Friday, February 1, 2013

Billboard is February's Magazine of the Month

On February 3rd, 1959 the plane carrying Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, and the Big Bopper crashed near Mason City, Iowa, killing the three musicians and the pilot. This tragic event was commemorated in Don McLean's American Pie, and every year since 1979 fans have gathered at the Surf Ballroom in Clear Lake for a memorial concert.

In honor of these musical innovators, we've selected Billboard as our February magazine of the month. Billboard began publication in 1894 as a trade magazine for the billboard industry, and over the years evolved into covering the carnival industry, motion pictures, radio and television. In the 1930s Billboard began publishing their charts of popular music, and in 1961 they began to focus exclusively on the music industry. You can read more about the history of Billboard on Wikipedia, or check out the latest music news on their website: www.billboard.com

Be sure to stop into Carnegie-Stout to check out the latest issue of Billboard and browse our music collection on the first floor because we've got an eclectic collection with something for every listener! You might also want to browse our many biographies, autobiographies, and memoirs on and by musicians of every genre.

If fiction is more your style, we've pulled together a few titles you might enjoy:

Telegraph Avenue by Michael Chabon
The latest character-driven title by the acclaimed Chabon, Telegraph Avenue focuses on a economically vulnerable record shop owned by two friends in California. Richly detailed and humorous, this novel tackles touches on the issues of race and consumerism in America. 

High Fidelity by Nick Hornby
Hornby writes about the foibles and loves of eccentric young people with humor and care. High Fidelity, an upbeat and character-driven novel of music, love, and a record store, is also the basis for a movie starring John Cusack.


A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan

Egan demonstrates her chops as a master of the unconventional and thought-provoking in A Visit from the Goon Squad. As the narrative switches between the engaging characters, the reader is taken on a journey through the changing music industry.

Year Zero by Rob Reid
A humorous science-fiction take on illegal downloads, Reid's first novel, Year Zero, is packed with detail. When aliens, addicted to Earth's music, discover that they owe astronomical fees for their illegal downloads, they engage the services of entertainment lawyer Nick Carter to fight back. Failing that, they'll simply destroy the Earth.

Zoo City by Lauren Beukes
Beukes' second novel is a fast-paced, award-winning, hard-boiled supernatural mystery about the dark-side of the South African music industry. You can read Sarah's staff review of Zoo City, which includes a link to the book's official soundtrack with songs by South African musicians.

Fitzwilliam Darcy, Rock Star by Heather Lynn Rigaud 
A retelling of Pride and Prejudice where Darcy and Elizabeth are members of two rival rock bands. Steamy, witty, and of a faster-pace than Austen's original that's sure to charm readers who can't get enough Darcy.

 

Please stop by the Recommendations Desk on the first floor, check out NoveList Plus on the library's website, or visit W. 11th & Bluff next week for more reading suggestions. Or submit a Personal Recommendations request, and we'll create a reading list just for you!

Monday, January 28, 2013

Pure by Julianna Baggott

Have you ever enjoyed a book so much that you find yourself  trying to read more and more slowly, rationing out chapters so that perhaps the book might not end so quickly? That is what I found myself doing half-way through Pure by Julianna Baggott. Usually, I plow through books at a breakneck pace, skimming though sentences to find out what happens next, and that's especially true if it's one that one as filled with peril and mystery as Pure is.

Pure opens roughly nine years after the apocalyptic Detonations; a cataclysmic world-wide disaster that destroyed much of civilization. The cause of the Detonations is unclear (and is one of the story's many mysteries) but the effects were devastating. Those who survived did so at a great cost; they are fused with whatever (or whoever) they were holding or standing close to at the time. For our main character 16-year-old Pressia, it means having her left hand and arm fused with the plastic doll she was holding. Other characters in the story bear similar scars - a boy with a flock of live birds fused to his back, another with his younger brother permanently attached to his shoulders. Nightmarish creatures called Dusts (people fused with the earth or buildings) and Beasts (people fused with wild animals) haunt the landscape, devouring any living thing that comes within reach.

Equally deadly is the OSR - once called Operation Search and Rescues, now known as Operation Sacred Revolution - the paramilitary group that runs the poverty-riddled settlement where Pressia lives with her grandfather. At age 16, all children must register with the OSR or face execution. If selected, recruits are "un-taught" how to read and taught how to kill. Those who are too weak or deformed to join are used as live targets for the new recruits.

But this bleak and deadly landscape isn't the only world here. There are those who escaped the Detonations by taking shelter in the Dome, which sits on a great hill overlooking the rubble fields. A few weeks after the Detonations, thousands of notes were dropped on the rubble fields with this message:
From www.puretrilogy.co.uk
This message was the first and only communication from the Dome. Years later, some people worship the Dome, others, like the OSR, plot to destroy it. But many think little about it, more concerned with day-to-day survival.

Life inside the Dome, however, is far from perfect. The cost of surviving the Detonations is to live in a tightly-controlled society under constant surveillance. Sixteen-year-old Partridge, son of the Dome's most powerful man, lives an isolated life, haunted by the death of his mother, who chose to leave the Dome during the Detonations, and his older brother's recent suicide. After uncovering evidence that his mother may still be alive, Partridge escapes the Dome to the rubble fields.

Pressia, meanwhile, is on the run from the OSR when she finds Partridge and saves him from a Groupie attack (Groupies are quite literally groups of people fused together). Thinking she can somehow use Partridge to get off the OSR's list, she agrees to help him find his childhood home, where he believes he will find clues that will lead him to his mother.

Pressia and Partridge's search does not end there, of course. What they uncover leads them to question their own lives, the world they have grown up in and who they really are. Though the book is long at 400+ pages, it is a fast-paced read, filled with action, surprising revelations, heartbreak and of course, more questions than answers. But as quickly as the action unfolds, you'll want to slow down and take in every word.

Baggott's world-building is excellent, adding that much more urgency to Pressia and Partridge's journey. While there is a hint of romance between some characters, it is not the central theme. Pressia is a very strong female lead - while not always sure of the decisions she makes, she never yields control or loses her agency. This is a refreshing change after having read so many YA Hunger Games wannabes. To be sure, Pure is no less dark than Hunger Games, in fact, it is more so. The world of Pure is more complex, with lies and deceptions layered one after another and filled with so much tragedy that it is part of everyday life. That people like Pressia are able to not just survive, but to do so with their spirit intact is no less a victory than finding the answers to the questions surrounding her.

It wasn't until the very last page of the book that I realized it was part of a planned trilogy. The next book, Fuse, is due out in February and you can already place a hold on it (after mine, of course!)

~ Allison, Adult Services

Update 1/30/13 - Pure was awarded the 2013 ALA/YALSA Alex Award, which is given every year to ten books written for adults that have special appeal to young adults! See the whole list at: www.ala.org/yalsa/alex-awards#current

Friday, January 25, 2013

New books for New Adults

If you're the sort of person who makes an effort to keep track of the trends and labels popular in publishing (and I am), you may've come across the discussion of New Adult fiction. If this is your first time encountering the phrase New Adult to describe a book, you're probably wondering what on Earth that is meant to convey (or at least that was my reaction). Roughly speaking, these are books about the lives of 20-somethings aimed at 20-something readers.

What's driving this new marketing push is up for debate, but many agree that it has something to do with the recent popularity of Young Adult novels among adult readers. However you want to label it, a book about someone exploring their goals, identity, relationships, and place in the world can make for compelling reading. Or viewing. From HBO's recent series Girls to the cult favorite Veronica Mars.

Because this is a rather new designation, you'll find that the titles championed as New Adult are rather varied in tone, setting, and content. It's the difference between Rowling's Harry Potter series and Grossman's Magicians. So while some of these titles are shelved in the YA section at Carnegie-Stout, others might contain more about the physical side of relationships than some readers will be comfortable with.

That said, if you're a teen who tends to read books from the adult collection, or an adult who's always reading YA, New Adult might be the books for you! We've pulled together some suggestions from our collection, but if you want to read more, check out New Adult Alley, a blog devoted to New Adult fiction.

Adult Fiction
Slammed by Colleen Hoover
Eighteen-year-old Layken struggles with holding her family together after her father dies, until she develops a relationship with her new neighbor, Will, who has a passion for poetry slams and gives her a new sense of hope.

Beautiful Disaster by Jamie McGuire
Travis Maddox, Eastern University's playboy, makes a bet with good girl Abby that if he loses, he will remain abstinent for a month, but if he wins, Abby must live in his apartment for the same amount of time.

The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides
Madeleine Hanna breaks out of her straight-and-narrow mold when she enrolls in a semiotics course and falls in love with charismatic loner Leonard Morten, a time which is complicated by the resurfacing of a man who is obsessed with Madeleine.

Romance
Easy by Tammara Webber
When Jacqueline follows her longtime boyfriend to the college of his choice, the last thing she expects is a breakup. After two weeks in shock, she wakes up to her new reality: she's single, attending a state university instead of a music conservatory, ignored by her former circle of friends, stalked by her ex's frat brother, and failing a class for the first time in her life.

Young Adult Fiction
Pushing the Limits by Katie McGarry
Former popular girl, Echo, finds herself mysteriously cast as an outsider at school and has scars on her arms with no memory of how they got there. When she meets bad boy, Noah Hutchinson, she is surprised that he is able to understand. Sparks fly and the two have a hard time fighting their attraction despite secrets they are both keeping.

Something Like Normal by Trish Doller
When Travis returns home from Afghanistan, his parents are splitting up, his brother has stolen his girlfriend and car, and he has nightmares of his best friend getting killed, but when he runs into Harper, a girl who has despised him since middle school, life actually starts looking up.

Where She Went by Gayle Forman
This sequel to Forman's If I Stay is set three years after the car accident that almost killed Mia. This reflective story is told from the perspective of Adam, whose band took off after Mia left for Julliard, as they find their paths crossing again in New York.


Please stop by the Recommendations Desk on the first floor, check out NoveList Plus on the library's website, or visit W. 11th & Bluff next week for more reading suggestions. Or submit a Personal Recommendations request, and we'll create a reading list just for you!