Showing posts with label FY11. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FY11. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

The Modern Armchair Traveler

There are many great ways to travel the world from the comfort of your own home these days. I've gathered together a few links to help you get away this summer!

A book can be an excellent window into another time or place, and two librarians have created a website to match the reader with a destination. BiblioTravel allows you to search by location in addition to more traditional title and author searches. Perfect for readers who've enjoyed our License Plate Bookmarks Display!

I should warn you that it's possible to spend a crazy amount of time at this next link (especially if you've ever been sucked in by Google's Street View feature). 360 Cities offers interactive 360 degree panoramic images from around the world. You can see Grant House in Galena, but there are, as yet, no images from Dubuque.

Many museums around the world offer virtual tours of their collections, including the Louvre, the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, and the National Gallery of Art.

Or maybe you were among the thousands who watched the Decorah Eagle Cam this spring? Many zoos have live webcams year round! The San Diego Zoo has live cameras for their Pandas, Polar Bears, Elephants, and Apes, as well as videos of other animals (including babies). The Smithsonian National Zoological Park has 18 live webcams for everything from the Cheetas to Microscopic Organisms. The BBC provides an index of webcams available throughout England, which show everything from traffic to giraffes. Also fun is the South Pole Live Cam, though it is down for the Antarctic Winter.

We hope that you are enjoying this year's Adult Summer Reading Program, Novel Destinations! Remember for every five books you read this summer, you can be entered into a weekly prize drawing. Just stop by the Reference or Recommendations Desk the next time you visit Carnegie-Stout to get signed up.

Photos from Flickr users Wonderlane and Sharon Hall Shipp.Link

Monday, June 27, 2011

A Review of Rules of Civility by Amor Towles

One of my favorite characters in Rules of Civility is Fran Pacelli, a five-foot-nine City College dropout from North Jersey who "unsettled the prim at the boardinghouse by wandering the halls without a shirt on and asking loudly if they had any extra booze." Another favorite is Evelyn Ross, a "surprising beauty from the American Midwest." When Evelyn passes out drunk in a New York City alley, the only clue to her identity is the library card the police find in her coat pocket.

A rebellious sort, Evelyn insists on reading Hemingway by "skipping ahead to anywhere but the beginning" because doing so puts "bit characters on equal footing" and "frees the protagonists from the tyranny of their tales." The protagonist in Rules of Civility is twenty-five-year-old Katey Kontent—pronounced Kon-TENT, "like the state of being." Bored with her job and attracted to a banker she meets in a jazz club, Katey "embarks on a journey from a Wall Street secretarial pool through the upper echelons of New York society," and inevitably drifts away from interesting bit characters like Fran and Evelyn, the ones I would have liked to read more about.

At one point, Katey recalls an old family story about her father, a deceased Russian-immigrant who used to cook "closed-kitchen eggs" for Katey when she was a girl. According to her uncle, Katey's father burned his remaining Russian currency in a soup pot when he first arrived in New York, even though "the ruble was as widely accepted as the dollar in some neighborhoods." Katey goes on to burn her own currency, so to speak, encouraged by her father's obstinance and her rebellious friends. But since Katey turns out to be so reluctant and cautious, her own awkward path toward self-actualization is not terribly exciting.

Rules of Civility attempts to be "an implicit celebration of happenstance," a recognition of the potential and poetry of "spur of the moment decisions" and "chance encounters." But it's a bit overdone, much in the same way that New York City is explicitly romanticized as the place where these chance encounters are most likely to take place. It's hard to take seriously the character who laments, "The problem with being born in New York is you've got no New York to run away to."

I do like the emphasis on books and authors, though, from Ernest Hemingway to Agatha Christie. The title Rules of Civility is taken from George Washington's schoolboy primer consisting of 110 maxims on everything from table manners to obeying parents, the last and most profound of which is, "Labour to keep alive in your Breast that Little Spark of Celestial fire Called Conscience."

When Katey finds a reprint of Washington's Rules of Civility in the banker Tinker Grey's apartment, she adopts it as sort of a philosophical approach to her own life. This complicates her relationship with Tinker, who relies on Henry David Thoreau's Walden as his guide, a book which thoroughly rejects social conventions. Can young lovers overcome such conflicting literary tastes?

And there are very interesting similarities between Rules of Civility and F. Scott Fitzgerald's classic 1925 novel, The Great Gatsby. Both are set in and around New York between the world wars, and both use first-person narrators who reflect on past events. Both include car accidents and gas stations, old grieving fathers from the Midwest, party crashing at mansions overlooking Long Island Sound, and name changes: James Gatz to Jay Gatsby, Katya to Kate, Teddy to Tinker, and Eve to Evelyn.

In The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald writes, "The city seen from the Queensboro Bridge is always the city seen for the first time, in its first wild promise of all the mystery and the beauty in the world."

And in Rules of Civility, Amor Towles writes, "For however inhospitable the wind, from that vantage point Manhattan was simply so beautiful, so elegant, so obviously full of promise—you wanted to approach it for the rest of your life without ever quite arriving."

But in the end, The Great Gatsby immortalizes a fall from civility and grace, while Rules of Civility tries to describe an ascent to it. The Great Gatsby will "gut you like a fish," while Rules of Civility manages "a semblance of rhythm and a surfeit of sincerity."

~Michael May, Adult Services


Rules of Civility: A Novel, debut literary fiction by Amor Towles, will be published on July 26, 2011 by Viking Adult.

This review was based on the digital galley obtained from Penguin Group USA through NetGalley.com at http://netgalley.com/.

Please visit author Amor Towles's website at http://amortowles.com/.

More Free Resources for Your eReader

If you enjoyed our original post about free eBooks for your eReader, even those pesky Kindles that don't yet work with Carnegie-Stout's popular OverDrive database, we have a couple of new resources for you!

391 Places for Free Books Online: This site should keep you busy for a while. The author has arranged his links by genre as well as a straight alphabetical listing. He's even included a few links for free downloadable audiobooks.

Books on the Knob: Each day the author of this blog links readers to free eBooks, sharply discounted eBooks, and other promotions. While there are links for most popular eReaders, the blog's author started out by directing people toward deals for the Kindle so it skews a bit in Amazon's direction.

And don't forget, the Dubuque County Library System also provides access to OverDrive for their library patrons through NEIBORS. If you have any questions, comments, or run into a technical problem, don't hesitate to contact Carnegie-Stout at (563) 589-4225, through this handy Contact Us form, or in person!

Friday, June 24, 2011

Read Alike: The Help

The Help is both a runaway best seller, it has been on the New York Times Best Seller list for over two years, and author Kathryn Stockett's first novel. The audiobook adaption was the 2010 Audie winner for both Fiction and Distinguished Achievement in Production. The story of 1960s Mississippi and the changes to segregation and women's roles has been a popular selection for book clubs across the nation. It's a fast-paced tale of domestic life that uses multiple narrators' distinctive voices to provide a fuller picture of this dynamic time period.

Unsurprisingly, the book has been adapted as a feature film set for release August 12, 2011. The film will star Emma Stone, Mike Vogel, Bryce Dallas Howard, Viola Davis, Allison Janney, and Octavia Spencer. Ms. Spencer was an inspiration for the character of Minny, whom she plays in the movie and voiced for the audiobook. Unfortunately, as you may have read, the character of Aibileen is the source of a lawsuit by Ablene Cooper, who works as a maid for Ms. Stockett's brother.

If you're among the many readers who loved The Help, we have a few reading suggestions for you:

The Dry Grass of August is a recently published coming-of-age story by another first-time author, Anna Jean Mayhew. The novel's main character is a 13-year-old girl who is closer to her family's black maid than her parents, and discovers the realities of racism in the 1950s South on a family vacation to Florida. You can read more about this novel in Amy's Staff Recommendation post.

The Secret Life of Bees is a heart-warming debut novel about a young girl in 1960s South Carolina who sticks with her "stand-in mother" in the face of segregation and racism. The author, Sue Monk Kidd, has since written a second novel and several Non-Fiction titles, which often feature religious themes.

The Air Between Us by Deborah Johnson has a similar 1960s Mississippi setting and focus on the growing Civil Rights movement, but the focus is on how integration affects the town's two physicians, one black and one white, after the death of a local hunter.

Popular author of character-driven fiction, often featuring Southern women, Anne Rivers Siddons' Downtown captures the turbulence of 1960s Atlanta. Smoky, a young writer from a poor background, moves to Atlanta to work for a local magazine and quickly becomes involved in the War on Poverty, the Civil Rights Movement, and falls in love.

Four Spirits is the story of increasingly violent racial tension in 1960s Birmingham, Alabama by author Sena Jeter Naslund, who provides fresh perspectives of well-known historical and literary figures in her novels. The action of Four Spirits centers around four young girls who were killed in a church bombing, and the choices of a white college student named Stella.

Mudbound is Hillary Jordan's first novel. The novel employs multiple narrators to explore life in rural Mississippi at the end of WWII, as Laura follows her husband and deeply racist father-in-law to a rundown farm she detests. The return of soldiers, black and white, from the battlefields of Europe only complicated the already stressful environment.

Night Talk is the story of an unexpected friendship between white Evie and black Janey Louise, the daughter of Evie's family maid in 1950s Georgia. Elizabeth Cox's third novel explores the integration of the public schools, and how these events affected the two girls throughout their lives.

Elizabeth Berg's novel We Are all Welcome Here is the heart-warming story of Paige, crippled by polio, her black caregiver Peacie, and their struggle to raise Paige's daughter Diana in 1960s Tupelo, Mississippi (the town where Elvis was born).

Freshwater Road is the debut novel by actress Denise Nicholas. The novel's main character is a young black college student from Michigan who travels to Mississippi in the summer of 1964 to register black voters, and discovers a new perspective our nation's racial landscape.

Please stop by the Recommendations Desk on the first floor, check out NoveList Plus on the library's website, or visit W. 11th & Bluff next week for more reading suggestions. Or submit a Personal Recommendations request, and we'll create a reading list just for you!

Monday, June 20, 2011

The Film That Changed My Life by Robert K. Elder

The Film That Changed My Life: 30 Directors on Their Epiphanies in the Dark by Robert K. Elder (Chicago Review Press, 2011).

If you love movies and talking about them, you will enjoy browsing this book. It’s like participating in a book club about films. Robert Elder, a film columnist in Chicago, interviews 30 directors on what film changed their life. He asks good follow-up questions, so you get to hear the directors talk about individual scenes and turning points. It makes you want to see the movies again.
Some of the directors and their choices are Danny Boyle on Apocalypse Now (and he’s not a fan of the recut, extended version Apocalypse Now Redux); Edgar Wright on An American Werewolf in London; John Woo on Rebel Without a Cause (which inspired Woo to comb his hair and talk like James Dean); and John Waters on The Wizard of Oz (his favorite scene and line: when they throw water on the witch, and she says, “Who would have thought a good little girl like you could destroy my beautiful wickedness.”). I didn’t recognize all the directors, and learned a lot.
Elder’s own personal favorite is Quentin Tarantino’s Reservoir Dogs—specifically the scene in which an undercover cop learns how to be an undercover cop.

Another book of interest to film lovers is Conversations with Scorsese by Richard Schickel (Knopf, 2011). Film critic Schickel has collected his talks over the years with this great director and the results are a fascinating read for any film buff. Scorsese admits he wants to make a classic love story. "It's not like a test," he says, "but it's like a canon of work that every filmmaker or novelist should be able to do."

~Mirdza, Adult Services

Friday, June 17, 2011

Read Alike: Stuart Woods

Stuart Woods

www.stuartwoods.com

Fans of fast-paced cinematic Thrillers appreciate the broad appeal of Stuart Woods' best selling titles. Whether in his multiple series titles or his earlier non-series books, Woods’ writes fast-paced, provocative stories that feature an investigation, often political or legal.

Pacing is the key to Woods' success. From the first page, readers are drawn into the stories, and despite the complexity of plot lines, we read quickly, driven to discover what will happen next. Dialogue dominates in these books, and that, combined with numerous action sequences and short chapters, moves readers quickly through the pages. Frame also plays an important role. Books are primarily set in Woods' native South, and the stories often feature boats and boating, another area with which Woods is personally familiar. But more important than the physical setting are the trappings of the rich and famous life style that fill these pages. Food, wine, brand name clothes, and cars all contribute to the background of the stories and set the stage for the adventures.

Woods' earlier novels were more provocative, while his more recent titles seem more commercial, and his story lines, as he turns to series rather than stand-alone titles, have become increasingly character-driven. He currently writes three different series. The most complex features the Lee family, from the Edgar-award-winning Chiefs to recent titles, in which hero Will Henry Lee IV is President of the U.S. These present more serious issues and often political skullduggery. One of his newer series stars Holly Barker (Orchid Blues), ex-military police and chief of police for Orchid Beach, Florida, and offers a more serious focus, from murder investigations to threats from right-wing military groups. The long-running Stone Barrington series (New York Dead), which follows the ex-NYPD officer and sometimes lawyer/investigator, have evolved from serious crime stories to lighter, often politically incorrect amorous adventures. International intrigue; sex, sometimes explicit; rich and famous backgrounds; and less intense investigations make these lighter reads. Woods characters also include Ed Eagle (Santa Fe Rules) a criminal defense lawyer living in Santa Fe and Rick Barron (The Prince of Beverly Hills) who solves crimes during the 1930's Golden Age of Hollywood.

Read-alikes:

Lawrence Sanders may be dead, but his popular McNally series lives on, now written by Vincent Lardo. Like Woods, Sanders wrote a range of titles, from the serious to the more commercial. Intricate plots, filled with twists and betrayals, series and non-series characters, and provocative story lines generally characterized his writing. Although the McNally titles are narrated in the first person, and humor plays more of a role, these Florida-based investigative adventures, set amongst the moneyed class, might appeal especially to fans of the Stone Barrington series. To read about Archy McNally, playboy sleuth, try McNally's Trial.

Jeffrey Archer, who also has written a diverse range of Thrillers from the serious to the commercial, might be another possibility, as, like Woods, he is a storyteller who relates fascinating tales, peopled with likable characters, who come to a satisfying end. International intrigue and double-dealing fill his page-turning novels, but he also includes a glimpse of the rich and powerful, as does Woods. In the classic Not a Penny More, Not a Penny Less, Archer explores a personal experience with wit and style, as his hero seeks revenge for having been defrauded of more than half a million dollars.

Another author of intricate, page turning, international Thrillers is Sidney Sheldon, who also filled his adventures with beautiful people placed in difficult situations. Revenge figures prominently, and it is not always achieved by legal means, another characteristic shared by Woods' novels. Try The Other Side of Midnight to sample his timeless popularity.

Screenwriter Stephen J. Cannell's novels possess a similar cinematic appeal, fast pacing, characters who could be on the screen, action scenes, and revenge. While the plots may be more complex than those of Woods, the characters, particularly series character LA police detective Shane Scully , will certainly appeal. Try The Tin Collectors, the first featuring Scully.

Not all of James Patterson's titles are obvious matches for a Woods fan, unless the reader does not mind more graphic violence and sex. However, a recent series, begun with 1st to Die, offers several appeal similarities: fast-pacing, details of wealthy lifestyles, series characters, and complicated plots. These stories generally feature fewer gory details, and a breezy pace.

The following authors also write fast-paced, plot-driven suspense stories that may be similar in writing style to Stuart Woods:

David Baldacci, William Diehl, Michael Crichton and Stephen Frey

If you enjoy more character-driven fast-paced suspense stories, try one of these authors:

Lawrence Block, John Gilstrap, Michael Connelly and Thomas Cook

Please stop by the Recommendations Desk on the first floor, check out NoveList Plus on the library's website, or visit W. 11th & Bluff next week for more reading suggestions. Or submit a Personal Recommendations request, and we'll create a reading list just for you!

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Bloomsday

Every year on June 16, fans of James Joyce’s novel, Ulysses, commemorate the anniversary of Leopold Bloom’s ordinary day in Dublin. There are Bloomsday celebrations all over the world; the most famous of course, in Dublin, Ireland. It was first celebrated in 1954, on the 50th anniversary of the events in the novel. The library has a selection of Joyce’s novels, as well as biographical information and critical works.

Novels by James Joyce

Audio Books

Biographies and critical works