Thursday, April 30, 2009

Doctor Who : Peacemaker


Doctor Who : Peacemaker / James Swallow; read by Will Thorp.— [Bath:] BBC Audiobooks, 2008.

1 audio file (31088 KB) : (2 hr., 9 min.)
Downloadable audio file
Requires OverDrive Media Console
Mode of access: World Wide Web.
Doctor Who (Television program : 2005- )
ISBN: 9781408499092 (sound recording : OverDrive Audio Book)

1. Doctor Who (Fictitious character) -- Fiction. 2. Healers -- West (U.S.) -- Fiction. 3. Science fiction. 4. Space and time – Fiction. 5. Western stories.

823.92

The Doctor and Martha Jones materialize in the Wild West, although the Doctor cautions Marsha that it’s not called that yet. The town of Redwater is being terrorized by two zombie desperados with some very potent lightning spouting side arms. They demand the whereabouts of a snake oil salesman that passed through recently. The extraordinary thing about his medicine was that it really worked. It cured many in town of the smallpox. Anxiety and horrific nightmares are, however, common side effects.

Perhaps more extraordinary is that this science fiction western with zombies, alien invaders, and blazing ray guns is quite entertaining. The author pulls it off very smoothly, and Thorpe’s narration keeps pace with the plot. And, if his American accents are not completely convincing, they are all distinctive and amusing.

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Little Women


Little women / Louisa May Alcott; read by Sandra Burr.— Grand Haven : Brilliance Audio, 1998.
16 sound discs (18 hr.) : digital ; 4 3/4 in.
Unabridged
Directed by Laura Grafton
Compact discs
ISBN: 9781597371384

1. Autobiographical fiction. 2. Domestic fiction. 3. Family – Fiction. 4. March family (Fictitious characters) – Fiction. 5. New England – Fiction. 6. Sisters – Fiction.

813.4

The March sisters grow from children to young adults in genteel poverty next to their wealthy next door neighbors. The setting is Massachusetts during the Civil War. The distinctive character of the four sisters, their parents, and the domestic setting are drawn largely from the author’s own life. Little Women has been a popular and critical success since its publication in 1868-1869, and Burr’s clear and spritely narration makes this edition a pleasant one.

Sunday, April 26, 2009

The wall : growing up behind the Iron Curtain

The wall : growing up behind the Iron Curtain / Peter Sís. -- New York : Farrar, Straus and Giroux, c2007.
[52] pages : ill. (some col.), maps (some col.) ; 32 cm.
1st ed.
"Frances Foster books"--Title page.
Maps on endpapers.
ISBN: 9780374347017 (hc.)

1. Authors, American -- 20th century – Biography. 2. Czech Americans – Biography. 3. Czechoslovakia -- History -- 1945-1992. 4. Czechoslovakia -- Social conditions -- 1945-1992. 5. Illustrators -- United States – Biography. 6. Sís, Peter, 1949- -- Childhood and youth

741.642092

In words and drawings Sís reminisces about his childhood and youth in communist controlled Czechoslovakia. “As long as he could remember, he had loved to draw.” As an infant and child at home in Prague he was free to draw whatever he wanted, but when he went to school he was told what to draw and what to think. “Looking back, I can see how easy it is to brainwash a child. We were like sheep … until music from the free world—rock ‘n’ roll and the Beatles—made a crack in the wall.” As a youth during the Prague Spring he became part of a rock group and a radio disc jockey until the Russian tanks moved in and the government began to watch and question everybody. In Los Angeles in 1984 he had a chance to defect and he took it. “Now when my American family goes to visit my Czech family in the colorful city of Prague, it is hard to convince them it was ever a dark place full of fear, suspicion, and lies…”

Saturday, April 25, 2009

The Daleks’ master plan

The Daleks’ master plan / Terry Nation, Dennis Spooner.— [Wiltshire] : BBC Worldwide Ltd., 2001.

5 sound discs (6 hrs.) : digital ; 4 3/4 in. + 1 booklet.
(Doctor Who (Television program : 1963-1989))

At head of title: Doctor Who
Contents: Mission to the Unknown – The Nightmare Begins -- Day of Armageddon – Devil's Planet – The Traitors – Counter Plot –Coronas of the Sun -- The Feast of Steven – Volcano – Golden Death – Escape Switch – The Abandoned Planet – Destruction of Time
Booklet includes full track listing, production notes and photos.
First broadcast between November 1965 and January 1966
Variant titles: The Dalek’s master plan, The Daleks Master Plan, The Dalek Master Plan.
Full cast dramatization, connecting narration by Peter Purves
Cast: William Hartnell (The Doctor), Peter Purves (Steven Taylor), Adrienne Hill (Katarina), Jean Marsh (Sara Kingdom), Kevin Stoney (Mavic Chen), Peter Butterworth (The Meddling Monk), Nicholas Courtney (Bret Vyon)
Compact discs
ISBN: 9780563535003

1. Doctor Who (Fictitious character) -- Drama. 2. Life on other planets -- Drama. 3. Science fiction television programs--Great Britain. 4. Time travel -- Drama.

791.4561

“We at this table pledge our allegiance to the Dalek cause. Our armies will reduce the galaxies to ashes, their people to dust. And Earth we will conquer first!”

On the planet Kembel in the 41st century, the Doctor and the agents of the solar system’s Space Security Service come across a fully formed plan to conquer the Milky Way, organized by the Daleks. And right in the midst of the plot is the Guardian of the Solar System, Mavic Chen. The head of the government is giving not only comfort to the enemy, but aid as well in the form of taranium, a rare substance found only on Uranus. It’s needed to power the Daleks’ ultimate weapon, the Time Destructor! When the Doctor snatches the taranium and takes off, it begins an epic chase through space and time: to the penal planet Desperus, to Mira with invisible eight-foot tall unfriendly inhabitants, to a volcanic planet, and to Earth in the 41st and 20th centuries and Egypt during the Fourth Dynasty. In the midst of this extended chase another Nemesis in the form of the time-meddler shows up still in his monk’s robes from 1066 to fiddle around with the history of the 41st century.

According to the Doctor Who Wikia, “Only Day of Armageddon (Episode 2), Counter Plot (Episode 5) and Escape Switch (Episode 10) survive on 16mm film telerecordings.” This audio adaptation uses the soundtrack connected by narrative done by Peter Purves who plays Steven in the original show. It’s quite an entertaining romp through space-time.

Friday, April 24, 2009

iHCPL Potluck #56 To Tweet or Not To Tweet...Twitter

Exercises1) Browse a couple of different Twitter profiles (news, fashion, celebrities) and read through a few updates. Do you think this is something you would adopt for personal use? Is there a particular topic you'd like to tweet about?

When I signed up for account earlier in the month for this exercise, I started to follow NPR newscaster Scott Simon, but I gave it up because the finished product was so much better on the radio. I also thought that it would be useful to follow the library to stay up to date with what’s happening. But, at first couldn't find HCPL because I searched under "Harris County Public Library" for tweets and not "harriscountypl." Once I found harriscountypl I also found other people and institutions to follow. I now get lots of tweets from the New York Times. So far, I've found it easier to scan and pick out what I want to read than RSS feed on my aggregator. I was tempted by, but held back on following NPR, because I listen to their news every morning on the radio. I changed my background to multiple portraits of Hypatia, daughter of the mathematician Teone and wife of the philosopher Isodoro, and most importantly the librarian of Alexandria (LCSH: Hypatia, d. 415)

2) Use the search feature to find tweets about a topic that interests you. What were the results?

The results were that I found out that MorganBaden in New York was "… reading Walter Dean Myers' Arbuthnot lecture delivered last w/e, and it is rocking my world." I want to know how she got a copy "about 20 hours ago" to read! Her bio leads me to think that she might be a journalist.

3) Post your thoughts about Twitter to your blog. For help navigating through Twitter, see their support page.

While my thoughts are still, who would want to know what I'm doing all the time (except maybe my boss during the day to be sure that I was working and not twittering away my time)? I realized that I had the identical thought about starting a blog, and now I post to my blog regularly because I enjoy writing, and I don't care if it's true that "Never before have so many said so much to so few." So, I’m going to keep twittering for a few more months, before I decide to give it up or continue.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Walter Dean Myers on “The Geography of the Heart”

























This past Saturday I had the good fortunate to attend the Arbuthnot Lecture given at the Alex Haley farm in Clinton, Tennessee. The well known and highly regarded author for young adults and children, Walter Dean Myers spoke on “The Geography of the Heart.”

As a member of the 2009 Arbuthnot Honor Lecture Committee of the Association for Library Service to Children, I was eagerly anticipating the lecture. The five-member committees—I say committees in the plural because there are several committees at work at the same time in different stages of their responsibilities—spend two years in the process of naming a lecturer and selecting a site for the lecture. Our committee, chaired by Amy Kellman, first met in Washington at the American Library Association Conference on June 23, 2007. We all brought suggestions for possible lecturers, but after discussion we came to a consensus well before our midwinter deadline. The next major decision was on June 28, 2008, at the Annual Conference in Anaheim; we reviewed the applications from institutions wanting to host the lecture. Although there were several outstanding possible sites, the match of Myers with the tenth anniversary celebration of the Langston Hughes Library at the Children’s Defense Fund’s Alex Hailey farm proved providential.

I set off for Tennessee with an exhilarating exhibition of Gulf Coast weather. The rain coming sideways at the terminal windows in Hobby Airport made the light outside turn green. As a result my afternoon flight wasn’t able to leave the ground until 9:30 in the evening. It’s a good thing I brought along a good book to read. I flew into Nashville and drove to Oak Ridge, which according to Tennessee folklore is the home of glow-in-the-dark frogs. I arrived at about 4:30 the next morning, napped, and went on to the lecture in Clinton.

April is a perfect time to be in Tennessee; the redbuds and dogwoods were all in bloom; the first signs of greenery were reappearing on the trees in the Smoky Mountains; the Canada geese were gliding along in the creek, and the sun was shining. I offer my condolences to those of you who spent the day in the dark and heavy rain back in Harris County. Signing in at the farm, I ran into a half-dozen of my former colleagues from the Nashville Public Library, and had a chance to visit with them and eat lunch with them before the program began. Then we all went in to the huge white tent in the sun and waited. Thankfully there was a cool breeze that blew through one side and across the hundreds in the audience.

At noon there was a panel discussion, “Trends and issues in Contemporary Children’s and Young Adult Literature” by members of the Langston Hughes Library Board. Since the library is a research institution focusing on books written or illustrated by African Americans or books about the African American experience, the panel was made up of African American academics, authors, publishers and librarians. Before getting down to the trends and issues, one member Effie Lee Morris, the retired Coordination of Children’s Services for the San Francisco Public Library reminisced about studying under May Hill Arbuthnot, “She looked prim, but she wasn’t. Her classes in children’s literature were lively. Her focus was on the children first and then the books.”

The trend the participants noticed was the “Street Literature” now flooding the market. Much of it was originally self-published. Wade Hudson, the publisher of Just Us Books, said that librarians needed to measure the new street lit against the works of Walter Dean Myers, Jacqueline Woodson, Sharon Draper, or Sharon G. Flake, authors that realistically portray the African American experience and, at the same time, know that out of this experience they have a message to pass on that is not measured by the number of books that they sell.

After the discussion we were welcomed to the lecture by Marian Wright Edelman, the President of the Children’s Defense Fund, Sheadrick Tillman, the Haley Farm Managing Director, and Pat Scales, ALSC President. Arbuthnot Chair Amy Kellman introduced Walter Dean Myers as a real mensch.

Myers noted that he’d been around for such a long time that he knew both Alex Haley and Langston Hughes. He said, “I love to write. What I do is write books for the troubled boy that I once was. My life is no different from any avid reader. As someone who is now at peace with himself, I can reflect on what worked and what didn’t in my life, and reading did.”

He recalled how his mother read to him from true romance magazines, and then after sitting in her lap and following the words he realized that he too could read them, she had him read them aloud to her. Reading gave him “an imagined universe that was both transitory and real.” He did not understand why some of the other boys in his Harlem neighborhood, didn’t “want to read no book.” Eventually he came to realize that they had different “geographies of the heart.” His were the assumptions of the larger culture that reading would get you ahead of life. His friends assumptions were that reading would not change their lives or their situation.. It would not lift them out of poverty or give them the self-esteem and recognition that they craved. It was a mental geography without hope.

He concluded, “Hope is not wishful thinking. It is the re-creation of our society. What my ancestors did, but in a new and better way. And while we can’t force or project our geography on others, we should give them stories to give them hope.”

Now, I am eagerly anticipating the publication of the lecture in the upcoming issue of Children and Libraries: The Journal of the Association for Library Service to Children.

Postscript: It's printed in the Winter 2009 issue on pages 8-16, 26.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Hoops

Hoops / Walter Dean Myers.—New York : Laurel Leaf, 2008, c1981.
183 p. ; 18 cm.
“Based on an original screenplay by John Ballard with additional material by Dennis Watlington.”
ISBN: 9780440938842

1. African Americans – Fiction. 2. Basketball – Fiction. 3. Basketball Betting – Fiction. 4. Harlem (New York, N.Y.) – Fiction.

Lonnie Jackson remembers one of the things that his father said before he split was that “his days were piling up on him.” At seventeen Lonnie is starting to feel the same way. Then one evening he goes over to the playground to shoot some baskets and he trips over a wino lying in the middle of the court. He doesn’t know it at the time, but he’s just met his future coach.

Myers expertly delivers fast paced basketball action, suspense, crime, and a touch of romance in this realistic forerunner to urban street lit.

Wanda Gág

Wanda Gág : the girl who lived to draw / Deborah Kogan Ray.—New York : Viking, 2008.

[40] p. : col. ill. ; 24 x 27 cm.

At head of title: “The Creator of Millions of Cats

Audience: Ages 5 up.

Bibliography: p. 40

ISBN: 9780670062928

1. Artists – United States – Biography. 2. Gág, Wanda, 1893-1946. 3. Illustrators -- United States -- Biography.

741.642092

Born to Bohemian parents in Minnesota all the Gag (rhymes with jog, not bag) children were encouraged to actively pursue both the fine and performing arts. Their father, a house painter by trade, was also a painter of pictures and on his deathbed he gave his oldest daughter this commission, “What Papa couldn’t do, Wanda will have to finish.” Starting at age fifteen Wanda began to support the family through the sale of her art. On scholarships she went on to study art in St. Paul and at the Art Students League in New York. At a one-woman show in New York in 1928, she was approached by a children’s book editor, who asked if she had ever considered writing a story. In fact, she had one already written, inspired by the German folktales that she loved as a child. It was called Millions of Cats.

Ray’s gentle and vividly colorful illustrations enliven her picture book biography of her fellow artist.

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Doctor Who: The Forever Trap

Doctor Who: the forever trap / Dan Abnett ; read by Catherine Tate.-- [Bath] : BBC Audiobooks, 2008.
2 sound discs (2 hr., 23 min.) : digital ; 4 3/4 in.
Unabridged
Compact discs
Produced by Kate Thomas ; series theme music by Murray Gold ; music and sound effects performed by Simon Hunt.
ISBN: 9781408406786

1. Apartment houses – Fiction. 2. Doctor Who (Fictitious character) – Fiction. 3. Dwellings – Fiction. 4. Human-alien encounters – Fiction. 5. Outer space – Fiction. 6. Science fiction.

823.914

A smooth talking and not entirely honest sales-hologram invades the TARDIS and tricks Donna Noble into a sales contract for a luxury apartment complex. If location is all three of the most important things in real estate, then the Edifice doesn’t have any of them. It’s somewhere in the midst of Outer Space, without any means of transportation out. Not only that, new tenants keep arriving without any provision for what they need to survive. Aquatic life forms are dumped on the carpet with nothing for their gills to breathe. Some of the more aggressive tenants are fighting for control of the Edifice, and no one seems to be in charge. Fortunately, there is a Doctor in the house.

Catherine Tate is such a gifted actress and mimic that her single voice presentation sounds like the highest quality full-cast radio drama. As the actress who plays Donna in the television series, it is little wonder that she does a good job voicing Donna’s part. The wonderful part of her performance is how closely she has captured fellow actor David Tennant's speech patterns when she reads the Doctor’s part. The sound effects are also excellent, and Dan Abnett’s original story even has a cliffhanger between discs one and two. Everyone involved with this project is to be commended.