RSS

Category Archives: Cover Love

Delightfully deadly comics

It’s been a few weeks since I finished the last issue of Beneath the Trees Where Nobody Sees by Patrick Horvath but that doesn’t mean that I haven’t been thinking about it almost daily. I had been reading an article about the Eisner nominations for 2024 where it was given the best new series nomination. And the second piece fell into place: Hoopla had the series.

Believe me, I tried to pace myself. I borrowed the first and second issue. Then waited a day before borrowing the third through sixth. I did spread out reading them over several days though I had to resist the urge to ignore work and household duties to sit and read them all in one sitting. It’s the age-old bookworm problem– the compulsion to sit and read it through because it’s THAT good but the knowledge that once you’ve read it, you can’t read it again for the first time, so you have to slow down.

So, I did have them at my fingertips with Hoopla, though I do also now have it on my list to own. When they’re this good, it must be owned. The combination of storytelling and stark visuals (even as evidenced in the cover art) create an air of disturbing questions that must be answered by reading them. And when you meet Samantha Strong, a brown bear living in an idyllic small town operating a business who confesses that she doesn’t murder the locals, well, you know it’s something you need to know more about. Science meets mystery. Intrigue meets turmoil. Curiosity meets wit.

Each issue moves the needle a little closer to a resolution. And when (in this case because it was a digital read) I swiped to the last page, read it, and paused. The complete picture, set up from the very first pages of the first issue was all wrapped up and I was not the same. Who could be?

The series is smart in the same way I was taken completely by W. Maxwell Prince’s Swan Songs. I feel smarter for having read them. I value the creativity that the creators put into their work. I marvel at the work that goes into capturing a piece of the human experience that can reach out from the pages of a comic to shift perspective and make me think deeply.

 
1 Comment

Posted by on September 23, 2024 in Adult, Authors, Comics, Cover Love

 

Celebrate romance

Romance is in the air. I’m feeling extra lovey today on my wedding anniversary and having finished Jason Reynolds’ new book that will be out in October called Twenty Four Seconds from Now last night, I thought I’d post some favorite romances.

First, let’s spend a few minutes bowing down to the genius of Jason Reynolds. This story of Neon and Aria has a timeline that sparkles in addition to the community including family and friends that support their two year romance. It’s heartwarming and natural and is exactly the kind of story that teens deserve.

The others that I’ve adored that range from tragic and sad to all-encompassing and sweet.

What are your favorite romance stories?

 

Six sensational covers

Yes, we do judge books by their covers. And as a high school librarian, my readers advisory absolutely includes the books cover art. Here are six favorites with nothing but the covers to speak for themselves.

 

It’s Delicate(s)!

When Sheets, published by creator Brenna Thummler, dropped in 2018, I read it and enjoyed it. When its sequel, Delicates, dropped in 2021, I read it and was moved by it. Then the last of the trilogy, Lights, dropped in 2023 and not only did I read it, I read it from an advanced copy and completely melted. But maybe that’s not the right analogy with a series full of ghosts. I was levitating.

To be brief: the series follows lonely Marjorie, a motherless girl being raised by her dad running a laundromat where ghost friends including Wendell live. Making friends is a struggle and when Eliza and Marjorie pair up as oddball friends, there’s the sweetest sense that they’ve found someone special. But teenagers are fickle creatures and school is hard. The characters drive the story but equally evocative is the carefully selected color palette enhancing every scene. Feelings are felt among every panel and page because of the skilling coloring and illustrations.

Those feelings were no different when I figured out a way to drive nearly six hours from home for the last of only three staged musical readings of Delicates at Dramashop in Erie, PA. My only regret is that I didn’t bring my teenaged sons to see it with me. Not only would they have admired the talent of the cast (so, so much talent) but the skilled storytelling and the whimsical use of the small set and props. The experience of watching the pianist play right in front of the audience and the intimate setting of being so close to the stage with the lights the same colors as the colors in the graphic novels felt like a warm hug. Layered with raw emotions like Marjorie’s loneliness or Eliza being bullied while her helpless dad tries to help are turned upside down when the audience can’t help but laugh at the catty popular girls’ snarky comments and Marjorie’s little sibling. In two hours, everyone relived their youth. It was all laid bare through Thummler’s story.

Of course only one thing could top the night, but I made sure in advance that there would be a cherry on this sundae and that was the presence of the creator, Brenna Thummler herself. Wearing a fabulously fantastic pink jumpsuit with a vivid backpack, she had her pastel Sharpies ready to sign the books I brought only after she wiped away the tears of love and gratitude for the cast and crew to bring life to her stories on stage. She was being gifted items from fans and friends after giving us all the greatest gift to see it live.

 

The book had…

Cheeky displays in libraries that highlight patrons who come in looking for a book only by something they faintly remember about it such as a blue cover or the word “heart” in the title. I love those displays and have done a few of them myself. But what I love more are the actual readers advisory interactions with said patron to try to find the specific book they were looking for. This happened several months ago in our high school library and I haven’t gotten it out of my head.

I’m going to start by spoiling the ending– we found the book.

Specifically SHE found the book again by endlessly combing the shelves in the area she remembered it being after we both spent several afternoons going back and forth about what she remembered and where she remembered discovering it on the shelf one day after school.

She remembered the “diverse characters on the front cover” and that they were in a kind of “school setting” and that it was in “this specific area” in the fiction section.

In this case, I wasn’t much help, but she persevered. She ended up checking out the book because when she had first pulled it off the shelf she had only started a chapter or two and hadn’t checked it out then. I like that she ended up finding it herself, maybe if only to remind myself that I’m human. And I loved that there was a happy ending- a reunion of book and reader.

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on April 9, 2024 in Cover Love, Fiction, Young Adult

 

Best of 2023: YA extra love

Like the people whose birthday falls on or near a holiday, they’re often overlooked (but not always!) Books hit readers at opportune times or speak to an experience that connects to their life in a meaningful way. Here are a few that I wanted to give a little extra love to.

The creative juices flowing in these stories in how they’re told and what focus they took were what made these stellar additions to the top books of 2023 for teens.

You’ll notice the only format I didn’t focus specifically on was manga. I read widely in this format as well but often the series have been longstanding and thus not specifically published in 2023. There are always new series coming out as well but it’s hard to pinpoint publication when they are published in the United States. Yet I couldn’t not talk about my favorites of the year that may or may not have been published in 2023, but were read in 2023.

 
 

Best of 2023: YA fiction

Next up is YA fiction. So much is published each year that it feels like it’s a never-ending battle to read it all. I try to do what I can!

There is a distinct beauty to each of these stories. For the books whose authors have been around for some time or the newcomers, sentences, paragraphs, and pages can be read and reread. There are some explosive scenes, hidden histories, and even a little fun between the pages of these fiction titles.

 
 

Best of 2023: YA romance

Coming up on young adult literature for the best of lists for 2023 was too hard so I had to create several categories including today’s romance, nonfiction, and fiction (but I’ll also throw in a few bonus titles too). Romance is having a moment and I’m here for it!

There are some names that wouldn’t surprise you to be on the list along with some newcomers. Each spans the categories of magical realism to realistic, features queer and straight characters, and even representation such as in the Deaf community, Judaism, and women in medicine (from way back!) Indulge!

 
 

Talk comics to me

As a school librarian, I spend a lot of my time recommending books. On occasion, students and staff will recommend books to me in the course of conversation. Family and friends who know my tastes often recommend titles too. And I was especially excited yesterday afternoon when I stopped off to the local comic book shop to pick up one item and left with six- one entirely based on his recommendation alone.

It’s no secret that I discovered Saga about forty-ish issues into it’s publication (or really several volumes) which then turned into the necessity of purchasing each issue when I fell head-over-heels. On the 29th, Saga volume 11’s book birthday meant that when I left school I’d drive the two blocks over to the comic book shop to pick it up. They knew I was coming and even left a sweet Post-it on my pulled copy. I figured while I was there I’d pick up issues 2-5 of Swan Songs since issue 5 dropped that day and I liked the concept in issue 1. Then we got to talking and his excitement to talk about Somna hit me with all the same adrenaline that I get when I recommend a book to someone. I told him to add it to my pile.

Having them close by is the icing on the cake that is indie comic shops. The patriarch passed fairly recently, but the shop is going strong under the direction of his children and the passionate employees. After posting about my visit, a former student posted that he happened to be in the store several hours after I had visited. Next time, I told him, we’ll meet there to catch up. Excitement and love of creations like comics and graphic novels is infectious– they can always talk comics to me.

 

Looking for love? Look no further than the library

Wouldn’t it be adorable to meet your significant other in a library? Of course it would but that’s not what I mean. I just mean that today I had fun recommending more romance titles to a student who came back having loved Elise Bryant’s Reggie and Delilah’s Year of Falling that I had recommended to her and was looking for others.

Unfortunately, the other Bryant titles didn’t come in from our new order, but there were others. I recommended Dustin Thao’s You’ve Reached Sam— a student favorite– and because it was also newly-arrived, J.C. Cervantes’ Always Isn’t Forever.

Looking for love? Look no further than the library! There are plenty more where it came from.

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on November 28, 2023 in Authors, Cover Love, Fiction, Young Adult