Category Archives: Books

Get Excited for Teen Lit Con 2018!!

Do you work with teens that love to read? Then you absolutely need to start planning to attend this year’s Teen Lit Con! (It’s a FREE event for teens!)

This year the event will be held Saturday May 12th from 10am – 4pm at Chaska High School. According to the Teen Lit Con site, “the purpose of this day is to celebrate teen literature, promote reading and writing, and to create a community of readers by connecting teens and authors.”

If that’s not enough, read this recap from Rogers High School Media Specialist Bethany Kauffman, which describes the joy of last year’s event, along with some awesome pictures.

And finally…the authors this year are fantastic! Authors at this year’s event include:

We hope you are able to share this event with your students/teen patrons and encourage them to take part in this fantastic, FREE day of YA literature!

 

CMLE Reads Across MN: Dangerously Divine

Minnesota is the land of 10,000 lakes, and it also has many interesting books. In this series, we are sharing some of the books we like from Minnesota, or Minnesota authors.

We are mapping our literary journey around Minnesota, so you can see all the interesting places where our books are set. Follow our progress on our Google Map, accessible by clicking that link or searching for the title CMLE Reads Across Minnesota!

Dangerously Divine, by Deborah Blake

This is not a usual book set in Minnesota – it’s book 2 in one series, and a continuation of another three book series. None of the previous books are set in Minnesota; but this one features Gregori Sun, who comes to a monastery in Minneapolis to recover from tragedy.  While volunteering in a soup kitchen, he meets librarian Ciera Evans. Naturally, she is adept in researching through old and valuable books; but she’s also adept in butt-kicking vigilante action on the city’s bad guys! (Shhh! That part is kind of a secret) I like all the books in this series; but it was particularly fun to read about the library and explore settings around the Cities in this fictional world!

From Amazon: “Though his physical wounds have healed, Gregori Sun, the eldest of the Riders, remains in spiritual turmoil. His search for his mother, the one person able to heal his soul and save his life, is failing—until he crosses paths with a beautiful and fascinating librarian who might be the key to his salvation…

Ciera Evans’s bookish ways are just a guise. The product of a difficult past, she has dedicated her life to saving lost teens—by any means necessary. She works alone, but when a dark, brooding stranger proposes they team up to solve both their problems, she is tempted—in more ways than one…

After Ciera and Sun’s plans are derailed by dangerous enemies, they find themselves entangled in an ungodly affair—one that will force them to either find new strength together or be forever haunted by their pasts alone.”

Interested in African American literature? Come to the African American Read-In at CMLE on Feb. 20th!

At CMLE, we love books and we love to celebrate. When the two go together, it’s fantastic. That’s why we’re definitely excited to take part in the African American Read-In!

On Tuesday, February 20th, from 11am – 1pm (but we’ll be here all day with books and refreshments so feel free to drop in as your schedule permits) at our HQ location, we will be hosting an African American Read-In event!

What is the African American Read-In? Great question!

During the month of February, schools, churches, libraries, bookstores, community and professional organizations, and interested citizens are urged to make literacy a significant part of Black History Month by hosting an African American Read-In.”

We were so inspired by this page of resources from the ReadWriteThink website that we decided to host our own event. The NCTE website gives an overview of what to expect at a Read-In event:

“The format of these events varies widely, but all events have a few things in common:

  • Texts written by African American authors are shared.
  • Participants either listen to or provide the readings.
  • A count is taken of who attends, and that count is documented in the “report card” as a measure of the global reach of this program each year.”

Our event will have library books by African American authors available to browse and read, as well as several booklists with recommended reading titles available for you to take or review. Light refreshments will be provided, and Office Dog Lady Grey will provide her soothing presence.

Join us to discuss and share books written by African Americans! If you would like to come prepared with your own books to share, this page has six booklists to get you started.

CMLE Goodreads Books for February!

We love to read new books with our online book groups on Goodreads! Since it’s a new month, that means we will have new selections for you to enjoy. Join us and let’s read together!

For our CMLE Librarian Professionals group, we’ll be learning from the book Act Like a Leader, Think Like a Leader by Herminia Ibarra.

“You aspire to lead with greater impact. The problem is you’re busy executing on today’s demands. You know you have to carve out time from your day job to build your leadership skills, but it’s easy to let immediate problems and old mind-sets get in the way. Packed with self-assessments and practical advice to help define your most pressing leadership challenges, this book will help you devise a plan of action to become a better leader and move your career to the next level.”

For our CMLE Librarians Enjoying Books group, we’ll be reading The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zaton.

“The international literary sensation, about a boy’s quest through the secrets and shadows of postwar Barcelona for a mysterious author whose book has proved as dangerous to own as it is impossible to forget.  An uncannily absorbing historical mystery, a heart-piercing romance, and a moving homage to the mystical power of books, The Shadow of the Wind is a triumph of the storyteller’s art.”

Can’t get enough books in your life? We totally understand!! Sign up for our 2018 CMLE Reading Challenge or our CMLE Book Group Podcast Reading Challenge! Listen to our Books and Beverages podcast for more great literary or Reader’s Advisory suggestions! 

Book Suggestions: The Pope of Palm Beach

The Pope of Palm Beach, by Tim Dorsey

This is book #21 in Dorsey’s series – and every one will make you laugh out loud! The main character is Serge A. Storms – hyperactive, lover of Florida history, adventurer and explorer. Every book is Serge and his sidekick, Coleman, driving and exploring cool things from Florida’s history. They pull into a new town, and….wackiness ensues.

Oh. And Serge is a serial killer.

Not like *that* kind; he very specifically only kills bad people. And he’s amazingly creative about it. People generally don’t get shot in these books. Instead, in each book Serge spends time carefully thinking up punishments for people that fit their individual crimes. An alligator poacher is fed to a pool of alligators; evil bankers who stole people’s pensions are poisoned by bath salts in a Jacuzzi; he removes the safety device on a bungee swing ride and a gangster is thrown to his death.

As an added bonus, this book is all about books and the publishing industry. And, we get another example of Serge’s passion for librarians! (Smart chicks who like books: Really, aren’t they everyone’s type???)

If you need a beach-style book, that will make you laugh out loud as you read, with a dose of interesting Florida history mixed in for some educational value – these are the books for you! And if you like audio books, I really like these in that format – Oliver Wyman’s deadpan delivery adds to the laughter in every book.

From Amazon: “No one worships the Sunshine State as much as Serge A. Storms. Perpetually hunting Floridian arcana and lore, he and his permanently baked sidekick, Coleman, are on the road again. This time they’re on a frenzied literary pilgrimage that leads them back to Riviera Beach, the cozy seaside town where the boys spent their formative years.

Growing up, Serge was enthralled by the Legend of Riviera Beach, aka Darby, a welder at the port who surfed the local waves long before the hot spots were hot. A god on the water, the big-hearted surfer was a friend to everyone—the younger surfers, cops, politicians, wealthy businessmen and ordinary Joes—a generosity of spirit that earned him the admiration of all. Meanwhile, there was a much murkier legend that made the rounds of the schoolyards from Serge’s youth—that of the crazy hermit living in a makeshift jungle compound farther up the mysterious Loxahatchee River than anyone dared to venture.

Then Serge moved away. But never forgot.

Now he’s back, with those legends looming larger than ever in the rearview mirror of his memory. As his literary odyssey moves north from Key West, closer and closer to his old stomping grounds, Serge digs into the past as only Serge can. Along the way, he unintentionally disturbs some long-forgotten ground, attracting the attention of a cast of villains that only Florida can produce.

As the body count grows, so does the list of questions:

Why are the guys in the hard hats worried about the monkeys? When do you hack a motel air-conditioner? How does Coleman get high with cat toys? Who is expecting the dildo? And will book tours ever be the same after Serge decides to check one out?

Told in alternating flashbacks between Serge and Coleman’s childhoods and the present day, The Pope of Palm Beach is a witty and deliciously violent delight from the twisted imagination of Tim Dorsey.”