Dear YA Fiction, I’m Breaking Up With You.

Dear YA Fiction,

I’m breaking up with you.

At least emotionally I am.

You ride on the wave of teen angst and drama.

You show happily ever afters.

You show hard things that work out.

You show dreams coming true.

My reality was much different.

I was raised by you. My idea of love, friendship, and college. My ideas of life were shaped by the things I read.

Looking back at my Teen years you did me very few favors. You hurt me more than anything else. The hours I spent crying over the broken heart of a character. The hours I spent crying because someone was abandoned in a book were real. I felt your pain. I felt your betrayals. I felt the joy when things worked out. I loved getting to feel those things but I’ve grown up now.

I know real life is much different. I know things don’t always work out. I know that the ending of the story isn’t always “happily ever after”.

I also know that when I look at the Teen fiction currently being published I am disappointed. You major in Girl characters, which is beautiful, but what am I supposed to hand the Teen boy coming into my library who doesn’t want to read their 15th book in a row with a female main character. You major in drama and relationships. What am I supposed to hand the boy who has read the Michael Vey series and the Pendragon series? They don’t want another book with a romantic relationship.

What about the girl who doesn’t believe in happily ever afters? Her life has shown her that those don’t exist. I can hand her “The Hate U Give” and “The Compound” but what then? What can I hand her when she’s tired of Rom Coms and Chick lit?

I love that we have more diverse books but Diversity shouldn’t mean that we stop writing anything for your already loyal and devoted readers. I look through the YA reviews online and I wonder where I’ll find books for these kids. Where will I find things to interest them? I can steer them towards Classics and Adult Literature but there is something beautiful about YA Lit and you are in a position to lose a lot of your readers.

I had a kid come in and want something funny. He was a Teen now. He loved the iFunny series by James Patterson but he was ready for something Teen related. What can I hand him? Where are the Teen books that make you laugh? Where are the Teen books that are lighthearted but not Rom Coms?

I love you YA Lit but you’ve lost me emotionally. My emotions are overdrawn. Don’t forget about me. Don’t forget about the kids who want something different. Don’t stop writing books for us because we are striving for Diversity. Diversity doesn’t mean we stop writing books that will appeal to this group. Diversity means we add, not subtract. I believe in you YA Fiction. You can do this.

-B

A Bookish Year in Review Teen Edition

I love books! I read 156 of them last year and I don’t regret a second of any of that reading!

Missed most of the conversation at a family get together because I was reading= totally worth it.

A friend wants to hang out but I’m only 100 pages from the end of my book= sorry friend. Another time.

Real. Life. Issues. ….. If you’re a bookworm.

I love being on Goodreads.com and being able to look back at all the books I read last year. In doing this I realized there has been a significant change in my reading habits since I began this profession of “Librarian”.

I’ve always loved different cultures and people who are different than myself but I have seen a significant uptick in the amount of diverse books I’m reading. I’m not just referring to diversity of skin color, but diversity of style, character, setting, mental illness, socioeconomic status, and culture.

When I was in High School I read Chick-Lit. Aka sappy sweet romances that often, upon closer inspection, have no bearing on real life. I was quite proud of myself for moving beyond that this year.

So I present to you- my favorite Teen books that I read last year.


FANTASY- A riveting tale of adventure, mischief, and self-awareness. The current runs through the entire universe. And everyone is given a “gift”. The main character is riddled with chronic pain ( I have my own theories as to why her “current gift” has manifested this way). Can she find a way past her pain and free herself from her brother’s tyrannical grip?

INDIAN CULTURE- Absolutely adorable! Dimple doesn’t know she is being set up for an arranged marriage by her family. Rishi does. As Rishi approaches Dimple to declare how excited he is about their impending nuptials, Dimple does what any sane girl would do- throws her coffee on him and runs away. This fun tale shows the beauty of Indian culture and shows that maybe, just maybe, our parents occasionally do have our best interests at heart.

LOW INCOME- Awkward girl who no one likes. Korean boy who has the only empty seat on the bus. 80s. Need I say more? Eleanor and Park have no reason to be friends, no reason to like each other. So why does Eleanor start looking forward to her mornings on the bus with Park? Is it just to escape her evil stepfather? And why does Park start to look forward to seeing Eleanor every morning on the bus? So what if she smells like vanilla? She only has like two different shirts. And yet, there’s just something about her.

MENTAL ILLNESS- I went into this looking for an adorable book that would bring some of the life of fandoms into literature. What I got instead was a punch to the gut. Eliza isn’t just the author of a famous web comic, a secret she guards with her life, she’s also the one battling the monsters of anxiety that knock at her door continually. Can she find a way to tell the world that she’s really the author? Can she find a way to keep her demons at bay?

SET IN BUSHWICK – I’m not ashamed to say that I am a Pride and Prejudice junkie! I love Austen and most every retelling of Austen I have ever read. That being said, I didn’t have high hopes for this book. I enjoyed the sneak peak I read on Epicreads.com but I didn’t have the highest hopes. Man was I wrong. Ibi Zoboi brings to life the complexity of neighborhoods that are changing, pride in who you are and where you come from, and the importance of looking past first impressions.

FANTASY- I love fairy tales. I was excited about this retelling but I was expecting to hate the Sea Witch. You’re supposed to right! We’ve all seen the Disney version and we know Ursula is evil! So why did I love this book! The main character was so. much. more. than. evil. I loved the depth and complexity. Set in Scandinavia it was a brand new world to come to life! I loved how it switched between narrators and you saw the fullness of everyone’s depth.

MENTAL ILLNESS- Absolutely beautiful. John Green has done it again. Never have I read a book that dealt with the reality of severe anxiety in such a beautiful and complex way. He didn’t oversimplify things. He didn’t downplay things. He didn’t make her purely a victim. It was beautiful.

THRILLER- I don’t usually like thrillers. I feel things deeply and this book was a thriller. So why did I read it? A teen’s recommendation of course! One of my regulars suggested this to me so I read it on a whim. What I got was a psychological thriller with twists, turns, lack of sleep, questions, and crazy dreams. It was amazing!

So there you go. My top recommendations from 2018 of favorite books. Read some. Tell me some of your favorites!

Keep Sparkling!

-B

To Toss or Not To Toss

To toss or not to toss, that is the question!

Libraries tend to be the dumping ground for a lot of people. The teacher is retiring and decides to donate all of her classroom decorations going back to the 70s to the Children’s Department. Someone’s children are growing up and they have toys they don’t want anymore….. that are broken. You have a doll collection going back to the 60s that you want to let us display but then also want us to store for you until you decide you want to look at it again 3 years later.

The Public Library is just that- public. And if you ask any Librarian they will probably tell you that their library is underfunded. Most librarians in the U.S. make less an hour than fast food workers.

If they can’t pay the librarians very much, they also can’t fund all of the thousands of programs and ideas the librarians have. So donations are appreciated! So much! Donations can be such a blessing!

But they can also be a curse. We can receive a lot of sub-par things. We never want to make our patrons feel as if we don’t appreciate them but sometimes the things that are donated aren’t worth keeping. Just because it has sentimental value to you, doesn’t mean it’s a good quality object. Just because your kid loved this toy that is super loud and has to have 17 D batteries to run and sits at 4 feet tall, doesn’t mean it’s a feasible toy to keep in the library space.

So donate away! We appreciate it! Give us things! BUT don’t be upset when you come back three years later and ask to see that yellow lamp covered in a paisley lampshade that you had since you were a little girl but you donated it to us….. and it’s gone. We may have upcycled it. We may have used it for an event and then stuck it in storage. We may have decided we didn’t have room for it and given it to the local thriftstore.

We appreciate your donations but we really only have so much space. My motto tends to be- If we haven’t used it in the last three years, toss it.

We recently went through a construction process in our children’s department and we went through EVERYTHING we had and purged. We had a giant pile at the end! We had heads for kids to wear to act out The 3 Little Pigs but we haven’t used them in over 5 years. They were cute. They were Paper Mache. They were donated by a teacher. But we just didn’t have the space anymore. And honestly, we didn’t need to feel guilty about getting rid of them!

If you’re a librarian who needs to purge and get rid of things that have been donated, don’t feel guilty. Understand that you are doing your best and, ultimately, you are the one who knows what your department needs, not the patron. The patron doesn’t always know best. The patron doesn’t organize and run your programs. The patron shows up for the program- you do all the work. So give yourself permission to purge. Give yourself permission to breathe. You do a lot for your patrons. Purge your workspace for you.

Keep Sparkling

-B

The Book Detective

I don’t remember the name but the cover was blue.

I think there was a house on the cover.

There was a dog and a boy that were friends.

One of the character’s name was John.

Some kids went on an adventure.

It was one of the ones with the books and the monsters.

It took place in a school.

It had a murder and a detective.

We all have books that we love and we may not remember the names or the author.

Every.

Single.

Day.

I have a patron come up to me with a phrase similar to the ones above.

Every.

Single.

Day.

They don’t remember any pertinent information but they think from these random details I will just know what book it is. I have shelves and shelves of books in my department and I’m expected to remember the covers, characters, and have read all of the books to help you find this particular one. (Insert banging head against the wall).

Over time I’ve gotten much better at parsing these things out. Asking for more details. Helping the reader discern what they are actually looking for but most of my time lends to a very Sherlock Holmes kind of experience.

I really don’t know why people aren’t more amazed at our being able to figure out what they wanted! I mean we take all of this nonsense and inconsequential details and VOILA! Here’s your book! The answer to your question! The destination of your journey! We have delivered it to you! …. And the patron is never impressed. But alas, we do it. We search and scour and glean and sift until finally your desired book is hand delivered to you. From every Librarian out there- you’re welcome world

The Musing of Spiderman

You know those moments when you think, “I never imagined I’d be doing this at my job”. Well as I was putting away a wall sticker of Spiderman, that had 8 pieces and was the size of an 8 year old child, I thought, “I never imagined I’d be doing this at my job!”

Librarians have very interesting lives. Particularly those of the Teen and Children’s variety. We do a million different tasks that most people don’t even realize need to be done.

You know that book with the sticky cover that you returned? I cleaned that.

You know that torn page that your 2 year old inflicted on that brand new book? I fixed that.

You know that craft that has 5 different pieces for your 6 year old to glue on? I cut all of those out. All 5 pieces. For 25 children. With full knowledge that you will throw it away in a week’s time. You’re welcome.

You know that obscure book that a Teen wanted that no one has ever heard of? I found it through Inter- Library Loan for them. Got myself a copy. Read it so I could discuss it with them and silently thought to myself, “This book is ridiculous but at least the Teen is happy!”.

But amidst all of these tasks we keep one thing in mind. We want people to love libraries. That’s why we do it! That’s why we spend hours reading shelves to make sure that every book you tossed back on the shelf is in the right place so someone else can find it. That’s why we pull 25 books on a subject for a teacher to come look through and choose 2. That’s why we do it. Libraries are important. We want people here. We bring joy and adventure.

So the next time you’re in a library and you love the decorations or your child is adoring the craft they’ve brought home from Storytime thank your Librarians. Don’t just say, “Thank you” but actually stop and realize all the hard work they put into it. All the weird, crazy things they do to delight the patrons and thank them for that specifically. Recognize that they work hard. Being a librarian is not all fun and games, but it’s always worth it to see someone’s eyes light up as they discover how wonderful reading can be.

The Tale of the Sparkling Librarian

Once upon a time there was a little girl who had a dream.

A dream to become a librarian. She had wanted to be one since I was 6 years old and at 25 her dream came true! She became a librarian! (insert squeals!) And she lived happily ever after!

Obviously that girl was me. Little old me dreaming of residing in a library. The glamorous life of reshelving books and working in processing…… not so much!

I absolutely love my job! Getting to help people find the book they were looking for is very satisfying. But even better is when I can recommend a book to someone and they end up loving it! It’s like a small piece of myself has been given to them. It’s beautiful.

So why “sparkling” you ask? It’s quite simple- I sparkle! I love glitter and sequins and colors! A friend of mine was deep cleaning my computer in college and he exclaimed, “You have glitter on your hard drive! How did that happen?” My response, “I’m a girl!”

Now I know that’s not typical for all girls. No stereotyping here- but I do love glitter. I love shiny things and twirling skirts. I love dressing up in costume and being silly. I love singing at the top of my lungs.

But more than that, I love bringing joy to people. And that’s what Librarians do. Really. We put something in your hands that has the capacity to help you feel great emotion. We give you a chance to go on an adventure. A chance to discover what life could be if you were born someone different.

So that’s what you’ll find here. A life of glitter, sparkles, and joy. And maybe a few complaints about the frustrations that come with being a librarian. But mostly glitter.

Keep sparkling!

-B