Study Buddies discussion
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Does your public library have The Study Series?
Many libraries have a Collections Development link that you can request titles to be added to the local or extended branches, so that's one place you can start.

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I'm trying to get my library to carry it--considering I work there and it would be much easier to recommend if we had it in stock. Maybe I'll just donate a set.


Thanks Lizette! So next year when I'm at UCLA I can easily recommend it to my library class buddies.


Wow, very cool, Tina! Where is the library (or general vicinity if you don't want to say the town where you live)? I have been planning to get to our Glendale library and the rest of LAPL but haven't had the time lately. Darn schoolwork!

I read these books out of my local library, but they originally only had the first two. I then suggested that they purchase it, but since I couldn't wait I had to do an interlibrary loan to get the third. They finally got a copy of Fire Study... like 3 months after I had read it!


I don't understand why banning books is something people want. You have them screaming that the youth of today is illiterate and then you have the same bunch screaming that the youth of today shouldn't read Huck Finn or Things Fall Apart or any number of books. And those are just the classics. It turns my stomach to think about it.
Ridiculous people.
That's so funny because a patron approached me a few days ago and asked if it was "normal" for a book with the F word in big bold letters printed on the first page to be sectioned in YA. I told him it was quite normal and if he wasn't comfortable having his class browse in that section, he might want to try the JV section for more appropriate materials. It was so funny because he's a teacher and I thought they would be used to that.
For us in bookstores, it's a little different. Parents tend to get snippy with us if we hand their kid a book the parent doesn't want them to read. I guess that's the parent's right. (?)
I don't have kids but if I did, I would much rather have them reading about "bad" things than participating in them in reality. I was probably reading about sex by the time I was 10 (my mom's romance novels were not heavily guarded!) but I didn't actually participate in anything remotely sexual until I was 24! FYI that guy is now my hubby, the one and only.
The other issue I have is with people who have a hard time understanding the differences and confluences between fiction and non-fiction. Fiction isn't real (! some people don't seem to be able to grasp this) but it refers to pieces of our reality and helps us understand/contemplate it. So I don't get it when people get so bent about magic and Harry Potter and Philip Pullman and that kind of thing. I wouldn't call myself pious (I'm Catholic) but I also don't think "magic" is equivalent to "devil worship" as some people try to make it seem.
I think people who think that need to read a book, or possibly two.
I don't have kids but if I did, I would much rather have them reading about "bad" things than participating in them in reality. I was probably reading about sex by the time I was 10 (my mom's romance novels were not heavily guarded!) but I didn't actually participate in anything remotely sexual until I was 24! FYI that guy is now my hubby, the one and only.
The other issue I have is with people who have a hard time understanding the differences and confluences between fiction and non-fiction. Fiction isn't real (! some people don't seem to be able to grasp this) but it refers to pieces of our reality and helps us understand/contemplate it. So I don't get it when people get so bent about magic and Harry Potter and Philip Pullman and that kind of thing. I wouldn't call myself pious (I'm Catholic) but I also don't think "magic" is equivalent to "devil worship" as some people try to make it seem.
I think people who think that need to read a book, or possibly two.
Alethea, Now that you bring it up, I've had to deal with "snippy" parents more at the bookstore than at the library. I guess that's because most kids only have contact with their parents when they're being picked up (five hours later!). Even that teacher I talked to was very low key about the content in the book. In fact, he looked rather happy that I was able to answer his question and give him an alternative. Not a problem patron at all.
I constantly have to explain to my library co-workers that the bookstore has literally prepared me for everything.
The problem with ALA's Freedom to Read statement is that it's merely a guideline and not a law. I'm usually 100% For all of ALA's "guidelines" and see them as rules, but I also know a lot of teachers, librarians (not the ones at my library =), and administers that do not agree at all. It makes me so mad.
I constantly have to explain to my library co-workers that the bookstore has literally prepared me for everything.
The problem with ALA's Freedom to Read statement is that it's merely a guideline and not a law. I'm usually 100% For all of ALA's "guidelines" and see them as rules, but I also know a lot of teachers, librarians (not the ones at my library =), and administers that do not agree at all. It makes me so mad.

Also, I have always been an avid reader. As a result I read at a high school level in second grade. There weren't many choices of "appropriate" reading material that I wasn't bored by. I was constantly reading about sex and drugs way before sex ed in school. Meanwhile I have always been extremely careful about any activities that could keep me from getting what I want in life (a college degree, a teaching certificate, the chance to travel...)
Alethea, my library is in Illinois about an hour from Chicago in Elgin.

I read about sex when I was about 7 years old because my mom had Victoria holt books laying around and the dark covers with the fierce women on them intrigued me. I continued to read romance novels even as my mom forbade me to take sex ed in school. Directly or indirectly I was much more aware of myself and how quickly a situation could spiral out of control in HS and avoided such situations until i met my first boyfriend in college and we're almost on 5 years. Meanwhile 4 out of the 5 friends I had in HS either was pregnant in HS or got so quickly thereafter.
Coincedence or otherwise, none of them read anything more then a Cosmo and learned about sex from Health class. Which doesn't teach you about what happens when your hormones overwhelm you.




Very true Lexie, I was one who didn't start reading until I was way out of high school so I was also one that was pregnant (I didn't happen to get married first) but still I was preg after one month of marriage and I was 18 at the time, But I was not one that new very much about sex and how to control my emotions I think if they start at least in middle school learning how to control them that they will have more success in not getting the way I was so soon. LOL OK well that was probably more than you needed to know :)
Ok, ok. I'll finally donate a set of books to the library I work at. At first, I didn't know how the collections dept. worked, but just a month ago, one of the library assistants told me that she ordered 2 books that I had suggested. So it's much easier to get things in than I thought. First thing next week.
Now the problem I have is deciding whether to buy the YA covers or the original. The YA ones will attract more attention, but there's no Fire Study.
Now the problem I have is deciding whether to buy the YA covers or the original. The YA ones will attract more attention, but there's no Fire Study.


When I request books at the library for purchase, I include the ISBN so that they get the right copy. Maybe try that and definitely try to get them to get Fire Study.
I'm actually donating them because I work there.
I was going to get them the YA covers, but there's no Fire Study. So I'm just going to go with the originals.
I didn't donate them before because a lot of donations slip out of the library and into the Friends of the Library Bookshoppe without review from the librarians. I also didn't realize they were paying attention to my random conversations about books and ordering ones that I had suggested. I had to make sure that my donations wouldn't "accidentally" end up in the Bookshoppe. The Library Assistant that I talked to also works at B&N, so she's already heard about the series (and has it on her to-read list). She'll probably be the first to check them out.
I was going to get them the YA covers, but there's no Fire Study. So I'm just going to go with the originals.
I didn't donate them before because a lot of donations slip out of the library and into the Friends of the Library Bookshoppe without review from the librarians. I also didn't realize they were paying attention to my random conversations about books and ordering ones that I had suggested. I had to make sure that my donations wouldn't "accidentally" end up in the Bookshoppe. The Library Assistant that I talked to also works at B&N, so she's already heard about the series (and has it on her to-read list). She'll probably be the first to check them out.















Glendale Public Library for example has Poison and Magic but not Fire Study. And I also found out thanks to the magic of the internet, that someone's got Poison checked out right now :) Very soon (allowing time for processing), the LA Public Library - Eagle Rock branch will have all 3! Yay!!
Jane and I are working on getting Study into more libraries. Just for fun, see if your library has them. (Post info here!) And if not, place a request! I'm sure there are many more people who would love to read the books if only they didn't have to pay for their copy ;)
We *heart* public libraries and think everyone should have access to free reading material and literacy. Yes!!!