![]() NewsHugo Award ballot is live!
Once again, John "Mensch" Scalzi (a triple nominee) has assembled a Hugo Voters' Packet consisting of electronic versions of practically every nominated work. If you're a registered Hugo voter, he'll supply you with a copy of the whole damned thing.
Final Ballot for the 2009 Hugo Awards The 2009 Hugo Voters Packet: Now Live Video chat with high school students at Arapahoe HS in Littleton, COI did a live video-chat with some enterprising high-school freshmen at Arapahoe High School in Littleton, CO, a cabal of enterprising kids who are lobbying the school-system to add Little Brother to the statewide curriculum (!). We had a great chat -- they're really bright and lovely kids and clearly passionate and engaged! Alternative Little Brother PDFBruce M Campbell created a lovely alternative PDF of Little Brother:
Little Brother wins the Ontario Library Association’s White Pine Award
Today I found myself surrounded by hundreds and hundreds of enthusiastic, high-school age readers from the Ontario school system, and was honoured to receive a popular award for best Canadian young adult novel of 2008. The award was the White Pine, part of the Ontario Library Association's "Forest of Reading" program -- librarians nominate ten books in each of several age-divided categories and students from across the province are encouraged to read all ten on the roster and vote for their favourite. All in all, 250,000 students participate in Forest of Reading, and over 8,000 were in attendance today for the awards ceremony at Harbourfront in Toronto. I was mobbed by group after group of vibrant, intelligent, engaged students, passionate readers who wanted to talk about my book and the other books they'd enjoyed (the other nine nominees were all very good, and the authors were fascinating people). To top it all off, I was delighted to discover that Little Brother won the White Pine award, making it the popular choice for best YA book among Ontario's high-school students. I could not be more delighted! |
This book has a whole bunch to recommend it: It’s fast-paced, well-written, and the protagonist is engaging in a geeky way, if just a tiny little bit generic. The book is a bit didactic in places. However, since in some ways it’s a fictionalized manual for how to build an underground resistance to an evil government, that’s only to be expected. Really very good, and based on what I remember about my own teenage years,
|
|
Little Brother is proudly powered by
WordPress
|
|