Tag Archives: Five Book Friday

Five Book Friday!

downloadThat’s right….As if the Library wasn’t a great enough place already, this year, the West Branch is an official polling place for early voting in Massachusetts!  Those who choose to take advantage of this new option can check out the schedule of polling locations and places by clicking on this link, which will take you to the website for the Secretary of the Commonwealth.  The application for an Early Voter Ballot can be found by clicking here, as well.  We hope this process will make it a little easier for you to fulfill your civic duty by voting when you are able to do so…and also, hopefully, minimize the stress of these elections by allowing you do avoid any nonsense that may occur on Election Day itself.  You can also visit the Torigian Life Center and City Hall to cast an Early Ballot.

See?  Libraries are good for All Things.
See? Libraries are good for All Things.

If you have any problems, especially on Election Day, you can feel free to talk to one of the wardens (police officers) at the polling place, or call the Secretary of the Commonwealth’s Elections Division at 617-727-2828 or 1-800-462-8683. Additionally, the national Election Protection Hotline is 1-866-OUR-VOTE or 1-888-VE-Y-VOTA (en Español).

And just a friendly reminder, pursuant to General laws chapter 56, section 25, it is against the law to allow the marking of his ballot to be seen by any person for any purpose. This includes a voter photographing their own ballot after marking it.  So party like it’s 1992 while at the polling places, ok?

Ok.  Now that all that Adulting has been done and dusted, let’s get to the books….This week is a survey of histories of many different kinds.  We hope you enjoy!

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3757073The Terranauts: Ostensibly, T.C. Boyle’s newest novel is science fiction; it’s set in a version of 1994, in the deserts of Arizona.  With global warming an ever-growing threat, eight ‘Terranaunts’ are preparing to enter a three-acre biodome where they will live completely sealed off from humanity in preparation for an off-earth colony.  Yet while Boyle’s book has plenty of interesting scientific details, and his alternative America is a fascinating place, this book is really about the lives, loves, and choices of the Terranauts themselves–those who enter the dome, and those who are left outside.  By switching narratives, he allows the reader to full experience life through these characters eyes, making this a much more personal, searching, and therefore, realistic story than might otherwise be expected.  Many are calling this book Boyle’s masterpiece (or one of them, at least!), with Publisher’s Weekly proclaiming it “A sprawling tale of achievement, yearning, pride, and human weakness…a multilayered work that recalls the tragicomic realism of Saul Bellow and John Updike.”

3757027Napoleon’s Last IslandWhen Thomas Keneally was visiting Melbourne, he learned the story of the Balcombe family, who lived on the island of St. Helena.  Mr. Balcombe worked for the British East India Company, and was responsible for provisioning ships bound for the Cape Colonies.  The family also played host to St. Helena’s most famous inhabitant–Napoleon Bonaparte, who was sent to live there in exile following his defeat at Waterloo.  Taken with the Balcombe’s story, and, most specifically with the experiences of their thirteen-year-old daughter Betsy, he crafted this novel, a fascinating blend of fact and fiction that explores not only the relationships on the tiny St. Helena, but also its place in the wider world of the French Revolution and Terror.  At the heart of it all, however, is Betsy, and her remarkable, heartbreaking, horrible, and vivid memories.  The New York Times Review of Books was particularly taken with Keneally’s “Insightful and nimble prose. . .[Keneally] seamlessly unites fiction and the ‘truth,’ which means in this case that its armature of fact supports its layers of fictional invention as thought they were weightless.  The delight Keneally took in pulling off this trick shows on every page.”

3783601The Authentic William James: From the imagined past to the reconstructed past to an historical mystery we go.  Stephen Gallagher’s fin-de-siecle investigator Sebastian Becker has seen some of the worst that Britain has to offer.  Now an agent for the Crown, Becker is once again called upon to use his familiarity with madness and the human soul to evaluate the sanity of a confessed arsonist known as “Wild West Showman, The Authentic William James”.  The quest will take Becker to the wild world of Hollywood, where his hunt into James’ psyche will force him to reconsider his own duty–to his country, and the man he pursues.  Stephen Gallagher clearly delights in delving into shadowy, nearly-forgotten corners of history for his tales, and this book is no different, offering readers a very unique view of his subject, through the eyes of a increasingly interesting protagonist.  Publisher’s Weekly agrees, giving this book a starred review and saying “Gallagher gives Sebastian Becker another puzzle worthy of his quirky sleuth’s acumen in his outstanding third pre-WWI mystery…[He] makes the most of his unusual concept in the service of a twisty but logical plot line.”

3817995A Life Discarded: 148 Diaries Found in the Trash: A bit of actual (and recent) history here:  In 2001, 148 tattered and mould-covered notebooks were discovered lying among broken bricks in a dumpster on a building site in Cambridge, England.  Filled with dense handwriting, the books were the partial record of a life, spanning fifty years from 1952 until weeks before they were discarded.  This book is biographer Alexander Masters’ five-year journey to discover the author of the diaries, and piece that person’s life back together, with results that are as surprising as they are touching.  Masters’ is a talented biographer, and this real-life detective novel is also about putting the titular ‘discarded life’ in a much broader context, making these diaries the center of a considerably larger, and deeply emotional, and undeniably odd tale.  This book got rave reviews in England, where it was first published, with The Spectator hailing it as “Playful, unsettling and altogether compelling … pin-sharp and generously open to eccentricity … an ingenious new twist on the concept of a ghostwritten biography, in which the ghost turns out to be the kind of person who usually disappears between the cracks of society without leaving a trace behind…brilliantly fleshed out and brought back to life.”

3789541TruevineAnd finally, another true, and nearly forgotten story to round our our survey, this one opening in 1899, on a tobacco farm in Truevine, Virginia.  As the story goes, one sweltering summer day, a man approached two young boys, George and Willie Muse, who worked as sharecroppers on the farm, and lured them away with candy.  Albino black children, the boys were captured into a circus that performed all around the world, and they became celebrities, performing as “Ambassadors from Mars”,  among other far more derogatory titles.  Back in Truevine, their mother frantically searched for her missing children, leaving a scar on the family that lingers to this day.  In this haunting and meticulously researched story, journalist Beth Macy followed not only the Muse brother’s experiences in the circus, but also the effects their disappearance had on those left back home.  What she discovered was a tale much more twisted, challenging, and morally complex than she ever suspected, and the book, as a result, is a fascinating, moving, and occasionally chilling tale about race and family and memory that is already being nominated for non-fiction awards, include the Kirkus Prize.  Kirkus said in its review, “The story draws on years of diligent, investigative research and personal investment on the author’s behalf, and it features numerous interviews with immediate family, neighbors, distant relatives, Truevine townsfolk, and associated friends, most notably Nancy Saunders, Willie’s fiercely outspoken primary caregiver. Macy absorbed their own individual (and often conflicting) interpretations of the Muse kidnappings, condensing and skillfully braiding them into a sturdy, passionate, and penetrating narrative.”

Until next week, beloved patrons–happy reading!

Five Book Friday!

Things are tough out there, beloved patrons–tensions are high, emotions are volatile, and those of us with autumnal allergies are sniffly and miserable.  So, with that in mind, please enjoy these five things to make you smile before we get to the books:

  1. This plush orange, who seems very content with life:
    http://www.etsy.com/listing/166350463/cute-orange-fruit-plushie-fleece-toy?ref=shop_home_active_2
    http://www.etsy.com/listing/166350463/cute-orange-fruit-plushie-fleece-toy?ref=shop_home_active_2

    2. The Giant Pumpkin from this year’s Topsfield Fair, which weighed in at  2,075.5 pounds, making it not only the largest pumpkin in Topsfield Fair History, but the largest pumpkin in North America!pumpkinwinner3-1475347794-3451

3. A hedgehog dressed as Dracula (seemed timely, right?)

www.buzzfeed.com
www.buzzfeed.com

4. Apple Cider Donuts from Idylwile Farms in Acton:

http://idylwildefarm.com/bakery/baked_goods/
http://idylwildefarm.com/bakery/baked_goods/

5. And, of course….new books.  New books can make any day just a little bit better….let’s see what we’ve got for this week:

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3747120Hag-Seed: Though many know her because of her novel The Handmaid’s Tale, Margaret Atwood has written over forty works of fiction, poetry, and essays, and this newest of her novels is one of the most hotly anticipated releases of the year.  A retelling of Shakespeare’s The Tempest, that also includes a staging of The Tempest, Atwood’s book focuses on Felix, the Artistic Director of the Makeshiweg Theatre Festival–a man at the top of his game, and a man deeply troubled by memories and old grudges.  He finally gets a chance to right his wrongs, to have his revenge, during a staging of The Tempest in a prison theater program…but he never counted on the effect the work, and his own work, might have on him in return.  Even those familiar with Shakespeare’s work will find this new novel fresh, inventive, and wonderfully surprising, because Atwood so deftly weaves her own insight and characterization into a plot that never feels borrowed.  The Boston Globe agrees, writing that “What makes the book thrilling, and hugely pleasurable, is how closely Atwood hews to Shakespeare even as she casts her own potent charms, rap-composition included… Part Shakespeare, part Atwood, “Hag-Seed” is a most delicate monster — and that’s “delicate” in the 17th-century sense. It’s delightful.”

ef_cover_sm-683x1024Eternal Frankenstein: Mary Shelley invented the modern horror novel with her 1818 Frankenstein.  It has never been out of print in its nearly-200-year existence.  It has inspired legions of authors, filmmakers, artists, and readers across years, countries, and generations.  And this volume, edited by Ross E. Lockhart, pays tribute to the greatness of Shelley’s creation, as well as to Shelley herself, in a new collection of sixteen short stories.  These are the perfect appetizer-length stories to get your All Hallows Read started right, and an impressive contribution to the Frankenstein cannon.  It’s also enormously gratifying to see Mary herself appear in these stories, and to have such a presence in this book, reminding us of the debt that we horror fans owe–for new comers, there are also appearances by Tesla and Stalin, among many other historic characters, and a wide array of time periods and narrators, as well.  Publisher’s Weekly was impressed enough to give this collection a starred review, hailing “This impressive compendium contains a rich array of short stories…All of the writing is high quality, all the stories are suspenseful, and would make an excellent college classroom companion to Frankenstein because of its relatable narratives interwoven with history and biography, as well as some vivid present-day tale…that address bullying, loneliness, and body image.”

3760371A Gambler’s AnatomyJonathan Letham made his name by breaking all the rules of genre with ease and impressive skill, and its has ensured that this new release is also one of the most hotly anticipated books of the year.  The hero of Letham’s tale is Bruno Alexander, a stylish professional gambler who lives to squeeze enormous sums from hapless amateurs.  But when his luck runs out, and his health begins to fail, Bruno finds himself begin flown to California for an experimental surgery–and revisiting the course of the strange, fantastical life that has brought him to this point.  Facing an unsure fate, and grappling with powers he doesn’t quite understand, Bruno begins to wonder whether he has really been calling the shots in his life, or whether he is merely a pawn, at the whim of fate.  The result is a story that Lithub describes as “a spy story wrapped up in a farce wrapped up in a social justice quest narrative, with a dash of horror and the paranormal thrown in for good measure. A tragicomic gem.”

3747059-1The RisenDrenched in atmosphere and full of fully-realized characters, Ron Rash’s new book is a perfect piece of escapism for those looking for a new, suspenseful, and captivating thriller.  It all begins in the summer of 1969, when sixteen-year-old Eugene and his older brother, Bill, are swimming in a secluded creek in their remote Appalachian hometown.  There they met a stunning stranger named Ligeia, originally from Daytona Beach, who entrances them both–and also drives them irrevocably apart.   Decades later, Bill has become a respected surgeon, while Eugene has become the town’s resident failure.  But when their shared past returns to haunt them, Eugene is forced to delve into his memories and try desperately to recall which of them is true, before the past destroys any hope of Eugene’s or Bill’s future.  The Washington Post gave Rash’s novel rave reviews, calling it “Compelling… Rash, as always, has an absolutely sure sense of place… He is a riveting storyteller, ably heightening the tension between the story’s past and present… A story about control, evil and the nature of power — both to save and to kill.”

3783670Homeward BoundWhile there were a fair number of raised eyebrows and discussion over Bob Dylan’s Nobel Prize last week, which is really exciting, because it means people are thinking about these things.  It also resulted in a lot of discussion about the power of song, and song lyrics, to shape people, affect their thinking, and provide a soundtrack to their lives.  And few people embody that power more than Paul Simon.  Simon has sold over 100 million records, won 15 Grammys, and has been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame–twice.  And he has done it by constantly evolving, trying new forms of expression, and embracing all the wonderful foibles and details that make humans so nifty.  In this first major biography of the seventy-five-year old Simon, Peter Ames Carlin looks not only as his life and art, but at the people whose lives he has touched, from Carrie Fisher to Leonard Bernstein, from Nelson Mandela to the thousands of people who came to Central Park to see him reunite with Art Garfunkel.  The result is a powerful and fascinating work that Kirkus Reviews cheers as a “nuanced, fascinating portrait…Simon’s music career defies easy categorization―much as his relationship with Garfunkel does―but in Carlin’s portrayal, his legacy as an innovative songwriter and musician is undeniable. An absorbing and layered study of ‘one of the most influential voices in Western popular culture.’”

Until next week, beloved patrons–happy reading!

Five Book Friday!

So it’s fall, dear patrons, and a lovely one at that.

Jericho Lake, photo by Jim Salge, newengland.com
Jericho Lake, photo by Jim Salge, newengland.com

Did you know that the drought in New England is actually making the fall colors brighter?  Because the leaves have less water in them, the sugar in them concentrates–and it is the sugar that makes the leaves turn colors…more precisely, it’s the chlorophyll leaving the leaves that takes the green away, but the color that remains is determined by the type of tree and the glucose levels in the leaves.  The higher the sugar content, the higher the reds and purples we see.   Nerd alert.

Here at the library, we are seeing a bumper crop of new books on our shelves, offering plenty of hours of reading pleasure for the lengthening nights.  And don’t forget to check out our All Hallow’s Reads displays to keep you in the Halloween spirit!  Here are just a few suggestions for you from the new book harvest this week:

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3788990Indelible Ink: The Trials of John Peter Zenger and the Birth of America’s Free Press: It’s been a pretty interesting few weeks in the world of journalism, which makes it even more interesting to understand how the concept of “the freedom of the press” came to be established in the United States.  In this fascinating work, Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Richard Kluger examines a 1733 incident when a a small newspaper, the New-York Weekly Journal, printed scathing articles assailing the new British governor, William Cosby, calling him corrupt and abusive.  The paper’s publisher, an impoverished printer named John Peter Zenger, had no hand in the words or ideas behind that paper, but it was he who was prosecuted for the attacks on Cosby.  Zenger faced down the attacks, however, spending over a year in prison before finally facing a jury in a case that would lay the foundations for the rights journalists still claim today.  This book is not only winning over readers, but scoring big points with historians and critics as well for its insightful, well-researched, and expertly-told story.  The New York Times Book Review, to note one example, said that it is full of “vivid storytelling built on exacting research, a knack for animating the context and an exquisite sense of balance that honors this country’s essential press freedom without romanticizing its champions.”

3795671Permanent Sunset: Fans of the unlikely sleuth Sabrina Salter will delight in her newest outing, set on the idyllic villa in the Virgin Islands.  A former television meteorologist, Sabrina has just begun to relish her new life in the upscale rental business when the body of a woman who was set to marry the soon-to-be-former owner of a villa Sabrina was in the process of buying, a discovery that puts her once again at the center of a murder mystery that will call on all her cunning and quick wits to solve.  Those of you pining for the return of lazy summer days will love the detailed setting of these books, and there is no doubt that C. Michele Dorsey knows how to produce a mystery full of twists, turns, and shocks that will have fans riveted.  Publisher’s Weekly agrees, saying that this second book in Sabrina’s series is an “Outstanding sequel… The ensuing mystery, chockablock with unanticipated plot twists, complex supporting characters, and terrific dialogue, makes for mighty good page-turning fun.”

3762090The Angel of History: In this small-scale epic novel, Rabih Alameddine presents one night in the life of a Yemeni-born poet named Jacob, who is passing the time in the waiting room of a psych clinic, side-by–side with the specters of Satan, Death, and 14 saints, who all wait with him has he ponders his life, from his early years growing up in an Egyptian brothel to the confines of his wealthy father’s home, to the struggles and triumphs of living as a gay Arab man in San Fransisco during the height of the AIDS crisis.  Though heartbreaking and deeply profound, Alameddine is one of those rare talents that is able to bring humor into the depths of his characters’ turmoil, making for a book that is drawing comparisons to Mikhail Bulgakov’s The Master and Margarita, and calling forth enormous praise from readers and critics alike.  Library Journal gave the novel a starred review, saying “How does the mind grapple with transition, change, loneliness, and deterioration? Alameddine’s body of work is an extended meditation on this central question . . . With humor and wit, Alameddine reconfigures the self in exile and all its implications.”

3743138The AdventuristHow many times have we seens cubicle workers equated with drones, “desk jobs” described as “mindless”?  In this wonderfully insightful novel, J. Bradford Hipps peeks below the assumptions about corporate office life to study the existence of one man.  Harry Hurt may be mired in work-related responsibilities and worries, particularly as his software company’s budget begins to skid, but he is also a man in search of love, a brother, a potential lover, and a man who has decided, once and for all, to live his life adventurously…or, at least, to try.  The very real, very human story that Hipps tells within the monotony of corporate life is a real surprise, perhaps because we’ve come to see so many existences astwo-dimensional.  Publisher’s Weekly agrees, and gave this book a starred review, noting that Harry is “self-aware and observant, the perfect narrator for a story that feels like the slow-motion collapse of a man who’s already on the edge when the reader meets him. But rather than leaving him to wallow, the novel ends on a sense of hope predicated on the potential in a clean break and a fresh start. Deeply human, at times funny, and laced throughout with reflection on the crushing weight of the familiar, this novel is an engaging and nuanced exploration of life.”

3785518Moscow Nights: The Van Cliburn Story–How One Man and His Piano Transformed the Cold War The full title is something of a mouthful, but Nigel Cliff’s gripping story of the Texas-born Van Cliburn is a wonderfully readable modern history of music during the largest standoff in modern history.   Cliburn traveled to the Soviet Union in 1958 to compete in the First International Tchaikovsky Competition–a competition that Soviet leaders had already determined would be won by a Soviet pianist.  But the moment that the shy 23-year-old began to play, audiences fell in love with his talent and his sheer love of his art.  In the end, Cliburn was awarded top prize on orders from Khrushchev himself, creating a moment of shared joy in the midst of worldwide fear and darkness.  Cliff’s account captures the tension of the Cold War, but also the marvel of Cliburn’s talent, and the marvelous connection that all of us, as humans, have to music, making for a book that is both educational, and unexpectedly hopeful.  Booklist gave the work a starred review, hailing it as “A thrilling delight…compulsively readable…a biography for music lovers, Cold War devotees, and all readers seeking a true feel-great story.”

Until next week, beloved patrons…..happy reading!

 

 

Five Book Friday: The Banned Books Week Edition

In honor of Banned Book Week, today, we take a look at five books that have recently been officially challenged or publicly denounced, and their authors responses to them, and why #weneeddiversebooks in our lives, and in our libraries:

3244814Eleanor and ParkWhen it was first released in 2013, Rainbow Rowell’s first YA novel got a huge amount of praise and acclaim, and rose up the ranks of the New York Times bestseller list in short order.  A group of high school librarians in Minnesota also selected it as a summer reading book and invited Rowell to speak to their students and at a local public library in the fall.  That was when two parents, with the support of the district’s Parents Action League convinced the Anoka-Hennepin school district, the county board, and the local library board to cancel the events, remove the book, and discipline the librarians who selected it, declaring that Eleanor & Park was a “dangerously obscene” book.  In the end, the book was retained (an no librarians were harmed), and Rowell was re-invited to speak in St. Paul.  Though she hesitated to speak about the incident, in an interview with The Toast, Rowell discussed specifically why the challenge was absurd, and why books like Eleanor and Park are so vital:

…this isn’t really about me. It’s about the students at these schools, who already read my book or might like to – or might like to read other books that reflect their real lives.
When this all happened last month, I was really upset by it. (I still cry when I talk or type about it.)…Because the characters are so close to my heart, and everything about this campaign deliberately misses the point of Eleanor and Park’s story.
When I told my sister that some people (Ed. note: or, you know, “one guy”) were outraged by the language in my book, she said, “They should try living through it.”
And that’s just it. Eleanor & Park isn’t some dystopian fantasy about a world where teenagers swear and are cruel to each other, and some kids have terrible parents.
Teenagers swear and are cruel to each other. Some kids have terrible parents.
Some girls have terrible stepdads who shout profanity at them and call them sluts – and some of those girls still manage to rise above it.
When these people call Eleanor & Park an obscene story, I feel like they’re saying that rising above your situation isn’t possible.
That if you grow up in an ugly situation, your story isn’t even fit for good people’s ears. That ugly things cancel out everything beautiful.

2389284Tyrell: Author Coe Booth has won acclaim from critics and readers alike for her gritty, down-to-earth stories about what it is really like to grown up in an inner city; this book, specifically, follows 15-year-old Tyrell, who lives in a homeless shelter with his sister and mother, and constantly tries to turn away from the life that landed his father in prison.  However, parents in Chesterfield County had demanded that certain books be removed from the District’s libraries, Tyrell included, because they discuss allegedly inappropriate themes such as drug use, sexuality, and violence.  Many, including State Senator Amanda Chase, also demanded that labels and rating be given to books to mark them as “violent” or “sexually explicit”, based on a number of passages that were taken wildly out of the context of the story.   Though the books were retained in the library, the School Board stated that, going forward, it would encourage “Continued professional development for librarians regarding collection development” and “Enhanced outreach and communication between librarians, teachers, students and parents about appropriate book selections to meet the interests and needs of individual students.”  As Booth herself noted in an article for the National Coalition Against Censorship:

A lot of times parents think that 13 year olds are not ready for the material in the book, this is always really interesting because before I was a writer, I worked in child protective services. I investigated child abuse. I counseled children who had been sexually abused, so I know for a fact that children the age of thirteen and actually way younger, are living through the experiences that are in the book. You know, these kids are actually living these experiences, but god forbid they’re reading about them.  It’s such a weird line that is drawn…

I think that reading books like mine, and just different books, different cultures, different experiences, like I said before, it makes young people see that they are connected. There are ways that they’re not so different. They’re not so far apart. They have the same struggles with their parents, school, relationships, you know, the same exact things. Yes, they may speak a little different. They might live in a different kind of neighborhood. But underneath all of that, they’re still someone trying to figure out who they are, which is basically what young adult literature is, right?

3763285The Seventh WishKate Messner’s book is about a magic fish.  It also deals with the very real epidemic of opiate addiction in the United States in a way that is accessible to children.  In order to promote the book, Messner was invited to speak to children in Vermont, at South Burlington’s Chamberlin Elementary School–an invitation that was rescinded three days before the event because, the school’s principle, “felt the book and my presentation about the writing process behind it would generate many questions that they would not be able to adequately answer and discuss”.  Despite this, the school also proceeded to return the 20 copies they had ordered from a local bookstore to display in the school library.   Though not strictly banned, the incident set off a social media firestorm, and  Messner blogged about a letter she received from a school librarian which stated (in part), “as a mother of a fourth grader, I would never give him a book about heroin because …I just don’t think that at 10 years old he needs to worry about that on top of all of the other things he already worries about… For now, I just need the 10 and 11-year-olds biggest worry to be about friendships, summer camps, and maybe their first pimple or two.”  In response, Messner wrote:

We don’t serve only our own children. We don’t serve the children of 1950. We don’t serve the children of some imaginary land where they are protected from the headlines. We serve real children in the real world…And whether you teach in a poor inner city school or a wealthy suburb, that world includes families that are shattered by opioid addiction right now. Not talking about it doesn’t make it go away. It just makes those kids feel more alone.

When we choose books for school and classroom libraries, we need to remember who we serve. We serve the kids. All of them. Even the kids whose lives are not what we might want childhood to look like. Especially those kids.

When we quietly censor books that deal with tough issues… we are hurting kids. Because no matter where we teach, we have students who are living these stories. When we say, “This book is inappropriate,” we’re telling those children, “Your situation…your family…your life is inappropriate.”  This is harmful. It directly hurts children. And that’s not what we do.

3110716The Glass CastleJeannette Wall’s memoir of her nomadic, poverty-stricken childhood, her siblings, and her deeply troubled parents has been hailed as a modern classic, and remained on the New York Times bestsellers list for over 100 weeks.  However, this February, the parents of several students in  West Allegheny, Pennsylvania, descended on the school district’s meeting, arguing the book was inappropriate for children under the age of 18.  One parent stated that “The school district is adding, I feel, more emotional distress by placing these types of books in their hands” (though no one voiced an issue with the massacres in The Odyssey, or the sex and murder in Romeo and Juliet….However, in response to the school board’s decision to only teach excerpts from the book, some 200 students signed a petition  asking the district not to use censorship in an attempt to shield teens from problems they may be encountering in their lives.  According to Renae Roscart, aged 15, who wrote the petition:

You’re trying to protect the children and I see that, but you’re really sheltering them and making them ignorant to issues that actually plague our society and are relevant right now…How is this inappropriate for our children when they’re going through this right now? What time could be more relevant to learn this than when they’re going through it? By cutting these particular things out, you’re pretending that these statistics don’t exist. You are pretending that sexual assault and alcoholism isn’t something that youths encounter. And that is a problem.

2137242What My Mother Doesn’t Know: Sonya Sones book is a novel-in-verses, describing the world through the eyes of a teenage girl, who is searching for her ‘Mr. Right’, and coping with–and learning to appreciate–the changes in her body as she goes through puberty.  The book was praised by critics and lauded by readers…and yet it became one of the most challenged books of the 21st century.  According to the American Library Association’s website, Sones’ book was removed from the library shelves of the Rosedale Union School District in Bakersfield, California in 2003 because of discomfort with the poem, “Ice Capades”—a teenage girl’s description of how her breasts react to cold.  It was further challenged at the Bonnette Junior High School library in Deer Park, Texas in 2004 because the book includes foul language and references to masturbation.  Still Sones noted how proud she was of her book being so controversial, and stated on her blog:

Though you’ve got to have thick skin to be a banned author. Parents from all across the country have written to me to rant about how disgusting and inappropriate they think my book is, and have filed formal complaints called “challenges” to attempt to get it removed from middle school and high school libraries. There are apparently legions of narrow-minded folks out there who feel that if a book isn’t appropriate for their own child, then no child should be allowed to read it…But the problem is that the people who try to ban books often don’t actually read them. They just read the juicy parts. I can’t tell you how many letters I’ve received from incensed parents telling me that they were horrified when they read “excerpts” of my book. If these people had taken the time to read the entire book, they’d have seen that when the narrator, 14-year-old Sophie, is pressured by her boyfriend to have sex, she refuses to let him push her further than she wants to go. In fact, his sexually aggressive behavior is the main reason that Sophie stops dating him….I think the great Irish playwright and critic, George Bernard Shaw, summed it up brilliantly: “Censorship ends in logical completeness when nobody is allowed to read any books except the books that nobody reads.”

Until next week, dear readers–keep being dangerous!

Five Book Friday!

And a very Happy Birthday to Victoria Woodhull, American suffragette, activist, and the first woman to run for President of the United States in 1872.

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Not only that, but Woodhull, born on this day in 1838, was the first woman to run a newspaper, the Woodhull & Claflin’s Weekly, founded in 1870, which she ran with her sister, Tennessee Claflin.  Not only that, but that same year, she became the first woman to operate a brokerage firm on Wall Street, called Woodhull, Claflin & Company (also run with her sister Tennie).

woodhull-douglass-electionWoodhull was born in Ohio, and though she had no formal education, she certainly had a remarkable mind and impressive will.  She made her first fortune as a “magnetic healer” (not precisely a legitimate form of medicine, but one that was incredibly popular in the mid-19th century).  During this time, she also met Cornelius Vanderbilt, who became a lifelong friend, a constant source of financial support, and very nearly her brother-in-law (rumors had it that he had proposed to Tennie, but his family refused to allow him to marry her).  It was her work as a medium that allowed Victoria to fun her brokerage form and newspaper, and the intensity of her convictions that won her national attention.  Woodhull was a champion of women’s legal, voting, and sexual rights, which polarized not only the women’s suffrage movement, but society in general.  She was also an advocate for equality between races, as well– when nominated for president, nominated Frederick Douglass in turn for her running-mate.

Though votes weren’t counted in the same way they are now, so we can’t know for sure how many votes Woodhull received, but we know it wasn’t many.  Her campaign was seriously harmed when a self-proclaimed “moral defender of the nation” named Anthony Comstock had Woodhull, her husband, and Tennie arrested for “publishing an obscene newspaper” a week before the election.  They were acquitted at trial six months later, and Woodhull ran for president again in 1884 and 1892.  Following her two defeats, she moved to England, where she offered lectures on health and the human body, and married her third husband (she had divorced her two previous ones, much to the chagrin of the American public).  Victoria Woodhull passed away on June 9, 1927, leaving a legacy with which we, as a people, are still grappling today.

If you would like to read more about Woodhull and her radical run for president, check out this website from American Experience.

And now…on to the books!

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3794357The Last Days of Jack SparksThis book…it’s a weird one that tricky to sum up in a few sentences.  What you need to know going in is that (fictional) journalist Jack Sparks died while writing a book on the supernatural, and his quest to prove it definitely true or false.  As a tribute, his brother Alistair, has put together Jack’s manuscript, along with notes that Alistair made in his quest to track down the truth about Jack’s final days, and how on earth a video got posted to Jack’s YouTube account that he insisted was not of his making.  The result is a myriad of unreliable narrators all fixated on their own agendas and needs, and a story where nothing–or everything–is true, and the implications for both are really quite chilling.  At turns hysterically, cynically funny, at times horribly insightful regarding the horrible isolating narcissism of social media, and at times just plain weird, Jason Arnopp’s book, I promise, is like nothing else you’ve ever read.  Paul Tremblay, who wrote the sensational A Head Full of Ghosts, said that this book was “Funny, creepy and totally nuts.”  And I agree.  (For real devotees, Jack Spark’s website is still online, just to add to the verisimilitude.)

3743074The WonderAs we noted here last week, fall is the Season for Books, with publishers putting out all their heavy hitters now in time for literary awards and holiday shopping sprees.  Irish author Emma Donoghue’s new release is among the most noted of the year, and being hailed as her masterpiece–high praise indeed considering the success of her previous works.  Set in small Irish village of Athlone in 1859,  the plot of this story centers on eleven-year-old  Anna O’Donnell, who believes that she is living off the manna of Heaven, and thus, reportedly hasn’t eaten for months, yet shows no signs of fatigue or ill-health.  As international interest in Anna’s case grows, Lib Wright, a veteran of Florence Nightingale’s Crimean campaign, is hired to watch over the girl for two weeks, and prove her story true or false for the press.  The result is a deeply searching, insightful book about relationships and faith and darkness that shows Donoghue is as skilled in historical fiction as she is in any other genre.  Booklist agrees, giving this one a starred review, and calling the book, “Outstanding…. Exploring the nature of faith and trust with heartrending intensity, Donoghue’s superb novel will leave few unaffected.”

3785025-1Blood Crime: Another example of historical fiction done right, Sebastià Alzamora’s gothic thriller takes us to 1936, during the beginning of the Spanish Civil War, and to the besieged city of Barcelona.  Death is everywhere, but when a Marist monk and a young boy are discovered dead, drained of their blood, the event is gruesome enough for the police to take notice–and for a thirteen-year-old Capuchin novice to take matters into her own hands, and risk meeting a monster face-to-face in order to discover the truth.  Inspired by true events, but given a fascinatingly dark, unique twist by Alzamora, this book was a sensation in Spain when it was first published, and earned a starred review from Publisher’s Weekly, that called it “”Extraordinary… Alzamora deftly balances a swiftly moving, multithreaded plot set firmly in a historical context with a transcendent, nearly timeless exploration of the dark, violent nature of humanity and the vain search for God’s mercy, and, in doing so, creatively fulfills the challenge of reinventing gothic horror for a modern age.”

3788971-1Everfair: For a time, steampunk and neo-Victorian books were the stuff of romances and graphic novels, imaging a world of other-wordly inventions and providing an escape from the painful realities of our own history.  But Nisi Shawl has reinvented the steampunk genre by using it, instead, to explore, question, and contest history, by creating a world where imperialism was challenged by natives who have harnessed the power of steam and established what our history calls the Belgian Congo into a utopia called Everfair, where native Africans and European socialists and escaped slaves from the United States can live in freedom.  Told from a number of voices that have long been silenced by our histories, and whose complex relationships have gone painfully overlooked, this book uses alternative histories to tell a powerful story that is both wildly imaginative and deeply reflective of our reality.  This also earned a starred review from Publisher’s Weekly, who said of it, “This highly original story blends steampunk and political intrigue in a compelling new view of a dark piece of human history.”

51eqm8zkfel-_sx341_bo1204203200_Wilber’s War : An American Family’s Journey Through World War II Written by local author–and Library patron!–Hale Bradt, this book is the reconstruction of his father life, his parents’ love, and the world events that shaped and defined his family.  While Norma Bradt endured the Second World War on the American home front, protecting her family, dealing with rationing, and managing the daily stress of having a husband serving in the Pacific, Wilber Bradt fought with the U.S. Army in the Solomon Islands, New Guinea, and The Philippines, sending home richly detailed letters about his experiences, which form the backbone of his highly original work, that also looks at Hale Bradt’s own visits to the battlefields on which his father fought, and his considerations of the toll war takes, not only on armies and nations, but on individual families who are forced to endure it all.  The Midwest Book Review called this book an “inherently fascinating read…deftly crafted…[and] very highly recommended”, and we are honored to have our patron’s work displayed right here on our shelves!

 

Until next week, beloved patrons…happy reading!

Five Book Friday!

Today’s post, beloved patrons, comes to you from Ames, Iowa, home of Iowa State University, and birthplace of Sara Parestsky, author of the V.I. Warshawski mysteries, and U.S. Poet Laureate Ted Kooser (and also where a historical conference is being held, which is why I am here, but anyways….).

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Story County, Iowa

Ames is a major college town situated within the charmingly-named Story County, pretty much at the very center of the state.  And, imagine my joy when, while walking down the street near Iowa State University, I saw this Free Little Library, looking well-used and much-loved:

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Yay for Tiny Libraries!

And seeing those books, eagerly awaiting the new friends who would come and take them home, naturally got me to thinking about the new books that have clambered up onto the shelves at our (not so little) Library this week!  So feel free to drop by and find a new tale to take with you on your weekend adventure.  It’s a season for fiction, so please enjoy this week’s selections!

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3787982And The Trees Crept In Teen literature has become one of the fastest-growing, most progressive in publishing today–and also feature some of the most arresting cover-art to be found anywhere.  Dawn Kurtagich’s newest release is no exception, providing a stunning cover, and a thoroughly creepy, novel that can be enjoyed by teen readers and non-teen readers alike.  When Silla and Nori arrive at their aunt’s home, it’s immediately clear that the “blood manor” is cursed–and it’s far more than the creaky floors,  and ominous, foreboding woods surrounding the estate.  It’s the fact that Silla is haunted by visions of a beautiful boy out in the woods; her sister can see a man that no one else can…and the fact that the trees seem to be creeping, inexplicably, ever closer.  This thoroughly immersive gothic novel earned a star review from Kirkus, which said that it “Will haunt readers with its raw emotions, palpable pain, and consistent character voices… Frightening and compelling, this gothic will easily sweep fans up into its creeping sense of hysteria.”

3736571Here I AmFew books have been more highly anticipated than this one–Jonathan Safran Foer’s first novel in over a decade and, by all accounts, well worth the wait.  Set in present-day Washington, D.C., the novel traces, on one level, the experiences of  Jacob and Julia and their three sons, as they cope with a word growing increasingly frightening and strange.  By invoking Abraham’s quote in the Book of Genesis (when God called him to make a sacrifice of his son), Foer explodes the scope of this novel, making it not only about one family, but about the nature of being a father, a son, a Jew, an American–and, ultimately, human, in a book that NPR called “Dazzling . . . A profound novel about the claims of identity, history, family, and the burdens of a broken world.”

3747070Lady Cop Makes TroubleAmy Stewart’s first Kopp sisters novel was an unexpectedly smash hit, and now the intrepid Constance Kopp has become one of the nation’s first deputy sheriffs, and is at work in New Jersey and New York, on the hunt for a German-speaking con man who not only threatens her dreams for a new life and career, but also the honorable Sheriff Heath.  But even as this case grows in danger, Constance knows she has the support of her sisters Norma and Fleurette–that is, when they aren’t training pigeons for the war effort or fanning dreams of a life on the stage.  Based on a true story, Stewart’s books are full of terrific historic detail, including a number of real-life (and larger-than-life) personalities, making this a must-read series for mystery and history fans alike!  Library Journal gave this book a starred review, saying “Constance and her sisters are every bit as enjoyable in this outing as their first. Stewart deftly combines the rough-and-tumble atmosphere of early 20th-century New York City with the story of three women who want to live life on their own terms. The addition of supporting female characters who are also pushing societal boundaries is a welcome touch to the series.”

3747071Mischling: Here’s another huge release that has been on a number of “Best of” lists recently.  Affinity Jones’ novel opens with twin sisters, their mother and grandfather arrive at Auschwitz in 1944.  Pearl and Stasha Zagorski find hope in the midst of darkness through the private language and shared games, but it isn’t long before they find themselves a part of Mengele’s Zoo, where horrific experiments are performed on twins to allegedly understand their unique bond. When Pearl disappears at a concert arranges by Mengele, Stasha is devastated, but clings to the possibility that Pearl remains alive. When the camp is liberated by the Red Army, she and her companion Feliks–a boy bent on vengeance for his own lost twin–travel through Poland’s devastation.  This epic journey of a novel is harrowing and heartbreaking, yes, but, as Publisher’s Weekly noted in their review, “Konar makes every sentence count; it’s to her credit that the girls never come across as simply victims: they’re flawed, memorable characters trying to stay alive. This is a brutally beautiful book.”

3737415Razor Girl: Carl Hiaasen is back with another darkly comic, rollicking mystery set in the murky work of the Florida Keys.  When Lane Coolman’s car is bashed from behind, what appears to be an ordinary accident quickly turns into something much more dangerous.  Behind the wheel of the offending car is Merry Mansfield–the titular Razor Girl–so named for her unique, eye-popping addition to what might be an otherwise unexciting scam. But the scam is only the very beginning of a situation that’s going to spiral crazily out of control while gathering in some of the wildest characters Hiaasen has ever set loose on the page.  Kirkus gave this latest installment in Hiaasen’s growing cannon a starred review, cheering, “Rejoice, fans of American madness who’ve sought fulfillment in political reportage. South Florida’s master farceur is back to reassure you that fiction is indeed stranger than truth. . . . [Hiaasen’s] plotting is so fine-tuned that preposterous complications that would strain lesser novelists fit right into his antic world. Relax, enjoy, and marvel anew at the power of unbridled fictional invention.”

Until next week, beloved patrons–happy reading!

Five Book Friday!

And once again, beloved patrons, we arrive at another Friday, and another round-up of some of the fascinating books that are frolicking on our shelves, eager to go along with you on a weekend adventure.

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And speaking of this weekend, don’t forget to stop by the International Festival this Sunday, September 11, from 12-6pm!  There will be plenty of entertainment, activities, arts, and, naturally, a smörgåsbord of food from Greece, Brazil, China, Poland, Portugal, to name only a few.  And lastly, don’t miss your chance to visit the Friends of the Library Booth, where you may just have a chance to meet the remarkable Lady Pole in person!  Free Parking & a Shuttle service will be available from Higgins Middle School or Northshore Mall parking lot (by East Boston Savings Bank).  Look for the Council on Aging Vans with International Festival Signs, and have a safe, wonderful, and delicious time!

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3757349The NixThis book has been gracing any number of “Best of 2016” lists, and getting rave reviews from critics, authors, and readers alike.  A Nix, in Norwegian folklore, often appears as a white horse, and steals away children.  In Nathan Hill’s debut novel, a ‘Nix’ is anything that is loved–and lost.  For Samuel Andresen-Anderson, college professor and would-be writer, that ‘Nix’ is his mother, who abandoned him when he was a child, and, in 2011, suddenly re-appears, the alleged perpetrator of an outlandish crime that is attracting national media attention.  Though his mother is being portrayed as a radical, amoral hippie, Samuel has always held a memory of a kind, young, and very, very ordinary woman–so which version of his mother is true?  To find out, he embarks on a journey into his family’s past, from the Chicago riots in 1968 to Norway, and the mythical Nix itself, resulting in a big, sprawling, and emotionally impactful book that earned a starred review from Kirkus, which called it a “sparkling, sweeping debut novel that takes in a large swath of recent American history and pop culture and turns them on their sides. . . .A grand entertainment, smart and well-paced, and a book that promises good work to come.”

3773362The Pigeon Tunnel: John Le Carré created the Cold War spy novel, raising espionage from the land of magazine tales and pulp novels and crafting a genre that is still selling millions of copies today.  This newest release is his first memoir, detailing a life that seems equally as interesting and surprising as any of his fiction.   Le Carré himself worked for British Intelligence during the Cold War, and, both in that capacity and in his literary work, has travelled to some of the most extreme places, and met with some of the most extraordinary people (and parrots), on earth (the parrot could perfectly mimic machine gun fire and sing the opening to Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony at will, in case you were wondering).  From Rwandan genocide museums to meetings with international heads of state, from preparing television adaptations to living in a bunker with a female German terrorist,  Le Carré’s incisive, insightful style brings each of these tales to life in a way that will make you think you, too, have acquired all the stamps he has in his passport.  Publisher’s Weekly agrees, saying, “Always insightful, frequently charming, and sometimes sobering, the memorable tales told by master storyteller le Carré about his life will surely delight both longtime fans and newcomers.”

3772824The FortunesPeter Ho Davies’ newest book re-imagines America’s history through the eyes of Chinese immigrants, a group of people who had an enormous and crucial impact on American culture and society, but whose story is so seldom considered in literature.  Intertwining the tale of four lives: a railroad baron who unwittingly launches the Chinese Labor Movement to a Chinese actress who is forbidden from kissing white men on public or on screen, to a hate-crime victim whose death mobilizes other immigrants, to a biracial writer who travels to China in the hopes of adopting a baby, this Davies spins stories that are heavily influenced by actual historic events, and deals with issues of identity and community, belonging and isolation, loss and hope in a way that is beautfully empathetic and relatable, not to mention surprisingly funny and genuinely touching.  Publisher’s Weekly also loved this book, giving it a starred review and cheering, “The book’s scope is impressive, but what’s even more staggering is the utter intimacy and honesty of each character’s introspection. More extraordinary still is the depth and the texture created by the juxtaposition of different eras, making for a story not just of any one person but of hundreds of years and tens of millions of people. Davies…has created a brilliant, absorbing masterpiece.”

3788996True Believer: Stalin’s Last American Spy: Noel Field was a British-born American who moved back to the US following his father’s death, and attended Harvard University.  He was hired by the U.S. State Department in the late 1920’s, and went to work for the League of Nations in 1936.  This was around the same time that he began working as an operative with the Soviet NKVD.  A devout Communist and staunch believer in the Soviet Union, Fields was arrested in 1949 by the Soviets, interrogated, tortured, and held for five years in solitary confinement.  Nevertheless, he remained devoted to the Communist cause until his death in 1970.  In this new biography, Kati Marton not only details Fields’ startling life, but also analyzes his beliefs, trying to understand what makes a person so loyal to a cause that has treated him with such inhumanity.  The result is a powerful and engaging book that is proving a hit with critics and readers alike.  Library Journal also notes that “Marton’s own parents were the only Western journalists to ever interview Field and his wife, Herta Field. . . . The conspiracy, subterfuge, and cataclysmic destruction of Field’s family and friends are all addressed in this well-researched book.”

3788978We Eat Our OwnIn 1980, an Italian horror film called Cannibal Holocaust, which tells the story of a documentary film team that traveled to the Amazon to find cannibalistic tribes, and was widely thought to be a ‘snuff film’ (a film where the murders or suicides portrayed are real), and which is still banned in many places.  Kea Wilson’s debut novel takes that film as inspiration to tell the story of a down-and-out actor who gratefully (and a little desperately) accepts a job for a film being made in South America.  But he never dreams of the very real dangers that lurk around the set, from the area’s dyng economy, drug traffikers and guerilla fighters to the jungle that surrounds the cast and crew.  Playing with concepts of time and identity and truth, Wilson’s book has been making quite a splash already, with Kirkus Reviews noting ” Wilson shows impressive command of a narrative that weaves back and forth and back again in both time and locale; much like the viewer of a pseudo-documentary horror movie (ever seen The Blair Witch Project?), you wonder throughout whether you should trust whatever it is you’re told—and jumping to the end won’t help at all. You shouldn’t anyway, because Wilson’s writing style is hypnotic, tightly wound, and harrowingly evocative of the story’s stifling, bug-heavy atmosphere. Even the sunniest skies of this ill-starred shoot are thick with menace and portent. Keep telling yourself, ‘It’s only a novel, it’s only a novel'”.

 

Until next week, beloved patrons–happy reading!