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A funny, light read about small town America and the power of love. Young Adult ... Ehrenreich's approach is personal, funny, and very thought-provoking. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Random Reading Recommendations


1
Random Reading Recommendations
2
What do YOU like to read?Click below to go to
the beginning of the section.
  • Mystery/Suspense
  • Womens Friendships
  • Relationships
  • Young Adult
  • Memoir/Non-Fiction

3
Mystery and Suspense
4
American Fujiby Sara Backer
  • Gaby, a  young American woman living and working
    in Japan, finds herself selling "fantasy
    funerals" to wealthy Japanese families when she
    is fired from her university job. Her life is
    further complicated by mystery when she is called
    up to aid  Alex, an American man who has come to
    Japan to investigate the mysterious circumstances
    surrounding his only son's death. Reluctant to
    assist at first, Gaby soon becomes embroiled in
    Alex's quest to discover what really happen to
    his son and together, the two of them face the
    sometimes impenetrable Japanese culture and
    discover a shocking truth about the fate that can
    endanger foreigners.

5
Gone for Goodby Harlan Coben
  • Years after his older brothers disappearance,
    Will learns that his brother may be alive, and on
    the run from those who accuse them of murdering a
    neighbor girl. As Will delves into his brothers
    whereabouts, his own personal life becomes
    mysteriously complicated as his girlfriend
    vanishes without explanation and he learns that
    she may not have been the person he always
    thought she was.

6
House of Sand and Fogby Andre Dubus, III
  • An unlikely premise makes for one of the finest,
    most literary stories of suspense I have read. A
    young woman is mistakenly evicted from her home
    and her house is sold to an Iranian immigrant in
    an auction before she can prevent it. With the
    help of a renegade sheriff's deputy, she launches
    a battle to win back her home. But the new owner
    also feels he has every right--legal and
    moral--to own the house.  A page-turner that ends
    surprisingly. This book has caused more
    discussion among my friends than any other I have
    read recently. Find out why!

7
Never Mind Nirvanaby Mark Lindquist
  • A commitment-phobic Seattle prosecutor, who is
    also the ex-lead of a a popular rock band, is
    assigned the case of another Seattle musician
    accused of date-raping a teen. As he revisits his
    old haunts searching for clues, he is forced to
    confront his own past as well as his attitudes
    about relationships. A treat for anyone who likes
    legal drama and Seattle music culture.

8
Boy Still Missingby John Searles
  • Sure to be a movie, this fast-paced story about
    a teenager who finds clues about his mothers
    previous life, her current secrets, and his own
    origins. Dominick steals money from his mother
    and secretly passes it along to Edie, an older
    woman from town who is pregnant with his fathers
    child. When she disappears with his moneywithout
    following through on hints that she and Dominick
    will consummate their friendshipDominick
    disappearsat least to the people of his
    hometown.
  •  
  • He knows just where he is, howeversearching for
    clues about his own life. He follows a trail to
    New York, where his mother has always told him he
    had an older brother, who lived with an uncle
    there. When he finds his uncle, however, he
    discovers deeper secrets about his mothers life,
    and about his own. The plot is twisting and
    surprising without being confusing or
    ridiculousa terrific blend of good writing and
    good storytelling.

9
Womens Friendships(Beyond Divine Secrets of
the Ya-Ya Sisterhood)
10
Talk Before Sleep by Elizabeth Berg
  • Guaranteed Kleenex material, this is the story
    of two women whose relationship changes
    profoundly when one is diagnosed with breast
    cancer.
  • This author is visiting Bellinghams Village
    Books on June24 at 730 p.m.!!

11
The Secret Life of Beesby Sue Monk Kidd
  • Lily has always felt responsible for her
    mother's death, but when an explosive argument
    with her abusive father indicates that she may,
    in fact, hhave killed, she decides to run away.
    She takes with her the family's black
    housekeeper, Rosaleen, who has just had a
    confrontation with three racists in town after
    attempting to register to vote, and is being held
    in the town jail. The two escape to Tiburon,
    South Carolina, after Lily finds what she
    considers to be a clue from her dead mother. In
    Tiburon, they find three African-American sisters
    living together and raising bees for honey. The
    women take Lily and Rosaleen in, and Lily soons
    learns much about beekeepping, friendship, and
    herself as she grows closer to the sister and is
    eventually able to confront the truth about
    herself and her mother and the past.

12
Relationships
13
A Theory of Relativityby Jacquelyn Mitchard
  • When Gordon McKennas sister, Georgia, and her
    husband, Ray, die in a car crash, he is certain
    he will be able to take on the responsibility of
    raising her one year old daughter, Keefer, as he
    and his parents believe Georgia would have
    wished. The in-laws, howeverwealthy
    southernershave other plans, however, and a
    legal battle for the right to raise the girl
    ensues.
  •  
  • The in-lawsRays parentsshow no mercy in their
    quest to raise their sons daughter as their own.
    They know that Gordon was adopted, and therefore
    not technically a blood relative of Georgia and
    Keefers, and they use this information in their
    custody battle, citing language in the law that
    refers to blood relations.
  •  
  • Readers who enjoy legal thrillers and family
    dramas will be pleased by this taut, emotional
    combination of the two genres.

14
The Good People of New Yorkby Thisbe Nissen
  • A terrific novel about a New York Jewish woman
    who marries, for a few years, a down-home country
    boy from Nebraska. Although a portion of the
    novel is devoted to their marriage, the majority
    of the story follows divorced wife Roz and her
    daughter Miranda as they navigate the murky
    waters of single-parenting and coming-of-age,
    both drifting in and out of relationships with
    men, but sustained by their faith in and love for
    one another.
  •  
  • Roz mis-marries, originally, Mirandas father, a
    Christian from Nebraska, and while their love at
    first seems ideal, the impending pressure of
    careers and family drive them apart, and Roz and
    Miranda are left alone to raise each other in New
    York City.
  •  
  • When Roz falls in love with Mirandas
    orthodontist and he moves in with her and
    Miranda, Miranda is at first skeptical. She
    learns to appreciate the new situation, however,
    when she and the orthodontists teenage son hit
    it off. Their own relationship is doomed,
    however, when they discover a secret that drives
    their parents apart.

15
The Dive from Clausens Pierby Ann Packer
  • Carrie Bells life falls into disarray when her
    fiance in paralyzed after diving from a pier.
    After 8 years, Carrie had been ready to end the
    relationship, but now that Mike is injured, she
    feels pressured to stay by his side. As she
    weighs the choicesstaying with him or
    leavingshe is desperately unsure of how to
    proceed, and so escapes to look for answers
    within herself. This is a compelling, moving, and
    sometimes uncomfortable look at how we handle
    tragedy and react to our worst and best impulses.

16
Henrys List of Wrongsby John Scott Shepherd
  • After a major life set back, Henry decides to
    right the wrongs hes committed as a ruthless,
    compassion-less businessman. With the help of a
    mysterious girl named Sophie, he retraces the
    past ten years of his life, trying to repair the
    damage he has caused in peoples lives. A funny,
    thoughtful book. Youll see the movie in it, too.

17
The Man Who Ate the 747by Ben Sherwood
  • J.J. Smith, a records-confirmer for the Book of
    Records, travels to Superior, Nebraska, where a
    man has reportedly been eating a 747 to prove his
    love for a woman. Wally Chubb has a specially
    constructed grinder that allows him to demolish
    small pieces of the airplane and consume them
    with his food.hopefully to catch the attention
    and win the love of Willa Wyatt, whom he has
    loved since they were both children.
  •  
  • J.J. persuades Wally to go public with his
    pursuit and hopefully win a spot in the Book of
    Records, but the ensuing publicity has some
    disastrous results, and J.J., who has long been
    interested only in records and numbers,
    unexpectedly finds love visiting this small
    community. A funny, light read about small town
    America and the power of love.

18
Young Adult
19
Hanging on to Maxby Margaret Bedard
  • Sam is a high school senior struggling to meet
    the demands of high school and fatherhood. After
    his ex-girlfriend, Brittany, announced that she
    would be giving up their infant son for adoption,
    Sam can't let the baby go, and so decides to take
    on the task of raising the baby himself.
  •  
  • His first year, as chronicled in this short
    book, is full of challenges. He attends an
    alternative school, where he meets other teen
    parents (all girls) and befriends Claire, who
    used to attend his regular high school with him
    and struggles with the complications that result
    from two teen parents dating each other. In
    addition, his relationship with his father is
    strained--though he knows his dad cares for Max,
    his dad is reluctant to get very involved in the
    boy's upbringing. Sam also impresses his math
    teacher, who convinces him to take the SAT and
    consider a college education--a plan which is in
    direct opposition to the agreement he has made
    with his father to finish high school and get a
    job to support Max.
  •  
  • Although this is a short book, and there are
    some areas I would have liked to see developed
    more, I absolutely loved it and closed the cover
    in tears. Sam is a likeable, realistic
    character--full of compassion, but also torn
    between being a kid and having fun and being a
    responsible parent. The plot unfolds smoothly,
    with carefully time flashbacks gradually
    revealing Sam and Brittany's story as well as
    Sam's own story about his mother's death years
    earlier.
  •  

20
Love That Dogby Sharon Creech
  • A short, sweet story written in verse about a
    young boy who is encouraged to write poetry by an
    understanding teacher, and as a result, is
    finally able to talk about what happened to his
    beloved dog.

21
Life is Funnyby E.R. Frank
  • In this series of interconnected stories about
    eleven teenagers in Brooklyn, E.R. Frank creates
    a collection of miniature worlds that expose the
    often harsh truths about being a teen in the 90s.
    Although the subject matter is frequently bleak,
    there is a great deal of humor and happiness in
    the lives of these characters, who despite their
    troubles and flaws, are entirely likeable. Even
    though each story felt complete, I still found
    myself rooting for and wanting to know more about
    the characters and wishing that they would be
    mentioned later in the book, which they sometimes
    were.
  • Among the characters are the angry, nearly
    illiterate, Eric, who is raising his young
    brother, Mickey Grace and Sam, who are both
    models and find that having a beautiful face
    isnt necessarily a guarantee that youll have a
    beautiful life Keisha and Gingerbread, who
    discover each otherand first love Monique and
    Molly, sisters who save each other from
    themselves and from their crazy mother and Drew,
    who has listened to his father beat his mother
    long enough.
  • I loved this book. At first, I struggled to get
    into it, expecting a traditional plot line, but
    once I met the characters, I found myself longing
    for more of their stories and their lives if
    there is anything at all thats disappointing
    about this book, its that there isnt more of
    it! E.R. Frank doesnt hesitate to use the
    language teens use, and she does it extremely
    well obviously she has an ear for dialogue and
    for the lives that teens lead and the problems
    they wrestle with.

22
The Reappearance of Sam Webberby Jonathan Scott
Fuqua
  • In THE REAPPEARANCE OF SAM WEBBER by Jonathan
    Scott Fuqua, eleven-year-old Sam Webber and his
    mother move to a poorer section of Baltimore
    after being abandoned by Sam's father. The two
    struggle to make enough money to live, and Sam
    grieves his father. At school, he is bullied by
    larger kids and unhappy until he is befriended by
    the elderly black custodian, Greely, who protects
    and cares for Sam to make up for his own mistakes
    with his children decades earlier. Other adults
    buoy Sam--his mother, her friends Junie and
    Ditch, his mother's boyfriend, Howard, and the
    waitress, Rose, who has known Sam for years.  All
    of them help Sam see his own strengths and help
    his grow and experience happiness despite the
    absence of his father in this well-written,
    entertaining story.

23
Hole in My Life by Jack Gantos
  • Gantos, now a well-known childrens author,
    recounts his early adulthood, when he was
    arrested and jailed for drug smuggling. As a high
    school student, his family moved to St. Croix,
    and he later joined them. While working there, he
    was approached by a drug smuggler who offered him
    10,000 to help sail a boat with 1000 pounds of
    hash to New York City. Gantos accepted, and
    joined a surly Brit named Hamilton for the voyage
    north, which was fraught with perils, not the
    least of which was the pairs inexperience
    sailing.
  •  
  • Not long after arriving in New York, Gantos,
    Hamilton, and their recruiter join forces to sell
    the hash, and eventually get caught by the FBI,
    tried, and sent to prison. About half of the
    memoir is Gantos account of life behind bars,
    where he kept a secret journal between the lines
    of The Brothers Karamazov and worked as a
    technician in the prisons hospital.
  •  
  • After serving a fifteen month sentence, Gantos
    was released and went on to pursue a writing
    career. (His books are popular among middle and
    high school students and include Joey Pigza
    Swallowed the Key and his first novel, Rotten
    Ralph.)
  •  
  • This memoir is a perfect selection for anyone
    who likes adventure and is interested in knowing
    more about life in prison.

24
Shattering Glassby Gail Giles
  • Have you ever wondered what it would be like to
    help someone unpopular transform themselves into
    someone whom everyone liked? How would school be
    different if this happened? Would it be a good
    thing, or not?
  • Following the leadership and encouragement of
    Rob, a popular and charismatic boy at his high
    school, Young Steward agrees to help school
    geek Simon Glass by transforming him into one of
    the schools most popular students. He suspects
    Robs intentions, but doesnt know exactly what
    makes him suspicious. Only much later, after
    Simons transformation, do he and Simon discover
    together why Rob is bent on changing Simon and
    proving his power to others. What they find out
    puts everyone in danger.
  •  
  • This is a powerful suspense story that haunt
    readers long after they have finished reading.
    Youngs choicesto participate in the
    re-creation of Simon his decision to withhold
    information about Rob, and his ultimate decision
    (which cant be revealed here!) will leave
    readers thinking about this story long after they
    have finished reading the book.

25
Stoner and Spazby Ron Koertge
  • Imagine struggling to walk everywhere you
    goeach step a painful one that involves dragging
    your handicapped leg behind you Imagine enduring
    high school with this disabilitypeople staring,
    bullies poking fun, people calling you spaz.
    And imagine that despite your disability, you are
    intelligent and funnyand interested in dating.
  •  
  • Sixteen-year-old Ben Bancroft has never really
    fit it. Abandoned by his mother and father, he
    has been raised by his grandmother, who is more
    concerned about the way Ben looks than how he
    feels. And he feels bad, much of the time,
    because his cerebral palsy handicaps his walking,
    makes it impossible for him to drive, and
    isolates him from his peers. Hes used to
    spending hours alone, watching old movies, which
    he loves. Until one day, in the theater, he
    encounters another misfithis classmate, Colleen,
    who has a reputation around school for using and
    selling drugs. She befriends Ben, and the two
    begin an unlikely, sweet, and short, romance.
  •  
  • As Ben becomes more involved with Colleen, he
    also becomes more aware of the life she is
    leading and of the danger she courts with her
    drug dealing and use and with her ex-boyfriend,
    Ed, and he wonders how much hes willing to
    sacrifice in order to have her companionship and
    love.
  •  

26
Memoir and Non-Fiction
27
Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil by John
Berendt

Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil by John
Berendt is one of my all-time favoritesa
literary true-crime-memoir-travelogue that
profiles a series of unusual minor characters who
happen to be real inhabitants of Savannah,
Georgia.   The author traveled to Savannah and
set up a temporary residence there in order to
investigate a murder. During the course of his
stay, however, he found the residents of the city
as fascinating and often as mysterious as the
crime he came to analyze, and his profiles of
them, and of the city of Savannah, make his story
read like a gothic southern novel.
28
The Frailty Myth Redefining the Physical
Potential of Women and Girls by Colette Dowling
  • Using the latest research and anecdotal
    evidence, Dowling argues that women are gradually
    catching up to men in terms of physical
    strength.  In previous generations, she argues,
    women were often denied opportunities to realize
    their full physical potential and discouraged
    from athletics, and as those attitudes change, so
    do women's perceptions of themselves, and so do
    their physical abilities. A provocative read, and
    an enlightening look at culture and history.

29
Nickel and Dimed On (Not) Getting By in
Americanby Barbara Ehrenreich
  • My reading group just read this book and thought
    it was an excellent expose on the lives of people
    who work for minimum wage. Ehrenreich, a regular
    contributor to Harper's and Time and the author
    of several other books about sociological issues,
    assumed the life of a low-wage worker for several
    months to see how people survive on minimum wage.
    What she found out was grim  housing and
    transportation issues face the majority of
    low-wage workers, and working conditions are
    often tiring, demeaning, and de-personalizing. 
    Ehrenreich's approach is personal, funny, and
    very thought-provoking.  A quick read, but one
    that will stick with you long after the last
    page.

30
The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down by Anne
Fadiman
  • This amazingly poignant story illustrates the
    clash of cultures that occurs in the United
    States far too often, but in some cases, with
    tragic results.
  • Anne Fadiman retraces the story of a Hmong
    family that moved to L.A. in the 80s and
    discovered their youngest child was seriously
    ill. Suffering from violent seizures, she was
    rushed to the emergency room again and again,
    where doctors eventually diagnose severe epilepsy
    and prescribe medication that will control the
    seizures and prevent brain damage.
  • The family rejects Western medicine, believing
    that the epilepy is a form of spiritual
    possession, and that their daughter is blessed.
    As she grows older, the seizuresand the conflict
    with doctors and between culturesgrow more and
    more severe.
  • A beautifully written, heartbreaking story.

31
The Better World Handbook
  • Authors Ellis Jones, Ross Haenfler, and Brett
    Johnson present numerous ideas--and much food for
    thought--about how individuals can, in ways both
    large and small, affect the world in a positive
    way. Many of their ideas revolve around the way
    we spend our money--the food we buy, the cars we
    drive, the gifts we give, the clothes we wear.
    They offer statistics and data that supports
    their claims that consumerism is damaging to the
    environment, the culture, and the individual
    psyche. Most importantly, they offer many ways
    readers can assess their attitudes and behavior
    to make a more positive impact on the world
    around them.
  •  
  • The authors suggest 7 foundations for building a
    better world (economic fairness, comprehensive
    peace, ecological sustainability, deep democracy,
    social justice, culture of simplicity, and
    revitalized community), and then offer practical
    actions for making those ideals a reality. They
    divide their ideas into suggestions about things
    you can do in these areas money, shopping,
    food, personal life, friends and family,
    community, home, work, media, politics,
    transportation, travel, and organization. In each
    area, they analyze some of the current problems
    and list ways you can help, ranging from buying
    from eco-friendly and reponsible businesses to
    getting enough sleep and exercise. Finally, they
    end with the top ten suggestions for building a
    better world include an "action index" that can
    be used to help remind you of some of the things
    you can do.

32
Cant Buy My Loveby Jean Kilbourne
  • This is easily the best book Ive read on the
    topic of how advertising permeates our culture
    and sends dangerous messagesespecially to young
    peopleabout the supposed joy to be found in
    cigarettes, alcohol, and material goods.
    Kilbourne has researched her subject matter
    thoroughly and includes hundreds of
    examplesincluding numerous visualsto support
    her claims and demonstrate the dangers of
    commercial media. I thought Id already heard all
    the arguments about the topic, but I was wrong,
    and this book made me realize that although I can
    avoid ads in my own life, I can do very little to
    alter the effects theyve had on those around me.

33
On Writingby Stephen King
  • Whether or not you appreciate his fiction, you
    will find inspiration and insight in Stephen
    King's book, ON WRITING A MEMOIR OF THE CRAFT.
    King, who only recently recovered from a severe
    accident that left him with a shattered leg,
    broken ribs, and numerous other injuries, recalls
    the life experiences that led to his prolific
    career as America's best-known horror writer.
  • King's childhood poverty led him to escapist
    films--mainly genre horrow flicks of the
    1950s--and he developed a taste for the
    imaginative possibilities of horror and fantasy
    writing. He contributed to his brother's
    underground newspaper, was editor of the high
    school paper, and eventually wrote sports for a
    small local daily before attempting--and
    publishing, slowy--short stories. After college,
    marriage, and during his brief career as a high
    school English teacher, King work steadfastly on
    a number of manuscripts, typing his first
    published book, Carrie, in the laundry room of
    his singlewide trailer.
  •  
  • In the years since, King has published over 30
    novels, two books of non-fiction, dozens of short
    stories, and several movie scripts. He admits
    that while his work has been panned by literary
    critics, he is following the same guidelines and
    using the same writing skills as any other more
    respected literary authors. His stories, he
    says, find him, and he simply follows them where
    they lead.
  •  
  • In addition to recalling his past and offering
    ideas about writing, King writes movingly of
    being hit by a van two years ago and undergoing
    serious rehabilitation--his leg was shattered,
    four ribs broken, and he suffered severe weight
    loss and other injuries.
  •  
  • As a writer, I found his testimony about his
    life and his craft moving and convincing. I think
    his story would appeal to any of his fans,.
    others who aspire to write, or anyone looking for
    an inspiration rags-to-riches story.
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  

34
Fast Food Nation The Dark Side of the
All-American Mealby Eric Schlosser
  • If you need a reason to stop eating hamburgers
    and french fries, this book will provide you with
    dozens. Schlosser traces the history of the meat
    industry and the history of the fast food
    industry and offers numerous revelations about
    the working conditions of meat industry and fast
    food industry workers, as well as some shocking
    (in some cases, sickening) facts about the food
    you may be served at your local fast food
    establishment. I recommend this book over and
    over again because I think it has some important
    and thoughtful information we should consider
    about the food we eat and the industry that makes
    it.

35
My Year of Meatsby Cynthia Ozeki
  • Another great peek into Japanese culture that
    would also be a great companion read to Fast Food
    Nation. Jane Tagaki-Little is an American hired
    to produce a documentary for Japanese television
    audiences that shows the many uses of beef in the
    home.  Each episode focuses on a "typical"
    American family enjoying meals centered around a
    beef dish. As Jane travels with the production
    crew, she learns some shocking truths about the
    beef industry and the harm it may be doing to
    ordinary people. A great read that is also
    educational without being preachy.

36
Me Talk Pretty One Dayby David Sedaris
  • David Sedaris, a frequent contributor to Esquire
    magazine and NPR, compiles his latest humorous
    essays in this book, which includes many about
    his life in France, where he struggles to
    understand the language and the culture (my
    favorite is "Jesus Shaves" in which he and a
    group of classmates attempt to explain Easter--in
    broken French--to their Muslim classmate). As in
    his previous collection, Naked, he also find some
    hilarious anecdotes to share about his family (in
    particular, his father) and his sister, actress
    Amy Sedaris. Sedaris recently won the James
    Thurber prize for outstanding American humorist,
    which is basically the Pulitzer of humor.  Read
    his stories and find out why!
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