Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Parents' Summer Reading Letter


To read or not to read?  That is a silly question.

Dear Parents,

Greetings from the library! In the posts titled Suggested Summer Reading, you will find a list of books selected for students' reading pleasure. Yes, pleasure. This is not a required reading list; this list is for personal enjoyment. These books have been selected because they are well-told tales, enjoyable and navigable without a teacher’s guidance. Hopefully, there is something for everyone—sports, adventure, mystery, fantasy, history, and biography. All the books are entertaining; some are heart-wrenching. 

I suggest summer reading because reading produces many personal and academic benefits. Research shows that students who read for fun:
·         Build a broad knowledge base (which in turn further improves reading comprehension)
·         Become better and faster readers
·         Develop fluency with words
·         Improve writing skills
·         Earn higher scores on standardized reading and writing tests
·         Have Fun!

When the school year begins, I hope your student will make good use of the Bishop Maclibrary. The library owns approximately 10,000 books and subscribes to 19 magazines. Books and articles may be requested from libraries throughout the state, free of charge, via interlibrary loan. Bishop Mac subscribes to twenty proprietary databases, password-protected collections of citations and full-text articles from magazines, newspapers, and academic journals. Our alumni report that their college professors heavily emphasize databases in the preparation of term papers and that they are grateful for the introduction they received in high school. 

I encourage students to participate in “Read for a Lifetime,” (RFL) a program sponsored by the Illinois State Library. Any participant who reads at least four titles from the designated list receives a certificate signed by the Illinois Secretary of State. RFL students also have the opportunity to earn service hours by participating in the Dr.Seuss Readathon sponsored by Target. 


For more book suggestions and to learn more about the Mac library, please visit the library blog at http://bishopmclibrary.blogspot.com/.  The blog features monthly new-book postings, Thursday book trailers, interesting and fun articles, school news, and student book reviews and recommendations. 
I look forward to seeing to you and your student(s) in the Fall. Happy reading!
Sincerely,

Terri E. Jones, M.S.
Librarian

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Suggested Summer Nonfiction - June

History

World War II

The hiding place / Corrie ten Boom

As the Nazi madness swept across Europe, a quiet watchmaker's family in Holland risked everything for the sake of others and for the love of Christ. They sheltered Jews until they were arrested and sent to a concentration camp. Could God's love shine through, even in Ravensbruck? (Amazon.com ; 5/4/2012)

 

The boy who dared / Susan C. Bartoletti


It’s morning. Soft gray light slips over the tall redbrick wall. It stretches across the exercise yard and reaches though the high, barred windows. In a cell on the ground floor, the light shifts dark shapes into a small stool, a scrawny table, and a bed made of wooden boards with no mattress or blanket. On that bed, a thin, huddled figure, Helmut, a boy of seventeen, lies awake. Shivering. Trembling.   It’s a Tuesday.   The executioner works on Tuesday.” (excerpt ; from the book jacket.)

“When 16-year-old Helmut Hubner listens to the BBC news on an illegal short-wave radio, he quickly discovers Germany is lying to the people. But when he tries to expose the truth with leaflets, he's tried for treason. “ (Amazon.com)

Iraq War

  From Baghdad, with love: a Marine, the war, and a dog named Lava / Jay Kopelman

When Marines enter an abandoned house in Fallujah, they hear a suspicious noise, clutch their weapons, and ease around the corner. They do not discover an insurgent but a tiny puppy. Despite military rules against keeping pets, the marines adopt the puppy and eventually , Lt. Col. Kopelman brings him home to America.


Biography

From the barrio to the boardroom / Robert Renteria


Today Robert Renteria is a successful business owner and civic leader, but he grew up as an infant sleeping in a dresser drawer. This poignant and often hard-hitting memoir traces Robert's life from a childhood of poverty and abuse in one of the poorest areas of East Los Angeles, to his proud emergence as a business owner today. (from Amazon.com ; 5/8/2012)

We beat the street : how a friendship pact led to success / The Three Doctors (Sampson Davis, George Jenkins, Rameck Hunt)  and Sharon Draper

Growing up on the rough streets of Newark,  Rameck, George,and Sampson could easily have chosen drug dealing, gangs, and prison.  But when a presentation at their school made them aware of the opportunities in the medical and dental professions, they made a pact that they would become doctors.  It took a lot of determination, but despite all the hardships, the three succeeded. (from Amazon.com ; 5/8/2012)Show More

 

Student Summer Reading Letter


To read or not to read?  That is a silly question.
Dear Students,

Greetings from the library! Under the suggested summer reading list post you will find a list of books selected for your reading pleasure. Yes, pleasure. This is not a required reading list; this list is for your personal enjoyment. These books have been chosen because they are well-told tales, enjoyable and navigable without a teacher’s guidance. Hopefully, there is something for everyone—sports, adventure, mystery, fantasy, history, and biography. All the books are entertaining; some are heart-wrenching. For more book suggestions, please keep visiting the library blog at http://bishopmclibrary.blogspot.com/.  

Earlier this year, I had the opportunity to talk with some Mac students about the importance of reading and to share some favorite books. One student asked, “What is the point?” Since a good question deserves a thoughtful answer, I made a list-- reading speed and fluency; expanding one’s general knowledge base; finding and applying information; building vocabulary; honing writing skills; earning better grades and higher standardized test scores.  All important for college and for life.  My husband pronounced the list “too cerebral.”

So I went searching for authors’ thoughts on reading.  Here’s a nice quote from Lynn Schwarz. “So what has been the point? Not to amass knowledge or pass the time. Reading teaches, first and foremost, how to sit still for long periods and confront time head-on. . . . Reading gives a context for experience. It teaches receptivity so that we may grow to receive the world. It gains us nothing but the enchantment of the heart.” (paraphrased from Ruined by reading / Lynn S. Schwarz, 1996).

Still pretty philosophical. So here is my take.  I hope you will find the pleasure of being lost in a good story, of finding the “reading zone,” if you will. Hearing a narrator’s voice in your head has all the qualities of a good movie, only better. It is more like a good day dream. Your imagination brings the author’s words to life, supplies all the scenery and paints the characters. The action takes place inside you.  And not just in your mind. When you are captured by a story, your heart races. Your spine tingles or crawls. Hair stands up on your arms; you glance over your shoulder to see if, like the characters in the story, you are being watched. You feel fear or dread or suspense in the pit of your stomach. You grip the book tighter and tighter even as you turn the pages faster and faster, because you have to know. . .  You HAVE TO KNOW what happens next. 

Here’s hoping you find a little “enchantment of the heart” this summer. See you in the Fall.


Ms. Jones
The Librarian

Monday, May 21, 2012

Suggested Summer Fiction - June








The final four / Paul Volponi

As Michigan State Spartans and Troy University Trojans meet in the semi-finals of the NCAA championship, four players tell their personal stories --  the excitement, stress, and physical toll of the game; personal relationships; the harsh realities of life in a housing project (drive-by shooting); the rules of eligibility and the question of paying college players.  (from the book)




Paralyzed / Jeff Rud

“Nate Brown was still lying out in the middle of the field. Dr. Stevens was kneeling beside him now, watching him intently and checking his pulse. My chest began to tighten, and I started to sweat. Why wasn't Nate getting up?

When  angry fans dub Reggie Scott a “dirty” player, he is forced to confront his own guilt and decide whether he can continue to play his senior season and beyond. (Amazon.com ; 5/4/2012)





Mexican Whiteboy / Matt de la Peña
No matter where he lives, 16-year-old Danny Lopez is an outsider -- at his private high school because he was Mexican and with his father’s family because he is white.  He decides to spend the summer with his dad’s family, hoping to learn to be "real" and to stop feeling numb.  By the end of the summer, he has filled the void through unexpected friendship . . . and baseball. (from Amazon.com ; 5/7/2012)


 
Shelter / Harlan Coben

Mickey Bolitar witnessed his father's death, sent his mom to rehab, moved in with his estranged uncle Myron, and enrolled in a new high school. Then his new girlfriend, Ashley, disappears.  And the crazy Bat Lady tells him that his father is alive. The trail leads Mickey into a seedy underworld revealing that neither Ashley nor his father were who he thought they were. (from Amazon.com; 5/8/2012)  [Suspenseful with plenty of twists and turns. Terrific! – the Librarian]


Artemis Fowl / Eoin Colfer

Twelve-year-old Artemis Fowl is a millionaire, a genius—and, a criminal mastermind. But even Artemis doesn’t know what he’s taken on when he kidnaps a fairy, Captain Holly Short of the LEPrecon Unit.  These fairies are not the bedtime –story variety; they are armed and
dangerous.   Artemis thinks he has them right where he wants them…but then they stop playing by the rules.  (Amazon.com ; 5/4/2012)  [There are 8 books in the Artemis series; go crazy!]
Star Crossed; Liar’s Moon / Elizabeth Bunce
Digger is a forger, pick-pocket, and thief with a heart of gold. She is also an orphan trying to survive while avoiding the clutches of her brother, the ruthless Inquisitor.  Set in a vaguely-medieval fantasy world, the stories include intrigue and adventure; clashes with the law and her brother; a dash of romance; and magic.

“As I crossed back through the empty court, something that wasn't moonlight flashed in the corner of my vision. Swearing silently, I spun slowly back around, my eyes pressed closed until the last moment. But I hadn't imagined it. There by an arched doorway, in a streak like the mark left on the floor from heavy furniture, was the faintest glitter of something that should not have been there. I knelt beside it and gingerly dipped my fingers toward the flagstones, tapping just lightly enough that a stream of silvery mist spread out from my touch like the radiating arms of a star, flashing the floor in sparkling light. There was magic at Bal Marse. Of course there was.  (excerpt from Liar’s moon)

[Action; plot twists; believable characters. Great reads – the Librarian]

The lost songs / Caroline B. Cooney
Lutie Painter had never skipped school before. . . On the phone, Saravette's voice had been thready and weak, as if she were ill. But one sentence had been strong and sharp. "You have to know," said Saravette suddenly. . .

[From the bus], she saw Saravette leaning against a telephone pole. . . . Thirty years old, looked eighty. Sunken cheeks from lost teeth. Tattoos and piercings no longer brave and sassy, but pitiful. Wearing two sweaters on an already hot morning. Both dirty. . . .

“Miss Veola's still preaching at me. There's a lot to preach about too. By now," said Saravette, laughing, "I've broken all the commandments." . . . Saravette put out her cigarette and immediately lit it again. For the first time, her eyes met Lutie's and stayed focused. "You have to know something," she said quietly. It was not the voice of a crazy person to a stranger. It was the voice of a mother to her daughter. . . .

Panic filled Lutie Painter. . . .

[Saravette] signaled one of the scary guys at the counter. She's going to buy drugs, thought Lutie. Right now. With me sitting here. . . .She's already forgotten what she said, thought Lutie. What's murder, after all? Just one in a list of ten. Whatever. . . .

The [cashier] marched Lutie out of the coffee shop. The bus appeared almost immediately, which was a good thing. Lutie's knees were shaking and her heart was falling out. Her mother might be a murderer.

"Don't cry, honey," said the woman. "And don't come back."  (
excerpt from the book; ch. 1)

Lutie’s grandmother told her , “Some people inherit land or silver spoons. . . . We inherited songs. They’re my grandmother’s shouts to God. . . . her prayers were answered for you, Lutie. You’ll have the world she wanted.” (from the book jacket)


 
The rose that grew from concrete / Tupak Shakur

Poetry written by Tupac from ages 14 to 19.  The poems reflect the harsh realities of life but also the power of dreams and hope.