather and tells a series of interlinked tales both historical and magical featuring the tiger’s wife and the deathless man. In this account of love, loss and war in the modern world, Obreht’s vivid writing creates unforgettable visions of unique settings.

Swamplandia! RUSSELL, Karen. Swamplandia! (Knopf)
Mere months after their mother dies, the Bigtree family’s alligator-wrestling theme park and cafe, Swamplandia!, goes out of business, sending the abandoned siblings on individual perilous journeys away from home in this dazzling, affecting, funny novel.

The Little Bride SOLOMON, Anna. The Little Bride. (Riverhead)
In late 19th-century Russia, Minna, a 16-year-old servant, wishing for a new life in America, signs up with Rosenfeld’s Bridal Service. She is sent to the hardscrabble South Dakota Territory where both her devoutly orthodox husband-to-be and his crude one-room dugout fall far short of her dreams.

The Homeland Directive VENDITTI, Robert & Mike Huddleston. Homeland Directive. (Top Shelf)
This tightly plotted thriller of a graphic novel probes the fine line between government protection and privacy invasion. The United States has determined that its residents can be investigated for suspicious activities by mining everyone’s data DNA, the sum of each person’s online transactions and activities.

Among Others WALTON, Jo. Among Others. (Tor)
As she recovers from the confrontation with her mother that killed her twin sister, Mori keeps a journal permeated by a love of reading in this mesmerizing fantasy novel. Sent to a boarding school where she is desperately lonely and abandoned by the fairies who once kept her safe, Mori finds refuge in books, which are her instruction manuals and her joy.

Robopocalypse WILSON, Daniel H. Robopocalypse. (Doubleday)
In this artificial intelligence blockbuster, the heroic actions of a handful of characters are told in the form of briefing reports recovered after the Robot Wars that nearly exterminated humanity. This format with its emphasis on survival in battle and full-throttle action will appeal particularly to those who enjoy science-gone-wrong thrillers.

Retribution Falls WOODING, Chris. Retribution Falls. (Spectra)
Captain Darian Frey loves the Ketty Jay, his airship, and he’ll do whatever it takes to keep flying. After he and his crew of misfits take on a job that goes horribly awry, they find themselves aligned against a conspiracy and trying to save the day in this action-filled, steampunk adventure.

NONFICTION

How I Killed Pluto and Why It Had It Coming BROWN, Mike. How I Killed Pluto and Why It Had It Coming. (Spiegel & Grau)
Brown gives a charming account of the astounding series of discoveries that result in the down-grading of Pluto from planet status. The combination of engaging humor, accessible science, and personal anecdote makes for a lively glimpse into an extremely successful career in astronomy.

Little Princes GRENNAN, Conor. Little Princes: One Man’s Promise to Bring Home the Lost Children of Nepal. (HarperCollins/Morrow)
What was intended to be a 90-day experience working in an orphanage became much more on the day Grennan learned that many of his young charges were actually the victims of a child trafficker. In this adventurous, funny and even romantic book, he dedicates himself to reconnecting the children with their families in remote Nepalese villages.  

Girls Like Us LLOYD, Rachel. Girls Like Us: Fighting for a World Where Girls Are Not for Sale, an Activist Finds Her Calling and Heals Herself. (HarperCollins/Harper)
Lloyd began working in the sex industry at age 17 (dancing in a club). In her memoir, she expands the narrative of her personal decisions into an understanding of the larger societal issues involved in women’s choices.

Feynman OTTAVIANI, Jim. Feynman. (First Second)
Nobel-Prize-winning physicist Richard Feynman was a researcher, professor, civilian scientist at the birth of the atomic bomb, and famed lecturer. His quirky personality and his passion for physics and for fun are presented in energetic, colorful images, as are his more important scientific theories.

Vietnamerica TRAN, GB. Vietnamerica: A Family’s Journey. (Villard)
In this intriguing graphic memoir, Tran, born and raised in the United States, returns to Vietnam to research his family’s history, especially their experiences of the Vietnam War and then adapting to life as immigrants living in the United States.

National Book Awards & AB4T Best of the Year

Tuesday, October 18th, 2011

No, not the Young People’s Literature category. Many, many others have done a great job of writing about those unfortunate events. I would like to take a brief look at the NBA Fiction finalists.

They are (from the NBA website):

Andrew Krivak, The Sojourn (Bellevue Literary Press)

Tea Obreht, The Tiger’s Wife (Random House)

Julie Otsuka, The Buddha in the Attic (Alfred A. Knopf, an imprint of Random House)

Edith Pearlman, Binocular Vision (Lookout Books, an imprint of the Department of Creative Writing at the University of North Carolina Wilmington)

Jesmyn Ward, Salvage the Bones (Bloomsbury USA)

I was happy to see three titles among the five nominees with genuine appeal for teen readers. Click on the links to see our AB4T reviews.

In my library, the most popular of the three is The Buddha in the Attic. Not only was it one of the first two books checked out this fall when we returned to school, it was placed on hold the very next day by a student who talked to me about her love for Otsuka’s first novel, When the Emperor was Divine.

Speaking of the best of the year, all of us who review for this blog are right now embroiled in choosing the Best Adult Books 4 Teens, 2011. We are narrowing our year’s reading down to the 15 to 20 best. It’s a challenge. What are we really looking for? As one reviewer, Mark Flowers, wrote in an e-mail today, are we looking for “great books with teen appeal, books with great teen appeal, or great books with great teen appeal?”

Ideally the latter, but it’s hard not to be swayed by a truly great novel that might only appeal to a certain segment of teens, or that popular genre thriller that has appeal in spades and less literary panache. I speak in suppositions, of course!

So, tell us. What were the best adult books (fiction, nonfiction, graphic novel, poetry, you name it) with teen appeal that you read this year? What adult books did the teens you know enjoy?

Best Books of the Year so far, 2011

Monday, June 20th, 2011

Why wait until the end of the year?

With ALA Annual approaching, where we all begin to look forward to fall books, this is a good time to look back at the best of the best of the year so far.

Each blog reviewer was asked to choose up to 3. We aimed (as always) to highlight books that offer a combination of quality and teen appeal. Some reviewers offer a reason for choosing the book as a “best,” others a brief plot summary. Either way, click on the link for the full blog review.

Agree or disagree?  Please share your own favorites in the comments!

Fiction

After the Golden Age by Carrie Vaughn
Probably the most teen appeal of the three I’ve chosen. Really fun, but thought-provoking at the same time.  (Mark Flowers)

Alice Bliss by Laura Harrington
Alice’s idyllic small-town life is interrupted when her father’s army reserve unit is called up for active duty in Iraq. (Angela Carstensen)

Among Others by Jo Walton
A love of reading permeates this mesmerizing fantasy about Mori’s life after her twin sister’s death and surviving her mother’s attempts to destroy her. (Angela Carstensen)

Big Girl Small by Rachel DeWoskin
Sixteen year-old Judy has the body of a little person, but the fiery drive of a dragon master, until the day she finds herself in the center of a sex scandal. (Diane Colson)

Blind Sight by Meg Howrey
Seventeen year-old Luke is amazed to discover that his biological father is a famous television star. Even more amazing is the bond that develops between father and son, and Luke’s gradual understanding of his family. (Diane Colson)

The Cloud Roads by Martha Wells
A rousing fantasy about a lost boy who can shift from “groundling” to a winged form, and who discovers he has a role to play in saving the world. (Karyn Silverman)

The Glass Demon by Helen Grant
The development of mood, setting and rising tension pay off in a harrowing climax. The savvy and complex teen characters have an original point of view that keeps readers caring about their story.  (Priscille Dando)

Jamrach’s Menagerie by Carol Birch
Jaffy leaves behind a life on the streets of 19th-century London for adventure on the high seas in this enormously satisfying novel of friendship, survival, and redemption. (Connie Williams)

The Lost Gate by Orson Scott Card
This speculative fiction coming of age tale has Danny discovering his mettle when he learns he may be the most powerful gatemage ever born. Too bad his family wants him dead. (Charli Osborne)

Robopocalypse by Daniel H. Wilson
This will be a go-to book for librarians wanting to satisfy reluctant teen readers – a barely plausible war thriller told in brief episodes of relentless action. (John Sexton)

Sister by Rosamund Lupton
A really well told mystery with great characters and a *completely* unexpected ending. (Carla Riemer)

Spiral by Paul McEuen
Tight plotting, three dimensional characters and seamless integration of science make this a stand out thriller. (Priscille Dando)

Swamplandia! by Karen Russell
A dazzling, affecting, funny novel in which three abandoned siblings each journey away from their isolated island home at their own peril. (Angela Carstensen)

Ten Thousand Saints by Eleanor Henderson
Haven’t had a chance to try this one out on teens yet, and I have a feeling it might be a hard sell, but the book is just too good not to include. (Mark Flowers)

The Tiger’s Wife by Téa Obreht
In a war-torn Eastern European country, a young doctor remembers her grandfather and tells a series of interlinked tales both historical and magical. (Karyn Silverman)

Touch by Alexi Zentner
Grief and loss across generations in the Far North, Touch is story-telling at its best. (John Sexton)

The Uncertain Places by Lisa Goldstein
A gripping fantasy appealing even to non-fantasy fans like me. The story stays with you in a very haunting way. (Caroline Bartels)

The Wise Man’s Fear by Patrick Rothfuss (Kingkiller Chronicles #2)
Nothing else manages this blend of genuine adolescent voice; sophisticated, beautiful writing; and heart-wrenching, pulse-pounding action. (Karyn Silverman)

Nonfiction

The Dressmaker of Khair Khan: Five Sisters, One Remarkable Family, and the Woman Who Risked Everything to Keep Them Safe by Gayle Tzemach Lemmon
Kamela Sediqi turned to sewing to support her extended family after the Taliban took over Kabul and made her dream of being a teacher impossible. (Jane Ritter)

History of a Suicide: My Sister’s Unfinished Life by Jill Bialosky
Teen readers, especially those impacted by suicide, will find insight in this unforgettable account of the tragic circumstances and aftermath of the death of the author’s sister by suicide. (John Sexton)

Little Princes: One Man’s Promise to Bring Home the Lost Children of Nepal by Conor Grennan
A fast funny read with romance, adventure and a good cause. Teens will relate, enjoy reading and plot how to change the world if they aren’t already doing so. This book has taken off in schools across the country. (Amy Cheney)

Paper Cutting: Contemporary Artists, Timeless Craft by Laura Heyenga
A stunning look at the work of 26 contemporary cut-paper artists. (Jane Ritter)

Graphic Novels

The Listener by David Lester
Louise, a contemporary young Canadian sculptor, travels to Europe after an activist friend dies during a protest in Vancouver. There she confronts the influence of the Third Reich on international art and politics, past and present. (Francisca Goldsmith)

Vietnamerica by GB Tran
The best GN I’ve seen in a while. Intriguing story, perfect structure, excellent blending of art and words. (Mark Flowers)

Poetry

Ardency: A Chronicle of the Amistad Rebels by Kevin Young
A chorus of voices brings the story of the Amistad to life, from hymns and letters to speeches and a reading primer. (Karlan Sick)