Sunday, October 31, 2010

Nuts

Nuts / by Kacy Cook.-- New York : Marshall Cavendish, 2010.
155 p. ; 22 cm.
ISBN: 9780761456520

1. Families -- Fiction. 2. Honesty – Fiction. 3. Ohio -- Fiction. 4. Pets -- Fiction. 5. Squirrels – Fiction. 6. Wildlife rescue -- Fiction.

813.6

Nell and her brothers find a tiny baby squirrel beneath a tree in their yard. They chase off the neighbors’ cat and bring it inside to keep it safe. Nell goes online to see how to care for infant squirrels. She finds a web site with a link that reads, “If you find an orphaned squirrel” but she’s unhappy to read what it says, “At the top of the page was a notice in a red box: If you find a baby squirrel on the ground and there is no sign of the mother after two hours, or if the baby is injured, take it to a licensed wildlife rehabilitator. A veterinarian can help in locating one.” Nell is very disappointed; she really, really wants to keep it as a pet. What can she do?

This realistic animal story is full of interesting information about wildlife rescue and gray squirrels. It also poses a number of ethical questions about the relationships between humans and animals and about honesty among humans.

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Harold's Tail

Harold's tail / written and illustrated by John Bemelmans Marciano. -- New York : Viking, c2003.
130 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
ISBN: 9780670036608

1. New York (N.Y.) – Fiction. 2. Rats – Fiction. 3. Squirrels – Fiction.

Harold’s tale starts in Strauss Park and then moves to Riverside Park and eventually all about Manhattan. Harold’s travels starts with a scheming rat named Sidney, who tricks Harold into shaving his tail. Sidney glues it on to his tail and moves in to Harold’s home in Strauss Park. And Harold finds himself homeless. With a bare un-bushy tail everyone takes Harold for a rat!

Harold’s plight and his trans-species culture shock turns into a multicultural experience when, having been rejected by both humans and his fellow squirrels, he’s taken in by a more magnanimous pack of rats and is taught the nocturnal art of garbage can foraging. Marciano tells a delightful tale with well defined lively characters.

Peace Like a River

Peace like a river / by Leif Enger ; read by Edward Holland.-- Newport Beach : Books on Tape, p2001.
11 sound discs (12 hr., 31 min.) : digital ; 4 3/4 in.
Unabridged, library edition
Compact discs
ISBN: 0736685294

1. Bildungsromans. 2. Christian fiction. 3. Domestic fiction. 4. Faith – Fiction. 5. Fugitives from justice – Fiction. 6. Minnesota – Fiction. 7. Miracles—Fiction. 8. North Dakota – Fiction.

813.6

The night before the jury is about to render a verdict on his case Davey Land breaks out of jail and escapes. He shot two intruders who broke in and threatened his family, but when it comes out in the trial that he has provoked them, things look bad for Davey. His father Jeremiah, his asthmatic younger brother Reuben and his sister Swede, a nine-year-old author of heroic cowboy verse, take out on what they hope is his trail into the Badlands of the Dakotas.

Told by eleven-year-old Reuben, their journey and its cause and aftermath, becomes a determined struggle between faith and prayer and human selfishness, between comfort and privation, between deception and truth, and between images of hellish landscape and heavenly visions. It is also a tale abounding in miracles.

Savvy

Savvy / by Ingrid Law.—Complementary Teacher's edition. – New York : Puffin ; Boston. : Walton Media, c2010.
342, [38], 14 p. : ill. ; 19 cm.
"Includes almost 50 pages of bonus teaching materials, discussion questions, a special Q&A with Ingrid Law, notes from the 2009 Newbery Committee, and a sneak peak at Scumble, the next Savvy adventure!"

1. Fantasy fiction. 2. Kansas – Fiction. 3. Nebraska – Fiction. 4. Superheroes – Fiction.

813.6

Mibs Beaumont—Mibs is the nickname her baby sister gave her; her full first name is Mississippi—is looking forward with anxious anticipation to her thirteenth birthday. It’s only two days away and it’s the usual age when the members of her family first manifest their savvy. When her older brother Fish turned thirteen he caused a hurricane. Her “Great-aunt Jules…could step back twenty minutes in time every time she sneezed…second cousin Olive…could melt ice with a single red-hot stare,” and her brother Rocket could create an enormous amount of electricity.

But Mibs’s birthday suspense is crushed by a horrible highway accident. Suddenly, her father, a man without any savvy, is in a coma in the far away Salina Hope Hospital. When Rocket and her mother drive off to be with him Mibs and the rest of her large family are stranded with the preacher’s family, and Mibs knows that she just has to get to Salina and she will do anything to get there.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Turtle In Paradise

Turtle in paradise / Jennifer L. Holm ; read by Becca Battoe.— New York : Listening Library, 2010.
3 sound discs (3 hr., 48 min.) : digital ; 4 3/4 in.
Unabridged
Compact discs
ISBN: 9780307738301

1. Cousins – Fiction. 2. Depressions -- 1929 – Fiction. 3. Families – Fiction. 4. Key West (Fla.) -- History -- 20th century – Fiction. 5. Treasure troves--Florida--Florida Keys—Fiction.

813.54

Turtle got her nickname from her mother because she doesn’t cry or get upset about by bad news, and in 1935 the world is full of bad news. Turtle’s mother has a new job in New Jersey as a housekeeper, but her employer won’t let her daughter live in with her. She thinks children are noisy and she can’t abide noise. So Turtle and her cat Smokey have been sent to live with her aunt and uncle and her three cousins, Beans, Kermit, and Buddy in Key West, Florida. All three cousins are boys and they own a dog named Termite, a cross between a German Shepherd and dachshund. It’s not love at first sight. The boys don’t want to make room for a girl and Termite doesn’t want to make room for a cat.

Beans, who, like Turtle, is eleven, is the boss of The Diaper Gang. It’s a babysitting service for infants. Beans tells Turtle it’s strictly, “No girls allowed.” This doesn’t bother Turtle. She has no desire to change diapers. The Diaper Gang is a thriving business because they not only change diapers, but they work for candy, not money. And they have an important trade secret: a never-fail cure for diaper rash. Tagging along with the Diaper Gang and their wagon full of tightly swaddled and dry charges, gives Turtle a chance to meet the neighbors. Everyone in Key West is known by a nickname: Slow Poke, Too Bad, Killie, Papa, Nana Philly, Pork Chop. Hardly anyone goes by their real name, but they all seem to know all about Turtle the day after she arrives. It’s a lot different from New Jersey.

The Glass Castle: A Memoir

The glass castle : a memoir / Jeannette Walls. -- New York : Scribner, 2006.
288 p. ; 21 cm.
ISBN: 9780743247542 (pbk.)

1. Children of alcoholics -- United States -- Biography. 2. Homeless persons -- Family relationships -- New York (State) -- New York. 3. Poor -- West Virginia -- Welch -- Biography. 4. Problem families -- United States -- Case studies. 5. Problem families -- West Virginia -- Welch -- Case studies. 6. Walls, Jeannette.

362.82092

The first thing Jeannette Walls remembers from her childhood was being on fire. The three-year old was standing on a chair boiling hot dogs when her dress caught on fire At the hospital the nurses wanted to know what a three-year-old was doing cooking hot dogs. “’Mom says I’m mature for my age,’ I told them, ‘and she lets me cook for myself a lot.’ Two nurses looked at each other, and one of them wrote something down on a clipboard. I asked what was wrong. Nothing, they said, nothing.”

Pulling up stakes and doing the skedaddle in the early hours of the morning was a regular part of her family’s nomadic existence going from small desert town in Arizona, Nevada and California, until her father’s inability and her mother’s unwillingness to keep a job landed them in Phoenix living off the inheritance of Jeannette’s maternal grandmother, and when that ran out to the home of her paternal grandmother in Welch, West Virginia. From there one by one, her older sister, Jeannette, her younger brother, and youngest sister set out for New York to find work, education and their own lives.

The Hunger Games

The hunger games / Suzanne Collins. -- New York : Scholastic Press, c2008.
374 p. ; 22 cm.
ISBN: 9780439023481 (hardcover : alk. paper)

1. Contests – Fiction. 2. Interpersonal relations – Fiction. 3. Reality television programs -- Fiction. 4. Science fiction. 5. Survival -- Fiction. 6. Women gladiators – Fiction.

813.6

Throughout Panem the most-watched television show of the year is the “Hunger Games.” That’s because everyone in the Capitol and its twelve subservient districts is required to watch as twenty-four tributes, twelve boys and twelve girls, a pair from each district, aged twelve to eighteen, chosen by lottery, fight to the death. This gruesome reality show is punishment for an uprising seventy-four years ago when thirteen districts battled the Capitol. Now there are only twelve districts and the survivors are forced to participate in the annual reaping.

Sixteen-year old Katniss Everdeen would rather be hunting with her friend Gale than participating in this grim lottery. Naturally, she hopes her name won’t be drawn, but when the name of her twelve-year old sister is announced, Katniss jumps in to volunteer. Soon she and her fellow tribute are on their way to the Capitol, where an alcoholic coach and team of make-up artists and trainers will transform the Appalachian coal miner’s daughter and baker’s son into lethal gladiators and glamorous stars.

Monday, September 6, 2010

The Quantum Rose

The Quantum Rose / by Catherine Asaro ; read by Anna Fields.—[Ashland] : Blackstone Audio, 2004.
WMA audio file (192605 KB) (13 hr., 23 min.)
Unabridged
(Saga of the Skolian Empire; Book 6)
ISBN: 9780786133680

1. Science Fiction 2. Skolian Empire (Imaginary place) -- Fiction.

813.54

While having a relaxing swim Kamoj Quanta Argali, the governor of Argali, and her bodyguard are surprised by a group of riders led by Havyrl Lionstar, who appear on the other bank of the river. Embarrassed by the intrusion, Kamoj quickly gets out of the water and dresses, but by the time she joins her bodyguard, the riders have left. Lionstar, who has recently arrived from another world, is notorious for being both rich and rude. As if this breach of privacy wasn’t humiliating enough, on the way back from the river Kamoj runs into another group of riders led by another notoriously rich and difficult man, Jax Ironbridge, the ruler of the neighboring province and her betrothed. It is not a happy meeting. And soon Kamoj finds herself caught in a political and emotional bind by the desires of the two stubborn and powerful men.

Dead Air

Dead air / James Goss ; read by David Tennant. – Bath : BBC Audiobooks , 2010.
WMA audio file (17220 KB) (1 hr., 12 min.)
ISBN: 9781408425022 (sound recording : OverDrive Audio Book)
Downloadable audio file
Unabridged
Requires OverDrive Media Console
Mode of access: World Wide Web.

1. Science fiction – Sound recordings. 2. Sound recordings – Drama. 3. Weapons – Drama.

822.92

In 1966 pirate radio station Bravo, anchored off the coast of the United Kingdom receives two extraterrestrial visitors, one bent on destroying everything in its path, and the other bent on destroying the destroyer. It’s bad news for the humans on board, and could be much, much worse for the entire population of the earth.

This sound recording about a sound recordings that’s a weapon of mass destruction, with its marvelous script, talented acting and excellent production make this BBC original audio story a superb science fiction thriller.

Sunday, August 8, 2010

We Are the Ship: the Story of Negro League Baseball

We are the ship : the story of Negro League baseball / words and paintings by Kadir Nelson ; foreword by Hank Aaron.-- New York : Jump at the Sun/Hyperion Books for Children, c2008.
88 p. : col. ill. ; 29 cm.
ISBN: 9780786808328

1. African American baseball players. 2. Baseball -- United States – History. 3. Negro leagues – History.

Using the voice of an unnamed player Kadir Nelson tells the story of Negro League baseball from its beginnings in the 1920s through its end in 1960. In his oil paintings he gives every player’s portrait a bearing, as if the viewer is looking up at an exquisitely colored monumental statue of the man.

Calamity Jack

Calamity Jack / Shannon Hale, Dean Hale, and [illustrated by] Nathan Hale. -- New York : Bloomsbury, 2010.
144 p. : chiefly col. ill. ; 29 cm.
Sequel to: Rapunzel's Revenge
ISBN: 9781599903736 (pbk. : alk. paper)

1. Fantasy comic books. 2. Giants -- Comic books, strips, etc. 3. Graphic novels. 4. Jack and the beanstalk--Comic books, strips, etc. 5. Jack tales--Comic books, strips, etc.

741.5973

As he and his new friend Rapunzel head back east to his old hometown of Shyport, Jack thinks back on his past. He’s always been a schemer; he likes to think of himself as a “criminal mastermind with an unfortunate amount of bad luck.” He remembers the pranks and heists he and Prudence the pixie used to pull, including the last one which caused him to flee Shyport, and, worries that Rapunzel might not want to stick around once she discovers his criminal past.

The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde

The strange case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde / Robert Louis Stevenson ; wood engravings by Barry Moser ; foreword by Joyce Carol Oates.—Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1998, c1990.
157 p. : ill. ; 17 cm.
ISBN: 0803292406

1. Good and evil – Fiction. 2. Horror fiction. 3. Science fiction.

823.8

While out for a Sunday walk, Mr. Utterson, a very respectable lawyer, and his cousin Mr. Enfield pass by a door on a back street. The door is worn, blistered, discolored, and neglected. When he sees it, Enfield starts to relate a very odd story to his cousin about the occupant that lives behind the door, a Mr. Hyde. One late night he was walking along this street, he witnessed the collision of two pedestrians, Mr. Hyde and a young girl “of maybe eight or ten who was running as fast as she was able down a cross street. Well, sir, the two ran into each other naturally enough at the corner; and then came the horrible part of the thing; for the man trampled calmly over the child’s body and left her screaming on the ground … it was hellish to see.” Enfield and the child’s family accost Hyde and confront him with his cruel indifference. Seeking to buy them off and avoid a scandal he offers to pay restitution of one hundred pounds. He unlocks a door on the street, the very one that reminded Enfield of the story, steps inside, and returns with ten pounds in coin, and a check for ninety pounds drawn on the account of a very prominent citizen, whom Enfield would prefer not to name to his cousin. The amazing thing to Enfield was that the check, which he assumed must be a forgery or a fake, is honored by the bank the next morning.

Mr. Utterson, however, already knows the name on the check. He knows because he knows that the door morally deformed Mr. Hyde unlocked is the rear entrance to the home of his friend and client, the upright citizen, Dr. Henry Jekyll. He returns home, and from his safe he takes out the will of Dr. Jekyll, and rereads the very strange instruction, “in the case of the decease of Henry Jekyll, M.D., D.C.L., L.L.D., F.R.S., etc. all his possessions were to pass into the hand of ‘his friend and benefactor, Edward Hyde’” not only that, “but in the case of Dr. Jekyll’s disappearance or unexplained absence for any period exceeding three calendar months,’” Hyde would also inherit all. What is the hold that this grubby little man has over Jekyll? Utterson is determined to find out.

Squirrel's World

Squirrel's world / Lisa Moser ; illustrated by Valeri Gorbachev.— Cambridge : Candlewick Press, 2008, c2007.
44 p. : col. ill. ; 23 cm.
Audience: Ages 5 - 7.
(Candlewick sparks)
ISBN: 9780763640880

1. Animals – Fiction. 2. Forest animals – Fiction. 3. Helping behavior – Fiction. 4. Humorous stories. 5. Squirrels – Fiction.

813.6

Squirrel likes to go, go, go. He likes to help his friends, but he doesn’t slow down to listen to what they say to him. Sometimes he helps and sometime he tries to help and the result is not at all helpful.

2010-2011 Texas Bluebonnet Nominee

Children at War

Children at war / P. W. Singer.—New York : Pantheon Books, c2005.
xii, 269 p. ; 24 cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index
ISBN: 0375423494

1. Child soldiers – History – 20th century. 2. Child soldiers – History – 21st century.

355.0083

Singer gives a sobering social and political analysis on the increased use of seven to seventeen year-olds to fight the civil wars of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. It includes over thirty pages of endnotes and includes the words of former child soldiers who fought in Columbia, Lebanon, Liberia, Kashmir, Kosovo, Sierra Leone, Sri Lanka, and Sudan. It begins with a quote from a seven-year-old: “The rebels told me to join them, but I said no. Then they killed my smaller brother. I changed my mind.”

Why did the “recruitment and employment of child solders…one of the most flagrant violations of the norms of international human rights [and] contrary to the general practices of the last four millennia of warfare” suddenly become so prevalent? Singer cites three main causes. The first is poverty. The booming global economy of the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries left many people behind. “Indeed, three billion people, roughly half the world’s population, currently [2005] subsists on $2 or less a day.” He then goes on to translate this poverty into its results:, illiteracy, inadequate housing or the complete lack of housing, lack of access to safe drinking water, malnutrition, disease, and civil war.

The second is the technological advance in small arms: automatic rifles, land mines, and rocket-propelled grenades, are now light enough and simple enough to use and maintain that even a child can do it. “The ubiquitous and Russian-designed Kalashnikov AK-47, which weighs 10 ½ pounds, is a prime example. Having only nine moving parts, it is brutally simple. Interviews reveal that it generally takes children around thirty minutes to learn how to use one. The weapon is also designed to be exceptionally hardy. It requires little maintenance and can even be buried in dirt for storage…Thus, a handful of children now can have the equivalent firepower of an entire regiment of Napoleonic infantry.”

With the end of the Cold War a number of weak government began to totter as the funding they had been receiving from the superpowers disappeared. This made them more vulnerable to attacks by rebels. However, the rebels could no longer count on support from superpowers either, and so they turned to crime to generate income. Drug trafficking, kidnapping and protection rackets proliferated, and as they did so, ideological concerns began to disappear and war become “an alternate system of profit and power.” War becomes not a means to an end, but an end itself. “Highly personalized or purely predatory armed groups, such as warlords, which are focused on asset seizure, are particularly dependant on this new doctrine of using children.”

Most child soldiers come from the poorest part of the population. About a third of them are abducted by armed bands, the other two-thirds join to avoid starvation, occasionally encouraged by their parents because they are unable to care for them. “A good portion of girl soldiers who join as ‘volunteers’ cite domestic abuse or exploitation.” Many join to revenge the death of family member usually one or both parents. Once enlisted they are then indoctrinated. Their “training typically uses fear, brutality, and psychological manipulation to achieve high levels of obedience.” Abducted recruits are often forced, “to take part in the ritualized killing of others very soon after their abduction. The victims may be POWs for the other side, other children who were abducted for the sole purpose of being killed in front of the recruits, or, most heinous of all, the children’s own neighbors or even parents. The killings are often carried out in a public manner, such that the home community knows that the child has killed, with the intent of closing off any return.”

Having broken down the child down physically, and psychologically, he or she is then filled with basic infantry tactics. Some are given more specific duties as spies, or couriers, or suicide bombers. Girls are often assigned to be “wives” of adult officers. Generally all are sent out to attack civilian targets that are poorly defended. Typical orders are to kill everyone in a village and then burn it to the ground. Singer quotes a UNICEF worker who said, “Boys will do things that grown men can’t stomach. Kids make more brutal fighters because they haven’t developed a sense of judgment.” They are also assigned to be shields for their commanders or cannon fodder in what are termed human wave attacks. “The tactic is designed to overpower or wear down a well-fortified opposition through sheer weight of numbers. The very value of children is that they are extra targets for the enemy to deal with and expend ammunition upon.”

Singer concludes his book with recommendation on how to prevent children from becoming soldiers and how former child soldiers can be rehabilitated. He also warns that training for American soldiers must include how to fight them. “The hard reality is that our soldiers must be trained and prepared for what to do in the certain eventualities in which they will come face-to-face with child soldiers.”

Binky the Space Cat

Binky the space cat / by Ashley Spires.-- Toronto : Kids Can Press, c2009.
64 p. : col. ill. ; 23 cm.
Audience: Ages 7 to 10.
(Binky Adventure)
ISBN: 9781554533091 (hardcover)

1. Cats -- Comic books, strips, etc. 2. Graphic novels. 3. Space flight -- Comic books, strips, etc.

741.5971

Unlike your average cat, Binky has a purpose; he is a space cat. Binky is also an indoor cat. He is not been allowed in the space outside his home. But even as a kitten he realized that his home was being invaded by aliens! His humans, both the big and small one would exclaim, “Ew, bugs!” Binky did his research in books and online and discovered that aliens and bugs,
“--can fly
--steal your food
--lay eggs
Binky came to three conclusions:
1. Obviously bugs and aliens are the same thing.
2. Too bad humans aren’t smart enough to figure this out.
3. That must be why they need a cat around.”

Determined to protect his humans, Binky sends away for his Space Cat kit and trains very hard to deal with the alien menace.

Half Broke Horses

Half broke horses : a true-life novel / Jeannette Walls.-- New York: Simon & Schuster Audioworks, 2009.
8 sound discs (ca. 9 hr.) : digital ; 4 3/4 in.
Unabridged
Read by the author
Compact discs
ISBN: 9780743597227

1. Arizona -- Social life and customs -- 20th century -- Fiction. 2. Ranch life--Arizona--Fiction. 3. Ranch life--Texas--Fiction. 4. Smith, Lily Casey, 1901-1968 – Fiction. 5. Texas -- Social life and customs -- 20th century -- Fiction.

813.6

Jeannette Walls takes on the voice of her maternal grandmother, Lily Casey Smith, and tells the story of her life from Lily’s point of view. Lily died when Jeannette was eight. In reconstructing her grandmother’s biography used her mother’s reminisces and local histories, which presented her with several versions of events, so she made some artistic choices and presents Lily’s story as a first person “true-life novel.”

Born on a horse-breeding ranch in West Texas and raising her own children on a large cattle ranch in Arizona, Lily was very familiar with riding and training horses. She was also became a fearless horse racer, air pilot, taxi driver and teacher. Refusing the traditional role of ranch life she begs for a formal education and gets a partial one at the Sisters of Loretto Academy in Santa Fe, until half way through her first year when her father wrote the Mother Superior that he didn’t have the money to continue her education. When she arrives back at the ranch she discovers he’s spent it on some pure-bred dogs, dogs, which are ironically shot by a neighbor for bothering his cattle. This reinforces her already strong tendency of determined and persevering self-reliance.

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Library wars 1 Love and War

Library wars 1 love & war / story and art by Kiiro Yumi ; original concept by Hiro Arikawa.—San Francisco : VIZ Media, 2010.
[166] p. : ill. ; 19 cm.
(Library wars; Volume 1)
Shojo Beat edition
English translation and adaptation Kinami Watabe
ISBN: 9781421534886

1. Censorship -- Japan -- Comic books, strips, etc. 2. Graphic novels -- Japan. 3. Libraries -- Japan -- Comic books, strips, etc. 4. Science fiction comic books, strips, etc.

741.5952


For years Iku Kasahara has dreamed about joining the Library Forces. But now that she’s been accepted, the young soldier thinks that drill instructor Sergeant Dojo is making her training unnecessarily hard. Her friends tell her that’s because he has high hopes for her, but Iku isn’t so sure. After finishing a strenuous run weighed down with a rifle, she finished twelfth out of fifty trainees and first among the women, he snapped at her and made her do push-ups because she collapsing after she crossed the finish line.

Thirty years ago the Central Government passed the Media Betterment Act and the Media Betterment Committee began raiding bookstores and libraries. In response the Provincial Governments created the Library Forces to fight the censorship and protect their libraries. In this near future Manga the struggle for freedom of the press and the rights of readers to read what they want is no longer fought by lawyers and librarians using court cases; it’s fought with fists and automatic weapons. It gives a new dimension to the Unshelved® T-shirt that reads Intellectual Freedom Fighter.

Rain Rain Rivers

Rain Rain Rivers / words and pictures by Uri Shulevitz.— [New York] : Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 1988, c1969.
[32] p. : col. ill. ; 23 x 26 cm.
Sunburst edition (paperback)
ISBN: 0374461953

1. Rain and rainfall – Fiction.

813.54

In the comfort of an attic bedroom a girl and her cat contemplate the rain outside the window. The girl watches it rushing down the eaves, gushing out the drainpipes and thinks of the puddles that she can sail her toy boats in tomorrow. She imagines it raining on hills and fields far from her city home and collecting in rills, and brooks and rushing into the sea. “Oceans are swelling, Melting the skies.” She anticipates the joy of playing in the puddles with her friends. “We’ll run barefoot in puddles and stamp in warm mud. I’ll jump over pieces of sky in the gutter.” Her lyrical contemplation is illustrated in a muted palette of blue, yellow, and green over black ink.

Oryx and Crake

Oryx and Crake : a novel / Margaret Atwood.— New York : Nan A. Talese, 2003.
376 p. ; 25 cm.
1st American edition
ISBN: 0385503857

1. Dystopias. 2. Genetic engineering – Fiction. 3. Human beings – Extinction – Fiction. 4. Male friendship – Fiction. 5. Science fiction. 6. Triangles (Interpersonal relations) – Fiction.

813.54

Snowman was formerly known as Jimmy, but his friends and colleagues all adopted the names of extinct species, like Crake and Oryx. He renamed himself Abominable Snowman, or just Snowman for short; he doesn’t want to come across as too frightening to those under his care. Snowman is, like his namesake, slowly melting away, but not from the tropical sun. Although it’s warm enough that he only needs a sheet for clothing, he can’t get enough food and he’s wasting away from malnutrition. His charges, the children of Crake, are able to live off the raw vegetation of the land because they have been genetically engineered that way. Snowman can’t, and he lives in constant fear of an infection or being attacked by the wolvogs or pigoons. He frets and wonders how did things get so bad?

Mississippi Jack

Mississippi Jack : being an account of the further waterborne adventures of Jacky Faber, midshipman, fine lady, and the Lily of the West / L. A. Meyer ; read by Katherine Kellgren.— [Roseland] : Listen & Live Audio, Inc., 2009.
1 WMA downloadable audio file (250188 KB) (17 hr., 25 min.)
(Bloody Jack adventure; 5)
Unabridged.
Mode of access: World Wide Web.
ISBN: 9781593164478 (sound recording : OverDrive Audio Book)


1. Adventure stories. 2. Fink, Mike, 1770-1823?—Fiction. 3. Mississippi River – History – 19th century – Fiction. 4. Orphans – Fiction. 5. River boats – Fiction.

813.54

With the aid of her friends, Jacky Faber again escapes a British naval brig and heads west into the American wilderness Unknown to her, and delayed by the fickle fortunes of fate her true love, Jaimy Fletcher, is following in her tracks. Relieving the boisterous boasting Mike Fink of his keelboat on the Allegheny River she poles, paddles, and floats downstream to the headwaters of the Ohio River at Pittsburgh. She and her growing crew of companions repaint and outfit their craft as “The Belle of the Golden West” and take this miniature showboat and gambling den down the Mississippi to New Orleans. Along the way she and her crew outwit, out gun, or with the aid of fate, escape hostile natives, settlers, slave traders, British agents (some cruel and some amorous), (other) river pirates, a hurricane and a tornado.

Kellgren reads, sings, and acts Jacky’s adventures with the full gusto that Meyer’s text deserves. Hearing Mississippi Jack leaves no doubt in the listeners mind about why she has (so far) been awarded three Odyssey honors for her narration of Bloody Jack’s adventures.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

iHCPL The Web According to Google #88: Wave, Buzz, and Mobile

Exercises:

1. How do you think you could use Google Wave or Buzz for collaboration? Do you currently use any online collaboration tools?

I could use Google Wave for teleconferencing and working on joint projects if other members of the team also used it. But I don’t see what its comparative advantage over an e-mail with an attachment would be for a joint project. I signed up for Wave about a year ago on my home computer, and I have yet to find a practical use for it.

Buzz, the Twitter wannabe, is frighteningly repellent. Currently I get in my Gmail inbox, on average, more than the fifty messages a day. About half of them are commercial or political noise that I delete after a quick glance. Why—in the interest of sanity—would I want to increase this? The only thing that could possibly make it worse was if started popping up on my cell phone!

As part of the LIT team I used a wiki and now socialwok.

2. Read a little about one or two of the Google Mobile apps available for mobile phones. Which ones do you think you would use the most and how?

As a stingy person I would not give my phone company any other excuse to jack up the phone bill if I could help it. I would not use any of them if I have a choice. If I do not have a choice I might use the Calendar if I found myself without my hard copy calendar with me, and I would use the search to find the library catalog if all the library terminals were busy and if I didn’t have my netbook with me.

3. Make a post in your blog with your answers.

Above

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

iHCPL The Web According to Google #87: Google Reader

Exercises: 1. Take the tour or sign-up and try the service out. Do you currently use a feed reader? If so which one do you use? Would you switch to Google Reader if you don't already use it? Why or why not?

I took the tour to refresh my memory, but for once, it didn't need to be refreshed. Back in Thing #8 I chose Google Reader as my aggregator and have been using it ever since. The only downside is that when I went to it today:
AgggggggggHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH 823 posts to read! Perhaps I need to find a 12-step program for Info Addicts. Hello, my name is Bruce, and I'm powerless over my Aggregator.

2. Take a look at some of your favorite sites. Do they have feeds? If they do, subscribe to one of the feeds. Hint: Our website has feeds.

Yes, most of them do. That's what contributes to my overabundance of posts, the 53 feeds to which I subscribe. Harris County Public Library - Our Space: People & Books @ HCPL is one of the 53. The only site I haven't had success subscribing to is Book Examiner written by Michelle Kerns. It has delightfully snarky reviews, but Examiner.com does not play nicely with the Google Reader. The RSS posts repeatedly took me to notices that said "the article isn't published yet," so I've had to revert to a listserv subscription for my fill of often outrageously catty reviews, trash talk about other reviewers, or statistical counts of the number of clichés appearing in reviews.

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Going Bovine

Going bovine / Libba Bray.-- New York : Delacorte, 2009.
480 p. ; 22 cm.
ISBN: 9780385733977

1. Automobile travel – Fiction. 2. Bovine spongiform encephalopathy – Fiction. 3. Dwarfs –
Fiction. 4. People with disabilities – Fiction.

813.6

Just before dying Alonso Quixano recovers his reason and addresses his family and friends from his deathbed, “I was mad, and now I am sane; I was Don Quixote of La Mancha, and now I am, as I have said, Alonso Quixano the Good. May my repentance and sincerity return me to the esteem your graces once had for me...” Alonso was fifty years old when too much reading—day and night he consumed books of chivalry—and too little sleep deprived him of his reason and he decided to become a knight errant.

Cameron Smith is only sixteen when his study of Don Quixote for the state mandated SPEW (State Prescribed Educational Worthiness) test is rudely interrupted. His muscles begin to twitch uncontrollably; he collapses in class, after punching a classmate and insulting the teacher. He is diagnosed with Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. In animals it’s known as mad cow disease. His brain is deteriorating and he will lose control of his muscles and be subject to dementia and delusions. A gang of eight-foot high fire giants have already chased him, and when he tries to flee he finds the way blocked by, a “Big Dude. Black armor glistening like oil. Spiked Helmet, steel visor. Sword. The light bounces off the sword in arcs and hurts my eyes. Sword.”

But all is not frightening or hopeless. In the hospital he is attended by a nurse named Glory, and awakes to meet one of his classmates in the bed next to his, “Paul Ingacio Gonzales, but everyone calls me Gonzo.” Gonzo is a champion gamer and a bit of a hypochondriac, but he shares Cameron’s love of science fiction movies. Cameron also meets someone that he’s glimpsed briefly before. He wakes up to find her standing at the end of his bed. As he describes her, “I take in the torn fishnets, plaid mini-kilt, shiny riveted breastplate with leather straps at the sides… Her wings are a crazy black-and-white-checkered pattern, like they’ve been spray-painted at a body shop to look like hipster sneakers.” Did I mention that her hair is pink?

He blinks his eyes to make the hallucination go away, but she doesn’t. Then she introduces herself as Dulcie, eats the chocolate pudding from his hospital tray, and tries to enlist him in a mission to save the world and maybe himself by tracking down Dr. X, whose travel between dimensions has opened this universe up to forces of dark energy, including the ones now consuming Cameron’s brain. He tells her this is the most random thing he’s ever heard. She tells him that he has to take Gonzo with him because their fates are connected. He counters, “There’s no such thing as fate.” To which she replies, “Except for random fate.” And he figures, it’s better than just sitting in the hospital bed and waiting.

Alonso Quixano’s quest ends with his death. Will Cameron’s quest take him beyond? Did I mention the yard gnome that’s really a Norse god?

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

iHCPL The Web According to Google #86: Calendar and Documents

1. Create a calendar in Google Calendar and try adding some events or tasks to it. How do you think you would use Google Calendar in the workplace or at home? Do you think you would find it helpful to share calendars with coworkers, friends, or family?

I forgot I have a Google calendar! I last used it on Wed Jun 27, 2007. Since it duplicates my Outlook calendar and the pencil and paper one that I carry around with me in my ever-present notepad at work, I haven't used it. However, it might be useful when I'm attending a library conference. Its last use for the ALA 2007 annual conference in DC, but I can't remember if I ever used it while I was there. I'll try again for this year. While it could be useful to share it with coworkers, family or friends, it’s been my experience that none of them, myself included, actually use it.

2. Try creating a file Google Docs and uploading one from your computer. Can you see yourself using Google Docs in addition to or instead of a desktop office application? Why or why not?

I also forgot that I had a Google Docs account that I created during the original iHCPL. There were four documents from 2007, one blank word processing document from 2008, and a document that was sent to me in April 2009. I started typing the draft for this post using the blank word processing document from 2008. The choices of typeface are limited, but sufficient for taking notes. Initially it let me copy and paste from the Google Document onto Word, but not from Word onto the Google Document, but then a few minutes later it did. I'm somewhat puzzled by its repentance, and wonder if I did something differently the second time. The Google Document's tool bar was simpler than the Word 2007 ribbon, which I count as a plus. I was able to copy and paste the image of a book cover from the jump drive I had plugged into my desktop and re-size it easily. The Google Document had a handy drop down menu that gave sizes for the image that went from thumbnail to full page, or custom dimensions. On the other hand, cutting and pasting an image that was not already a .jpeg file or cropping an image were processes that I needed the extra functions of Word to accomplish.


I started uploading my Books Blogged spreadsheet, a 91K excel 2003-2007 file, on May 4, 2010 at 8:22 a.m. CST. At 8:28 I clicked back to the previous page, and it stopped attempting to load the file, as near as I could tell it had done nothing. I stated again at 8:33 a.m., and this time it worked.

Overall Google Docs was much faster than I remember it from 2007, so I don’t know if this is a function of improvements in its software or more bandwidth at the library. Will I actually use it again? I doubt it. All the computers at work are loaded with Microsoft Office, the desktops, laptops at home, and my netbook are all loaded with Microsoft Office.

Monday, May 3, 2010

Catch-22

Catch-22 / Joseph Heller; performed by Jay O. Sanders. -- New York : HarperAudio : Caedmon, p2007.
16 sound discs (19 hr., 30 min.) : digital ; 4 3/4 in.
Compact discs
Unabridged
"Bonus: a rare, archival recording of Joseph Heller reading his personal selections from Catch-22"--Container.
Originally published in 1961
ISBN: 0060890096

1. Black humor. 2. Satire. 3. War stories. 4. World War, 1939-1945--Aerial operations, American -- Fiction. 5. World War, 1939-1945--Italy—Fiction.

813.54

Catch-22 is wonderfully witty word-play, a ball of tangled narrative time, dialog, fears, and desires. Set on an Army Air Corps base on the imaginary island of Pianosa off the coast of Italy during the closing months of the Second World War, the book begins in the base hospital and introduces protagonist Captain John Yossarian and his like-minded friend Dunbar. Yossarian is bombardier who is malingering, faking a liver ailment to avoid combat duty. He’s confronted by a positive thinking fellow officer from Texas, who unsuccessfully tries to cheer him up.

“But Yossarian couldn’t be happy, even though the Texan didn’t want him to be, because outside the hospital there was still nothing funny going on. The only thing going on was a war, and no one seemed to notice but Yossarian and Dunbar. And when Yossarian tried to remind people, they drew away from him and thought he was crazy. Even Clevinger, who should have known better but didn’t, had told him he was crazy the last time they had seen each other, which was just before Yossarian had fled into the hospital.

Clevinger had stared at him in apoplectic rage and indignation and clawing the table with both hands, had shouted, ‘You’re crazy!’

‘Clevinger, what do you want from people?’ Dunbar had replied wearily above the noises of the officers’ club.

‘I’m not joking,’ Clevinger persisted.

‘They’re trying to kill me,’ Yossarian told him calmly.

‘No one’s trying to kill you,’ Clevinger cried.

‘Then why are they shooting at me?’ Yossarian asked.

‘They’re shooting at everyone,’ Clevinger answered. They’re trying to kill everyone.’

‘And what difference does that make?’”
--Page 25

Repeatedly others call Yossarian crazy, but as the book goes on and instances of bureaucratic reasoning stray farther and farther from reality and instances of injustice and gory death are heaped one upon another, the reader begins to feel he may be one of a few sane people in the African, Mediterranean and Middle East Theater of Operations.

Heller’s command of vocabulary and rhythm is astounding, as are his critiques of human institutions and motives. The book is a precisely crafted Gordian knot of circular logic that weaves themes of human self-delusion and hope as it progresses, and Sanders does a superb reading of this twentieth century classic.

Thursday, April 29, 2010

iHCPL The Web According to Google #85: Resistance is Futile

1. What Google products do you use on a regular basis? Why do you use them and what makes them better than a competing product?

Google [the search engine]
If there’s an answer or a bit of information on the web, Google finds it. Over the past few years I have also tried Agent 55 and Mamma Metasearch, which will generally turn up what I need because they include Google in their searches. Wolfram|Alpha has never returned a relevant answer for me. Quintura has an interesting way of displaying results. Bing is just a Google wannabe.

Gmail My personal e-mail, cheap, and it presorts all the commercial e-mails and political e-mails into folders so I can quickly scan and dispose of them.

Blogger My blog for iHCPL. I have not tried any other ones.

Reader I use this aggregator for my RSS feeds., alas so much to read so little time! 789 posts! How could that many aggregate is less than a week? I use it because I can’t find the time to try anything else.




2. Check out Google Labs. Did you see any new products that you want to try
?

No, I can’t think of any use that I could make of any of these.

3. Search or browse Google Books. Do they have the book or magazine you looked for?

Yes there was a copy of Catch-22 by Joseph Heller. I am listening to an audio version of this book now, and I wondered how some of the proper nouns were spelled. So I was able to discover how Doc Daneeka’s name and the imaginary island of Pianosa were spelled.

Did you find any gems? How can this be used in the library?

The ability to search the full text of a book is an excellent and fast way to find a specific fact in a book, especially if I’m trying to find a particular passage in a fiction book. Since the vast majority of them have no index, Google Books is the concordance to them. Amazon can also be used this way, although its coverage is limited to select in print works.

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Goth Girl Rising

Goth Girl rising / Barry Lyga. -- New York : Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2009.
390 p. ; 22 cm.
Sequel to: The astonishing adventures of Fanboy and Goth Girl
ISBN: 9780547076645

1. Emotional problems of teenagers -- Fiction. 2. Goth culture (Subculture) – Fiction. 3. Grief – Fiction. 4. High schools – Fiction. 5. Interpersonal relations – Fiction. 6. Mothers -- Death – Fiction. 7. Psychotherapy – Fiction. 8. Schools – Fiction. 9. Teenage girls – Fiction.

813.6

Kyra Sellers, Goth Girl of The Astonishing Adventures of Fanboy and Goth Girl is back from her stay at the Maryland Mental Health Unit, sent there, she discovers, because of her condition: a severe case of DCHH, Daddy Couldn't Handle Her. Her mom went to the hospital and died, but Kyra figures she’s tougher than her mom.

So watch out people at South Brook High. Kyra swings between sad and angry. Sad is hopeless, powerless and confusing, but anger, anger gives you the power to do something and a target to hit. She knows her father Roger and the teachers are after her. She’s not sure about her friends Jecca (formerly known as Jessica) and Simone. And then there’s Fanboy; she could talk to Fanboy and things felt better. But Fanboy betrayed her. He called her father and told Roger that she had a bullet. And then for the six months she was locked in DCHH he never called her, never sent an e-mail—just like Jecca didn’t. Well,

“Eff all them.

And eff him too.

Who said he could be happy? Who said he could just forget about me?”

Kyra’s side of the story is an excellent portrayal of the anger that boils up from the hopelessness of grief, and the hope born of love and honesty to bind the wounds of life and death.

Saturday, April 24, 2010

The Shakespeare Stealer

The Shakespeare stealer / Gary Blackwood. -- New York : Dutton Children's Books, c1998.
216 p. ; 22 cm.
ISBN: 0525458638


1. Great Britain -- History -- Elizabeth, 1558-1603 – Fiction. 2. Orphans – Fiction. 3. Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616 – Fiction. 4. Theater – Fiction.

813.54

Widge is delighted when Dr. Bright takes him away from the orphanage in Yorkshire at age seven to be his apprentice. Vain, melancholy and unaffectionate Dr. Bright educates Widge to read and write in English, Latin, and a kind of shorthand of Dr. Bright’s invention called “charactery,” and then sells his apprenticeship to a brooding, gruff, mysterious, silent, and deadly stranger when Widge is fourteen. Eventually Widge comes to know him as Falconer.

Without hesitation Falconer marches Widge off south. They travel day and night, Falconer warning Widge to keep quiet, and also cutting the throats of a few cutpurses along the way who attempt to waylay them. Eventually they arrive in Leicester, and Widge meets his new master, Simon Bass. Mr. Bass explains his new duties to him. He’s to travel to London.

“…When you go to London, you will attend a performance of a play called The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark. You will copy it in Dr. Bright’s ‘charactery’ and you will deliver it to me.”

“… I am a man of business, Widge, and one of my more profitable ventures is a company of players. They are not so successful as the Lord Chamberlain’s of the Admiral’s Men, by they do a respectable business here in the Midlands. As they have no competent poet of their own they make do with hand-me-downs, so well used as to be threadbare. If they could sage a current work, by a poet of some reputation, they could double their box.”

So, accompanied by Falconer, Widge sets off to London to capture a copy of the play. He puts the penny Falconer supplies him with, in the admission box at the Globe, and joins the crowd of groundlings in front of the stage. His transcription goes well, until he gets caught up in the play, and forgets to write down some parts. The next day, to save a penny—they were worth a lot more then—he sneaks in backstage to listen to the lines. Unfortunately he’s discovered . So he makes up a lie. He tells the theater company that he desperately wants to be a player and has run away from his master in the hope of joining them. To his surprise, they take him in. Now he must act the part of a player until he gets an opportunity to complete his copy of the script, or steal the copy owned by the company.

Well developed characters, a believable sense of place, and an interesting plot filled with surprises and disguises pack this exceptionally good tale of Elizabethan theater full of verisimilitude and delight.

King of Shadows

King of shadows / Susan Cooper.-- New York : Margaret K. McElderry Books, 1999.
186 p. ; 22 cm.
ISBN: 0689828179

1. Time travel -- fiction. 2. Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616 -- Fiction. 3. Actors and actresses -- Fiction. 4. Globe Theater (Southwark, London, England) – Fiction.

813.54

Nat Field is one of the two dozen in the American Company of Boys, all of them actors under the age of eighteen and all of them hand picked by producer and director Arby to travel to London to put on two of Shakespeare’s plays at the newly reconstructed Globe theater in 1999. Nat is excited when they arrive in England. He just wishes Arby wasn’t so driven and didn’t drive his actors so hard. But the night before he’s set to debut as Puck in "A Midsummer's Night Dream" disaster strikes. He gets sick, really, really sick. He goes to sleep and wakes up in the morning about four centuries earlier. He’s still in London, and a strange new fellow named Harry greets him by name, and says he’s glad he’s better, he was afraid that he’d had the plague. Nat still has his part in the play. Harry’s glad he didn’t forget his lines. But the production is not at the new Globe, it’s at the original, and Nat finds himself working for the play's author.

Monday, April 19, 2010

Alchemy and Meggy Swann

Alchemy and Meggy Swann / Karen Cushman.—Boston : Clarion Books, 2010.
176 p. : ill., map ; 22 cm.
ISBN: 9780547231846

1. Alchemy -- Fiction. 2. Fathers and daughters -- Fiction. 3. Great Britain -- History -- Elizabeth, 1558-1603 -- Fiction. 4. London (England) -- History -- 16th century -- Fiction. 5. People with disabilities -- Fiction.

813.54

When her beloved granny died, Margaret Swann is informed by her mother that her father has sent for her, and she’s to go live with him in London. Meggy is shocked; she never knew that she had a father. Well, she knew that she must have had a father because everyone has or had one, but never in her thirteen years has her mother mentioned him to her. So she arrives in London with her only friend: her pet goose Louise. Louise has a sprung wing and cannot fly, just as Meggy has crooked legs and cannot walk. Using two walking sticks she can lurch forward from side to side painfully dragging her legs along with her, but she doesn’t call it walking; she calls it “wabbling.”

London, when she arrives in 1573, does not impress her. It’s crowded, it’s noisy, it’s filthy, it stinks, and they have dead men’s heads hung on their bridges! “Ye toads and vipers!” she exclaims upon arrival at her father’s house at the Sign of the Sun on Crooked Lane. Insult is added to injury when her father, Master Ambrose the Alchemist expresses his disappointment that she is not a son, wonders aloud if she is a crackbrain, and then walks away from her upstairs into his attic room. The only civil person she meets that day is Roger Oldham, Master Ambrose’s assistant, a boy of about her own age, who is delighted to have just found a new job as a player with a troop of actors. Eventually Roger and Meggy will become friends and verbal sparring partners, but now with Roger leaving and her father—Master Peevish—as she thinks of him, obsessed with finding the secret of immortality, Meggy must find a way to care for herself in this challenging new world.

Thursday, February 25, 2010

iHCPL The Future of Media #81: Get Out Your Crystal Ball


Wall Street Guru Ball

Exercises

1. Which of the developments listed above do you think will have the most influence? Is there a new technology you have been following that you think will have more effect? Discuss it in your post.

I think the price of energy, especially electricity, will have the greatest impact on any of these technologies. It's the Achilles’ heel of all the new whiz-bang stuff. It's great until the power goes out and then it completely disappears. Moore’s Law is a trend that has held true in the recent past in a part of the world that's used to relatively inexpensive power. It's not a trend that will trump supply and demand, as demand for power increases in the developing world the price of it may go up steeply.

2. Are you an early adopter of every gadget or do you have fond memories of technologies from the past? What is your favorite media gadget or which outdated format do you miss the most? Describe it in your post.

I bought a felt-tipped pen when they first came out and an itty-bitty computer that I could stuff in my briefcase as soon as I could, but those are exceptions to my usual mode of wait five years until they get the bugs worked out. I’m still pining for my old 35mm Single Lens Reflex camera that used black and white film.

I am ready to be an early adopter of any of these life enhancing gadgets should they come to market:

- Ballpoint pen with automatic spell check
- Fat-eating chocolate milkshake
- App to retrieve personal email accidentally sent to listserv before any recipient has read it


Tuesday, February 23, 2010

iHCPL The Future of Media #80: Movies

Exercises

1. Use one of the film sites above to find a free full-length film (you’ll probably have the best luck with Hulu, The Auteurs, or IMDB). Watch a little of it. Would you watch an entire film on your computer or do you still prefer watching DVDs on your TV?

Hulu had the oddest collection of movies imaginable. I guess I shouldn’t look at it from the viewpoint of collection development. I’m sure their policy is whatever’s available, which translates in practice to: look what the cat dragged in! There are a few Oscar winners, a lot of Zane Grey Westerns, and one of my personal favorites, which I have been unable to convince anyone in my family to sit down and watch with me, the 1959 classic, "The Giant Gila Monster." And for local interest there’s “The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas.”

The Auteurs had some interesting fare. However, as I browsed their small library of films, and picked out two that intrigued me: “Death in the Garden = La mort en ce jardin” (1956) directed by Luis Buñuel, and Carnival of Souls (1962) directed by Herk Harvey. They are both available on Netflix, to which I already have a subscription, so I could not see the point of spending an additional $5 to view them. I clicked on Take a look on the home page which took me to this screen:

I found that their The Auteur’s Picks “The Wayward Cloud = Tian bian yi duo yun” (2005) directed Ming-liang Tsai was also available on Netflix, as was their Now Playing “The Blue Angel = Der blaue Engel (1930) directed by Josef Von Sternberg. Also the description of “The Wayward Cloud” on Netflix made me think that there was no way that I wanted to get into an online discussion with anyone about the film. What could you say to someone about watermelon erotica? A person might get a computer virus of some kind, or find him-or-herself social networking with some very asocial personalities carrying on like that.

So I proceeded on to their Top Rated selection, “As I Was Moving Ahead Occasionally I Saw Brief Glimpses of Beauty” (2000) directed by Jonas Mekas. From the accompanying synopsis it sounded like an almost five-hour home movie, and that was more than I estimated that I could endure.

Next, I went to the free movie section on IMDb. It was reassuring (and a confirmation of my good taste) that “The Giant Gila Monster” (1959) was also available there. I picked out “Pickman's Model” (2008) as the film that I would view because I’d read the H.P. Lovecraft story from which it was taken. I was curious how it could be adapted for the screen. I also picked it because it was only 19 minutes long. It made very effective use of darkness: a black screen with eerie sound effects and then minimal illumination, but the overacting was dreadful, and if you had not read the story you would probably miss the punchline, that the grotesque and gruesome paintings that Pickman made were done from life, not his imagination.

I find no significant difference between watching on the TV screen or the computer screen.

2. Find a trailer for an upcoming film. Would you use these sites to keep up on current film information?

I watched the first six Opening This Week and Coming Soon trailers on the Internet Movie Database. I found that although I originally planned to watch all fifteen, six was about all I could take. I think I’ve been conditioned by my experience in movie theaters. I felt like, “Enough of the coming attractions! Let’s get on with the show!”


3. Write a blog post about the experience.

From the trailers my impression was “Shutter Island,” “The Crazies”, and “Cop-Out” were definite Do Not Sees for me. “The Yellow Handkerchief ” was a Maybe. “The Ghost Writer” was a Maybe: Wait for the Video, It’ll Be Cheaper, and “Alice in Wonderland” was a Must See. However, I would have gone to see “Alice in Wonderland” on the strength of the director and actors without the benefit of the trailer.

Would you consider using any of the fee-based services to get the movies you want at home? If so, which one would work better for you and why?

I do subscribe to Netflix; because their collection is more extensive. I hope that someday the library will be able to stream video as a delivery system for movies, beyond what we are able to do with OverDrive®.

Saturday, February 20, 2010

iHCPL The Future of Media #79 Television

Exercises:

1. Visit Hulu, tv.com, or one of the other TV sites. Search or browse the site to see if your favorite show is listed.

I was able to find episodes of “Barney Miller” on both Hulu and tv.com. There were 68 on Hulu, and 66 on tv.com. I watched the full episode of “Atomic Bomb” on tv.com. But, alas, there were no episodes of “Doctor Who;” I’d have to buy them on iTunes or DVD. Oddly enough there were also no episodes of “You Bet Your Life,” not even on the network sites.

I was happy to discover Shiba Inu Puppy Cam and a live feed of a squirrel feeding at a bird feeder. It’s worth being aware of, especially in October.

2. Have you ever watched a TV show on your cell phone?

No, I have not.

If not, are you interested?

Not at all

Why or why not?

I can’t imagine paying for a service that bills me by the minute for watching TV on a tiny screen. Also, when I looked at what TV was available from my phone service (AT&T) it listed: “AT&T Mobile TV CBS Mobile, CNBC, Comedy Central, ESPN Mobile TV, FOX Mobile, FOX News, MSNBC, MTV, NBC2Go, Nickelodeon, CNN Mobile, ABC Mobile, Disney Mobile, and Crackle.”

As a personal opinion, I find American commercial television to be exactly what FCC Chairman Minnow said about it almost a half century ago, “I invite you each of you to sit down in front of your television set when your station goes on the air and stay there for a day without a book, without a magazine, without a newspaper, without a profit and loss sheet or a rating book to distract you. Keep your eyes glued to that set until the station signs off. I can assure you that what you will observe is a vast wasteland.”

Until they offer programming from PBS or the BBC, I’d be willing to pay a little extra to keep it off my telephone.

3. Are there any streaming programs or user "channels" that you watch?

Since the great changeover to digital broadcasting, this is the only way I have to watch PBS. The television set has become primarily a DVD and VHS playback machine.

Have you ever posted videos to a site on a regular basis?

I have never posted a video to a site.

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

iHCPL Searching #78 Video

Exercises:

1. Search for a particular video using both Truveo and Blinkx. Look for any similarities or differences in the results, and write about them in your blog.

I searched for information about the freshly awarded “2010 Newbery Medal.”

Truevo came up with the information right away with a link to the Today Show interview with the winners of the Newbery and Caldecott awards.


















Blinkx linked to the same MSNBC Today Show clip, but it appeared below the fold, so to speak. It was on page one, but you needed to scroll down to find the link. It appeared as the 6th item on the menu.



















As a side note on my search for the Newbery Medal, the last link that Blinkx found was a video about an Aerolineas Argentinas flight from Cordoba, Argentina to Buenos Aires. The flight landed at Aeroparque Jorge Newbery. It made me wonder if the pioneering Argentine aviator Jorge (1875-1914) for whom the airport is named might be a descendant of English publisher, John (1713-1767) for whom the medal is named.










2. Go to HCPL’s YouTube channel and take a look around. Discuss in your blog ideas for how your own branch video could add to the mix of searchable video content on the Internet.

Having carefully viewed and evaluated our collective contribution, analyzed the statistics and ratings, I have discerned three rules for effective videos:

1) Involve Young Adults
2) Make it Funny
3) Add Bouncy Music

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

iHCPL Searching #77: Images

Exercises

1. Using
AllFreeClipArt, how many clicks did it take to get to a color Santa that doesn’t look like a troll?

Since “Your search - Santa not troll - did not match any documents.” I tried the directory for Christmas, and found this:


It was indexed as a mouse, but I think it looks more like a bear in a beard. I guess he’s holding a piece of cheese. I thought it was a package with polka-dot wrapping paper. It took me 9 minutes and 42,000 clicks (most of them circular, returning me back to the home page again and again) because I wasn’t able to figure out how to get a copy that wasn’t a cropped screen print. Then I remembered to right click the mouse to get the picture of the mouse-bear Santa. But he’s definitely not a troll. I could not find any information on the site that told me how to credit the picture

2. Read “10 Places to Find Free Images Online”. Blog about 2 of the sites listed.

I tried Fotogenika.net , but found it to be of little use for images. It was a directory of photography services from the location of Target Photo Centers to Houston Helicopter Rides : Aerial Photography, Rides. Wedding & Engagement Flights. I think Loren Baker’s statement that, “The site is well organized,” is misleading. It is well organized if you are looking for a photographer, but of little use if you are searching for a photograph.

Then I went to FreeDigitalPhotos. I was gratified that under the Category Animals there was a selection of Squirrel photographs. However, the terms of use required that I credit “Photograph uploaded by FreeDigitalPhotos.net Admin” and the name of the photographer, but no name for a photographer was not listed. Which was frustrating at first until I looked at the sidebar to the right, and clicked on the Acknowledgement Required, which said, ” This photo has been uploaded by FreeDigitalPhotos.net staff and only requires a general link. There is no photographer name available for this particular image.” It also included a required link back in HTML to


Image: FreeDigitalPhotos.net

3. Try logging in to the clip art program for HCPL use. Each branch has their own login and password you can get from your branch librarian. Find an illustration that could be used for a program at your branch and add it to your blog. Be sure to credit that piece.



I used this for my Take Me to Your Reader posting about YA Science Fiction Graphic Novels on January 8, 2010, but I had forgotten to use the credit, so I went back and fixed it. It now displays with the “@jupiterimages” credit.

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Catch the Lightning

Catch the lightning / Catherine Asaro.— New York : Tor, 1997, c1996.
309 p. ; 18 cm.
(Saga of the Skolian Empire ; 2)
ISBN: 0812551028

813.54

1. Alternative histories (Fiction). 2. Cyborg – Fiction. 3. Heredity, Human – Fiction. 4. Los Angeles (Calif.) – Fiction. 5. Love stories. 6. Mayas – Fiction. 7. Mexican Americans – Fiction. 8. Science fiction. 9. Skolian Empire (Imaginary place) -- Fiction. 10. Telepathy – Fiction.

Tina Pulivok, a seventeen-year-old chicana of Maya Indian ancestry, meets the love of her life on a street corner in Los Angeles in 1987. He’s tall, dark, handsome, and projects a sense warmth and affection. He thinks she’s beautiful. He’s just out of this world. He does speak with a very strange accent, whether he’s speaking Spanish or English. And when she asks him, he claims to have been on his way to a diplomatic reception in Washington, when he got lost. And why would he be going to a reception dressed like the member of a gang? Oh this wasn’t his dress uniform; he’d left that back on his spaceship until he got his bearings. Tina figures he’s into some kind of role-playing game. In fact, Althor is not just out of this world; he’s from another universe, one in which Jamaica did not become the fifty-first state in 1981, one in which California was part of the United States of America, and one in which he is the target of a high level assassination plotted by members of his own government.