Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Weird Website Wednesday

One of our Reference Desk staplers met its end yesterday, and a coworker reminded me of an odd blog we'd found earlier this year: The Lives and Deaths of Academic Staplers. A librarian at Middle State Tennessee University decided to "document the destruction of public staplers through their general use" starting with the Spring 2013 semester. They're currently on stapler #13.

Image from The Lives and Deaths of Academic Staplers
This left me thinking about some of the other quirky websites of dubious utility that we come across in the course of the day at Carnegie-Stout, and I thought I'd share a few with you.

How Many People Are in Space Right Now?
The space shuttles may no longer be in service, but that doesn't mean there aren't astronauts, cosmonauts, taikonauts, and other space travelers orbiting the planet.

HORG: The Holotypic Occlupanid Research Group : A Database of Synthetic Taxonomy
Image from HORG
An intensely detailed classification system and archive of those little plastic doodads that keep the plastic bag on your bread closed (occlupanids). If you remember learning about kingdom, phylum, class, order, genus, and species in Biology, you'll probably appreciate the dedication behind this site.

TV Tropes
If you ever wondered how many television programs about girl robots there've been, or why someone might refer to such a thing as falling into the uncanny valley, TV Tropes is there to tell you. Just be wary, if you've never visited before, you're liable to lose an hour.

Wookieepedia
Wikipedia for those of you fluent in Wookiee. Although we'd understand if more of our readers were fluent in Klingon.

Did you know we'll be holding an adults only light saber class on May 4th? Call the Reference Desk (563-589-4225) today to reserve your spot!

Monday, March 11, 2013

The Vorkosigan Saga by Lois McMaster Bujold

 Today I am recommending that you pick up a science fiction series from which I've only read half of the books. The Vorkosigan Saga novels by Lois McMaster Bujold are a fast-paced collection of genre-blending fun. The series leaps from murder mystery to epic space battle to romance to political drama, and what ties it all together are Bujold's skills in character development and world-building (galaxy-building?).

The hero of most of the stories is Miles Vorkosigan: charismatic leader, strategic genius, crippled hunchback, and son of one of the most powerful men on his militaristic backwater home planet. Though over the years the series has developed a large and colorful cast of characters from a diverse array of backgrounds, some of whom headline in their own novels. It certainly doesn't hurt that Bujold always maintains a sense of humor, even the darker novels have their comic moments.

I first picked up Shards of Honor, the first in a two part story of how Miles' parents met, while in high school. (At Carnegie-Stout we have these two books as the omnibus Cordelia's Honor.) I read these books two times before I realized they were part of a larger series, and it's only this year that I've made the organized attempt to read them all in some sort of order. I've always been somewhat haphazard when it comes to reading a series, starting with the third book and stumbling over the other books at random. Of course, I'm the sort of reader who often flips to the last page before I've finished the third chapter, so spoilers (usually) don't bother me.

Happily, this is definitely a series where you can get away with reading the books out of order because Bujold doesn't just experiment with the type of story she's telling, but where in the larger chronology the individual story fits. So some readers follow the order of publication, others follow the internal chronology, and I happily muddle my way through, picking whichever one looks more interesting at the moment.

If you're looking for a starting place, you can get away with picking whichever title strikes your interest. However, if you're looking to begin at the beginning, start with Cordelia's Honor (technically Falling Free comes earlier on the time line, but it's so early that there isn't a character overlap). Cordelia's Honor is also a good pick if you're looking for a bit of romance with your science fiction. Young Miles (omnibus containing The Warrior's Apprentice and The Vor Game, the first two novels with Miles as protagonist) has more of a focus on fast-paced action and mystery.

While I haven't loved every book in the series, I keep returning to these characters and their world because Lois McMaster Bujold has managed to capture a piece of my imagination.

~Sarah, Adult Services

Sunday, March 10, 2013

Dubuque Tournament of Books: Elite Eight

Welcome to Round Two of the Dubuque Tournament of Books!

Voting for the second round will run from March 10th - March  16th. Winners from round two will be announced on March 17th, when voting for the third round begins.

The results from Round One:
Are You My Mother: a comic drama 23 votes
Wild: from lost to found on the Pacific Crest Trail 18 votes

The Long Earth 27 votes
Redshirts 16 votes

Gone Girl 31 votes
Notorious Nineteen 8 votes

Building Stories 15 votes
Batman: the court of the owls 26 votes

Code Name Verity 15 votes
The Fault in Our Stars 22 votes

The Casual Vacancy 24 votes
Bring Up the Bodies 14 votes

50 Shades of Grey 20 votes
Bared to You 14 votes

Killing Kennedy: the end of Camelot 14 votes
Behind the Beautiful Forevers: life, death, and hope in a Mumbai Undercity 21 votes

Cast your votes for the second round below! Not sure which title to vote for? Check out this blog post.