All kinds of things are happening at the library this summer! Check out the special events we have planned, and our TeensRead Book Groups for Middle School Students and Friends! |
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| Here's a list of the special events for teens we have planned this year! Here's a printable list of events listed branch by branch.
TeensRead! Book Groups & More for Middle School Students and FriendsEiseley Branch Library 1530 Superior St. 402-441-4250 June 4-July 9 Mondays 1:00-2:00 PM Fantasy & Science Fiction Book Group Whether you are a die-hard fantasy fan or more at home among distant planets with science fiction, this book group is for you. We will read, talk, eat and have fun on Monday afternoons. To sign up, stop in at Eiseley (1530 Superior St.) or call Eiseley's information desk (402-441-4250). June 4 - Meet and Greet June 11 - The Forest of Hands and Teeth by Carrie Ryan June 18 – Ship Breaker by Paolo Bacigalupi June 25 – Citizen of the Galaxy by Robert A. Heinlein July 2 – The Roar by Emma Clayton July 9 – Vote for next year's book Gere Branch Library 2400 S. 56th St. 402-441-8560 June 12-July 17 Tuesdays 2:30-3:30 PM A little dark reading... Gere's TeensRead Book Club this summer will feature books about the night. Come and find out if our talks about these books will shed any light or just leave us in the dark. Sign up at Gere in person or by phone. Vote now for your favorite titles, and pick up the books in person at our first meeting. Walt Branch Library 6701 S. 14th St. 402-441-4460 May 29-June 26 Tuesdays 6:30-7:30 PM Over-Readers Anonymous: For Addicts of Young Adult Paranormal Romance Fallen angels, immortals, dystopian societies, the underworld, and of course, vampires; we'll have them all this summer at Walt Branch Library's book gathering sessions for teen and adult fans of Young Adult Paranormal Romance. Join other avid readers who share an interest in this ever-growing subgenre. We will obsess over a new paranormal romance theme every week with the focus on one main book. Bring someone who shares your appreciation for mysterious, dark and brooding heroes. Both adults and teens are welcome! Attend any of the sessions or sign up for all five by stopping in at Walt Branch Library (6701 S. 14th Street) or calling Walt's information desk (402-441-4460). Pre-registration is encouraged, but not required. May 29-Fallen Angels (Hush, Hush by Becca Fitzpatrick) June 5-The Underworld (Abandon by Meg Cabot) June 12-Immortals (Evermore by Alyson Noël) June 19-Apocalyptic & Dystopian Societies (Enclave by Ann Aguirre) June 26-Vampires (Hearts at Stake by Alyxandra Harvey) Williams Branch Library 5000 Mike Scholl St. 402-441-8580 June 7-June 28 Thursdays 2:30-3:30 PM Friends, Books and Fun Face to face friends, fun with favorite books and food; join us Thursdays at 2:30 PM Sign up and check out the first book, The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins, at Williams Branch Library. Summer Reading Program images are copyrighted. Contact the CSLP at 1(866) 657-8556 or info@cslpreads.org for more information. |
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Posts tagged as books
Own the Night: Teen Summer Reading Program
May 08, 2012 by Webmaster
Tagged in: books, summer reading, teens,
Comments: 0
Hey, Read This!
May 01, 2012 by pjorgensen

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Books listed are chosen to represent the wide world of literature. While there is something for everyone, not every title listed will be of interest to, or appropriate for, every reader. Check with your librarian for more suggestions.
Check out these new booklists - three of our new Books, Movies & More pages!
More Book Recommendations
Susan's Teen Read Week Book List 2011
Sarah's Teen Read Week List 2010
Susan's Teen Read Week Book List 2010
Susan's Summer Reading List, 2010
Sarah's TeensRead List, Summer 2010
YALSA Top Ten Best Books for Young Adults
YALSA Award for Excellence in Nonfiction for Young Adults: 2010 Finalists
Susan's Teen Read Week Book List 2009
Best Books for Young Adults From the American Library Association
The Hot List! Check the most popular items on the teen advance reservations list!
Susan's Picks, Winter 2008 Also available as a two-part audio podcast; the podcasts also include books for adults:
Part 1
Part 2
Good Youth Books for Gifts, 2008 (This list includes books for younger readers)
Susan's Teen Read Week Book List 2008
Sarah's Teen Book List, Spring 2008 An audio podcast based on this list is also available:
Susan's Picks, Spring 2008 Also available as an audio podcast:
Good Youth Books for Gifts, 2007 (This list includes books for younger readers)
Susan's Teen Read Week Book List 2007
Books for Young People: A Gere Branch Books Talk Presentation - Feb 5, 2007
Game On! Fiction for Gaming Fans
Susan's Teen Read Week Book List 2006
Susan's Teen Read Week Book List 2005
Young Adult Booktalks, Spring 2004
Golden Sower Award Nominees From the Past
Teen Book Club
The online Teen Book Club is one of eleven online book clubs available through Lincoln City Libraries. Sign up and you'll receive brief daily sections of the books in your specified categories via your e-mail account. Each day's entry will be approximately 5 minutes worth of reading material. Click the book cover image to get more information.
Tagged in: libraries, youth services, teen, teens, teenage, teenager, teenagers, book, books, read, reading, recommended reading,
Comments: 0
New Books On Order
April 30, 2012 by Webmaster
The New Books On Order lists are PDF files, which require the free Adobe® Acrobat® Reader. Help for viewing these files is available on the City of Lincoln Web site.
You can also sign up to receive the monthly New Books on Order list by e-mail; here is the current list.
Additional materials on order for this month can also be viewed in our catalog.
- May 2012
- April 2012
- March 2012
- February 2012
- January 2012
- December 2011
- November 2011
- October 2011
- September 2011
- August 2011
- July 2011
- June 2011
All Large Type books on order can be viewed in our catalog.
(This list may not be produced during some months.)
Tagged in: book, books, new books, on order, reserve, hold,
Comments: 0
A Little Dark Reading
April 13, 2012 by Webmaster
Brought to you by Sarah @ GERE Branch Library Night Runner by Max TurnerZack Thomson is a sane teenager living in a mental ward - and he's pretty much okay with that. After his parents died, he developed some very strong and weird allergies and the mental ward was a place that could handle his needs. His severe allergy to sunlight means he mostly only deals with the night staff, and Nurse Ophelia does the best job with his crazy food restrictions anyway. She makes a strawberry smoothie that soothes his raging hunger and doesn't make him feel sick. Things are running pretty smoothly until the night that the freaky guy on the motorcycle crashes through the wall into the lobby of the ward and tells him to run. Suddenly Zack has questions and lots of them! Keeper of the Night by Kimberly Willis HoltIsabel's mother died, and nobody is talking about it. Not her dad, who sleeps curled up on the floor next to the bed he used to share with mom, not her sister who has nightmares and wets the bed every night, and not her brother, who begins taking a knife to his room each night and carving his anger into the wall. Isabel is doing everything she knows how to do to keep the family afloat, but unless she gets some help, tragedy may strike again. Night of the Bat by Paul ZindelJake is a spoiled 15-year-old, or at least that is everyone's opinion of him up until now. So when his dad's expedition to study bats in the Amazon is in trouble, Jake flies down, determined to prove that he can help. But the man-eating monster they find themselves up against is something out of a nightmare, and may be beyond anyone's ability to destroy - let alone a teenager on his own in the jungle. Up All Night by Abrahams, Bray, Levithan, McCormick, Weeks & YangSix short stories about thing that keep you up all night: Babysitting your little brother and his dying pet mouse; Going out of town to a concert with your stupid friends who drink too much and having to call your dad and his new sweetheart for a place to crash; Deciding that the party is lame and bailing out to find what you REALLY want to be doing; Learning to drive secretly at night and discovering power you never knew you had; And a graphic short about a monkey without a mother - all of which may very well keep YOU up and pondering all night long! In the Forests of the Night by Amelia Atwater-RhodesRiska used to be a girl with a family, back in 1701. Now she's an old vampire, forced into this unlife against her will and at a very high cost, powerful, angry and alone. There are no sparkly love stories here, just tragedy, loss and power. A Discovery of Witches by Deborah HarknessDo you love the idea of a dusty British library reading room, a mysterious magical manuscript that disappears as soon as it's discovered, and a forbidden love story between a witch and a vampire? This book is gothic, dark, mysterious, romantic, peopled with witches, vampires, and daemons, rich with history - and best yet...great characters and really well written!! It'll leave you craving book #2...which is due out July 10th!! The Night Circus by Erin MorgensternPrepare to be up all night. The setting is a unique circus that travels secretly and only opens at midnight. The author will entrance and enchant you with the descriptions of this circus that are so amazingly delicious and addictive, they will haunt your imagination forever - and that's just the setting. The story itself, a complex, fascinating story of REAL magic, amoral competition, and accidental love will leave you breathless and cheering for the characters to beat all odds and win together. Nightjohn by Gary PaulsenA historical novel - not Paulsen's usual fare but he's produced a remarkable story here. Sarny is a slave girl in the 1850's. Nightjohn is also a slave - or is he? He can read, and he's teaching Sarny how too, despite the huge risk. When Sarny accidentally spills the secret the punishments are beyond harsh, and she's sure that life and death are more important than learning how to read - but Nightjohn has some amazing plans in store. Night by Elie WieselThe most tragic and horrific story on this list, and it's not fiction. When Elie Wiesel's family was forcibly removed from their home and taken to a concentration camp in German-occupied Poland during WWII, Elie was 15 years old. He was a deeply religious boy, who lovingly studied his Jewish faith and dreamed of studying the even more mystical and complex cabbala. Enduring the horror of the Holocaust on the very front lines was a test not only of his will to survive, but his sanity, and his faith. He is rocked body and soul by this experience, and again by surviving it. Much later he found himself compelled to share it, and it is an important story of our history, one that has many difficult lessons to teach today's students. This book is not an easy read, but it is a critical one. Night Fires by George Edward StanleySet in Oklahoma in 1923, this is the story of a boy whose father was recently killed in a car accident. He and his mother move to Lawton, OK from Washington DC, where their loss and grief get entangled with the racial unrest happening in this small town. Woodrow just wants to fit in, and find some friends who might help him deal with his sadness. His mom is nearly too sad to get out of bed, so when his neighbor offers some fatherly support, Woodrow is drawn in. But there is a strong KKK presence in Lawton, something his own father would have been set against - and his new friends are up to their pointy white hats involved with the Klan. Woodrow has to make a stand, but how many horrible acts will he commit in the name of weakness and need before he finds his strength? The Replacement by Brenna YovanoffMackie doesn't remember the whole story - he was too little when it happened, but his sister does. She was four years old, awake in the night, and she watched while her little brother was stolen from his crib, and replaced with Mackie. And she loved him anyway. As did the rest of his family, even though they knew in their hearts he wasn't quite right. They buy all plastic silverware when they realize the iron in the metal hurts him. They protect him from harm when they discover the scent of blood makes him faint. They make up allergies to explain his pallor, and excuses to explain his absence from from church - even though his dad is the minister. But when another child is replaced, and the changeling dies, Mackie steps up. He's the only one who can go to the fae underworld to find out the truth, and the only one who can change it. Wicked Girls by Stephanie HemphillBased on the Salem Witch Trials of 1692, this novel takes us inside the circle of girls who cried "Witch". The core group of three, Ann, Mercy and Margaret, and four other girls who come and go from the group, as the power dynamic shifts...and shift it does. It's all about power. In this time and place, young women had little to none and this was an opportunity to seize some. The power impress, to have your parents listen to you and treat you with respect, to get back at people in the town who had harmed you or your friends, and power to control the group itself. Before long, the frenzy they've whipped up results in not just imprisonments for the accused, but some hangings, and the girls begin to fear that they're in way over their heads. |
Tagged in: books, recommend, teens, read, horror, gothic, vampire, vampires,
Comments: 0
VOTE for Gere's TeensRead Books HERE!
April 04, 2012 by Webmaster
Tagged in: books, summer reading, teens, teensread, read,
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Previous Entries







Wednesday, June 13, 2012
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Friday, June 15, 2012
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
Friday, June 29, 2012
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
Book Groups & More for Middle School Students and Friends


Up All Night
A Discovery of Witches
Nightjohn


