Showing posts with label Women. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Women. Show all posts

Thursday, July 10, 2014

Staff Review: Vintage by Susan Gloss

Set against the trendy backdrop of a vintage boutique in Madison, Wisconsin, Susan Gloss’s charming novel revolves around 30-something store owner Violet and the female customers she befriends.

Each chapter begins with an introduction to one of the shop’s retro items. Readers then become acquainted with a cast of women who, like the clothing and accessories in the boutique, have unique stories to tell and are beautiful, despite their flaws. Each character has recently encountered a challenge in her life, whether it be divorce, adultery, or an unplanned pregnancy. Even the vintage shop, which is a character in its own right, is struggling to survive in the neighborhood’s changing landscape.

As the lives of the characters grow more entwined, they find ways to help one another overcome their problems. Vintage becomes a celebration of life and death and stresses the importance of friendship and following your heart. The book’s outcome may be a bit sappy for some, but the optimistic, feel-good ending suits the overall tone of the story.

Readers looking for tales of female friendship and a touch of romance should check out this book. Despite the hardships plaguing the novel’s characters, Vintage remains sweet and upbeat. This, coupled with the fact that the chapters are easy to fly through and don’t require a great deal of concentration, makes the book perfect for a summer read. Author Susan Gloss also goes out of her way to bring the downtown area of Madison to life, making this a fun read for anyone familiar with the city.

-Abbey, Technical Services

Monday, March 10, 2014

Sycamore Row VS The Husband's Secret: Dubuque Tournament of Books, round two

This week we'll be posting the judges' decisions for the second round of the 2nd Annual Dubuque Tournament of Books. To see an overview of the judges and contestants, check out this blog post. To see why Bethany selected The Husband’s Secret by Liane Moriarty in the first round, click here. To see why Charleen selected Sycamore Row by John Grisham in the first round, click here.
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1d2MCwnl4KKHo4KwKFZRusmd1eiv-dOl4Ky1H0DZWqVU/viewform
Judge: Bethany
This one is rough for me to review because it's outside my normal genre preferences. I've read John Grisham before and can appreciate his storytelling abilities and his expertise of the legal system, but UHG, this one was drawn out for me. A bit forgettable too. I generally prefer my thrillers to come together like puzzles, with pieces finding their way together from all over the board; but this one felt very linear to me. I'd say the last 15 pages of the 447 pages were page turners. And the fact that I know the number of pages without looking it up, indicated that I referenced page 447 too many times while reading. A countdown... 200 pages to go, 100 pages, 75 pages to go... I wouldn’t say the book is boring, it just builds very slowly, with a lot of details. The mystery element was enough to keep me reading, and the end culminates in a very satisfying way.

On the pro side, it was a smart story with likable characters. I have to say I learned a lot about racism in the south, and racism in the 1980’s. It has impacted my world view and I’m grateful for that. If you're into legal thrillers, it was good. It just didn’t thrill me much.

My round 2 choice is The Husband’s Secret. To compare these two books with the same standard doesn’t quite seem fair. For me, The Husband’s Secret, was a simple, easy, and page turning-read. I identified strongly with the characters and the storyline felt relevant to me. Sycamore Row is a different world, set apart from me and I couldn’t relate on most levels. Sycamore Row is also bogged down with a mountain of details and information, which slows the pace down substantially. The pace alone was enough for me to prefer The Husband’s Secret. I require an enticing story to keep my interest, a book I don’t want to put down. I found that in The Husband’s Secret, and found the opposite in Sycamore Row. Don’t get me wrong, Sycamore Row is a smart novel, but just didn’t make my list of most enjoyable.


Judge: Charleen 
Cheap Thrills book blog  
I find it oddly fitting that Bethany describes the world of Sycamore Row as one she can't relate to, because I had mixed feelings while reading The Husband's Secret, and for similar reasons.

All three of the main characters are flawed in their own way, which is of course what makes them so real. Still, even though I sympathized with all of them at one point or another, I also felt at a distance from them, questioning rather than relating. Even in the midst of their new, life-altering circumstances, each of these women remains defined by her motherhood... but I'm not a mother. Could I identify more with their actions and their motivations if I were? I don't know.

That being said, I did find the story compelling, and it comes together very well in the end. I can't help but be impressed by the book as a whole, even if it wasn't my favorite.

Personally, my preference is still for Sycamore Row. The Husband's Secret, though enhanced by extraordinary circumstances, was a bit domestic for my tastes. However, Bethany brings up a good point: "I require an enticing story to keep my interest, a book I don't want to put down." I think most readers would agree with this, and while I quite enjoyed it, I can't argue against the fact that Sycamore Row was an easy book to put down (at least to a point). So, setting personal taste aside, I'll concede to The Husband's Secret.


Thursday, February 20, 2014

Staff Review: Unmentionables by Laurie Loewenstein

Laurie Loewenstein has written a simultaneously heartbreaking and uplifting insight into our world as it was a century ago. With scenes in small-town Illinois, war-torn France and gritty Chicago, you will experience both humor and hardship along with Loewenstein's flawed but lovable cast of characters.

The story reads as though in a contemporary setting. You'll find yourself immersed in long-standing feuds, cruel discrimination, military hospitals, and of course, love and adventure, almost without noticing the author's thorough research. She includes fascinating details of everything from clothing to printing presses to relationships and expectations. Your eyes will be opened to the obstacles and charm of the slower communication and transportation, and the (even more) judgmental neighbors, our ancestors lived with not so long ago.

Unmentionables includes a little something for everyone. You'll learn about the struggle for women's suffrage and early 20th-century politics and economics. The characters are diverse and complex, and you may find yourself missing a couple of them when you finish the book. If you're looking for a feel-good novel with a little extra education and drama, Unmentionables is perfect for you.

~Rachel, Technical Services

Monday, August 26, 2013

Women's Equality Day

Joint Resolution of Congress, 1971
Designating August 26 of each year as Women’s Equality Day

WHEREAS, the women of the United States have been treated as second-class citizens and have not been entitled the full rights and privileges, public or private, legal or institutional, which are available to male citizens of the United States; and

WHEREAS, the women of the United States have united to assure that these rights and privileges are available to all citizens equally regardless of sex; and

WHEREAS, the women of the United States have designated August 26, the anniversary date of the passage of the Nineteenth Amendment, as symbol of the continued fight for equal rights: and

WHEREAS, the women of United States are to be commended and supported in their organizations and activities,

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, that August 26th of each year is designated as Women’s Equality Day, and the President is authorized and requested to issue a proclamation annually in commemoration of that day in 1920, on which the women of America were first given the right to vote, and that day in 1970, on which a nationwide demonstration for women’s rights took place.

Thanks, Bella!

Start your Women’s Equality Day by checking out some of materials available at Carnegie-Stout Public Library, and if you have time to go exploring online, try these websites:

The Iowa Women’s Archives

The National Women’s History Project http://www.nwhp.org/resourcecenter/equalityday.php

Bend,not break: a life in two worlds by Ping Fu with MeiMei Fox.  Fu’s autobiography covers her time as a child soldier in China through her selection as Inc Magazine’s Entrepreneur of the Year.

Dearsisters: dispatches from the women’s liberation movement by Rosalyn Baxandall and Linda Gordon.  This anthology collects original documents of the feminist movement of the 1960s and 70s.

Ironjawed angels directed by Katja von Garneir with screenplay by Sally Robinson and story by Jennifer Friedes. A dramatization of the lives of Alice Paul and Lucy Burns, this DVD is a favorite of League of Women Voters members.

Alittle f’d up: why feminism is not a dirty word by Julie Zeilinger.   Try this “primer on feminism for teenagers” (so described in a review in Library Journal) by a blogger who was born in 1993. 

Notfor ourselves alone: the story of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony directed by Ken Burns and produced by Paul Barnes from a book by Geoffrey C. Ward.  The friendship of two leaders of the women’s rights movement serves as the backdrop for this history lesson.

Onewoman, one vote written and produced by Ruth Pollak and Felicia Widmann.  The documentary originally aired on Public Television’s series, The American Experience

Strong-mindedwomen; the emergence of the woman-suffrage movement in Iowa by Louise R. Noun.  Des Moines resident Louise Noun, who died in 2002, wrote this history of suffrage in Iowa and its sequel, Morestrong-minded women: Iowa feminists tell their stories.



~Michelle, Adult Services

Friday, June 14, 2013

BFFs & Frenemies

While I find the term "frenemies" objectionable, I admit to enjoying stories about poisonous, nice-to-your-face relationships. Bitter, backstabbing jealousy covered in a thin mask of friendship can make for some delicious conflict in a story. Often, but not always, the characters in these twisted friendships are women, often young, privileged women. So, if like me, you're cursed with wonderfully supportive friends and a dearth of couture, try picking up one of these books, movies, or TV shows and exploring the turmoil beneath the perfect facade.


Movies and TV


Books

I'm So Happy for You by Lucinda Rosenfeld
Wendy and Daphne have always been friends, and Wendy has always been the successful, stable one. Now Daphne seems to have stumbled into the perfect life, and Wendy is left reeling with jealousy. Rosenfeld's fast-paced and engaging novel is by turns reflective and sassy, with plenty of drama.





Friends Like Us by Lauren Fox
Willa and Jane have been friends and roommates since college, but their Milwaukee apartment becomes crowded when Jane starts dating Willa's friend from high school. Fox's witty and bittersweet exploration of relationships in your 20s will ring true for many New Adults.






More Like Her by Liza Palmer
Ms. Palmer’s novels are about women in the process of confronting their dissatisfaction with their lives and relationships with wit and emotion. While some of her titles are lighter and more romantic, her most recent novel, More Like Her, is somewhat darker. Frannie is convinced that her coworker, Emma, has the perfect life, and that her own is a disappointing mess, but then Frannie finds that Emma isn’t so perfect after all.




Dare Me by Megan Abbott
 Edgar-winning novelist Megan Abbott’s suspenseful, character-driven novels present a feminine perspective on the darker corners of the mystery genre. Dare Me is a fast-paced and disturbing glimpse into the cut-throat dynamics of cheerleading. A new, popular coach upends the power structure of Sutton Grove High School’s squad. Manipulation, revenge, and jealousy all increase the tension of this psychological page-turner.


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, December 10, 2012

Brain on Fire: My Month of Madness by Susannah Cahalan

It began - or at least it seemed to begin - with two small bug bites. Bedbugs? Perhaps. The young Manhattan reporter, just months out of college, searched her apartment for any sign of the pest. Despite finding no trace, she searched again, eventually calling in an exterminator, who also found nothing. Unknown her, this seemingly innocuous event would mark the beginning of an illness that would eventually steal her sanity, mind and nearly her life.

Susannah Cahalan's Brain of Fire: My Month of Madness is her recollection (as much as she is able to remember) of her journey through what initially appeared to be a bad cold, to extreme personality changes, paranoia, mania and vivid auditory and visual hallucinations and seizures. It is also a harrowing journey through the health care system, as she and her parents desperately searched for a diagnosis as Cahalan slipped further and further into catatonia.

Brain on Fire is based on Cahalan's recollections during the first stages of her illness. However, as she admits, the very nature of the disease makes her memory of that time unreliable, and later, simply missing. Cahalan also relies on the recollections of her parents - who kept a shared journal to keep each other updated on their daughter's progress between visits - her boyfriend's memories and stories from her family, friends and coworkers. Cahalan also draws on her extensive medical records and interviews with the doctors and nurses who treated her, including, as Cahalan's mother remarks, "a real-life Dr. House." She also reviews recordings of her time in New York University Hospital's Advanced Monitoring Unit, offering a haunting glimpses of her deteriorating sanity, none of which Cahalan remembers.

Some of the book's most moving passages (of which there are many) are the recollections of her parents and loved ones. Cahalan's parents had divorced and remarried and her relationship with her father - a somewhat reserved and emotionally distant man - had suffered. Her parents, who had not maintained a relationship, vowed early on that their daughter would not be placed in a psychiatric ward. Her father kept a near-constant vigil at her bedside and her mother researched every possible cause of her daughter illness, searching out the best doctors with increasing desperation. The effect of Cahalan's illness - of watching their only daughter fall apart and being powerless to help - was profound. But, as Cahalan acknowledges, she would not have survived without them.

The science behind the disease Cahalan is eventually diagnosed with is highly complex and not entirely understood. Therein lies the crux of the book - the disease is so rare and difficult to diagnose, its cause so mysterious - that it baffles even the best doctors in the field. Perhaps the most sobering message of this book is, as Cahalan says, how lucky she was. To have been admitted to the right hospital at the right time and referred to the right doctors; the sheer odds against her were astronomical. How many others, she wonders, were not so lucky? How many have been confined to psychiatric wards, long-term care facilities, or have died because they were not as fortunate?

At the close of the book, nearly two years had passed since her admission to NYU Hospital. While she had returned to her job at the New York Post and had, again, moved out of her mother's home, she admits that she isn't entirely sure if her recovery is complete. After such a harrowing journey, after the insults suffered by her brain and body, was is even possible to return to the same person she had been before? Cahalan seems to accept the idea that she might never return to exactly the same person she was before, nor will her parents and boyfriend.

Brain on Fire is both a memoir and a medical thriller, an exposé of the health care system and a tribute to the men and women who work within in,  it is a warning of how fragile our minds and bodies are, and an affirmation of the strength of love and family.

~ Allison , Adult Services

Monday, October 1, 2012

Shine Shine Shine by Lydia Netzer

 I've been thinking about what I enjoyed about Shine Shine Shine, a first novel by Lydia Netzer. In Booklist Kristine Huntley says it's "whimsical" and "a unique and moving love story." Publisher's Weekly says that it's "[c]haracterized by finely textured emotions and dramatic storytelling." "[J]uicily wacky" says Barbara Hoffert in Library Journal. Even Kirkus praises the "charming characters."

Add in the currently hot topic of a child with autism, and a plot-line involving an astronaut husband that reminds me of Apollo 13 (one of my favorite movies), and it's no wonder that I checked it out! But what made this book difficult to put down was the main narrator, Sunny (a handful of chapters are from her husband or mother's perspective). I am a sucker for unconventional, sarcastic female narrators, who meet the challenges of life with dry, sarcastic wit. I also enjoy anything that explores questions of family and motherhood (see: Gilmore Girls).

In fact, three other new books I've read and loved this summer featured narrators that fit the description. Sometimes I feel guilty for preferring female strong female voices in my fiction, but then I'm reminded that most books reviewed in, and most of the book reviewers working for, the big publications like The New Yorker are, in fact, men, and then I don't feel so bad.

So as a bonus, here are the short reviews for those other three books from our group Pinterest Board.

A Grown-Up Kind of Pretty by Joshilyn Jackson
Darkly humorous with wonderfully distinct alternating narrators,three generations of Southern women, who explore the questions of motherhood, destiny, and family.

Code Name Verity by Elizabeth Wein
It seemed like a straightforward story of WWII, but it crept up on me and turned out to be far more clever than I expected. Highly recommended.

True Believers by Kurt Andersen
I liked the narrator, Karen Hollander, who decides to come clean about her youth in the '60s while still in her sixties. The big reveal wasn't a huge surprise, but the voice (and Chicago setting) made up for it.

~Sarah, Adult Services

Friday, June 15, 2012

Read Alike: Wild by Cheryl Strayed

Oprah's famous book club has returned (now with webisodes) and her first selection is Wild: from lost to found on the Pacific Crest Trail by Cheryl Strayed. Ms. Strayed's memoir has been receiving positive reviews and numerous holds here at Carnegie-Stout since its publication earlier this year. Prior to Wild, Ms. Strayed worked as a columnist and wrote a novel, Torch. You can read more about her background and writing on her website: cherylstrayed.com

Wild is an inspirational, lyrically descriptive story of grief, hiking, and personal growth. After her mother's sudden death from cancer, Ms. Strayed's life fell apart. On impulse, she decides to challenge herself by hiking the Pacific Crest Trail, which runs 2,650 miles from the Mexican border of California to the Canadian border of Washington.

You can read more about the Pacific Crest Trail by following these links:
www.fs.usda.gov/pct/
www.pcta.org

We've also gathered together some read alike suggestions for Wild available at Carnegie-Stout:

Tales of a Female Nomad by Rita Golden Gelman
When children's author Rita Golden Gelman is confronted by a divorce and an empty nest, she impulsively sets out for Mexico, starting her decades long journey from home to home around the world. I included this book in a list of some of my favorite female travel narratives in a blog post last summer.

The Cactus Eaters by Dan White
Dan White and his girlfriend Melissa leave their jobs at a Connecticut newspaper to tackle the Pacific Crest Trail. Mr. White writes with humor and honesty about their misadventures, neither was an experienced hiker, though his transformation is somewhat less inspiring than Ms. Strayed's.

A Walk in the Woods by Bill Bryson (917.40443 BRY)
Mr. Bryson is known his witty travel writing. In A Walk in the Woods, he tells of his journey along the Appalachian Trail from Georgia to Maine, along with local trivia, natural history, and more. Mr. Bryson is a more experienced hiker than some of the others he meets along the trail, but this is also a less difficult trail.

Tolstoy and the Purple Chair by Nina Sankovitch (028.8 SAN)
After Ms. Sankovitch's sister is killed by cancer, she works through her grief by reading, an activity the sisters had shared. This is a moving story about family, reading, and the strength of relationships and memory. This book was also the topic of an earlier staff review.

Library Journal has also created a list of reading suggestions for readers who loved Wild, which you can check out by clicking here.

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!

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!

Friday, May 11, 2012

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!

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Iron Jawed Angels & 50/50 in 2020

In continuing celebration of Women's History Month, C-SPL and the League of Women Voters will be showing the award-winning film Iron Jawed Angels Thursday, March 22nd at 6:00 p.m. in the Aigler Auditorium on the third floor. The award-winning film starring Hilary Swank, Francis O'Connor and Angelica Huston tells the true story of the passionate and dynamic women of the women's suffrage movement who risked their freedom and lives to win American women the right to vote.



After the film, there will be a discussion of 50-50 in 2020, an initiative whose mission is to achieve political equity for Iowa women by recruiting, training and mentoring women in sufficient numbers that by the 100th anniversary of Woman Suffrage in 2020, Iowans will have elected females to fill 50% of the Iowa Legislature, the Iowa delegation to the U.S. Congress, and the office of governor.

To learn more about Women's History Month, check out our blog post posted earlier this month. Also check out Women in Iowa: 2012 (.pdf), put together by the State Data Center of Iowa and the Iowa Commission on the Status of Women.

Saturday, March 3, 2012

Women's History Month

"I would like to go back to school so that I can become economically independent, support myself, and if need be, support those dependent upon me. I want a wife who will work and send me to school. And while I am going to school I want a wife to take care of my children."
From "Why I Want a Wife" by Judy Syfers, entire text available online here: http://www.cwluherstory.org/why-i-want-a-wife.html

March is National Women's History Month. This year's theme is Women's Education - Women's Empowerment. You can read more about this year's theme, and the history of Women's History Month at the National women's History Project's website.

On March 22nd at six p.m. the League of Women Voters and Carnegie-Stout will be showing "Iron Jawed Angels" in the Aigler Auditorium, followed by a discussion. This film dramatizes of the suffragettes efforts to pass the 19th amendment which gave women the right to vote. Click here to read more about this event.

We encourage you to stop by the display of books and movies on the new fiction shelves on the First Floor, and to check out the links to online resources below.

The Library of Congress, Women’s History Month: Provides links to online exhibits, profiles, and other resources of the Library of Congress.
The Library of Congress, International Women’s Day Photo Set: One of several Flickr sets of images from the Library of Congress, and the location from where the photo in this post originates.
Iowa Pathways, Women’s Suffrage: Iowa Pathways are resources put together by Iowa Public Television for teachers and students. This link provides an introduction to the history of women's suffrage and women's rights in Iowa.
Iowa Women’s Hall of Fame: The Iowa Women's Hall of Fame is a function of the Iowa Commission on the Status of Women, and their website has recently been updated to include short biographies of the members of the Hall of Fame.
The Carrie Chapman Catt Girlhood Home and Museum: Carrie Chapman Catt is one of the best known Iowa Women's Suffragists, and this museum is a two-hour drive from Dubuque.
Discovering American Women’s History Online Database: Walker Library of Middle Tennessee State University has created this database which allows users to search the contents of many different digital collections.
The National Women’s History Project Quiz: This quiz was created by the National Women's History Project, the organization behind the development of Women's History Month.

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/.

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Mother's Day

This coming Sunday, May 8th, is Mother's Day. Many local restaurants will be serving brunch, and Boy Scout Troop 91 will be serving pancakes at Eagle Point. The Dubuque Youth Ensembles will be performing a concert at Five Flags Theater.

However you're planning to celebrate this special day, we here at Carnegie-Stout have some suggestions for Moms and Motherhood!

You can check out our display of Mother's Day books on the first floor on the New Books shelves, or take a peak at our online list of titles, both fiction and non-fiction.

We also have a large number of magazines that would appeal to mothers of all different types:
Woman's Day
More
Ladies' Home Journal
Country Woman
Family Circle
Vogue
Lucky
Cosmopolitan
InStyle
Working Mother


Readers of all types might enjoy the display by the Recommendations Desk featuring books about Tea. Stop by and pick up a bookmark, or check out this reading list online! There's fiction, mystery, history, romance, and even a biography of Sir Thomas Lipton.

Coffee Drinkers might prefer:
Making your own gourmet coffee drinks (641.6373 TEK)
Frasier (DVD TV)
What we eat: the true story of why we put sugar in our coffee and ketchup on our fries (641.3 WHA)

And everyone's welcome to stop by the Recommendations Desk for more reading suggestions!

Monday, May 2, 2011

The Fart Party and Drinking at the Movies by Julia Wertz

The Fart Party and Drinking at the Movies by Julia WertzI first noticed Julia Wertz's graphic novel Drinking at the Movies late last year while skimming lists of the best books of 2010. When I took a closer look, the titles of Wertz's earlier comics, The Fart Party Volumes 1 and 2, intrigued me. As Mario Anima of FanboyPlanet.com put it, "Lets be frank here, farts and party together at last? I’m there."

Actually, as a blurb at the end of Drinking at the Movies points out, "The Fart Party Volumes 1 and 2 have nothing to do with farts or parties." Rather, Wertz's autobiographical comics detail her relationships during her 20's, her low-paying jobs, her move from San Francisco to Brooklyn, and her developing artwork.

"I came up with the name 'Fart Party' when my boyfriend couldn't stop farting," Wertz told the SFist in 2006. "I suggested we throw a party and fill the balloons with farts. When we want people to leave, we pop the balloons. A lot of people don't like the name 'Fart Party.' But that's okay 'cause I don't like a lot of people."

In a slightly more conciliatory tone today, Wertz uses the title Museum of Mistakes: The Comic Formerly and Regrettably Known as 'The Fart Party' on her website at http://www.juliawertz.com/.

Julia Wertz's comics are as good, if not better, than a lot of contemporary literature. Los Angeles Times Book Critic David L. Ulin calls Wertz's work "funny and outrageous, but also serious, since what Wertz is tracing is the difficulty of knowing how to live." He says it's "a quiet triumph, a portrait of the artist in the act of becoming, a story with heart and soul."

LIBRARY BOOK BAG, AWESOOOOME...Personally, I like Wertz because she eats cheese in front of an open fridge, refers to current affairs as "nooze," and thinks the public library is "one of the top five places to kick it."

But most of all, I'm a fan of Julia Wertz because she creates art out of ordinary, everyday experiences, and she makes it look so easy, as if anyone could do the same.

~Mike, Adult Services

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Women's History Month

"Our History is Our Strength" is the 2011 theme of Women's History Month. March is an opportunity for us to focus on the achievements of women past and present, the famous and the less familiar. At Carnegie-Stout Public Library, we've gathered together resources aid in the discovery and celebration of all women.


We encourage you to stop by the display of books and movies near the Recommendations Desk on the First Floor, and to check out the links to online resources below.


The Library of Congress, Women’s History Month: Provides links to online exhibits, profiles, and other resources of the Library of Congress.

The Library of Congress, International Women’s Day Photo Set: One of several Flickr sets of images from the Library of Congress, and the location from where the photo in this post originates.

Iowa Pathways, Women’s Suffrage: Iowa Pathways are resources put together by Iowa Public Television for teachers and students. This link provides an introduction to the history of women's suffrage and women's rights in Iowa.

Iowa Women’s Hall of Fame: The Iowa Women's Hall of Fame is a function of the Iowa Commission on the Status of Women, and their website has recently been updated to include short biographies of the members of the Hall of Fame.

The Carrie Chapman Catt Girlhood Home and Museum: Carrie Chapman Catt is one of the best known Iowa Women's Suffragists, and this museum is a two-hour drive from Dubuque.

Discovering American Women’s History Online Database: Walker Library of Middle Tennessee State University has created this database which allows users to search the contents of many different digital collections.

The National Women’s History Project Quiz: This quiz was created by the National Women's History Project, the organization behind the development of Women's History Month.