Saturday, August 30, 2014

What's New? Stacking the Shelves


StS is a weekly meme hosted by Tynga's Reviews. Hop on over there to ogle what other bloggers got.

Purchased:

Positive: a memoir by Paige Rawl with Ali Benjamin. 288 p. HarperCollins Publisher, August, 2014. 9780062342515.

Publisher synopsis: Paige Rawl was an ordinary girl.
Cheerleader, soccer player, honor roll student. One of the good kids at her middle school.
Then, on an unremarkable day, Paige disclosed the one thing that made her "different": her HIV-positive status.
It didn't matter that she was born with the disease or that her illness posed no danger to her classmates.
Within hours, the bullying began.
They called her PAIDS. Left cruel notes on her locker. Talked in whispers about her and mocked her openly.
She turned to school administrators for help. Instead of assisting her, they ignored her urgent pleas . . . and told her to stop the drama.
She had never felt more alone.
One night, desperate for escape, Paige found herself in front of the medicine cabinet, staring at a bottle of sleeping pills.
That could have been the end of her story. Instead, it was only the beginning.
Finding comfort in steadfast friends and a community of other kids touched by HIV, Paige discovered the strength inside of her, and she embarked on a mission to change things for the bullied kids who would follow in her footsteps.
In this astonishing memoir, Paige immerses the reader in her experience and tells a story that is both deeply personal and completely universal: a story of one girl overcoming relentless bullying by choosing to be Positive.

I can't recall where I read about this one but I'm always looking to beef up my YA memoir collection to  support an eighth grade memoir unit. I am also intensely interested in AIDS stories as I was an ER nurse in the early 80s when AIDS was a frightening mystery illness. I also worked as an outpatient transfusion nurse in NYC and many of my patients suffered from AIDS. Highly interested in reading this one.



Wild Things! Acts of Mischief in Children's Literature by Betsy Bird, Julie Danielson and Peter D. Seruta. Candlewick Press, August, 2014.

Publisher synopsis: Secret lives, scandalous turns, and some very funny surprises — these essays by leading kids’ lit bloggers take us behind the scenes of many much-loved children’s books.
Told in lively and affectionate prose, this treasure trove of information for a student, librarian, parent, or anyone wondering about the post–Harry Potter children’s book biz brings contemporary illumination to the warm-and-fuzzy bunny world we think we know.
What's new with you? Leave a link in the comments.

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