Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Don't forget to get your band together for....


Rock Band @ the library on December 28th. "The Rock Band" video game offers teens in 7th-12th grades the opportunity to be part of a virtual band! Bring your band (a group of 3 or 4), or join a band when you get here. Prizes will be awarded for best costumes, best performance, and mad skills. Come dressed to impress and be ready for a good time! Online registration begins December 21 - All Members of a Band MUST Register Individually!

Time: 2:00pm - 5:00pm
Room: Community Room
Registration: pending 12-21-2007 @ 9:00am

Slam by Nick Hornby


From Booklist *Starred Review* For Hornby, author of About a Boy (1988) and High Fidelity (1995), the move from adult to young-adult fiction represents more of a natural progression than a change in course. So it should come as no surprise that he has written an accomplished teen novel featuring a character whose voice hits its groove at the downbeat and sustains it through the final chord. Sam is a disarmingly ordinary 15-year-old kid who loves to skate (that's skateboarding, to you and me). But then he is blindsided: his girlfriend gets pregnant, and he lands in the middle of his mum's nightmare (she had Sam when she was 16). This may sound like an old-fashioned realistic YA problem novel, but it's a whole lot more. Sam, you see, has a sort-of-imaginary friend: the world's greatest skater, Tony Hawk, whose poster Sam talks to when he has problems. And the poster talks back, maybe, or maybe Sam is just reciting quotes from Tony's autobiography. And is it really Tony who is "whizzing" Sam into the future for glimpses of what is to come? With or without Tony's help, Sam gives us the facts about his very eventful couple of years, but as he reminds us, "there comes a point where the facts don't matter anymore . . . because you don't know what anything felt like." Which is where Hornby comes in. We know exactly how Sam feels—even when he feels differently from the beginning of a sentence to the end—and it feels just right: a vertiginous mix of anger, confusion, insight, humor, and love. Ott, Bill

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Are you a great writer?


Would you like to enter an essay contest for great prizes? The Friends of the Canton Public Library, the Canton Public Library, and the Canton Observer are sponsering a Martin Luther King, Jr. student essay contest. Check out the address below for more information!


http://www.cantonpl.org/aboutus/cplnews/kingcomp.pdf