Reading Level: Adult Non-Fiction
(4 out of 5)
You know that this is going to be a fun book when it is written by Punky Brewster! Soleil Moon Frye doesn't disappoint. I think I oh'ed and ah'ed over every page. Her party ideas are fun, affordable, and they can be adapted for library programs. I absolutely loved all the color pictures. Most of you know I love my picture books!
If you are looking for new ideas for party planning check this book out!
Brand New at the Library!
Saturday, November 30, 2013
Friday, November 29, 2013
Death Benefit by Robin Cook
Reading Level: Adult
Submitted by Gerti
Robin Cook is one of my favorite authors, so it comes as not surprise that I really enjoyed one of his recent books, called Death Benefit. It involves (briefly) several of his stock characters, New York Medical Examiners Laurie Montgomery and Jack Stapleton, who are some of my favorites. But in this book, the protagonist is Pia Grazdani, a Colombia University medical student, who finds herself in the middle of a murder mystery while working in a lab on campus. Both the professors running the lab die, and everyone else assumes they are killed by germs they have been working on, but Pia can't buy that.
The subplot involves a pair of Wall Street hotshots who have created a company that buys back life insurance policies from sick, elderly people, and their profits would be down if the Columbia professors work growing human organs were successful. So they solicit some Albanian mobsters to kill the professors, and make it look like they were killed by their germ experiments, while in reality they have radiation poisoning.
Pia and the medical examiners get together while she is trying to find out whether the professors bodies are giving off alpha radiation, but her interference causes the mobsters to kidnap her and shoot another fellow from the lab. It seems like all the loose ends have been tied ups, until the New York Albanians discover that the girl they've kidnapped is related to an Albanian mobster from New Jersey, and then they turn on the Wall Street guys.
If it seems complicated, it is, but there is enough of both medical information and spy drama to make for a rollicking read. There are some mysteries left unresolved, especially regarding the workmen who spend days working on the air conditioning in the lab. Are they mobsters? One of the fellows does talk to Pia about her Albanian-sounding name, but it is never made clear that they are mobsters and that was when the radioactive material was planted in the professor's office. Except for the question mark, I think "Death Benefit" was well written and will please any true Cook fan, just as it pleased me.
Submitted by Gerti
Robin Cook is one of my favorite authors, so it comes as not surprise that I really enjoyed one of his recent books, called Death Benefit. It involves (briefly) several of his stock characters, New York Medical Examiners Laurie Montgomery and Jack Stapleton, who are some of my favorites. But in this book, the protagonist is Pia Grazdani, a Colombia University medical student, who finds herself in the middle of a murder mystery while working in a lab on campus. Both the professors running the lab die, and everyone else assumes they are killed by germs they have been working on, but Pia can't buy that.
The subplot involves a pair of Wall Street hotshots who have created a company that buys back life insurance policies from sick, elderly people, and their profits would be down if the Columbia professors work growing human organs were successful. So they solicit some Albanian mobsters to kill the professors, and make it look like they were killed by their germ experiments, while in reality they have radiation poisoning.
Pia and the medical examiners get together while she is trying to find out whether the professors bodies are giving off alpha radiation, but her interference causes the mobsters to kidnap her and shoot another fellow from the lab. It seems like all the loose ends have been tied ups, until the New York Albanians discover that the girl they've kidnapped is related to an Albanian mobster from New Jersey, and then they turn on the Wall Street guys.
If it seems complicated, it is, but there is enough of both medical information and spy drama to make for a rollicking read. There are some mysteries left unresolved, especially regarding the workmen who spend days working on the air conditioning in the lab. Are they mobsters? One of the fellows does talk to Pia about her Albanian-sounding name, but it is never made clear that they are mobsters and that was when the radioactive material was planted in the professor's office. Except for the question mark, I think "Death Benefit" was well written and will please any true Cook fan, just as it pleased me.
Thursday, November 28, 2013
Happy Thanksgiving!
All locations of LCPL will be closed in observance of Thanksgiving. Normal hours 10am-6pm will resume on Friday, 11/29/13. Come say Hi if you aren't out braving the Black Friday shopping!
Wednesday, November 27, 2013
Catching Fire the Movie!
But never fear we only have another year to wait to see Mockingjay part 1! I still can't believe they are splitting the book into two movies. They just love to torture us.
If you have seen the movie leave a comment letting us know how you thought it compared to the book.
Friday, November 15, 2013
Divergent by Veronica Roth (Movie Trailer)
Friday, November 8, 2013
The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros
Reading Level: Adult Fiction
Submitted by Gerti
Submitted by Gerti
Back
in the days when I taught a short story class to college freshmen,
Sandra Cisneros was one of the authors the school chose for me to
teach them. The story they chose of hers was called “The House on
Mango Street,” and it comes from this collection of vignettes,
published back in 1984. I never liked it as much as some of the other
stories I had to teach, and I was amazed every semester that the
students I taught at the New Hampshire technical college always
responded so well to it.
Cisneros
writes this story collection about the daily life, dreams and
encounters of a young girl growing up in the Latino section of
Chicago. We see the house she lives in, and meet her family,
neighbors, friends and teachers, and despite her simple “young
girl” language, the characters are distinctly if not completely
drawn. We meet the landlord, the crazy cat lady, and the teenaged
neighbor girl who does the baby sitting who is desperate to escape
that street and that life. We see the desperation and “harsh
reality” of the area, symbolized by a beautiful hidden garden that
gradually gets filled with junker cars after the hard-working Asian
family who tended it moves away. We see the girl Esperanza’s shame
at the shabbiness of her house, and her growing desire to exceed
expectations and leave the area to become someone different from her
own mother, someone who lives up to their dreams and is not burdened
by raising children.
The
critics still like this book more than do I, and they heap praise on
Cisneros’ writing. “Marvelous… spare yet luminous” reads the
blurb from the San Francisco Chronicle writer, although I would only
agree with the word “spare.” “Deeply moving” writes the
critic from the Miami Herald, and once again, I disagree. I find too
much of Cisneros’s anger in the vignettes, and am uncomfortable
with her obviously biographical “voice”. I find it more poignant
than delightful, as spare as poetry but without a poet’s skill. I
don’t find her “one of the most brilliant of today’s young
writers” as Gwendolyn Brooks says, and find the pictures Cisneros’
draws as difficult to access and understand as a blue period Picasso.
The
only story that sings for me (with the clever line “Today we are
Cinderella”) is the one where Esperanza and her sisters are given
second-hand shoes to wear. The young girls run up and around the
neighborhood wearing the fashionable footware, until they realize
that the high heels have turned them into sexual objects to the men
in the neighborhood, and then they hide the shoes away until they are
thrown out. Only in this story do I hear the shrill note of the
neighborhood, and feel the fear and sobriety that is the undercurrent
of living there.
I
don’t like it, and I wouldn’t want to read more by Cisneros in
this style. But at least I can say now that I’ve read the whole
book, and “it’s not her, it’s me.”
Wednesday, November 6, 2013
Charles and Emma: The Darwins' Leap of Faith by Deborah Heiligman
Reading Level: Adult Non-Fiction
Submitted by Gerti
Submitted by Gerti
As
you might expect from an author whose name means “holy man” in
German, Deborah Heiligman has written an account of what religion
meant in the life of a very famous man - Charles Darwin. For those
who don’t know, he was the British naturalist who came up with the
“survival of the fittest” concept of evolution, and hence butted
heads with those who were more comfortable with the creation story in
the Bible, where God created everything that ever lived. This book
spends most of its time dealing with that dilemma in Darwin’s life.
But
the method this book uses to examine the gulf between Darwin’s
theories and commonly held religious beliefs in the 1800s is to
examine the relationship between Darwin and his wife Emma, who was
far more religious than her husband. Heiligman’s book details the
Darwin’s many children and their happy family life. And it shows
how the death of the couple’s favorite child, Annie, challenged
Emma’s belief in heaven and killed Charles’ entirely. More
important in regards to his scientific contributions, it details what
influenced Darwin to make his great leap of thought – including his
voyage on the HMS Beagle and the Thomas Robert Malthus’ essay on
human population growth and decline that Darwin thought might explain
the growth and decline of plant and animal species as well. The book
even shows the influence Darwin had on popular culture – from the
cartoons that lampoon the relationship between monkeys and humans, to
the novel “Wives and Daughters” by Elizabeth Gaskell where the
hero was modeled after Darwin.
I
found the book interesting, as it humanizes the iconic figure,
showing how worried Darwin was about releasing “The Origin of
Species” before it was perfect, and how he dealt with public and
private opposition to his theory, as well as to closely-related rival
theories. The text delves into his many fascinations – with bugs,
birds, for example, and explains what might seem a mystery for modern
people - why he was able to spend so much time being a naturalist
(his family was related to the rich and famous Wedgwoods.) It also
lists Darwin’s many illnesses, and shows how hard he had to work to
overcome his frequent bouts with headaches and intestinal distress in
order to research and write his many books (and journals).
So
the book taught me more about Darwin the man than a simple biography
would have. But my criticism is that, at times, the author’s need
to link religion to a particular moment in Darwin’s life felt
forced, although I understand that she wanted to make this more than
an “ordinary” biography. Yet, even with that issue, the book is
worth reading if you have any interest in the life of this ordinary
man with an extraordinary mind.
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