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Kern County Library Staff Suggests...: April 2009


Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Look What's New for Kids!

How to Get Rich in the California Gold Rush: An Adventurer’s Guide to the Fabulous Riches Discovered in 1848 by Tod Olson - The fictional Thomas Hartley gives readers a historical portrait of life in the California gold fields, offering a unique and witty snapshot of a key period in the economic development of the United States.

April Recommendations for Kids

Fiction

11 Birthdays by Wendy Mass - Amanda and Leo were born on the same day and have always celebrated their parties together and have been the best of friends—until their 10th birthday. Now, a year later they are stuck having their 11th birthday parties separately. They become stuck repeating their birthday over and over, and begin to experiment by making different choices hoping to escape the time trap.

Dinosaur vs. Bedtime by Bob Shea - A small, fierce, red dinosaur takes on the world, fighting against a big pile of leaves (ROAR! ROAR! ROAR!), a plate of spaghetti ("ROAR! CHOMP! CHOMP! ROAR! ROAR!"), or bath time and tooth brushing (ROAR! ROAR! ROAR!). The result of each battle is the proud announcement, “Dinosaur wins!” but what happens when Dinosaur faces the biggest challenge of all, bedtime? A delightful bedtime story for all dino-lovers.

What REALLY Happened to Humpty? by Jeanie Ransom - When Humpty Dumpty fell off of the Wall, everyone said it was an accident, but Joe Dumpty, a hard-boiled detective and Humpty's brother has his suspicions. Can he crack the case? An amusing romp through Mother Goose begs to be shared.



Nonfiction

Who’s Haunting the White House by Jeff Belanger - Mary Todd Lincoln was the first person to see a ghost in the White House. Read about other spooky sightings in our country's most famous house.

Aesop’s Fables Retold by
John Cech - Classic fables with fresh, new illustrations. Be reminded why the reward for hard work is a treasure we can all find by reading the fable of “The Farmer & His Sons”

April Recommendations for Teens

Fiction

Saga by Conor Kostick - Meet Ghost, she's a member of the anarcho-punk airboard gang who live to break the rules. They live in Saga, a futuristic corrupt monarchy which enforces a strict class system through hi-tech devices. Soon strange things start to happen in Saga, people appearing and disappearing, as if using special effects. Ghost and the Gang learn that Saga is not actually real but a sentient computer game, and the strangers are actually players on New Earth. The game attempts to enslave the population of New Earth. Ghost and her gang must stop it and join forces with Erik and his friends from Epic, a parallel game world. Find out what happens in this action packed gaming adventure that has an all too real feel to it.

Spirit by J.P. Hightman - Blackthorne, a town that everyone knows is haunted just happens to be the site winter carnival that hopes to breathe life into this old town. A train is bound to this mysterious place carrying the promise of fireworks, sleigh rides and skating…that is if it arrives. Tess and Tobias Goodraven are ghost hunters bound for Blackthorne to hunt ghosts, when the train they are on is derailed in mysterious woods, and find that it is haunted by a witch. Now Tess and Tobias have to use their wits and skills to combat this malevolent creature and ghosts of their past. This eerie ghost story is a great work of witches and ghosts in Victorian England.

Chalice by Robin McKinley - Mirasol is just a lowly beekeeper in an obscure corner of the Willowlands. She spends much of her time minding her bees and her goats with only passing interest in the rest of the Willowlands. When the Master and the Chalice, ruler and protector of the land are killed in a fire, the country goes into a panic for neither declared an heir before they died. The Circle has tracked down the last remaining heir of the Master, who left years ago to become a priest of Fire, and has agreed to come back. Mirasol is too caught up in her own problems to worry about the new Master, her bees are producing too much honey and her goats are fountaining milk! The Circle come and declares her the next Chalice, and Mirosol's life is changed forever. How will the new Master and Chalice bring order to the Willowlands? Find out in this fantastic fantasy from one of the masters of fantasy.

Vampire High by Douglas Rees - The first day at a new school can be unsettling, but it turns out there is something weird about the new school Cody Elliot is attending. Its name is Vlad Dracul and the principle is seven feet tall and has a pet wolf, the kids all are tall, silent and wear sunglass in the middle of winter. Soon it dawns on Cody that he attends a school of Vampires. It turns out the only reason he attends the school is to play Water Polo, since the Vampires or Jenti (its what they call themselves) have a thing for water and the school has to have water sports. This should be a dream come true; no homework, no studying, all he has to do is play sports, but something seems off to Cody. He starts to do the super hard homework, he befriends two of the Jenti, and when he donates blood things get out of control. This is a funny, and satirical look at vampires and people, and how to survive high school in one piece.

Order of Odd Fish by James Kennedy - Jo Larouche's arrival at the house of her aunt, Lily, was a mysterious drop-off in the laundry room. Attached to Jo's blanket was a note of caution that Jo was, in fact, "a dangerous baby." Now, thirteen years later, all of Jo's dangerous qualities have only added up to a glass of milk, according to Aunt Lily. When strange events unravel at Aunt Lily's costumed Christmas party, the quiet California desert life will soon no longer be able to contain Jo and her potential. Once a mysterious box drops from the clouds, addressed to Jo from none other than the Order of Odd-Fish, Jo and Aunt Lily find themselves heading for Eldritch City—where civilization is fashioned from the absurd. The Order of Odd-Fish is a fun, funny story full of oddball characters and the best cockroach butler you will ever find in a book. It appears as though pages have been ripped from Roald Dahl and Lewis Carroll, twisted all up, and then bound together with Monty Python-esque decoration—a truly entertaining book, fallen from the clouds . . . with your name on it.

April Recommendations for Adults

Fiction

Cutting for Stone by Abraham Verghese - Marion and Shiva Stone are twin brothers born of a secret union between a beautiful Indian nun and a brash British surgeon at a mission hospital in Addis Ababa. Orphaned by their mother's death in childbirth and their father's disappearance, bound together by a preternatural connection and a shared fascination with medicine, the twins come of age as Ethiopia hovers on the brink of revolution. Yet it will be love, not politics—their passion for the same woman—that will tear them apart and force Marion, fresh out of medical school, to flee his homeland. He makes his way to America, finding refuge in his work as an intern at an underfunded, overcrowded New York City hospital. When the past catches up to him—nearly destroying him—Marion must entrust his life to the two men he thought he trusted least in the world: the surgeon father who abandoned him and the brother who betrayed him.

A Darker Domain by Val McDermid - Past and present intertwine in this rare stand-alone novel of taut psychological drama—a brilliant exploration of loyalty and greed from the bestselling mistress of suspense. Fife, Scotland, 1985. Heiress Catriona Maclennan Grant and her baby son are kidnapped. The ransom payoff goes horribly wrong and Grant is killed. Her son disappears without a trace—until 2008, when a tourist in Tuscany stumbles upon dramatic new evidence that reopens the investigation. Fife 1984, at the height of the politically charged national miners' strike, Mick Prentice abandons his family to join the strikebreakers down south. Labeled a blackleg scab, he's as good as dead as far as his friends and relatives care. Twenty-three years later, a young woman walks into a police station to report Mick Prentice missing. Detective Karen Pirie, head of the Cold Case Review Team, wants to know why it's taken so long for anyone to notice. Pirie, already immersed in the Prentice investigation, works to unravel these seemingly unrelated mysteries that will lead her into a dark domain of violence and betrayal—darker than any she has yet encountered.

The Good Parents by Joan London - Award-winning Australian author London (Gilgamesh) delivers a tender and compelling tale of mother love and the harrowing moment when a daughter spreads her wings and vanishes from her parents' orbit. Maya de Jong is an eighteen-year-old country girl who moves to Melbourne and begins an affair with her new boss. When Maya's parents, Toni and Jacob, arrive for a visit, Maya is gone—no one knows where. Maya, for reasons of her own, leaves haunting clues in late-night calls to her brother at home, carefully avoiding detection by the two people who love her most. Ultimately, to find her daughter Toni will have to revisit a part of her past that she thought she had shut off forever—the closest she ever came to being a lost girl herself. Utterly contemporary and a story as old as humanity, a stunning portrait of familial love and how far we can drift apart in the moments between the words we speak.

The Help by Kathryn Stockett - Seemingly as different from one another as can be, three women will nonetheless come together for a clandestine project that will put them all in danger. In pitch-perfect voices, Stockett creates three extraordinary women whose determination to start a movement of their own forever changes a town, and the way women—mothers, daughters, caregivers, friends—view one another. Set in Jackson, Mississippi at the beginning of the Civil Rights Movement, The Help is a deeply moving novel filled with keenly observed characters, wicked humor, and hope. A universal story about the lines we abide by, and the ones we don't.

The Knees of Gullah Island by Dwight Fryer - Gillam Hale rises to fame and notoriety for the quality of his home brew. Though born to free parents, a black man in the mid-19th century South would be unwise to distinguish himself above his white neighbors. When jealous competitors kidnap him and his family and sell them to plantations throughout the South, Gillam is forced to confront the legacy of his rash decisions. The prequel to The Legend of Quito Road, is a timeless story of love, loss, hope, and rebirth exploring the complex racial dynamics that shaped the South through one family's extraordinary journey to freedom. The theme of this book is "bent knees straighten crooked deeds."



Nonfiction

The Lost City of Z: A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon by David Grann - In April of 1925, the last of the great Victorian adventurers, Percy Fawcett, left England for the deadly jungles of Brazil. Fawcett, a seasoned explorer, assembled a three-man team for the expedition to find El Dorado in the Amazon. Soon daily dispatches trickled to a stop and the explorers' disappearance remained a mystery until 2004. David Grann, a native New Yorker with no previous interest in or experience with jungle exploration, became captivated by the tale and launched his own Amazonian search for Fawcett. What he found there, some 80 years after Fawcett's disappearance, is a startling conclusion to this absorbing narrative. An excerpt from this fascinating book and the Talk of the Nation Feb. 26, 2009 interview with the author is available at National Public Radio.

A. Lincoln: A Biography by Ronald C. White - Using Lincoln's private notes and newly discovered letters and photographs, White sheds light on his family sorrows and struggles, and on his political and moral evolution. Meticulously researched, White creates an emotionally vivid portrait of the country lawyer who became our most beloved president. A transcendent, sweeping, passionately written biography that greatly expands our knowledge and understanding of its subject, A. Lincoln will engage a whole new generation of Americans. The Book Tour podcast, Feb. 24, 2009, of the author interview by host Lynn Neary is available at National Public Radio.

Nine Lives: Death and Life in New Orleans by Dan Baum - A multivoiced biography of this dazzling, surreal, and imperiled city through the lives of nine characters whose lives have been bracketed by two epic storms: Hurricane Betsy, which transformed the city in the 1960's, and Katrina, which nearly destroyed it. Above the canal and below, the lives of high school band directors, Mardi Gras Kings, jazz-playing coroners and transsexual barkeeps are windows into every strata of a city haunted by the possibility of disaster. All their stories converge in the storm, where some characters rise to acts of heroism and others sink to the bottom. But it is New Orleans herself—perpetually whistling past the graveyard—that is the story's real heroine. An extraordinary feat of reporting that allows Baum to bring this kaleidoscopic portrait to life with brilliant color and crystalline detail, Nine Lives shows us what was lost in the storm and what remains to be saved.

No Angel: My Harrowing Undercover Journey to the Inner Circle of the Hells Angels by Jay Dobyns - Leaving no skull of his harrowing journey unturned, Dobyns befriends bad-ass bikers, meth-fueled "old ladies," gun fetishists, psycho-killer ex-cons, and even some of the "Filthy Few"–the elite of the Hells Angels who've committed extreme violence on behalf of their club. Eventually, at parties staged behind heavily armed security, he meets legendary club members such as Chuck Zito, Johnny Angel, and the godfather of all bikers, Ralph "Sonny" Barger. Reminiscent of Donnie Brasco's uncovering of the true Mafia, this is an eye-opening portrait of the world of bikers, the most in-depth since Hunter Thompson's seminal work, one that fully describes the seductive lure criminal camaraderie has for men who would otherwise be powerless outsiders. Here is all the nihilism, hate, and intimidation, but also the freedom–and, yes, brotherhood–of the only truly American form of organized crime.

Eco Barons: The Dreamers, Schemers, and Millionaires Who Are Saving Our Planet by Edward Humes - From Pulitzer Prize winner Edward Humes comes the story of the remarkable visionaries who have quietly dedicated their lives and their fortunes to saving the planet from ecological destruction. A groundbreaking account that is both revealing and inspiring, Eco Barons tells of the former fashion magnate and founder of Esprit who has saved more rainforests than any other person and of the college professor who patented the "car that can save the world," the plug-in hybrid. There are the impoverished owl wranglers who founded the nation's most effective environmental group and forced a reluctant President George W. Bush to admit that humans cause global warming. And there is the former pool cleaner to Hollywood stars who became the guiding force behind a worldwide effort to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. At a time when there is no shortage of dire news about the environment, Eco Barons offers a story of hope, redemption, and promise—proof that one person with determination and vision can make a difference.
 
   
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