Saturday, December 26, 2015

Flawless

Flawless 
by Lara Chapman 
Language: English 
New York : Bloomsbury, 2011.
258 pages ; 22 cm.
ISBN: 9781599905969 1599905965 
Summary: In this modern take on the Cyrano story, brilliant and witty high school student Sarah Burke, who is cursed with an enormous nose, helps her beautiful best friend try to win the heart of a handsome and smart new student, even though Sarah wants him for herself. 
Available: http://www.amazon.com/Flawless-Lara-Chapman/dp/1599905965

Saturday, November 28, 2015

Chromo kids

Chromo kids 
by Lynsey Lore 
Language: English 
Summary: This is a brief description of some of the thoughts that go through the mind of someone who found out that they weren't traditionally conceived, but rather are a product of a fertility clinic and a sperm donation. 
Available: http://www.amazon.com/Chromo-Kids-Lynsey-Lore-ebook/dp/B00UJGSZIO

Sunday, November 15, 2015

Archie Nolan: family detective

Archie Nolan: family detective 
by Beverley Ward 
Language: English 
DC Network, 2015. 
p. ; cm. 
ISBN: 
Summary: Science geek Archie Nolan tries to keep a low profile, but when his class are told to research their family tree, he is terrified twin sister and school swot Jemima is going to reveal that they are donor conceived. Archie’s in turmoil. The only person who understands is his donor conceived friend Cameron, but he seems to have unearthed a village vampire…..and Archie's far more interested in investigating that! 
Available: http://www.dcnetwork.org/products/product/archie-nolan-family-detective-story-8-12yr-olds

Saturday, October 31, 2015

Silence is Goldfish

Silence is Goldfish 
by Annabel Pitcher 
Language: English 
London : Indigo , 2015. 
384 p. ; 216 x 135mm 
ISBN: 9781510100435 1510100431 
Summary: What happens to a fifteen-year-old girl when she finds out for the first time that her own father feels revulsion toward her, finds her peculiar, and doesn't even consider her to be his daughter? That's what Tess discovers one night when, during an emergency, she had to go to the nearest computer in the house to find out how to put out a kitchen fire. Glancing at what her father had on the screen, she discovers a blog post he wrote for the Donor Conception Network, where he admits to not loving the "ugly red thing gnawing" at his wife's breast on his daughter's first day of life. This is how in fact Tess discovers that she was actually conceived via sperm donor, and that the only father she has ever known is not really her father. This truth completely unmoors her. At first Tess runs away from home, but decides against it after four hours on her own in the middle of the night, only to wonder how she is to live with this man and this new knowledge. She returns home but within 24 hours, Tess becomes mute as a protest against her parents for a lifetime of lies. The book is told in the first person and though mute, Tess has a lot to say, but all of the dialogue stays in her head as she communicates only with a plastic goldfish she bought when she ran away and that she now keeps in her pocket. Meanwhile, finding out the truth about her conception is just one of her problems. Tess is brutally bullied both online and at school for being fat and for her large frame, which she now knows she mustn't have gotten from her father, and she loses her best friend when she can no longer confide in her about what she found out on her father's computer that night. Tess also becomes fixated on the substitute math teacher who has the same blonde hair, brown eyes, and fat fingers that she has. Convinced they share the same DNA, she becomes obsessed with learning more about him, and what she does is so shocking that it finally leads her out of her mutism. This book explores what happens when parents keep the truth from their children in cases where they had to use donor sperm to conceive. It is not so much this fact that causes Tess's problems as much as it is the fact that the truth has been kept from her her entire life. Except for scenes of cruel bullying, there is no violence, sex, or foul language in this book. Recommended for ages 12 and up.
Available: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Silence-Goldfish-Annabel-Pitcher/dp/1780620004

Saturday, October 17, 2015

I heart robot

I heart robot 
by Suzanne Van Rooyen 
Language: English 
Month9Books, LLC, [2014] ©2014. 
ISBN: 9781942664109 ; 1942664109 
Summary: Sixteen-year-old Tyri wants to be a musician and wants to be with someone who won't belittle her musical aspirations. Q-I-99 aka 'Quinn' lives in a scrap metal sanctuary with other rogue droids. While some use violence to make their voices heard, demanding equal rights for AI enhanced robots, Quinn just wants a moment on stage with his violin to show the humans that androids like him have more to offer than their processing power. Tyri and Quinn's worlds collide when they're accepted by the Baldur Junior Philharmonic Orchestra. As the rift between robots and humans deepens, Tyri and Quinn's love of music brings them closer together, making Tyri question where her loyalties lie and Quinn question his place in the world. With the city on the brink of civil war, Tyri and Quinn make a shocking discovery that turns their world inside out. Will their passion for music be enough to hold them together while everything else crumbles down around them, or will the truth of who they are tear them apart? 
Available: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0692337334?psc=1&redirect=true&ref_=ox_sc_act_title_2&smid=ATVPDKIKX0DER

Sunday, September 20, 2015

Spirit level

Spirit level
by Sarah N. Harvey
Language: English
Victoria, British Columbia : Orca Book Publishers, 2016.
233 pages ; 21 cm.
ISBN: 9781459808164 ; 1459808169
Summary: An only child, Harriet (also known as Harry), has also never had a dad. Born to a “single mother by choice,” she was donor-conceived because her mother always wanted a child but did not want a relationship. This Harriet has always known. Never having been even slightly curious to find out if she had any donor siblings or even to try to contact her donor father, Harriet, now in high school, comes across a magazine article one day about a guy who sired 500 kids through sperm donation. It suddenly occurs to Harriet that she could be one of his kids. Having known about the Donor Sibling Registry, a service that matches donors, offspring, and siblings, since “before she could read” (because her mother purchased a lifetime membership when Harriet was young), Harriet decides to finally take a look to see if she has any half-siblings. She registers her information on the DSR and when she begins to receive emails from some of her half-siblings, she is excited to meet them, especially fifteen-year-old Lucy who also lives in Seattle and who, being the child of two moms, has also always known she was donor-conceived. One other half-sibling ends up in the picture though and that is eighteen-year-old Meredith who has come all the way to Seattle from Missoula, Montana in search of her sperm donor father. She has a hunch he is still in the city in which he donated sperm and she is hell-bent on finding him and she wants Lucy and Harriet to experience the quest with her. But Lucy and Harriet are not ready to find (or meet) their sperm donor father, instead content with having just met each other. Tensions begin to build between Harriet and Meredith, especially when Meredith’s best friend Alex, who has left Montana to accompany Meredith on her journey, starts to like Harriet and the two develop a relationship outside of the one each has with Meredith. When Meredith, despite being Harriet’s “sister” catches wind of Harriet's budding relationship with her best friend Alex, she takes out her jealousy on Harriet physically, landing Harriet severely hurt. It turns out that Meredith is deeply troubled, mostly because of the fact that, unlike Harriet and Lucy who have always known, she did not find out that she was donor-conceived until she was twelve years old. Feeling betrayed and lied to by her parents, she is profoundly hurt and acutely angry and now feels betrayed again by her half-sister Harriet. Is it better to have always known, like Harriet and Lucy have? Is it not painful to find out later in life that you are donor-conceived and that the father you always thought was your father was not your father at all? These are just some of the issues explored in this novel. There is no sex, violence, or foul language used in the book and it is recommended for ages twelve and up.
Subject headings:


  • Children of sperm donors -- Juvenile fiction 
  • Seattle (Wash.) -- Juvenile fiction 
  • Sisters -- Juvenile fiction
  Available: http://www.orcabook.com/Spirit-Level-P1091.aspx

A big dose of lucky

A big dose of lucky
by Marthe Jocelyn
Language: English
Victoria, British Columbia : Orca Book Publishers, 2015.
249 pages ; 21 cm. 
ISBN: 9781459806689 ; 1459806689
Summary: Since she was a day old, the only world Malou Gillis has ever known is the 16 years she spent living in the Benevolent Home. When a fire breaks out one night, completely burning the home to the ground, Malou is told it is time for her and all the other teenage girls living there to leave to make their way in the world. Before she goes though, Mrs. Hazelton gives Malou two clues to her past - a baby bracelet with the words "Baby Fox" inscribed on it and the town of Parry Sound,  about 5 hours from the orphanage where she grew up. Having nothing except the $138.00 that was given to her,  Malou sets off to see if she can find out who her parents are. A series of unusual coincidences lead her to a job at the hospital where she is pretty sure she was born, a piece of paper with seven names on it, which she finds in the hospital's record room, one of whom she suspects is her mother's, and an encounter with several young people who all share her brown skin color. But it isn't until Malou shows up in town that they will all learn how they are connected. It turns out they were all donor-conceived at that same hospital. Does that mean they are all siblings and that Malou was donor-conceived as well? And if so, how do two parents go through all that trouble to have a baby only for that baby to end up in an orphanage? Except for one graphic description of how exactly men make deposits in the case of sperm donation, there is no sex, violence, or foul language in this book. Recommended for ages 12 and up.
Available: http://www.amazon.com/A-Big-Dose-Lucky-Secrets/dp/1459806689

Friday, May 15, 2015

Lola and the boy next door

Lola and the boy next door 
by Stephanie Perkins 
Language: English 
New York, N.Y. : Dutton Books, 2011. 
338 p. ; 22 cm. 
ISBN: 9780525423287 ; 0525423281 
Summary: Budding costume designer Lola lives an extraordinary life in San Francisco with her two dads and beloved dog, dating a punk rocker, but when the Bell twins return to the house next door Lola recalls both the friendship-ending fight with Calliope, a figure skater, and the childhood crush she had on Cricket. 
Available: http://www.amazon.com/Lola-Next-Door-Stephanie-Perkins/dp/0142422010/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1431689641&sr=8-1&keywords=Lola+and+the+boy+next+door+%2F+Stephanie+Perkins

Sunday, May 10, 2015

How I fell in love & learned to shoot free throws

How I fell in love & learned to shoot free throws 
by Jon Ripslinger 
Language: English 
Brookfield, Conn. : Roaring Brook Press, ©2003. 
170 pages ; 22 cm. 
ISBN: 0761327479 ; 9780761327479 
Summary: Seventeen-year-old Danny Henderson, an indifferent basketball player, has his eye on Angel McPherson, star of the girls' team in their Iowa high school. 
Available: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0761318925/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o00_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1

Sorta like a rock star

Sorta like a rock star : a novel 
by Matthew Quick 
Language: English 
New York : Little, Brown, 2010. 
355 p. ; 22 cm. 
ISBN: 9780316043526 ; 0316043524 
Summary: Although seventeen-year-old Amber Appleton is homeless, living in a school bus with her unfit mother, she is a relentless optimist who visits the elderly at a nursing home, teaches English to Korean Catholic women with the use of rhythm and blues music, and befriends a solitary Vietnam veteran and his dog, but eventually she experiences one burden more than she can bear and slips into a deep depression. 
Available: http://www.amazon.com/Sorta-Like-Rock-Matthew-Quick/dp/0316043532/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1431256509&sr=8-1&keywords=sorta+like+a+rock+star

Saturday, April 18, 2015

The friendship riddle

The friendship riddle 
by Megan Frazer Blakemore 
Language: English 
New York : Bloomsbury, 2015. 
368 p. 
ISBN: 9781619636309 ; 1619636301 
Summary: With nods to classic fantasy expertly woven into this surprising and emotionally-charged journey through the ups and downs of middle school, Megan Frazer Blakemore proves that even the bravest heroes need true friends by their side. Ruth Mudd-O'Flaherty has been a lone wolf at her new middle school ever since her best friend, Charlotte, ditched her for "cooler" friends. Who needs friends when you have fantasy novels? Roaming the stacks of her town's library is enough for Ruth. Until she finds a note in an old book...and in that note is a riddle, one that Ruth can't solve alone. With a tantalizing set of clues before her, Ruth must admit she needs help, the kind that usually comes from friends. Lena and Coco, two kids in her class could be an option, but allowing them in will require courage, and Ruth must decide: Is embarking on this quest worth opening herself up again? 
Available: http://www.amazon.com/Friendship-Riddle-Megan-Frazer-Blakemore/dp/1619636301

Thursday, March 5, 2015

Whose Eyes are These?

Whose Eyes are These? 
by Marcia Byalick 
Language: English 
Black Rose Writing, 2015. 
118 p. 
ISBN: 161296463X ; 9781612964638 
Summary: Sloane, the best hip hop dancer in Lakeview Middle School, discovers her dad is not her biological father after he's diagnosed with leukemia, and doctors hopscotch over her to get the compatible, life-saving bone marrow he needs from her eight-year-old sister. The fallout from this news... anger at her parents for their secrecy, jealousy toward Emma, (their "real" child)... and most of all, intense curiosity about the mystery man responsible for her blue eyes... leads Sloane to make questionable alliances and take uncomfortable risks. Sloane's unhappiness infects how she handles the job she's most proud of... choreographer of the seventh grade talent show. As she figures out exactly how important what's inherited is in creating who she is, she moves from assigning blame and regains confidence in her role as a daughter. Along the way she gains a better understanding of forgiveness, loyalty and the unbreakable bonds of love. 
Available: http://www.amazon.com/Whose-Eyes-These-Marcia-Byalick/dp/161296463X/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1425559653&sr=8-1&keywords=marcia+byalick

Sunday, October 19, 2014

Dasœ Geheimnis des ehrenwerten Hauses eine etwas andere Detektivgeschichte

Dasœ Geheimnis des ehrenwerten Hauses eine etwas andere Detektivgeschichte 
by Stefan Remigius 
illus. by Doris Wallraff 
Language: German 
Mörfelden FamART-Verl. 2014.
160 S. Ill. 21 cm, 240 gr. 
ISBN: 9783981141085 3981141083 
Summary: Eine Detektivgeschichte für Kinder ab 8 Jahre - und eine Geschichte über Freundschaft, Hilfe in der Not und über Familien, die etwas anders und doch ganz gewöhnlich sind. 
Available: http://www.amazon.de/Das-Geheimnis-ehrenwerten-Hauses-Detektivgeschichte/dp/3981141083/ref=sr_1_17?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1413723282&sr=1-17&keywords=Samenspende

Virus 57

Virus 57
by Christophe Lambert; Sam Vansteen
Language: French
Paris : Syros, 2014.
376 p. ; 21 cm.
ISBN: 9782748514650 ; 2748514653
Summary: 57 adolescents, procréés par insémination artificielle et issus du même donneur, sont porteurs d'un virus virulent et contagieux qui se déclenche à l'adolescence et lorsqu'il fait plus de 45 degrés. 57 bombes bactériologiques lâchées dans la nature et aucun remède...
Available: http://www.amazon.fr/Virus-57-Christophe-Lambert/dp/2748514653

Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Fast genial

Fast genial 
by Benedict Wells 
Language: German 
Zürich : Diogenes, 2011. 
336 S. ; 184 mm x 116 mm. 
ISBN: 9783257067897 ; 3257067895 
Summary: Die unglaubliche, aber wahre Geschichte über einen mittellosen Jungen aus dem Trailerpark, der eines Tages erfährt, dass sein ihm unbekannter Vater ein Genie ist, und sich auf die Suche nach ihm macht – das Abenteuer seines Lebens. 
Available: http://www.amazon.de/Fast-genial-Roman-Benedict-Wells/dp/3257241984/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1413288946&sr=1-1&keywords=Fast+genial+Wells%2C+Benedict

Das unsichtbare Herz

Das unsichtbare Herz 
by Friedrich Ani 
Language: German 
München : C. Hanser, 2005. 
219 p. ; 22 cm. 
ISBN: 9783446206045 3446206043 
Summary: Sie lernen sich in einem Chatroom kennen und wollen es erst nicht glauben: Alle drei wurden künstlich gezeugt. Merit, 17, weil ihre Mutter in einer lesbischen Beziehung lebt. Frederick, 15, weil sein Vater unfruchtbar ist. Dennis, 15, weil seine gehörlose Mutter ein gehörloses Kind haben wollte. Sie könnten unterschiedlicher nicht sein, doch in einem sind sie sich einig: Sie möchten wissen, wer ihre leiblichen Väter sind. 
Available: http://www.amazon.de/Das-unsichtbare-Herz-Friedrich-Ani/dp/3423623861/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1413287818&sr=1-1&keywords=Das+unsichtbare+Herz

Saturday, July 26, 2014

Panic

Panic 
by Lauren Oliver 
Language: English 
New York, NY : Harper, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers, [2014]. 
408 pages ; 22 cm. 
ISBN: 9780062014559 ; 0062014552 
Summary: In the poor town of Carp, New York, a group of teens enters a high-stakes game that involves a series of secretive, possibly deadly challenges throughout the summer, with the winner receiving more than $50,000--enough money to start a new life. 
Available: http://www.amazon.com/Panic-Lauren-Oliver/dp/0062014552/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1406372918&sr=1-1&keywords=panic+lauren+oliver

Boy Red

Boy Red 
by S. D. Everington 
Language: English 
Musa Publishing, 2013.
ISBN: 9781619375154 
Summary: Boy Red is a story about identity, about where you come from and where you belong. The day after his sixteenth birthday, Red discovers that the man he calls ‘Dad’ is not his biological father. Will Red be able to track down the anonymous sperm donor who gave him life? What will he learn about himself along the way? And just what else are his parents hiding? 
Available: http://musapublishing.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=5&products_id=672

The making of us : a novel

The making of us : a novel 
by Lisa Jewell 
Language: English 
New York : Atria Books, 2012. 
403 p. ; 22 cm. 
ISBN: 9781451609110 ; 1451609116 
Summary: As a man named Daniel slowly fades away in a London hospice, he tells his friend Maggie that he was an anonymous sperm donor who fathered four children--a revelation that unexpectedly brings together a group of strangers, in this powerful celebration of family, friendship, life, and love. 
Available: http://www.amazon.com/The-Making-Us-A-Novel/dp/1451609116/ref=sr_1_5?ie=UTF8&qid=1406370111&sr=8-5&keywords=making+of+us

Teen spirit

Teen spirit 
by Francesca Lia Block 
Language: English 
New York : HarperTeen, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers, [2014] 
234 pages ; 22 cm. 
ISBN: 9780062008091 ; 0062008099 
Summary: Julie wanted nothing more than to feel connected to her deceased grandmother, but when she actually makes contact with the other side it's not her grandmother that responds, but a spirit that has its own sinister agenda. 
Available: http://www.amazon.com/Teen-Spirit-Francesca-Lia-Block/dp/0062008099/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1406369706&sr=8-1&keywords=teen+spirit+block

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Progeny

Progeny 
by Anita Bihovsky 
Language: English 
CreateSpace, 2014 
244 pp. 
ISBN: 1495474801; 9781495474804 
Summary: Sitting beside her mother's deathbed, twenty-year-old Selene Mannon learns that the woman she's about to lose isn't her biological parent. Grieving and confused, Selene sets out to discover the identity of her real mother. Little does she know, the question isn't as simple as it seems. Curiously missing medical files kick off a mystery layered in deceit. Selene soon crosses paths with pediatrician Deandra Robbins, who is seeking the same files -- which may hold the key to diagnosing three of her young patients' puzzling symptoms. Aided by private investigator Max Field, they work together to unearth a past that others are determined to keep buried at all costs. But just when Selene believes she's finally gotten to the bottom of things, the biggest shock still awaits. While all this is happening, a mysterious born-again nurse, Merle Addison, is blackmailing a doctor she once worked for to ultimately fund a deadly plot that will intersect with Selene. Can Selene forgive the mother who raised and deceived her? Will she ever find her real mother? How far will people go to find -- or hide -- the truth? Join Selene and her friends as they struggle against the odds in search of answers that may be harder to cope with than a lifetime of lies. 
Available: http://www.amazon.com/Progeny-Anita-Bihovsky/dp/1495474801/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1398261652&sr=8-1&keywords=Anita+Bihovsky

Sunday, March 9, 2014

Lizzie!

Lizzie!
by Maxine Kumin
Language: English
New York : Seven Stories Press, [2014]
ISBN: 9781609805180; 1609805186
Summary: A bright, curious girl in a wheelchair who enjoys visiting a petting zoo in her Florida town uncovers a mystery surrounding a shack full of screeching monkeys.
Available: http://www.amazon.com/Lizzie-Maxine-Kumin/dp/1609805186/ref=lh_ni_t?ie=UTF8&psc=1&smid=ATVPDKIKX0DER

Thursday, January 16, 2014

Ici Julie Joyal : une sorte de petit roman en quarante et un tableaux

Ici Julie Joyal : une sorte de petit roman en quarante et un tableaux
by Jean-Pierre April
Language: French
Montréal : XYZ éditeur, 2009.
162 p. ; 21 cm. 
ISBN: 9782892615463; 2892615461
Summary: Julie Joyal, née par insémination artificielle, est à la recherche de son père biologique.

Thursday, March 28, 2013

Missing me

Missing me
by Sophie McKenzie
Language: English
London : Simon and Schuster, 2012.
290 p. ; 22 cm.
ISBN: 9780857077271; 0857077279
Summary: Six years have passed since the end of 'Sister, Missing'. Madison is now a teenager and learns that their biological father was an anonymous sperm donor and sets out to track him down. Her search bears fruit sooner than she expects, but is the father she discovers all he seems? As Madison gets drawn into a mysterious investigation involving missing girls and secret hideaways, she finds herself in more and more danger.
http://www.sophiemckenziebooks.com/

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Kid kind

Kid kind
by Caja Cazemier
Language: Dutch
Houten : Van Holkema & Warendorf, 2001.
144 p. ; 22 cm.
ISBN: 9026993986; 9789026993985
Summary: Als ze bijna 16 is, komt Emma erachter dat haar vader niet haar biologische vader is; ze gaat op zoek naar haar identiteit. Vanaf ca. 12 jaar.
Google translation: When she was almost 16, is Emma finds out that her father is not her biological father, she goes in search of her identity. From about 12 years.
http://www.cajacazemier.nl/

Friday, June 29, 2012

Dads, geeks and blue haired freaks

Dads, geeks and blue haired freaks
by Ellie Phillips
Language: English 
London : Electric Monkey, 2012.
295 p. ; 20 cm.
ISBN: 9781405258197; 1405258195  
Summary: Sadie Nathanson spends her life trying to survive the excruciating embarrassment of simply existing. It's hard enough being a bit of a shrinking violet within a loud and outspoken extended family, but the unexpected card from 'Dad' on her 15th birthday is the last straw. As 'Dad' was an Internet sperm-donor, it doesn't take a genius to work out that this is a bad joke, probably set up by her ex-best-friend Shonna. But it starts Sadie wondering - just who was her father? Is he the cause of her worry crinkle and wonky bum? What would happen if she tracked him down? So she decides to do just that. With help from her nerd cousin Billy, his friend Nodding Tony and a regular dose of 'Haironomics' (Sadie's own hairstyle-related philosophy system), they uncover a lot more than they bargain for.
http://www.elliephillips.co.uk/

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

The Library of Congress Finally Acknowledges Donor Offspring: (But this is only a beginning)

In 2009, I published an article for the American Fertility Association entitled, "Librarians at a Loss to Help Donor Offspring," which I just last month reworked for the AASL blog. In it, I talked about the difficulty identifying books for parents and donor offspring children due to a lack of recognition by the Library of Congress in the form of an official subject heading. In 2010, Patricia Mendell and I published an article in Children & Libraries about self-published children's picture books about assisted reproductive technology. It included an extensive annotated bibliography of about 38 titles which was the entire number of books that we were able to identify at that time. (The number of children's books on that topic has since doubled).

The list was significant because, other than the list first published by the American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM) and compiled by Elaine Gordon, PhD and Ellen Speyer, MFT and the ASRM Education Committee, there was no other comprehensive list of children's books on this subject. As a librarian, such a list should have been a breeze to compile. I figured I would start with ASRM's list and then search for those books in the Library of Congress, see what subject headings were assigned to catalog them, and then create a new list. Well, it turned out, that would be impossible as the Library of Congress had no subject headings for "Donor offspring," "Children of gamete donors, or "Children of surrogate mothers," let alone subject headings for children of egg donors, sperm donors, or embryo adoption. Having already identified a few titles about these subjects that were included in the Library of Congress, but not cataloged as such, I wrote to them and suggested they create a new subject heading, "Donor-conceived," defined as individuals who have been created via sperm, eggs, or embryos donated by another person (a gamete donor). I also figured that since I myself was a librarian, my suggestion would have some influence. This is what I wrote:
There are many subject headings for "Children of --", i.e. Children of celebrities, Children of rabbis, Children of single parents, etc., but there are no subject headings for "Children of sperm donors" or "Children of surrogate mothers" or any of the assisted reproductive technologies. As a librarian, I have identified over 40 children's and YA books that have major characters who are the children of sperm donors, egg donors, etc., which is crucial to the plot and purpose of the book. Yet there is no subject heading under which to search for these books. My lists are here: http://booksfordonoroffspring.blogspot.com and here: http://yabooksfordonoroffspring.blogspot.com if you would like to see the books I've identified. There are more than enough to constitute the creation of a new LC subject heading. I would love to hear back from you on this as well. I'm a huge fan of the LC and I am at your site every day for my work.
However, this is the response I received:
We have not had the need to establish a heading for the children of sperm donors, as we have not cataloged any items that specifically focus of that topic. The existing headings have been adequate for the items that we've cataloged. We establish new headings only as they are needed for cataloging new works being added to our collection.
Not deterred, I wrote back to them:
How about "Artificial insemination, Human -- Offspring" or "Surrogate mothers -- Offspring?" These subject headings focus on the parents who produce these children, but there are no subjects yet for the donor-conceived. For example, the book: Sperm Donor Offspring: Identity and Other Experiences by Lynne W. Spencer, has as its subject headings: "Sperm banks -- United States" and "Artificial insemination, Human" but other than the title, the average patron might not know that this is a book about donor offspring if they were searching for a book that addressed the specific concerns of donor offspring.
And this is what they wrote back:
Our practice has been to use headings such as "Artificial insemination, Human" and "Surrogate motherhood" to catalog works on this topic.
That was in April 2009. Fast forward to June 2012 when I received a letter from noted radical librarian Sanford Berman, who is to the Library of Congress what Socrates was to ancient Athens and who is the subject of his own biography, Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sandy Berman But Were Afraid to Ask. He read our article in Children & Libraries in August 2010 and himself wrote to the Library of Congress on our behalf suggesting they add the subject heading "Donor offspring" based on the extensive list of children's books put forth in our article. His letter informed me that the Library of Congress had finally decided to create a new subject heading for "Children of sperm donors." I jumped out of my chair when I read this! While some would like to believe that this announcement by the Library of Congress marks the beginning of an official public acknowledgement recognizing the existence of families created with the help of donors, the reality is that once again the rights of the donor-conceived are still being only partially represented and totally misunderstood. It is clear that the Library of Congress, in creating this new subject heading for "Children of sperm donors," has shown that they lack a genuine understanding of the donor offspring created with gamete donation, but also the implications both medically and psychologically surrounding the use of assisted reproductive technology (ART), as they also use the subject heading "Test tube babies" for children conceived via in vitro fertilization (IVF) even though they are created in petri dishes and not test tubes.

While their new subject heading follows their own convention for "Children of --," as in "Children of gay parents," and "Children of single parents," (two official LC subject headings), it is less than adequate and quite limiting for librarians trying to help these families find resources, as only one group of donor offspring is represented - children of sperm donors. If the subject heading must be listed under children, then it should be entitled "Children of gamete donors." Other variants then could be "Donor-conceived" or "Donor offspring."

While some will feel positively now that the Library of Congress has at last begun to acknowledge children created through donation with the assistance of another person, my colleague and co-author Patricia Mendell is less optimistic. "As a mental health practitioner who has been working in the field of reproductive medicine for over 25 years, the decision by the Library of Congress to create a subject heading for only one group of donor offspring is not only disappointing and frustrating, but hurtful and offensive to the thousands of donor-conceived individuals and their families who have been created with the help of assisted reproductive technologies."

When I decided to write to the Library of Congress in 2009, it was clear that they needed to create an all encompassing subject heading for the donor-conceived. Also, using the subject heading "Donor-conceived" would be the best and most accurate subject heading since it would recognize all individuals created with the help of a donor. The subject heading "Children of sperm donors" used for "Sperm donors' children," seems to imply an ownership or affiliation that may or may not feel accurate to the donor-conceived.


 
While the next step might be to get the Library of Congress to create subject headings for "Children of egg donors," "Children of surrogate mothers," and "Children of embryo donation," we would suggest instead that they look at the subject heading "Donor-conceived." Although it was possible to find some of this material using the existing Library of Congress subject headings like "Infertility," and "Artificial insemination -- Human," there was nothing that identified the experience of being a donor offspring. Books such as Janice Grimes' book series, Before you were born: our wish for a baby were cataloged as "Artificial insemination -- Human." And the Iréné Celcer series, Hope and Will have a baby was cataloged with "Infertility," and "Test tube babies" as subject headings. These subject headings were wholly inaccurate and inadequate. So how to find these books will remain a big challenge if one is looking for books about those conceived via surrogate mother, egg, and embryo donation.

I plan to continue to write to the Library of Congress and share with them the books that I have discovered without the help of a Library of Congress subject heading, urging them to create further change in how they catalog their books for this population of children. We know that of the many children's books on this subject, over 95 percent have been self-published, but many have not been sent to the copyright office of the Library of Congress. We would ask that these authors register their books and in so doing put pressure on the Library of Congress that they must, and need to, have a subject heading for "Donor-conceived."

 This post was co-authored with Patricia Mendell

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Catch & Release

Catch & release
by Blythe Woolston
Language: English
Minneapolis : Carolrhoda Lab, ©2012.
210 p. ; 20 cm.
ISBN: 9780761377559; 0761377557
Summary: Eighteen-year-old Polly and impulsive, seventeen-year-old Odd survive an deadly outbreak of flesh-eating bacteria, but resulting wounds have destroyed their plans for the future and with little but their unlikely friendship and a shared affection for trout fishing, they set out on a road trip through the West. 
http://www.blythewoolston.net/

My Mixed-Up Berry Blue Summer

My mixed-up berry blue summer
by Jennifer Gennari
Language: English 
Boston : Houghton Mifflin Books for Children, 2012.
119 p. : ill., map ; 20 cm.
ISBN: 9780547577395; 0547577397
Summary: Twelve-year-old June Farrell spends the summer at her Vermont home getting used to the woman her mother is planning to marry and practicing her pie-baking skills, as she hopes to win the blue ribbon at the fair.
http://www.jengennari.com/

Burnout

Burnout
by Adrienne Maria Vrettos
Language: English 
New York : Margaret K. McElderry Books, ©2011.
193 p. ; 22 cm.
ISBN: 9781416994695; 1416994696
Summary: Months after coming out of alcohol and drug rehab, high school student Nan wakes up on the subway the day after Halloween wearing a torn Halloween costume, her long hair cut, and "HELP ME" scrawled across her chest, feeling sick and having no idea how she got there.
http://adriennemariavrettos.com/

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Librarians at a Loss to Help Donor Offspring

I do research. It might be why I became a librarian. I love to look things up, and then I enjoy the thrill of finding what I am looking for. I also enjoy looking things up for other people. But one of my favorite things to do is to look up subjects that are hard to find. But first you have to find subjects that are hard to find, and then try to find them. Well, I stumbled upon one. It’s books for and about donor offspring. What are donor offspring? They are children conceived via sperm or egg donation.

In 2003, I read a book review in Booklist of the book, Donuthead, by Sue Stauffacher. In the review, it was mentioned that the main character’s mother had had her son via artificial insemination. Serendipitously, I mentioned this to a friend who had an interest in this topic and she said, can you find me other books like that? Excited to perform a search, I said, “sure.” (I actually consider searching a hobby). So of course the first thing I did was go to the Library of Congress. I was going to take a look at their subject headings and just follow them and it would lead me to similar books. Well not so fast. It didn’t happen that way at all. The subjects listed for Donuthead were:

Friendship
Courage
Fear
Self-actualization (Psychology)
Single-parent families
Mothers and sons 

Where were the subject headings telling me that the main character was donor-conceived? There were none. Okay. Dead end. I wasn’t expecting that. Where do I go next? I decided to broaden my search by doing a keyword search. Of course this was an option from the beginning, I just wasn’t happy about it. I thought this would be easy. I searched the term “donor offspring” as that is what adults conceived via gamete donor call themselves. A search for this term turned up one book, Experiences of donor conception : parents, offspring, and donors through the years by Caroline Lorbach. I looked at the subject headings and decided to use those to again narrow my search. I found as subject headings:

Human reproductive technology
Infertility – Treatment
Reproductive health

This was not helpful. I was looking for juvenile fiction similar to Donuthead in which the main character was a “donor offspring.” I wanted to impress my friend with my searching skills. Maybe there were no other books? Could be. Long story short, there were other books. The trick was to use so many different keywords to actually find them, but I did find some. But why no uniform subject headings for books that were essentially all about the same subject? I wrote to the Library of Congress about this myself. I gave them the list of all the books I had found that were written for children, and that were in their catalog, who were donor offspring and this is the response I got:
We have not had the need to establish a heading for the children of sperm donors, as we have not cataloged any items that specifically focus on that topic. The existing headings have been adequate for the items that we’ve cataloged. We establish new headings only as they are needed for cataloging new works being added to our collection.
Why were they not responsive? And from a librarian no less? A little reading on the Library of Congress turns out that they have a history of not being responsive to adding or changing their subject headings. Have you heard of Sanford Berman, Library of Congress gadfly? Turns out he’s been battling the Library of Congress to change its subject headings for years so that real people, not just librarians, can find what they are looking for. He actually cited me in an article I wrote so I decided to write to him, and I was happy to hear that he not only read my article in Children & Libraries, but employed his gadfly expertise to lobby them to add a new subject heading. I suggested “Children of sperm donors,” or “Children of egg donors,” or “Children of gamete donors.” Surely these children need representation in the Library of Congress as the Library of Congress subjects headings are the “de facto standard for libraries,” as Hope A. Olson states in her book, The Power to Name. Isn’t it in naming something that we acknowledge that something, someone exists? The existence of these children were not acknowledged by the Library of Congress. At the time I wrote to them, I had discovered thirteen children’s books that were written either for donor offspring children, or about donor offspring children. Thirteen! (And I have since found so many more). And maybe thirteen doesn’t sound like a lot, but did you know that the Library of Congress has just one book on the children of epileptics, yet this category of people gets its own subject heading? Same for the children of clergy in England, the children of coal miners in France, and the children of mentally ill mothers, to name a few. Just one book each! Yet I had identified so many more for the subject I was proposing be added, but the Library of Congress does not budge on these matters apparently. So where does this leave us? It leaves us with people like me who love to look for the hard-to-look-for. I have ended up having to use up to thirty different keywords to find books that could be found with just one subject heading: “donor offspring,” or, to follow Library of Congress conventions, “Children of gamete donors.” But I have managed. To date I have found about seventy-six books written for donor offspring children, and I have found about fifteen books written for young adults, and boy has it been fun searching for the unsearchable. I will continue to publish about this as nobody else is, and maybe the Library of Congress will eventually listen.

Monday, April 30, 2012

Spenderkind (Donor Child)

Spenderkind
by Katrin Stehle
Language: German
Stuttgart : Gabriel Verlag/Thienemann, 2012.
237 pp.
ISBN: 9783522302845; 3522302842
Summary from Google Translate: Lina has great parents and her friend Julian. She is envied by many. But a day can change EVERYTHING. The day when Lina learns that her father is not her biological father. Is he really still your father? And as if that were not confusing enough, Lina feels suddenly attracted to Nick as well as to Julian. What matters more - the old or the new, the genes or the emotions? Lina has to find out necessarily where it belongs. A book about love, family ties and the search for identity.
Interview with the author: http://cms.thienemann.de/index.php?option=com_thienemann§ion=2&av=3&Itemid=11&view=interview&interid=74 http://www.katrinstehle.de/

Friday, July 15, 2011

On the Other Hand

On the other hand
by Jean Gill
Language: English
Talybont, Ceredigion : Y Lolfa, 2005.
136 p. ; 19 cm.
ISBN: 9780862437718; 0862437717
Summary: A mix of gripping story with fascinating facts on left-handedness. Everyone should think left-handed - or so 14 year old Jamie thought when she tied her hand behind her back for a day-long protest in school, against persecution of left-handers over the centuries. Her best friend Ryan publicised their cause with a new series of articles in the school magazine but just when their campaign is going well, Ryan's Mum drags him off from Wales to live in America. There he faces bullying at its most deadly and Jamie has to live from one email to the next to know whether her friend is coping.
http://www.jeangill.com/

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Who Am I? : experiences of donor conception

Who Am I? : experiences of donor conception
with foreword and afterword by Alexina McWhinnie.
Leamington Spa, Warwickshire : Idreos Education Trust, 2006
vi, 66 p. ; 21 cm.
ISBN: 9780955403101; 0955403103

Behind closed doors : moving beyond secrecy and shame

Behind closed doors : moving beyond secrecy and shame
edited by Mikki Morrissette ; in affiliation with the Donor Sibling Registry.
[S.l.] : Be-Mondo Publishing, 2006.
94 p. ; 23 cm.
ISBN: 0977204219; 9780977204212

Sperm donor offspring : identity and other experiences

Sperm donor offspring : identity and other experiences
Lynn W Spencer.
[Charleston, SC] : Booksurge, ©2007.
150 p. ; 23 cm.
ISBN: 1419672614; 9781419672613

Experiences of donor conception : parents, offspring, and donors throughout the years

Experiences of donor conception : parents, offspring, and donors throughout the years
Caroline Lorbach.
Philadelphia, PA : Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 2003.
ISBN: 184310122X; 9781843101222
Summary: "Drawing on the experiences of parents, offspring and donors and including her own and her family's story, this thought-provoking and informative book explores the process of donor conception. From finding out about an infertility problem, to considering whether - and how - to tell the children about their conception, and how those children feel as the adult offspring of a donor, she provides practical suggestions as well as in-depth consideration of the emotional and ethical issues involved."

"Lorbach takes the reader step-by-step through the process of deciding to use donor conception, choosing a donor, and discussing the decision with others and considers the perspective of the donor alongside those of parents and offspring. Tackling difficult subjects such as disclosure and offspring's access to information about the donor, this important book is a much-needed resource for health, counseling and social work professionals as well as for the couples and families themselves."--BOOK JACKET.

Friday, July 1, 2011

Nobel genes

Nobel genes
Rune Michaels
Language: English
New York : Atheneum Books for Young Readers, ©2010.
181 p. ; 22 cm.
ISBN: 9781416912590; 1416912592
Protagonist: boy, approximately 12
Summary: A boy whose manic-depressive mother has always told him that his father won a Nobel Prize, spends his time taking care of her and searching for clues to the identity of the Nobel Prize-winning sperm donor, eventually finding a truth he must learn to accept.
http://www.runemichaels.com/
Book Reviews: School Library Journal, Publishers Weekly, Booklist, Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books, Library Media Connection, Kirkus Review

Qui est ma mère?

Qui est ma mère?
Charlotte Kerner ; traduction de l'allemand par Geneviève Granier ; illustrations, Bruno Mallart.
Language: French
Paris : Hachette Jeunesse, ©1993.
315 p. : ill. ; 17 cm.
ISBN: 2010190041; 9782010190049
Summary: French translation of "Geboren 1999". An adopted boy searches for his birth parents only to find he is the product of artificial insemination. For junior high and high school students.
http://charlottekerner.de/

Saturday, May 2, 2009

Finding Cassidy

Finding Cassidy
by Laura Langston
Language: English
Toronto : HarperTrophyCanada, ©2006.
237 p. ; 22 cm. 
ISBN: 0002553163; 9780002553162
Summary: Sixteen-year-old Cassidy's world is turned upside-down when she learns that her father has been diagnosed with a fatal disease. She is further devastated to learn that he isn't her biological father.
Reviews: Canadian Children's Book Review
http://lauralangston.com/