Wednesday 29 March 2023

Spring Reading

This week, the Library team have put together a Spring themed book list full of reading recommendations for the long Easter break. Complete with classic fiction, graphic novels, YA, romance and much more, this list is full of books with 'Spring-like' themes of fresh starts, nature, hope and change. 

For even more recommendations, check out the GCH Library Catalogue online where you'll find a longer 'Spring Reading' list under the 'Quick Lists' tab.

All titles listed are available to borrow from the Library and students can now borrow up to 6 books to stock up for the holidays.


The Abbey Mystery by Julia Golding [STA]

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll [STA]

The Black Flamingo by Dean Atta [STA/STM]

Chocolat by Joanne Harris [STA/STM]

Cinderella is Dead by Kalynn Bayron [STA/STM]

Everything, Everything by Nicola Yoon [STA]

The Gilded Ones by Naima Forna  [STM]

Good Omens by Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman [STM]

The Hobbit by J.R.R Tolkein [STA/STM]

The Hunt for the Nightingale by Sarah Ann Juckes [STA]

The Island of Missing Trees by Elif Shafak [STM]

Journey to the River Sea by Eva Ibbotson [STA]

A Kind of Spark by Elle McNicoll [STA]

Lovely War by Julie Berry [STM]

Love is a Revolution by Renee Watson [STA]

Middlemarch by George Eliot [STA/STM]

Ophelia by Lisa Klein [STA]

Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen [STA/STM]

The Secret Life of Albert Entwistle by Matt Cain [STA]

Sheets by Brenna Thummler [STA - GN]

Six Crimson Cranes by Elizabeth Lim [STA]

Stay Gold by Tobly McSmith [STM]

This Poison Heart by Kaylnn Bayron [STA]

To All the Boys I've Loved Before by Jenny Han [STA]

Tokyo Ever After by Emiko Jean [STM]

Witch Hat Atelier by Kamome Shirahama [STA -GN]

With the Fire on High by Elizabeth Acevedo [STA/STM]

XOXO by Axie Oh [STA]


Happy reading!






Friday 17 March 2023

British Science Week

In this week's library blog post we're looking at British Science Week with a Women's History Month twist. 


At St Andrew's Library, we've put together a display encouraging students to learn more about some of the many amazing, and often previously underappreciated, female scientists of modern history.

As part of this, we want to highlight the work of scientists like Rosalind Franklin. 

Franklin made significant breakthroughs in the discovery of the double helix structure of DNA yet was unacknowledged in the 1960s when Francis Crick was awarded the Nobel Prize for discovering the structure (using Rosalind's findings). You can read more about her crucial contributions to modern science in Rosalind Franklin by Cath Senker [STA - 575.1].


We've also included some fictionalised versions of other scientists including I, Ada by Julia Gray and The Thrilling Adventures of Lovelace and Babbage [GN]. Both titles offer more creative accounts of the life of Ada Lovelace - the 19th century Countess regarded as the very first computer programmer. 


You can also browse a selection of short biographies of female scientists from the following titles which demonstrate the vast and vital contributions women (both in Britain and beyond) have made to science so far:

Brilliant Ideas from Wonderful Women by Aitziber Lopez [STA 609]

Women in Science: 50 Fearless Pioneers Who Changed the World by Rachel Ignotofsky [STA 509.92]

A History of Britain in 21 Women by Jenni Murray [STA 920.72]

Girls Can Do Anything by Caitlin Doyle [STA 920.72]



Find all of these and more at St Andrew's Library!




Wednesday 8 March 2023

Happy World Book Day!

 This year, GCH will be celebrating a belated World Book Day on Wednesday 8th March. 


There will be bookish events all week (6th-10th March) including:

  • Mrs Swan's Scavenger Hunt - find and name all the book characters in order to win a prize!
  • Spot Staff Reading - some teachers and members of support staff will be wearing badges with their favourite books on. The aim of this game is to find all the badges, ask the wearer why this book is their favouite and record all these to show the Library team. Without these answers your findings won't count. 
  • Book Recommendation Bingo - gain a library merit!
  • Make a Bookmark -ask at the desk for pencils etc and make a bookmark at St Andrew's Library during break and lunch. 
  • Book Swap - recycle your old books and pick up something new! This will be held on the balcony at break and lunch on Wednesday 8th March. 
  • Poster Competition- showcase your 'Top 10 Reads' at St Michael's Library. 


And of course author Julia Golding will be visiting on Wednesday 8th for a busy day full of workshops, assemblies and book signing. For more information about her visit check out our previous blog post here!




Friday 3 March 2023

Women's History Month

With the beginning of March, GCH Library is once again celebrating Women's History Month.

Check out our displays at St Andrew's and St Michael's Library for a wide variety of Women's History themed choices including historical fiction, classics by female authors, feminist retellings, biographies and non fiction history books covering hundreds of years of Women's History.


To mark the occasion, the Library team have also chosen a few of these to share in a timeline style reading list. All books in purple are fiction books (historical fiction, retellings and classics) while all titles in blue are non fiction books (history monographs or biographies).


Over 1000 years of Women's Stories:

Medieval Women by Henrietta Leyser [STA - 942.0144] - England 450-1500 (Hilda, Abbess of Whitby, Empress Matilda & many more!)

The Plantagenet Prelude by Jean Plaidy - 12th century France (Eleanor of Aquitaine)

Catherine Called Birdy by Karen Cushman- 13th century England 

All Fall Down by Sally Nicholls - 14th century England (The Black Death, Yorkshire)

And I Darken by Kiersten White - 15th century Ottoman Empire (Vlad III  Gender Swapped Retelling)

Joan of Arc 

Divine Heretic by Jaime Lee Moyer  - 15th century France (Jeanne d'Arc, The Hundred Years War)

The Lady in the Tower by Alison Weir [STA -942.05242]- 1530s England (Anne Boleyn)

Pirate Queen by Sam Hart and Tony Lee [GN] - 16th century Ireland (Grace O'Malley, Tudor control of Ireland)

Artemisia Gentilschi by Jonathan Jones [STA - 709.032 GEN] - 17th century Italy (Greatest female artist of the Baroque age)

The Familiars by Stacey Hall - 1612 England (Pendle Hill Witch Trials)

The Rover and Other Plays by Aphra Behn [822 BEH] - 17th century England (One of the first English women to earn a living through her writing. Behn was greatly praised by Virginia Woolf  and is considered a trailblazer who broke barriers for later generations of female authors)

Queen of Freedom by Catherine Johnson - 1720 Jamaica (Queen Nanny, First Maroon War)

Drama and Danger by J.T. Williams - 18th century England (Elizabeth Sancho and Dido Belle, London)

Dido Belle 

Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi - 18th century Ghana-21st century America (Slave Trade, British Colonisation, American Civil War, Jazz Age)

Frankenstein by Mary Shelley - 19th century Europe (Arguably the very first Science Fiction novel)

The Five: the Untold Lives of the Women killed by Jack the Ripper by Hallie Rubenhold [STM- 920.72]  - 1880s England (Victorian London, Experiences of working class women)

Mysterious Element: The Story of Marie Curie by Pam Robson [STA     530.092]- 19/20th century Poland and France


The Color Purple by Alice Walker - 20th century America (Follows the struggles of several Black women in rural Georgia. The great success of Walker's novel led to win the Pulitzer Prize for Literature in History in 1982 - making her the first African-American woman to do so)


Wild Swans by Jung Chang [ STA 920 CHA] - 20th century China (Experiences of three generations of women under Mao's rule of China and life during the Cultural Revolution of the 1960/70s)

Frida Kahlo by Andrea Kettenmann [STA 709.0431 KAH] - 1940s Mexico (One of the most significant 20th century painters and part of the Mexicayotl movement which aimed to define Mexican identity after the revolution of the 1910s)

The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank [STA/STM 920 FRA] - 1940s Amsterdam (Follows teenager Anne's experiences living hidden in a warehouse for two years during WWII and the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands)

The Wheel of Surya by Jamila Gavin - 1947 India (Partition of India and war in the Punjab)

Malala Yousafzai
The Fountains of Silence by Ruta Sepetys - 1957 Spain (Experiences of working class woman in Madrid under the Franco dictatorship)

Hidden Figures by Margot Lee Shetterly [STA 920 VAU] - 1960s America (Follows the four African-American mathematicians who made great contributions to the US space program - set during the Civil Rights era, Space Race, Cold War and gender equality movement)

Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi [GN] -1970s Iran (Tehran, Overthrowal of the Shah's regime, Islamic Revolution and war with Iraq)

Becoming by Michelle Obama [STA/STM 920 OBA]  - 20/21st century America (Charts Michelle Obama's life so far including her childhood in Chicago, experiences as a successful lawyer, advocate for women and role as the first Black First Lady of the United States)

A Very Large Expanse of Sea - 2002 America (Experiences of an American Muslim teenage girl one year after 9/11)

I am Malala by Malala Yousafzai and Christina Lamb [STA 920 MAL] - 21st century Pakistan (Follows Malala's campaign for girl's rights to education beginning with the Taliban's seizure of Swat Valley in 2007) 


As usual all books mentioned are available to borrow from the school Library!




Wednesday 1 March 2023

Upcoming author visit: Julia Golding

 On Wednesday 8th March, GCH will be celebrating a (slightly belated) World Book Day - an event made even more special by the attendance of author Julia Golding.

Known for her Cat Royal Adventures, Tudor romance series The Lacey Chronicles under the penname Eve Edwards and YA paranormal romance series The Benedicts written as 'Joss Stirling', Julia Golding's novels have been a GCH staple for many years.

The Library team are particularly excited to hear more about her new Jane Austen Investigates series which looks likely to be a new favourite of our Murder Most Unladylike, Sinclair's Mysteries and Scarlet and Ivy fans!




Julia will be speaking to Years 7,8 and 9 during P2 about her books and her life as an author. She will then be leading a writing workshop for Year 7 students during P3 and another for Years 8/9 students later in the day. 

Julia will also be in the Library during lunch to sign books so please bring along any copies you might have at home too. 

Please ask Mrs Swan if you have any questions about World Book Day. All students attending the workshops will be informed shortly!