Showing posts with label FY12. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FY12. Show all posts

Monday, May 28, 2012

Kitty Cornered by Bob Tarte

Try as I might, there are librarian stereotypes that I cannot escape. I have thick glasses, I'm an introvert, I own several cardigans and I am, above all else, a cat lady. At one time in my life, I found myself responsible for five cats at once. I currently own two - one wayward cat was reclaimed by his owner (after having wandered, somehow, to my house from across the river) and two passed away. Luckily, I am not the only cat owner at the library, and I can get my multiple-kitty fix anytime.

Becoming a cat lady (or lord) can creep up on you. You start with one, adopt another because she might be lonely, then you spy a stray in your neighborhood, or a friend of a friend can no longer take care of some poor, defenseless elderly cat, and can’t you please take him in? This is how Bob Tarte, author of Kitty Cornered, found his house filled with six cats of wildly differing personalities (this is after he and his wife took in a multitude of ducks, parrots, chickens and rabbits).

In the beginning, the Tarte household had only two cats - Moobie, an aging white cat, and Agnes, a black cat who enjoys tripping people as they navigate the stairs. They’re soon joined by Lucy, Maynard, Tina and - eventually - Frannie. Each cat comes with his or her own baggage. From Lucy’s disdain for litter boxes, to Maynard’s (originally Maybel) constant wailing and Frannie’s insistence on being petted while she eats. Anyone who has owned a cat can sympathize not just with Tarte’s struggles to make each cat feel at home, but also with his strong desire to do so, even at great financial and mental costs.

What makes this book so entertaining and heartwarming is Tarte’s earnestness to earn each cat’s affection. The most difficult cat to win over, Frannie, who Tarte and his wife caught only fleeting glimpses of at first - eventually comes around, as much as a cat can. Each chapter tells the story of how each cat came to join the household, and the troubles and travails entailed. There are many laugh-out-loud moments in the book, such as Moobie’s adaptation to wearing an Elizabethan collar (or, as Tarte’s wife calls it, “the funnel of happiness”) and some poignant ones as well. Throughout, Tarte narrates with self-deprecating humor, mixing his own anxieties with those of (and for) his animals. The lengths to which he goes to for his cats - and his deep love for them - were immediately familiar to me. How many other pet owners have anxiously checked litter boxes and water bowl levels when a pet is ill? Or wonder if a momentary limp or prolonged scratching means something more dire than what it appears to be?

As with any book about a beloved pet written lately, the end of the book is usually dedicated to the inevitable decline in the pet’s health, the excruciating decisions that must be made and the reflection on the aftermath of loss. Being as soft-hearted as I am, I have avoided such books because I simply can’t bear to read about the death of a pet, or even about the tragic circumstances the pet was rescued from. No Dewey: The Small-Town Library Cat or Homer’s Odyssey for me, thank you. So I was hesitant to pick up Kitty Cornered, for fear of a chapter ominously titled “Borrowed Time” or “The Big Meadow.” Happily, there is no such sadness in Tarte’s book. While two of the cats have close calls, we’re left with an image of a warm and chaotic household where cats outnumber humans, and happily so.

You can see photos of Tarte's cats on his website, and browse a collection of photos of C-SPL staff cats, too!


Friday, May 25, 2012

Spotlight: Mystery Graphic Novels


Graphic Novels, like print books, cover a wide range of genre and tone, which means you don't have to be a fan of super heroes to check one out! Today we'll be focusing on graphic novels with appeal for mystery fans.

Earlier this month Andrew reviewed The Hunter by Darwyn Cooke, a graphic novel adaptation of the first book in Richard Stark's Parker series of mystery novels. The Hunter will be the topic of discussion at the next meeting of Carnegie-Stout's graphic novel discussion group, Graphic Content at 7:00 p.m. on June 12. You can read Andrew's full review of this gritty crime thriller by clicking here.

Ed Brubaker's Criminal series has a similar inspiration in hardboiled mysteries. The series is drawn by Sean Phillips, whose expressive style conveys the violence of the story without overwhelming gore. The series starts with Coward, Leo is a professional pickpocket known for his skills as a thief and in avoiding risky situations, but now he finds himself on the run.

Mr. Brubaker also writes superhero stories for Marvel, including the Gotham Central series, a police procedural set in the city famous as the home of Batman. Mr. Brubaker's coauthor on the series is Greg Rucka, who got his start writing suspenseful crime novels. Michael Lark is the artist, and his style is striking, reminiscent of shows like Law and Order. The story follows the men and women of the Gotham City police department as they try to do their jobs without the assistance (or interference) of Batman.

Evan Dorkin's Beasts of Burden: Animal Rites has received several Eisner Awards and a Harvey Award and was a 2011 selection by YALSA. The story of a group of dogs and cats who band together to solve supernatural mysteries. Mr. Dorkin is known for his humorous writing, and it's on display in this series. Jill Thompson created the excellent watercolor illustrations.

Blacksad by Juan Diaz Canales also features a feline investigator, though of the two-legged hardboiled PI variety. The series is set in 1950s America, with murder and kidnapping under the threat of Soviet attack. Illustrator Juanjo Guarnido's art is lush, emotive, and has a film noir feel.

The graphic novel collection even has titles for the True Crime aficionado. Green River Killer: a true detective story was written by Jeff Jensen whose father, Detective Tom Jensen, was in charge of the original investigation. Illustrator Jonathan Case's black and white art does not distract from the story.True Crime readers may also want to check out the work of Rick Geary. Mr. Geary has written about several high profile historic murders, including Lizzie Borden.

Batman, despite his costume, is a detective, and the new series by Scott Snyder, Court of Owls has more of that mystery flavor. Illustrator Greg Capullo has a high gloss superhero style to the art.

In John Layman's series Chew, Tony Chu works with the Special Crimes Division of the FDA (not a typo). When Mr. Chu eats, he's given a psychic vision of the food, which makes for some disturbing and darkly humorous investigations. Rob Guillory's illustrations have a cartoonish style that is both goofy and unsettling.

And finally, the beloved fictional author and amateur detective, Richard Castle, has a graphic novel adaptation of the equally fictional Derrick Storm, private eye. The team of Brian Michael Bendis, Kelly Sue Deconnick, Scott Hanna, and Dan Green do a fine job of bringing this action-packed television tie-in to life.

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!

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Great books you may have missed

With all the attention that surrounds the release of the latest best-sellers and celebrity bookpicks, some great books may fall through the cracks. But we’re here to help! Every other week we’ll provide a list of books - some old, some new - that we’ve added to the library’s collection that may not have been on your radar, but are definitely worth checking out.

This week's books range from a novel about a family whose lives are broadcast across the Internet, to a collection of stories centering around a man who begins to receive strange calls on his new cell phone and decides to adopt the life of the man the callers are looking for.

Click here for the full list, and check back on June 6th for a new list, and happy reading!

Image by Tall Chris via Flickr, CC BY 2.0

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Bestseller Read-Alikes for the Week of May 21st

Can’t wait to get your hands on the latest best-seller, but the hold list is too long? To tide you over, every week we’ll offer similar titles and authors to the week’s fiction and nonfiction best sellers.

Fiction
This week's #1 book on the fiction bestsellers list is 11th Hour by James Patterson & Maxine Paetro. The latest installation in The Women's Murder Club series finds the four women - a homicide detective, a medical examiner, an assistant district attorney and a crime reporter - investigating the the murder of a millionaire who was killed with a weapon linked to the deaths of four San Francisco criminals. Detective Lindsay Boxer is horrified to realize that the killer could be among her closest friends.

You can catch up with the series beginning with 1st to Die (2001). While 11th Hour can be read on its own, it helps to know the personal back stories of the recurring characters.

Other books with similar writing styles and themes include:

Tess Gerritsen - Author of the best-selling Rizzoli and Isles series, Gerritsen uses her knowledge as a physician to write detail-rich, fast-paced mysteries. Her plots often follow contemporary medical issues, as well as questions of medical ethics. Whether possessing the medical or the investigative expertise, Gerritsen's heroines must work their way through medical clues and track the villains, all while facing life-or-death situations. Try The Surgeon, the first in the series.

John Sandford - Like Patterson, Sandford writes fast-paced suspenseful crime novels, in series and stand-alone formats. The crimes are often committed by a serial killer, and the atmosphere of the novels is generally menacing and dark, with graphic descriptions of violence. Try Broken Prey, from the Lucas Davenport series.

Click here for more fiction bestsellers...


Nonfiction
This week's #1 nonfiction book is The Years of Lyndon Johnson: The Passage of Power by Robert A. Caro. The conclusion in his multivolume biography former president Lyndon Johnson - The Path to Power (1982), Means of Ascent (1990), Master of the Senate (2002) - highlights five key years in Johnson's life, beginning in 1958 with his presidential campaign and ending in 1964 after John F. Kennedy's assassination. Drawing on thousands of interviews and documents, Caro paints an intriguing and detailed portrait of Johnson from the tension between him and the Kennedy brothers, to the political maneuvering (and strong-arming) that lead to the successful passage of the the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

Other books similar to The Years of Lyndon Johnson: The Passage of Power include:

Lone Star Rising (1991) and Flawed Giant (1998) by Robert Dallek - Another multivolume examination of Lyndon Johnson and his legacy, this time authored by a presidential historian, and casts the former president in more sympathetic light than other biographer's have. Tracing his life and career from his childhood in Texas to his eventual selection as JFK's running mate and then to the presidency,  Dallek attributes Johnson's reputation as a "wheeler-dealer" to his genuine desire to help the disadvantaged.  

Theodore Rex, by Edmund Morris - The sequel to the 1979 biography The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt , Morris describes Theodore Roosevelt's presidency as he faced the challenges of a new century in which the United States would become a world power, and discusses his accomplishments and failures, the enemies he made, and his family life.

Click here for more nonfiction bestselllers ...

If you'd like more recommendations, 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, May 21, 2012

"Behind the Beautiful Forevers" by Katherine Boo

On a small patch of land owned by Chatrapati Shivaji International Airport (formerly Sahar International Airport) in Mumbai, near the luxury hotels, you'll find the slum of Annawadi. Home to a few thousand squatters and subject of Katherine Boo's first book. What is remarkable about Behind the Beautiful Forevers is how invisible Katherine Boo is from the narrative.

Ms. Boo is a Pulitzer Prize winning journalist, currently on staff with the New Yorker. Throughout her career she has focused her attention on poverty, education, and marginalized populations. You can read more about her background, and samples of her work in her New Yorker profile here.

Ms. Boo spent more than three years (from late 2007 to early 2011) observing life in Annawadi, building a detailed picture of Annawadi's residents. These nuanced, compelling biographies range from ambitious, ruthless Asha to Sunil, a young and desperately poor scavenger. The hours of interviews, conversations, as well as videos and official reports, provide a basis for a truly immersive reading experience.

Behind the Beautiful Forevers is, in addition, a real page-turner, opening with Abdul, a teenaged entrepreneur in trash and recyclables, hiding from the police, accused of attempting to burn his neighbor alive. Despite ample evidence that it was self-immolation, Abdul's family becomes trapped in the justice system, and its corruption.

I highly recommend this book, especially to those readers who don't normally pick up nonfiction, but who enjoyed, say, Slumdog Millionaire or Precious. You may also want to check out Salaam Bombay!, Shantaram, or Born into Brothels.

~Sarah, Adult Services

Friday, May 18, 2012

Read Alike: Sophie Kinsella


Sophie Kinsella has already been the topic for a Friday Read Alike post, but I recently read her latest book, I've Got Your Number and loved it so much I couldn't resist a revisit!

Ms. Kinsella is best known as the author of the Chick Lit series following Shopaholic Becky Bloomwood. For those not in the know Chick Lit novels focus on a twenty or thirty something woman as she struggles to balance career, romance, family, and her own peace of mind. Always character-driven, often funny, typically deal with serious issues and personal growth, and don't always have the happily ever after of a Romance.

I've Got Your Number falls closer to the Contemporary Romance end of the spectrum, with a focus on the developing romantic relationship between the characters. Poppy Wyatt has her life figured out. She has a career she loves, close friends, a wonderful relationship with her family, and she's about to check a perfect marriage off the list, when her cell phone is stolen. She takes possession of a phone abandoned in a trash bin by Sam Roxton's former assistant, and Poppy's life becomes complicated.
 
For more lighthearted contemporary romances, check out these authors:

Bet Me by Jennifer Crusie
Ms. Crusie is best known for her hilarious romances and intelligent, quirky heroines, though in recent years her pen has turned toward the supernatural. But for a fast-paced, sexy read, Bet Me is a sure winner. At bar, shortly after getting dumped and weeks from her sister's wedding, sensible Min Dobbs overhears her ex bet Cal Morrisey that he can't get Min to sleep with him.

Stay by Allie Larkin
Ms. Larkin's debut novel, Stay, has humor, romance, and a large German Shepherd named Joe. After the man she's been dreaming of for years marries her best friend, Savannah spends the evening with a bottle of vodka and wakes up to realize she's ordered a dog from the internet. Joe's new vet is attractive and available, but then the newlyweds find that married life isn't all a honeymoon.

Big Girls Don't Cry by Cathie Linz
Ms. Linz is known for the humor and witty banter to be found in her upbeat romances. Her heroines are independent and capable, and her heroes often have a military background. Start with Big Girls Don't Cry, Leena has returned to her small hometown from life as a plus sized model in Chicago to work as a receptionist for the local veterinarian, Cole. Cole is, of course, the boy Leena punched in high school for making fun of her weight.

Just One of the Guys by Kristan Higgins
Ms. Higgins' humorous romances feature independent heroines and colorful, supportive secondary characters. She's also known for writing in the first-person. Start with Just One of the Guys, Chastity, the only daughter in a family of macho guys (firefighters, military heroes, etc) is witty, athletic, capable, and intelligent, but unlucky in love. Possibly because the man she's always loved treats her like a sister.

It Had to Be You by Susan Elizabeth Phillips
Ms. Phillips’ contemporary romances often feature bad boys who are bad in all the best ways who find their match in her strong heroines. Funny, fast-paced, and more than a little steamy, her novels are fun without being fluff. Start with It Had to Be You, the first in her series of novels centered around a fictional Chicago football team. Phoebe has been encouraging her reputation as a flighty socialite, and the team’s coach is less than pleased with her arrival.

A few Romantic Comedies available on DVD
The Holiday
Two Weeks Notice
His Girl Friday
Friends With Benefits
Sweet Home Alabama 

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!

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

True Sisters by Sandra Dallas



I think most everyone knows about the westward migration via wagon train but I admit that I had never heard of the Mormon handcart pioneers until I read a summary of Sandra Dallas' new novel, True Sisters.  Dallas tells the story of the real life Martin Handcart company, a group of about 650 individuals (mostly Scottish, English and Scandinavian) who, in 1856, signed up to push handcarts from Iowa City to Salt Lake City, a journey of about 1300 miles.  This group of Mormon converts followed the path of previous handcart companies to reach the promised land of Zion.  

Dallas tells this story through the experiences of four women traveling with the company.  Nannie and Ellie are actual sisters who, along with Ellie’s husband Andrew, are looking to start a new life.  Jessie is a hardworking farm girl traveling with her two brothers hoping to build a successful farm in the promised land of Utah.   Anne is a loyal wife following her husband even though she is not a believer in the Mormon faith.  Maude, an older woman, becomes a valuable member of the company due to her mid-wife and doctoring skills (especially since both Anne and Ellie are pregnant). 
 
This journey is a disaster from start to finish for the company.  The ship that took them from England to America was delayed and once they reached Iowa City there were not enough supplies to go around.  Each person was only allowed to take 17 pounds of belongings in their handcart so many people were forced to abandon the majority of their possessions in Iowa City.  The carts were hastily made and of poor quality.  The journey itself took them through scorching prairies, treacherous rivers and across snow-packed mountains.  Many people died on this trek and many more may have died if a rescue party had not been sent out from Salt Lake to find them.  Throughout all of the hardships, the women help one another through their tragedies and triumphs and are able to keep their faith. 
 
The women in this story are fictional but the circumstances were very real.  Dallas did her research and had members of the LDS church proofread her manuscript before it was published.  The story itself is beautifully written but I could not get past the voice in my head screaming “what is wrong with these people? Who thinks it is a good idea to walk 1300 miles pushing/pulling a handcart, especially while pregnant?”  I kept thinking, “is this going to be another Donner party?”  I understand that the majority of these people were trying to escape religious persecution and make a better life for their families but that wasn’t the case for everyone.  For instance, Anne’s husband sold their successful business in London after he converted to the Mormon faith and made the decision to travel to Zion without consulting his wife.  He made this decision without thinking that the journey might not be the best situation for his pregnant wife and young children. 

Despite all my misgivings, this is an interesting story and I did learn something about the history of the Mormon religion.  The trek these people made is absolutely a testament to the strength of the human spirit.  Are you wondering if all of the women make it to Zion?  To get the answer you will have to read the book. 

To learn more about the Mormon Handcart Pioneers click on the following links. 

Reenactments (yes there are reenactments of the trek)

~Amy, Adult Services

Friday, May 11, 2012

Comment: Prefer Mystery Movies

Library patron comment submitted at a movie screening:
Prefer mystery movies & movies that are not silent. Thank you.

Library staff reply:
Carnegie-Stout Public Library shows a movie suitable for adult audiences one evening each month. We try to show movies from a broad range of genres and eras in hopes of appealing to as many people as we can. We have shown several mystery movies over the last few years, including The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, The Maltese Falcon, Double Indemnity, Witness for the Prosecution, Vertigo, The Killing, The Thief, Murder on the Orient Express, The Departed, and Shutter Island. All of these had sound.

Of course we will continue to show more mystery movies in the future. When selecting titles, we must be able to acquire non-theatrical public performance rights for the movies, and they must be readily available on new DVDs. If you have specific titles you'd like us to consider, please let our library staff know in person, by email at yourlibrarian@dubuque.lib.ia.us or by phone at 563-589-4225.

mm, 5/8/12

Spotlight: Motherhood

 This Sunday, May 13th, is Mother's Day, and what better topic for our Friday post than motherhood? We've brought together some fiction titles, memoirs, advice books, and movies to look over here, or on display at Carnegie-Stout. And don't forget, our magazine of the month is Working Mother!

Novels
Afterwards by Rosamund Lupton (Mystery) In Ms. Lupton's fast-paced and conversational second novel, a woman runs into a burning building to save her daughter, but that's only the start of the danger.

Sing You Home by Jodi Picoult (Fiction) A thought-provoking novel that includes a soundtrack. Music therapist Zoe Baxter sues her ex-husband for custody of their frozen embryos after she falls in love with another woman.

Left Neglected by Lisa Genova (Fiction) Ms. Genova's second novel is reflective and inspirational. A successful career woman and mother finds herself reevaluating her priorities after a traumatic accident.

Room by Emma Donoghue (Fiction) This fast-paced and suspenseful novel is told from the perspective of five-year-old Jack, who has lived his entire life in one small room with his mother, held captive by the whims of her kidnapper.

Please Look After Mom by Kyŏng-suk Sin (Fiction) This haunting family drama has a relaxed pace, though the revelations about the characters keep the pages turning. When the family matriarch goes missing, her children and husband search Seoul as well as their memories.

Come Home by Lisa Scottoline (Mystery) Ms. Scottoline's latest novel is fast-paced and suspenseful, as well as an examination of motherhood. Dr. Jill Farrow has finally found balance in her life after her divorce, when her ex-husband's daughter arrive unexpectedly with news of her father's murder.

One True Thing by Anna Quindlen (Fiction) This is a reflective and thoughtful novel by Ms. Quindlen. Ellen has taken care of her mother throughout her battle with cancer, and never expected to be accused of euthanasia.

Winter Garden by Kristin Hannah (Romance) A character-driven and moving story of family. After their father's death, two sisters are brought reunited with their abrasive, Russian-born mother.

Boneshaker by Cherie Priest (Science Fiction) In a fast-paced, alternate universe steampunk Seattle Briar struggles to raise her precocious son, Zeke, on the wrong side of the tracks, but things are only complicated when Zeke decides to clear his father's name.

Movies and Television
Gilmore Girls


Biography, Memoir, and Advice
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!

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Dubuque Newspapers in Google News Archive


Here's a list of some Dubuque, Iowa newspapers, approximately in reverse chronological order, which can still be accessed via Google News Archive.

Coverage is not complete, and many issues do not appear to be searchable by keyword, but if you have a specific date you might be able to find articles by browsing to those issues.

To find obituary dates, try the THonline.com Obituary Archive Search.

For tips and tricks, see How to Find Dubuque Obituaries Online and Who Can Use the Telegraph Herald Digital Archive.


The Telegraph-Herald
22,552 issues
Aug 17, 1903 - Dec 31, 2004

The Telegraph-Herald and Times-Journal
1,500 issues
Aug 1, 1919 - May 19, 1935

Dubuque Telegraph-Herald
1,207 issues
Oct 27, 1901 - Dec 20, 1931

Dubuque Daily Telegraph
293 issues
Jan 1, 1901 - Oct 27, 1901

Dubuque Daily Herald
4,897 issues
Sep 28, 1866 - Dec 31, 1900

Dubuque Sunday Herald
1,024 issues
Feb 15, 1885 - Apr 17, 1898

Dubuque Herald
4,973 issues
Jan 1, 1860 - Feb 14, 1885

Daily Dubuque Herald
222 issues
Oct 21, 1868 - Jul 12, 1869

Dubuque Democratic Herald
489 issues
Sep 10, 1863 - Sep 10, 1865

Daily Express and Herald
576 issues
Nov 17, 1855 - Jun 30, 1859

Weekly Express and Herald
61 issues
Oct 22, 1856 - Dec 30, 1857

Dubuque Weekly Observer
18 issues
Jul 1, 1854 - Nov 3, 1854

Iowa News
48 issues
Jun 3, 1837 - Jun 16, 1838



Bestseller Read-Alikes for the Week of May 7th

Can’t wait to get your hands on the latest best-seller, but the hold list is too long? To tide you over, every week we’ll offer similar titles and authors to the week’s fiction and nonfiction best sellers.

Fiction


This week's #1 book on the fiction bestsellers list is The Wind Through the Keyhole by Stephen King. Part of the epic Dark Tower series that King began writing in 1974, The Wind Through the Keyhole takes place between books four (Wizard and Glass) and five (Wolves of the Calla) in the series. The story begins as Roland and his ka-tet (loosely defined as the people he is questing with) take shelter from a violent storm. As they wait for the storm to pass, Roland tells them stories from his early days as a gunslinger, when he was sent out by his father to investigate vicious murders, purportedly committed by a shape-shifter.

Peter David, Robin Furth and Jae Lee have created an on-going Dark Tower graphic novel series that also explores Roland's life before the events in the series' first book The Gunslinger. Start with The Gunslinger Born.

Other books with similar writing styles to King include:

Sandman: Preludes and Nocturnes by Neil Gaiman: The first in the Sandman graphic novel series begins as an occultist, attempting to capture Death to bargain for eternal life, traps her younger brother Dream instead. After his 70 year imprisonment and eventual escape, Dream, also known as Morpheus, goes on a quest for his lost objects of power. Like King's Dark Tower series, the Sandman series features an enigmatic loner on a quest across worlds.

The Talisman, by Peter Straub & Stephen King: The first in the Jack Sawyer series, follows twelve-year-old Jack Sawyer as he embarks on a quest to save his mother's life and journeys back in time across America--and into another realm. Or, try one of Straub's stand-alone novels, Mr. X.

Click here for more fiction bestsellers...


Nonfiction

This week's #1 nonfiction book is again Rachel Maddow's Drift: The Unmooring of American Military Power and you can find read-alikes for that title here. At #2 is Lots of Candles, Plenty of Cake: A Memoir by Anna Quindlen In a series of essays,  the Pulitzer-prize winning author reflects on growing older, raising children, feminism and body image. An honest and often humorous memoir, Quindlen uses her own life to shed light on our own.

Other books similar to Lots of Candles, Plenty of Cake: A Memoir include:

I Feel Bad About My Neck, by Nora Ephron: With her disarming, intimate, completely accessible voice, and dry sense of humor, Nora Ephron shares with us her ups and downs in I Feel Bad About My Neck, a candid, hilarious look at women who are getting older and dealing with the tribulations of maintenance, menopause, empty nests, and life itself.

Sleeping with Cats, by Marge Piercy: Poet and novelist Marge Piercy presents a memoir that delves into the people, events, and actions that have had a profound impact on both her life and her work, from her turbulent childhood to her two painful early marriages, sharing her insights on aging, love, and creativity.

Click here for more nonfiction bestselllers ...

If you'd like more recommendations, 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, May 7, 2012

Keeping Chickens with Ashley English: All You Need to Know to Care for a Happy, Healthy Flock by Ashley English

Okay.  I confess.  I chose this book by the cover.  Well, by the cover and by the title.  Chickens, chicks, hens, poultry, eggs, roosters . . .  these words or pictures on a book jacket will capture my interest as quickly as a gray tie on a dark background or a shadowy Scot wearing a kilt.  Call me a sucker for do-it-yourself books on farm life and sustainable living with a sizzling romance title thrown in now and then for variety. 

Keeping Chickens has lots of color pictures of different breeds of chickens, chicken coops, eggs and chicken accoutrements, making it as appealing as a glossy magazine. 
I flipped back through the book just to make sure I’m not exaggerating when I say there is a photograph, graphic or drawing on almost every set of pages excluding the glossary and index.  It has ten mini “Portrait of a chicken owner” biographies, directions on how to make a chicken tractor, recipes, a chicken anatomy guide plus a resource list complete with addresses, phone numbers and/or websites.  It would be a great gift for a friend who has just researched Title 16, Chapter 8-5-10 of the Dubuque City Code to discover that city residents can keep “a maximum of four (4) chickens and/or ducks (hens only)” for egg production. 

As an experienced chicken wrangler of nine years, I found English’s book accurate and insightful.  She didn’t spend a lot of time talking about raising meat birds and butchering, which was fine with me because I don’t eat my chickens.  She captures the fascination that I and other small time backyard farmers have with chickens.  If we were raising thousands of chickens for a living, we wouldn’t have the time to enjoy the different personalities in our little flocks.

Ashley English has degrees in holistic nutrition and sociology, and she writes in a practical, easy-to-follow voice.  She also writes for the blog Design*Sponge, is a member of Slow Food USA and quotes Michael Pollan, all points in her favor from my point-of-view.  Our Library has three other titles in the Homemade Living series that sound equally inviting as Keeping Chickens.  I want to read English’s book about canning before my tomatoes ripen.  Imagine that!  I’m already thinking of preserving my ‘mater crop that isn’t even planted yet.  Hope springs eternal--along with weeds.


 - Michelle, Adult Services

Friday, May 4, 2012

Spotlight: Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Charles Taylor

Charles Taylor, former President of Liberia, has been in the news recently due to his recent conviction for war crimes committed in Sierra Leone during the '90s. This was a turbulent and violent period for both Sierra Leone and Liberia, fueled by corruption and blood diamonds.

If you're interested in learning more about the trial of Charles Taylor, the website www.charlestaylortrial.org provides a day by day account of the trial itself, along with background information, a glossary, and an acronym cheat sheet.

For the story of how Mr. Taylor was removed from power and Liberians transformed their country into the stable democracy it is today, check out Mighty Be Our Powers: how sisterhood, prayer, and sex changed a nation at war by Leymah Gbowee and Carol Mithers. Ms. Gbowee and current Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf (and Tawakkul Karman of Yemen) were awarded the 2011 Nobel Peace Prize for their accomplishments.

For more on blood diamonds and their impact on Liberia and Sierra Leone, try:
In A Long Way Gone (966.404 BEA), the autobiography of Ishmael Beah, today a human rights activist, Mr. Beah tells the compelling and gritty story of his experience as a child soldier in Sierra Leone.

Aminatta Forna, the British daughter of a Sierra Leone physician executed for his political beliefs, has worked as a journalist, a documentarian, and novelist. Her lyrical second novel, The Memory of Love, tackles the impact of civil war on the lives of individuals.

Diamonds of War (DVD 553.82) is a 2002 National Geographic documentary shows the impact of the demand for diamonds on Sierra Leone.

Blood Diamond (Feature DVD), this 2006 thriller starring Leonardo DiCaprio, is loosely based on events of the Sierra Leone Civil War, and the creation of the Kimberley Process Certification Scheme, which attempts to curtail the trade in illegal diamonds.

Kanye West's Grammy award winning second album, Late Registration, includes the track, "Diamonds from Sierra Leone," which addresses the trade in blood diamonds.

Other books and DVDs that might be of interest:
What is the What (Fiction Eggers), Sudan
War Child  (962.404 JAL), Sudan
Don't Let's Go to the Dogs Tonight (Biography Fuller), Zimbabwe
Beasts of No Nation (Fiction Iweala), West Africa
One Day the Soldiers Came (302.2309 LON), Various
Little Bee (Fiction Cleave), Nigeria
Hotel Rwanda (Feature DVD), Rwanda
An Ordinary Man (967.57104 RUS), Rwanda
Running the Rift (Fiction Benaron), Rwanda
The Last King of Scotland (Feature DVD), Uganda
The Last King of Scotland (Fiction Foden), Uganda
Unbowed (Biography Maathai), Kenya
King Peggy (Biography Bartels), Ghana

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!

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

The Hunter by Darwyn Cooke

My book review this time around is for The Hunter, which we’ll be discussing at the next meeting of Graphic Content, the library’s graphic novel discussion group. This means we’ve got several copies of the book sitting at the Circulation Desk, so come grab one if my review makes it sound interesting. Love it or hate it, we’d love to hear your opinion when we meet at 7:00 p.m. on June 12.

The Hunter opens with twenty nearly wordless pages in which the main character, Parker, walks into New York City dirty, worn, and broke. Through a quick succession of thefts and scams he gets food, cash, new clothes, a hotel room, and a bottle of vodka. With impressively minimal effort, Parker has secured everything he needs for his immediate comfort. At the same time, and in the same slick fashion, writer/artist Darwyn Cooke has shown us everything we need to know about the character: he’s cold, confident, highly skilled, and angry. It’s a pitch-perfect introduction and you can see the whole thing on the publisher’s website.

As the book progresses, we learn that Parker was a very successful thief until his wife and one of his partners double-crossed him and left him for dead. After some recuperation, Parker has come for his revenge. His goals and simple: he wants to kill his wife and his partner and get his money back. Unfortunately, the partner has become involved with a national crime syndicate and Parker soon finds himself waging a one-man war against overwhelming odds.

Before I go any further, I feel the need to spend a little time unpacking the history of this book, since the plot is bound to sound familiar to a lot of readers. The original novel was written in 1962 by Richard Stark, a pseudonym of prolific and much-celebrated mystery author Donald Westlake. Westlake followed The Hunter with 23 more Parker novels. It’s been adapted into three movies: Point Blank (1967), Full Contact (1993), and Payback (1999).

It’s easy to see why this novel and character have been so popular. Parker is much too cold and calculating to be sympathetic, but there’s something very compelling about his ruthless and efficient pursuit of what his personal code defines as justice. His appeal is like that of a shark; however abhorrent his goals and methods may be, it’s hard not to respect his effortless competency. Parker may not have as much fun as Danny Ocean, but, like Ocean’s Eleven, The Hunter exploits the joy we find in watching a bad guy stick it to a bigger bad guy.

Clearly, Cooke can’t take any credit for the creation of Parker but he shows a very clear understanding of the character’s appeal and how to convey it to the reader. A lot of that comes from the art. Cooke’s known for throwback 60s Modernist style, so this project is right in his wheelhouse. The clothes, cars, and architecture are all straight out of a Mad Men episode. Cooke restricts himself to just two colors, black and gunmetal blue, which plays right into both the cold tone and retro feel of the book.

Cooke followed The Hunter with 2010’s The Outfit, which brought more of a fun caper-movie feel. A third book, The Score, is due out at the end of the month. If you’re crime and mystery reader who’s curious about comics and graphic novels, The Hunter’s a great place to start. Cooke’s art is really clear and easy to follow and the story doesn’t require you to know a bunch of obscure facts about some guy who runs around in long underwear and a mask.

~ Andrew, Adult Services

"Working Mother" is May's Magazine of the Month

In honor of Mother's Day on May 13th, we've selected Working Mother as our Magazine of the Month. This magazine is designed to support the growing number of women who balance career and family every day.

In addition to the print magazine, Working Mother's website has a large number of interactive features from a community of more than a 150 bloggers, to a family organizer. You can check out the magazine here at Carnegie-Stout or their website by following this link: www.workingmother.com

Other mom friendly magazines available at Carnegie-Stout include:

Monday, April 30, 2012

Researching a Historic Property

Have you ever wanted to find out more about your historic home or property?  On Wednesday, May 2, 2012 at 7:00 p.m. Dave Johnson and Wally Wernimont from the City of Dubuque Planning Services Office will be presenting a program on researching a historic property.  The program will be held in the 3rd Floor Aigler Auditorium from 7:00-8:00 p.m. at Carnegie-Stout Public Library.  The program will take you through a step-by-step approach for finding more information about your home or other properties.

Friday, April 27, 2012

Spotlight: From the Web to the Stacks.

From the invention of the printing press, technology has changed the ways we interact with information. It's no secret that the internet and eReaders are shaking up the scene today. A story we've heard a few times already in 2012 involves the success of self-published authors (see Publishers Weekly).

From Allison's staff review of Eden by Keary Taylor, to the excitement around 50 Shades of Grey by E.L. James, authors, readers, and publishers are discovering that success and great reads can be found outside the traditional sources. Of course, the stories we hear about are those authors who've made the jump to traditional publishing like Amanda Hocking, author of young adult paranormal romances and self-made millionaire.


Read Alike Suggestions for Amanda Hocking

The Frenzy by Francesca Lia Block 17 year-old Liv has had more than your typical teenage struggles and concerns. When she turned 13 she discovered that she's not as human as she thought.

Evermore by Alyson Noel The first book in the Immortals series, who discovered her psychic powers after a tragic car accident.

Tithe by Holly Black Sixteen year-old Kaye has seen faeries all her life, which is just another way that marks her as different, like her rock musician mother. Then she saves a mysterious young man who claims to be a knight of the faerie court.

Wings by Aprilynne Pike, Fifteen year-old Laurel discovers, after growing wings, that she is a faerie.


Read Alike Suggestions for 50 Shades of Grey

You may also want to check out these discussions where readers have suggested their favorite erotica authors: Dear Author and Read React Review

The Claiming of Sleeping Beauty by Anne Rice (writing as A.N. Roquelaure)

Kushiel's Dart by Jacqueline Carey

Saddled and Spurred by Lorelei James

Smooth Talking Stranger by Lisa Kleypas


Other Books Available at Carnegie-Stout that started out on the internet
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!