Messing Library

in the Middle School @ MICDS

LIBRARY BY NUMBER


118,503: Pages printed in the library 2010-11
110,917: Words we wrote for 2010 NaNoWriMo
2,020: % increase in book circulation since 2008
316: Pieces of art exhibited in the library 2010-11
164: Books featured on Library Picker 2010-11
27: Videos featured in "ON CAMERA: 2015"
1: Books about gnomes in the library collection

THE WEDNESDAY WARS

BOOK REVIEW  |  Wednesdays aren't so good for Holling Hoodhood. He's the only seventh grader at his school who doesn't attend religious classes during Wednesday afternoons, so that leaves him alone --and with plenty of work to do-- for his teacher, Mrs. Baker.

And she hates him.

But a series of events throughout the book change his relationships with everyone, from his friends, to his family, and even to Mrs. Baker.

Just some highlights of The Wednesday Wars to peak the potential reader's interest: food rotting in the classroom closet; a plot to employ hundreds of different methods to torture a teacher; rats loose in the school; even a principal who never grants a snow day (even after an ice storm).

This one was one of the sleeper hits I read this summer... never expected it to be this good. My first doubt was the seventh grade dialog: it didn't seem real in the first few chapters, to simple to have come from seventh graders. I thought the author was pegging "sevies" as too young or too simple-minded. After a few more chapters, however, I found the relationships and conversations between the students to be the best part of the book. From the threats Holling receives when he doesn't provide cream puffs to the comments involving him acting in a play, I can see that I was wrong about the dialog. It's fun to read and has insight I didn't see coming.

I recommend this one for 6th graders to adults. From dealing with weird situations in school to the difficulty of oblivious parents at home, the life of Holling Hoodhood reads about as true to life as any book you'll find.

DARK TOWER GRAPHIC NOVELS

BOOK REVIEW  |  Someone told me recently that my wish list for gifts (birthday, etc.) always looks like it was written by a 10-year-old. Why?

No, it's not because of the handwriting... (well, maybe sometimes) it's because it's always full of books and video games.

Since I'm a huge fan of Stephen King's Dark Tower series of books, one of the items on the "10-year-old" wish list was the graphic version of the beginning of that Dark Tower story. I read it last week and can tell you this: I'm not quite sold on the comics/graphic novel thing. But they're growing on me.

PROS: I got to relive the first part of a story I already knew I loved with this graphic novel. The illustrations were dark and fantastic and matched well with the themes of the plot. Great use of color!

CONS: It was initially annoying to look at the illustrations while reading the text (this from a graphic novel newbie)... after reading thousands of pages of the original story (with vivid details), the illustrations kind of short-circuited the images I had made up in my head when I first read the Dark Tower books.

Overall, it was really just a new take on one of my favorite stories. I wouldn't say better or worse, just different. I'll buy the next installment because I like the story... however, I'm not sure how I would approach graphic novels whose stories are new to me. I like to build a visual world in my head when I read, making it my own by basing it on the words on the page. I feel like graphic novels won't let me do that... but I'm willing to give it a try and see how it goes! In my mind, it's always good to mix things up once and awhile.


LOST JOURNAL OF INDIANA JONES

BOOK REVIEW  |  I've always been into Indiana Jones... the movies actually lead me to take a string of archeology classes in college and eventually influenced how I chose my major.

I can't tell if that's cool or just sad.

So when I saw a (fake?) leather-bound book at Borders entitled The Lost Journal of Indiana Jones, I bought it without even looking at the price tag.

It's definitely a fun book for fans of the movies... but you have to really know the details of the Indiana Jones storyline to appreciate the "Lost Journal," which is supposedly the lifelong journal of Indiana Jones that fell into Soviet hands at some point and is now annotated with KGB notes. It includes maps, sketches, newspaper clippings, photos, and some comments that give an interesting and amusing insight into some of the characters.

Fans of the series should give this one a try!