Sunday, February 22, 2009

Identical

Identical / Ellen Hopkins read by Laura Flanagan.— [St. Paul] : High Bridge Audio, p2008.
7 sound discs (8 hr. 45 min.) : digital ; 4 3/4 in.
Unabridged
Compact discs
Audience: Ages 14 and up.
ISBN: 9781598877359

1. California – Fiction. 2. Dissociative disorders -- Fiction. 3. Novels in verse. 4. Problem families – Fiction. 5. Sexual abuse victims – Fiction. 6. Sisters – Fiction. 7. Twins – Fiction. 8. Young adult fiction.

Kaeleigh and Raeanne are identical twins. They may share the same body, but they have very different personalities. The twins live in the dysfunctional family of an incestuous alcoholic father and an emotionally distant politically ambitious mother. Raeanne acts out her rebellion using alcohol and any other drugs she can get her hands on and sexual promiscuity. In contrast Kaeleigh, the victim of her father’s attention passively submits to the tyranny. She longs for her boyfriend to rescue her, but she’s so burdened by a dreadful load of shame and guilt that when he offers help she back away.

Identical is a thrilling new twist on the motif of the evil twin. Hopkins’s writing is ingenious and captivating, and the single reader narration by Laura Flanagan is brilliant. Her ability to vocally distinguish between Kaeleigh and Raeanne is marvelous.

Fire on the Mountain

Fire on the mountain / Edward Abbey.— New York : Avon Books, 1992, ©1962.
181 p. ; 21 cm.
ISBN: 0380714604

1. Eminent domain – United States – Fiction. 2. Grandfathers – New Mexico – Fiction. 3. New Mexico – Fiction. 4. White Sands Missile Range (N.M.) – Fiction.

813.54

His grandson, Billy, tells the end of New Mexico rancher John Vogelin’s life. Billy’s annual summer visit to the Box V Ranch is disrupted by the United States. The government seizes the ranch to expand the White Sands Missile Range. Despite the arguments of his friend, Lee Mackie and the increasing show of force demonstrated by courts, law enforcement and military, John Vogelin refuses to leave his former property, a decision that leads to his death. The fire in the title is his funeral pyre. The back cover copy hails this 1962 novel as “a powerful and moving tale that gloriously celebrates the undying spirit of American individualism.” It could also be characterized as a well-written, realistic cautionary tale about the dangers of self-centered stupidity.

Abbey’s prose is clear and clean. His descriptions of the New Mexico landscape are precise and beautiful.

Books, Readers and Beyond: #54 Social Networking Through Books Exercise Three


Search for one of the books you selected in the first post on at least two of the social networks. Do the ratings for the book differ on each site, or are they similar? Did you find anything surprising?

Going back to iHCPL Books, Readers and Beyond: #52 What to Read Exercise 1 I picked Behind the Scenes at the Museum by Kate Atkinson, one of the read-alikes for Margaret Drabble’s The Witch of Exmoor.

I tried goodreads first and hit the jackpot. There were “1,564 ratings, 3.90 average rating, 236 reviews” The site’s rating system is a scale of one to five stars, one star = didn’t like it to five stars = it was amazing. So, depending on the reader’s tastes the reviews went from “I can't even begin to express my depth of loathing for this book. … Gaaaah! I left it behind on a plane somewhere. Should have attached a toxic warning label.” to the more enthusiastic, “I loved this book so much that I slowed down in the middle for fear of finishing it.”

Next, I tried Readerville Note:books. There, only one person had commented on the book, “I almost completely loved this book; instead I just really liked it, and will happily recommend it to many.” To me this read like a confirmation of the goodreads 3.90 average rating, poised between 3 stars (liked it) and almost, but not quite 4 stars (really liked it).



Saturday, February 21, 2009

Books, Readers and Beyond #54 Social Networking Through Books Exercise Two

After viewing the resources above, what ideas come to mind for implementing a book club into your library. Post your thoughts and ideas onto your blog. Using one of the "live" book club resources, also look for a title that your book club could discuss.

At first I thought, If this is to be a new start-up I need something that will intrigue customers and draw them in, not yet knowing who the other members of the club would be, a potential customer would not come for the companionship and camaraderie of the other members of the club, although she or he might hope that this would be a place to meet and get to know some congenial companions. As the organizer it would certainly be important to me, because I know that this is what will sustain a group, and the lack of this is what often breaks groups apart.

So I went for the most tried and true principle of all library programming, if you feed them they will come, and decided to choose a book that could be tied in thematically with food, like the Octavia Field Branch’s “Read It & Eat It Book Club.” My first thought was Eat Cake by Jeanne Ray, a domestic comedy about a woman who starts a cake bakery out of her home after her husband is laid-off.

Then I though I should look for a more recent release, one that the library owns in multiple copies. I browsed through the ReadingGroupGuides for inspiration on new titles and found an interview with author Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni about her new book The Palace of Illusions and book groups. I know she must be an intelligent author because she also knew about the food-book nexus:

“I love book clubs. Unlike bookstore talks where you are introducing a new book to people unfamiliar with it, the members of a reading group have generally gone through a book carefully. Of course, this means you have to be prepared for in-depth questioning. ('The color red appears 41 times in this novel, but it doesn't always mean the same thing. What exactly did you want it to symbolize, and why?') But it also means they liked the book, otherwise they wouldn't have invited you. Plus there's usually food. Good food.”

However, when I discovered that the novel was based on the Mahābhārata, I forgot about food for the moment I was so intrigued by a more primary need, the need for a story, and I knew that you could not ask for a better story than the Mahābhārata, along with the Rāmāyana, it is to Indian Literature what the Iliad and the Odyssey are to Greek Literature, the epic foundation stories from which all the rest flow from, and ultimately are judged against. Plus, it is written from the woman’s point of view, Panchaali, the wife of the five heroic brothers of the story. And she was the wife of all five at the same time. You might look at this either as a woman’s secret fantasy or as her worst nightmare, but either way it’s a potential draw for women readers. (The branch could start a narrative history book club later if men are feeling left out.)

Another plus was that the library owned multiple copies and most of them were in on the shelf. Worried that this might indicate a slow read, I read through the First Chapter Excerpts on the catalog, and that quickly dismissed my fears. Not only was Divakaruni knowledgeable about the food-book nexus, but sentence one of the novel starts with a child eager to hear a story, the favorite for many children, where did I come from? Reading on, I discovered that the author teaches creative writing at the University of Houston, so she’s a local author, and her book has a readily available discussion guide, a good source of questions for the group facilitator should conversation start to flag, or wander completely off topic. So I decided to put Eat Cake back on the shelf as a suggestion for the second meeting of the club.

Now that I have the story, it’s time to get back to food, networking and publicity.
  • First, try to recruit another member of the library staff who knows Indian culture and cookery and would be interested in helping out.
  • Failing success at that the fall-back plan is the subject browse search in the catalog for Cookery, Indic.
  • Next schedule space or meeting room.
  • Then get the event on the events calendar.
  • Schedule it far enough ahead to allow enough time for the publicity to get out.
  • Open up Publisher and begin designing the flyer.
  • Think how to distribute the flyer, next to a display of any copies of the volume in the branch.
  • Oh yes, that means putting together a display with a color copy of the book jacket to hold place when all the copies are checked out. Surround them with Indian cookbooks and any copy of the Mahābhārata that’s available.
  • Write press release and send it to the local press.
  • Then take or mail them to the Houston Indian Associations.
  • Talk up the program to your regular customers.
  • Get a commitment from a few of them to attend.

Friday, February 20, 2009

iHCPL Books, Readers and Beyond #54 Social Networking Through Books Exercise One

Post on your blog whether or not you ever been a member of a book club. Also discuss whether you prefer joining a in-person or online book club.

Making my first stop by browsing through the list of Harris County Public Library branch book clubs, I was intrigued to see that the Barbara Bush Library Afternoon Book Discussion would be talking about Three Cups of Tea by Greg Mortenson on Thursday, February 26, 2009 starting at 1:30 p.m. Three Cups of Tea is a book that I’ve recently read and wrote about on this blog (on Sunday, December 28, 2008). I was also intrigued by the listing for Tremendous Tuesdays: Silly Science Play with Color on March 17, 2009 at the same branch, but since it’s a “program for children 8-12 years who love learning about science,” and I’m five times the upper age limit for the intended audience, I figured they probably wouldn’t let me in.

I visited the Houston Great Books Council site and only got about half of the answers on their challenging Literary Trivia quiz. I liked their selection of Shakespeare sites.

I was impressed by the large selection of titles on ReadingGroupGuides. I looked up the guide to Three Cups of Tea, and found the discussion questions and the summary to be very useful. It was interesting to find the identical discussion questions at Reading Group Choices. On a hunch, I checked the site for the book’s publisher, Viking/Penguin, and found the original copy for the summary and questions in Penguin(usa)’s Book Clubs Reading Guides.

Readerville is an interesting site. I found the clear English sentences of its Terms of Service to be a refreshing change from the usual legalize found on most sites. I wandered about it for some time, lurking in the discussions, then getting sidetracked in the War & Peace forum to an “Essay in the New England Review by Michael Katz that contrasts and compares” recent translations.

I’m already a member of LibraryThing and I’ve been posting book annotations to Goodreads for a few months now. In contrast to Readerville, Shelfari’s terms of service are more extensive and include this little warning: “Shelfari reserves the right to change or modify any of the terms and conditions contained in the Site Terms or any policy or guideline of the Site, at any time and in its sole discretion.” Although I’m a member of Facebook, I was unable to find Living Social: Books on Facebook. But, then again, I’ve never had much luck finding a group on Facebook. I did find an Italian “Books on Facebook” group with a few members in College Station, unfortunately, I’m illiterate in Italian.

My own book club experience has been face to face with humans; I haven’t yet explored the online version. While I was living in West Virginia in the mid-1980 I was a member of a Wednesday morning book club that met at the downtown English Lutheran Church about two blocks from the library where I worked. My next experience was with a group in the library. The Main Library in Nashville, Tennessee had a group that met regularly once a month to discuss books selected by the members. I am happy to report that the club is still meeting.

Saturday, February 14, 2009

iHCPL Books, Readers and Beyond: #53 Finding Books Online Exercise 3

Download an eBook. Spend at least half an hour reading it. Write about your experience on your blog. How did it compare with reading a traditional print copy? What do you think are the advantages and disadvantages of each format?

From the list of 20+ Places for Public Domain E-Books I went to Planet PDF and browsed the titles. I downloaded a copy of a story I hadn’t read since I was an undergraduate many decades ago, “Metamorphosis” by Franz Kafka. “This text is a translation from the German by Ian Johnston, Malaspina University-College Nanaimo, BC. It has been prepared for students in the Liberal Studies and English departments. This document is in the public domain, released, January 1999.”


Using the Adobe software scroll bar to navigate the pages was the most difficult adaptation that I had to make in reading an eBook as opposed to reading a codex. Going line to line was no problem, but I often lost my place when I went page to page. It took me about half an hour to get the feel of it. About the same time it takes me to get a feel for the controls of an unfamiliar rental car. After that I was able to immerse myself in the predicament of Gregor Samsa and his family.

eBook
Advantages
  • Glows in the dark
  • It can find a particular word or phrase quickly with its search feature
  • Can compensate and enlarge type size for failing human eyes

Disadvantages
  • I have to read it on my computer. It’s difficult to move about with it
  • Should not be tossed in the general direction of misbehaving pet
  • Dependent on hardware reading device
  • Dependent on electric power

Print book in codex format
Advantages

  • It’s portable, can read it in bed or on the beach
  • Can be tossed in the general direction of misbehaving pet
  • Not dependent on hardware
  • Not dependent on electric power

Disadvantages

  • Search feature is dependent on human eyes and brain and tendency for attention to wander, find particular word or phrase slowly and with much muttering
  • Needs an external source of illumination
  • One size type -- Old geezers taking advantage of the read in bed mode are forced to get up, get dressed and drive out to Wal-Mart to purchase stronger reading glasses, or go to the public library and get a large type edition

Thursday, February 12, 2009

iHCPL Books, Readers and Beyond: #53 Finding Books Online Exercise 2

Search for one of the books you selected in the previous post. Is it available from a bookstore? Which one, and at what price? (In dollars or in other books.) Can you find an eBook or Audio version online? On which site did your find it? (If you can’t find it online, please list in your blog the sites you searched.)

From Post 52 exercise 1 I picked Behind the scenes at the museum by Kate Atkinson. I started my searching at Brazos Bookstore and found a copy, at least a mail-order copy, right away.

Encouraged, I scrolled down to see if there was an audio or eBook edition. Not seeing, one I went up to the top of the screen and clicked on eBook Help. There was lots of helpful information about eBooks in general there, but no convenient link for a search.

I tried Bartleby next, but no luck there. There was considerable information on getting rid of stomach fat, but that was off the topic. Since the title is still under copyright I skipped 20+ Places for Public Domain E-Books. I thriftily tried the Public Library next, but there was no electronic version at the eBranch. I tried ManyBooks.net from the list Best Places to Get Free Books - The Ultimate Guide. Browsing titles I did find Behind the Scenes or, Thirty years a slave, and Four Years in the White House, a memoir by Elizabeth Keckley, published in 1868. An appropriate choice for Black History Month, but once again off the topic of my current search. I next searched the long tail of Amazon, beyond the home page ad for the new Kindle 2, I entered the title, and got the same trade paper edition displayed by Brazos (although at a discounted price) and a link to the Audio Download from their “trusted partner,” Audible.com, once again, at a discounted price.

I believe that this completely answers the question.

iHCPL Books, Readers and Beyond: #53 Finding Books Online Exercise 1

Find and report on your blog the three booksellers that are closest to your branch or facility. Do they have an online presence? If they do, please describe it in twenty-five words or less on your blog.

I first went to my LibraryThing local feature and entered the ZIP code for the Administrative Offices. Here's the listing I got:
Plenty of libraries and bookstore in the neighborhood, but the only one with a picture on the LibraryThing site was the West University Branch of the Harris County Public Library. On the Upcoming events column only Murder By The Book and the Brazos Bookstore listed their events.
I looked for a websites for the three closest stores using Google. Half Price Books had a generic site for the chain with a mashup Google map and a Search Books feature that's a click through to Amazon.

Half Price Books
- Rice Village 2537 University Blvd. (listed variously as 2.1 and 2.2 miles from 77054), 2537 University Blvd., Houston, TX 77005

Brazos Bookstore (2.9 miles), 2421 Bissonnet, Houston, Texas 77005 had a site with recommendations by their staff and by their customers. Each customer had a short biographical profile along with a link to the recommended title, an excellent 2.0 marketing technique. There was also a search feature for particular titles, however, it did not appear to interface with the stock at the local store.

It was much the same for the Murder By The Book (2.9 miles), 2342 Bissonnet St., Houston, TX 77005. Customer recommendations (but not last names) were given prominent placement on the site.


Sunday, February 8, 2009

iHCPL Books, Readers and Beyond: #52 What to Read Exercise 4

A customer has read Alanna: the First Adventure by Tamora Pierce. She would like to read the other books in the series in order. Using one of the above resources, post the series title, the order of the books in the series, and the resource you used.

For this one I first went to Mid-Continent Public Library's juvenile series search and entered Alanna as a title search, and found it right away.


So, the series title is Song of the Lioness and clicking the hyperlink on the series title gave me the whole series and sequence:


iHCPL Books, Readers and Beyond: #52 What to Read Exercise 3

A customer tells you that he's read every book written by Dean Koontz and asks you to find an author who writes similar books. Using two of the sites listed above, find three new authors to recommend to your customer. Post the sites you used and the results in your blog.

From NoveList Plus Author Read-alikes I went to Joyce Saricks’s bibliographic essay on Dean R. Koontz. Among the authors she lists as read-alikes are:

Dan Simmons
John Saul
Charles Grant




I went to Library Booklists and Bibliographies and used its search feature. I entered the search term , "Dean Koontz," which directed me to a list of read-alikes including the Wake County Public Libraries, which had one entitled If You Like Dean Koontz, which listed these authors:

Greg Bear
Stephen King
Peter Straub

A bonus of the Wake County List was that it included annotations of specific titles by the authors.

iHCPL Books, Readers and Beyond: #52 What to Read Exercise 2

Using one of the resources listed above find two books suitable for a fourth grade girl interested in animals and another two books for her thirteen year old brother who is interested in ghost stories. Post which resource you used and the books you located.

I started with NoveList Plus, and drilled down from:
Browse to
Older Kids (9-12) to
Recommended Reads to
Animal Stories to
Horses

To come up with the first title: The black stallion / Walter Farley, Lexile: 680, Popularity: 4 Stars

Then I decided to use Morton Grove Public Library’s Kids’ Webrary® to choose: Actual size / Steve Jenkins.

I went to the book finder using first the first the subject “Animals – Fact” and then limiting that to grade “3”

The result popped up on the bottom of the screen.

I clicked on “Full Details” to get:

I used the same book finder using the Subject “Ghosts and Horror” to and grade “8” to select Dark Thirty by Patricia C. McKissack. It came with a “video review” of an animated dragon reading the annotation, “A collection of ghost stories with African American themes, designed to be told during the Dark Thirty--the half hour before sunset--when ghosts seem all too believable.” The dragon, which moved only its mouth, was interesting, but not very spooky for a thirteen-year-old.

From the same list I also picked:

The 13th floor: a ghost story / by Sid Fleischman

So my final lists are:

Fourth-grade girl
The black stallion / Walter Farley
Actual size / Steve Jenkins

Thirteen-year-old brother
Dark Thirty / Patricia McKissack
The 13th floor: a ghost story / Sid Fleischman

iHCPL Books, Readers and Beyond: #52 What to Read Exercise 1

How do you find a read-alike? Pick a title by one of your favorite authors. Search Novelist Plus to find a read-alike. Now perform the same search using two of the other sites listed above. Were the results the same? Compare the two searches and the results in your blog post.



I decided to find a read-alike for Margaret Drabble’s 1996 novel The witch of Exmoor. I went to the NoveList Plus database and started with a Browse search under · Adults · Author Read-alikes, then to the Authors C-D category. Alas, Drabble was not one of the profiled authors. So I went back to the home page Search function and entered the book title. This took me to a review of the book.


The reviews from Booklist, Publishers Weekly, Library Journal, and Kirkus gave good summaries of the novel and the link to the First Chapter gave a good sample of the author’s style. But, obviously, I would need to go to another source for read-alikes.

I next tried What Should I Read Next? I entered author and title in the search boxes, and got a somewhat curious result. The database picked up the author’s first husband (they were divorced in 1975) as a co-author.

Nevertheless, I clicked ahead. The result was a very curious list.


Last on the list was the author’s own novel, The radiant way, an obvious read-alike, but one that did not fulfill the requirements of the exercise, and not one that a person would need to consult a database to find. At the top of the list was a most interesting recommendation. The Pine Barrens by John McPhee, a non-fiction profile of the Pine Barrens wilderness area in New Jersey first published in 1968. Did the database connect term: Sparsely Populated Wilderness Area (United State : coastal area : New Jersey) = Sparsely Populated Wilderness Area (United Kingdom : coastal area : Exmoor)? I don’t think so. I believe that they are associated on the list because, as I was working on this exercise, I also used The Pine Barrens as a non-fiction text to see how the various sources would work on a non-fiction title. And I expect that a few other fans of Ms. Drabble had also done searches for titles like Celt And Saxon and How to Read a Church: A Guide to Symbols and Images in Churches and Cathedrals coincidentally with their search for a read like The witch of Exmoor. It’s the downside of crowd-sourcing. When your crowd is very small peculiar tastes lead to peculiar results.The list was interesting, but not one I would feel good about handing over to a customer.


I next tried a site from The Librarian in Black’s list, Gnooks because it followed by the intriguing annotation, “My students either love this or hate it.” I went to the Map of literature and entered “Margaret Drabble.” The result was a very twitchy graphic. I say twitchy, because the names kept twitching around like a swarm of nervous insects. The static screen capture below does not do it justice.



Margaret Drabble is center screen. Penelope Lively and Kate Atkinson are closest to her on the screen. Kate Atkinson looks very promising. A quick peek at some sample pages from Behind the scenes at the museum on Amazon confirms that she could indeed be a Drabble read-alike, with her rapid fire details of domestic life from an unorthodox metafictional point of view, in this case a freshly formed zygote within her mother's womb.


Penelope Lively also appears to be a good fit. Once again the subject headings in our catalog confirm that her method for her adult titles is psychological fiction and her settings domestic. Once again the first six pages of The Photograph courtesy of Mr. Bezos’s online reading emporium and Kindle store confirms a similar style.


I was also interested to see Richard Price on the screen, since I’m currently listening to an audio version of Lush Life, and my family is a big fan of the television series, “The Wire.” Price is a writer for the series. "The Wire" is a gritty cops and robbers, actually, cops and drug dealers drama set in Baltimore. Price has a very rich and detailed prose style and a sense of how a person’s social class and economic circumstances greatly affect his or her life. These could also characterize Drabble’s work, but his American urban police procedurals are not read-alikes for her English domestic fiction.


Interestingly, Margaret Drabble’s sister A.S. Byatt who appeared in the lower right-hand corner of the screen when I first entered Drabble’s name had twitched off the display when I clicked back returned from investigating Price.


It’s too soon to count myself as one of Gnooks lovers, but, as of this posting, I am infatuated.


Friday, February 6, 2009

The war that made America

The war that made America: a short history of the French and Indian War / Fred Anderson ; illustrations chosen and captioned by R. Scott Stephenson.— New York : Penguin, 2006.
xxv, 293 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 22 cm.
Bibliographic note: p. [267] – 275
Includes index.
ISBN: 0143038044

1. United States – History – French and Indian War, 1755-1763.

973.26

In the early1750s three nations struggled for control of a very strategic piece of North American real estate: the Ohio County. They had very different plans for it. For England’s colonies spread along on the eastern coast of the continent it was land to be settled and farmed. For France it was a link between its trading outposts on the Mississippi and St. Lawrence Valleys, a vital transportation and commercial link with its Native American trading partners. For the Iroquois Confederacy it was land to fall back on and protect their culture from the encroachments of the Europeans. Yet at the same time, trade was also important because it provided metal tools and weapons. European trading partners were far more welcome than European farmers.

Distrustful of the incursions and expeditions of Virginian land companies and Pennsylvanian traders, the governor-general of Canada, the marquis Duquesne, ordered a series of forts built between Lake Erie and the Forks of the Ohio River, a place now occupied by the city of Pittsburgh. The Virginia colonial government was incensed by the action, alerted London, and was given the authority, along with other colonial governments, to act against these encroachments. So an expedition led by a young but ambitious Virginia major, George Washington, was sent to the Forks of the Ohio to remove the French by force.

The results were disastrous for the English, both militarily and diplomatically. It was the first blood spilled in what would become The Seven Years War, a war that stretched from North America to the east across an ocean to Europe, Africa, India and the Philippines. English historian and Prime Minister Winston Churchill referred to it as “the first world war.” The outcome in North America led first to English victory, and then, a decade later, to the revolt of its original colonies. A major theme of Anderson’s book is to show how the political and financial cost of the war with the French and Indians sowed the seeds of the war of revolution. This is a well written, well illustrated, and informative history.