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Tag Archives: bn

Barnes & Noble Memorial Post: Teen Reads

20 Saturday Oct 2007

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in book reviews

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bn, feminism

Today was my last day at Barnes & Noble, and I thought I’d celebrate by highlighting some of the great books I read this year from the Barnes & Noble’s teen section, which is where I find some of the most interesting and enjoyable books. So here is a lightly annotated list of some of my favorite young adult reads from the past 17 months.

  • Tithe, by Holly Black. This gritty urban fantasy is about a girl who discovers she’s a changeling, and finds herself struggling to save herself and her friends from the violence of an amoral faery world that is all too real. And it’s the first in a series: c’mon Holly, write a fourth!
  • Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist, by Rachel Cohn & David Levithan. A girl and a guy both on the rebound from problematic relationships meet at a concert and spend the night wandering Manhattan (and possibly falling in love).
  • S.E.X.: The all-you-need-to-know progressive sexuality guide to get you through high school and college, by Heather Corinna. Okay, it’s not fiction, but it’s a great read all the same. In my dream world, every school system in the country would be using this for their sex ed program.
  • Wicked Lovely, by Melisa Marr. Another modern fairytale about a girl who discovers she is gifted (or cursed) with the magical power to heal the world of faery . . . but at what personal cost?
  • Actually, anything by David Levithan, though my favorite (aside from Nick & Norah) is The Realm of Possibility, a series of interconnected narrative poems about a group of friends at a high school and their network of relationships, romantic, platonic, and every shade in between.
  • This is All: The Pillow Book of Cordelia Kenn, by Aiden Chambers. I thought the end of this novel was a cop-out, but the rest is a voluble, maddening, tender and fascinating account of a young woman’s coming of age and her maturing relationships.
  • Runaways, by Brian K. Vaughn, et. al. Teenage superheros/heroines come into their powers and discover their parents are plotting to take over the world. Fun graphic novels that play confidently with the genre (and have some kick-ass young women as characters).
  • The Mislaid Magician; or, Ten Years After: Being the Private Correspondence Between Two Prominent Families Regarding a Scandal Touching the Highest Levels of Government and the Security of the Realm, by Patricia C. Wrede & Carolyn Stevermere. Besides deserving an award for Longest Title Ever, this third book in the Sorcery & Cecelia series provided me with one of the best quotes of last year: “The most unsettling result of this adventure is that we find ourselves in possession of a superfluous child.”
  • The Book Thief, by Marcus Zusak. A story about a foster child, an accordian player, a Jew in hiding, some stolen books, Germany in the midst of the Second World War, and the way human beings respond to overwhelming crises–all narrated by the compelling character of Death. It’s hard to describe, so I just tell people to read the first paragraph and see if they can resist being hooked.

(images all snagged from Powell’s online store)

B&N Pictures

21 Friday Sep 2007

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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bn, boston, photos


Here are some photos I took on my way to work this morning, at the Barnes & Noble store, and on my way home again.

Barnes & Noble (Boston) #2

I’ve discovered that (on nice days) it is as fast to walk to work along the Fenway park system as it is to ride the T, so I am getting my exercise without having to get up any earlier than the 7:00-11:00am shift at work requires!

Maps, Photographs, and Other Things Useful to Homeland Security

02 Sunday Sep 2007

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in life writing

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bn, boston, simmons, travel


Boston: Day Three

My computer is up and running . . . for the first time, ever, I have high-speed internet access on my own computer, in my own dorm room. I have finally arrived in the 21st century. Whatever Pixies, Nixies, Boggarts or Brownies saw fit to patch up my ethernet allowed their benevolence to run out when it comes to Anna’zOn, since I can’t get the page-editing software to work today. However, other aspects of my multi-media communication arsenal seem to be functioning, so here is what I can offer by way of showing you a bit about my new environs, one weekend in to the adventure.

1) Photos, as so many have requested. I have uploaded pictures of my dorm and its immediate environs to to Picasa, which you can view by clicking on the link below.

North Hall

I also have an album up of photographs from the going-away party my friend Cara hosted last Sunday (good lord, was it only a week ago??) so all my Barnes & Noble buddies could wish me luck.

2) Check out this Google map of Anna’s Boston, which I was created last night. I’ll be adding to it as I enlarge my world (a little each day) . . . for you map freaks out there (and I say this with all kindness because I’m one of them. My room decorations current consist of four maps: NPR stations in the United States, a map of the world, a map of Boston, and a map of the campus), hope you enjoy it!

Today, I’m sticking close to “home” (the dorm doesn’t quite feel homey yet), making headway in the organization of my life–both internal and external–and preparing for Advising/Orientation day on Tuesday, at which (according to the published schedule) we will drink a lot and sign away our lives (academic and financial) on various bits of paper. Tonight, I have a hall meeting at which I will get to meet some of those people whom I live with, whom–so far–I have only met as shuffling bodies headed for the showers in the morning. I’m not up for much socializing at the moment, but they’re all Graduate School of Library and Information Science, or GSLIS Students (pronounced “GISS-liss” with a hard G as in gambol or gabardine), so chances are I will have some of them in classes and every repetition of names and faces helps!

I had my first meal at Bartol Hall, the main dining hall on the residential campus. La-dee-dah! It’s like the most expansive breakfast buffet you’ve ever seen (waffles? pancakes? bagels? oatmeal? cold cereal? egga? bacon? grits? fruit and yogurt? hot chocolate? coffee? fruit juice?). Suddenly, the whole monastic-like system of bachelor dons and bluestocking lady professors living in University quarters and dining in the Senior Common Room makes so much more sense . . . except, of course, for the fact that it’s made possible by a whole regiment or two of waitsstaff who bear an unsettling resemblance to the Scouts in Gaudy Night, except for (thank heavens!) the absence of frilly aprons and caps.

More about people and courses when I meet more of the former and attend more of the latter . . .

For Labor Day, I am going to take the T (subway) to Wonderland and get a look at the ocean!

American Activism(s)

02 Monday Jul 2007

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in book reviews

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bn, feminism, politics


My colleague at Barnes & Noble, Tony, who runs the music department, has decided to set up a display in my honor come August, when I am abandoning the store and moving East. I was asked to come up with a theme. After some consideration, I picked (for obvious reasons) the theme of political rabble-rousers in twentieth century American history. The movies must be fiction (no documentaries), but be based on actual true-life people or events. It’s a completely subjective list of movies that I have enjoyed, and from which I learned something about our collective history.

In order of historical period, they are:

1. Newsies (1992)*
2. Iron-Jawed Angels (2004)
3. Reds (1981)
4. Entertaining Angels (1996)
5. Cradle Will Rock (1999)
6. Dash and Lilly (1999)
7. Good Night & Good Luck (2005)
8. Kinsey (2004)
9. Norma Rae (1979)
10. North Country (2005)

They are all worth watching . . . so add them to your Netflix queue!

*be warned, this is a (thoroughly enjoyable) Disney musical about the newsboy strike of 1899–okay, almost the 20th century–so if your taste doesn’t run to musicals, this may not be your first choice!

Work in Boston: Addendum

28 Thursday Jun 2007

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in life writing

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bn, boston



So I actually bought a map of the City of Boston that was large enough for me to mark things on in red marker. So far, I have “school,” “home,” and “work” written in. More will surely follow . . . but that’s a good start.

Work turns out to be sandwiched between the Christian Science Center (left) and the Boston Public Library (below), a direct ride of the T (subway/train system) from both my dorm and the Simmons campus. I really couldn’t ask for a more convenient location.

Work in Boston!

16 Saturday Jun 2007

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in life writing

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bn, boston


Yesterday, my manager at Barnes & Noble told me she had spoken with the manager of Barnes & Noble’s store in the Prudential Center, downtown Boston, and they would be happy to accept me as a transfer employee when I arrive in the fall. It is a huge relief to have a part-time job already arranged before I leave town.

"the past is a wild party; check your preconceptions at the door." ~ Emma Donoghue

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