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Minnesota Libraries
Most-Borrowed Books

We asked Minnesota public libraries for their top-circulating titles. Here are the most-checked-out adult and teen books around the state.
ANOKA COUNTY

data for 2008-2010
Adult
1. Fearless Fourteen by Janet Evanovich
2. Twelve Sharp by Janet Evanovich
3. Plum Lovin' by Janet Evanovich

DAKOTA COUNTY
data for 2003-2010
Adult
1. The Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown
Juvenile
1. Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix by J.K. Rowling

DULUTH
data for 1999-2010
Adult
1. Duluth: An Illustrated History of the Zenith City by Glen N. Sandvik
2. Duluth: Sketches of the Past edited by Ryck Lydecker, Lawrence J. Sommer & Arthur Larsen
3. To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee

HENNEPIN COUNTY
data for 2010
Adult
1. The Help by Kathryn Stockett
2. The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest by Stieg Larsson
3. Sizzling Sixteen by Janet Evanovich
Juvenile
1. The Red Pyramid by Rick Riordan

GREAT RIVER REGIONAL LIBRARY
(BENTON, MORRISON, SHERBURNE, STEARNS, TODD and WRIGHT COUNTIES)

data for 2004-2010
Adult
1. True Believer by Nicholas Sparks
2. Nineteen Minutes by Jodi Picoult
3. Dear John by Nicholas Sparks
Juvenile
1. Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince by J.K. Rowling
2. Summer of the Sea Serpent by Mary Pope Osborne
3. Haunted Castle on Hallows Eve by Mary Pope Osborne

RAMSEY COUNTY
data for 1985-2010
Adult
1. Housekeeping by Marilynne Robinson
2. For My Daughters by Barbara Delinsky
3. The Last Resort by Dan Binchy
Juvenile
1. Knights of the Kitchen Table by Jon Scieszka
2. Arthur's Mystery Envelope by Marc Brown
3. The Not-So-Jolly Roger by Jon Scieszka

SAINT PAUL
data for 1999-2010
Adult
1. Saint Paul: The First 150 Years by Virginia Brainard Kunz
2. The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down by Anne Fadiman
3. The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls

SCOTT COUNTY
data for 2010
Adult
1. The Help by Kathryn Stockett
2. The Lost Symbol by Dan Brown
3. Eat, Pray, Love by Elizabeth Gilbert
Juvenile
1. The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
2. The Lightning Thief by Rick Riordan
3. Diary of a Wimpy Kid by Jeff Kinney

WASHINGTON COUNTY
data for 2004-2010
Adult
1. While My Pretty One Sleeps by Mary Higgins Clark
2. Morning Glory by LaVyrle Spencer
3. Bitter Sweet by LaVyrle Spencer

 

Book Club Club

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    The envelope please ... announcing short-shorts contest winners

    By Marge Barrett | Published Mon, Jan 11 2010 8:10 am

    Marge Barrett

    We had 26 wonderful entries from all over the state, on all sorts of topics, with word counts ranging from 126 to 796. We thank all of you who submitted to MinnPost's first ever short-shorts contest.

    And the winners are:

    1st Place: “Christmas Goes Up in Smoke” by Margaret Vaillancourt

    2nd Place: “The Learning Process” by Bill Nemmers

    3rd Place: “Adeline” by Jenny Stanley

    Honorable Mention: “July 3rd" by A.D. Stoner

    Congratulations to all!

    Our judges had to make difficult choices. We thank these folks for their wisdom and generosity: Nancy Cook, Bart Galle, Deborah Girdwood, Ginger Hamer, Donna Malum, Robert Rogers, Sharon Sparks, Bonnie West.

    And, finally, we thank all the readers of MinnPost who support the writings of fellow Minnesotans. 

    For the next three Mondays, we will post the winning pieces for your continuing enjoyment. Today it’s our pleasure to begin with our honorable mention.

    "July 3rd" by A.D. Stoner

    I remember that it was July 3rd. I remember that the air was stifling, the sun was shining, and I was playing basketball—either Horse or Pig—in the hay loft with Dad and my sister when Mom climbed the ladder. I don’t remember why Mom was mad—she often was—but I do remember that her face was tight, her hands clenched into knobby fists. She stared at us a moment before she yelled at Dad. I don’t remember what she said. He ignored her. She left.

    When Mom appeared on the ladder again, only her head and shoulders appeared above the loft floor. She threw two brown eggs at Dad. One missed him, but he caught the other unbroken in his hand. He hurled it back at her, and the egg broke on her thin neck: yellow yolk dripping over her collarbone. In the moment before she retreated down the stairs, I saw a depth of shock and hurt in her eyes I had never seen before.

    I was fifteen and my sister was twelve.

    I remember that later that afternoon, I sat on the couch with Dad and my sister watching "Beauty and the Beast." Mom, who rarely drank, was drinking in the basement. I remember being frozen to the couch, the heavy air smothering me. When Mom came back upstairs, she staggered towards us and leaned over the back of the soft brown couch to hug my sister and me. I don’t remember her touching Dad. She slurred into my ear, “I love you,” the pine needle scent of Tanqueray on her breath. Then she walked out the door. I remember the pit in my stomach. I remember Dad not moving.

    I don’t remember how I thawed my legs from the couch, but I knew she had to be followed. I was the only one. I trailed Mom into the barn and climbed the ladder. I remember the afternoon sun streaming between the cracks in the barn walls, the light hazy through bits of hay and wood dust. Mom held a long, thick brown rope in her hands.

    I remember the adrenaline surge. I remember running to her, screaming. I remember grabbing the rope as she tried wrapping it around her neck. I remember pulling, tugging. Then my sister was behind me and I screeched at her to run, go get Dad. Mom blubbered that we were better off without her. I remember those moments alone with her, yelling to the breaking point of my throat, begging her to stop, screaming, “I love you!” and “I need you!” I remember my whole body straining against hers, my hands clenching the rope. I could not let go. When Dad arrived and walked to Mom, he easily took the rope from her drunken hands. I remember his look of detached annoyance.

    My sister and I returned to the house. Stunned, we stood in the kitchen not knowing what to do. Dad had once said that he should just call her parents to come and get her. I called my grandparents. From our living room window, I watched Mom stumble across the yard. Dad walked several paces behind her. When I told Dad that Grandma and Grandpa were coming, he snapped at me, “Why would you do that?”

    Later, Grandpa entered our house and yelled, “What did you three do to her?” My sister and I went outside and sat in our Jeep Wagoneer and prayed the rosary as darkness closed in. I don’t remember when my grandparents left. They didn’t take Mom. I remember standing in our kitchen as Mom fumbled with the newspaper and tried to leave the house. Dad refused to move out of her way. She searched the paper saying, “I need help, I need help.” I don’t remember where I was standing when she put her hand through the kitchen window. I remember the prickly pine needle stench of her vomit. I don’t remember Mom going to bed. I don’t remember going to bed myself. I don’t remember if I slept.

    The sun looked different on July 4th that year. The rays seemed to curve and collapse on themselves instead of illuminating a path. The house was quiet. Mom was in bed. She stank, but I hugged and kissed her. Dad, my sister and I went to play tennis. I don’t remember any spoken words from that day, but my mind shrieked as we returned home later, “Is she alive?” Then a whisper, “Which would be better?” And my mind curved and collapsed on itself.

    She was alive and so far she’s been alive on every day following. But the fear settled deep and hard in my belly. I don’t remember when I stopped being afraid.

    A.D. Stoner is a writer and editor living in Minnesota with her husband and two young children. She attends writing workshops, classes, and festivals at The Loft Literary Center in Minneapolis.

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