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  • The Girl Who Drew Butterflies: How Maria Merian's Art Changed Science

    Maria Merian can be considered one of the world's first entomologists. Her studies of butterflies and moths and their life cycles were revolutionary and groundbreaking. Even more so because she was a women in the 17th century. At that time many people believed caterpillars and butterflies were different species. They believed butterflies spontaneously appeared. Maria carefully observed the insects in her garden. She collected specimens and watched what happened to them. She connected insects to specific plants. And she drew pictures and took copious notes of the process.

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  • They Call Me Güero

    Guero is a kid living on the border between the U.S. and Mexico. He is an American citizen but his mom is from Mexico. So they travel the border frequently. Guero tells the story of his family life and his friends at school through a series of poems. These poems show the connections he has to the area around him and to his family. They also illustrate the racism he faces on a daily basis. One of the more heartbreaking poems was called Playoff Game where the girls' basketball team is in the playoffs and the opposing crowd shouts racist slurs throughout the game.

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  • The Truth as Told by Mason Buttle

    Life is hard for Mason Buttle. His family has been hit by tragedy Bing Bang Boom. First was Grandpa, then mom and then best friend Benny. All that grief has a way of piling up on a family and Mason's has sunk under the weight. It is just Grandma, Uncle Drum and Mason at home now and Shayleen. Uncle Drum brought Shayleen home from the diner one day. She moved into Mason’s room, forcing him to the attic, and is addicted to the Home Shopping Network. The Buttles have had to sell of parts of their generations old farm to make way for new developments.

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  • The Little Book of Lykke

    This is a companion to the The Little Book of Hygge: The Danish Way to Live Well and it was well worth the listen. Wiking takes on the topic of happiness. The Danes are considered the happiest people on earth and he sets out to discover how and why. There is a lot of information on how to live a happier life in regards to different aspects of your life like financial, social, helping others, etc.

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  • Sweep: The Story of a Girl and Her Monster

    The life of a chimney sweep in Victorian London is a harsh one. Young children are "apprenticed" to master sweeps and climb through narrow, twisting chimneys on a daily basis. They are abused and neglected and forced to work until they die or get to old to fit in the chimneys. Nan Sparrow is one such sweep. She has been indentured to cruel master Wilkie Crudd ever since she was abandoned by The Sweep, her protector and mentor. The only thing The Sweep left her was a piece of char that always stayed warm.

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  • Where the Crawdad's Sing

    Kya was all alone on the marsh. Abandoned at a age ten by everyone in her family, Kya learned to fend for herself by selling mussels and smoked fish to the only person to look after her, Jumpin, and his wife. They did not intrude on Kya's solitude but merely made sure she was ok, had some food and adequate clothing. Shunned and made fun of by the locals, Kya lived a solitary existence where the marsh was her only friend. She drew, collected and cataloged marsh life. Befriending the gulls, and other creatures who didn't judge her.

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  • The Mental Load: A Feminist Comic

    I really enjoyed parts of this book but I thought it was a little helter skelter and could have used more organization of topics. A few parts made me a little uncomfortable but I think that says more about me generationally than the book. And I am 100% sure that’s the point the author is trying to make.
     

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  • Betrayal

    Caleb smuggles illegal goods next to his legit goods used as a cover across the 9 Star Systems. Caleb is a cynical, foul-mouthed ass-kicking pilot with lots of recriminations he's buried deep, however he does try to do good by a few people. 1001 is an android or a synth, her assignment is to kill Caleb.

    I love Pippa DaCosta's work and am considering purchasing her books, since most libraries don't carry her work (just a few nibbles on Hoopla & Overdrive).

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  • Spooked!: How a Radio Broadcast and the War of the Worlds Sparked the 1938 Invasion of America

    The War of the Worlds broadcast on October 30, 1938 was the ultimate in fake news. Orson Welles and John Houseman created a radio program that fooled the country into believing martians had landed in New Jersey. Gail Jarrow does a fantastic job setting up this pivotal moment in history. She explains the importance of radio to an audience who probably never listen to the radio. She sets up the people involved by describing not only Welles and Houseman and their radio programs but also the original novel by H.G. Wells.

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  • Blood Water Paint

    Artemisia Gentileschi is a painter from the Italian Renaissance. Her story is one of tragedy and strength. She is left motherless at a young age and goes to work in her father's studio. Soon she is the better painter of the two even though he takes credit for her work. She becomes the pupil of Agostino Tassi and welcomes his attentions as first. Then he uses his position and power to rape her believing he will get away with it. Artemisia is not your typical 16th century woman however. She and her father bring Tassi to trial and win.

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  • Finding Langston

    Langston and his father have moved to Chicago after the death of his mother. Langston misses Alabama and his grandmother. Chicago is lonely and he is bullied by his classmates who call him "country". His father works long hours at the factory and Langston is on his own a lot. He discovers the George Cleveland Hall branch library and its remarkable librarians who introduce Langston to the poetry of his namesake Langston Hughes. These poems bring the South back into Langston's life. 

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  • Spark Joy: An Illustrated Master Class on the Art of Organizing and Tidying Up

    Marie Kondo is not for everyone. She is definitely quirky and I will admit that I do not follow all of her teachings. I don't talk to my possessions or commune with my house. However, I do think there is a lot of value in what she says about touching everything you own and deciding if you really want/need it in your house. I do feel like there is a difference between loving something (feeling joy) and needing something. I don't love some of the things in my house, but I need them and there are no substitutes that really work.

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  • Small Spaces

    Bestselling adult author of The Bear and the Nightingale makes her middle grade debut with a creepy, spellbinding ghost story destined to become a classic

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  • Sheets

    Marjorie Glatt was just thirteen years old and trying to hold what was left of her family together. Since her mother's death, her father was just barely hanging on and it was left to Marjorie to run their family business, a laundry service.

    Wendell was a little ghost who was looking for a friend. He left his ghost town and found himself at the laundry run by Marjorie. This is a cute story about friends, love and loss.

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  • They Call Me Guero

    2019 Pura Belpré Honor Book
    2019 Walter Honor Book for Outstanding Children's Literature
    ALSC Notable Children's Book, 2019
    A School Library Journal Best Book of 2018, Middle Grade
    Shelf Awareness 2018 Best Children's & Teen Books of the Year
    NCTE 2019 Notable Verse Novels

    Twelve-year-old Güero is Mexican American, at home with Spanish or English and on both sides of the river. He’s starting 7th grade with a woke English teacher who knows how to make poetry cool.

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