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The World-Famous Nine

Cover of The World-Famous Nine. The cover has the cross-section of the building, with yellow and orange floors and walls, and people walking by on each floor. There are two staircases at the bottom, with a woman on one and a man on the other, and the two main characters, Zander and Natasha, in the center of the bottom.

The World-Famous Nine

Guterson, Ben. The World-Famous Nine. New York : Little, Brown and Company, 2024.

Middle grade mystery/fantasy books are always popular, because they are so much fun to read! The World-Famous Nine is no exception.

Zander and his parents live in Pittsburgh, where his parents are professors. But this summer, Zander gets to spend 5 long weeks with his grandmother, who owns and operates The Number Nine Plaza, an amazing department store with a Ferris Wheel, several restaurants, a pet shop, and many other magnificent departments to explore.

But strange things are happening at The Nine, from short power outages to attacks on the staff. Natasha is the daughter of one of The Nine’s staff and sometimes works at the department store (swinging above the diners at the 360, the rotating restaurant near the top of the building). Natasha and Zander become fast friends, and decide to investigate the strange happenings, and the inscriptions found all around The Nine. If they can figure out what the inscriptions mean, it will lead them to a precious artifact from the early days of the store that might be able to save its future!

This book is perfect for those in late elementary school and early middle school who love a good mystery with puzzles to figure out. The Nine is a bit magical, if for no other reason than it has 19 floors and takes up a city block and serves cherries and pickles ice cream! The supporting cast of characters are a lot of fun to read, and you’re never sure who is good and who is not. There’s enough excitement to keep even the most reluctant reader engaged in what will happen next to Zander and Natasha!

Mary Beth Adams is the Community Engagement Librarian for Alamance County Public Libraries. She can be reached at madams@alamancelibraries.org.

 

Missing White Woman

Cover of Missing White Woman. Black woman somewhat facing the reader, looking over her shoulder toward the right side of the book. The photo is overprocessed and in the hues of orange, pink and gray. The title is in thin white letters superimposed on the photo.

Missing White Woman

Garrett, Kellye. Missing White Woman. New York : Mulholland Books / Little, Brown and Company, 2024.

Thriller lovers (especially those who loved When No One is Watching by Alyssa Cole) will love Missing White Woman.

Breanna is ready for a romantic weekend with her boyfriend Ty in New York City. They’re staying just over the river in an Airbnb in Jersey City, and the row house is as gorgeous as advertised. The neighbors look a little suspicious of a black woman trying to enter the code on the door, but Breanna, unfortunately, is used to that. She and Ty have a great weekend together, even though there are a few discordant notes. Ty can’t stop working and takes calls even when they’re having a romantic carriage ride.

Then, on Monday morning, Breanna gets up and goes to find Ty. Instead, she finds the body of a white woman in the foyer. Ty is nowhere to be found. The police suspect Ty has something to do with the murder, and Breanna wants nothing more than to prove his innocence and escape without being arrested herself.

The back story for Breanna and the other characters is strong and gives emotional weight to what is happening in the present. This thriller is really well-written and would be a great book club read. Book clubs (or families or friends) would have a lot to discuss, from neighborhood watches and the use of social media as a news source to the coverage of missing white women versus the coverage of missing people of any other race and gender and the macro- and microaggressions people of color face every day, including those from the police.

I recommend listening to this book via Libby – you won’t want to stop listening when your car ride is over, or your chores are done! It also is available as an ebook through Libby and a hardback book at your local library!

Mary Beth Adams is the Community Engagement Librarian for Alamance County Public Libraries. She can be reached at madams@alamancelibraries.org.

 

2024 Best Fiction for Young Adults, Winners and Nominees

2024 Best Fiction for Young Adults, Winners and Nominees

Cover of Becoming a Queen. Young man with blond hair, wearing khaki shorts, is facing the other direction, and is holding a purple ball gown in front of him. He has his feet arched up as if he was wearing high heels.

YALSA (Young Adult Library Services Association) puts out a list every year of the best fiction titles of the year before. Anyone can recommend a title, and the blogging team chooses the top ten titles. Alamance County Public Libraries owns most of the titles already, and I’ve included a link to our request form if one of the titles we don’t have appeals to you!

Top Ten

Becoming a queen by Clay, Dan

Mark wore a dress for a talent show, and his boyfriend broke up with him. His older brother, whom he often turns to when he’s upset, is struggling with his own issues. So Mark puts on a dress again, and finds it offers escape from his pain and a chance to be his authentic self (and see others’ authentic selves).

Cover of Dear Medusa. Young lady is looking over her shoulder and almost frowning. She has bright red/pink hair, and there's painted snakes superimposed on top of her head and body, as well as a drawing of flames around her eye, and daisies below her.

Dear Medusa by Cole, Olivia A.

This novel-in-verse deals with sexual abuse of a high school student by a teacher. Alicia feels cut off from her classmates and the world until she finds a note from another survivor in her locker. Maybe she isn’t as alone as she feels she is, and there is hope for her and the other survivors to make it through this year.

 

Cover of Divine Rivals. The D and R look like typewriter keys. There are three blue flowers with orange centers and long thin stems on the cover, which has a black background with gold sprinkles.

Divine rivals : a novel by Ross, Rebecca (and Ruthless vows , second in the duology)

This historical fantasy/romance duology features Iris and Roman, who are rivals for the newspaper columnist job at the Oath Gazette. The world is in chaos, as the gods have woken, started a war, and mortals have to choose a side. Iris relieves her anxiety by writing letters and slipping them into her wardrobe. They vanish and end up in Roman’s hands, and he decides to answer. Thus begins an enemies-to-lovers story.

 

Cover of For Lamb. The background is beige. There is a tree in the upper right cover, stretching across the top of the book. In the center is the side view of a Black woman, looking toward the right. Below her, you see a white family, looking upward, as if looking at her or at the tree. To the family's right is a single stem of leaves, falling down.

For Lamb by Cline-Ransome, Lesa

Lamb Clark can’t change the fact that she is Black and living in Jackson, Mississippi in a time when looking wrong at someone White can get you lynched. She still is friends with Marny, the daughter of a local White doctor, because they have so much in common – a love of books and reading, controlling older brothers, and a parent that is not in the picture. But when Marny’s older brother George sexually assaults Lamb, and her older brother Simeon retaliates, a mob is formed by George to find and punish Simeon.

 

Cover of I Kick and I Fly. The cover is red and orange. You see a background of a city behind the bottom, and two people holding hands and running down the street, toward the viewer. The letters are "clear" and through them, you can see a woman standing in fighting position with her hands below her chin, ready to punch, standing in a black background.

I kick and I fly by Gupta, Ruchira

Heera is part of the Nat, a caste of nomadic people who are no longer allowed to ply their trade of entertainment via wrestling, acrobatics and juggling. They believe the only work for their women is prostitution. Heera is given a chance to escape that through a hostel teaching women kung fu, where she learns how strong she really is and the power she has as a woman.

 

Cover of Plan A. The cover is pink, the title is in black, with white words - Her Story. Her Choice - underlined and in white. You can see Plan B scribbled out behind the words on the cover.

Plan A by Caletti, Deb (not owned by the library; click here to request we purchase it)

Ivy and Lorenzo are taking a trip across the country, from Texas to Oregon. Their ultimate destination is a place where Ivy can receive a legal abortion. Lorenzo is determined to make this trip fun, from stopping in places with world-capital names like Rome, Oregon and Paris, Texas, to finding the corniest roadside attractions possible. But they also find other women who share their stories of reproductive experiences and decisions and chip away at the shame Ivy feels.

 

Cover of Promise Boys. At the top, "Perfection. Excellence. Discipline. Murder." The cover is red. There are three boys pictured in front of the height chart that is used for mug shots. The back two boys are pictured in profile, while the front boy is facing the viewer. Instead of red, there are holes around his eyes so you see black skin.

Promise boys by Brooks, Nick

J.B., Ramon and Trey are students at Urban Promise Prep School, a charter school that has very strict rules about everything. When the principal is murdered, these three boys are the prime suspects and must band together to figure out who actually killed him, and why.

 

Cover of Saints of the Household. Cover is orange, with two Indigenous people's heads, one on top of the other. There are plants pictured in their hair.

Saints of the household by Tison, Ari

Max and Jay try to keep their mother safe from their abusive father by intervening whenever they can and acting as a support for each other. When they see a friend in trouble, they beat up a classmate, but then question if that was the right decision. They use their doubt about their actions to explore their Bribri heritage and what kind of person they want to become.

 

 

Cover of Their Vicious Games. Black cover, pink lettering for title. Image of a hand, holding pearls and a perfume bottle. In the facets of the bottle, you see several faces and eyes, all scared or angry or screaming.

Their Vicious Games Wellington, Joelle (not owned by the library; click here to request we purchase it)

When scholarship student Adina gets in a fight with her former best friend, she loses her spot at Yale. The Finish, a competition held by the Remington family, can get her life back on track, but she has to survive a game that is not at all what she expected – a fight to the death.

 

 

Cover of Warrior Girl Unearthed. Cover is orange with leaves, handprints and flowers. There is a woman's face in the center of the book, with dark hair, dark eyes and a serious look. The bottom of the cover is green, and has a pattern of interlocking fish.

Warrior girl unearthed by Boulley, Angeline

Perry isn’t like her twin, who is excited to take part in the Kinomaage program’s internship. But after a car wreck involving a mother bear and her cubs, Perry’s aunt Daunis requires Perry to take part, too. Through her internship, she learns about “Warrior Girl,” whose remains and knife are in the university’s archives. She researches how to repatriate remains and funerary artifacts, and she and the other young adults fight for Warrior Girl to be returned to her people.

 

 

Other Nominees

Always the Almost by Underhill, Edward (not owned by the library; click here to request we purchase it)

Ander and Santi were here by Garza Villa, Jonny

As you walk on by by Winters, Julian

Bianca Torre is afraid of everything by Winans, Justine Pucella

Bittersweet in the Hollow by Pearsall, Kate

The buried and the bound by Hassan, Rochelle

The chalice of the gods by Riordan, Rick

Chaos theory by Stone, Nic

City of Nightmares by Schaeffer, Rebecca (not owned by the library; click here to request we purchase it)

Cruel illusions by Fuston, Margie

Delicious monsters by Sambury, Liselle

The do-over by Painter, Lynn

The do and donuts of love by Jaigirdar, Adiba (not owned by the library; click here to request we purchase it)

A door in the dark by Reintgen, Scott

The fall of Whit Rivera by Maldonado, Crystal

Forever is now by Lockington, Mariama

Forget me not by Derrick, Alyson

Give me a sign by Sortino, Anna

Gloria Buenrostro is not my girlfriend by Hoàng, Brandon

Going bicoastal by Adler, Dahlia

Gone Wolf by McBride, Amber (not owned by the library; click here to request we purchase it)

Gorgeous gruesome faces by Cheng, Linda

Heartbreak boys by Green, Simon James

Highly suspicious and unfairly cute by Hibbert, Talia

How to succeed in witchcraft by Brophy, Aislinn

If tomorrow doesn’t come by St. Jude, Jen

Invisible Son by Johnson, Kim (not owned by the library; click here to request we purchase it)

Izzy at the end of the world by Reynolds, K. A.

The lake house by Durst, Sarah Beth

Mascot by Waters, Charles

Miles Morales : suspended : a Spider-Man novel by Reynolds, Jason

The minus-one club by Magoon, Kekla

Nigeria Jones by Zoboi, Ibi Aanu

The queens of New York by Shen, E. L.

Rain rising by Comrie, Courtne

Reggie and Delilah’s year of falling by Bryant, Elise

Remind me to hate you later by Mason, Lizzy

Rhythm & muse by Brown, India Hill

The secrets we keep by Gustafson, Cassie

The sharp edge of silence by Rosenblum, Cameron Kelly

She is a haunting by Tran, Trang Thanh

A spark in the cinders by Moke, Jenny Elder

Spell bound by Lukens, F. T.

The spirit bares its teeth by White, Andrew Joseph

Star splitter by Kirby, Matthew J.

Stateless by Wein, Elizabeth

This Dark Descent by Josephson, Kalyn (not owned by the library; click here to request we purchase it)

This delicious death by Cottingham, Kayla

This time it’s real by Liang, Ann

Those pink mountain nights by Ferguson, Jenny

Unraveller by Hardinge, Frances

We are all so good at smiling by McBride, Amber

We deserve monuments by Hammonds, Jas

What happened to Rachel Riley? by Swinarski, Claire

What stalks among us by Hollowell, Sarah

When the angels left the old country by Lamb, Sacha

Where you see yourself by Forrest, Claire

 

The Spellshop

Cover of The Spellshop. Fantastical forest with a cozy cottage with flowers and vines and a winged cat on the steps in front of the cottage.

The Spellshop

“The Spellshop,” by Sarah Beth Durst. Copyright 2024, New York: Bramble, Tor Publishing Group (376 pages, $29.99).

Content Warning: Fire/Fire Injury, death, grief.

Looking for a cozy fantasy read that is less autumnal forward than most others? Durst’s The Spellshop is just the ticket. With its summer storms and seahorses, you’ll just fall in love with this charming island that is the background to Durst’s story.

Our main heroine, Kiela, is a displaced librarian. Her assistant, Caz, is a magicked spider plant. Together, they flee the burning library that was once their home, clutching all of the books they can carry. Kiela and Caz travel to Caltrey, an outer island of the empire, to hide away in Kiela’s old childhood home. Here, Kiela is hoping that she and Caz can keep their heads down, keep the books safe, and not interact with the community, but that’s easier said than done.

They bide their time, intending to eventually return to their burned library, but life, and the island have other plans for them. In order to survive and help the island thrive again, Kiela uses her books and enchants the plants to grow. With the grown plants, our protagonist opens a jam shop as a cover as she tends to the island itself.

It’s a low stakes kind of book, but that’s not to say that Kiela doesn’t come up against obstacles and unknown forces. Pick up the book today to discover what happens in this magical world next!

Kayleigh Dyer is a Library Technical Processing Assistant at May Memorial Library. Contact her at kdyer@alamancelibraries.org.

Back to School

Back to School

If you have kids heading back to school this month, you know it can be a time of anxiety and excitement. This collection of books will help your student get through those back-to-school jitters!

Cover of Back to School by Wanda E. Brunstetter. Young girl in a blouse and long skirt swinging on a tree swing, in front of a hill and a white school building.
Cover of Back to School, Backpack! by Simon Rich. The central figure is a green backpack, its zipper making a frowny face, holding on to closet doors and refusing to come out.
Cover of Back to School is Cool! by Jim Jenkins. Pinky Dinky Doo is on the right side, with a piece of chalk, and the words appear on the chalkboard. There also is a dog holding an index card with the author's name on it.
Cover of Louise The Big Cheese and the Back-to-School Smarty-Pants by Elise Primavera. Louise in standing in the center of the illustration, with a diploma over her head. Books with a globe on top are to her right, and books with a dog sitting on top are to her left.
Cover of Tiny Goes Back to School by Cari Meister. Large dog is surrounded by smaller dogs and a young child.
Cover of Llama Llama Back to School by Anna Dewdney. Llama's coat is halfway off/on, and he's wearing his backpack. His friend has his backpack on and is smiling.

Back to School by Wanda E. Brunstetter – Brunstetter is a popular Amish romance writer who also writes an adorable series of books for elementary school readers! In this book, Rachel is happy to be back in school, but not so happy that Orlie is there, making her life miserable. Kids will see themselves in Rachel as she tries to get along with a classmate that is just, well, ornery!
Back to School, Backpack! by Simon Rich – Going back to school is exciting, but it also can make you anxious. Backpack isn’t sure he’s ready for the crowded halls, scary bathrooms, and lonely cafeteria tables at school. Kids will identify with Backpack as he names some of the fears they have about school. This would be a great conversation-starter with your young child about their fears!
Back to School is Cool! by Jim Jenkins – This is an easy reader, so young readers will feel accomplished when they read this book to themselves. Pinky Dinky Doo’s little brother is nervous about school starting, so Pinky tells him about her worst hair day ever, which happened to be on picture day. Pinky’s reassuring words will help kids feel more comfortable about starting school.
Louise the Big Cheese and the Back-to-School Smarty-Pants by Elise Primavera – Louise wants to be the best this year, and make straight As. But she has the hardest, toughest teacher ever. Will that end her dreams to make the grade? This illustrated chapter book will delight students, whether they are overachievers like Louise or not!
Tiny Goes Back to School by Cari Meister – This Level 1 easy reader uses simple wording to tell a compelling story. Tiny the dog is having trouble obeying commands, like sit and come. Tiny’s family decides to send him back to school, but will Tiny ever learn? Kids who struggle with certain skills will identify with Tiny and be motivated to keep trying!
Llama Llama Back to School by Anna Dewdney – Llama Llama isn’t ready for summer to end – he’s loved backyard camping and picnics and time to play with his friends. He’s nervous about school starting again, but with the help of his momma and his friends, maybe it will be alright. This beloved character will make young kids feel understood if they’re nervous about school, too.

Mary Beth Adams is the Community Engagement Librarian for Alamance County Public Libraries. You can reach her at madams@alamancelibraries.org.

Summer Listening – The Glass Library

Sometimes in the summer, you need a great book to listen to on the way to a great vacation spot, or while you’re working. I’ve been enjoying one bookish, magical series that is available through Hoopla!

The Glass Library Series by C.J. Archer

Cover of The Librarian of Crooked Lane. Back of woman with long blond hair and a black dress, standing in the lobby of a library with bookshelves on either side of her and a clock in front of her on a wall.
Cover of The Medici Manuscript. Back of young woman with long blond hair and a black dress, standing in front of a desk with a book to her left which is glowing and sparkling. She is in an office with a globe, bookshelves and paintings.
Cover of The Untitled Books. Back of young woman with long blond hair standing in front of a large window. There are piles of books around her, and all of them have sparkles coming off of them. The room also has a desk and shelves.
Cover of The Dead Letter Delivery. Back of young woman with blond hair, standing in front of an arched entryway. There are sparkling books around her, and also letters with stamps scattered behind her.

The Glass Library series is the textbook definition of a glacially-slow-burn romance, while also ticking the fantasy, mystery and historical fiction boxes.

The Librarian of Crooked Lane is the first book in the series. Sylvia Ashe is now without family in the world (at least, family she knows of). Her mother never discussed her father, and now that she and Sylvia’s brother are both deceased, she is curious. Her brother left a diary that mentions silver magic and the name India Glass. She never thought that they were descended from magicians; after all, she’s just an ordinary woman!

Gabriel Glass survived the Great War without a scratch, despite being on the front lines for the entire war. He is artless (without magic), even though his mother India is a famous watchmaking magician. When he saves someone in a boating accident, staying underwater much longer than they ought he should be able to, he can’t escape the reporters digging into his life. He denies he has magic, but many people don’t believe him.

Sylvia chases down Gabe at an opening gala for the Royal Academy Art Show in London, posing as a waitress to approach him. She hopes that she can talk to his mother and find out why her brother James had her name in his diary. Of course, his parents have just left for a trip to America, and her asking him gets her thrown out of the party and fired summarily. Gabe is at first unwilling to help her, but as she and her best friend Daisy leave the party, someone tries to kidnap Gabe. His best friend Alex, whose father works for Scotland Yard, and Gabe’s cousin Willie (a smart-talking cowgirl from the United States) act as his bodyguards and foil the plan (although Sylvia’s well-placed kick might have helped as well).

Gabriel comes to the library where Sylvia works, and accidentally gets her fired. He enlists her help in finding out who stole a painting from the Royal Academy, and promises to help her research her heritage and find out if she has a magical ancestor. He also gets her a job in the Glass Library, a library of texts about magic that his family has contributed to heavily.

There is much to enjoy with this series of books. In each book, there is a mystery to solve, as well as the overarching mystery of who are Sylvia’s family, and does she have magic? It is fascinating to see the world of the 1920s in England, when roads had both horse and carriages and motorcars, single working people still lived in boarding houses, and the aristocracy still held an enormous sway on society and life.

If you love magic, these books show a different, perhaps more realistic view of magical use. Magicians have just one specialty, and often just one spell. Paper magicians own paper factories, and know a spell that makes paper stronger. Ink magicians enchant ink to make it last a long time and stay sharp and legible. It is very different from most magic systems where magicians can do multiple spells in multiple disciplines.

And if you’re looking for a very (very, very, very) slow-burn romance, you’re going to love this series. Gabriel and Sylvia get closer and closer as the series continues, but never admit their feelings to each other. Their best friends Daisy and Alex also flirt and bicker, but never (at least not yet!) act on their feelings. I will admit to yelling at the audiobook in my car, “just KISS already!” But the tension between them is truly enjoyable and I know that when they do kiss, it will be worth it.

Book five, Secrets of the Lost Ledgers, comes out this September. Until then, use Hoopla to catch up on the story!

Mary Beth Adams is the Community Engagement Librarian for Alamance County Public Libraries. You can reach her at madams@alamancelibraries.org.

The Four Agreements

Cover of The Four Agreements. Four panels with plants in them, background is orange in each, with a green cross in between the four panels.

Ruiz, Miguel. The Four Agreements. San Rafael, Calif.: Amber-Allen Pub., 2012. [Carlsbad, Calif.] : Hay House ©1997.

Miguel Ángel Ruiz Macías, better known as don Miguel Ruiz, is a Mexican author. The most popular of his works “The Four Agreements, has been translated in 52 languages. A phenomenally written book, describing the source of self-limiting beliefs that humans make with themselves that causes their own needless suffering and robs us of joy. Based on ancient Toltec Wisdom, The Four Agreements offer new simple life goals that can radically and rapidly transform our lives. Short read, easy to follow along this book would be perfect for many ages and many stages. From the young adult just piecing the puzzles together to the grandparents reflecting on the legacy they are leaving behind. The Four Agreements is a must read for anyone committed to living life fully!!

These agreements can be found in various places (sometimes worded in different ways) from religious scriptures to universal laws.

  • Be Impeccable with Your Word: Move with integrity; Say only what you mean.
  • Don’t Take Things Personally: This agreement is a superpower. What others say & do is a projection of their own reality.
  • Don’t Make Assumptions: Find the courage to ask questions and to express what you really what.
  • Always Do Your Best: Though your best will change at different times, simply do your best and you will avoid self-judgement self-abuse and regret

 My favorite thing is that the agreements will put the responsibility back on us (the individual) accountability is at the forefront and that I appreciate.

Nicole Givens is the Children’s Programming Coordinator for Alamance County Public Libraries. You can reach her at ngivens@alamancelibraries.org.

Steamy Reads for the Summer

When the temperature rises, so does our love of a good steamy romance! Here are some perfect choices for summer reads at the pool or on vacation.

Cover of At First Spite. Man and woman standing in profile, backs/sides barely touching. Man is wearing black suit and has one eyebrow raised. Woman is wearing flowy wrap dress, glasses and is smiling slightly.

At first spite : a Harlot’s Bay novel by Dade, Olivia – Athena is living in Spite House, which is an apt name for our 10-foot wide house attached to her ex Johnny’s house on one side, and just four feet away from her ex’s older brother on the other side! She wants to hate Johnny’s older brother Matthew, but he’s helpful, and listens to her, and he’s very sexy, even if he did convince Johnny to leave her.

Cover of Birding with Benefits. Woman with brown hair chewing her lip, holding binoculars. In one lens, you can see a yellow bird. In the other, you see a man with brown hair and beard looking toward the bird.

Birding with benefits by Dubb, Sarah T. – The year of “yes” leads Celeste to agree to partner with John for a birding event (never mind that she knows nothing about birding). But several days in the Arizona wilderness with a patient teacher, who she realizes she is very attracted to, leads to them upgrading their relationship to “birders with benefits.” But when the event is over, will he fly away?

Cover of Triple Sec. Glass of a fruity drink in the middle, with three arms/hands grabbing the glass - two female and one male.

Triple sec : a novel by Alexander, T. J. – Mel is a bartender at an Instagram-worthy spot, and sees the good and the bad (mostly the bad) of dating every day. When Bebe and Kade walk into the bar, she’s intrigued by Bebe. Bebe and Kade have an open relationship, so Mel overcomes her hesitations and agrees to go on a date with Bebe. But she also feels chemistry and connection with Kade. Can they make a polyamorous relationship work?

Cover of Blood on the Tide. Red/pink cover, gold mirror, gold chain and pendant on the left, and the hint of a black tail like a fish or mermaid on the right.

Blood on the tide by Robert, Katee – Romantasy hits the high seas with Blood on the Tide. Lizzie is a vampire who is on the rampage, trying to get her family’s heirlooms back from the vicious Cŵn Annwn. She rescues a selkie named Maeve, who can help her get through the Threshold. Maeve forms an uneasy partnership with Lizzie to get her skin back, but she can’t help falling in love with the vampire’s bites.

Cover of That Time I Got Drunk and Saved a Demon. Demon with pointy ears, not wearing a shirt, clutching a woman wearing a white off the shoulder shirt and holding a beer stein.

That time I got drunk and saved a demon by Lemming, Kimberly – Cinnamon wants to live a quiet life, but that’s not to be, after she saves Fallon, a demon. Fallon is determined to kill the evil witch who is enslaving his people, and he’s dragging Cinnamon along for the ride.

Cover of The Prospects. Two baseball players wearing green jerseys. One is holding the other up in the air and they are celebrating.

The prospects : a novel by Hoffman, KT – Gene is the first openly transgender professional baseball player. When his former teammate/rival Luis is traded to his minor league team, their chemistry on and off the field is horrible (at first). But spending all that time together on the field and on the bus leads to tension and electric glances between them. Can they make their major league dreams come true?

Mary Beth Adams is the Community Engagement Librarian for Alamance County Public Libraries. You can reach her at madams@alamancelibraries.org.

Stay Out of the Heat!

When the temperatures are high, stay inside and read books about summer with your little ones! We recommend visiting the library as well, and enjoying our air conditioned children’s areas.

Cover of Summer. Cover is dominated by a big yellow sun with rays coming off of it. Animals are at the bottom, looking up.

Summer by Wenxuan Cao – Teach your children about kindness and sharing with this delightful picture book! Each animal wants to have the small sliver of shade for themselves. However, after fighting, they realize that they can give each other shade if they work together!

Cover of Sari-Sari Summers. Young girl in overalls and grandmother in red dress stand in front of store shelves, full of food and drink.

Sari-sari summers by Bontigao, Lynnor – Nora loves her grandmother’s sari shop so much! When the temperatures soar, and no one is coming to the store, she takes matters into her own hands. She gets ripe mangoes from the tree outside and makes refreshing mango ices to share with their customers.

Cover of Hot City. Stylized girl and boy, with buildings that look like a kid drew them, behind them.

Hot city by Joosse, Barbara M. – Where do you go when the buses are expelling dragon fire, and your snow cone melts immediately? The library! We can’t argue with this book’s logic, as Mimi and Joe escape the heat at their local library and let their imaginations run free.

Cover of Think Cool Thoughts. Young girl in red dress standing in foreground. Behind her are black outlines of buildings and people. Cover is purple, with blue and white birds flying through the sky.

Think cool thoughts by Perry, Elizabeth – The hottest day of the year has Angel’s family feeling down. They decide to sleep on the roof that night, leading to an extraordinary night for Angel (and the relief of a rain shower the next morning).

Cover of Hot Dog. Small brown dog on a wood staircase leading to the beach. Can see the water and sand behind the dog.

Hot dog by Salati, Doug – It’s just too hot in the city, and this dog has had enough! He plops down in the middle of a crosswalk, and his owner picks him up. They travel by taxi, train and ferry to reach the beach, where they find cool water, stiff breezes, and all the room in the world to run!

Mary Beth Adams is the Community Engagement Librarian for Alamance County Public Libraries. You can reach her at madams@alamancelibraries.org.

Children’s Adventure Novels

We’re about halfway through our summer reading program, Adventure Begins at Your Library, so we’re sharing a list of children’s adventure novels (ages 7-14). Most of these were published in the last year, or are part of an ongoing series!

Cover of The Misfits A Royal Conundrum. Five kids in a jailhouse lineup. All seem sullen and a bit confused. Kids are of different races, genders and religions (one young lady wearing a hijab).

A Royal Conundrum (The Misfits Book 1) by Lisa Yee and Dan Santat (ages 8-12)

Every kid sometimes feels like a misfit, but Olive feels like one most of the time. When she’s sent to what she thinks is a reform school, she instead finds it is a secret spy school where she and her misfit classmates/friends can save the day by stopping the heist of the century!

Cover of Treasures of the Maya. Geronimo Stilton in front of a Mayan pyramid with a picture of Thea flying in front of him.

Treasures of the Maya by Geronimo Stilton (ages 8-12)

Geronimo Stilton is the most anxious adventurous reporter mouse in the world! On his trip to Chichén Itzà, his sister Thea and an ancient Mayan necklace go missing, and Geronimo has to find them. The Geronimo Stilton books are colorful, action-packed and fun for kids to read.

Cover of Trim Saves the Day. Black cat walking on a ship's wheel, with a parrot below looking up at him in disbelief.

Trim Saves the Day by Deborah Hopkinson (ages 7-10)

Trim the kitten loves being part of the ship’s crew, but hasn’t quite found his place yet. After trying several jobs, he discovers something big that requires all hands on deck! This is an intermediate reader, great for kids who are just starting to read chapter books. A second book in the series is coming in July.

Cover of Viewfinder. Young girl with an astronaut suit walking through a mushroom wood, looking back over her shoulder. In front of her is a lit treehouse.

Viewfinder by Christine D.U. Chung (ages 6-9)

A young explorer in the distant future lands on an uninhabited Earth. She finds a viewfinder, which shows her what Earth used to be. But she also finds signs that there might be someone else living on Earth now. This is a wordless graphic novel, perfect for those who love to tell the story themselves!

Cover of Mapmakers and the Lost Magic. Young lady is sitting on the left, looking up at a bird on the top right, with a 3D map in her lap.

The Mapmakers and The Lost Magic; The Mapmakers and The Enchanted Mountain; The Mapmakers and The Flickering Fortress by Cameron Chittock (ages 8-12)

This relatively new series (books published in 2022, 2023 and 2024) features Adelaide, who wants to run away from home and the diabolical Night Coats, and the magical creature she accidentally awakens named Blue. Adelaide discovers the magical hideaway of the long-dormant Mapmakers, and begins a journey toward becoming a Mapmaker, abolishing the Night Coats and bringing peace and joy back to her world.

Cover of Adia Kelbara and the Circle of Shamans. Young African girl with glasses and a purple dress in the forefront with a glowing stone in one hand and a light coming out of her other. In the background, there is a girl with a headscarf and sword, and a boy with a staff.

Adia Kelbara and the Circle of Shamans by Isi Hendrix (ages 8-12)

This is the first of a trilogy about an African girl whose family believes she has a demon inside her. She gets a kitchen internship at the Academy of Shamans, runs away with cat Bubbles, and hopes she fits in better at the Academy (and that there’s someone who can cure her there). But what she finds is that she needs to harness her powers to exorcise a truly evil demon from the kingdom’s emperor! The second book in the series comes out in October.

Cover of The Minor Miracle. Three cartoony kids on the cover. The front kid, Noah Minor, is floating the other two in the air.

The Minor Miracle: The Amazing Adventures of Noah Minor (ages 10-14)

Sure, Noah fell out of a 16th floor window when he was a baby, but his life has been pretty dull since then. He wants to be as amazing and talented as his two best friends, so he’s thrilled when, during a routine vision test, he finds out he can manipulate gravity and is recruited to train with Gravitas, a top-secret government agency. But Gravitas wants him to hunt down the one person who might be able to help him with his powers, his great-uncle Saul. The characters in this book are in 7th grade, making it perfect for those late elementary and middle school readers.

Cover of Magnolia Wu Unfolds It All. Two cartoon girls walking across a city street holding a sock, a backpack and walking with a dog.

Magnolia Wu Unfolds It All by Chanel Miller (ages 7-11)

Magnolia pins the lone socks she finds in her family’s laundromat to the bulletin board, but no one ever claims them. So, she and her new friend Iris from California decide to travel across the city to solve the mystery of each sock, and find out all kinds of interesting things along the way. This is a great early chapter book for kids in elementary school.

Mary Beth Adams is the Community Engagement Librarian for Alamance County Public Libraries. You can reach her at madams@alamancelibraries.org.