<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
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    <title>Teen Services</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/weblog/teens/" />
    <link rel="self" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/weblog/teens/atom.xml" />
   <id>tag:berkeleypubliclibrary.org,2006:/weblog/teens//2</id>
    <link rel="service.post" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=2" title="Teen Services" />
    <updated>2006-10-13T01:22:10Z</updated>
    <subtitle>The Berkeley Public Library Teen Services blog.</subtitle>
    <generator uri="http://www.sixapart.com/movabletype/">Movable Type 3.2</generator>
 
<entry>
    <title>Sports fiction</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/weblog/teens/2006/07/sports_fiction_1.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=2/entry_id=67" title="Sports fiction" />
    <id>tag:berkeleypubliclibrary.org,2006:/weblog/teens//2.67</id>
    
    <published>2006-07-26T00:57:32Z</published>
    <updated>2006-10-13T01:22:10Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Basketball, football, soccer, baseball, wrestling, boxing, swimming, hockey, dog mushing - it&apos;s all here....</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Teen Librarian</name>
        <uri>http://www.berkeleypubliclibrary.org/weblogs/teens/</uri>
    </author>
            <category term="Sports fiction" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/weblog/teens/">
        <![CDATA[<h4>Basketball, football, soccer, baseball, wrestling, boxing, swimming, hockey, dog mushing - it's all here.</h4>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p>Alphin, Elaine Marie<br />
<strong>Perfect Shot</strong>  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 2005<br />
This mystery about the murder of high school student Brian’s girlfriend features lots of basketball action.</p>

<p>Brashares, Anne                    <br />
 <strong>*Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants</strong> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1991<br />
Bridget flirts with her coach at soccer camp. She’s one of the four friends who share the traveling pants.</p>

<p>Coleman, Evelyn<br />
<strong>Born in Sin</strong>   &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2001<br />
Keisha resents being thrown into a summer program for “at-risk” youth. But she discovers she has a natural talent for swimming.</p>

<p>Courtenay, Bryce<br />
<strong>Power of One</strong>  v   2005<br />
A boxing story set in South Africa at the beginning of World War II.</p>

<p>Coy, John<br />
<strong>Crackback</strong>   &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2005<br />
Football used to be fun. Now there’s too much pressure and his best friend is pushing steroids.</p>

<p>Crutcher, Chris<br />
<strong>*Whale Talk</strong>   &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2001<br />
TJ, a multiracial teen, shuns the jocks at his high school but then agrees to form a swimming team.</p>

<p>de la Peña, Matt<br />
<strong>Ball Don’t Lie</strong>    &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2005<br />
Basketball is Sticky’s life – and his ticket out. Features detailed basketball action – both street and regulation. </p>

<p>Gotto, Ray<br />
<strong>Cotton Woods</strong>  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1991<br />
The baseball "natural" shows his stuff in this full-color comic book.</p>

<p>Henry, Sue<br />
<strong>*Murder on the Iditarod Trail</strong>   &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1991<br />
It’s one thousand miles from Anchorage to Nome in the grueling Iditarod—a dog sled race. </p>

<p>Hughes, Pat<br />
<strong>Open Ice</strong>   &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2005<br />
Should Nick’s third concussion be the end of his hockey career? What… not play hockey?</p>

<p>Jenkins, A. J.<br />
<strong>Out of Order</strong>   &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2003<br />
He’s cocky, and good at a lot of things, including baseball. But all is not as it seems.</p>

<p>Klass, David  <br />
<strong>California Blue</strong>   &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1994<br />
Much to his father’s disappointment, seventeen-year-old John prefers track to football. To complicate things, John discovers an unknown species of butterfly in the redwoods, which causes conflict in his logging town.</p>

<p>Klass, David  <br />
<strong>Home of the Braves</strong>   &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2002<br />
A hot shot soccer player from Brazil invades Joe’s territory—on the field and in matters of romance.</p>

<p>Lynch, Chris<br />
<strong>Inexcusable</strong>  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2005<br />
High school senior and football player Keir is accused of date rape.</p>

<p>Malamud, Bernard<br />
<strong>*The Natural</strong>   &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1952<br />
The classic baseball story.</p>

<p>Marino, Alfred<br />
<strong>Pinned</strong>   &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2005<br />
Two high school students who come from very different worlds reach the State finals in this detailed story about wrestling.</p>

<p>Myers, Walter Dean<br />
<strong>*Slam! </strong>  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1996<br />
Slam is banking on his basketball skill to be his ticket to financial success.</p>

<p>Murphy, Claire<br />
<strong>Free Radical</strong>   &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2002<br />
Luke, a baseball player, learns his mother is wanted by the FBI for her role in the death of a student during an anti-Vietnam War protest  thirty years ago. Set in Fairbanks, Alaska and, more locally, at the Santa Rita jail.</p>

<p>Nishiyama, Yuriko<br />
<strong>Rebound</strong>   2003-<br />
Translated from the Japanese.  A manga series about a basketball team.</p>

<p>Peet, Mal<br />
<strong>Keeper</strong>  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 2003<br />
Detailed descriptions of the art of goalkeeping integrated into a story about environmental awareness.</p>

<p>Peters, Julie Anne<br />
<strong>Far from Xanadu</strong>   &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2005  <br />
Mike makes the all-state softball team, but struggles with her feelings for the new girl in town. Mike’s a girl too.</p>

<p>Powell, Randy<br />
<strong>Three Clams and an Oyster</strong>   &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2002<br />
Three high school juniors who play flag football dump a teammate who is always drunk or stoned. Now they’re trying to replace him.</p>

<p>Ripslinger, Jon<br />
<strong>How I Fell in Love</strong>   &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2003<br />
<strong>& Learned To Shoot Free Throws</strong><br />
Danny the Bruiser falls for the Stone Angel.</p>

<p>Trueman, Terry<br />
<strong>Cruise Control</strong>  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2004<br />
Highly successful athlete Paul excels in three sports, but his family life is complicated by his brother’s cerebral palsy.</p>

<p>Volponi, Paul<br />
<strong>Black and White</strong>   &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2005<br />
They’re inseparable off the court, and a formidable duo on the court – until they get busted for robbery.</p>

<p>Waltman, Kevin<br />
<strong>Learning the Game</strong>  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2005<br />
Nate and some of his basketball teammates break into a frat house and deal with the consequences.</p>

<p>Zusak, Markus<br />
<strong>Fighting Ruben Wolfe</strong>   &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2001<br />
Teenage brothers Ruben and Cameron enter an illegal boxing league. Eventually, they have to fight each other.</p>

<p>Zusak, Markus<br />
<strong>Getting the Girl</strong>    &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2001<br />
In this sequel to </strong>Fighting Ruben Wolfe</strong>, Cameron gets the girl – Rube’s ex-girlfriend.</p>

<p>*<strong>also available as an audiobook</strong></p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Horror</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/weblog/teens/2006/06/horror_1.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=2/entry_id=53" title="Horror" />
    <id>tag:berkeleypubliclibrary.org,2006:/weblog/teens//2.53</id>
    
    <published>2006-06-22T01:20:14Z</published>
    <updated>2006-06-22T01:24:26Z</updated>
    
    <summary>WARNING - some of these stories are not for the squeamish....</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Teen Librarian</name>
        <uri>http://www.berkeleypubliclibrary.org/weblogs/teens/</uri>
    </author>
            <category term="Horror" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/weblog/teens/">
        <![CDATA[<p>WARNING - some of these stories are not for the squeamish.</p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p><strong>*also available as an audiobook</strong></p>

<p>Anderson, M. T.<br />
<strong>Thirsty </strong>	1997<br />
Struggling to remain human. A vampire story.</p>

<p>Atwater-Rhodes, Amelia<br />
<strong>In the Forests of the Night</strong>   1999<br />
A vampire story. Written when the author was fifteen.</p>

<p>Barker, Clive<br />
<strong>*Abarat </strong>  2002<br />
<strong>Days of Magic Nights of War </strong>  2004<br />
Enter the frightening world of Cindy Quackenbush. In book two, the forces of night prepare for war.</p>

<p>Blease, Kathleen<br />
<strong>One Dark Night: 13 Masterpieces of the Macabre </strong><br />
A collection of thirteen short gothic stories by various authors.</p>

<p>Butler, Octavia E.<br />
<strong>Fledgling</strong>	2005<br />
A middle aged woman wakes to find herself an eleven year old girl. A gruesome vampire story.</p>

<p>Child, Lincoln <br />
<strong>Utopia</strong>	2002<br />
A high tech amusement park gone horribly wrong. Utopia includes four different theme parks: Camelot, The Boardwalk, Gaslight, and Callisto.</p>

<p>Drvenkar, Zoran<br />
<strong>Tell Me What You See</strong>  2005<br />
On a secret visit to her father’s grave, sixteen-year-old Alissa discovers the crypt of a child and acquires terrible powers from which only her friend Evelin can save her.</p>

<p>Due, Tananarive<br />
<strong>The Good House</strong>   2003<br />
Voodoo, suicide and murder.</p>

<p>Gaiman, Neil<br />
<strong>The Last Temptation</strong>	2005<br />
Gaiman adapts a story from Alice Cooper’s album <strong>Lost in America.</strong> A graphic novel.</p>

<p>Hoffman, Nina Kiriki<br />
<strong>A Stir of Bones</strong>  2003<br />
Fourteen-year-old Susan lives with an abusive father in a sentient house.</p>

<p>King, Stephen<br />
<strong>*Carrie </strong>  2005<br />
Something bad will happen at the prom. This audiobook version is read by Sissy Spacek, who played Carrie in the film version.</p>

<p>King, Stephen<br />
<strong>Cell   </strong>2006<br />
No good can come from cell phones.</p>

<p>Klause, Annette Curtis<br />
<strong>The Silver Kiss </strong>  1990<br />
When their paths cross, Zoe is dealing with a death in the family and Simon is seeking to avenge the death of his mother. A vampire story.</p>

<p>Klause, Annette Curtis<br />
<strong>*Blood and Chocolate</strong>   1997<br />
A werewolf falls in love with a human but the pack is dead set against it.</p>

<p>Koja, Kathe<br />
<strong>Blue Mirror    </strong>2004<br />
A demon lover on the streets.</p>

<p>Koontz, Dean<br />
<strong>Forever Odd	 </strong>  2005<br />
Odd Thomas can see the dead.<br />
<strong>Prodigal Son	</strong>    2005<br />
In New Orleans, in the 21st century, Dr. Frankenstein is living as mad scientist Victor Helios.</p>

<p>Martinez, A Lee<br />
<strong>Gil’s All Fright Diner </strong>  2005<br />
Zombies. Vampires. Werewolves. A comedy in the vein of Douglas Adams.</p>

<p>Meyer, Stephenie<br />
<strong>Twilight</strong>	2005<br />
He is tall, pale and handsome. Set in the Olympic peninsula in Washington State -  where the sun rarely shines.</p>

<p>Moore, Alan<br />
<strong>Swamp Thing: the Curse  </strong>   2000<br />
Originally published in single magazine form as <strong>The Saga of the Swamp Thing #35-42</strong>. Includes a controversial werewolf story.</p>

<p>O’Nan, Stewart<br />
<strong>Night Country</strong>    2003<br />
Marco tells the story of the friends that survived the car crash. But he himself is dead.</p>

<p>Pomplun, Tom<br />
<strong>Horror Classics </strong>    2004<br />
A “graphic classic.”  Includes stories by Ambrose Bierce, H.P. Lovecraft, Edgar Allan Poe, Saki, and Jack London.</p>

<p>Poe, Edgar Allan<br />
<strong>Edgar Allen Poe’s Tales of Mystery and Madness	</strong>	2004<br />
Slightly abridged retellings “The Black Cat,” “The Masque of the Red Death,” “Hop-Frog,” and “The Fall of the House of Usher.” A graphic novel.</p>

<p>Rice, Anne <strong><br />
*Interview with the Vampire</strong>   1994<br />
The first in the series featuring rock star vampire Lestat.<br />
	<br />
Sebold, Alice<br />
<strong>*Lovely Bones </strong>  2002<br />
Fourteen-year-old Suzy Salmon narrates this story – from heaven. It’s grisly.</p>

<p>Shan, Darren<br />
<strong>Lord Loss </strong>  2005<br />
This first book in the <strong>Demonata</strong> series is “guaranteed to gross out anyone aged 12 to 20.”</p>

<p>Vande Velde, Vivian<br />
<strong>Being Dead	</strong>2001<br />
Each of these seven stories features a ghost of some sort.</p>

<p>Elrod, P.N. (editor)<br />
<strong>Dracula in London</strong>    2001<br />
Many different writers imagine the most famous vampire loose in London.</p>

<p>364.152 G262j<br />
Geary, Rick<br />
<strong>Jack the Ripper : a journal of the Whitechapel murders 1888-1889 </strong> 1995<br />
In graphic novel format.</p>

<p>611 R53s<br />
Roach, Mary <br />
<strong>Stiff : the Curious Lives of Human Cadavers</strong>   2003<br />
Science writer Mary Roach tells you what really happens to those donated bodies. </p>

<p>614.57 P926h<br />
Preston, Richard <br />
<strong>The Hot Zone </strong>  1994<br />
It’s true, and so that much scarier.  Ebola virus is unstoppable- and there’s no cure. <br />
</p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Hispanic / Latino voices</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/weblog/teens/2006/06/hispanic_latino_voices_1.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=2/entry_id=52" title="Hispanic / Latino voices" />
    <id>tag:berkeleypubliclibrary.org,2006:/weblog/teens//2.52</id>
    
    <published>2006-06-22T01:18:46Z</published>
    <updated>2006-06-22T01:24:26Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Updated April 2006...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Teen Librarian</name>
        <uri>http://www.berkeleypubliclibrary.org/weblogs/teens/</uri>
    </author>
            <category term="Hispanic / Latino voices" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/weblog/teens/">
        <![CDATA[<p>Updated April 2006</p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p><strong>*also available as an audiobook</strong></p>

<p>Allende, Isabel<br />
<strong>Zorro </strong>  (2005)<br />
“Let us begin at the beginning, at an event without which Diego de la Vega would not have been born.”</p>

<p>Alvarez, Julia<br />
<strong>Finding Miracles</strong>  (2004)<br />
Fifteen-year-old Milly Kaufman is an average American teenager until Pablo, a new student at her school, inspires her to search for her birth family in his native country.</p>

<p>Canales, Viola<br />
<strong>Tequila Worm </strong> (2005)<br />
Sofia is a Mexican American girl growing up in South Texas.</p>

<p>Cisneros, Sandra<br />
<strong>*Caramelo</strong>   (2002)<br />
The story of the Reyes family, told through the voice of Lala.  </p>

<p>Danticat, Edwidge<br />
<strong>Breath, Eyes, Memory </strong> (1994)<br />
Twelve-year-old Sofie moves from Haiti to New York and back to Haiti.</p>

<p>Díaz, Junot<br />
<strong>Drown</strong>  (1996)<br />
Short stories about Dominican Americans. </p>

<p>Durán, Miguel<br />
<strong>Don't Spit in my Corner</strong>   (1992)<br />
Based on the author's experience as a teenage pachuco. </p>

<p>Escandón, María Amparo<br />
<strong>Gonzalez and Daughter Trucking Co</strong>.: <br />
a road novel with literary license  (2005)<br />
The story of Libertad Gonzalez, imprisoned in the Mexicali Penal Institute for Women.</p>

<p>Esquivel, Laura<br />
<strong>*Like Water for Chocolate</strong>   (1992)  <br />
Recipes for love during the Mexican revolution. </p>

<p>Herrera, Juan Felipe<br />
<strong>CrashBoomLove  </strong>(1999)<br />
At Rambling West High School, it's Hmongs vs Chicanos vs everybody vs César. A novel in poetry. </p>

<p>Jiménez, Francisco<br />
<strong>Breaking Through</strong>  (2001)<br />
Sequel to The Circuit follows Francisco through high school. </p>

<p>Hernandez, Irene Beltran<br />
<strong>Secret of Two Brothers </strong>  (1995)<br />
A young ex-con tries to make it in LA. </p>

<p>Hernández, Jo Ann Yolanda <br />
<strong>White Bread Competition </strong> (1997)<br />
When Luz, a ninth-grade Latina student in San Antonio, wins a spelling competition, her success triggers a variety of emotions among family, friends, and the broader community.</p>

<p>Lachtman, Ofelia Dumas<br />
<strong>Summer of El Pintor </strong>  (2001)<br />
Monica’s life situation changes dramatically.</p>

<p>Martínez, Demetria<br />
<strong>*Mother Tongue</strong>   (1996)<br />
In Albuquerque, Mary meets José Luis, a refugee from El Salvador. </p>

<p>Martinez, Victor<br />
<strong>*Parrot in the Oven  </strong> (1996)  <br />
Manny, vato firme, decides not to follow in his brother's footsteps. </p>

<p>Miller-Lachman, Lyn (editor)<br />
<strong>Once Upon a Cuento</strong>   (2003)<br />
Seventeen short stories contributed by fourteen Latino authors.</p>

<p>Nava, Michael<br />
<strong>Hidden Law</strong>   (1992)<br />
Gay attorney Henry Rios takes the case of a teenager accused of murder. </p>

<p>Obejas, Achy<br />
<strong>Days of Awe  </strong> (2001)<br />
A Cuban refugee discovers that her family is actually converses - Jews who converted to Christianity during the Spanish Inquisition. </p>

<p>Osa, Nancy<br />
<strong>Cuba 15</strong>   (2003)<br />
Violet Paz, a Chicago high school student, gets ready for her "quince.”</p>

<p>Quiñonez, Ernesto<br />
<strong>Bodega Dreams </strong>  (2000)<br />
Chino learns about power in Spanish Harlem. </p>

<p>Rodriquez, Luis J<br />
<strong>Music of the Mill  </strong>(2005)<br />
Spans sixty years and three generations of the Salcido family.</p>

<p>Pam Muñoz<br />
<strong>*Esperanza Rising  </strong> (2000)  <br />
A wealthy Mexican girl works as a migrant worker in Southern California just before the Depression. </p>

<p>Saldaña, Jr., René <br />
<strong>Finding Our Way</strong>   (2003)<br />
Short stories</p>

<p>Sáenz, Benjamin Alire<br />
<strong>Sammy and Juliana in Hollywood </strong> (2004)<br />
As a Chicano high school student living in the unglamorous town of Hollywood, New Mexico, Sammy Santos faces the challenges of "gringo" racism, unpopular dress codes, the Vietnam War, barrio violence, and poverty.</p>

<p>Santana, Patricia<br />
<strong>Motorcycle Ride on the Sea of Tranquility </strong> (2002)<br />
Yolanda's brother Chuy returns from Vietnam in 1969. </p>

<p>Soto, Gary<br />
<strong>*Buried Onions  </strong> (1977)  <br />
19-year-old Eddie drops out of college and finds himself struggling in Fresno, California</p>

<p>Triana, Gaby<br />
<strong>Cubanita </strong> (2005)<br />
Seventeen-year-old Isabel is eager to leave Miami to attend the University of Michigan and escape her overprotective Cuban mother</p>

<p>Velásquez, Gloria L.<br />
<strong>Teen Angel </strong> (2003)<br />
15 and pregnant.</p>

<p><br />
</p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Asian American voices</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/weblog/teens/2006/06/asian_american_voices.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=2/entry_id=51" title="Asian American voices" />
    <id>tag:berkeleypubliclibrary.org,2006:/weblog/teens//2.51</id>
    
    <published>2006-06-22T01:17:44Z</published>
    <updated>2006-06-22T01:24:26Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Updated March 2006...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Teen Librarian</name>
        <uri>http://www.berkeleypubliclibrary.org/weblogs/teens/</uri>
    </author>
            <category term="Asian American voices" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/weblog/teens/">
        <![CDATA[<p>Updated March 2006</p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p><strong>*also available as an audiobook</strong></p>

<p>Desai Hidier, Tanuja  <br />
<strong>Born Confused</strong>  (2002)<br />
17 year old Dimple Lala’s parents are trying to set her up with a “suitable boy,” straight from India.</p>

<p>Divakaruni, Chitra Banerjee  <br />
<strong>*Mistress of Spices</strong>  (1997)<br />
The old lady who runs the Indian spice shop in Oakland is not what she seems.</p>

<p>Guterson, David<br />
<strong>*Snow Falling on Cedars </strong> (1994)<br />
In the 1950s, a Japanese American fisherman is accused of murder on a small island in Puget Sound.</p>

<p>Jen, Gish  <br />
<strong>Who's Irish?</strong>  (1999)<br />
Jen offers unique views of growing up Chinese American in these short stories.</p>

<p>Kadohata, Cynthia <br />
<strong>Kira-kira </strong> (2004)<br />
Kira-kira means glittering- that’s how Katie Takeshima’s big sister Lynn sees the world. Now Lynn is sick, and the glitter is gone.   </p>

<p>Keller, Nora Okja  <br />
<strong>Comfort Woman </strong> (1997)<br />
Biracial Korean American Beccah’s mother was a “comfort woman”, forced into prostitution in Japan during WWII. Now living in Hawaii, they’re both dealing with the aftermath of that legacy.</p>

<p>Lahiri, Jhumpa  <br />
<strong>*The Namesake </strong> (2003) <br />
The tie to India is strong for American-born Gogol, named for the Russian author.  </p>

<p>Le, Thi Diem Thuy  <br />
<strong>The Gangster We Are All Looking For  </strong>(2003)<br />
A Vietnamese family makes the transition from boat people to San Diego apartment dwellers.</p>

<p>Lee, Gus  <br />
<strong>Honor and Duty </strong> (1994)<br />
There are disadvantages in being a Chinese American West Point cadet in the 1960s- namely, the Vietnam War.</p>

<p>Lee, Marie  <br />
<strong>Necessary Roughness</strong>  (1996)<br />
Korean American twins move from urban California to rural Minnesota, where everything from sports to popularity seems to run according to different rules.</p>

<p>Massey, Sujata  <br />
<strong>The Bride's Kimono </strong> (2001)<br />
Antiques dealer Rei Shimura has a great job exhibiting rare kimonos- until one of the kimonos is stolen and a client found murdered. </p>

<p>Mochizuki, Ken  <br />
<strong>Beacon Hill Boys </strong> (2002)<br />
It’s 1972 and Dan Inagaki doesn’t want to be labeled “model minority” any more.</p>

<p>Na, An  <br />
<strong>*A Step from Heaven</strong>  (2001)<br />
On the plane to California, Korean Young Ju had imagined America as heaven. Not quite.</p>

<p>Namioka, Lensey  <br />
<strong>An Ocean Apart, a World Away</strong>  (2002)<br />
Yanyan leaves her family in Nanking to study medicine at Cornell in the 1920s.</p>

<p>Otsuka, Julie  <br />
<strong>When the Emperor Was Divine  </strong>(2002)<br />
This lyrical view of the Japanese Internment camps begins in Berkeley.</p>

<p>Platt, Randall Beth  <br />
<strong>The Likes of Me</strong>  (2000)<br />
Cornelia Lu Hankins is half Caucasian, half Chinese and all albino- most unusual for 1918. Having run away from a lumber camp, she finds work in a carnival sideshow.</p>

<p>Salisbury, Graham <br />
<strong>*Shark Bait </strong> (1997) <br />
Mokes’ Chinese American dad is the police chief in their rural Hawaiian town- his mom is “white as ice cream”.  The author reads the audiobook, with authentic dialect.</p>

<p>Scott, Joanna C.  <br />
<strong>The Lucky Gourd Shop</strong>  (2001)<br />
Three adopted Korean children are curious about their birth mother- but it’s their American mother who takes the eldest son’s memories and brings Mi Sook’s tale to life.</p>

<p>Shea, Pegi Deitz  <br />
<strong>Tangled Threads: a Hmong Girl's Story</strong>  (2003)<br />
After 10 years in a Thai refugee camp, now Mai Yang is in Providence, Rhode Island. Talk about culture shock!</p>

<p>Shiga, Jason <br />
<strong>Double Happiness</strong>  (1999)<br />
Twenty-something Tom grew up in a white suburb of Boston, then moves to San Francisco Chinatown. Shiga’s distinctive cartooning style and use of dialect let you see another side of Grant St.</p>

<p>Sledge, Linda Ching  <br />
<strong>A Map of Paradise </strong> (1997)<br />
Travel back and forth from Hawaii to California in the 1800s, as Hawaiian-born (ethnically Chinese) Mulan (Molly) struggles with a dangerous romance with a poet.</p>

<p>Strom, Dao  <br />
<strong>Grass Roof, Tin Roof</strong>  (2003)<br />
A Vietnamese writer brings her two children to California to escape persecution, where they encounter both love and racism.</p>

<p>Yamanaka, Lois  <br />
<strong>Name Me Nobody </strong> (2000)<br />
Middle school in Hawaii is no picnic for Emi-Lou - and now her best friend Von has come out as a lesbian.</p>

<p>Yoo, David <br />
<strong>Girls for Breakfast </strong> (2005)<br />
Do girls avoid Nick Park because he’s the only Korean American at school?  </p>

<p>Yoshimura, Akira<br />
<strong>Storm Rider</strong>  (2004)<br />
As an orphan of 13, Hiko travels to San Francisco and ends up in Baltimore, adopted by a wealthy American business. Based on the true story of Joseph Heco.</p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Autobiographies and Biographies</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/weblog/teens/2006/06/autobiographies_and_biographie.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=2/entry_id=50" title="Autobiographies and Biographies" />
    <id>tag:berkeleypubliclibrary.org,2006:/weblog/teens//2.50</id>
    
    <published>2006-06-22T01:15:30Z</published>
    <updated>2006-06-22T01:24:26Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Updated April 2006...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Teen Librarian</name>
        <uri>http://www.berkeleypubliclibrary.org/weblogs/teens/</uri>
    </author>
            <category term="This is my own story" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/weblog/teens/">
        <![CDATA[<p>Updated April 2006</p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p><strong>*also available as an audiobook</strong></p>

<p>305.567 B637e<br />
Bok, Francis  (2003)<br />
<strong>Escape from Slavery:</strong><br />
the true story of my ten years in  captivity--and my journey to freedom in America   </p>

<p>305.8 W556<br />
Gaskins, Pearl Fuyo  (1999)<br />
<strong>What Are You?:</strong> voices of mixed-race young people </p>

<p>305.23 N2363<br />
Nazario, Sonia<br />
<strong>Enrique’s Journey</strong>   (2006)<br />
When Enrique was five, his mother, too poor to feed her children, left Honduras to work in the United States. She was not able to return. After eleven years, Enrique decided he would go find her. He set off alone, with little more than a slip of paper bearing his mother's North Carolina telephone number.</p>

<p>338.761 K159g<br />
Katz, Jon  (2000)<br />
<strong>Geeks: how two lost boys rode the Internet out of Idaho  </strong></p>

<p>610.92 D297p<br />
Davis, Sampson, et al  (2002)<br />
<strong>The Pact: three young men make a promise and fulfill a dream </strong> </p>

<p>616.861 Z136<br />
Zailckas, Koren  (2005)<br />
<strong>Smashed: story of a drunken girlhood </strong> </p>

<p>616. 89 K184gr<br />
Kaysen, Susanna  (1994)<br />
<strong>Girl, Interrupted</strong>  <br />
Hospitalized for a mental illness</p>

<p>780.92 L548p2<br />
Partridge, Elizabeth  (2005)<br />
<strong>John Lennon: all I want is the truth: a photographic biography   </strong></p>

<p>780.92 Sh15z<br />
Ardis, Angela  (2004)<br />
<strong>Inside a Thug's Heart: with original poems and letters by Tupac Shakur </strong><br />
Written by his girlfriend</p>

<p>780.92 W95r<br />
RZA  (2005)<br />
<strong>The Wu-Tang Manual </strong>  <br />
“…a curious mix of Eastern philosophy, supreme mathematics, capitalism, and, not least, talent.”</p>

<p>792.8 Ai52t<br />
Tracy, Robert  (2004)<br />
<strong>Ailey Spirit: the journey of an American dance company   </strong></p>

<p>811.54 N335w<br />
Nelson, Marilyn   (2005)<br />
<strong>A Wreath for Emmett Till  </strong><br />
A poetic tribute</p>

<p>796.323 c722c<br />
Colton, Larry  (2000)<br />
<strong>Counting Coup: a true story of basketball and honor on the Little Big Horn</strong></p>

<p>796.323 M663ay<br />
Yao, Ming    (2004)<br />
<strong>Yao: a life in two worlds</strong><br />
By the NBA player from China</p>

<p>920 C4975b<br />
Brackett, Virginia  (2005)<br />
<strong>A Home in the Heart: the story of Sandra Cisneros  </strong></p>

<p>920 D719ar<br />
Donofrio, Beverly   (1992)<br />
<strong>*Riding in Cars with Boys</strong><br />
Coming of age in the sixties.</p>

<p>920 D8913af<br />
Dumas, Firoozeh  (2003)<br />
<strong>Funny in Farsi: a memoir of growing up Iranian in America  </strong><br />
 <br />
920 D3814ab<br />
Delman, Carmit  (2002)<br />
<strong>Burnt Bread and Chutney: growing up between cultures: a memoir of an Indian Jewish girl   </strong></p>

<p>920 G158ah<br />
Gantos, Jack  (2003)<br />
<strong>*Hole in My Life  </strong><br />
Gantos did jail time before becoming a successful writer.</p>

<p>920 G943af<br />
Guilbault, Rose Castillo   (2005)<br />
<strong>Farmworker's Daughter: growing up Mexican in America</strong></p>

<p>920 J56ar2<br />
Jiang, Ji-li  (1997)<br />
<strong>*Red Scarf Girl: a memoir of the Cultural Revolution</strong></p>

<p>920 M15ai<br />
Mace, Nancy  (2001)<br />
<strong>In the Company of Men: a woman at the Citadel  </strong><br />
The citadel is a prestigious military school in South Carolina.</p>

<p>920 M14521apr<br />
McDonald, Janet  (1999)<br />
<strong>Project Girl </strong><br />
By the author of<strong> Spellbound</strong> and <strong>Brother Hood</strong>.   </p>

<p>920 M4498aor<br />
Asgedom, Mawi  (2002)<br />
<strong>Of Beetles & Angels: a boy's remarkable journey from a refugee camp to Harvard   </strong> <br />
At the age of three, he fled civil war in Ethiopia by walking with his mother and brother to a  Sudanese refugee camp, and later moved to Chicago.</p>

<p>920 P285ab<br />
Paulsen, Gary  (2000)<br />
<strong>The Beet Fields: memories of a sixteenth summer  </strong><br />
By the author of Hatchet and many other stories for young adults.</p>

<p>920 R2207ahr<br />
Read, Kirk  (2001)<br />
<strong>How I Learned To Snap</strong>: a small-town coming-out and coming-of-age story  </p>

<p>920 R6186aar<br />
Rodriguez, Luis J    (1994)<br />
<strong>Always Running: la vida loca, gang days in L.A. </strong></p>

<p>920 Sa835ap2<br />
Satrapi, Marjane  (2002)<br />
<strong>Persepolis</strong>  <br />
In graphic novel format, she tells the story of her life in Iran during and after the 1979 revolution.</p>

<p>920 So78l<br />
Soto, Gary<br />
<strong>*Living Up the Street </strong> (1985) <br />
Autobiography of poet and author Gary Soto</p>

<p>920 T1878aL<br />
Tate, Sonsyrea  (1997)<br />
<strong>Little X: growing up in the Nation of Islam </strong></p>

<p>920 T319b<br />
Tezuka, Osamu  (2003-)<br />
<strong>Buddha</strong><br />
In graphic novel format  </p>

<p>920 W1537ab<br />
Walker, Rebecca  (2001)<br />
<strong>Black, White and Jewish: autobiography of a shifting self  </strong></p>

<p>920 W8326tr2<br />
Wolff, Tobias   (1989)<br />
<strong>*This Boy’s Life: a memoir</strong><br />
The author shares the details of his traumatic childhood. The movie is good, too.</p>

<p>920 W935b<br />
Wright, Richard    (1945)<br />
<strong>*Black Boy </strong>  <br />
The autobiography of the African-American writer, recounting his early years and his harrowing experiences drifting from Nachez to Chicago to Brooklyn. </p>

<p>920.1 D81 <br />
Shreve, Susan Richards  (2003)<br />
<strong>Dream Me Home Safely: writers on growing up in America </strong></p>

<p>940.548 W637n<br />
Wiesel, Elie (1960)<br />
<strong>*Night   </strong><br />
The story of a teenage boy who survived the Holocaust. “Never shall I forget these things, even if I am condemned to live as long as God Himself. Never."  </p>

<p>956.70443 R524b<br />
Riverbend   (2005) <br />
<strong>Baghdad Burning: girl blog from Iraq  </strong></p>

<p>956.9405 Z42a<br />
Zenatti, Valerie   (2005)<br />
<strong>When I Was a Soldier  </strong><br />
The story of an Israeli soldier</p>

<p>958.1047 Ak22c<br />
Akbar, Said Hyder  (2005)<br />
<strong>Come Back To Afghanistan: a California teenager’s story</strong></p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>African American voices</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/weblog/teens/2006/06/african_american_voices_2.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=2/entry_id=49" title="African American voices" />
    <id>tag:berkeleypubliclibrary.org,2006:/weblog/teens//2.49</id>
    
    <published>2006-06-22T01:14:02Z</published>
    <updated>2006-06-22T01:24:27Z</updated>
    
    <summary>African American interest fiction. Updated April 2006....</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Teen Librarian</name>
        <uri>http://www.berkeleypubliclibrary.org/weblogs/teens/</uri>
    </author>
            <category term="African American voices" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/weblog/teens/">
        <![CDATA[<p>African American interest fiction. Updated April 2006.</p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p><strong>*also available as an audiobook</strong></p>

<p>Baldwin James<br />
<strong>*Go Tell It On the Mountain</strong>   (1953) <br />
A teenager in Harlem struggles with his religious identity. </p>

<p>Butler, Octavia<br />
<strong>*Kindred </strong> (1979) <br />
A contemporary African American woman finds herself transported to a pre-Civil War plantation.</p>

<p>Curtis, Christopher<br />
<strong>*Bucking the Sarge</strong>  (2004)<br />
Luther T. Farrel has got to get out of Flint, Michigan. As his best friend Sparky says, "Flint's nothing but the Titanic." And his mother, a.k.a. the Sarge, says, "Take my advice and stay off the sucker path." </p>

<p>Davidson, Dana<br />
<strong>Jason & Kyra</strong>  (2004)<br />
Jason comes to terms with his irascible, often absent father and his growing attraction to the quiet, studious Kyra.</p>

<p>Flake, Sharon<br />
<strong>Who Am I Without Him? </strong> (2004)<br />
Short stories about girls and the boys in their lives.</p>

<p>Flake, Sharon<br />
<strong>Bang </strong> (2005)<br />
A teenage boy must face the harsh realities of inner city life, a disintegrating family, and destructive temptations as he struggles to find his identity as a young man</p>

<p>Frost, Helen<br />
<strong>Keesha's House</strong>  (2003)<br />
Seven teens each describe in poetic forms what caused them to leave home and where they found home again.</p>

<p>Gaines, Ernest<br />
<strong>*A Gathering of Old Men </strong> (1983) <br />
Louisiana in the 1950's is the scene for this story of murder and defense. </p>

<p>Himes, Chester<br />
<strong>Cotton Comes to Harlem</strong>   (1965) <br />
Coffin Ed and Grave Digger Jones pursue a crooked preacher. </p>

<p>Houston, Julian<br />
<strong>New Boy</strong>  (2005) <br />
As a new sophomore at an exclusive boarding school, a young black man is witness to the persecution of another student.</p>

<p>Johnson, Angela<br />
<strong>*The First Part Last</strong>  (2003)<br />
Bobby adores his baby daughter.</p>

<p>Mcdonald, Janet<br />
<strong>Brother Hood</strong>  (2004)<br />
Sixteen-year-old Nate, an academically gifted student who attends an exclusive private boarding school, straddles two cultures as he returns home for occasional visits to see his family and "gangsta crew" in Harlem.</p>

<p>Morrison, Toni<br />
<strong>*The Bluest Eye </strong> (1969) <br />
The first novel by the winner of the 1993 Nobel Prize for Literature. </p>

<p>Mosley, Walter<br />
<strong>*47 </strong>   (2005)<br />
Number 47, a fourteen-year-old slave boy growing up under the watchful eye of a brutal master in 1832, meets the mysterious Tall John, who introduces him to a magical science.</p>

<p>Myers, Walter Dean<br />
<strong>The Autobiography of my Dead Brother</strong>  (2005)<br />
Jesse pours his heart and soul into his sketchbook to make sense of life in his troubled Harlem neighborhood and the loss of a close friend.</p>

<p>Myers, Walter Dean<br />
<strong>Fallen Angels</strong>  (1989)<br />
Private Richie Perry does a tour in Vietnam. </p>

<p>Mowry, Jess<br />
<strong>Babylon Boyz</strong>  (1997) <br />
On the grimy streets of "Babylon," Pook and Dante are faced with a difficult decision. </p>

<p>Porter, Connie<br />
<strong>Imani, All Mine </strong> (1999)<br />
"Mama says I'm grown now because I got Imani. She say Imani all mine."</p>

<p>Sapphire<br />
<strong>Push  </strong>  (1996)<br />
The story of Precious Jones, who has a tough life in Harlem. </p>

<p>Senna, Denzy<br />
<strong>Caucasia</strong>    (1998)<br />
Biracial sisters Birdie and Cole are separated when their mother goes underground and their father flees to Brazil. Set during the 1970s.</p>

<p>Sinclair, April<br />
<strong>Coffee Will Make You Black</strong>   (1994)<br />
The story of Stevie, who comes of age in Chicago during the late sixties. </p>

<p>Volponi, Paul<br />
<strong>Black and White</strong>  (2005)<br />
Two star high school basketball players, one black and one white, experience the justice system differently after committing a crime together and getting caught.</p>

<p>Williams, Lori Aurelia<br />
<strong>*When Kambia Elaine Flew in from Neptune </strong> (2001)<br />
Shayla can't figure out the new girl next door, Kambia Elaine, who tells fantastic stories.</p>

<p>Williams-Garcia, Rita<br />
<strong>Every Time a Rainbow Dies</strong>  (2001)<br />
Sixteen-year-old Thulani witness a rape and becomes obsessed with the victim.</p>

<p>Woodson, Jacqueline<br />
<strong>If You Come Softly </strong> (1998)<br />
Fifteen-year-old Jeremiah is black. Ellie is white. They fall in love and then try to cope with people's reactions.</p>

<p>Wright, Bil<br />
<strong>Sunday You Learn How To Box</strong>  (2000)<br />
Louis Bowman, a fourteen-year-old African American boy lives in project housing.</p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Teen pregnancy &amp; parenting - fiction</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/weblog/teens/2006/06/teen_pregnancy_parenting_ficti.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=2/entry_id=48" title="Teen pregnancy &amp; parenting - fiction" />
    <id>tag:berkeleypubliclibrary.org,2006:/weblog/teens//2.48</id>
    
    <published>2006-06-22T01:12:20Z</published>
    <updated>2006-06-22T01:24:27Z</updated>
    
    <summary></summary>
    <author>
        <name>Teen Librarian</name>
        <uri>http://www.berkeleypubliclibrary.org/weblogs/teens/</uri>
    </author>
            <category term="Teen pregnancy &amp; parenting - fiction" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/weblog/teens/">
        
        <![CDATA[<p><strong>* also available as an audiobook</strong></p>

<p>Anonymous<br />
<strong>Annie's Baby  </strong>   1998<br />
The diary of Anonymous, a pregnant teenager  </p>

<p>Bechard, Margaret<br />
<strong>Hanging on to Max</strong>    2002<br />
Seventeen-year-old Sam is the only boy in the alternative school program for teen parents.</p>

<p>Dessen, Sarah<br />
<strong>*Someone Like You </strong>    1998<br />
Scarlett is pregnant when her boyfriend Michael dies in a motorcycle accident. She turns to her best friend Halley for support. </p>

<p>Haruf, Kent<br />
<strong>*Plainsong </strong>   1999<br />
She gets thrown out of her house when her mother discovers she's pregnant.</p>

<p>Inclan, Jessica Barksdale.<br />
<strong>Her Daughter's Eyes </strong>  2001<br />
Seventeen-year-old Kate tries to hide her pregnancy.</p>

<p>Johnson, Angela<br />
<strong>*First Part Last</strong>    2003<br />
On the night of his sixteenth birthday, Bobby’s girlfriend tells him she is pregnant.</p>

<p>MacDonald, Janet<br />
<strong>Spellbound </strong>   2001<br />
Raven gets pregnant the first time she has sex.<br />
<strong>Chill Wind </strong>    2002<br />
Aisha is a nineteen-year-old single mother with two kids.</p>

<p>Nolan, Han<br />
<strong>Born Blue  </strong>  2001 <br />
Janie calls herself Leshaya and sings the blues. A wrenching story about child abuse, addiction, poverty, and pregnancy. </p>

<p>McKinney-Whetstone, Diane<br />
<strong>Leaving Cecil Street</strong>   2004<br />
Shay’s best friend Neet decides to have an abortion. This story is set in 1969 – when abortion was illegal.</p>

<p>Olsen, Sylvia<br />
<strong>The Girl with a Baby</strong>    2003 <br />
Fourteen-year-old Jane, mother of Destiny, wants to stay in school.</p>

<p>Porter, Connie Rose<br />
<strong>Imani All Mine</strong>    1999 <br />
Fifteen-year-old Tasha names her baby Imani, which means “faith.”</p>

<p>Sapphire<br />
<strong>Push</strong>    1996<br />
The painful story of sixteen-year-old Precious Johnson, twice impregnated by her own father.</p>

<p>Wild, Margaret<br />
<strong>One Night  </strong>  2004<br />
Helen, pregnant after a one night stand with Gabe, moves out of her parent’s house. This story is told in a series of poems.</p>

<p>Williams, Lori Aurelia<br />
<strong>Broken China  </strong>   2005<br />
China is fourteen when her two-year-old baby unexpectedly dies.</p>

<p>Williams-Garcia, Rita<br />
<strong>Like Sisters on the Homefront </strong>   1995<br />
Fourteen-year-old Gayle's mother forces her to have an abortion and sends her to live with her pastor uncle’s family in Georgia.</p>

<p>Woodson, Jacqueline<br />
<strong>Dear One</strong>    1991<br />
Feni can’t believe her mother is letting a pregnant fifteen-year-old come live with them until the baby is adopted. </p>

<p>Wolff, Virginia Euwer<br />
<strong>*Make Lemonade </strong>   1993<br />
Fourteen-year-old LaVaughn agrees to baby-sit the two children of seventeen-year-old Jolly.</p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Science fiction</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/weblog/teens/2006/06/science_fiction.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=2/entry_id=47" title="Science fiction" />
    <id>tag:berkeleypubliclibrary.org,2006:/weblog/teens//2.47</id>
    
    <published>2006-06-21T23:50:29Z</published>
    <updated>2006-06-22T01:24:27Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Here are our updated science fiction recommendations. Let us know what you think....</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Teen Librarian</name>
        <uri>http://www.berkeleypubliclibrary.org/weblogs/teens/</uri>
    </author>
            <category term="Science fiction" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/weblog/teens/">
        <![CDATA[<p>Here are our updated science fiction recommendations. Let us know what you think.</p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p><strong>*also available as an audiobook</strong></p>

<p>Anderson, M T<br />
<strong>*Feed  </strong>    2000  <br />
The feed controls your thoughts.</p>

<p>Asimov, Isaac<br />
<strong>*I, Robot </strong>    1950<br />
The classic that introduced the three laws of robotics. </p>

<p>Barnes, Steve<br />
<strong>Cestus Deception </strong>   2004  <br />
A Clone Wars, Star Wars, novel by the author of Lion’s Blood.</p>

<p>Bear, Greg<br />
<strong>Darwin’s Children  </strong>   2003<br />
In this cautionary tale of genetics and evolution, a retrovirus has produced millions of genetically altered children.</p>

<p>Bell, Hilari<br />
<strong>A Matter of Profit </strong>  2003<br />
Ahvram, appalled by atrocities the army has visited on other worlds, tries to derail an assassination at home.</p>

<p>Blackman, Malorie<br />
<strong>Naughts and Crosses</strong>   2005<br />
Sephy is a Cross -- a member of the dark-skinned ruling class. Callum is a Naught -- a "colorless" member of the underclass who was once a slave to the Crosses. </p>

<p>Bujold, Lois<br />
<em>Mountains of Mourning</em><br />
in <strong>*Borders of Infinity</strong>   1991   <br />
Teenage Miles, 5 feet tall, somewhat misshapen and just out of officers' training school, must administer justice in a backward province where the population has proven  by infanticide that it still views "mutants" as subhuman.</p>

<p>Butler, Octavia <br />
<strong>Lilith’s Brood</strong> 2000<br />
Dawn, Imago, and Adulthood Rites in one volume. The story of humanity’s unwilling merge with the Oankali.</p>

<p>Card, Orson Scott<br />
<strong>Shadow of the Giant</strong>  2005<br />
The 8th book in the Ender Wiggins series. </p>

<p>Crutcher, Chris<br />
<strong>Sledding Hill</strong>   2005<br />
Explores life, religion, and censorship from an unusual viewpoint.</p>

<p>De Haven Tom<br />
<strong>It’s Superman </strong>  2005<br />
The formative years of the Man of Steel. A graphic novel.</p>

<p>Emschwiller, Carol<br />
<strong>Mister Boots</strong>   2005<br />
Is Mister Boots a man or a horse? Is Bobby a boy or a girl?</p>

<p>Gould, Steven<br />
<strong>Wildside </strong>   1996<br />
Charlie and friends discover a doorway to an alternate world—one with the potential to make them millionaires.</p>

<p>Hoffman, Mary<br />
<strong>Stravaganza, City of Flowers </strong>  2005<br />
Sky Meadows is a London teenager who is also a <em>stravagante</em> – that is, he can time travel to an alternate Renaissance Italy. Follows <strong>City of Masks</strong> and <strong>City of Stars</strong>. Improbable? Yes, but compelling in its detail.</p>

<p>Hogan, James P.<br />
<strong>Outward Bound </strong>  1999  <br />
A teenager headed for juvie opts for a diversion program.</p>

<p>Ishiguro, Kauzo<br />
<strong>Never Let Me Go </strong>  2005<br />
The “carers” are clones created for the sole purpose of harvesting their organs.</p>

<p>Klause, Annette<br />
<strong>*Blood and Chocolate </strong>   1987<br />
As the traditions of the pack disintegrate, a teenage loup garou experiments with independence by becoming involved with a meat boy. The results are disastrous. </p>

<p>Kress, Nancy <br />
<strong>Nothing Human  </strong> 2003<br />
When she reaches puberty, Lillie falls into a coma from which she awakens saying, “The pribir are coming.”  </p>

<p>LeGuin, Ursula<br />
Telling     2000  <br />
Set on the planet Aka, which bears a strong resemblance to China during the Cultural Revolution. </p>

<p>Martinez, A Lee<br />
<strong>Gil’s All Fright Diner</strong>   2005<br />
Zombies. Vampires. Werewolves. A comedy in the vein of Douglas Adams.</p>

<p>McHugh, Maureen F<br />
<strong>Mission Child </strong>     1998  <br />
A teenage girl faces war, refugee camps and relocation with grim determination. </p>

<p>Mosley, Walter<br />
<strong>47 </strong>  2005<br />
Number 47, a fourteen-year-old slave boy growing up under the watchful eye of a brutal master in 1832, meets the mysterious Tall John, who introduces him to a magical science.</p>

<p>Nagata, Linda<br />
<strong>Limit of Vision </strong>    2001<br />
Three young scientists pirate a nanotech life form.</p>

<p>Price, Susan<br />
<strong>Sterkarm Handshake  </strong>  1998<br />
A twenty-first-century corporation builds a time travel tube with a<br />
direct connection to sixteenth-century England. Followed by the <strong>Sterkarm Kiss</strong>.</p>

<p>Reed, Kit<br />
<strong>Thinner Than Thou</strong>   2004<br />
Set in a not to distant future where the cult of body image has become the new religion.</p>

<p>Sawyer, Robert J<br />
<strong>The Neanderthal Parallax</strong>: <strong>Hominids</strong> 2002, <strong>Humans</strong> 2003, <strong>Hybrids</strong> 2003 <br />
Scientists on Earth have discovered a parallel universe where Neanderthals, not homo sapiens, have prevailed.</p>

<p>Shinn, Sharon<br />
<strong>Mystic and Rider </strong>  2005<br />
The first volume in the Twelve Houses series. If you like a bit of romance in your science fiction, Shinn is the writer for you.</p>

<p>Turtledove, Harry<br />
<strong>Gunpowder Empire </strong>   2003<br />
An alternate-world story featuring teenagers from late 21st century Los Angeles and a Roman Empire that never declined.</p>

<p>Vaughan, Brian<br />
<strong>Y, the Last Man. One Small Step</strong>  2004<br />
Yorick Brown, the only human male to survive a global sex-specific plague, may not be unique for much longer. A graphic novel.</p>

<p>Werlin, Nancy<br />
<strong>Double Helix</strong>  2003<br />
Features eighteen-year-old Eli dealing with the strange circumstances of his birth.</p>

<p>Westerfield, Scott<br />
<strong>Peeps </strong>  2005<br />
“Parasite positive" people carry an ancient disease that causes vampirism.</p>

<p>Wilson, Robert Charles<br />
<strong>Spin </strong>   2005<br />
The stars….  They just blinked out. A brother, sister and their friend are central to the mystery in this complex story filled with scientific speculation and complicated characters.</p>

<p>Yolen, Jane (editor)<br />
<strong>Years Best Science Fiction and Fantasy for Teens  </strong> 2005</p>

<p>Zahn, Timothy<br />
<strong>The Green and the Gray</strong>   2004<br />
Part hard science fiction, part mystery and part alien-human encounter played out in Manhattan parks.</p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>African American Voices</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/weblog/teens/2006/01/african_american_voices.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=2/entry_id=10" title="African American Voices" />
    <id>tag:berkeleypubliclibrary.org,2006:/weblog/teens//2.10</id>
    
    <published>2006-01-25T02:36:27Z</published>
    <updated>2006-06-16T03:54:06Z</updated>
    
    <summary>African American Voices February 1998 Apollo Concrete Candy (1996) These six short stories, set in Oakland, CA, were published when the author was sixteen. Baldwin, James Go Tell It On the Mountain (1953) A teenager in Harlem struggles with his...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Web Manager</name>
        
    </author>
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://berkeleypubliclibrary.org/weblog/teens/">
        <![CDATA[<p>African American Voices<br />
February 1998<br />
Apollo<br />
Concrete Candy (1996)<br />
These six short stories, set in Oakland, CA, were published when the author was sixteen.</p>

<p>Baldwin, James<br />
Go Tell It On the Mountain (1953)<br />
A teenager in Harlem struggles with his religious identity.</p>

<p>Burgess, Barbara H.<br />
The Fred Field (1994)<br />
Oren searches for his best friend's killer.</p>

<p>Butler, Octavia<br />
Kindred (1979)<br />
A contemporary African American woman finds herself transported to a pre-Civil War plantation.</p>

<p>Campbell, Bebe Moore<br />
Your Blues Ain't Like Mine (1992)<br />
Set in rural Mississippi, beginning in the 1950's</p>

<p>Cary, Lorene<br />
Price of a Child (1995)<br />
In 1855, Ginnie, a Virginia slave, becomes free woman Mercer Gray. But to do so, she must abandon her youngest child.</p>

<p>Clair, Maxine<br />
Rattlebone (1995)<br />
In this set of interconnected short stories, readers follow Rennie's growth from childhood to adulthood.</p>

<p>Curtis, Christopher<br />
Watsons Go to Birmingham - 1963 (1995)<br />
An African American family from Flint, Michigan, visit Alabama at the height of the Civil Rights struggle.</p>

<p>Gaines, Ernest<br />
A Gathering of Old Men (1983)<br />
Louisiana in the 1950's is the scene for this story of murder and defense.</p>

<p>Himes, Chester<br />
Cotton Comes to Harlem (1965)<br />
Coffin Ed and Grave Digger Jones pursue a crooked preacher.</p>

<p>Johnson, Charles<br />
Middle Passage (1985)<br />
In 1830, a free man finds himself on a slave ship bound for Africa.</p>

<p>Lattany, Kristin H.<br />
Kinfolks (1997)<br />
Everybody wants to find Professor Green: both women who bore his children and the children who have only recently learned they are brother and sister.</p>

<p>Marshall, Paule<br />
Brownstones, Brown Girl (1959)<br />
A family from Barbados moves to Brooklyn during the Great Depression.</p>

<p>Morrison, Toni<br />
The Bluest Eye (1969)<br />
The first novel by the winner of the 1993 Nobel Prize for Literature.</p>

<p>Mosley, Walter<br />
Gone Fishin' (1997)<br />
Easy Rawlings' younger days. For older readers.</p>

<p>Mowry, Jess<br />
Babylon Boyz (1997)<br />
On the grimy streets of "Babylon," Pook and Dante are faced with a difficult decision.</p>

<p>Myers, Walter Dean<br />
Fallen Angels (1989)<br />
Private Richie Perry does a tour in Vietnam.</p>

<p>Myers, Walter Dean<br />
Slam (1997)<br />
Sixteen year old "Slam" Harris thinks his basketball talent will get him out of the inner city, but his coach sees things differently.</p>

<p>Petry, Ann<br />
The Street (1946)<br />
In Harlem in the 1940's, a mother struggles to raise her son alone.</p>

<p>Sanders, Dori<br />
Clover (1990)<br />
Ten year old Clover winds up with a white stepmother she barely knows.</p>

<p>Sinclair, April<br />
Coffee Will Make You Black (1994)<br />
The story of Stevie, who comes of age in Chicago during the late sixties.</p>

<p>Williams-Garcia, Rita<br />
Like Sisters on the Homefront (1995)<br />
After an abortion, a 14 year old girl is sent south to stay with her country cousin.</p>

<p>Woodson, Jacqueline (editor)<br />
A Way Out of No Way (1997)<br />
This collection of stories and poems about coming of age includes work by Anna Deavere Smith, Randall Kenan, June Jordan, Bernice Johnson Reagon, Nikki Giovanni, and Jamaica Kincaid.</p>

<p>Prepared by the Berkeley Public Library Teen Services staff. Revised February 1998</p>]]>
        
    </content>
</entry>

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