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Staff picks are selected each month and archived here. Check back
often to find more suggestions for great
reading. To view previous staff picks, please click on the dates below: Back to Current Picks |
September 2004
Featuring Authors Attending The Baltimore Book Festival See our Events Page for more details
"Galileo and the Stargazers" "Animal Tales" Jim Weiss Tapes $9.98 CDs $14.98 Jim Weiss is a professional storyteller
having produced 34 storytelling recordings. His live performances entertain
adults and children alike who upon hearing him, experience the feeling of
having met characters from a wide range of classic literature and folktales.
Two of his storytelling recordings include: Animal Tales - A delightful collection of several Aesop Fables, plus lively tales from Grimm, Chaucer, and others. Appropriate for Ages 3 and up. Galileo and the Stargazers - Historic icons of the sciences are turned into real people weaving discovery with tales of great thinkers who changed the world. Recommended for Ages 7 to adult.
The Lost Colony of Roanoke Illustrated by Hudson Talbott; Written by Jean Fritz Published by Penguin Putnam $16.99 -Lisa Cody Exiled: Memoirs of a Camel
Written by Kathleen Karr Published by Marshall Cavendish $15.95 Exiled is an outstanding
imagining of the experience of the camels brought to Texas to be part of
the United States Camel Corps in 1856. The story is told in first
person from the point of view of one of the camels, young Ali, beginning
with his childhood in the Middle East and continuing through the dissolution
of the United States Camel Corps at the outbreak of the Civil War. The
story is well-researched and peopled with the historical personalities originally
involved in the experiment, as well as the camel whose skeleton now resides
in the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History. The story is followed
with an author's note about the actual historical details. I also
recommend her book Skullduggery which focuses on a bizarre branch
of medicine: phrenology. The story is exciting and filled with adventure
as well as historical detail.
-Emma Casale
The Flag Maker
Written by Susan Campbell Bartoletti; Illustrated
by Claire A. Nivola
Published by Houghton Mifflin
$16.00
Susan Campbell
Bartoletti's The Flag Maker tells the story of the women who sewed the original
Star-Spangled Banner--the flag that survived the British attack on Fort McHenry
and inspired Francis Scott Key to write the poem that would later become our
national anthem. Through the eyes of Caroline, the twelve-year-old daughter
of flag maker Mary Pickersgill, we see this giant flag
gradually taking shape as war draws ever closer to Baltimore. The book includes historical notes and a list of "Flag Facts", and Bartoletti draws a faithful picture of life in Baltimore in the early 1800s, acknowledging the sad fact that at least one of the women who helped to create this famous symbol of freedom was Mary Pickersgill's slave. Bartoletti's simple narrative style is well complemented by Claire A. Nivola's watercolor illustrations, which capture the 'look' of early American art. -Ben Bruch
Miracle's Boys Written by Jacqueline Woodson Published by Penguin Putnam $15.99-hardcover $5.99-paperback Selected for Baltimore's Annual Citywide Reading and Discussion Program Lafayette was
there when their mom doesn't wake up one morning. . . for good. Things
are never the same after that for him or his older brothers, Tyree and Charlie.
Miracle's Boys is the story of what keeps the boys together
without parents to guide them and despite the challenges of an urban setting. -Donna Basik
Behind You Written by Jacqueline Woodson Published by Penguin Putnam $15.99 In Behind You,
Woodson deftly weaves together the experiences of those left behind after
the tragic death of a teenage boy. It is a story of reconciliation
which supports the idea that the meaning of a person's death is truly the
meaning it holds for those touched by his or her life. This book is
a welcome addition to the youn adult list in a city where so many teens are
losing their loved ones through homicide. -Jennifer Williams
Not Quite a Stranger Written by Colby Rodowsky Published by Farrar, Strauss, and Giroux $16.00 After his mother's death, 17 year-old Zack arrives in Baltimore, Md., to find the father that he has never met. Arriving unannounced, he is met by his 13 year -old half-sister, Tottie, whose world is suddenly up-ended by the fact that a virtual stranger is now sharing her home. Rodowsky's skill is having the story unfold in alternating chapters between Zach's and Tottie's points of view evoking the emotions of two adolescents in crisis along with the family's adjustment to the situation. -Debbie Nelson
A Northern Light Written by Jennifer Donnelly Published by Harcourt Brace $17.00-hardcover $8.95-paperback With the backdrop of the Adirondack
mountains and lakes, inherently full of their own mystery, an endearing story
unfolds of two girls whose paths fatefully cross. 16 year-old Mattie
Gokey's story is told in flashbacks from her current job as hired help at
a resort. She knows something no one
-Debbie Nelsonelse does, but is torn between loyalities to old promises and what others want her to do, and what she knows is right and she owes to herself. The Willoughby Spit Wonder Written by Jonathon Scott Fuqua Published by Candlewick $15.99 In this touching
story, Carter Johnston, a boy experiencing the first stirrings of manhood,
fights the reality of his father's failing health by attempting something
extraordinary. Set in the familiar beauty of the Chesapeake Bay region,
Fuqua's novel captures the natural richness and the dangers of a boyhood
on the water. A fine, fine novel. -Jennifer Williams
T is for Terrible Written and Illustrated by Peter McCarty Published by Henry Holt $15.95 In this new book,
a T-Rex explains that he can't help being big and scary. He can't
help that he has a big appetite, or that he doesn't eat trees. He
started out like everyone else, hatching from an egg and having a mother.
He grew just like everybody else and he couldn't help that he grew
so big. McCarty's illustrations are soft and inviting. This
is a great picture book for the young dinosaur lover and a pleasant introduction
to the terrible T-Rex. -Lisa Cody
Thunder Rose Written by Jerdine Nolen; Illustrated by Kadir Nelson Published by Harcourt Brace $16.00 Jerdine Nolen's Thunder Rose is a new twist on an
old American tradition--the "tall tale". The hero of this story is Rose herself,
an African-American cowgirl born during an electrical storm, who soon becomes
known throughout the West for her prodigious strength and her ability to control
thunder and lightning. The source of Rose's power, we are told, is her song,
which grows out of the "fortunate feeling" she has in her heart, a sense of love and optimism that can tame stampeding cattle or angry tornadoes. Nolen's tale, which was inspired by the bravery of the freed African slaves who made new lives for themselves in the Old West, is brought to life by Kadir Nelson's award-winning illustrations. -Ben Bruch
The Castle of The Cats Retold by Eric A. Kimmel; Illustrated by Katya Krenina Published by Holiday House $16.95 This retelling
of the latvian folktale "The Palace of the Cats" (also know as "The White
Cat") is beautifully illustrated and simply retold. A farmer sends
his three sons on three quests to determine who will inherit the farm. The
youngest son happens upon a castle inhabited only by cats and ruled over
by their beautiful white cat queen. She gives him the items he has
been sent questing for by his father, and of course, they wind up living
happily ever after. Eric Kimmel is an excellent storyteller and has
retold a number of traditional folk tales from all over the world. -Emma Casale Leaping Beauty Written by Gregory Maguire Published by HarperCollins $15.99 Leaping Beauty - Gregory Maguire Eight "fractured"
fairy tales are presented in this clever, funny, modern, and up-beat collection
of stories casting zany animals as the well-known characters.
-Debbie Nelson
Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister Written by Gregory Maguire Published by HarperCollins $25.00-hardcover $14.95-paperback From the bestselling
author of Wicked, this outstanding retelling of Cinderella is set
in Renaissance Holland, and is told from the point of view of the stepsisters,
neither of whom is wicked, merely ugly. Maguire skillfully creates
each of his characters and allows the reader to experience compassion and
understanding for each of them, even the wicked stepmother. While this
book was intended for adult readers, it is well-suited to the sophisticated
young adult reader. I absolutely loved this book and consider it one
of the best Cinderella retellings I have ever read. -Emma Casale
Wizard at Work Written by Vivian Vande Velde Published by Harcourt Brace $16.00-hardcover $5.95-paperback This entertaining
collection of stories focuses on a wizard looking forward to his summer
vacation: gardening, fishing and napping. Unfortunately, a wizard's
work is never done and his vacation keeps getting interrupted: to rescue
a princess, lift a vile curse, confront a ghost. . . This book is
a wonderful read. -Emma Casale
Heir Apparent Written by Vivian Vande Velde Published by Harcourt Brace $17.00-hardcover $6.95-paper Giannine has been
looking forward to playing the new virtual reality game Heir Apparent.
Finally she is getting the chance. The game is extremely
difficult with numerous ways to get your character killed, forcing her to
start the game over. While she is playing the game, protesters attack
the arcade and damage the equipment. Now Giannine is in the game for
her life. She can't be disconnected from the equipment until she has
won the game and if she doesn't win within a certain period of time, she
will actually die. A fun read, with a little surprise on the very last
page. Don't look until you finish the book!!! -Emma Casale
The Stink Files Dossier 001: The Postman Always
Brings Mice Written by Jennifer Holm and Jonathan Hamel Published by HarperCollins $14.99 This entertaining
espionage story is told from the feline point of view of James Edward Bristlefur,
former pet to the director of a very secret intelligence agency in Britain.
When his owner is poisoned, James finds himself being sent to live with
a woman in Norway. The only problem is that he was put on the wrong
plane and instead winds up in a humane society in Newark, New Jersey. He
is adopted by a boy named Aaron. James sets out to find out who caused
him to be put on the wrong plane and who has been framing him for behaving
badly in the house, while developing a relationship with his new owner Aaron.
This book is a fun read with a bit of heart and a good amount of suspense.
Look for its sequel in October.
-Emma Casale
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