Showing posts with label timely take-aways. Show all posts
Showing posts with label timely take-aways. Show all posts

Sunday, October 01, 2023

Timely Take-aways: Strong Women through History

From medieval times to the present, several new books explore strong women through history and why they are often misrepresented, overlooked, or unheard.

Brave Hearted: The Women of the American West 
Katie Hickman, 2022, Spiegel & Grau             
Themes: US History, American West, Women

Through a wide range of primary source documents, explore the little-known world of diverse women who survived harsh landscapes and circumstances.

Take-aways: Update the curriculum to include first-hand accounts of diverse women of Native American, African, and Chinese descent.


The Dark Queens: The Bloody Rivalry that Forged the Medieval World
Shelley Puhak, 2022, Bloomsbury, Macmillan       
Themes: World History, Medieval, Women

During 6th century, two powerful women of the Merovingian Empire ruled for decades while balancing statecraft and family life.

Take-aways: Use these queens to show how history often misrepresents women’s contributions.


Poor Richard’s Women: Deborah Read Franklin and the Other Women Behind the Founding Father
Nancy Rubin Stuart, 2022, Beacon Press, Penguin Random House       
Themes: US History

Readers are introduced to the many women who impacted the life of Benjamin Franklin.

Take-aways: Update the Colonial Period curriculum to include the women who surrounded the men who are often the focus on US history courses. Discuss the use of personal correspondence in historical research.


Women Healers: Gender, Authority, and Medicine in Early Philadelphia 
Susan H. Brandt, 2022, University of Pennsylvania Press         
Themes: US History, Women

Explore the role of women in medical science through the works of Elizabeth Coates Paschall and the accomplishments of other practitioners of European, African and Native American descent.

Take-aways: Share the authoritative medical work of diverse women during the mid-19th century.


Off with Her Head: Three Thousand Years of Demonizing Women of Power
Eleanor Herman, 2022, William Morrow: HarperCollins                   
Themes: History, Women

From the ancient world to the politics of today, trace the history of misogyny against women.

Take-aways: Use the book’s humorous examples to discuss with students the different ways women of power have been portrayed through history.


Warrior Queens & Quiet Revolutionaries
Kate Mosse, 2023, Mantle: Macmillan                                             
Themes: History, Women

Through a diverse cast of women from around the world along with personal connections, Mosse addresses why the achievements of women are often overlooked or under-represented.

Take-aways: Explore Mosse’s book for unique women that will bring history alive for students.


Young Queens: Three Renaissance Women and the Price of Power

Leah Redmond, 2023, Farrar, Straus & Giroux                   
Themes: History, Europe, Women

In the sixteenth-century, Catherine de’ Medici, Elisabeth de Valois, and Mary, Queen of Scots transformed Europe.

Take-aways: Use the intertwining lives of these three women to demonstrate the different ways women were able to survive and thrive in male dominated societies.

Whether helping educators keep up-to-date in their subject-areas, promoting student reading in the content-areas, or simply encouraging nonfiction leisure reading, teacher librarians need to be aware of the best new titles across the curriculum and how to activate life-long learning. - Annette Lamb

Friday, September 01, 2023

Timely Takeaways: Space Science

From meteorites to aliens, explore a wide range of recently published books focusing on space science, astronomy, and cosmology. These thought-provoking books separate the fact from the fiction.

Impact: How Rocks from Space Led to Life, Culture, and Donkey Dong
Greg Brennecka, 2022, William Morrow, Harper Collins
Themes: Science, Space Science, Cosmology

Brennecka’s humorous approach brings the story of meteorites to life through fascinating examples.

Take-aways: Use the author’s stories to enhance the teaching of space science and specifically meteorites.

NASA Missions to Mars: A Visual History of Our Quest to Explore the Red Planet
Piers Bizony, 2022, Motorbooks, Quarto Group   
Themes: Science, Space Science, Space Exploration

This visually-rich reference explores the past, present, and future of Mars exploration.

Take-aways: Use this amazing visual story to enhance the planetary science curriculum. Involve students in speculation about the future exploration of other planets in our solar system.

The Red Planet: A Natural History of Mars
Simon Morden, 2022, Pegasus Books, Simon & Schuster                 
Themes: Science, Space Science

Told in seven parts, readers explore the planetary science, geology, and the history of Mars.

Take-aways: The author’s accessible, conversational writing style make this book a good choice for high school educators seeking a content-area reading experience for teens.

The Cosmos Explained
Charles Liu, 2023, Ivy Press, Quarto Group                   
Themes: Science, Space Science, Astronomy

With an emphasis on our place in space and time, this visually-rich book traces the history of our universe and the evolution of our social system. 

Take-aways: Teachers will find the short biographical sketches of key contributors to be useful.

Before the Big Bang: The Origin of Our Universe from the Multiverse
Laura Mersini-Houghton, 2023, Mariner Books, HarperCollins     
Themes: Space Science, Cosmology

Follow the author’s personal and professional journey re-writing the origin story of our universe.

Take-aways: Students are fascinated by the prospect of a multiverse. Update the curriculum to include the latest information on the universe’s origin.

Under Alien Skies: A Sightseer’s Guide to the Universe
Philip Plait, 2023, W.W. Norton & Company                   
Themes: Science, Space Science, Astronomy

Plait takes readers on an entertaining adventure through the universe. From the moon and Mars to black holes, each chapter explores a different space science topic.

Take-aways: Weave Plait’s humorous, easy to understand examples into the space science curriculum.

Interstellar: The Search for Extraterrestrial Life and Our Future in the Stars
Avi Loeb, 2023, Mariner Books, HarperCollins     
Themes: Science Space Science, Space Exploration

Loeb examines that challenges of encountering alien life and our quest to explore the universe.

Take-aways: Use this book to address student speculation about aliens and interstellar exploration.

The Little Book of Aliens
Adam Frank, 2023, Harper, HarperCollins                                       
Themes: Science, Space Science

Through eight engaging chapters, readers learn the fact and fiction of alien life. Trace the history of the big ideas, scientific exploration and research, and near-future issues.

Take-aways: Students often have questions about the possibility of alien life. Use examples from this easy-to-understand book to lead thought-provoking discussions about this hot topic.

...

Whether helping educators keep up-to-date in their subject-areas, promoting student reading in the content-areas, or simply encouraging nonfiction leisure reading, teacher librarians need to be aware of the best new titles across the curriculum and how to activate life-long learning. - Annette Lamb


Tuesday, August 01, 2023

Timely Take-aways for Life Long Learners: Literature and Language

Whether exploring favorite authors, lesser-known works, or book history topics, several new titles provide breadth and depth to the study of literature, literary collections, speeches, and history. 

Index, A History of the
Dennis Duncan, 2022, W.W. Norton & Company Themes: Book History, Social History, Books

Book history fans will be enthralled by this fascinating history of the index. Duncan traces the little-known highlights of its design, use, and changes over time.

Take-aways: Students will related to how the index has evolved from print media into digital searches.


Everyday Emerson: A Year of Wisdom
Ralph Waldo Emerson, 2022, St. Martin’s Essentials, Macmillan Themes: Literary Collections

These daily quotes are intended to connect with everyday life and share the universal appeal of his writings.

Take-aways: English teachers will find these quotes to be excellent discussion starters. Ask students to consider whether they agree with the quote and how it applies to life in today’s world.


Walt Whitman’s New Orleans: Sidewalk Sketches and Newspaper Rambles
Stefan Scholberlein (Editor), 2022, LSU Press Themes: Literary Collections

After an introduction and excerpts from A Traveller’s Note Book, readers explore 50 short prose “sketches” and insightful information and resources about Whitman and his works.

Take-aways: Use this fascinating book to help students better understand Whitman and his use of sketches to share his insights into daily life. Ask students to create their own sketches based on their observations.


Undelivered: The Never-Heard Speeches that Would have Rewritten History
Jeff Nussbaum, 2023, Flatiron Books, an imprint of Macmillan Themes: Literary Collections, Speeches

Sharing notable speeches that were never delivered, Nussbaum explores the historical contexts along with the content of dozens of speeches by well-known individuals. From change and crisis to apology and loss, each of the five parts examples a different theme that impacted the speech’s outcome.

Take-aways: Students are familiar with the famous speeches, but will find these less-known, never-heard speeches to be engaging and thought-provoking.


All the Knowledge in the World: The Extraordinary History of the Encyclopedia
Simon Garfield, 2023, William Morrow, HarperCollins Themes: Book History, Language Arts

Garfield’s conversational style turns what could be a dry history of the encyclopedia into an engaging exploration of this fascinating reference source. Through short, interesting chapters, readers learn about the authors and publishers along with the content and formats of the beloved encyclopedia.

Take-aways: Share examples from Garfield’s book, then ask students to adopt their favorite reference book category. From field guides to atlases, involve students in writing their own reference history.


Storyland: A New Mythology of Britain
Amy Jeffs, 2023, Andrew McMeel Publishing Themes: History, Social Science, Literature, Mythology

While tracing the history and interconnected mythology, Jeffs retells both well-known and lesser known tales. Along the way, readers explore key landscapes and legends. The linocuts are of particular note.

Take-aways: Written for a modern audience, young adults will enjoy the retellings. Involve teams of students in examining the early, prehistory, antiquity, or the Middle Ages and mythological themes.


The Wonderful World of James Herriot: A Charming Collection of Classic Stories
James Herriot, 2023, St. Martin’s Press, an imprint of Macmillan Themes: Essays & Narratives

This illustrated version of Herriot’s popular narratives bring these classic stories alive for a new audience.

Take-aways: Inspire teen writers to use observation and humor in their own nonfiction narratives.


The Hobbit Encyclopedia
Damien Bondi & Vivien Stocker, 2023, Frances Lincoln, Quarto Group Themes: Literary Criticism

This illustrated guide to Tolkien’s universe features hundreds of entries related to characters, places, and plot elements.

Take-aways: Suggest this reference companion for fans of The Hobbit. Ask students to create their own “encyclopedia”.

Whether helping educators keep up-to-date in their subject-areas, promoting student reading in the content-areas, or simply encouraging nonfiction leisure reading, teacher librarians need to be aware of the best new titles across the curriculum and how to activate life-long learning. - Annette Lamb


Saturday, July 01, 2023

Timely Takeaways: Animal-Human Relationships


Animal-Human Relationships

From turtles and koalas to animal babies, explore several new books that examine the lives of animals and their relationships with humans around the world.

Of Times and Turtles: Mending the World, Shell by Shattered Shell
Sy Montgomery, 2023, Mariner Books, an imprint of HarperCollins
Themes: Nature, Animals, Reptiles

Organized into five parts, Montgomery immerses readers in the world of turtles. Combining science with storytelling, readers follow the author’s experiences helping recovering turtles.

Take-aways: Draw on the book’s engaging examples to share the need for turtle protection.


Nursery Earth: The Wondrous Lives of Baby Animals and the Extraordinary Ways They Shape our World
Danna Staaf, 2023, The Experiment, an imprint of Hachette Book Group
Themes: Nature, Animals, Baby Animals

From egg to adulthood, explore the cycles of life in the animal world. Tracing both the history and science of animal development, Staaf shares fascinating facts and insights into the lesser known aspects of animal life.

Take-aways: Explore often overlooked phases of animal development.


Koala: A Natural History and an Uncertain Future
Danielle Clode, 2023, W.W. Norton & Company
Themes: Nature, Animals, Mammals

Clode investigates the history, physiology and personalities of koalas. Along the way, she reflects on the need to protect these unique Australian marsupials.

Take-aways: Bring life science alive with information about these adorable animals.


Beastly: The 40,000-Year Story of Animals and Us
Keggie Carew, 2023, Abrams Press
Themes: Nature, Animals, Wildlife

Divided into ten parts, readers explore the relationship between humans and animals through history. Focusing on key encounters, Carew examines a wide range of creatures and the importance of biodiversity.

Take-aways: Weave the author’s anecdotes into a discussion of animal-human interactions through time.


The Creative Lives of Animals
Carol Gigliotti, 2022, NYU Press
Themes: Nature, Animals, Environmental Protection

From building shelters to seducing potential mates, explore the many ways animals apply creativity in their everyday lives.

Take-aways: Use the examples in this book to show young people the need to view animals as individuals who make important contributions in the natural world.


Sentient: How Animals Illuminate the Wonder of Our Human Senses
Jackie Higgins, 2022, Atria Books, an imprint of Simon & Schuster
Themes: Nature, Animals

Told through the sensory capabilities of thirteen animals, readers learn about human perception and celebrate the connections among creatures of the world.

Take-aways: Teach senses within the context of human and animal characteristics.

Saturday, April 01, 2023

Timely Take-aways for Life-long Learners: Trees and Forests

Whether exploring the impact of climate change or the restoration of forests, several new books examine individual trees, tree ecology, and forests of the world.


The Treeline: The Last Forest and the Future of Life on Earth
Ben Rawlence, Feb 2022, St. Martin’s Press, an imprint of Macmillan
Themes: Nature, Plants, Trees

Combining storytelling with science, Rawlence takes readers on a quest to learn about the impact of climate change on the trees of the boreal forest.

Take-aways: Use the locations described in the book to engage students in a discussion about the shifting treelines around the world. 


Ever Green: Saving Big Forests to Save the Planet
John W. Reid & Thomas E. Lovejoy, Mar 2022, W.W. Norton & Company
Themes: Nature, Forests, Trees

An economist and a biologist explore the five remaining megaforests of the world and discuss what it will take to save them.

Take-aways: Of particular note is the connection between the forests and the inhabitants in each region. Involve students in an in-depth exploration of one of these forests.


A Trillion Trees: Restoring Our Forests by Trusting in Nature
Fred Pearce, Apr 2022, Greystone Books
Themes: Nature, Plants, Trees

Pearce weaves interviews with indigenous people into an exploration of forests of the world, their destruction, and their recovery.

Take-aways: Pearce’s investigation provides a wide range of ideas for forest recovery that address the many forces driving change. Involve youth in discussing these forces.


Now is the Time for Trees:Making an Impact by Planting the Earth’s Most Valuable Resource
Arbor Day Foundation, Apr 2022, Timber Press, an imprint of Hachette Book Group
Themes: Nature, Plants, Trees

Filled with photographs, this book celebrates trees and the global movement to plant them.  While highlighting large-scale tree conservation programs, it also provides guidance for individuals inspired to plant trees themselves.

Take-aways: Use the examples in this book to inspire young people to become tree advocates. Ask them to select the conservation program they think will have a lasting impact.


White Pine: The Natural and Human History of a Foundational American Tree
John Pastor, Jan 2023, Island Press
Themes: Science, Natural History, Trees

From the 17th century through today, John Pastor traces the history of the white pine tree with an emphasis on restoring white pine forests and looming issue of climate change.

Take-aways: Using the white pine as an example, ask youth to trace the past, present, and future of another tree.


The Hidden Company that Trees Keep: Life from Treetops to Root Tips
James B. Nardi, Feb 2023, Princeton University Press
Themes: Nature, Science, Natural History, Trees

Featuring detailed drawings, Nardi describes the many forms of life that thrive in and around a tree. Nardi’s unique approach to the tree community is chuck-full of fascinating facts.

Take-aways: Use this book to inspire youth to focus on the life in a specific local tree.


Whether helping educators keep up-to-date in their subject-areas, promoting student reading in the content-areas, or simply encouraging nonfiction leisure reading, teacher librarians need to be aware of the best new titles across the curriculum and how to activate life-long learning. - Annette Lamb

Wednesday, March 01, 2023

Timely Take-aways for life-long Learners: Modern European History: A Fresh Look

 


Several new works of nonfiction provide fresh insights into early modern and modern European history. Beyond the violence and wars, these books examine the period through archaeology, political actions, and the roles of women.


Bosworth: The Archaeology of the Battlefield
Richard Mackinder, Feb 2022, Pen and Sword Military, Casemate Publishers
Themes: History, Military

Richard Mackinder uses the latest archaeological research to take readers step-by-step through the Battle of Bosworth (1485) that began the early modern era.

Take-aways: Use this fascinating work to help youth better understanding the role of physical evidence and archaeology in understanding key historical events.


William of Orange and the Fight for the Crown of England: The Glorious Revolution
Brian Best, Oct 2021, Frontline Books, Casemate Publishers
Themes: Biography, History, Military

Known as the Glorious Revolution, Protestant William of Orange and his troops ousted Catholic King James. Brian Best takes readers through the Stuart dynasty from 1660 to 1714 on an exploration of the key acts passed by Parliament and the major religious conflicts of the period along with the life of King William III of England, Scotland, and Ireland.

Take-aways: Use this work of nonfiction to talk with youth about how conflicts were settled not only by violence, but also through Acts of Parliament.


The House of Orange in Revolution and War: An European History, 1772-1890
Jeroen Koch, Dik Van Der Meulen, Jeroen Van Zenten, May 2022, Reaktion Books, University of Chicago Press
Themes: History, Europe

This sweeping history of the House of Orange-Nassau takes readers from the 18th century into the 20th century. Exploring three Dutch Kings, this fast-paced narrative examines the transnational impact of this period.

Take-aways: Use this book to review the key people, places, and events of European history through the lens of the House of Orange-Nassau.


When Women Ruled the World: Making the Renaissance in Europe
Maureen Quilligan, Dec 2022, Liveright, an imprint of W. W. Norton
Themes: History, Europe, Tudor & Elizabethan Era (1485-1603)

Quilligan’s engaging work of nonfiction demonstrates how powerful women challenged tradition by creating strategic alliances and assuming political authority. Through gift giving and political ingenuity, four Queens figured out a way to flourish in a male dominated world.

Take-aways: Use this book as an outstanding example of revisionist history that seeks to demonstrate how creative, intelligent women impacted the European monarchy.


The Tudors in Love:Passion and Politics in the Age of England’s Most Famous Dynasty
Sarah Gristwood, Dec 2022, St. Martin’s Press, an imprint of Macmillan
Themes: History, Europe, Great Britain, Tudor & Elizabethan Era (1485-1603)

Romantic courtly love played a key role in politics and international diplomacy during the Tudor dynasty. Sarah Gristwood takes readers through the drama and obsessions that shaped the era.

Take-aways: Teens love drama. Use Gristwood’s captivating history to bring this period alive for students.


Whether helping educators keep up-to-date in their subject-areas, promoting student reading in the content-areas, or simply encouraging nonfiction leisure reading, teacher librarians need to be aware of the best new titles across the curriculum and how to activate life-long learning. - Annette Lamb


Wednesday, February 01, 2023

Timely Take-aways for life-long Learners: Strong Women Around the World


From a planetary scientist to a pirate’s wife, several new autobiographies and biographies explore the lives of lesser-known women through history. Whether using her position as first lady to support educational projects or solving crimes on the high seas, these nontraditional women left powerful legacies.


A Portrait of the Scientist as a Young Woman: A Memoir
Lindy Elkins-Tanton, May 2022, William Morrow, HarperCollins
Themes: Memoir, Science, Women

Elkins-Tanton overcame a traumatic childhood and ovarian cancer to become the principal investigator on a major space exploration project. Her engaging story shares personal connections with science and how these experiences lead her to find meaning in life.

Take-aways: Teachers will find useful examples that demonstrate how to nurture a passion for science in students, particularly young women.


A Woman of Adventure:
The Life and Times of First Lady Lou Henry Hoover
Annette B. Dunlap, June 2022, Potomac Books and Longleaf Services
Themes: Biography, First Ladies, Women

While supporting her husband’s political career and the needs of her family, Lou Henry Hoover was still able to promote educational opportunities for women. This engaging biography shares the fascinating life and powerful legacy of this less-known first lady.

Take-aways: Students are likely familiar with first ladies such as Eleanor Roosevelt. Use this biography to demonstrate the achievements of first lady Lou Henry Hoover.


Woman, Captain, Rebel:
The Extraordinary True Story of a Daring Icelandic Sea Captain
Margaret Willson, January 2023, Sourcebooks
Themes: Biography, Maritime History, Women

This fast-paced, well-researched biography tells the story of Captain Thurídur Einarsdóttir, a woman who fought for human rights as Iceland’s most famous female sea captain. Whether solving a robbery or challenging social norms, this powerful woman fought for underrepresented Icelanders.

Take-aways: Women’s stories are underrepresented in the world history curriculum. Feature the story of Captain Thurídur Einarsdóttir to demonstrate the ongoing struggles of women in nontraditional roles.


The Pirate’s Wife: The Remarkable True Story of Sarah Kidd
Daphne Palmer Geanacopoulos, Dec 2022, Hanover Square Press, HarperCollins
Themes: Biography, Maritime History, Women

During the Golden Age of Piracy, socialite turned legendary accomplice Sarah Kidd fought behind the scenes in support of her infamous pirate husband. This work of narrative nonfiction connects this resourceful woman to the larger story of pirate wives.

Take-aways: Traditional pirate stories overlook the role wives played in support of their swashbuckling husbands. Weave this example into the broader context of the Golden Age of Piracy.


In Search of Amrit Kaur: A Lost Princess and Her Vanished World
Livia Manera Sambuy, Mar 2023, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, Macmillan
Themes: Biography, World History, Women

Livia Manera Sambuy traces the forgotten story of H. H. Amrit Kaur of Mandi, a woman who left her family for personal freedom and spoke out for women’s rights.

Take-aways: Teachers are always looking for less-known stories and perspectives.


Whether helping educators keep up-to-date in their subject-areas, promoting student reading in the content-areas, or simply encouraging nonfiction leisure reading, teacher librarians need to be aware of the best new titles across the curriculum and how to activate life-long learning. - Annette Lamb


Sunday, January 01, 2023

Timely Take-aways for Life-Long Learning: History of Place

Whether exploring the history of remote mountain regions or telling the story of a city through its people, these new works of nonfiction explore how five places around the world evolved over time.


Beaver River Country: An Adirondack History
Edward I. Pitts, June 2022, Syracuse University Press, Longleaf
Themes: History, Adirondacks, United States

Pitts explores the history of the remote northeastern United States known as the western Adirondacks. From indigenous people to early settlers and seasonal visitors, Pitts shares how this wild area was preserved and continues to survive.

Take-aways: Use this book to jumpstart an exploration of your own region’s rural areas. Think about how local history such as photos, key historical events, and interesting people can bring your area live for students.


France: An Adventure History
Graham Robb, July 2022, W.W. Norton & Company, and imprint of W.W. Norton
Themes: History, Europe, France

Balancing fascinating historical information with humorous anecdotes, Robb’s amazing narrative reflects decades of research and exploration of France’s urban and rural areas. 

Take-aways: Use this book as an example of the connection between history and travel. Use the author’s adventures to encourage students to think about places they’d like to visit and explore in-depth.


España : A Brief History of Spain 
Giles Tremlett, Sept 2022, Bloomsbury Publishing, an imprint of Macmillan
Themes: History, Europe, Western

From prehistoric times to today, readers explore the geographic, cultural, and political history of Spain along with its relationship with people and lands nearby. Stunning photographs and illustrations bring the place and international history to life.

Take-aways: Educators will find the book’s approach useful as they think about interesting ways to present international history.


The New Yorkers: 31 Remarkable People, 400 Years, and the the Untold Biography of the World’s Greatest City
Sam Roberts, Oct 2022, Bloomsbury Publishing, an imprint of Macmillan
Themes: History, Biography, New York, United States

The story of New York is told through the lives of lesser-known individuals who impacted the cultural landscape of the famous city.

Take-aways: Think about how this book uses individual lives to tell the city’s story. Ask youth to use a biography-focused approach to telling the story of another city. 


Himalaya: Exploring the Roof of the World
John Keay, Nov 2022, Bloomsbury Publishing, an imprint of Macmillan
Themes: History, Asia, Central Asia

Keay explores the unique historical, social, geographic, and environmental aspects of Himalaya. Told thought fascinating anecdotes, readers explore the unique features of this endangered area of the world.

Take-aways: Of particular note is how the author connects the history of the Himalaya to the consequences of climate change. Think about how this approach could be applied in teaching about other areas of the world.


Whether helping educators keep up-to-date in their subject-areas, promoting student reading in the content-areas, or simply encouraging nonfiction leisure reading, teacher librarians need to be aware of the best new titles across the curriculum and how to activate life-long learning. - Annette Lamb

Thursday, December 01, 2022

Timely Take-Aways for Life-Long Learners: Insects

 


Timely Take-Aways for Life-Long Learners: Insects

Insects are critical to healthy ecology systems. Unfortunately, these essential creatures are sometimes overlooked and often maligned. From wasps and moths to bees and beetles, several new and upcoming books explore the world of entomology and the important role of these tiny creatures. These titles invite readers to even respect cockroaches and crickets.


The Insect Crisis: The Fall of the Tiny Empires that Run the World
Oliver Milman, Mar 2022, W.W. Norton                       
Themes: Science, Life science, Nature, Entomology

From bees to beetles, THE INSECT CRISIS explores the impact of collapsing insect populations around the world. Of particular note is the wide range of examples and situations used to provide evidence of the crisis.

Take-aways: Educators will find the many examples useful in discussing the consequences of insect loss.


Endless Forms: The Secret World of Wasps
Seirian Sumner, Jul 2022, HarperCollins                   
Themes: Science, Life science, Nature, Entomology

Exploring the world of wasps, ENDLESS FORMS provides an in-depth look at this often misunderstood insect.

Take-aways: Use wasps as an example of the importance of the insects in our increasingly fragile ecosystem. 


The Surprising Lives of Bark Beetles: Mighty Foresters of the Insect World
Jiri Hulcr & Marc Abrahams, Sep 2022, Univ of Florida Press         
Themes: Science, Nature, Entomology

Through amazing macro-photography and useful informational text, THE SURPRISING LIVES OF BARK BEETLES shares fascinating facts about beetles. While often viewed as destructive pests, the bark beetle is under appreciated in the insect world.

Take-aways: Discuss the use of macrophotography to learn more about lesser-known creatures. Involve youth in their own insect study using digital photography.


Of Cockroaches and Crickets: Learning to Love Creatures that Skitter and Jump
Frank, Nischk, February 2023, Greystone Books       
Themes: Science, Life science, Nature, Entomology

Combining engaging anecdotes with compelling factual information, OF COCKROACHES AND CRICKETS convinces readers that these insects are much more than their negative stereotypes.

Take-aways: Use cockroaches and crickets as examples of insects that have been maligned and need to be reconsidered as an important part of ecosystems.


What a Bee Knows:  Exploring the Thoughts, Memories, and Personalities of Bees
Stephen L. Buchmann, March 2023, Island Press     
Themes: Science, Life science, Nature, Entomology

Through engaging anecdotes and useful ecological connections, WHAT A BEE KNOWS invites readers to follow entomologists as they dive into the bee universe. 

Take-aways: Use the author’s exploration of the bee mind to challenge student thinking about insects. Encourage students to take the perspective of an insect.


The Jewel Box: How Moths Illuminate Nature’s Hidden Rules
Tim Blackburn, May 2023, Island Press                     
Themes: Science, Life science, Nature, Entomology

Through engaging anecdotes and useful ecological connections, THE JEWEL BOX introduces readers to a wide variety of moths and their unseen world.

Take-aways: Use the moth to discuss the essential role of insects in ecology.


Whether helping educators keep up-to-date in their subject-areas, promoting student reading in the content-areas, or simply encouraging nonfiction leisure reading, teacher librarians need to be aware of the best new titles across the curriculum and how to activate life-long learning. - Annette Lamb

Tuesday, November 01, 2022

Timely Take-Aways for Life-long Learning: History of the American West

Several new histories of the American West shed light on lesser known individuals and new ways of thinking about this fascinating time period and location.


Birthing the West: Mothers and Midwives in the Rockies and Plains
Jennifer J. Hill, March 2022, Bison Books, Longleaf Services   
Themes: American West, History, Women

Childbirth is an overlooked event that dramatically impacted the economic and cultural development of the American West.

Take-aways: From the changing role of midwives and physicians to the transition of births from homes to hospitals, teachers can use this book to help students better understand woman and families in the West.


The Widowed Ones: Beyond the Battle of Little Bighorn
Chris Enss, June 2022, TwoDot                               
Themes: Biography, American West, History, Women

Told through diaries and other primary sources, THE WIDOWED ONES shares the story of seven officers’ wives whose husbands died at the Battle of Little Bighorn providing a unique look at western life.

Take-aways: History is often told from the soldier’s perspective. This text provides useful examples of the impact of military service on families.


Peace and Friendship: An Alternative History of the American West
Stephen Aron, July 2022, Oxford University Press     
Themes: American West, History, Revolutionary Era

This refreshing collection of inspiring stories focuses on instances of peace and good will often overlooked in favor of a focus on conflict and violent ends.

Take-aways: Students sometimes feel like history is just one conflict after another. Use anecdotes from this text to stress historical episodes that ended in cooperation, alliances, and peace. 


Continental Reckoning: The American West in the Age of Expansion
Elliott West, February 2023, University of Nebraska Press                     
Themes: American West, History

This engaging work of nonfiction shares both the physical transformation of the West along with the deep impact on the people who were displaced and those that reshaped the land.

Take-aways: This sweeping narrative highlights key events within the larger national and global contexts. These contexts are essential in helping students understand the significance of this pivotal period and place.


The Summer of 1876: Outlaws, Lawmen, and Legends in the Season that Defined the American West
Chris Wimmer, June 2023, St. Martin’s Press, an imprint of Macmillan   Themes: American West, History

Wimmer uses the 100th anniversary of the nation to explore key figures and events in American frontier mythology. These interrelationships provide fascinating insights into a changing nation.


Whether helping educators keep up-to-date in their subject-areas, promoting student reading in the content-areas, or simply encouraging nonfiction leisure reading, teacher librarians need to be aware of the best new titles across the curriculum and how to activate life-long learning. - Annette Lamb

Monday, October 03, 2022

Timely Take-aways: Medicine and Medical History


Timely Take-aways for Life-long Learners: Medicine and Medical History

From natural remedies and inoculations to surgical practices, several new works of nonfiction explore the history of medicine and its impact around the world.

Empire of the Scalpel: The History of Surgery
Ira Rutkow, Mar 2022, Scribner, an imprint of Simon & Schuster
Themes: Medical, History

Tracing the fascinating story of surgery through global history, EMPIRE OF THE SCALPEL shares the key people and breakthroughs that established the foundations for today’s life-saving medical practices.

Take-aways: Educators will find useful examples of how the science of surgery evolved over time. Use these people and practices to demonstrate the importance of ongoing research and perseverance. 


The Empress and the English Doctor
Lucy Ward, Jun 2022, Oneworld Publications, an imprint of Simon & Schuster
Themes: History, 18th century, Medical

THE EMPRESS AND THE ENGLISH DOCTOR is a fast-paced, nonfiction narrative telling the story of Catherine the Great’s quest to inoculate the masses against smallpox. Rather than focusing on the science itself, the true story explores the challenges of preventative health care in the 18th century.

Take-aways: Use this story as an example of the importance of political leadership in promoting science. 


The Physick Garden: Ancient Cures for Modern Maladies
Alice Smith, April 2022, Frances Lincoln, an imprint of Quarto Group
Themes: Medical, Natural Remedies, Herbs, History

THE PHYSICK GARDEN shares information about 80 plants used in natural remedies and alternative medicine. Each two-page spread explores a plant, its medicinal uses, along with both ancient tales and modern research about its use in healing.

Take-aways: This book provides a fascinating interdisciplinary approach to medicinal plants. Use it to identify engaging examples that connect science and history topics.


Healing a Divided Nation: 
How the American Civil War Revolutionized Western Medicine
Carole Adrienne, August 2022, Pegasus Books, an imprint of Simon & Schuster
Themes: History, United States, Civil War period, Medical

HEALING A DIVIDED NATION examines the revolutionary advances made in medical science during the Civil War. These innovations transformed healthcare along with a wide range of related areas from education and culture to technology.

Take-aways: The long term impact of the medical advances during the Civil War era are found across disciplines. Demonstrate the key connections between science and history.


Heroes and Scoundrels
Moira Dolan, August 2022, Quill Driver Books, an imprint of Ingram Publisher Services
Themes: Biography, History, Science, Medicine

Part of the Boneheads and Brainiacs series, HEROES AND SCOUNDRELS explores both honest and dishonest medical researchers (1951-1975) connected with the Nobel Prize.

Take-aways: Reflect on both the positive and negative decisions made for medical progress.


Whether helping educators keep up-to-date in their subject-areas, promoting student reading in the content-areas, or simply encouraging nonfiction leisure reading, teacher librarians need to be aware of the best new titles across the curriculum and how to activate life-long learning. - Annette Lamb

Tuesday, March 15, 2022

Timely Take-Aways for Life-Long Learning

Several new works of nonfiction explore the long history of planet Earth including the relatively recent impact of humans and other animals. Each provides a unique perspective and context for investigation.


A Brief History of Earth

Andrew H. Knoll, Apr 2021, Custom House, an imprint of Harper Collins

Themes: Natural history, Science, Earth science


A BRIEF HISTORY OF EARTH takes readers on a 4.6 billion-year journey through the science of our planet with chapters exploring the chemical, physical, biological, oxygen, animal, green, catastrophic, and human Earth. Of particular note are the excellent illustrations, conversational writing style, and balance of anecdotes with facts.

Take-aways: Educators will find the connections to climate change useful within the larger context of earth history. This book would be a good choice for an AP content-area reading assignment.


A (Very) Short History of Life on Earth

Henry Gee, Nov 2021, St. Martin’s Press, an imprint of Macmillan

Themes: Natural history, Life science, Evolution


A (VERY) SHORT HISTORY OF LIFE ON EARTH provides a quick overview of how life evolved on Earth in a dozen short chapters. The first seven chapters explore early life, to dinosaurs leaving five chapters for mammals, primates and human evolution.

Take-aways: This primer on evolution would be of particular interest to science students and teachers seeking an engaging work of nonfiction for leisure reading.


A Natural History of the Future: What the Laws of Biology Tell Us About the Destiny of the Human Species

Rob Dunn, Nov 2021, Basic Books, an imprint of Hachette Book Group

Themes: Natural history, Nature, Ecology


A NATURAL HISTORY OF THE FUTURE explains how Earth has become a human ecosystem. Focusing on ecology and evolution, the author skillfully explains the history of humans and their impact, climate change, and the need for action.

Take-aways: Educators will find the timely topics useful in curriculum updates.


A History of the World in 100 Animals

Simon Barnes, May 2022, Pegasus Books, an imprint of Simon & Schuster

Themes: World history, Animals


A HISTORY OF THE WORLD IN 100 ANIMALS explores dozens of animals that have had a close relationship with humans across the millennia. From the honeybee to the giant squid, Barnes examines the connection between humans and the other creatures that inhabit the Earth. Each animal is presented through a short, conversational essay.

Take-aways: This interdisciplinary work blends history, culture, art, and life science. Of particular note are the outstanding full-color illustrations, short quotes from literature, and engaging anecdotes that bring the animals to life. Students of all ages enjoy learning about animals. Educators will find fascinating examples to engage students across the curriculum. Use an animal essay as a springboard to inquiry or writing.



Whether helping educators keep up-to-date in their subject-areas, promoting student reading in the content-areas, or simply encouraging nonfiction leisure reading, teacher librarians need to be aware of the best new titles across the curriculum and how to activate life-long learning. - Annette Lamb

Tuesday, February 15, 2022

Timely Take-Aways for Life-Long Learning


From Ferdinand Magellan and Sir Francis Drake to lesser-known scientific explorers and even an unknown mariner, a batch of new nonfiction works share previously overlooked stories set during the age of discovery. These titles expand our thinking about the people and missions that jumpstarted maritime travel and commerce.

In Search of a Kingdom: Francis Drake, Elizabeth I, and the Perilous Birth of the British Empire
Laurence Bergreen, Mar 2021, Custom House, an imprint of Harper Collins
Themes: World history, Maritime history, British empire, Age of Discovery

IN SEARCH OF A KINGDOM is an engaging nonfiction narrative exploring Francis Drake, his major voyages of exploration, and his relationship with Elizabeth I.
Take-aways: Educators will find the relationships among the key players along with the specifics of Drake’s expeditions to be helpful in understanding the bigger picture of piracy, enslaved people, diplomacy, and the quest for fame and riches during this period.

Conquering the Pacific: An Unknown Mariner and the Final Great Voyage of the Age of Discovery
Andrés Reséndez, Sep 2021, Mariner Books, an imprint of Harper Collins
Themes: World history, Spanish history, Maritime history, Age of Discovery

CONQUERING THE PACIFIC shares an amazing account of a mid-16th century Spanish expedition that crossed the Pacific Ocean and returned. Launched from a secret port in Mexico, the crew included a Black mariner who captained the small, lead ship.
Take-aways: Of particular interest are the many examples of navigational techniques necessary to successfully cross this challenging ocean.  In addition, the book details encounters with the Pacific Islanders and an assortment of near-disasters.

Latitude: The True Story of the World’s First Scientific Expedition
Nicholas Crane, Oct 2021, Pegasus Books, an imprint of Simon & Schuster
Themes: World history, Maritime history, Expeditions, Age of Discovery

LATITUDE is a fast-paced nonfiction narrative tracing the adventures of a dozen eighteenth-century European scientists who made important discoveries about global navigation and other amazing achievements.
Take-aways: STEM educators will find this true story of scientific discovery to be an engaging way to teach youth about perseverance and the quest for knowledge.

Straits: Beyond the Myth of Magellan
Felipe Fernandez-Armesto, Mar 2022, University of California Press
Themes: World history, Maritime history, Expeditions, Age of Discovery

STRAITS revisits the life of Ferdinand Magellan separating the fact from fiction through surviving primary sources while providing useful insights and context.
Take-aways: Historically, textbooks have glossed over the life of Magellan and portrayed him as the hero of the age of discovery. This work is effective in providing a more realistic and comprehensive examination of this historical figure.


Whether helping educators keep up-to-date in their subject-areas, promoting student reading in the content-areas, or simply encouraging nonfiction leisure reading, teacher librarians need to be aware of the best new titles across the curriculum and how to activate life-long learning. - Annette Lamb

Saturday, January 15, 2022

Timely Take-Aways for Life-Long Learning: Medieval Life

New Takes on Medieval Life

New works of nonfiction bust myths about the people and progress of the Middle Ages by providing new perspectives on this often misunderstood time period.

The Middle Ages: A Graphic History
Eleanor Janega, Sep 2021, Icon Books
Themes: graphic history, European history, Middle Ages, Medieval

THE MIDDLE AGES is a highly illustrated history of Medieval times. Combining engaging visuals with a conversational approach, this graphic history provides a useful overview with many specific examples and lots of fun along the way.

Take-aways: Rather than a dark period in history, Janega stresses that Medieval times featured art, culture, and intellectual development. Contains lots of ideas for reluctant learners and useful examples. 


Powers and Thrones: A New History of the Middle Ages
Dan Jones, Nov 2021, Viking/8 Titles
Themes: Europe history, Middle Ages, Medieval

POWERS AND THRONES explores a thousand years of medieval history. Divided into four parts: imperium, dominion, rebirth, and revolution, each section explores key individuals, transformational events, and enduring themes

Take-aways: Of particular note is Jones’ global approach to this time period while maintaining a mostly western lens. Young adults will enjoy the author’s conversational approach and themes of interest to contemporary readers.


The Bright Ages: A New History of Medieval Europe
Matthew Gabriele & David M. Perry, Nov 2021, Harper Collins
Themes: European history, Middle Ages, Medieval

THE BRIGHT AGES casts a new light on well-known people and events of the European Middle Ages. The book begins with the story of a Roman woman artisan and concludes with a debate about the prospects of the New World.

Take-aways: Gabriele and Perry help readers understand why long-held beliefs about the backward nature of the dark ages need to be replaced by an understanding of the time period that includes a broader, more diverse, and more inclusive view.


Medicine in the Middle Ages: Surviving the Times
Juliana Cummings, Dec 2021, Pen and Sword History
Themes: Medical history, Middle Ages, Medieval

MEDICINE IN THE MIDDLE AGES describes the perils of medieval life and how these people approached healing. Rooted in the work of ancient Greek and Roman philosophers, medieval medicine was linked to both the Catholic Church and the social status of patients. Explore the birth of hospitals and the horrors of war.

Take-aways: Educators will find this book useful in helping their students understand the challenges faced by both the rich and poor of the middle ages. From science and social studies to history, this book takes a multi-disciplinary approach to exploring the connection among religion, torture, plagues, medicine, and disease.

Whether helping educators keep up-to-date in their subject-areas, promoting student reading in the content-areas, or simply encouraging nonfiction leisure reading, teacher librarians need to be aware of the best new titles across the curriculum and how to activate life-long learning. - Annette Lamb

Saturday, January 01, 2022

Timely Take-Aways for Life-Long Learning: Drawing


Timely Take-Aways for Life-Long Learning:
Drawing

Whether seeking ideas for building confidence in young artists or exploring new how-to-draw series, several new drawing books are available for educators.


Drawing Workshop for Kids: Process Art Experiences for Building Creativity and Confidence
Samara Caughey, Apr 2021, Quarry Books, an imprint of Quarto Group
Themes: Art, Techniques, Drawing, Creativity

DRAWING WORKSHOP FOR KIDS shares both warm-up drawing activities along with drawing workshops to inspire children to explore and develop their own style.

Take-aways: Children benefit from both quick, exploration-type assignments as well as longer drawing workshops.


Drawing is for Everyone 
Kateri Ewing, Jul 2021, Quarry Books, an imprint of Quarto Group
Themes: Art, Techniques, Drawing, Creativity

DRAWING IS FOR EVERYONE builds drawing skills and confidence through 21 lessons with pencil, colored pencil, and ink.

Take-aways: Ewings suggests building both seeing-based and abstract drawing skills through engaging in a daily habit and following four guiding principles.


The Urban Sketching Handbook Series

Panoramas and Vertical Vistas: Techniques for Drawing on Location from Urban Perspectives, Mario Linhares, Sep 2021, Quarry Books/Quarto Group

Understanding Light: Portraying Light Effects in On-Location Drawing and Painting, Katie Woodward, Dec 2021, Quarry Books/Quarto Group

Themes: Art, Techniques, Drawing

THE URBAN SKETCHING HANDBOOK series provides artists with practical instruction focusing on creative techniques, tips, and advice for on-location sketching. Each title focuses a different sketching technique.

Take-aways: It’s useful to investigate how specific techniques are reflected in the works of masters when building sketching skills in new areas.


Ten-Step Drawing Series

Everyday Things: Learn To Draw 60 Ordinary Items in Ten Easy Steps!

Justine Lecouffe, Sep 2021, Walter Foster Pub.Quarto Group

Manga: Learn To Draw 30 Manga Characters & Animals in Ten Easy Steps! Chie Kutsuwada, Sep 2021, Walter Foster Pub./Quarto Group

Themes: Art, Techniques, Drawing

The TEN-STEP DRAWING series provides easy-to-follow instructions that encourage new artists to start drawing. Books in the series focus on drawing animals, flowers, people, nature, dogs, cats, and more. 

Take-aways: This simple, step-by-step approach is likely to increase the success of reluctant students, while teaching basic drawing techniques.


Whether helping educators keep up-to-date in their subject-areas, promoting student reading in the content-areas, or simply encouraging nonfiction leisure reading, teacher librarians need to be aware of the best new titles across the curriculum and how to activate life-long learning. - Annette Lamb

Wednesday, December 15, 2021

Timely Take-Aways for Life-Long Learning: Popular Science Topics


Timely Take-Aways for Life-Long Learning
Popular Science Topics

New works of popular science nonfiction are examining fascinating scientific themes through entertaining stories. Educators will find these useful in identifying timely examples for their classrooms.

Fuzz: When Nature Breaks the Law
Mary Roach, Sep 2021, W.W. Norton & Company
Themes: science, social science, nature, biology, philosophy, wildlife

FUZZ explores the science of human-wildlife interaction and conflict. Combining the disciplines of human behavior and wildlife biology, Roach shares fascinating and often humorous examples of the challenges of human-nature coexistence.

Take-aways: Roach’s conversational style is always popular with young adults and educators alike. From connections with bears and elephants to monkeys and trees, each chapter shares a short, engaging narrative that helps readers understand the complex relationships between nature and humans.


Blue: In Search of Nature’s Rarest Color
Kai Kupferschmidt, Jul 2021, The Experiment, an imprint of Workman
Themes: science, physics, optics, light, color

BLUE take readers on an adventure around to globe to identify examples of this rare color in minerals, animals, and plants. It also examines the science behind the color blue and its impact on human life.

Take-aways: Occurring less frequently in nature than other colors, blue is a color associated with both science and social science topics.


Pump: A Natural History of the Heart
Bill Schutt, Sep 2021, Algonquin Books, an imprint of Workman
Themes: science, life science, biology, circulation, heart

PUMP shares the evolutionary history of circulation and specifically the heart. Weaving together scientific observations with cultural connections, Schutt examines the history of this organ through amazing stories and examples.

Take-aways: Use examples from PUMP to help youth see how our understanding of the circulatory system has evolved over time.


Weirdness!: What Fake Science and the Paranormal Tell Us About the Nature of Science
Taner Edis, Nov 2021, Pitchstone Publishing, Independent Publishers Group
Themes: science, scientific theory, pseudo-science, paranormal


WEIRDNESS! celebrates the importance of science in a world of fake news, social media, and conspiracy theories. Edis describes the critical role of science, while exploring the bizarre beliefs that have become prevalent in today’s society.

Take-aways: Use Edis’ examples to jumpstart meaningful discussions about the importance of science and need to understand the “weirdness” in our world.

Whether helping educators keep up-to-date in their subject-areas, promoting student reading in the content-areas, or simply encouraging nonfiction leisure reading, teacher librarians need to be aware of the best new titles across the curriculum and how to activate life-long learning. - Annette Lamb

Monday, July 26, 2021

Timely Take-Aways for Life-Long Learning: The Boone Family

Timely Take-Aways for Life-Long Learning


The Taking of Jemima Boone: Colonial Settlers, Tribal Nations, and the Kidnap That Shaped America
Matthew Pearl, October 2021, HarperCollins
Themes: history, United States, Revolutionary Period

Blood and Treasure: Daniel Boone and the Fight for America’s First Frontier
Boby Drury and Tom Clavins, April 2021, Macmillan
Themes: history, United States, 18th and 19th Century

From tragedy and hardship to strength and independence, the Boone family represents the passion and resilience of 18th-century settlers. Both new titles skillfully explore the experiences of the Boone family within the larger context of the people, places, and events that shaped early westward expansion.

THE TAKING OF JEMIMA BOONE is an absorbing work of narrative nonfiction that seamlessly weaves key people and historical events with the personal story of a strong young woman with a legendary father. Divided into three sections, the book explores the taking, the retaliation, and the reckoning.

BLOOD AND TREASURE examines the epic struggle over the lands west of the Appalachian Mountains. From Native American tribes trying to save their land from invaders to the settlers pushed west by an expanding nation, this carefully researched, engaging narrative shares the many perspectives of both legendary figures and ordinary people.

Let’s explore seven timely take-aways for life-long learners:
1) In popular art and literature of the 19th-century, Jemima Boone was portrayed as a passive victim of a Cherokee-Shawnee raiding party. In reality, she was a strong wilderness woman who used knowledge of her captors, delay tactics, and skills in trail marking to stay alive.

2) During the early days of America’s westward expansion, complex relationships, ever-shifting allegiances, and broken promises sparked violent clashes between and among Spanish, French, British, Colonial American, Indigenous, and Enslaved peoples. These conflicts and betrayals caused deep and lasting physical and emotional scars that impacted their future actions.

3) Cultural misunderstandings about property ownership, allegiance, and family structure were at the root of many clashes. Unlikely early biographies that often depicted Daniel Boone as a thrill-seeking Indian killer, he is increasingly respected for his patience and interest in studying cultural nuances.

4) Peaceful gatherings were held among people of different cultural backgrounds to avoid conflict when possible. For instance, Jemima Boone had met her captor Hanging Maw at such an event prior to the kidnapping. Daniel Boone was adopted into a Shawnee family and was viewed as both a captive and son.

5) During the 18th-century, hunters spent six months on expeditions known as “long hunts”. Daniel Boone was one of several well-known long hunters. In addition to gathering and processing animals, Boone collected valuable information from other explorers such as John Finley as well as his own pathfinding that was later used to establish Kentucky settlements.

6) Although most people associate Daniel Boone with Kentucky, he and his extended family including Jemima Boone Callaway moved to Missouri in 1799 where he spent the last twenty years of his life.

7) Despite inaccurate 19th-century biographies and works of fiction, Daniel Boone remains an iconic figure in American history. However, it continues to be difficult to separate the man from the myth.

Timely Take-Aways for Life-Long Learning
Whether helping educators keep up-to-date in their subject-areas, promoting student reading in the content-areas, or simply encouraging nonfiction leisure reading, teacher librarians need to be aware of the best new titles across the curriculum and how to activate life-long learning. - Annette Lamb, Teacher Librarian: The Journal for School Library Professionals