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Tag Archives: Choose Your Own Adventure

New and Featured Books for Kids/Juvenile Readers for 06/12/2012:

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Come and check out these and some of the other new books and materials (or at least new to us) for younger and juvenile readers added to our library collection…

EASY READING:

The Duchess of Whimsy: An Absolutely Delicious Fairy Tale by Randall de Sève and illustrated by Peter de Sève

Driving My Tractor by Jan Dobbins and David Sim

Firefighter Ted by Andrea Beaty and Pascal Lemaitre

Woe Is Moe by Diane Stanley and illustrated by Elise Primavera

Richard Scarry’s Best Word Book Ever

Richard Scarry’s What Do People Do All Day?

Goose Moon by Carolyn Arden and illustrated by Jim Postier

Doo-Wop Pop by Roni Schotter and illustrated by Bryan Collier

Scrambled States of America by Laurie Keller

The Golden Rule by Ilene Cooper and illustrated by Gabi Swiatowska

I Like To Be Little by Charlotte Zolotow and illustrated by Erik Blegvad

FICTION:

Touch The Moon by Marion Dane Bauer and illustrated by Alix Berenzy

Choose Your Own Adventure: Help! You’re Shrinking! by Edward Packard and illustrated by Lorna Tomei

Ice Island by Sherry Shahan

The Time Warp Trio: It’s All Greek To Me by Jon Scieszka and illustrated by Lane Smith

Mystery Mansion by Michael Garland

NON-FICTION:

Food For Thought: The Stories Behind The Things We Eat by Ken Robbins

The Winnie-The-Pooh Cookbook by Virginia H. Ellison and illustrated by Ernest H. Shepard

Sink The Bismarck: Germany’s Super-Battleship Of World War II by Tom McGowen

Marching To Appomattox: The Footrace That Ended The Civil War by Ken Stark

Secrets of The Garden: Food Chains And The Food Web In Our Backyard by Kathleen Weidner Zoehfeld and illustrated by Priscilla Lamont

How Did That Get In My Lunchbox? The Story Of Food by Chris Butterworth and illustrated by Lucia Gaggiotti

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Please note that books mentioned here could be checked out between the time they end up on the blog and when you come to check them out. If you don’t see the items you’re looking for then please come up to the front desk, OR call us, OR send us an email at robinsbaselibrary@gmail.com and  we’ll put your name on the reserve list for when the item returns.

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Previous New/Featured books for Adults:

04/19/12.

04/11/12.

04/04/12.

03/29/12.

And for Young Adults:

04/12/12.

04/03/12.

03/20/12.

03/06/12.

02/21/12.

And for Kids/Juvenile Readers:

06/05/12.

04/17/12.

03/27/12.

03/13/12.

Reading material for 04/30/12.

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Some reading material from around the internet:

Grant Snider’s The Book Of The Future.

Get ready for the future of Firefox.

Portland tries to ban Groupon.

The dark side of Facebook memes.

The picture above is by Beverly Ealdama, from here.

104 year old woman sets world record as the oldest person to go paragliding (for the second time in five years).

Wal-Mart would like you to pay with cash.

All about CISPA, the bill that wants to erode your online privacy.

How are women’s eyes different from men’s?

from here.

The Choose Your Own Adventure books are now out in digital form.

Ben Marcus, author of The Flame Alphabet, talks about his novel.

The 10 grumpiest living writers.

The New Yorker has figured out what went wrong with the Pulitzers this year.

The Land Of Nod,” an illustrated poem by Robert Louis Stevenson.

John Irving’s advice to aspiring novelists.

The most cryptic titles in literature and what they mean.

Would you read a novel written by the internet?

Neil Gaiman’s The Graveyard Book will become a Disney movie.

The director of Chronicle is going to reboot The Fantastic Four.

Fringe has been renewed for a fifth and final mini season.

Fake Tupac is selling a lot of real records.

The Avengers comes out this Friday in America, but has already made almost $200 million overseas.

Tony Danza and Vince Vaughn are going to make a sitcom together.

The SyFy channel is planning to adapt Stephen King’s The Eyes Of The Dragon.

Movie theater owners still do not want you texting during movies, please.

They’ve already hired writers for the sequel to the new Spider-Man movie.

from here.

The lost civilizations that pioneered skull surgery.

4 people with super memory.

The question of why Rome failed.

How much of the moon’s surface did the Apollo 11 astronauts actually explore?

A brief history of international signage.

The more you struggle with new information the more likely you are to learn it.

Ponder existential depths as you answer the call of nature in this vertigo-inducing floor-less bathroom.

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Previous online reading material:

04/23/12.

04/16/12.

04/09/12.

04/02/12.

03/26/12.

03/12/12.