Tuesday, April 7, 2020

Music Memoirs


Looking for books that are both entertaining and straight forward? Music memoirs are a fun way to learn about the events behind your favorite performer's career. The story lines are often similar (though that's part of the fun) – a tale of a dreamer, who kept working at his/her craft, either with or against his/her parent’s wishes, proved everyone wrong, went through periods of darkness and doubt, often formed a substance abuse disorder, but rose above and conquered the world, then perhaps (depending on how career-expansive the memoir is) was humbled once again when the new band line-up proved less popular with fans, or they had a drug relapse, then they eventually found spirituality…or something like that. Here are a couple I’ve read recently that I have really enjoyed and below is a link to more of the library’s music memoirs in print and digital formats. Although the print formats may not currently be available while the library is closed, you can add them to your reading list!


Not Dead Yet by Phil Collins


The drummer and lead-singer of Genesis, and solo-artist, shares about his working class upbringing (in contrast to his British public school bandmates), how the drum set he received at the age of three formed who he would become, his early beginnings playing with bands in the swinging 60s clubs of London, and his struggles balancing work and fame with family life (admittedly, not well).  I listened to the audiobook version, narrated by Collins himself. Collins is a good storyteller and hearing him talk about his life is a treat. You can tell he’s a very reflective person and tries to be as honest and candid as possible. Although he does share some of the darker aspects of his life, specifically his affair that led to his third wife, and his period of heavy alcohol abuse in the early 2000s, I often had the feeling that he wasn't sharing everything, or that he was making sure not to hurt his "nice-guy" persona, but hey, you can only degrade yourself so much. Overall, Collins is very likable and tells his story with wit and grace. The only downside of the audiobook is you don’t get to see the photographs from Collins' life that are included in the print version.


Let’s Go (So We Can Get Back) by Jeff Tweedy


Chicago-based alt-country/rock musician and leader of the influential band, Wilco, Jeff Tweedy writes with his kids in mind. You can tell family means a lot to Tweedy (a similar theme that went through Collin’s book) as he reflects on his upbringing, his closeness to his mother and (to a lesser extent) his distant alcoholic father, and how his wife, Susie, helped him through many of the dark points in his life. In fact his love for his wife and kids are some of the most endearing parts of the book. It’s also hard not to get caught up in his excitement about some of his first gigs and meeting some of his idols in the early chapters. Tweedy's unique personality shines throughout. He's a humble, quiet guy, who can joke about his anxiety and neurotic quirks. Although, like the Collins book, it feels like sometimes Tweedy glosses over some of the darker sides of his life—the depths of his pain-killer addiction, feuds with former bandmate, etc. He does write about them often, but maybe it's that he doesn't feel proud of himself. I can't say that about the authors of the next book.


The Dirt by Vince Neil, Nikki Sixx, Mick Mars, Tommy Lee, and edited by Neil Strauss


This may be one of the sleaziest of memoirs (although I haven’t read Stephen Pearcy from Ratt's book, Sex, Drugs, Ratt Roll, which I heard may take the cake). Readers who shy away from reading about glorified tales of debauchery should avoid this one. This one is completely over-the-top. Any terrible thing you could think of somebody doing, probably happened in this book. Like me, you’ll likely find yourself disgusted and in awe, often simultaneously. This one is quite the opposite of the previous two memoirs. Instead of glossing over the darkness, the guys in Mötley Crüe revel in it; brag about it. Alternating between perspectives of each band member, it’s a behind the scenes glimpse of the excess of 80s rock star culture. It's often laugh out loud funny when one band members' story contradicts another, leaving one to wonder how things really played out. Through all the sleaze, there are tragedies in each band members life that force them to grow - for example; Nikki Sixx's several heroin overdoses, or the death of Vince Neil's 4-year old daughter Skylar to cancer. You don't have to find the band likable to find this sociologically fascinating! Note: The Netflix film of the same name does a pretty good job condensing and capturing the tone of the book.

What's Next?

One book I'm looking forward to read is Girl in a Band by Kim Gordon because I'm a big Sonic Youth fan and I'd like to read about her perspective on the grunge scene of the 90s (a genre their band is often thrown in with, but predated) and playing in a mostly male-dominated profession. I also have The Beautiful Ones by Prince in my to-be-read pile because the movie Purple Rain only gave me a small taste of what the performer's life, and the Minneapolis music scene of the 80s, was like.


Click here for music memoirs in print and CD audiobook


Click here for digital music memoirs


What music memoirs have you really enjoyed? Share in the comments.

Thursday, April 2, 2020

#HarryPotterAtHome for everyone

As the library's foremost Harry Potter fan, I try to create Harry Potter-themed events whenever possible, especially for adults who often get overlooked as fans of this beloved world. In this unusual and difficult time of social distancing, self-isolation and worry, I am happy to note that there are several new access points to Harry Potter material and lore for fans of all ages.

1. J. K. Rowling and WizardingWorld.com have announced the release of the new online Harry Potter hub: Harry Potter at Home. It has info, quizzes, crafts, lore and all sorts of fun Harry Potter resources for parents, teachers, carers, students and adult fans too. Don't forget to get sorted into your house!

2. J. K. Rowling has announced that she has granted open licenses for teachers and now allows them to make and share videos of themselves reading her books for students online.

3. As a part of the #HarryPotterAtHome release, Overdrive has issued free access to the first book in the Harry Potter series, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone. It is accessible through the end of April and available to everyone who has access to Overdrive as a City of Dubuque C-SPL card holder, or Bridges Overdrive, through the Dubuque County Library. What's really cool about this is these are available in many languages and in ebook or downloadable audio formats. May I humbly recommend you try the audio version, as Jim Dale is *amazing* as the narrator of the entire Harry Potter series and is a joy to listen to.

4. Speaking of the joy of audio books, Audible.com is also offering free streaming of the digital audio book version of the first book (Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone) under their "Audible Stories" section.  But here is the kicker - they are offering the British version of the audio book, which was narrated by actor and comedian Stephen Fry! As a die-hard Harry Potter fan, I have been aching to get my hands (and ears) on this audio version! While I am committed to Jim Dale forever as the Best. Narrator. Ever...I still wanted to hear a new take by a different narrator. You never know what new details or nuance you might pick up with a new voice.

5. Lastly, how about a Harry Potter themed online escape room? Sounds awesome, right? Sydney Krawiec, Youth Services Librarian at Peters Township Public Library in McMurray, PA created this Hogwarts Digital Escape Room for Harry Potter fans who are stuck at home. Thank you, Sydney!

If you have never read the Harry Potter series, I challenge you to do so now. The options for access and Harry Potter fun are wide open. Who couldn't use a little escape to Hogwarts right about now?

~Angie, Adult Services Librarian and Gryffindor For Life


Monday, March 2, 2020

C-SPL Reader of the Month: Ben Snyder

https://catalog.dubuque.lib.ia.us/cgi-bin/koha/opac-shelves.pl?op=view&shelfnumber=1881&sortfield=titleAbout Ben

I was born and raised right here in Dubuque before I headed out for awhile, traipsing about the country in search of work until I settled in California for a spell, writing for Riot Games, the creators of League of Legends. When I got home, I ended up buying the comic shop I went to as a kid, so now I proudly own Comic World & Games. We moved over to Dodge St, up the hill from the Hy-Vee Gas Station. It provides a great excuse to read twenty comics a week and keep shelves full of gently-loved books close at hand!

(See the past Reader of the Month posts here)

Q & A with Ben

Q. What is the best book you have read within the last year (or ever)?
   
A. I’m pretty confident that The House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski is an experience worth going through. In comics, Al Ewing’s run on Immortal Hulk and Chip Zdarsky’s Daredevil have been jaw-droppingly incredible for sustained periods over the last year.

Q. What is your ideal reading environment (location, sound, snacks, etc.)?

A. There’s a chair in my living room made of clouds that you can just sink into, like plush chocolate velvet. The lamp next to it has a warm, diffuse light that really brings out the colors in a well-drawn comic.

Q. What book are you most excited about reading next and what about it is most exciting?

A. Next up is my semi-annual re-read of the Lord of the Rings. I’m actually a little late starting it, but the shop’s been hectic lately. It’s always a shot of nostalgia, and it’s one of the rare books worth reading aloud to savor the flavor of Tolkien’s poetry. Dude clearly loved words.

Q. What book do you think more people should read and why do you think they should read it?

A. Any of the pretentious door-stop bricks by overconfident white dudes. Infinite Jest mostly succeeds as an examination of addiction, and you’ll feel awkward déjà vu at some of its prescience. There’s great bits about skill progress and pursuing your dreams. Ignore the footnotes, honestly, if you want to. Don’t let someone tell you how to read any of ‘em. Ulysses and Finnegan's Wake are both worth it, and you can find something in them even if you can’t read them the way your first-year professor wanted you to. Gravity’s Rainbow, same thing. A ton of Shakespeare is genuinely belly-laugh-in-a-room-full-of-strangers funny, and some of it more so even if you don’t know the exact pronunciation of a line to make it iambic pentameter. That’s a whole bunch of words before I got to why, so I’ll keep that bit short: cuz they are fun and full of gorgeous verbs and witty metaphors that’ll make you grin, as well as grim nouns and dour similes that’ll bring you to tears and make you feel stuff. That’s all you can ask of a story, right? 

Q. What book has been the most challenging for you to read? How did it challenge you?

A. Twilight, the whole saga, really, was difficult to appreciate at first. It’s chugging-maple-syrup sweet in places, with fizzy writing that can feel limp at first glance. Coming to recognize the genius of Bella’s sparse self-description, the way Meyer invites the reader to really escape into her world, just the rawness of a feminine power fantasy in a time when that still wasn’t acknowledged (look at reviews of the books written back then, dismissive and patronizing), it took me longer than I’d prefer to admit. But the series genuinely earns a place in any sensible American literary canon, even with the odd werewolf/baby stuff in the last book.

Q. When do you decide to stop reading a book? (In other words, do you read every book to the last page, or is there a moment when you decide to stop?)

A. True story, it wasn’t until I was thirty-one years old that I learned it’s possible to stop reading a story.


Check out more of Ben's Favorite Books

Apply to be the next C-SPL Reader of the Month! 

Tuesday, February 25, 2020

FY21 Library Budget Presentation Video

FY21 Budget Presentation

Carnegie-Stout Public Library Director Susan Henricks gave a presentation to the Dubuque City Council last evening about the Library's Fiscal Year 2021 budget recommendations.

Here's a link to the video of Susan's presentation. For more information, see the City of Dubuque's Fiscal Year 2021 Budget page.

Monday, February 3, 2020

C-SPL Reader of the Month: Cynthia Nelms-Byrne

https://catalog.dubuque.lib.ia.us/cgi-bin/koha/opac-shelves.pl?op=view&shelfnumber=1854&sortfield=title
Cynthia Nelms-Byrne, our February C-SPL Reader of the Month is a "mostly" retired artist, who loves spending her free time watching films, or (especially) reading.

(See the past Reader of the Month posts here)

Q & A with Cynthia

Q. Can you tell us a little about your reading interests? 

A. I just like good writing, and read mostly fiction that has compelling characters and an unusual plot. I don’t like romances, stuff like 50 Shades of Grey, etc., but I do
like the classics, like Madame Bovary, and everything by Carson McCullers.


Q. What is the best book you have read within the last year (or ever)?

A. Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead, or any other book by Olga Tokarczuk.

Q. What is your ideal reading environment (location, sound, snacks, etc.)?

A. No sound at all, in my big chair or in bed, sunflower seeds for snacks.

Q. What book are you most excited about reading next and what about it is most
exciting?


A. This House is Haunted by John Boyne. I just like everything I’ve read by him, and I’m anxious to find this one.

Q. What book do you think more people should read and why do you think they
should read it?


A. Anything by Jose Saramago, whose Blindness is an astounding look at a world
collapsing because almost everyone goes blind. Any of his books are great.

Q. What book has been the most challenging for you to read? How did it challenge
you?


A. One I’m reading now— 1491 by Charles Mann, which is about archeological research in the
Americas before and after Columbus. All those Mayan and Incan names and words
are making my brain fry.

Q. When do you decide to stop reading a book? (In other words, do you read every
book to the last page, or is there a moment when you decide to stop?)


A. If something just isn’t engaging me a few chapters in, I quit. As I get older, I’m
ready to quit reading more quickly, as there isn’t enough time to read everything.

Q. Do you remember when your love for reading began?

A. Yes! When I read Alice and Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass at
age 7 and was so proud of myself.



Check out more of Cynthia's Favorite Books

Apply to be the next C-SPL Reader of the Month! 

Saturday, February 1, 2020

Love, Sweet Love

Valentine's Day is fast approaching, but you can embrace love and romance all year round by picking up a good romantic read. We've put together a short list of some of the best new romance books of the past year to jump start your reading journey (all book summaries taken from Goodreads).

The Friend Zone by Abby Jimenez
Kristen Petersen doesn't do drama, will fight to the death for her friends, and has no room in her life for guys who just don't get her. She's also keeping a big secret: facing a medically necessary procedure that will make it impossible for her to have children.

Planning her best friend's wedding is bittersweet for Kristen, especially when she meets the best man, Josh Copeland. He's funny, sexy, never offended by her mile-wide streak of sarcasm, and always one chicken enchilada ahead of her hangry. Even her dog, Stuntman Mike, adores him. The only catch: Josh wants a big family someday. Kristen knows he'd be better off with someone else, but as their attraction grows, it's harder and harder to keep him at arm's length.





Well Met by Jen DeLuca
Emily knew there would be strings attached when she relocated to the small town of Willow Creek, Maryland, for the summer to help her sister recover from an accident, but who could anticipate getting roped into volunteering for the local Renaissance Faire alongside her teenaged niece? Or that the irritating and inscrutable schoolteacher in charge of the volunteers would be so annoying that she finds it impossible to stop thinking about him?

The faire is Simon's family legacy and from the start he makes clear he doesn't have time for Emily's lighthearted approach to life, her oddball Shakespeare conspiracy theories, or her endless suggestions for new acts to shake things up. Yet on the faire grounds he becomes a different person, flirting freely with Emily when she's in her revealing wench's costume. But is this attraction real, or just part of the characters they're portraying?

This summer was only ever supposed to be a pit stop on the way to somewhere else for Emily, but soon she can't seem to shake the fantasy of establishing something more with Simon, or a permanent home of her own in Willow Creek.

 


Get A Life, Chloe Brown by Talia Hibbert
Chloe Brown is a chronically ill computer geek with a goal, a plan, and a list. After almost, but not quite, dying, she’s come up with seven directives to help her “Get a Life”, and she’s already completed the first: finally moving out of her glamourous family’s mansion. The next items?

Enjoy a drunken night out.
Ride a motorcycle.
Go camping.
Have meaningless but thoroughly enjoyable sex.
Travel the world with nothing but hand luggage.
And... do something bad.
But it’s not easy being bad, even when you’ve written step-by-step guidelines on how to do it correctly. What Chloe needs is a teacher, and she knows just the man for the job.

Redford ‘Red’ Morgan is a handyman with tattoos, a motorcycle, and more sex appeal than ten-thousand Hollywood heartthrobs. He’s also an artist who paints at night and hides his work in the light of day, which Chloe knows because she spies on him occasionally. Just the teeniest, tiniest bit.

But when she enlists Red in her mission to rebel, she learns things about him that no spy session could teach her. Like why he clearly resents Chloe’s wealthy background. And why he never shows his art to anyone. And what really lies beneath his rough exterior


The Unhoneymooners by Christina Lauren
Olive is always unlucky: in her career, in love, in ...well, everything. Her identical twin sister Ami, on the other hand, is probably the luckiest person in the world. Her meet-cute with her fiancé is something out of a romantic comedy (gag) and she’s managed to finance her entire wedding by winning a series of Internet contests (double gag). Worst of all, she’s forcing Olive to spend the day with her sworn enemy, Ethan, who just happens to be the best man.

Olive braces herself to get through 24 hours of wedding hell before she can return to her comfortable, unlucky life. But when the entire wedding party gets food poisoning from eating bad shellfish, the only people who aren’t affected are Olive and Ethan. And now there’s an all-expenses-paid honeymoon in Hawaii up for grabs. Putting their mutual hatred aside for the sake of a free vacation, Olive and Ethan head for paradise, determined to avoid each other at all costs. But when Olive runs into her future boss, the little white lie she tells him is suddenly at risk to become a whole lot bigger. She and Ethan now have to pretend to be loving newlyweds, and her luck seems worse than ever. But the weird thing is that she doesn’t mind playing pretend. In fact, she feels kind of... lucky


The Bromance Book Club by Lyssa Kay Adams
Nashville Legends second baseman Gavin Scott's marriage is in major league trouble. He’s recently discovered a humiliating secret: his wife Thea has always faked the Big O. When he loses his cool at the revelation, it’s the final straw on their already strained relationship. Thea asks for a divorce, and Gavin realizes he’s let his pride and fear get the better of him.

Welcome to the Bromance Book Club.

Distraught and desperate, Gavin finds help from an unlikely source: a secret romance book club made up of Nashville's top alpha men. With the help of their current read, a steamy Regency titled Courting the Countess, the guys coach Gavin on saving his marriage. But it'll take a lot more than flowery words and grand gestures for this hapless Romeo to find his inner hero and win back the trust of his wife.



If romance isn't your thing, don't worry we have plenty of mystery, thriller, science fiction, fantasy, and more to choose from. Just stop by the library to browse or fill out a BookMatch Form to get personalized book recommendations from one of our librarians.

Amy, Adult Services