New Audiobooks!

We’ve had an explosion of new audiobooks in our Young Adult area! Whether you’re a teen or an adult,  check out these fascinating titles. The run time is listed for each audiobook, which is great if you know you have a reeaallly long car ride ahead of you!
Black, Holly. The Coldest Girl in Coldtown. 2013. Read by Christine Lakin. 10 CDs, 12 hours.

Patterson, James. Confessions of a Murder Suspect. 2012. Read by Emma Galvin. 5 CDs, 6 hours.

Roth, Veronica. Divergent. 2011. Read by Emma Galvin. 9 CDs, 11 hours, 12 minutes.

Pratchett, Terry. Dodger.2012. Read by Stephen Briggs. 9 CDs, 10 hours, 32 minutes.

Stiefvater, Maggie. The Dream Thieves2013. Read by Will Patton. 11 CDs, 12 hours, 46 minutes.

  Rowell, Rainbow. Fangirl. 2013. Read by Rebecca Lowman & Maxwell Caulfield. 10 CDs, 12 hours, 49 minutes.

Yancey, Rick. The 5th Wave. 2013. Read by Phoebe Strole and Brandon Espinoza. 10 CDs, 12 hours, 42 minutes.

Gaiman, Neil. The Graveyard Book. 2008. Read by the author. 7 CDs, 7 hours, 30 minutes.  If you have never heard Neil Gaiman speak before, just take this out immediately. Not only is he a fantastic writer, he is a phenomenal storyteller.

Gantos, Jack. Hole in My Life. 2006. Read by the author. 4 CDs, 4 hours, 20 minutes.

Farizan, Sara. If You Could Be Mine. 2013. Read by Negin Farsad. 5 CDs, 315 minutes.

Roth, Veronica. Insurgent. 2012. Read by Emma Galvin. 9 CDs, 11 hours, 21 minutes.

Forman, Gayle. Just One Day. Read by Kathleen McInerney. 8 CDs, 10 hours, 30 minutes.

Forman, Gayle. Just One Year. Read by Daniel Thomas May. 7 CDs, 8 hours, 14 minutes.

Farmer, Nancy. The Lord of Opium. Read by Raul Esparza. 9 CDs, 11 hours, 30 minutes.

Gardner, Sally. Maggot Moon. 2013, p2012. Read by Robert Madge. 3 CDs, 3 hours, 40 minutes.

Stiefvater, Maggie. The Raven Boys. 2012. Read by Will Patton. 10 CDs, 11 hours, 9 minutes.

Hawkins, Rachel. Rebel Belle. 2014. Read by Amy Rubinate. 8 CDs, approximately 594 minutes.

Donnelly, Jennifer. Revolution. 2010. Read by Emily Janice Card and Emma Bering. 12 CDs, 15 hours, 4 minutes.

Seamon, Hollis. Somebody Up There Hates You. 2013. Read by Noah Galvin. 6 CDs, 6 hours, 15 minutes.

Lockhart, E. We Were Liars. 2014. Read by Ariadne Meyers. 5 CDs, 6 hours, 30 minutes.

De La Peña, Matt. We Were Here. 2013. Read by Henry Leyva. 9 CDs, 11 hours, 2 minutes.

New Book Friday: July 2014

Happy Fourth of July! While the Library is not physically open today, we wanted you to know what new books are on the shelf, just WAITING for you to check them OUT! We have a real swell collection, from the final books of series and trilogies (Also Known as Elvis [The Misfits], City of Heavenly Fire [Mortal Instruments], Dreams of Gods and Monsters [Daughter of Smoke and Bone], The One [The Selection], Ruin and Rising [The Grisha Trilogy]), and stories from authors – both established and first-timers.

     

     

   

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

   

 

New Book Friday: June 2014

Happy first Friday of June! We have some fantastic books for you to enjoy as soon as you’re done with finals and exams.

Miss Kate’s top two recommendations are “Buzz Kill” by Beth Fantaskey and “Sekret” by Lindsay Smith. They’ll both have you on the edge of your seat!

     

     

     

     

     

     

      

     

     

     

     

   

     

   

   

2014 Teens’ Top Ten Nominees

YALSA officially announced the 2014 Teens’ Top Ten Nominees on April 17, Celebrate Teen Literature Day. This year’s list of nominees features 25 titles that were published between January 1, 2013 and December 31, 2013.

All teens are encouraged to read the 25 nominees before the national Teens’ Top Ten vote, which will take place August 15 through Teen Read Week at www.ala.org/yalsa/reads4teens  If you’re a teen, you can vote!

Arnett, Mindee. The Nightmare Affair.
Being the only Nightmare at Arkwell Academy, a boarding school for “magickind,” sixteen-year-old Destiny Everhart feeds on the dreams of others, working with a handsome human student to find a killer.

Banks, Anna. Of Triton.
When her mother’s reappearance in the Syrena world turns the two kingdoms – Poseidon and Triton – against one another, Emma must risk everything she loves and reveal herself – and her Gift – to save a people she’s never known.

Bardugo, Leigh. Seige and Storm.
Sequel to Shadow and Bone. Hunted across the True Sea and haunted by the lives she took on the Fold, Alina must try to make a life with Mal in an unfamiliar land, all while keeping her identity as the Sun Summoner a secret.

Block, Francesca Lia. Love in the Time of Global Warming.
After a devastating earthquake destroys the West Coast, causing seventeen year old Penelope to lose her home, her parents, and her ten year old brother, she navigates a dark world, holding hope and love in her hands and refusing to be destroyed.

Charbonneau, Joelle. The Testing.
Sixteen year old Cia Vale is chosen to participate in The Testing to attend the university; however, Cia is fearful when she figures out her friends who do not pass The Testing are disappearing.

Dashner, James. The Eye of Minds.
Michael is a skilled internet gamer in a world of advanced technology. When a cyber-terrorist begins to threaten players, Michael is called upon to seek him and his secrets out.

Edwards, Janet. Earth Girl.
Abandoned on Earth because of her inability to survive on other planets, Jarra crafts a fake background for herself to join a class of norms who are excavating the dangerous ruins of old cities.

Gleason, Colleen. The Clockwork Scarab.
In 1899 London young women are turning up dead, and Evaline Stoker, relative of Bram, and Mina Holmes, niece of Sherlock, are summoned to investigate the clue of the not-so-ancient Egyptian scarabs – but where does a time traveler fit in?

Gray, Laurie. Maybe I Will.
A novel presenting the realities of sexual assault without revealing the gender of the victim.

Henry, April. The Girl Who Was Supposed to Die.
She doesn’t know who she is. She doesn’t know where she is, or why. All she knows when she comes to in a ransacked cabin is that there are two men arguing over whether or not to kill her.

Howard, A.G. Splintered.
A descendant of Alice Liddell, the real-life inspiration for Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, 16-year-old Alyssa Gardner fears she is mentally ill like her mother and predecessors until she discovers that Wonderland is real and, if she passes a series of tests to fix Alice’s mistakes, she may be able to save her family from their age-old curse.

Kate, Lauren. Teardrop.
Since Eureka’s mother drowned, she wishes she were dead too, but after discovering that an ancient book is more than a story Eureka begins to believe that Ander is right about her being involved in strange things–and in grave danger.

Konigsberg, Bill. Openly Straight.
Tired of being known as “the gay kid”, Rafe Goldberg decides to assume a new persona when he comes east and enters an elite Massachusetts prep school–but trying to deny his identity has both complications and unexpected consequences.

Laybourne, Emmy. Monument 14:Sky on Fire.
Six high school kids, two eighth-graders, and six little kids trapped together in a chain superstore build a refuge for themselves inside. Outside, a series of escalating disasters, beginning with a montster hailstorm and ending with a chemcial weapons spil, seem to be tearing the world — as they know it — apart.

Richards, Natalie D. Six Months Later.
Waking up six months after dozing off in study hall to discover that she is on track to become the school valedictorian, a super jock is her boyfriend and her former best friend is not speaking to her, Chloe struggles to remember what happened and how the baffling changes occurred.

Rowell, Rainbow. Eleanor & Park.
Set over the course of one school year in 1986, this is the story of two star-crossed misfits–smart enough to know that first love almost never lasts, but brave and desperate enough to try.

Sales, Leila. This Song Will Save Your Life.
Nearly a year after a failed suicide attempt, sixteen-year-old Elise discovers that she has the passion, and the talent, to be a disc jockey.

Sanderson, Brandon. Steelheart.
At age eight, David watched as his father was killed by an Epic, a human with superhuman powers, and now, ten years later, he joins the Reckoners–the only people who are trying to kill the Epics and end their tyranny.

Sanderson, Brandon. The Rithmatist.
As Wild Chalklings threaten the American Isles and Rithmatists are humanity’s only defense, Joel can only watch as Rithmatist students learn the magical art that he would do anything to practice.

Smith, Jennifer E. This Is What Happy Looks Like.
After Graham Larkin accidentally sends Ellie O’Neill an email about his pet pig, the two begin a relationship from opposite sides of the country, but their relationship is complicated by the secrets they keep when they meet in-person.

Smith, Andrew. Winger.
Two years younger than his classmates at a prestigious boarding school, fourteen-year-old Ryan Dean West grapples with living in the dorm for troublemakers, falling for his female best friend who thinks of him as just a kid, and playing wing on the Varsity rugby team with some of his frightening new dorm-mates.

Stine, R. L. A Midsummer Night’s Scream.
Decades after the filming of a horror movie is halted in the wake of three actor deaths and rumors about a haunted set, Claire, the daughter of a failing studio head, helps with a production on the same site and pursues a relationship with her crush before a series of accidents threaten their ambitions.

Tucholke, April. Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea.
Violet is in love with River, a mysterious seventeen-year-old stranger renting the guest house behind the rotting seaside mansion where Violet lives, but when eerie, grim events begin to happen, Violet recalls her grandmother’s frequent warnings about the devil and wonders if River is evil.

Winters, Cat. In the Shadow of Blackbirds.
In San Diego in 1918, as deadly influenza and World War I take their toll, sixteen-year-old Mary Shelley Black watches desperate mourners flock to séances and spirit photographers for comfort and, despite her scientific leanings, must consider if ghosts are real when her first love, killed in battle, returns.

Yancey, Rick. The 5th Wave.
After the 1st wave, only darkness remains. After the 2nd, only the lucky escape. And after the 3rd, only the unlucky survive. After the 4th wave, just one rule applies: trust no one. Now it’s the dawn of the 5th wave, and on a lonely stretch of highway, Cassie runs from them. The beings who only look human, who roam the countryside killing anyone they see. Who have scattered Earth’s last survivors. To stay alone is to stay alive, Cassie believes, until she meets Evan Walker. Beguiling and mysterious, Evan may be Cassie’s only hope for rescuing her brother — or even saving herself.

Substance Abuse Bibliography: Young Adult Literature About Addiction

Anderson, Laurie Halse. The impossible knife of memory. 2014.
Enduring a transient existence before starting school in her Iraq War veteran father’s hometown, a troubled Hayley Kincaid longs for a normal life and pursues a relationship with a secretive boy before her father’s PTSD leads to a disturbing drug problem.

Anonymous. Go Ask Alice. 1971.
Based on the dairy of a fifteen-year-old drug user chronicling her daily struggle to escape the pull of the drug world.

Anonymous. Lucy in the sky. 2012.
A diary by an unnamed drug addict from an upper middle-class neighborhood in Santa Monica documents the ruination of her life after experimenting with drugs and alcohol at a party, after which she rejects everything she once cared about.

Barnes, John. Tales of the Madman Underground: (an historical romance 1973). 2009.
In September 1973, as the school year begins in his depressed Ohio town, high-school senior Kurt Shoemaker determines to be “normal,” despite his chaotic home life with his volatile, alcoholic mother and the deep loyalty and affection he has for his friends in the therapy group dubbed the Madman Underground.

Bloor, Edward. A Plague Year. 2011.
When a crystal meth epidemic tears through his Pennsylvania coal-mining town in 2001, Tom, a supermarket employee who dreams of escaping to college, finds inspiration in the heroism of the passengers of United Flight 93.

Burgess, Melvin. The Hit. 2014.
There is a new drug on the mean streets of Manchester which promises the most intense week of your life, and then you are dead – and after he watches a pop star die on stage, Adam thinks that his own life is so miserable that he might just as well try it.

Chbosky, Stephen. The perks of being a wallflower. 1999.
This is the story of what it’s like to grow up in high school.

Hinton, S.E. That was then, this is now. 1998, 1971.
Sixteen-year-old Mark and Bryon have been like brothers since childhood, but now, as their involvement with girls, gangs, and drugs increases, their relationship seems to gradually disintegrate.

Hopkins, Ellen. Crank. 2004.
Kristina Snow is the perfect daughter, but she meets a boy who introduces her to drugs and she becomes a very different person, struggling to control her life and her mind. The other two books in the trilogy are Glass and Fallout.

Leavitt, Martine. My book of life by Angel. 2012.
Sixteen-year-old Angel struggles to free herself from the trap of prostitution and drug abuse in which she is caught.

Lipsyte, Robert. Raiders Night. 2006.
Matt Rydeck, co-captain of his high school football team, endures a traumatic season as he witnesses a vicious assault of a rookie player by teammates and grapples with his own use of performance-enhancing drugs.

Maia, Love. DJ Rising. 2012.
Sixteen-year-old Marley Diego-Dylan’s career as “DJ Ice” is skyrocketing, but his mom’s heroin addiction keeps dragging him back to earth.

Marchetta, Melina. Jellicoe Road. 2008, 2006.
Abandoned by her drug-addicted mother at the age of eleven, high school student Taylor Markham struggles with her identity and family history at a boarding school in Australia.

Martinez, Jessica. Virtuosity. 2011.
Just before the most important violin competition of her career, seventeen-year-old prodigy Carmen faces critical decisions about her anti-anxiety drug addiction, her controlling mother, and potential romance with her most talented rival.

McCormick, Patricia. My brother’s keeper. 2005.
Thirteen-year-old Toby, a prematurely gray-haired Pittsburgh Pirates fan and baseball card collector, tries to cope with his brother’s drug use, his father’s absence, and his mother dating Stanley the Food King.

Myers, Walter Dean. The Beast. 2003.
A visit to his Harlem neighborhood and the discovery that the girl he loves is using drugs give sixteen-year-old Anthony Witherspoon a new perspective both on his home and on his life at a Connecticut prep school.

Myers, Walter Dean. Dope Sick. 1999.
Seeing no way out of his difficult life in Harlem, seventeen-year-old Jeremy “Lil J” Dance flees into a house after a drug deal goes awry and meets a weird man who shows different turning points in Lil J’s life when he could have made better choices.

Nelson, Blake. Recovery Road. 2011.
While she is in a rehabilitation facility for drug and alcohol abuse, seventeen-year-old Maddie meets Stewart, who is also in treatment, and they begin a relationship, which they try to maintain after they both get out.

Rapp, Adam. Punkzilla. 2009.
A runaway boy nicknamed Punkzilla who sustains himself on the streets of Portland through petty crimes decides to try to kick his meth habit, turn his life around, and go on a journey to Tennessee to visit his dying older brother.

Reed, Amy. Clean. 2011.
A group of teens in a Seattle-area rehabilitation center form an unlikely friendship as they begin to focus less on their own problems by reaching out to help a new member, who seems to have even deeper issues to resolve.

Whaley, John Corey. Where Things Come Back. 2011.
Seventeen-year-old Cullen’s summer in Lily, Arkansas, is marked by his cousin’s death by overdose, an alleged spotting of a woodpecker thought to be extinct, failed romances, and his younger brother’s sudden disappearance.

Woodson, Jacqueline. Beneath a meth moon: an elegy. 2012.
After losing her mother and grandmother to Hurricane Katrina, Laurel Daneau begins a new life in a new town, but when her boyfriend T-Boom introduces her to meth, her future begins to look as bleak as her past.