Wednesday, December 17, 2014

dvd review; the last song

I enjoyed watching the movie "The Last Song", specially because Liam Hemsworth comes out. This movie was about Roonie Milller (Miley Cyrus) in the summer, she spends it with her father in Wrightsville Beach. In the beginning of the summer, she is 17 years old who resents her parents for their messy divorce; she is annoyed that she is being forced to spend the summer with her estranged father, to whom she has not spoken for in three years. She was so angry that she has abandoned the one thing that she and her father used to share in common, playing the piano. She has no desire to spend the summer in North Carolina; neither getting to know Will Blakelee, the good looking Volleyball player who literally bumps into her on the first day in Wrightsville. The summer she initially ends up being an opportunity for her to learn about faith, family and love.

Friday, December 12, 2014

Author Jennifer Niven coming January 9th!

The Homestead Library is excited to be hosting author Jennifer Niven on January 9th, right after the release of her new book All The Bright Things on January 6thI was only able to read the first few chapters and I can't wait for the book to come out. Check out this review from Kirkus, and then go to GoodReads for more about reviews and reactions. Sign up in the library to get on the guest list.

KIRKUS REVIEW


Two struggling teens develop an unlikely relationship in a moving exploration of grief, suicide and young love.
Violet, a writer and member of the popular crowd, has withdrawn from her friends and from school activities since her sister died in a car accident nine months earlier. Finch, known to his classmates as "Theodore Freak," is famously impulsive and eccentric. Following their meeting in the school bell tower, Finch makes it his mission to re-engage Violet with the world, partially through a school project that sends them to offbeat Indiana landmarks and partially through simple persistence. (Violet and Finch live, fortunately for all involved, in the sort of romantic universe where his throwing rocks at her window in the middle of the night comes off more charming than stalker-esque.) The teens alternate narration chapter by chapter, each in a unique and well-realized voice. Finch's self-destructive streak and suicidal impulses are never far from the surface, and the chapters he narrates are interspersed with facts about suicide methods and quotations from Virginia Woolf and poet Cesare Pavese. When the story inevitably turns tragic, a cast of carefully drawn side characters brings to life both the pain of loss and the possibility of moving forward, though some notes of hope are more believable than others.
Many teen novels touch on similar themes, but few do it so memorably. (Fiction. 14 & up)


Monday, December 8, 2014

Return of Lego Poetry in the library


This week, students can stop by and create poetry without writing a word. There are some profound thoughts taking place.

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Developing a research strategy

There are a lot of research papers currently underway here at Homestead. One of the single most necessary and beneficial steps you can take as a researcher is to develop a good research strategy, knowing where and how to look for good information. Here's a short interactive presentation to introduce you to the process or refresh your memory.