Q1. I am looking for a book by Laurell K. Hamilton. I just read the third book in the Anita Blake series and I can’t figure out which one comes next!
A2. The fourth book in the Anita Blake series
is “The Lunatic Café.” There are a total of 25 books in this series, with the
26th, titled “Serpentine” coming out in August of this year. I would check the
catalog to see if we have it, and I would print the list for the patron to take
with them. I would tell them that I found the info on www.fantasticfiction.com.
It’s a very user-friendly website for finding series’ in order.
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Q2. What have I read recently? Well, I just finished this great book by Barbara Kingsolver, Prodigal Summer. I really liked the way it was written, you know, the way she used language. I wouldn't mind something a bit faster paced though.
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Q2. What have I read recently? Well, I just finished this great book by Barbara Kingsolver, Prodigal Summer. I really liked the way it was written, you know, the way she used language. I wouldn't mind something a bit faster paced though.
First of all, I’d have additional questions to ask this
reader. Do they generally like ecofiction? Do they like stories with female
protagonists? Is contemporary fiction something they prefer, or would they mind
a story set in the past? Or future? Would they mind read a young adult book?
But since I didn’t know any of that...my suggestion would be: “Nineveh” by
Henrietta Rose-Innes (see full description below.) Like “Prodigal Summer,” this book has a female
protagonist interested in ecology/nature, the writing is descriptive, and the
tone is thought-provoking. “Nineveh” is fast-paced, which is what the reader
says he/she prefers. According to Saricks (2009), faster-pacing often points to
thrillers or suspense novels, which may be the genres this reader prefers, but
just doesn’t know it yet!
Description:Katya Grubbs is Cape Town’s only ethical pest
removal specialist. When she is hired to remove the exotic beetles that have overrun
Nineveh, a new luxury housing development on the coast, Katya finds that bugs
aren’t the only unwelcome creatures hiding in the new (but inhabited)
apartments.
Book Appeal Terms:
Genre:Allegories; Psychological fiction
Character:Authentic; Complex; Strong female
Storyline:Character-driven
Pace:Fast-paced
Tone:Offbeat; Thought-provoking
Writing Style:Descriptive; Stylistically complex; Witty
Book Appeal Terms:
Genre:Allegories; Psychological fiction
Character:Authentic; Complex; Strong female
Storyline:Character-driven
Pace:Fast-paced
Tone:Offbeat; Thought-provoking
Writing Style:Descriptive; Stylistically complex; Witty
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Q3. I like reading books set in different countries. I just read one set in China, could you help me find one set in Japan? No, not modern – historical. I like it when the author describes it so much it feels like I was there!
Q3. I like reading books set in different countries. I just read one set in China, could you help me find one set in Japan? No, not modern – historical. I like it when the author describes it so much it feels like I was there!
A3. In NoveList, I used the following search terms:
Subject: Japan
Genre: Historical Fiction
Appeal Term (Writing Style): Descriptive
Appeal Term (Tone): Strong sense of place
After reviewing the results, I would recommend “The Teahouse
Fire” by Ellis Avery (see full description below). It is set in 19th century Japan, the writing style is
descriptive, and it has a strong sense of place, even being described as “lush
in details and epic in scope.”
Description:The fates of two women--one American, one
Japanese--become entwined in this sweeping novel of 19th century Japan on
the cusp of radical change and westernization. The Japanese tea ceremony,
steeped in ritual, is at the heart of this story of an American girl, adopted
by Kyoto's most important tea master and raised as attendant and surrogate
younger sister to his privileged daughter Yukako. Pasts shrouded in secrets and
mysterious traditions rocked by modernization make The teahouse fire a
compelling and provocative story, lush in details and epic in scope.
Book Appeal Terms:
Genre:Coming-of-age stories; Historical fiction
Storyline:Sweeping
Pace:Leisurely paced
Tone:Bittersweet; Moving; Nostalgic; Reflective; Strong sense of place
Writing Style: Descriptive; Engaging; Lyrical; Richly detailed
Genre:Coming-of-age stories; Historical fiction
Storyline:Sweeping
Pace:Leisurely paced
Tone:Bittersweet; Moving; Nostalgic; Reflective; Strong sense of place
Writing Style: Descriptive; Engaging; Lyrical; Richly detailed
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Q4. I read this great mystery by Elizabeth George called Well-Schooled in Murder and I loved it. Then my dentist said that if I liked mysteries I would probably like John Sandford, but boy was he creepy I couldn't finish it! Do you have any suggestions?
Q4. I read this great mystery by Elizabeth George called Well-Schooled in Murder and I loved it. Then my dentist said that if I liked mysteries I would probably like John Sandford, but boy was he creepy I couldn't finish it! Do you have any suggestions?
A4. According to NoveList, Well-Schooled in Murder is third in
the Thomas Lynley series, so I would ask the patron if he/she had read the
other books in the series, and if not, I would direct him/her to those. A
further search using the “read-alike” feature in NoveList indicates that Maj
Sjowall’s Martin Beck mystery series is very similar to the Thomas Lynley
series. They both share genres “mystery” and “police procedurals” and they
share the following appeal terms: likeable characters, character-driven and
intricately plotted style, leisurely-paced, strong sense of place, suspenseful
and violent tone. The reader may not have liked the Sanford novel because his
novels are generally thrillers, are more fast-paced and have flawed characters.
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Q5. My husband has really gotten into zombies lately. He’s already read The Walking Dead and World War Z, is there anything else you can recommend?
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Q5. My husband has really gotten into zombies lately. He’s already read The Walking Dead and World War Z, is there anything else you can recommend?
A5. Based on searching NoveList for
Genre: Graphic Novels
Subject: Zombies
Appeal Factors: Gruesome, Compelling,
I would recommend the
following
_______________________- The I am Hero series by Kengo Hanazawa and
- The Rage series by Pierre Boisserie
Q6. I love books that get turned into movies, especially
literary ones. Can you recommend some? Nothing too old, maybe just those from
the last 5 years or so.
A6. Based on personal experience, I would recommend, “A Man
Called Ove” by Fredrik Backman (as long as the patron is okay with subtitles.)
While I am a big-time reader, I’m not a huge moviegoer, so I
used the website located on Mary Chelton’s “Readers’ Advisory Tools for Adult
Readers” in the “Books on Film” section: www.mcpl.lib.mo.us/readers/movies.
This site allows you to sort movies-based-on-books by year. I was able to
recognize several literary titles from 2013-2017. I also looked a few less- familiar titles up on NoveList to see what genre they were. It’s worth noting
that as the years have progressed, there were less movies based on literary fiction and more
movies based on thriller and mysteries (and more violence.)
- Brooklyn (2015)
- Room (2015)
- The 100 Foot Journey (2014)
- The Sound and the Fury (2014)
- Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk (2016)
- The History of Love (2016)
- Submergence (2016)
- A Century of November (2017)
- Call me By Your Name (2017)
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Q7. I love thrillers but I hate foul language and sex scenes. I want something clean and fast paced.
Q7. I love thrillers but I hate foul language and sex scenes. I want something clean and fast paced.
A7.I can name thriller authors all day long, but as I am not a huge reader of the genre, when it
comes to the detailed content of their work, I have to refer to NoveList. I
performed an advanced search with the following parameters:
Genre: Thriller
Not: Profanity
Not: Steamy
Not: Explicit
And: Fast-Paced
Included among the results were James Patterson books (The
Alex Cross series), Dan Brown’s Robert Langdon series, some Harlan Coban titles
(Don’t Let Go), and some titles by Lisa Scottoline (One Perfect Lie.) Further
discussion would need to be had with the patron to learn if he/she prefers
series or stand-alones before actually recommending a specific title.
It should be noted that in this situation, the librarian is putting a lot of faith in NoveList. If the reader comes back with a book and says, "I asked for a good clean book and this is NOT that," they aren't going to care about NoveList appeal factors - they only know what you told them!
How I find books to read for me:
How I find books to read for me:
I don’t have just one way to find books – I have several
- Goodreads: I know which of my Goodreads “friends” have the same taste as I, so when I see that they’ve highly rated a book, I know there is a good chance that I will like it, too.
- Occasionally, if I REALLY love a book, I will use NoveList to find read-alikes and have actually had a fair amount of success in finding new books and authors that I enjoy.
- When I “rove” the library, I make sure to make a pass by the “New” shelves. Sometimes this results in taking more books home than I can read, but I think that’s a requirement written in a librarian’s job description.
- Trade journals are great for collection development, but for personal reading I find them overwhelming, sometimes.
Hi Shawn! Great job! I would have asked the patron additional questions as well. I totally agree with all you abut question 7 and having to rely on whatever RA tool results come up. I only felt comfortable recommending Mary Higgins Clark since I have read many of her books and remember them being pretty innocent and quite a few are thrillers as opposed to mysteries. I've read Patterson and there was sex and I'm sure swearing in those books (it's not a trigger for me so I wouldn't even notice). I wanted to ask that patron if they wanted some kind of religious thriller.
ReplyDeleteHi Katie,
DeleteI definitely need to sharpen my thriller RA skills. Thanks for suggesting Mary Higgins Clark - maybe I will start with her!
Excellent job on your response! Full points! You did a great job outlining how you answered each of the queries and consulted great online resources! I love that you're already thinking about follow up questions as well! Great job including summaries for the recommended books as well.
ReplyDelete