bookshop@secretgardenbooks.com's blog |
Tuesday was release day for the latest in Rick Riordan's Heroes of Olympus series, the Mark of Athena. After witnessing the wonder on the faces of the kids (and their parents!) as they took the new long-awaited hardcover in hand for the first time, I couldn't help but feel sorry about the inevitable dismay they will feel as they close their finished book and realize that they have at least a year to wait before the next installment is available. If you or your child is suffering from Percy Jackson withdrawals, have no fear! I have assembled a list of books below to help fill the emotional void left by Mr. Riordan's pen! Please feel free to leave questions comments below!
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More and more often these days I'm seeing adults - men and women - asking for recommendations from our kids' fantasy section, only, not for their kids. If you are one of these people, there is no need to be embarrassed! You are not alone! It seems that now more than ever there are high quality, well written fantasy books for teens. Here are a few of my favorites. Finnikin of the Rock (Paperback)$9.99 ISBN-13: 9780763652920Availability: Usually Ships in 1-5 days Published: Candlewick, 8/2011 Melina Marchetta's fantasy series is well-crafted and brilliantly executed. With heroes reminiscent of Tolkien, she tells a tale full of whispered rumors of saviors, dark spells, and unfulfilled prophesies.
Bitterblue (Hardcover)$19.99 ISBN-13: 9780803734739Availability: Usually Ships in 1-5 days Published: Dial, 5/2012 Cashore ties together her previous two novels dramatically in the latest installment. With a more intimate look at one of the most sinister villains I've encountered in YA literature, this is her darkest and most complex book yet.
The Crown of Embers (Hardcover)$17.99 ISBN-13: 9780062026514Availability: Usually Ships in 1-5 days Published: Greenwillow Books, 9/2012 Brand new in September, the sequel to Rae Carson's the Girl of Fire and Thorns absolutely surpasses the first in the series - which won several awards itself. If you haven't read the first, I've listed it below.
The Girl of Fire and Thorns (Paperback)$9.99 ISBN-13: 9780062026507Availability: Usually Ships in 1-5 days Published: Greenwillow Books, 8/2012 The Crimson Crown (A Seven Realms Novel) (Hardcover)$18.99 ISBN-13: 9781423144335Availability: Usually Ships in 1-5 days Published: Disney-Hyperion, 10/2012 Pre-order your copy of the fourth installment in Chima's masterful Seven Realms series, out October 23rd! A cunning, constantly surprising plot, with subversive characters that you are will be shocked to find yourself rooting for in the end, this is one of my all time favorite fantasy series.
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Last night, the Stranger and Fred Wildlife Refuge hosted a reading with Michael Chabon for book and music lovers alike. Chabon was reading from his latest novel, Telegraph Avenue, in which Archie Stallings and Nat Jaffe, co-owners of Brokeland Records, are forced to confront the uncertain future of their shop when a chain store opens down the street. Naturally, the age-old question was put forward by a member of the audience: Will books suffer the same fate as records, cassette tapes, and CDs and become a relic of the past? A rare comfort for individuals plagued by nostalgia to keep along side their record players and type writers? Will they fall prey, as so many have predicted, to our increasingly clutterless, convenience obsessed society with their collections of multi-purpose devices that all essentially do the same thing? This is a question that I'm faced with myself on a semi-regular basis here at the bookshop. The other day a man came in and told me that he would not be buying a book from us because he had just downloaded an e-book onto his Kindle. "How does it feel to work in a dying industry?" he asked me. Others are more positive, saying that they think that books will stick around because there is nothing quite like a book. But everyone says it with a degree of hesitation. I hope it doesn't happen... but let's be honest, the outlook is a little grim. When I heard Mr. Chabon's answer to the question of the future of books, I felt like I had been waiting for someone to explain it in exactly those terms. He first pointed out that records have had a longer life than both cassettes and CD's. Though they are large, easily scratched, and difficult to take jogging, they are still to this day being made and sold. This suggests, he said, something inherently valuable - that smell, the rich sound, the art on the jacket, the dust. Human beings love to have multiple senses engaged at once. The same argument, obviously, can be made for books. The sense of accomplishment that accompanies the sound of your hand sliding over paper as you turn the page, the yellowing sides of dust-covered pages welcoming you as you pick up your favorite book, the raised letters and faded colors of the cover art that gives a face and identity to each old friend - these are the qualities that make me such a fierce defender of the physical book. Maybe this won't be as profound to you as it was to me, and when I heard him give name to that "thing" that keeps us coming back to books, I was almost embarrassed that I had never thought of it that way myself. Telegraph Avenue will forever be a placeholder of the night I heard Michael Chabon offer hope for the future of my industry. Here's to embracing the new obnoxious habit of repeating this story to anyone who questions the future of books: "I once heard Michael Chabon say..." Telegraph Avenue (Hardcover)$27.99 ISBN-13: 9780061493348Availability: Usually Ships in 1-5 days Published: Harper, 9/2012 |
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