Staff Picks


February 2021

If You Want a Friend in Washington: Wacky, Wild & Wonderful Presidential Pets

by Erin McGill

This is a funny and informative book about the variety of animals presidents have kept as pets at the White House. The animals range from the very small to huge, common and rare. A fun read with whimsical illustrations.

Recommended by: Joan Stoiber, Youth Services Reference Librarian I

Posted in: Youth Nonfiction


The Secret Life of Sam

by Kim Ventrella

Sam has been raised by a single father all his life. When his father dies, Sam is very unhappy to be placed with his father’s sister who has been absent from his life for the last four years. While planning on leaving this new home Sam discovers an eerie connection to his father through the spirit world. This title is available as an audiobook Playaway.

Recommended by: Becky McCormack, Youth Services Assistant Manager

Posted in: Youth Fiction


Echo Mountain

by Lauren Wolk

It’s 1934 and Ellie and her family have lost their house in town and now live on the side of a mountain. Life is a struggle and becomes even more so when Ellie’s father falls into a coma after getting hit in the head by a tree he was chopping down. Add in mysterious dog, hiddewood carvings and an old hag and the intrigue begins in earnest. This book is available in the library and on OverDrive/Libby as an ebook and e audiobook.

Recommended by: Becky McCormack, Youth Services Assistant Manager

Posted in: Youth Fiction


Nikki Tesla and the Ferret-Proof Death Ray: Elements of Genius #1

by Jess Keating

After Nikki’s pet ferret accidently shoots off her death ray, she is sent to a school for brainy kids, the Genius Academy. Her fellow students are Charlotte Darwin and Leo da Vinci, smart kids too, but Nikki still doesn’t feel like she belongs or can be friends with them. However, when her death ray is stolen, they band together to get it back and the adventures begin. A hilarious and exciting new series, middle graders will be looking forward to reading the rest of the books in the series.

Recommended by: Joan Stoiber, Youth Services Reference Librarian I

Posted in: Youth Fiction


Ensnared in the Wolf’s Lair: Inside the 1944 Plot to Kill Hitler and the Ghost Children of His Revenge

by Ann Bausum

A heartbreaking and haunting account of the many immediate family members and relatives who were killed or imprisoned in camps when the plot to kill Hitler in an explosion failed. His revenge was swift and thorough, even sweeping up people who happened to share the same last name of some of the conspirators. Told from a diary secreted away by a daughter of one of the conspirator’s, this should rank with Anne Frank’s Diary of a Young Girl to show the evilness of some men, who took no account of age or innocence.

Recommended by: Joan Stoiber, Youth Services Reference Librarian I

Posted in: Youth Nonfiction


Teen Killers Club

by Lily Sparks

Signal was convicted of killing her best friend and even though she doesn’t have any memory of what happened that night, she knows that she is innocent. But she’s been categorized as a Class A, the worst of all pathological killers. When she gets an opportunity to get out of prison, she takes it. Now she’s in a camp of Class A teen killers all being trained to be assassins. Can she find friendship in a group of murders? Who should she trust? Can she find a way to prove her innocence before the rest of them find out that she’s not a killer like them?
Recommended by: Brandi Smits, Youth Services Manager

Posted in: Young Adult Fiction


Fever Year: The Killer Flu of 1918: A Tragedy of Three Acts

by Don Brown

This nonfiction graphic novel describes the panic in 1918 – 1920 when the Spanish flu killed hundreds of thousands of people. This book is available in the library and on Hoopla as an ebook.

Recommended by: Becky McCormack, Youth Services Assistant Manager 

Posted in: Young Adult Nonfiction


Snapdragon

by Kat Leyh

Snapdragon, Snap for short, is struggling to make friends and feeling different from the other kids in her class. Once she confronts the ‘witch’ of the neighborhood and discovers she’s pretty nice her world slowly begins to change. 

Recommended by: Becky McCormack, Youth Services Assistant Manager

Posted in: Youth Fiction


Chirp

by Kate Messner

Mia is moving, convalescing from a broken arm, hiding a secret and trying to make new friends all at the same time. Then her grandmother suspects that someone is sabotaging her cricket farm. Mia and her new friends attempt to solve that mystery while simultaneously working on a marketing plan for her grandmother’s business. 

Recommended by: Becky McCormack, Youth Services Assistant Manager

Posted in: Youth Fiction


The Grand Escape: The Greatest Prison Breakout of the 20th Century

by Neil Bascomb

This book gives the reader a gripping description of the greatest prison breakout of the 20th century. 29 prisoners tunnel their way out of Holzminden prison in Germany during World War I. It’s replete with photographs, letters and maps. 

 Recommended by: Becky McCormack, Youth Services Assistant Manager

Posted in: Youth Nonfiction


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