Thursday, April 24, 2008

Next Meeting: May 13!

That's right, it is that time again! Meet us at the South County Regional Library in Estero on Tuesday, May 13, 2008 at 4 p.m. We will be discussing the following topics:

1. Humorous Books: Everyone is encouraged to bring and share a book that has made them laugh out loud. It can be from any genre, fiction or nonfiction.

2. The blog. How to use it, how to post to it, why it is important, and how it can help.

3. A new project to help SWFLN members with Readers' Advisory.

Can't wait to see you there! Remember, there will be prizes to any new members, and any existing member that brings someone new with them!

See you then!

Girl's Guide to Witchcraft by Mindy Klasky

I found this book because it was mentioned in Library Journal. The author is a librarian, and so it the protagonist. So naturally, being a librarian myself, I had to read it. And I was pleasantly entertained by this book. (And I was excited to learn that the sequel was available at my library.)

This book introduces Jane Madison, a young reference librarian working at a special Colonial history library in Washington, D.C. At the beginning of the novel we find her mooning over a college professor who comes in to work every Monday morning (she calls him her Imaginary Boyfriend). She is horrified, then, when the powers that be decide to make the staff wear period costumes while at work. So now she has to try to look sexy in a mobcap. Heh.

The worst thing that happens is that she finds out the board is cutting her salary by 25%! But the good news (?) is she gets to live, rent-free, in the cottage out back. It takes a little elbow grease, but she and her best friend, Melissa, get the place clean and livable.

On her first night in the house she can't sleep, and ends up finding a hidden key that lets her into a locked room in the basement. Inside she finds a bunch of dusty old books. She opens one, and reads aloud, and...something strange happens.

This novel was better than most of what I would call the "chick lit" genre. The plot was carefully constructed, and the characters were well developed. Especially fun are Jane's grandmother, and Neko, Jane's flamboyantly gay familiar.

It was a hoot. Check it out.

The Queen's Soprano by Carol Dines

Angelica Volgia has a voice like no other. When she sings, she can make people burst with love, or weep with despair. But she lives in Rome in the 1680's, and the pope has outlawed any woman from performing (in any theatrical or musical sense) in public. So every morning Angelica sings behind the shutters of her room, and people gather in the street to listen to her "practice."

With the help of the maid, she learns that a young French sculptor has fallen in love with her, and they exchange notes in secret. If her mother knew they would be ripped apart forever.

You see, Angelica's mother is something of a fortune-hunter. She feels she was robbed of a good marriage when she was young, and is now determined that Angelica should marry far above her station, with her beautiful voice as the catalyst.

After her debut performance at a cardinal's palace, the suitors are lining up - cardinals, bishops, and other nobles visit her house. Some (the clergy) present other men as suitors. She despises them all, and she is already in love. She makes horrible nicknames, like Bishop Wet Lips and Prince Pimple Face.

When it seems that there is no other way to escape her mother's marrige schemes, she sends a plea for help to a friend and fellow singer who lives at the court of Queen Christina. Christina was a woman who abdicated the Swedish throne and came to Rome to convert to Catholicism. She had a houseful of artists and musicians that flew in the face of the current pope's laws about women performing in public.

So will Angelica escape her mother? Will she marry her woung suitor? Will the intrigues at court be her undoing?

THis was a pretty good novel. It felt a little choppy, but the historical details were well done, and the relationship Angelica had with her mother was really well done.

Cross My Heart and Hope to Spy by Ally Carter


Part 2 of the adventures of Cammie Morgan, private school girl and super-spy in training.

I liked this installment even better than the first - the series seems to have found its stride, and it was much more interesting than the first.

This time Cammie is back at school for her 2nd semester of her sophomore year, and things are getting interesting. Their first mission in CoveOps (Covert Operations) is to be dumped in the middle of Washington DC and make their way to the ruby slippers in the Smithsonian without being tailed. Cammie once again gets chatted up by a boy, but this time, the boy turns up at her school the next day. And he is much more interesting than the innocent Josh she met last semester. This one is a spy in training too.

Yes, it still has boys, but this time, the boy is not the important thing (well, he is important, but her schooling is more so). Especially when she isn't sure she can trust him.