Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Young Adult Staff Summer Reading

I read 4 YA books for this summer project and wrote up little summaries of each title (okay, sometimes I am an overachiever). Here they are:

  1. James Patterson – Maximum Ride: Saving the World and Other Extreme Sports – This is the third of the Maximum Ride series. Max continues to try to protect her flock of recombinant DNA bird kids from evil scientists and a variety of wolf people, find out information about their backgrounds, and oh yeah, in her spare time, literally save the world. The book is a very fast read, or listen, as many Patterson books are. It does answer many questions posed in the previous two books as it was supposedly the final book in the trilogy. However, it also leaves enough open for more books to follow.
  2. Gene Luen Yang – American Born Chinese – This book, winner of the 2007 Michael L. Printz award, is a graphic novel depicting three seemingly unrelated stories. They are then woven into one ending which powerfully conveys the theme of cultural identity and ultimately personal acceptance.
  3. John Green – An Abundance of Katherines – Aging child prodigy, Colin Singleton is good at languages and being dumped by all of the girls he has dated. All of which are named Katherine. After being by Katherine XIX immediately following graduation, he sets off with his best friend on a road trip. There he begins to develop his theorem of the predictability of relationships, which he hopes will define him as a genius and cause him to matter in the world. There is a lot of math in this book, even more fully explained in an appendix (which I will admit I skipped). It is an interesting twist on what could have just been another guy gets dumped story.
  4. Rachel Cohen and David Levithan – Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist – Set amidst the chaotic backdrop of the NYC punk music scene, this book details one long evening in which two high school seniors, who meet by accident, find that they may be what each other has been looking for all along. The story is told in alternating voices, which makes for some interesting viewpoints as we see the action through each person’s eyes. A very well done story, however potential readers should be cautioned in that there is a lot of strong language and sexual content (hetero and homosexual) throughout.

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