Witchy Reads!

A selection of fiction titles for your reading pleasure. Happy Halloween!

Cabot, Meg. Jinx. 2009. Sixteen-year-old Jean “Jinx” Honeychurch, the descendant of a witch, must leave Iowa to live with relatives in Manhattan after the first spell she casts goes awry, but she will have to improve her skills to stop her cousin from practicing black magic that endangers them and the boy they both like.

Coakley, Lena. Witchlanders. 2011. After the prediction of Ryder’s mother, once a great prophet and powerful witch, comes true and their village is destroyed by a deadly assassin, Ryder embarks on a quest that takes him into the mountains in search of the destroyer.

Duncan, Lois. Gallows Hill. 1997. Role playing takes on a terrifying cast when 17-year-old Sarah, who is posing as a fortune-teller for a school fair, begins to see actual visions.

Gray, Claudia. Spellcaster. 2013. Descended from witches, high school senior Nadia can tell as soon as her family moves to Captive’s Sound that the town is under a dark and powerful spell. Then she meets Mateo, the teenage local whose cursed dreams predict the future, and they must worktogether to prevent an impending disaster that threatens the entire town.

Green, Sally. Half Bad. 2014. In modern-day England, where witches live alongside humans, Nathan, son of a White witch and the most powerful Black witch, must escape captivity before his seventeenth birthday and receive the gifts that will determine his future.

Hearn, Julie. The Minister’s Daughter. 2005. In 1645 in England, the daughters of the town minister successfully accuse a local healer and her granddaughter of witchcraft to conceal an out-of-wedlock pregnancy, but years later during the 1692 Salem trials their lie has unexpected repercussions.

Hemphill, Stephanie. Wicked Girls: a novel of the Salem Witch Trials. 2010. Wicked Girls is a fictionalized account of the Salem witch trials told from the perspective of three of the real young women living in Salem in 1692. Ann Putnam Jr. plays the queen bee. When her father suggests that a spate of illnesses within the village is the result of witchcraft, Ann grasps her opportunity. She puts in motion a chain of events that will change the lives of the people around her forever.

Horowitz, Anthony. Raven’s Gate. 2005. Sent to live in a foster home in a remote Yorkshire village, Matt, a troubled fourteen-year-old English boy, uncovers an evil plot involving witchcraft and the site of an ancient stone circle.

Kontis, Alethea. Hero. 2013. Saturday Woodcutter accidentally conjures an ocean in the backyard and, with sword in tow, sets sail on a pirate ship, only to find herself kidnapped and held captive by a mountain witch with the power to destroy the world.

Lamb, Victoria. Witchstruck. 2013. Meg Lytton has always known she is different — that she bears a dark and powerful gift. But in 1554 England, in service at Woodstock Palace to the banished Tudor princess Elizabeth, it has never been more dangerous to practise witchcraft. Meg knows she must guard her secret carefully from the many suspicious eyes watching over the princess and her companions. One wrong move could mean her life, and the life of Elizabeth, rightful heir to the English throne. With witchfinder Marcus Dent determined to have Meg’s hand in marriage, and Meg’s own family conspiring against the English queen, there isn’t a single person Meg can trust.

MacCullough, Carolyn. Once a Witch. 2011. Born into a family of witches, seventeen-year-old Tamsin is raised believing that she alone lacks a magical “Talent,” but when her beautiful and powerful sister is taken by an age-old rival of the family in an attempt to change the balance of power, Tamsin discovers her true destiny.

Powell, Laura. Burn Mark. 2012. In an alternate London, England, the lives of a fifteen-year-old girl eagerly awaiting the development of her “fae,” or witch abilities, and the son of a man who sentences witches to death by burning, intersect when the son makes a startling discovery.

Pratchett, Terry. The Wee Free Men: the Beginning. 2011. Young witch-to-be Tiffany Aching teams up with the Wee Free Men, a clan of six-inch-high blue men, to rescue her baby brother and ward off a sinister invasion from Fairyland.

Rees, Celia. Witch Child. 2000. In 1659, 14 year old Mary Newbury keeps a journal of her voyage from England to the New World and her experiences living as a witch in a community of Puritans near Salem, Massachusetts.

Rinaldi, Ann. A Break with Charity: a story about the Salem Witch Trials. 1992. While waiting for a church meeting in 1706, Susanna English, daughter of a wealthy Salem merchant, recalls the malice, fear, and accusations of witchcraft that tore her village apart in 1692.

Schwab, Victoria. The Near Witch. 2011. 16 year old Lexi, who lives on an enchanted moor at the edge of the village of Near, must solve the mystery when, the day after a mysterious boy appears in town, children start disappearing.

Under My Hat: Tales from the Cauldron. 2012. Neil Gaiman, Holly Black, Diana Peterfreund, and Garth Nix are just a few of the authors who have toiled over their cauldrons and conjured up bewitching new creations inspired by and celebrating the might and mystery of the witch.

Official 2014 Teens’ Top Ten Titles Announced!

  1. Eleanor & Park by Rainbow Rowell
  2. Splintered by A.G. Howard 
  3. The Rithmatist by Brandon Sanderson
  4. The 5th Wave by Rick Yancey
  5. Monument 14: Sky on Fire by Emmy Laybourne
  6. Earth Girl by Janet Edwards
  7. The Testing by Joelle Charbonneau
  8. Steelheart by Brandon Sanderson
  9. Siege and Storm by Leigh Bardugo
  10. The Eye of Minds by James Dashner

You can see all of these titles, plus titles from other YALSA book awards and booklists, with the Teen Finder Book App! It’s free, and available for Android & iOS.

Dare To Be Scared! Horror Novels for Teens

We have a creeptastic selection of fantastic books. Here is a compilation of our horror novel selections from September 2014.

Aguirre, Ann. Mortal Danger. 2014. 376p. YA AGU

Baron, Ruth. Defriended. 2013. 248p. YA BAR

Bick, Ilsa J. White Space. 2014. 551p. YA BIC

Carroll, Emily. Through the Woods: Stories. 2014. YA GRAPHIC CAR

Chupeco, Rin. The Girl from the Well. 2014. 267p. YA CHU

Clare, Cassandra. City of Heavenly Fire. 2014. 725p. YA CLA

Garner, Em. Contaminated. 2013. 330p. YA GAR

Grant, Mira. Feed. 2010. 599p. YA GRA

Green, S.E. Killer Instinct. 2014. 257p. YA GRE

Hill, Joe. Locke & Key. 2008-2014. YA GRAPHIC HILL

Kooistra, Alison. The Night Wanderer: a graphic novel. 2013. 108p.  YA GRAPHIC KOO

Kraus, Daniel. Scowler. 2013. 289p. YA GRE

Lettrick, Robert. Frenzy. 2014. 298p. YA LET

May, Elizabeth. The Falconer. 2014. 378p. YA MAY

Ostow, Micol. Amity. 2014. 361p. YA OST

Snyder, Scott. American Vampire. Volume One. 2010. YA GRAPHIC AMERICAN VAMPIRE

Stolarz, Laurie Faria. Welcome to the Dark House. 2014. 357p. YA STO

Sullivan, Kiki. The Dolls. 2014. 371p. YA SUL

Vanhee, Jason. Engines of the Broken World. 2013. 262p. YA VAN

Vega, Danielle. The Merciless. 2014. 279p. YA VEG

New Book Friday: October 2014

All of a sudden, bam! The weather got cooler and chillier. Some of these books will help keep you warm (Hello, Knits for Nerds), while a few are guaranteed to give you chills (hello Amity, and Welcome to the Dark House). Don’t forget to stop by the library this month!

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

   

   

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

New Audiobooks for September

We have six new books on CD! Check out audiobooks for long car rides, or check out with the physical book to read along! Great for auditory learners.

Anderson, Laurie Halse.Fever, 1793. 2007. Read by Emily Bergl. 5 CDs, 5 hours, 46 minutes.

Carleson, J.C. The Tyrant’s Daughter. 2014. Read by Meera Simhan. 7 CDs, 8.5 hours. Note: author J.C. Carleson is a former undercover CIA officer.

Herbach, Geoff. Fat Boy vs. the Cheerleaders. 2014. Read by Nick Podehl. 5 CDs, 6 hours, approximately.

Kraus, Daniel. Scowler. 2013. Read by Kirby Heyborne. 9 CDs, 11.5 hours. Note: winner of the 2014 Odyssey Award.

McCormick, Patricia. Sold. 2012. Read by Justine Eyre. 3 CDs, 3.5 hours. Note: Sold was on the 2014 summer reading list for the Cold Spring Harbor Junior/Senior High School.

Sheinkin, Steve. Bomb: The Race to Build – and Steal – the World’s Most Dangerous Weapon. 2013. Read by Roy Samuelson. 6 CDs, 7 hours.

Most Popular Authors!

We’re going through all the book reviews submitted by teens this summer – and we’re proud to announce the most reviewed authors!

First place, with 8 reviews is Richelle Mead. Because of the amount of reviews, we will be ordering more copies of her teen books for the Young Adult section.

Second place, with 7 reviews is John Flanagan!

Third place is divided between two authors, who were each reviewed five times. Jennifer L. Armentrout and James Patterson. More of Ms. Armentrout’s books will be ordered for the Young Adult collection.

Fourth (and final place!) is appropriately divided between four authors, who were each reviewed FOUR TIMES! Nelson DeMille, John Green, Marie Lu, and Betty Smith were all read and reviewed.

 

Thanks to all of our participants in the Teen Summer Reading Club! Your book reviews were FANTASTIC! 🙂

Spark a Reaction Roundup

The 2014 Teen Summer Reading Club theme was “Spark a Reaction,” and did we spark a reaction!

66 teens signed up for the Summer Reading Club throughout the summer. Miss Kate, the Young Adult librarian, challenged the teens: if they collectively read more than 10,000 pages, she would dye her hair a wacky color. The teens read over 58,000 pages (total as of August 19: 59,765 pages). Next year the challenge will be upped to 70,000 pages!

Come to the library the first week of September — Miss Kate will have pink hair, all because of YOU!

Some of our best programs included Light Painting, Science EXPLOSION NIGHT!, and Silk Hoop Painting.

Silk Hoop Painting
Look at how high the soda went! Science EXPLOSION! Night
Light Painting!