Bog Child by Siobhan Dowd

Bog Child is about Fergus, a high school senior growing up on the border of Northern Ireland and The Republic of Ireland in the 1980s.  The Troubles, the conflict that rocked Northern Ireland between 1960 and 1998, colors the story: Fergus is being courted by the Provos*, a group that engages in terrorism, and his brother is in jail and participating in a hunger strike that will almost surely kill him.  While out cutting peat with his uncle, Fergus discovers the body of a child buried in a bog.  Archeologists are called, and research into the child’s origins shapes Fergus’ last summer before college.  As his own life descends into chaos, he imagines how the dead girl’s life must have been.

 
Bog Child is a really cool story about a guy who is trying to live a normal life in the middle of a crisis.  The story is well written, and Fergus has an authentic and strong voice throughout.  The many elements of the plot come together as Fergus tries to find peace with the decisions he has to make.  He struggles with balancing falling in love, getting the grades that will earn him a scholarship that will take him away from The Troubles, and trying to find a way to help his brother and his family.      


*Provos: Provisional Irish Republican Army

Classic read-alikes

If you're looking for a book to read or recommend and all that's coming to mind are "classic" youth and YA books, here are some contemporary books that you might like!

If you like this classic...
Try these contemporary titles!
The Chocolate War Bullyville, Prep
Z for Zachariah Gone, Life as We Knew It, The Dead and the Gone
The Witch of Blackbird Pond The Minister's Daughter, Witch Child
The Cay Hippie Chick, Overboard
Forever Story of a Girl, When it Happens
Homecoming Buried
Anne of Green Gables Hattie Big Sky, Billie Standish was Here, Dairy Queen
The Dark is Rising The Pellinor series, the Mortal Instruments series, the Keys to the Kingdom series
A Wrinkle in Time The Gideon trilogy, Bunker 10, London Calling, the Caretaker trilogy
Little Women Lucky
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory The Gollywhopper Games
The Saturdays The Penderwicks
The Narnia series Magic or Madness, the Dark Materials trilogy
Black Beauty Firehorse
Ballet Shoes The Year My Sister Got Lucky
The Babysitters' Club series The Peaches series, the Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants series
The Secret Garden The Gemma Doyle series, Flora Segunda
A Little Princess Pulling Princes, the Princess Diaries series, Finding Hattie
The Nancy Drew series Bad Kitty, the Enola Holmes series, Kiss Me Kill Me, Kisses and Lies
Pride and Prejudice The Luxe series, Cassandra's Sister
Watership Down The Redwall series
Sounder Laika
Hatchet The Killing Sea, Peak, The Winter Road
A Day No Pigs Would Die Out of the Dust
The Hobbit The Farsala trilogy, The Sea of Trolls, the Ranger's Apprentice series

 

Middle School Book Club: What We're Reading

The first book that members of the Middle School Book Club are reading is:

The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman

After the grisly murder of his entire family, a toddler wanders into a graveyard where the ghosts and other supernatural residents agree to raise him as one of their own.

This book won the 2008 Newbery Medal!

If you would like to join the Club, please email Sarah at sludwig@darienlibrary.org. We meet on the last Thursday of the month at 7:00 p.m and we serve pizza.

The Book Club is for rising 7th and 8th graders.

Twilight Screening and DVD Release Party

 

OMG Saturday is the day we’ve been waiting for!  The DVD! 


We’ll be watching it here in the community room (aka theatre, HUGE screen) at 2:00 on Saturday (21st).  There’s going to be snacks, drinks and did I mention the big screen with surround sound?


One thing though:  This movie is rated PG-13, so the event is for Teens 13+ only.

 

 

 

To get your Twilight fix before the big day, check this stuff out:

Twilight: The Complete Illustrated Movie Companion by Mark Cotta Vaz

Twilight by S. Meyer

New Moon by S. Meyer (or the Audiobook)

Eclipse by S. Meyer (or the Audiobook)

Breaking Dawn by S. Meyer (or the Audiobook)

Stephenie Meyer's non-Twilight book The Host (or the Audiobook)

Lords of Dogtown directed by Catherine Hardwicke (PG-13)

 Harry Potter: Goblet of Fire & Order of the Phoenix for some Robert Pattinson as Cedric Diggory

 

Image courtesy of flickr user i_heart_him

Schooled by Gordon Korman

Capricorn Anderson has never seen television, never handled money, never worn synthetic fibers or eaten pizza.  Raised by his hippy grandmother Rain, on a rural commune that has slowly dwindled to a population of two, Cap can drive, do Tai Chi, and grow fruits and vegetables.  When his grandmother falls and breaks her hip, homeschooled Cap is totally unprepared for life at Claverage (dubbed C-Average) Middle School. 

Clearly a freak, Cap quickly becomes the butt of practical jokes, especially the longstanding tradition of electing the biggest nerd as eighth grade president.  Cap, with his total inability to understand the modern world, makes an especially ripe target, since he believes everything his classmates tell him—whether it’s that bullfighting is a school sport, or that he must learn the names of everyone in school.   Cap’s adventure to fit in at his new school is hilarious, as are the reactions of his classmates and teachers as they try to figure out how to deal with his unique perspective on life and the eighth grade.  

Schooled is a quick read, and highly recommended for a laugh.

Teen Book Bloggers Review Aurora County All Stars

The Aurora County All-Stars by Deborah Wiles
Reviewed by L.

August 2007
Realistic Fiction
 
The Aurora County All-Stars, written by Deborah Wiles, is an extraordinary book. This is Deborah Wiles' third book, after Each Little Bird That Sings and Love, Ruby Lavender and all three are set in the same small town ("Halleluia") and feature many of the same characters. Having loved the other two books, I truly enjoyed reading more about the people I'd come to love.
 
The main character of this story is a baseball-obsessed boy named "House" who had to spend all of last year sitting on the sidelines because of a broken elbow. Nothing is going to keep him from playing in the big All-Star game this summer, nothing that is except the town's 200th anniversary pageant, which ends up being scheduled for the same EXACT time. The pageant is the biggest event ever to hit Aurora County, and all of the moms insist that the boys skip the game to attend the pageant. The pageant is being directed by the dramatic, bossy 14-year-old girl "Finesse" who was the one who broke House's arm last year. This time she's twisting it to get him and all the others to be in her production. Can everybody get what they want this year?
 
Deborah Wiles answer to that question is both funny and sad, with many touching moments that includes poetry by Walt Whitman. I thoroughly enjoyed this story and I couldn't put this book down until I was finished. Now I miss all the characters of Halleluia so much that I hope she writes another book very soon!

Teen Book Bloggers Review Savvy

Savvy by Ingrid Law
Reviewed by: L.

May 2008
Fiction
 
Savvy, written by Ingrid Law is a truly incredible book, with a huge variety of emotions swimming all throughout the book. Mibs Beaumont is just about to become 13 years old. In a normal family, that would just mean a party and some presents. But in the Beaumont family, it means something completely different. You see, when a Beaumont turns 13, they develop a special power, or as they call it, a savvy.
 
But the day before Mibs' special day, her Papa gets in a terrible car accident. After that Mibs doesn't dream of powerful savvys anymore, she just hopes for something that will save Papa. Mibs sneaks away her birthday party and the people watching over her and her two brothers to try a find a way to Papa. She boards a bus for the town of Salina, where her Papa is, but doesn't end up where she hopes to be at all. The bus ends up going in the other directions, and now Mibs must find a way to get back to Salina.
 
Mibs and her friends meet some kind and cruel people along the way. In her struggle to get back to Salina, Mibs must also try and figure out her savvy and how to use it.

Teen Book Bloggers Review Geek Magnet

geek magnetReviewer: A
Grade 7

by Kieran Scott
2008
Realistic Fiction
 
 
KJ Miller wants nothing more than to get rid of her “geek” guy-friends, who follow her around everywhere. In her opinion, they may be nice, but are also extremely annoying and make it almost impossible for the popular Cameron Richardson to notice her. So, when she meets Tama Gold, the popular queen, she thinks she finally has the perfect solution to all of her problems. Tama’s technique of “getting rid of geeks” is not all it seems, however. Geek Magnet is cleverly formatted as if it were a play, which corresponds to Grease, the play KJ and her friends are performing. It is a great book for light, fun reading and relates to high school social classes, as well.
 
Possibly Purchase
Geared towards middle school students

Teen Book Bloggers Review The Host

hostReviewer: K in 10th
Title: The Host
Author: Stephanie Meyer
Month/Year of Publication: 2008
Genre: Sci-Fi

Even if you don't like science fiction this is a great book. The souls have taken over earth and only a few rebel humans are left over. So when a soul named Wanderer takes the host body of one of the former adult rebels, she's in for a suprise. Her host body whose name is Melanie, won't let her body and mind be left to be taken over by Wanderer. Wanderer eventually gives into Melanie and they share her body, with Wanderer doing most of the bigger things. Wanderer and Melanie eventually stumble upon a group of rebel humans, a few of which Melanie know. The humans don't trust them because they know that they could be led to seekers to be infected with a soul. They lock Wanderer/Melanie up and it seems like they will never see the light of day again. What will happen to Wanderer and Melanie now?
 
Purchase Recommendation:
_x_ Definitely Purchase – one of the better books of the year
Age Recommendation:
_x_ This book is geared toward high school students/adults

Teen Book Bloggers Review World of Quest-Adventures for Dummies

Book: World of quest-adventures for dummies
Author: Jason T. Kruse
Rating(1-5): 5

 let me tell you, the title says it all! and this is the first book of the series so it's incomplete
 
Quest is a war hero, specifically a super hero with no record or memory of his past, was unjustly blamed and banned from the kingdom after a large battle fought for the king. now, 20 years later, the king's snobby 11 year old son, Nestor, comes to him and claims that he and Quest must search for a mythical weapon that was said to decide the fate of the world, and he Nestor, is the only one who can find it. now some of the most villainous creatures in the land are being sent by their dark lord to bring the boy back. Quest, now reluctantly must help the boy and save the very kingdom that banished him 20 years before. but the more trying obstacle Quest and Nestor seem to face is trying not to kill each other first.
 

---blog by katie99

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