Monday, November 19, 2012

Back in the Game by Charles Holdefer



In July another librarian and I took a road trip to Prairie Lights, an independent bookstore in Iowa City, to hear Charles Holdefer read from his latest novel, Back in theGame.  Why would we make a three-hour round trip drive for a half hour reading?  Holdefer had offered to come to Carnegie-Stout for an author visit this fall, so we wanted to learn more about him and his book.  Although his schedule didn’t allow Holdefer to come to Dubuque in October for a program after all, I did get a signed copy of his book to read.

Raised in Knoxville, Iowa, Holdefer attended the Iowa Writers' Workshop before moving to France in 1985, where he teaches at the University of Poitiers.  He returns to Iowa frequently to visit and to teach.  This summer his weeklong Novel Fundamentals class was part of the Iowa Summer Writing Festival.  Since November is NaNoWrMo, now seems like a good time to review his book.
"[Back in the Game] is about a guy who fakes his credentials to become an elementary-school teacher and finds himself in a small town in Iowa," Holdefer said. "He starts an affair with the mother of one of his pupils. The mother's husband is a meth addict." 

This is not a bucolic, happily-ever after fairy tale set in the rustic Iowa of years past.  This is 21st Century Iowa with smelly hog lots, bullying of special education students, meth labs and dysfunctional families.  Stanley Mercer, the main character in Back in the Game, never made it past Triple A ball in the United States.  He has been living out of the country for almost 15 years, never realizing his dream of major league success.  He is reeling from the triple whammy of losing his job playing baseball in Europe, being dumped by his French girlfriend and facing a future for which he has not prepared.  Encouraged by his brother Riley, an Illinois hotshot lawyer who is not anxious for Stanley to sponge off his family, Stanley looks for a real job, and he finds real people with real problems, and he is forced to deal with his own shortcomings. The game he finds in Iowa is making a new life after baseball; this life forces him to consider where he’s been and where he’d like to go. 
Despite being a fraud with no preparation for the classroom, Stanley is not the worst teacher ever.  He relates well to his students and encounters other teachers with problems of their own.  He finds himself drawn into the life of the community.  The story unwinds leisurely, and the quirky characters take time to reveal themselves.  They’re worth the wait: Beverly, the nurse and maybe lover in Chicago; Nelson, the art teacher unhappy at his failed marriage; the Rawlings family with Mom Amy having an affair with Stanley, her daughter Ginny’s teacher, and Dad Reggie clinging to family wealth as he wallows in methamphetamine addiction; Patty Gordon, the teacher with 28 years under her belt who helps Stanley survive his first few weeks of teaching; and Stanley’s Mom and her boyfriend Archie of the cranberry-colored sports jacket; what a cast!

Setting, particularly local color, is almost as an important element to me as characters I care about, a compelling plot and an intriguing topic.  Charles Holdefer offers me the whole package in Back in the Game, and his wry humor and social satire are a bonus.   I hope he can fit a visit to Dubuque in his schedule next year when he comes back to the United States.

--Michelle

Friday, November 16, 2012

Black Friday, tips to find the deals

The Holiday Season is approaching rapidly, which means that many of us are getting ready to do some serious shopping. Whether you're a Black Friday veteran or novice, Carnegie-Stout has tips and tools to help you plan your attack, but, fair warning, the library will be closed on Thanksgiving and the 23rd so our staff can enjoy the holiday with family.
Never fear though! The number one tip to prepare for Black Friday is to plan ahead (number three: fanny packs, warning! link contains swears). You want to have a shopping list, know where the best bargains are, and when the stores open.

While I've always been a fan of sorting through all the ads in the Thursday paper after stuffing myself with turkey, the internet means that you could've started your planning last week. Luckily this also means you don't have to go from store website to store website, but can find all the Black Friday ads in one place. You still might need to visit the store's pages to verify the local opening hours, but at least you can check if there any deals worth showing up at six a.m. first.

Websites that collect Black Friday Advertisements:
bfads.net
blackfriday.com

Websites that compare prices at various retailers:
www.bizrate.com
www.shopping.com
pricegrabber.com

But maybe you're on the hunt for some particular item, rather than just looking for the best door busters. Wading through dozens of circulars to find which stores have the sales you need, even electronically, can be a headache. If you know exactly what you want, a site that compares prices can be useful, but best bargain doesn't always mean best. First you'll want to compare televisions or blenders or leaf blowers to find which brands and models will do what you need them to.

This is when you should check Consumer Reports (they also have price comparisons). You might be familiar with Consumer Reports from their annual buying guide or their monthly publications, and both are available at Carnegie-Stout. But did you know that Carnegie-Stout also has access to Consumer Reports' online site?


You can find Consumer Reports in our list of Library Research Databases by clicking here. If you are at home you will be asked to enter your library barcode and PIN, but everyone can search their Buying Guides and Recommendations from a computer inside the library. You can even print off your findings for ten cents a page (black & white).

If you're not able to access Consumer Reports from home, and Carnegie-Stout isn't open, you can still read some of their advice at www.consumerreports.org. You can also turn to the product reviews on personal blogs, websites like Amazon (although these are not always trustworthy), or from a trusted friend or neighbor. Alternatively, you can take a look at the product reviews offered by:
Good Housekeeping (we have the magazine to flip through too)
CNET (technology and electronics)

And because librarians are most often asked to help select and operate eReaders, the first place you should check is OverDrive's list of compatible devices. This will tell you if your new eReader will play nicely with our eBooks. And if you're the lucky recipient of a shiny new eReader this holiday season, we'll be here to help you learn how to check out and download those eBooks.

Reviews and comparisons of eReaders:
Consumer Reports (you may need to go through the library's website to see all information)
Good Housekeeping
CNET

And if all this is too much for you, remember, you can always stay home and celebrate Buy Nothing Day instead.

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Bestsellers for the week of November 11th

It's a good time to be a rock star with a book, it seems. Over past few weeks, more and more memoirs and biographies by and about rock 'n' roll stars have appeared on the bestsellers list. This week, for instance, four artists have spots on the top 10:

Bruce: The Innocence, the Darkness, the Rising  by Peter A. Carlin, an authorized and painstakingly researched biography of the Boss. Drawing on exclusive interviews with members of the E Street Band, including Clarence Clemons’ final interview, and unrestricted conversations with Springsteen’s family, friends, manager Jon Landau, and Springsteen himself, Carlin gives his life the definitive treatment. Carlin also wrote a similarly sweeping biography of Paul McCartney - Paul McCartney: A Life - in 2009.

Rod: The Autobiography, the self-penned story of two-time Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductee's rise to fame that recounts his youth, his years with on tour with The Jeff Beck Group and The Faces and his three marriages and decades as a solo performer.

Waging Heavy Peace: A Hippie Dream by Neil Young. The early anticipated memoir recalls his childhood in Ontario, to his first gigs with the Squires as they traveled Canada in his 1948 Buick hearse, his spur-of-the-moment move to California in 1966 and the brief but influential time with Buffalo Springfield to his solo career and work with Crazy Horse and Crosby, Stills and Nash. Young also delves into his personal life, recounting the influence his wife and three children have had and finally coming to rest in the contemplative natural beauty of Hawaii.

There have been a few other biographies written about Young, including Shakey: Neil Young's Biography by Jimmy McDonough (2002), Neil Young Nation: A Quest, an Obsession, and a True Story by Kevin Chong (2005) and Neil Young: The Definitive History by Mike Evans (2012), but this is the first memoir penned by the artist himself.

Who I Am: A Memoir by Pete Townshend - The lead guitarist and founding memoir of The Who tells the story of his life in this memoir - a book that has taken him nearly a decade to write. A candid recollection of his difficult childhood in West London, the beginnings of his career with Roger Daltry and his struggles with the trappings of drugs, sex and fortune that inventively come with the lifestyle of a rock star.

Last week also saw Peter Criss' Makeup to Breakup: My Life In and Out of KISS, In the Pleasure Groove: Love, Death and Duran Duran by the band's co-founder John Taylor and How Music Works by David Byrne, which is less of an autobiography than an exploration of the evolution and meaning of music.

For a full list of this week's fiction and nonfiction bestsellers, visit us on Pinterest!