My favorite conference of the year! It’s always great to be surrounded by librarians, teachers, and authors who love books. And to hear about and receive piles of books that make my TBR pile dangerously tall.
Here are some of my favorite quotes from the conference (and, yes, I heard each of these authors speak and have each of their newest books):
I love the smell of books in the morning.
(there is) a pillar of books that you’ve read that raise you up…that have influenced you.
(when you’re very young and you’re reading and realize) you might be a book…the hungry caterpillar has a hole in it and you have a belly button.
My father had three daughters. That meant I was the oldest boy.
Inspired by mom who said the house was haunted and told her, “Don’t astral project.”
big, elaborate story with friends growing up. Hard to give that up.
Stories are not childish. They nourish us, give us courage, teach us how to empathize.
When you’re young, you don’t know you can repair yourself.
You can tell who the good teachers are because they like the same stories/characters you do.
Education doesn’t happen unless you get into the imagination.
What does hope really look like? Where was it lost? Where is it hiding in the story?
Secretly I’m writing for middle-aged women. I don’t know why children like my books.
The idea that we have to give kids hope is … I don’t have any to spare.
I hope I come up with another idea so my family doesn’t starve.
Good books build strong, resilient souls.
English class is where you learn the tools to survive.
family pain that is the scars, love story that is the muscle.
Next year’s conference is the Monday and Tuesday before Thanksgiving in Washington, DC. Go!
Chantress by Amy Butler Greenfield
The Whole Stupid Way We Are by N. Griffin
Above World by Jenn Reese

I began the summer rereading Unwind so I could read the sequel, Unwholly by Neal Shusterman. I loved reading Unwind for the second time. Great action, characters, and idea. Unwholly takes place immediately following the end of Unwind so I’m glad I read it again.
Doll Bones by Holly Black is just the right amount of spooky and just the right amount about growing up. What’s not to love about a spooky doll locked in a glass case?
I loved Steve Sheinkin’s Bomb last year. I love that he always makes me understand a time in history better than I did before. He does it again with Lincoln’s Grave Robbers. I had no idea how popular grave robbing was or why it was done. I also didn’t know the impact of counterfeiters at the time of Lincoln and how counterfeiting and robbing Lincoln’s grave were connected.
Perfect Scoundrels by Ally Carter is #3 in the Heist Society books, a series I look forward to. Kat is a teen from a criminal family and is very good at planning and carrying out involved heists. This latest installment is as much fun as the others, but read them in order!
Finally, a picture book: Vampire Baby by my friend and classmate Kelly Bennett is about a young boy who believes his baby sister has become a vampire when she gets teeth and begins biting everything. He sets out to prove this to his parents. Funny and oh, so true. Youch!









