Non-Fiction for Teens

The Shadow of the Fallen Towers by Don Brown

We’ve been working to make it easier for our teen readers to find the non-fiction books they enjoy! Now, at both the Aurora and the Dillsboro Public Libraries, there are special collections of non-fiction books written especially for a teen audience. You’ll find a wide variety of topics in these collections – history, crafts, biographies, poetry, social issues, science, and much more. Teen non-fiction even includes some books written in a graphic novel format!

We’ll be adding more books to these areas, so make sure you let us know about your reading preferences. Or, if you want to let us know anonymously, look for the paper surveys in the Teen areas.

Here are a few selections in some of the categories.

History

Bomb by Steve Sheinkin The Port Chicago 50 by Steve Sheinkin The Family Romanov by Candace Fleming

Crafts

The DIY Guide to Tie Dye Style by Welker and Spendlove Print Workshop by Christine Schmidt Rip It by Elissa Meyrich

Science

Phieas Gage by John Fleischman  The Race to Save the Lord God Bird by Phillip Hoose  The Secret of the Yellow Death by Suzanne Jurmain

Social Issues

Teen Guide to Student Activism by Stuart Kallen  Pride: Celebrating Diversity and Community by Robin Stevenson  Parkland Speaks edited by Sarah Lerner

Of course, these books are great for adults, too! I’ve found them to be very readable, and they often provide me with just the right amount of information on a subject.

Happy Reading!

Bleak Books with Olivia: The Maidens by Alex Michaelides

Have you ever read a book all the way through just to close it for the last time and say “wow, that was bleak”? Well, I’m here to make the case for those dark, dreary, haunting, and disturbing reads that keep you up at night long after you put them down. Welcome to Bleak Books with Olivia, your resident creepy book lover at the Aurora Public Library District.

Ah, finally, a return to my comfort zone: a dark academia murder mystery. After finishing Michaelides’s first novel, The Silent Patient, I was ravenous for more. Here in Bleak Books world, we love a good, shocking, knock-you-off-your-feet psychological thriller, and boy did Michaelides deliver. Then, after that book left a void in my life, I read the description for his next release: another psychological thrill ride with a crazy twist ending, but this time, with a dash of dark academia, the genre that’s taking the literary world by storm right now. So of course I put my name on the waiting list and read it as fast as possible as soon as I got it. Now, it’s time to reflect on the madness that is The Maidens. Let us begin, shall we?

Amazon.com: The Maidens: 9781250304452: Michaelides, Alex: Books

Mariana Andros is a group therapist living alone in London, grieving the sudden loss of her husband. Her niece, Zoe, calls her from school at Cambridge one evening in distress. There’s been a murder and Zoe’s best friend is the victim. Mariana comes to comfort Zoe, whom she raised as one of her own after her parents were tragically killed in a car accident, but she ends up staying to investigate the strange murder after she comes across an odd and seemingly sinister group of students led by the charismatic Classics professor, Edward Fosca. These girls call themselves the Maidens and have dedicated their lives to Fosca, whose strange and enigmatic presence combined with his talent for lecturing has drawn the interest of many students and faculty alike. Mariana finds herself drawn into the intertwined lives of these young women as one by one, they are picked off by the killer. Mariana knows in her heart it must be Fosca, but the truth is never all that it seems.

Set against the old, vine-covered academic setting of Cambridge University, this gripping story will shock you to your core. I was enthralled from start to finish, so invested in Fosca’s life that I felt I was a Maiden myself at times. Throughout the book, personal letters written by the killer themselves are sprinkled in, creating a three-dimensional image of a murderer before we ever meet them. The end is something you will NEVER see coming, I guarantee it. I would recommend reading The Silent Patient first, just because!

Thank you for joining me on this dissection of one of my favorite Bleak Books. I hope to see you again sometime soon! Please take a look in the Adult Fiction section at the Aurora and Dillsboro Public Libraries for my favorite Bleak Books. If you are looking to check out this specific title, please look on the New Books shelf at the Aurora Public Library. If you meet me in the library and have any Bleak Books suggestions, please let me know! I’m always looking for a new book to disrupt my life for a couple of weeks.