RSS

Author Archives: Alicia Abdul

Unknown's avatar

About Alicia Abdul

You'll find me drinking tea in a dress and reading... or making lists.

Of sleepless nights and grey hairs

In just a few short days, our school will host our first in-person author visit since the pandemic hit. And as much as I’m excited to bring a live author back to our school, it’s also the most nerve-wracking experience.

It’s not like this is new. Our school has hosted at least one author each year since 2011. Yet each and every time I have sleepless nights and sprout a few extra grey hairs. The planning and preparation is one thing, from signing the contract and fundraising for the cost (since our school does not support the full cost of author visits, we always seek outside support) to having books for purchase and finding the avenues to get teens excited about the visit.

This year has included a lot of transitions in both our district office and the library’s new space that we moved in to during our major capital improvement project for our campus. These factors add to the nervousness that everything will come together. It never gets easier. Plus, for these high schoolers, this is the first experience with an author visit because of the pandemic. I want to pack the library, but I want the students to want to be there. I want to inspire reading, which is usually the case after the visit. In the meantime, I’m running a reading challenge because of the authors breadth of titles.

As I said, I wouldn’t trade it for anything. The elation of the connection between the author and students cannot be substituted, but it’s the responsibility the librarian carries throughout the process that always gets me.

What things do other librarians and hosts do to quell the sleepless nights and reduce the grey hairs before a visit?

 
1 Comment

Posted by on March 26, 2023 in Authors, Events, Young Adult

 

Women authors to love

Continuing with the theme of Women’s History Month, I want to give a shout out to influential women authors through the lens of my reading experience.

  1. Probably forever, Ruta Sepetys will always be at the top of the list. Having had the pleasure of her company in person does add an additional layer of appreciation for her, but her books themselves mine hidden histories which are captured with elegance and an emotional capableness to reach through the pages of the book to reach the reader on another level. She’s simply the best.
  2. Mary Roach is the queen of curiosity for me. All of her books from the science of the military to cadavers have endlessly fascinated me. Years ago I wrote that she would be an author I’d love to have lunch with just to pick her brain. She’s got a fascinating array of subject areas, but I’ll follow her wherever that curiosity leads.
  3. There is no one more Instagram-poet famous that Rupi Kaur. I follow her as do many of my high school students to see what new and old poems she drops there. Then I scrambled when she publishes a collection to get my hands on a copy and then make sure I have a handful in our library too. I confess to also following her social media to see what dress she’s wearing and to celebrate that this poetess sells out arenas to read her poetry. She’s an experience.
  4. Sarah Andersen of Sarah’s Scribbles fame makes me laugh– every.damn.time. Her humorous take on the extraordinary and the mundane in her comics (but I’d be remiss not to gush about Fangs too) gave me a boost in the mornings when I would read a few pages from her comics with my cup of tea. She’s more than just a writer, she’s a creator.
  5. And when I think about books whose settings and writing envelope me, I think about the atmospheric writing of Cat Winters. She pulled me in with In The Shadow Of Blackbirds and kept me there with all of the other books (and short stories) that she’s written. She’s the ultimate spooky YA writer.
 

Memorable women

It’s Women’s History Month and a few weeks ago I also finished both Enola Holmes’ movies on Netflix which made me giddy for strong female leads. I’ve compiled a short list of the most memorable females in books and why they’ve still stuck with me.

  1. Alana from Vaughan and Staples’ Saga comics because that’s one woman (with wings) that I’d never want to cross on the battlefield of interstellar war or in love whether it’s her husband Marko or her daughter Hazel.
  2. Hazel from Schwartz’s Anatomy and newly published sequel Immortality because women surgeons in the 1800s. Her ingenuity and stickwithit attitude empowers all women in science.
  3. Josie from Sepetys’ Out of the Easy because she wanted a way out. Her mother’s way was not going to be her way but she learned from those women in the brothel and others around her just the same.
  4. Lisbon sisters from Eugenides’ The Virgin Suicides because you can’t get more memorable than the desperation, one girl at a time, to try to leave their life in suburbia. This is hands-down one of my all-time most memorable books. I even named my dog after one of the girls.
  5. Naomi from Perez’s Out of Darkness because the braid on the cover is emblematic of her struggles making her way through life after the death of her mother and dealing with her abusive stepfather while keeping an eye on her twin siblings and falling for Wash. There are scenes from the book that I replay in my featuring Naomi’s quiet strength.
  6. Susie Salmon from Sebold’s The Lovely Bones because her death is what led to the pain and heartbreak readers experienced that she could only but watch from a distance. A life cut short is often grounds for being remembered long after the death.
  7. Coco from Shirahama’s Witch Hat Atelier manga series because her insistence on needing to become a witch and her delightful problem-solving skills were about to fracture the relationship with the other girls in the atelier, until they realize how pure of heart Coco is, with a side of goofiness.
  8. Mattie from Donnelly’s A Northern Light because being close to a murder is a scary thing, but her uplift from just a farmgirl to self-education is inspiring.
  9. Laura from Jordan’s Mudbound because the delicate balance of being raised in the city to moving to mud country was enough to tear her in two. The quiet desperation and decisions she makes are not always perfect but quintessentially human.
  10. Anya Balanchine from Zevin’s All These Things I’ve Done because having a target on your back is hard enough, but keeping what’s left of your family together while trying to run an illegal chocolate empire is even more difficult. She’s got spunk.

Of course, this is just a handful. I might actually have to go back and create more lists of memorable women because there are too many to choose from.

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on March 14, 2023 in Miscellaneous

 

The ABCs of romance

  1. An Arrow to the Moon
  2. Book Love
  3. Code Name Helene
  4. Darius the Great Deserves Better
  5. Eternally Yours
  6. Fangs
  7. (The) Girl from the Sea
  8. (The) House on the Cerulean Sea
  9. If These Wings Could Fly
  10. Jessica’s Guide to Dating on the Dark Side
  11. Keturah and Lord Death
  12. Love in the Library
  13. Mudbound
  14. Not So Pure and Simple
  15. Out of Darkness
  16. Pumpkinheads
  17. Rent a Boyfriend
  18. Saga
  19. Tokyo Ever After
  20. (The) Unlikelies
  21. (E)Verything Everything
  22. Walk Through Walls
  23. XOXO
  24. Your Own, Sylvia
  25. Z: A Novel of Zelda Fitzgerald

Dark and light romances. For adults or teens. An alphabetical list of some that I’ve read and loved.

 

One for the money

One for the money, two for the show, three to make ready and four to go.

I was thinking about this children’s rhyme when I was contemplating what type of reading goals I could set for myself for 2023. As a practice, I don’t make goals because there’s usually a committee, reviews, and general work around reading (even though it’s never really work) that I’ll always be reading anyway. And I read widely already. So I thought I would highlight each month a children’s book, a middle grade, a YA, and an adult that I read. Here’s January’s books via rhyme–

One for the money: An Immense World by Ed Yong

It made so many best lists for 2022 which is why I added it to my TBR for January and it did not disappoint. Yong, take all my money because as a lover of science titles, this one was lyrical, moving, and insightful for a general adult audience.

Two for the show: How You Grow Wings by Rimma Onoseta

Sisters who grow up disparately loved by their mother, the choices that are made ultimately separate then reunite them in a moving story that brings them full circle. Clever, clever book for young adults.

Three to make ready: Ancestor Approved edited by Cynthia Leitich Smith

Short story collections are one of my favorite categories to explore and each of these short stories featuring Indigenous characters can be mirrors, windows, and sliding glass doors. All of the stories drew from a wealth of experience, storytelling, and heart.

Four to go: The Sun is Late and So Is the Farmer by Philip C. Stead and illustrated by Erin Stead

This children’s book includes a cast of animal main characters, including the four pictured on the cover wondering where the sun is and thus where the farmer is. The vibe of the cover art and title exactly matches the book itself.

 

After everyone

Cue Semisonic’s “Closing Time” and that’s how I’m feeling about reading Delia Owen’s Where the Crawdads Sing.

Yes I know that the movie was just released in 2022 and no, I haven’t watched it. I know that whenever a movie comes out there’s a resurgence in reading the book if it hadn’t been read before (or lovers of the book re-reading it) but still, the height of obsession with the book is well past since it was published in 2018 which seems like yesterday and a lifetime ago all at once. Yet the most wonderful thing about books is there really isn’t ever an expiration date and it can be read and reread at any time. It was a few days ago that finally after seeing it pop up again somewhere in my internet travels that I decided it was time.

I listened to the audiobook which annoyingly had a cover update from the movie (I hate that) but beside a captivating narrator, I found that for as popular with book clubs and reading circles, pop culture lists and Goodreads Choice Awards, I didn’t know anything about the book. It was what I hold dear about reading the book for the first time in 2023 because other than it’s general popularity, I didn’t know a single tidbit of what awaited me which is why my respect for the book deepened. I got to read the book as myself, not as anyone else or through anyone else. My own experiences interpreted what Kya was experiencing. My own experiences sensed the marsh. My own experiences greeted the characters.

For readers who have moved on, having a conversation about the book has well-passed since vivid thoughts about the book fade over time as new books crowd out the memory of the older books. But I wanted to celebrate here that a book is evergreen. It never goes out of style whether it’s 10 days old or 10 years old. As I wrote this sentence, I remembered Chicken Every Sunday by Rosemary Taylor, a book published in 1943 that was often read by soldiers during World War II. It was mentioned in the book When Books Went to War by Molly Guptill Manning. I promptly went to my indie bookseller who found a 1943 copy of Chicken Every Sunday that I bought, took home, read cover to cover with a cup of tea and my blanket, and sat in the experiences of from a half-century ago, but felt like it was yesterday.

Cheers to timeless stories.

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on January 18, 2023 in Adult, Audiobooks, Fiction, Reflections

 

Series alert: Something is Killing the Children

When I was making my top lists of 2022 and finishing up the year of reading, I noted that there were a handful of books on my lists (as I narrowed them down and that made the lists themselves) that were series. I have a love/hate relationship with series but I’ve learned to accept them as a natural course of publishing and creativity. Several years ago I decided that if I wasn’t completely obsessed with the first book in a planned series, that I wouldn’t continue reading the series out of obligation. Instead, I would have enough to be able to recommend the series to audiences. And with so many books out there to read, spending time reading ones I weren’t in love with wasn’t making anyone happy.

Enter this comic series, Something is Killing the Children, written by James Tynion IV, illustrated by Werther Dell’Edera, and colored by Miquel Muerto and published by BOOM! Studios. I have read up to the twenty-first issue through Hoopla and looking on BOOM!’s website, it says that issue 21 is available but then I see that there is a fifth published volume that includes issues 21-25, so I’m going to have to visit my local comic book store to check this out. To fill my time and the gap in waiting, it was introduced to me this weekend that House of Slaughter existed, telling the backstory of one of the Orders of St. George and the namesake house that main character, Erica Slaughter comes from in the series.

And Erica as a character is the strongest part of the series. Readers want to follow her journey of slaying monsters and sassing law enforcement. This is in addition to the creatively drawn monsters that haunt the woods and kill children, the gore of the action sequences that are dark and haunting but aren’t so ridiculously bloody that it is gratuitous. On a whim I borrowed the first volume and was shocked by how much I got into the characters, setting, and story because the comic series is a well-rounded mix of it all.

I’ll be over here waiting for the next issue and looking around the house to figure out what my totem would be.

 

Last and first

Other bookish people likely do the same thing, right? They plan their last book of a calendar year and the first one of the new year. I have been doing this for a few years now and while they don’t always work out to the five-star reads I want them to be in my head, not all books can be winners and that’s life.

But this year I can confidently say I chose well.

My last book of 2022 was

Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus

I bought this about a month at my indie bookstore on a whim. I rarely buy books that I haven’t read before but the hype around the book has been so overwhelming that I went ahead and bought it. Then it was clear by the beginning of December that I would save it for my last book of the year.

Vacation reading is often trying to cram as many books in as I can while still being productive and extroverted for holiday activities, so I actually waited until December 30th to read the first few chapters and then I could roll into the rest of the book on New Year’s Eve. The problem is that we had company for the better half of the afternoon, but I hunkered down with my champagne and white cranberry and finished about 11:45pm- in time to watch the ball drop and be filled with the love and admiration of Garmus’s writing AND how she created the most loveable and unique characters. It’s as funny as it is sad reminding me of a combination of The House in the Cerulean Sea by Klune and Lab Girl by Hope Jahren.

So the clock strikes midnight, I toast my cranberry champagne with my husband and kids, get a good night’s rest and wake up knowing that my first book of the new year awaited.

My first book of 2022 was

The Dead Romantics by Ashley Poston

In part, I chose this one because the color palette matched Garmus’s book. It’s a book that I saw a lot via social media and I also have read (and loved) Poston’s YA, plus it came in from the library several weeks ago so it was already on my TBR pile.

Just like Elizabeth Zott in Lessons in Chemistry, Florence Day is a main character I’ll remember. Her voice is unmatchable. With its mix of magical realism and new adult humor, it combines nicely with the sexy romance and Day’s day job as a ghostwriter of romance novels who does not believe that love wins anymore. As a book nerd, Day’s day job makes our word-loving hearts sing. In addition, I’m a cemetery walker who is curious about death, so Day’s family’s ownership of a funeral home and her unique upbringing is My Girl meets The Lovely Bones and would be something a Colleen Hoover reader should check out. The two twists in the last third of the book make it all the more indulgent and creative.

Now, onto a year filled with books in all their iterations with plenty of tea on the side.

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on January 1, 2023 in Adult, Authors, Fiction

 

Top 5 of 2022: Favorite blog posts

I needed one more TOP list of 2022, so I decided to look back at my posts from this year and highlight my five favorites.

  1. Obituaries: I’m still reading the obituaries every day. I’m still always looking out for an old cemetery to wander around. And I love discovering articles like this one about etching recipes on gravestones (and the woman who went on a quest to make the recipes and revisit the graves).
  2. Fifteen Years: I waxed poetic about my fifteens years in school librarianship.
  3. She’s A Ten, But…: I took the meme and made it my own. Anyone else pack a pile of books to bring to a place that you wholeheartedly know you won’t be able to read ANYTHING but yet, you still need to be prepared?
  4. Down the Rabbit Hole: When one book leads to another or a learning opportunity or a documentary to learn more. I did this with Chernobyl but I’ve also done it with fungi, medicine, and more.
  5. Saga‘s Lesson: Patience: My ode to the best comic series because as much as I want Staples and Vaughan to hurry the heck up, I also never want the series to end.
 

Top 10 of 2022: Young adult books edition

And rounding out the last four posts is my young adult top 10 because that’s who I spend the most amount of time reading and recommending for as a high school librarian. I’ve had the best time reviewing all of my reading this year to be able to pick out the top 10 of each target audience and from conferences to reader’s advisory, telling people to READ THESE BOOKS. So here they are!

I get chills just thinking about my reading memories with these titles which run the gamut of graphic to nonfiction, memoir and historical fiction with some of the best darn authors out there. I think in each one of these books there were lines and pages that I Post-it’ed to go back and reread and experiences that made me into a better human being. Plus, the best kinds of books lead you to other discoveries and I can say that each one of them led me to at least one other book or Google search.

Cheers to the book memories of 2022 and the new ones I’ll make in 2023!