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What's Happening at the Hoover Public Library.

Library Blog

Information on events, library related happenings, and other deep thoughts from our library staff.

This blog's title is a mash up of what two fractured fairytale book series?  Did you answer The Hero's Guide to Saving Your Kingdom by Christopher Healy and Whatever After by Sarah Mlynowski?  You're exactly right!  Do you know why I mashed those two series together?  Did you say they both have a new book coming out this week?  Right again!  You are on a roll!  The Hero's Guide to Storming the Castle (#2) hits shelves on Tuesday, April 30, 2013.  Whatever After: Sink or Swim (#3) quickly follows on Wednesday, May 1, 2013.  Are you a fan and shouting woo-hoo?  I know I am!  Are you totally clueless about these two series?  Let me fill you in.

Can you believe it?  This sweet-looking lady is Cressida Cowell, author of the How to Train Your Dragon series -- an epic adventure packed with Vikings and dragons.  You know what else is unbelievable?  The tenth book is almost here!  How to Seize a Dragon's Jewel hits U.S. bookshelves on Tuesday, April 30, 2013.  In this latest  installment, Hiccup is in exile and hunted by humans and dragons alike.  Can he find the Dragon's Jewel, mankind's last and only hope?  And if he does, what will he do with it?  New to the series or can't remember Hiccup's previous adventures?  The Hoover Public Library can jog your memory.
1. How to Train Your Dragon
2. How to Be a Pirate
3. How to Speak Dragonese
4. How to Cheat a Dragon's Curse
5. How to Twist a Dragon's Tale
6. A Hero's Guide to Deadly Dragons
7. How to Ride a Dragon's Storm
8. How to Break a Dragon's Heart
9. How to Steal a Dragon's Sword
10. How to Seize a Dragon's Jewel

So, you think you can dance?  Congratulations!  I hope you realize how lucky you are.  You could have been blessed with two left feet (like me) and been forced to merely watch dance movies with envy (also like me).  Actually, my inability to dance doesn't keep me from doing it.  That's the great thing about dance.  It's not so much how it looks, but how it makes you feel.  If you want to shake it, you shake it.  Especially this week, April 26-May 4, 2013.  It's National Dance Week.  So pull out your best dance moves, even if it's the Running Man or the Sprinkler.  And grab one of these dance-related teen fiction books.
Another Way to Dance by Martha Southgate
Aria of the Sea by Dia Calhoun
Audition by S. Ward
Bunheads by Sophie Flack

When my sister was four years old, she took ballet.  Every week, right after class, she would do a quick demo for our dad, showing off her newly acquired dance skills.  Every week, the demo looked exactly the same.  Obviously, my sister was not blessed with great dancing ability.  Hardly a surprise -- no one else in my family can dance either.  Does that stop us?  NO!  And you can bet we'll be busting a move this week, April 26-May 4, 2013.  Why?  It's National Dance Week!  Get in the groove with these dance books.
PICTURE BOOKS
The All-American Jump and Jive Jig by M. P. Hueston
Ballet Kitty by Bernette Ford
Brothers of the Knight by Debbie Allen
Cha-Cha Chimps by Julia Durango
Cock-a-doodle Dance! by Christine Tricarico

Audubon.  You've heard that word before, but you're not sure what it means.  Or you only have a vague understanding.  That used to sum up my level of knowledge, but that all changed when I read Okay for Now by Gary D. Schmidt in 2011.  The novel was filled with Audubon references, and it really sparked an interest to learn more.  And now I'm passing that information along to you on Audubon Day.  John James Audubon was a famous ornithologist and painter, who captured the wonder and beauty of wild birds in his art.  His major work was called The Birds of America and is featured in this blog's picture.  He was born on April 26, 1785, which is why we honor him today, April 26, 2013.  There are several ways you can celebrate Audubon's contributions to science and art.  Visit the Audubon Society's webpage to see how the naturalist's legacy continues to this very day.  Read a biography to learn more about his amazing life (JB  AUD in the Kid Zone).  Read a book about some of the birds he found so fascinating (598 in the Kid Zone and Nonfiction).  Walk through your backyard, your neighborhood, or a local park and do some birdwatching.  Follow in Audubon's footsteps -- take some art supplies with you and try to capture what you see.

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