Thank you!

Thanks to all of you that came out to Chapters for our fundraising event. Thanks to your support, we raised nearly $600 for the library!

If you have ideas of books that I should buy for the library, send me an email or drop off your suggestion in the green box in the library before you leave for Christmas holidays.

Coming in January - new books, plus a brand new reading list...Destination Unexpected!!

Fundraising for the Library

The Library @ Rez has 2 fundraising events coming up...tell all your friends and family!

Rez Reads at Chapters - Fundraising event!
On Thursday December 3rd, just in time to do some Christmas shopping, we will be hosting a fundraising event at Chapters Waterloo.

For every regularly priced item you buy in the store on that day, Chapters will donate 15% back to our school library! (books that are on sale do not qualify and your irewards discount won't be applied on this day)

Print off your invitation here (and give one to a friend or relative too!).
We'll use the money raised to buy fun new books for the library...and you'll be given a chance to make suggestions on what we should buy! If you have any questions, email Ms. Martin.

New Book Sale!
Remember those book club flyers you took home as a kid, and got to buy new books at much cheaper prices? Well, now we have one for high school students!

Some examples?

Get a copy of New Moon (with a locker poster of the movie!) for only $10. The Gamers edition of the Guinness Book of Word Records (with highest scores, largest cash prize, etc.) is only $15. You can The Hunger Games in paperback!...for only $8!! Get all 3 books of the Diary of a Wimpy Kid series in paperback for just $20 (that's less than $7 each). Plus many more great deals.

Check out the flyer in the library - or view online and print off your own order form. All orders are due to the library by Wednesday December 16th.

Welcome back!

We've made it through the first full week of school!

I hope you've had a chance to come check out the displays in the library - I've set aside all of the Rez Reads and Rez Recommends books, plus a bunch of other new titles.

One of my favourite parts of being a librarian is helping students find new books that they'll ENJOY reading...so if you're stumped, feel free to come up and ask me.

I'm also starting to compile my first order list for the year - so if you have any suggestions for titles I should consider, send me an email or pop by to see me. I'm always happy to hear suggestions.

Happy reading!

Wintergirls ~ Laurie Halse Anderson

I know I've been slow in posting this summer, but I needed to write about this book.

Laurie Halse Anderson is one of the best YA authors out there. And Wintergirls is simply brilliant. It's also one of the best - and most disturbing - books I've ever read that deals with eating disorders.

Two best friends descend into a deadly spiral, as they starve themselves in a quest to become the skinniest. When Cassie dies, Lia is left to cope still wants to fade away, and is haunted by the memories of her friend and her own demons.

It's dark, and haunting, and - like its title implies - sharp and icy. I actually felt a little queasy while reading it...only a powerful, honest novel can elicit that kind of reaction.

I'm positive it will be a multi-award winner this year. If you can't wait til September to read this one, the KPL has multiple copies.

Rez Recommends 2008-2009

Check out our first annual Rez Recommends list, as chosen by you! For full descriptions of each book, as well as people's comments about the book, click here for the Rez Recommends pdf file. These books will all be on display when you come back to school in September. In the meantime, check out your local library...and keep watching for new posts as I read through some of the new "Read Beyond Reality" books!

Vampire/Supernatural:
  • Blue Girl ~ Charles deLint
  • A Certain Slant of Light ~ Laura Whitcomb
  • City of Ember ~ Jeanne duPrau
  • Elsewhere ~ Gabrielle Zevin
  • Harry Potter series ~ J.K. Rowling
  • House of Night series ~ P.C. Cast & Kristin Cast
  • Mortal Instruments series ~ Cassandra Clare
  • Twilight series ~ Stephanie Meyer
  • Vampire Academy series ~ Richelle Mead
  • Vampire Knight (manga) ~ Matsuri Hino

Adventure/Survival:

  • Alex Rider series ~ Anthony Horowitz
  • House of the Scorpion ~ Nancy Farmer
  • The Hunger Games ~ Suzanne Collins
  • Life as We Knew It ~ Susan Beth Pfeffer

Mystery/Suspense:

  • The Compound ~ S.A. Bodeen
  • Paper Towns ~ John Green

Realistic Fiction — Funny:

  • Abundance of Katharines ~ John Green
  • Good Enough ~ Paula Yoo
  • How to be Bad ~ e. Lockhart, Sarah Mlynowski & Lauren Myracle
  • jPod ~ Douglas Coupland
  • Notes from the Midnight Driver ~ Jordan Sonnenblick

Realistic Fiction — Serious:

  • Born Blue ~ Han Nolan
  • Looking for Alaska ~ John Green
  • My Sister’s Keeper ~ Jodi Picoult
  • Secret Life of Bees ~ Sue Monk Kidd
  • Slam ~ Walter Dean Myers
  • Striking Out ~ Will Weaver
  • Suckerpunch ~ David Hernandez
  • Ten Mile River ~ Paul Griffin
  • Theories of Relativity ~ Barbara Haworth-Attard
  • A Thousand Splendid Suns ~ Khaled Hosseini
  • Wake ~ Lisa McMann

Non-Fiction (True Stories):

  • A Home on the Field: how one championship team inspires hope for the revival of small
    town America ~ Paul Cuadros
  • One Red Paperclip: or how an ordinary man achieved his dreams with the help of a
    simple office supply ~ Kyle MacDonald
  • Tuesdays with Morrie ~ Mitch Albom

Rez Reads...for the summer

I can hardly believe we're almost done another school year! Sometime in the next week or so, I'll be posting our first annual Rez Recommends list! We received a TON of book review forms from students (and last week's prize winners - cafeteria vouchers, iTunes gift card, Chapters gift card - were thrilled!). From these review forms, I'm going to compile the list of students' favourite books.

Speaking of favourite books, a student's mom got me a PRE-publication edition of the sequel to Hunger Games!! I was SO excited...and could barely put it down! Catching Fire, which isn't scheduled to be released until the beginning of September, is every bit as good as book 1!! Don't worry...when you come back to school in September, I'll be sure to have multiple copies of this one!

In the meantime, it's time to hit the public library. Library cards are free and you can
request books from any branch. You can also renew your books online, or ask for an extended summer loan to avoid those pesky fines.

Used bookstores are also a good option - they might not have the most recent books, but you’ll save some cash! Or you can visit a local bookstore, such as Wordsworth Books (an independent store, with lots of great suggestions for YA reads) or head to Chapters.

If you're looking for reading suggestions, check out the Read Beyond Reality list - this list was compiled by the Young Adult Library Association as their Top 10 Nominations and will be the first Rez Reads list of the 2009-2010 school year.

And, while you're reading for fun this summer, don't forget to fill out a Rez Recommends form - we'll start collecting them again in September.

Happy reading!

The Hunger Games ~ Suzanne Collins

Hooray for Rez Reads...those 20 minutes over the last few days got me hooked on this AMAZING book by Suzanne Collins... The Hunger Games.

You know that feeling you get when watching a really suspenseful TV episode or movie (occasionally, when I'm watching them on DVD, I hit pause so I can catch my breath!)...I had that same feeling with this book. Within a chapter or two I was completely hooked (and stayed up WAY too late reading). The characters are great, it's completely action-packed but very smart/thought-provoking at the same time.

Imagine this...every year, 2 young people from a District (think city/region) are "nominated" (i.e. forced) to "play" in the Hunger Games - basically a wilderness survival/fight to the death...and if you live, you win! And, the whole thing is televised....it would be like watching Surivor, only instead of voting people off the island, the survivors would be killing each other. BRUTAL.

Somehow, in the midst of this thrill-ride, the author manages to develop real characters that you're rooting for - and even throws in a bit of romance.

My only complaint...it continues in a second book, THAT HASN'T BEEN PUBLISHED YET! It comes out on September 1st...and I promise to have it here in the library for the first day of school! I'm going to fill out my Rez Recommends form...and it's getting a 5 out of 5, for sure!

Rez Reads is coming!

Next week - May 11th-15th - is Rez Reads week here at Resurrection. That means 20 whole minutes every day where we get to read whatever we want. Let me tell you, those 20 minutes (or 10-15, by the time I get finished checking out books to students who forgot to bring something!) are pure bliss.

I often read an Entertainment Weekly magazine or something from the New Internationalist or Geez magazines...depending on whether I want to read something escapist and "fluffy" or something more thought-provoking. My reading preferences are very mood-dependent.

I think, though, for this Rez Reads, I'm going to pick one of the novels that will be on next year's Rez Reads list (stay tuned for more information before the end of the school year!!).

Happy reading...and remember to share your favourites by filling out a Rez Recommends form...you might even win a prize!

Novels in Verse

April is Poetry Month here in Canada and the United States. To celebrate, I've created a display in the library (check out the orange floating cart) and have created this list of "verse novels"...these are all novels that are written in poetry (verse) style, and all are available in the library @ Rez. (Book descriptions are taken from NoveList - which you can use to search for similar books, with the password from the library).

  • Bronx Masquerade ~ Nikki Grimes (FIC GRI)
    While studying the Harlem Renaissance, students at a Bronx high school read aloud poems they've written, revealing their innermost thoughts and fears to their formerly clueless classmates.
  • CrashBoomLove ~ Juan Felipe Herrera (FIC HER)
    After his father leaves home, sixteen-year-old Cesar Garcia lives with his mother and struggles thorugh the painful experiences of growing up as a Mexican American high school student.
  • Crank ~ Ellen Hopkins (FIC HOP)
    Kristina Snow is the perfect daughter, but she meets a boy who introduces her to drugs and becomes a very different person, struggling to control her life and her mind. Also try the sequel, Glass.
  • A Dangerous Girl ~ Catherine Bateson (FIC BAT)
    (description from the back of the novel)
    All I had were some plans that went awry and a woman whose skin wore my fingerprints for nearly a summer.Merri, John, Leigh and Nick are positioned like the four points of a gameboard. Gentle John is Dungeon Master and craftsman of wood, but can he master the manipulative and ambitious Leigh? His sister Merri is seduced by the glamour of the stage, but her attention turns to Nick and his email haikus...
    Also check out the sequel, The Year it all Happened.
  • Dark Sons ~ Nikki Grimes (FIC GRI)
    Alternating poems compare and contrast the conflicted feelings of Ishmael, son of the Biblical patriarch Abraham, and Sam, a teenager in New York City, as they try to come to terms with being abandoned by their fathers and with the love they feel for their younger stepbrothers. Winner of the Coretta Scott King Honor award, as well as other starred reviews.
  • The Death of Jayson Porter ~ Jaime Adoff (FIC ADO)
    In the Florida projects, sixteen-year-old Jayson struggles with the harsh realities of his life which include an abusive mother, a drug-addicted father, and not fitting in at his predominately white school, and bring him to the brink of suicide. Also try Jimi & Me by the same author, where twelve-year-old Keith James moves from Brooklyn to a small midwestern town where his mixed race heritage is not accepted, but he finds comfort in the music of Jimi Hendrix and the friendship of a white classmate.
  • I Heart You, You Haunt Me ~ Lisa Schroeder (FIC SCH)
    When her recently deceased boyfriend, Jackson, reappears as a ghost, Ava is thrilled to have him in her life in any way she can, but when she finally begins to move on with her life, Jackson must find a way to let her go.
  • Jinx ~ Margaret Wild (FIC WIL)
    With the help of her understanding mother and a close friend, Jen eventually outgrows her nickname, Jinx, and deals with the deaths of two boys with whom she had been involved. Also try another of Margaret Wild's books, One Night, where a teenaged girl decides to have her baby and care for it on her own after a "one night stand" results in pregnancy.
  • Keesha's House ~ Helen Frost (FIC FRO)
    Seven teens facing such problems as pregnancy, closeted homosexuality, and abuse each describe in poetic forms what caused them to leave home and where they found home again.
  • Love, Ghosts and Facial Hair ~ Steven Herrick (FIC HER)
    Sixteen-year-old Jack woos beautiful Annabel, and through their relationship, copes with his mother's death. Also see the companion novel, A Place Like This.
  • Make Lemonade ~ Virginia Euwer Wolff (FIC WOL)
    In order to earn money for college, fourteen-year-old LaVaughn babysits for a teenage mother of two. A beautiful book - also check out the sequel True Believer.
  • Out of the Dust ~ Karen Hesse (FIC HES)
    In a series of poems, fourteen-year-old Billie Jo relates the hardships of living on her family's wheat farm in Oklahoma during the dust bowl years of the Depression.
  • Rubber Houses ~ Ellen Yeomans (FIC YEO)
    Relates seventeen-year-old Kit's experiences as her younger brother is diagnosed with and dies of cancer and as she withdraws into and gradually emerges from her grief.
  • Sold ~ Patricia McCormick (FIC MCC)
    Thirteen-year-old Lakshmi leaves her poor mountain home in Nepal thinking that she is to work in the city as a maid only to find that she has been sold into the sex slave trade in India and that there is no hope of escape.
  • Stop Pretending: What Happened When My Big Sister Went Crazy ~ Sonya Sones (FIC SON)
    A younger sister has a difficult time adjusting to life after her older sister has a mental breakdown. Also try other verse novels by Sonya Sones: What My Mother Doesn't Know and One of those Hideous Books Where the Mother Dies.
  • Street Love ~ Walter Dean Myers (FIC MYE)
    This story is set against a background of street gangs and poverty in Harlem in which seventeen-year-old African American Damien takes a bold step to ensure that he and his new love will not be separated.
  • Things Left Unsaid ~ Stephanie Hemphill (FIC HEM)
    After a lifetime of conforming to the image of what her parents and high school friends want her to be, Sarah must come to terms with her own identity when her destructive best friend tries to commit suicide.

Life Less Ordinary ~ books about teens who stand out from the crowd

  • An Abundance of Katherines by John Green
    Poor Colin hasn’t had much luck with dating. He’s been dumped 19 times...all by girls named Katherine! Nothing like a road trip with your best friend to try and heal your broken heart...and figure out why you keep getting dumped! John Green is hands down one of the best Young Adult authors out there! This book earned multiple starred reviews and a Printz Honor award.
  • Airborn by Kenneth Oppel
    This book is a perfect example of “don’t judge a book by its cover.” This high-flying novel has everything a great adventure should...daring rescues, thrilling escapes, pirates, and a little bit of romance thrown in for good measure. Winner of a Governor General's award. Also look for the follow-up books, Skybreaker and Starclimber.
  • The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing, Traitor to the Nation, vol. 1: The Pox Party by M.T. Anderson
    Octavian is a African slave sent to American to receive, as an experiment, a classical education usually reserved for the “elite”. As the Revolutionary War unfolds, Octavian runs away to join the army and experiences the horrors of what it means to be a slave in 18th century America. This brilliantly written novel also provides insightful commentary on today’s society and our notion of history. Also try volume 2, Kingdom on the Waves. Both are multi-award winners.
  • Elsewhere by Gabrielle Zevin
    When 15-year old Lizzie is killed, she travels to the afterlife, called Elsewhere, and tries to figure out how to “live” in her new surroundings. A powerful story about life, and life after death. Winner of multiple starred reviews...and one of my all-time favourites!
  • Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card
    Earth is about to be invaded by a hostile alien race. The defense plan? Train an army of children! Ender Wiggen is the unlikely candidate recruited to join the troops. Even if you don’t normally like science fiction, I DARE you not to love this book!
  • Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
    Kat’s little sister is ordered to compete in the Hunger Games...a reality TV series kind of like Survivor, but instead of getting voted off, you die! Kat volunteers to take her place and, with TV cameras following her every move, fights to stay alive.
  • I Am the Messenger by Marcus Zusack
    Ed Kennedy’s life isn’t exactly exciting...he spends all his time hanging out with his dog, driving his taxi and playing cards with his friends. When mysterious, coded messages show up in his mailbox, he is sent on a series of tasks that will change his life. Winner of a Printz Honor award.
  • I’d Tell You I Love You, But Then I’d Have to Kill You by Ally Carter
    Cammie goes to a prestigious all-girls private school...but it’s not just any private school. It’s a secret school for spies! All of the girls are spies in training, which makes leading a “normal” life a little difficult. It’s a fun, light-hearted adventure...if you were to mix James Bond with Harry Potter with the girls from Sisterhood of the Travelling Pants, this is the novel you’d get!
  • Life as We Knew It by Susan Beth Pfeffer
    When the moon is hit by a meteor and bumped out of its normal orbit, life on Earth is horrifyingly altered. Worldwide tsunamis, volcanoes, earthquakes, ice storms… chaos. Miranda describes in her diary how she and her family struggle to survive. Also check out the sequel, “The Dead and the Gone” that tells the same story, but from the perspective of a boy in New York City.
  • Magic or Madness by Justine Larbalestier
    Australian teen, Reason, must go live with her “wicked” grandmother, Esmeralda, in Sydney after her mother has a mental breakdown. While trying to escape from Esmeralda, Reason runs through a door...only to find herself in New York City. This magical adventure is the award-winning first book of a trilogy (followed by Magic Lessons and Magic’s Child).
  • Repossessed by A.M. Jenkins
    A “fallen angel” (demon) named Kiriel is bored with Hell and decides to take over the body and life of a slacker teen who has just been hit by a cement truck. Even though he’s breaking all the rules, Kiriel is determined to experience life as a human teen and have a positive impact on the people around him. Winner of a Printz Honor award.
  • Son of the Mob by Gordon Korman
    Imagine high school and dating...when your dad is a mafia leader! Life is certainly “interesting” for Vince Luca. Oh, and did I mention that the girl he’s fallen for is the daughter of an FBI agent?! Funny man Gordon Korman at his best! Also check out the sequel, Hollywood Hustle for more adventures as Vince heads off to college.

Don’t forget to fill out your own reviews of these books for a chance to win some great prizes!

New Rez Reads Spirit Wear!


Designed by Brooke Beggs (Gr. 12 student) with assistance from Heather Lee (Ms. Martin’s sister), the new Rez Reads spirit wear is "sick"!
Shirts are $20 each. Click here to download an order form - or pick up a copy in the library. Sample T-shirts (for sizing) are in the library - see Ms. Martin.

Orders, with payment, are due to the library by FRIDAY APRIL 3rd.