All posts by Sharon

Book Reviews!

After much deliberation I’ve decided to transform the Teen Zone blog into a book review blog. A new review will be posted every Tuesday and I want to encourage any teen who uses the Chelmsford Public Library to email me (phoran@mvlc.org) with any reviews you’ve written.  The reviews will be primarily of books, but if there is a CD, magazine, videogame or movie that you feel holds particular interest for teens–I’d be more than happy to post that as well.  To kick things off, I’m including a review of a new release entitled, Bliss by Lauren Myracle.

bliss2

Bliss has spent the entirety of her life living in unconventional places with her hippie parents, but when her father goes to Canada to evade the draft, Bliss moves in with her socially conservative Southern grandma and begins attending school for the first time.  While at school, Bliss hears the disembodied voice of a girl wanting blood and on a less supernatural, but even more terrifying note, Bliss makes several friends who aren’t what they seem and have deadly intentions regarding her.  Bliss is a strong, unique character who becomes enmeshed in bizarre and dangerous situations, set against the backdrop of the Manson family murders and subsequent trial, as well as the racial tension raging in the South at that time.  This is a fast-paced thriller with several terrifying characters that will stay with you long after you put the book down.

Happy Reading!

batgirl ~Tricia is the Teen Librarian at CPL and loves reading scary stories, especially when it’s dark and cold and rainy.

One Book Winner!!!

Chelmsford’s One Book for 2009 will be Greg Mortenson’s Three Cups of Tea:

The astonishing, uplifting story of a real-life Indiana Jones’ campaign to build schools in the most dangerous, remote, and anti-American reaches of Asia. Inspired by a chance encounter with impoverished mountain villagers, the author is building schools to provide a balanced education in an isolated and dangerous region.

Something wicked this way comes.

I absolutely LOVE Halloween; the candy, the costumes, the scary movies, but what I love most is spending the month of October getting ready for the big day by reading lots and lots of horror. I love reading horror fiction anytime of the year, but it’s a little more satisfying on chilly nights, with the leaves rustling, and the wind howling…

Here are 10 new(ish) Teen Horror Titles*:

Bliss by Lauren Myracle: Openhearted Bliss desperately wants new friends, making her the perfect prey of a troubled girl whose obsession with a long-ago death puts Bliss, and anyone she’s kind to, in mortal danger.

Night Road by A.M. Jenkins:  After a century of wandering Cole may still look like a teenager, but he’s known in the heme community for being observant, meticulous, and controlled—a master of life on the road.

Midnight Twins by Jacqueline Mitchard: Meredith and Mallory realize they have each been given a gift: Mallory can see deep into the past; Meredith can see the future. But when they discover that one boy is not what they imagined, their lives will be changed forever.

Generation Dead by Daniel Waters:  Phoebe is just your typical goth girl with a crush. He’s strong and silent…and dead.

Prom Nights from Hell by Meg Cabot, Kim Harrison, Michael Jaffe, Stephenie Meyer, and Lauren Myracle:  Far from gauzy, rose-colored clichés, the prom nights depicted in this anthology are surreal, scary, and often populated with monsters and zombies.

All Hallow’s Eve: 13 Stories by Vivian Vande Velde:  Creepy and gruesome, these horror stories all take place on Halloween night when high-school characters bridge the gap between the living and the dead.

Daemon Hall by Andrew Nance:  Ian Tremblin, the “King of Teen Scream,” holds a short-story contest in which the five finalists spend the evening with him in a haunted mansion, Daemon Hall.

Bonechiller by Graham McNamee:  Danny’s dad takes a job as caretaker at a marina on the shore of a vast, frozen lake in Harvest Cove, a tiny town tucked away in Canada’s Big Empty. If you’re looking for somewhere to hide, this is it.

City of Bones by Cassandra Clare:  When Clary Fray witnesses three tattoo-covered teenagers murder another teen, she is unable to prove the crime because the victim disappears right in front of her eyes, and no one else can see the killers.

Tantalize by Cynthia Leitich Smith:  This gothic-horror comedy, set in an Italian restaurant reopening as a vampire-themed supper club, begins when someone murders the chef and more brutal killings follow, while our heroine Quince scrambles to keep the family business alive and to escape with her own soul intact.

And to bring the list to lucky number 13, here are 3 favorites from the Master of the Macabre*:

Salem’s Lot by Stephen King:  Considered one of the most terrifying vampire novels ever written, it cunningly probes the shadows of the human heart — and the insular evils of small-town America.

The Shining by Stephen King:  Little Danny Torrence can read thoughts, and the stories in his father’s mind scare him nearly to death.

Cell by Stephen King:  What if a pulse sent out through cell phones turned every person using one of them into a zombie-like killing machine?

Don’t forget to join us here at CPL for a Scary Double Feature on November 1st.  The program will be held from 6pm until 10pm.  We’ll have plenty of popcorn and candy, so just bring yourself.

~Tricia is the teen librarian at CPL and loves everything about Autumn (especially if it’s related to Halloween) and is currently reading Jenny Green’s Killer Junior Year and The Dark Half.

*Synopses taken from editorial reviews found at Amazon.com.

Please allow me to introduce myself…

Hi there!  My name is Tricia and I’m the new Teen Services Librarian here at the Chelmsford Public Library.  I cannot begin to describe how excited I am to be a librarian (especially one who works with teens) and to be working in a library like CPL.  I work for you, so please, feel free to approach me whenever you have a question, need help, or just want to chat.

As a slightly more interesting way to introduce myself I’ve decided to share the following Top 5 lists:

My Favorite Teen Titles:

How I Spend My Weekends:

  • Baking pies (I’ve finally mastered my own pie crust)
  • Learning how to knit something other than a scarf
  • Running (albeit very slowly)
  • Playing Scrabble
  • Watching movies (lots and lots of movies)

My Favorite Places to Read:

  • On the train
  • In the reading rooms of old libraries
  • On the beach
  • Curled up on my couch
  • At the laundromat

Feel free to leave your own Top 5 lists in the comments!

~Tricia (aka cplteenlibrarian) is currently reading The Spell Book of Listen Taylor and A Prayer for Owen Meany.  What are you reading?