The library will be closed at all locations on Monday, April 21 in observance of Patriots Day. The library will resume operations on Tuesday, April 22.
The library's temporary locations are at the Beech Street Center and the E.C. Benton Library. For more information, including hours of operation, please click here.

AP Survival Guide

A virtual open forum for students from students on Saturday, February 19, from 2:00-3:00PM.

Register Now

Need help deciding if you are going to take AP next year? Join our panel of upperclassmen in an “AP Survival Guide” open forum with representatives from a range of AP courses. You will be able to ask a BHS upperclassmen directly about the classes and tests in a virtual Breakout Room.

We have representatives from the following classes:

  • AP Physics
  • AP Physics 2
  • AP Economics
  • AP Latin
  • AP Psychology
  • AP BC Calculus
  • AP US History
  • AP Biology
  • AP Computer Science
  • AP Art(1&2)
  • AP Spanish 
  • AP Chemistry 
  • AP Chinese
  • AP European History

Book Review: Dig Two Graves

Dig Two Graves by Gretchen McNeil

Arrives March 29, 2022

Reserve the Print Book 

When I first learned of the concept for this book, I was excited. As a personal fan of Alfred Hitchcock and his mastery of suspense, as well as the YA, meets Murder genre as a whole, I immediately chose this title because I felt I had enough frame of reference but also enough excitement to tear through it at once.

I also want to preface this by saying, This is just my personal opinion, based on my individual tastes in literature and writing styles.

Ok.

Neve is an interesting character. To describe her as an apathetic loner would not be inaccurate. She makes an interesting point of re-affirming herself that she does not want unnecessary attention while craving it deeply. I found her internal dialogue to be a perfect exemplifier of her conflicting attitudes. If a character were to come into mind, she is not unlike Faith from Buffy the Vampire Slayer. She is for the most part well-meaning, no-nonsense, fiercely loyal, and generally rejected by others. (of course, this is where the comparison ends because Faith’s struggles and circumstances were completely different, and she was very annoying lol.)

At the beginning of the book, she is betrayed by her best friend and outcasted in a humiliating experience at her wealthy high school. She is then put in a preppy summer camp called GLAM. Her narration is very angsty and obsessive, but it is not difficult to sympathize with her.

Her father is one of the most complex characters in the book. Neve’s whole family dynamic is well-written and detailed. Neve and her relationship with her family evoked me to empathize more with her than the Yasmin plot ever did. Diane is a weird villain. She is a Barbie doll meets a psychotic murderer. I really like that element. To not waste time, Javier was ok as were the other characters.

Alright, I’m actually going to get into the plot of the book now. Apologies.

The suspense and what led up to the ending were well done. I felt intrigued and entertained by Diane’s penchant for murder and Neve’s careful dance around death. After an awkward beginning, the plot began to pick up as soon as Neve had realized Yasmin was murdered. By the time the book had reached the end, I was invested in Neve’s success.

Overall this book is generally a good read. I would recommend it if you are a fan of teen-murder fiction or you just want to read something light and breezy. 😉

-Review by Teen Reviewer, 12/30/21

Book Review: All the Bright Places

All the Bright Places by Jennifer Niven

Reserve the Print Book | eBook | eAudio

All the Bright Places by Jennifer Niven is a wonderfully well written book that focuses on the importance of mental health. All the Bright Places takes place in modern day Indiana and follows two teenagers named Violet and Finch. Finch is a boy with a harsh past who struggles with mental illness, even though his family and friends won’t admit it. He is known as a “freak” at school and gets bullied frequently. Violet is almost his complete opposite, she is the girl with the picture perfect life, the one who everyone wants to be. Until her sister died and everything changed for her. Now she has been retreating from family and friends and spending more and more time alone. She blames herself for her sister’s death and this is why she is finding it hard to move on. Violet and Finch are both struggling in different ways and come from very different crowds at school so their paths don’t tend to cross, until one day where they meet on the edge of their high school’s bell tower. This day is when their whirlwind journey begins. Finch is able to help Violet find closure for her sister’s death, and Violet gives Finch something to live for. Unfortunately Finch’s mental health struggles are too deeply rooted for Violet to untangle on her own, so he will need to seek professional help before it is too late.

When I was looking for something new to read and came across this book, I was intrigued by the bright sticky notes on the cover and the lure of a story about characters my age. I knew I was going to like this book within the first few pages when I became aware of the rebellious and interesting character, Finch. I like how Finch adds humor and sadness to this story and how his character has many layers that we get to see unravel throughout the book. I also liked how this book was a quicker read and was easy to understand since it wasn’t too wordy. Sometimes I did find it challenging to follow Finch’s thoughts, but I think that is what the author was trying to convey since Finch also can’t follow his own thoughts sometimes. Overall I really enjoyed the book and would recommend it.

This novel is for you if you enjoy bittersweet endings, romance, and coming of age stories. It is also for you if you want to learn more about, or feel like you can relate to, a character struggling with serious mental illness.

-Review by Madeleine Morawski, 12/30/21

Book Review: Lion of Mars

The Lion of Mars by Jennifer L. Holm

Reserve the Print Book | eBook | eAudio

The story The Lion of Mars by Jennifer L. Holm is a science fiction novel about an 11-year old named Bell who lives in an American settlement on Mars, far from Earth. All of the adults get sick and the kids must find help. The book is rather short and the problem is solved easily compared to other books and it has a happier ending, so it is good for children. This book explains that politics is not in the interest of the people of the country in which these politics happen. This book also tries to explain to young children that aggressive foreign policy can be destructive for everyone including the people of the aggressive government. However, this book also does it in a way so as to make younger readers of the book understand the message without making the book too dark or traumatizing for young readers. However, the book also contains the theme of friendship and communicating with people who may have ideas that are different from your ideas and your thoughts, which is a valuable lesson for people of all ages. Another theme in the story is that you should always remember your roots and where you came from, but you shouldn’t let it decide who you want to be friends with and who you trust.

-Review by Teen Advisory Board Member, 12/21/21

Book Review: Vespertine

Vespertine by Margaret Rogerson

Reserve the Print Book | eBook | eAudio

This novel features a girl, Artemisia, who is training at a covenant to become a Gray Sister, a nun who cleanses the body of the dead so that their souls can continue without becoming spirits that want revenge. When her covenant is attacked by possessed soldiers, Artemisia awakens and takes on a powerful spirit, the revenant, to defend her covenant. However, it is soon revealed that there is much more at stake and Artemisia might be the only one who is able to save everyone.

First, the characters. The revenant was by far my favorite character with its prickly attitude. The constant banter between Artemisia and the revenant was also extremely entertaining and engaging. As for Artemisia, my feelings vary a little more. Artemisia is portrayed as a socially anxious girl due to her tragic past. When she was young, Artemisia was possessed by an Ashgrim, a spirit that died from fire. Her family isolated her and in the end, Artemisia continuously burned herself to keep the Ashgrim away before getting help from the covenant and has physical scars to show her difficult past. Despite her past, Artemisia is able to rise up to the challenges presented. She was quite plain in my opinion though her character definitely grew on me as the story progressed. I also liked how there was no apparent love interest. I was able to solely invest myself in the characters without having to think about relationships and whether or not they were going to last.

The plot, in my opinion, was very slow at the beginning and I was unable to be fully engaged. However, the pace picked up near the middle as the plot started revealing the direction it was going in. I flew through the end as I got more invested in the story as well as the addition of more action packed scenes with higher stakes. A negative I have is that the plot twist was predictable. It wasn’t too hard to figure out who was behind the Old Magic and attacks and it was slightly frustrating at times when Artemisia wasn’t able to figure out until near the end even if there were obvious clues.

The worldbuilding was one of the stronger aspects of the novel after it got less confusing. The system present has a hierarchy with clerics, saints, nuns, the Divine, and more. At first, the new terminology prevented me from fully understanding the story and hindered my ability to be invested but because it was repeated many times throughout the novel, I was able to understand the system better by the end.

Overall, this book was a fun read, especially with the relationship between Artemisia and the revenant. I recommend this book to fantasy lovers who want something a little different from the typical fantasy world.

-Review by Teen Advisory Board Member, 12/19/21

Resources for Middle School Students

Books (and eBooks)

Discover new books in the YA Room! We have Tween, Teen, Graphic Novels, Manga, and Nonfiction all in one easy-to-access space.

Browse the Catalog

Want books to go? Download the SORA app on your device and you can download eAudio and eBooks with your school email.

SORA App

If you have a library card handy, take advantage of our Hoopla App for instant access eContent.

Hoopla Digital

Databases

With a library card, you can use some of our databases full of teacher-approved resources.

Mango Languages

Britannica School Edition

Gale in Context: Middle School

Salem Literature

Historical Newspapers

Community Service

Beginning in 6th Grade, you can join Teen Advisory Board, a student-based organization that helps the library create new programs and services for teens.

TAB Application

You can also earn volunteer hours by reading books and writing reviews for…

Spoiler Alert

Winter Reading Challenge

Join the Challenge

 

November Events for Teens

Want to learn about events for grades 6-12 before they’ve already happened? Sign up for our bi-monthly newsletter from Secret Readers’ Society for updates on author talks, volunteering, new books, and more.

View the Slides

 

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

1 |

3:30 Manga Monday

2 |

3-4 NaNoWriMo

3 |

12-2:30 Tween Game Space

4 |

3:00 YA Book Club

5 |

Playtest Zones

(Saturday: 12-2 Trading Card Day)

8 |

Playtest Zones

9 | 

3-4 NaNoWriMo

Playtest Zones

10 |

Playtest Zones

11 |
CLOSED

12 |

5:30 TAB

7:00 Learn to Play

(Saturday: 2-6 D&D Feywild)

15 |

16 |

3-4 NaNoWriMo

3:30 Craft Crate

7:00 Decoding the News

17 |

3:00 Belmont Book Discussion

18 |

3:00 YA Book Club

7:00 D&D Epilogues

19 |

3:30 BTS Book Club

22 |

23 |

3-4 NaNoWriMo

24 |

Early Close: 6:00

25 |

CLOSED

26 |

CLOSED

29 | 

7:30 YA Author Talk

30 |

3-4 NaNoWriMo

     

The Great Library Puzzle Haunt

The Puzzle Haunt will operate in the main library from October 23-October 29. It is open to the public. On October 29, we will release the answers to all of the puzzles.

How to Play a Puzzle Haunt

Step 1:

Name your team! You can play by yourself or with friends. Submit your team name and answer the puzzles here:

shorturl.at/ahkzR

Step 2:

Find the ghosts. Use the crossword and box puzzle in the YA Room by our primary display to locate all six primary ghosts. There will be a station by each one with paper puzzles for you to solve.

(a seventh one is floating around somewhere, but it isn’t in the crossword)

Step 3:

Solve the puzzles! Each one will come with all the information you need to solve them. Having a difficult time with one? Skip ahead and solve the others. 

Good Luck Puzzling!

Have questions? Email Hannah Lee, YA Services Librarian, at [email protected]. We can’t give you the answers, but we might be able to give you a hint.

 

 

BTS Book Club

Join Our Reading Challenge on Goodreads.

What has Kim Namjoon been reading lately? Follow along with some of the top picks of the famous K-Pop star RM from BTS. 

For October, we read and discuss The Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka. We meet on Friday, October 22, at 3:30PM on Zoom. Register for link.

A novel about a man who finds himself transformed into a huge insect, and the effects of this change upon his life. This is a fantastic horror story about a hapless man who is turned into an insect. When Gregor Samsa woke up one morning from unsettling dreams, he found himself changed in his bed into a monstrous vermin. With this startling, bizarre, yet surprisingly funny first sentence, Kafka begins his masterpiece, The Metamorphosis. It is the story of a young man who, transformed overnight into a giant beetlelike insect, becomes an object of disgrace to his family, an outsider in his own home, a quintessentially alienated man. A harrowing — though absurdly comic — meditation on human feelings of inadequacy, guilt, and isolation, The Metamorphosis has taken its place as one of the most widely read and influential works of twentieth-century fiction.

Read the Hardcover | eAudio | eBook

For November, we will be exploring When Breath Becomes Air by Paul Kalanithi. We meet on Friday, November 17, at 3:30PM on Zoom. Register for link.

…a profoundly moving, exquisitely observed memoir by a young neurosurgeon faced with a terminal cancer diagnosis who attempts to answer the question What makes a life worth living? At the age of thirty-six, on the verge of completing a decade’s worth of training as a neurosurgeon, Paul Kalanithi was diagnosed with stage IV lung cancer. One day he was a doctor treating the dying, and the next he was a patient struggling to live. And just like that, the future he and his wife had imagined evaporated. When Breath Becomes Air chronicles Kalanithi’s transformation from a nai⁺⁸ve medical student “possessed,” as he wrote, “by the question of what, given that all organisms die, makes a virtuous and meaningful life” into a neurosurgeon at Stanford working in the brain, the most critical place for human identity, and finally into a patient and new father confronting his own mortality. What makes life worth living in the face of death? What do you do when the future, no longer a ladder toward your goals in life, flattens out into a perpetual present? What does it mean to have a child, to nurture a new life as another fades away? These are some of the questions Kalanithi wrestles with in this profoundly moving, exquisitely observed memoir. 

Read the Hardcover | eAudio |eBook

For December, we read and discuss Almond: A Novel by Won-pyung Sohn. We will meet on Friday, December 17, at 3:30PM on Zoom. Register for Link.

Yunjae was born with a brain condition called Alexithymia that makes it hard for him to feel emotions like fear or anger. He lives with his mother and grandmother above their used bookstore, decorated with colorful post-it notes that remind him when to smile, when to say “thank you,” and when to laugh. When a shocking act of random violence shatters his world, it leaves him alone and on his own. Yunjae retreats into silent isolation, until troubled teenager Gon arrives at his school and begins to bully Yunjae. After learning they have more in common than they realized, the two strike up a surprising friendship.

Read the Hardcover | eAudio | eBook

 

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