Gretchen Beilfuss Witt
Library Notes
Christmas Expectations
In late October, the Rowan Public Library Foundation and their guests were charmed with a ‘literary feast’ which included a presentation from the very entertaining speaker Dr. Elliot Engel. At the end of the evening, Engel spoke on behalf of the charity he often represents, that of the Great Ormond Street Children’s Hospital founded by Charles Dickens in 1852 as the first of such hospitals. He introduced to us a delightful Christmas treasury which begins with a version of Dickens’ beloved classic “The Christmas Carol” designed to read aloud. “A Christmas Carol Keepsake” also contains recipes, games and crafts to create your very own Victorian Christmas celebration. The recipes include Dickens very own Christmas punch and sweets with such names as Curates and Maids of Honour. Directions for a kissing ball and how to play ‘Forfeits’, an early version of truth or dare in riddles, complete this amusing collection.
“Christmas Observed” represents another type of treasury; a collection of short stories, poems, diary entries and letters relating to the observance of the Christmas season. It includes a most amusing letter from Leacock refusing an invitation from a young lady to attend a party for the young in the year 1910. He concludes “I do not consider a five-cent pen-wiper from the top branch of a Xmas tree any adequate compensation for the evening you propose.” Many no doubt often feel the same when asked to attend some holiday gathering. In the short story “Vera’s First Christmas Adventure” the foibles of obtaining just the right gift are examined. The poignant verse of Anthony Ross in “Christ Ran Stumbling” reminds us all of not to forget the unfortunate in this season. The anthology also includes the marvelous story of the impromptu peace between British and German on Christmas Eve during the Great War.
The final book selection is Stephen Nissenbaum’s “The Battle for Christmas” a study of the social and cultural history of Christmas, particularly as it is transformed into the present day American holiday. He outlines some of the more outrageous misbehavior of the British which led to the early Puritan ban against the holiday in the American colonies. However, as the turn of the nineteenth century approached, other denominations began to reclaim Christmas, urging church services be held on December 25. To combat the general misrule that continued to be prevalent, Nissenbaum claims the appearance of St. Nicholas brought a little domestic peace to the season. The appearance of Santa Claus also began to shape the focus of Christmas merriment towards children and into the home. Nissenbaum shares the experiences of Clement Moore’s friend Pintard and Moore’s own creation of the poem “The Night before Christmas.” Other traditions - gift giving, Christmas trees and Christmas charity - are explained in succeeding chapters. An enthralling study of the formation of our most cherished holiday.
Whatever your forte – history, literature or entertainment – check out these Christmas treasuries.
Rowan Public Library is headquartered in Salisbury NC, with branches in Rockwell and China Grove. The mission of the Rowan Public Library is to provide to the citizens of Rowan County library materials and services that inform, educate, and entertain; to promote literacy, the enjoyment of reading, and lifelong learning; and to serve as a center for community activities and services.
Sunday, November 28, 2010
Sunday, November 14, 2010
Library Notes
Betty Moore
Novels from other countries
Kabul. Kathmandu. Dubai. Shanghai. We may envision these locales as exotic places and wonder what life is like there for ordinary people. Fiction can be a good way to climb into the skin of someone in another culture. The authors of each of the following novels portray their settings almost as another character.
“Years of Red Dust: Stories of Shanghai” is the latest book from Qiu Xiaolong. He offers 22 brief stories, set in Shanghai’s Red Dust Lane from 1949 to 2005. Like calligraphy, the author’s deft brushstrokes illuminate the effects that radical political and cultural changes have had on people in one small neighborhood in this historic city. Even the story titles – such as “Return of POW I,” “When Nixon First Visited China,” “Cricket Fighting,” and “A Confidence Cap” — evoke this unique place and time.
Qiu is also the author of four mysteries featuring Inspector Chen Cao, head of the Shanghai Police Bureau’s Special Case Squad. While his hero investigates murders, the author weaves in social commentary about the changes going on in modern China.
Dan Fesperman shows the clash of new and old in his portrait of boom town Dubai, a global city that is part of the United Arab Emirates. In his latest thriller, “Layover in Dubai,” American businessman Sam Keller extends his layover to keep an eye on, then search for a missing co-worker. The search leads him on a suspense-filled ride through Dubai’s glittering malls and foreign worker labor camps, and into conflicts between Western culture and local religious traditions. According to a “Booklist” review, “ ‘Layover in Dubai’ has plenty of action, but it's Fesperman's portrait of a truly bizarre place that will captivate readers.”
Photographer Maria and journalist Imo face vast differences of language, culture, and religion in Kabul, Afghanistan, as they research a story about Afghani girls who have attempted suicide rather than enter arranged marriages with older men. In her novel “The End of Manners,” author Francesca Marciano evokes the landscape and environment of the region in addition to showing the moral complexities confronting both the local people and their visitors.
“The Godfather of Kathmandu” is John Burdett’s fourth thriller to feature Buddhist Sonchi Jitpleecheep, a Royal Thai Police detective. Sonchai seeks personal solace from his guru, an exiled Tibetan lama, to deal with a personal tragedy, at the same time he investigates the most shocking crime scene of his career. Along the way, readers are treated to a vivid portrait of today’s Thailand.
We may never visit these places ourselves, but fiction can provide us glimpses into life in these fascinating faraway cultures.
Betty Moore
Novels from other countries
Kabul. Kathmandu. Dubai. Shanghai. We may envision these locales as exotic places and wonder what life is like there for ordinary people. Fiction can be a good way to climb into the skin of someone in another culture. The authors of each of the following novels portray their settings almost as another character.
“Years of Red Dust: Stories of Shanghai” is the latest book from Qiu Xiaolong. He offers 22 brief stories, set in Shanghai’s Red Dust Lane from 1949 to 2005. Like calligraphy, the author’s deft brushstrokes illuminate the effects that radical political and cultural changes have had on people in one small neighborhood in this historic city. Even the story titles – such as “Return of POW I,” “When Nixon First Visited China,” “Cricket Fighting,” and “A Confidence Cap” — evoke this unique place and time.
Qiu is also the author of four mysteries featuring Inspector Chen Cao, head of the Shanghai Police Bureau’s Special Case Squad. While his hero investigates murders, the author weaves in social commentary about the changes going on in modern China.
Dan Fesperman shows the clash of new and old in his portrait of boom town Dubai, a global city that is part of the United Arab Emirates. In his latest thriller, “Layover in Dubai,” American businessman Sam Keller extends his layover to keep an eye on, then search for a missing co-worker. The search leads him on a suspense-filled ride through Dubai’s glittering malls and foreign worker labor camps, and into conflicts between Western culture and local religious traditions. According to a “Booklist” review, “ ‘Layover in Dubai’ has plenty of action, but it's Fesperman's portrait of a truly bizarre place that will captivate readers.”
Photographer Maria and journalist Imo face vast differences of language, culture, and religion in Kabul, Afghanistan, as they research a story about Afghani girls who have attempted suicide rather than enter arranged marriages with older men. In her novel “The End of Manners,” author Francesca Marciano evokes the landscape and environment of the region in addition to showing the moral complexities confronting both the local people and their visitors.
“The Godfather of Kathmandu” is John Burdett’s fourth thriller to feature Buddhist Sonchi Jitpleecheep, a Royal Thai Police detective. Sonchai seeks personal solace from his guru, an exiled Tibetan lama, to deal with a personal tragedy, at the same time he investigates the most shocking crime scene of his career. Along the way, readers are treated to a vivid portrait of today’s Thailand.
We may never visit these places ourselves, but fiction can provide us glimpses into life in these fascinating faraway cultures.
Sunday, November 07, 2010
Library Notes
Rebecca Hyde
If you’re interested in the craft of writing, as a writer or a reader, you may want to look at the new “Art of” series, in which the art of criticism is used to “illuminate” the art of writing. Each book in the series explores an aspect of creative writing (syntax, description, time, poetic line). The authors are “contemporary practitioners impassioned by a singular craft issue.”
Take, for instance, Mark Doty’s “The Art of Description: World into Word.” “It sounds like a simple thing, to say what you see,” he says, this poet who is known for his passionate search for the exact word and phrase, all the while recognizing that it is an exercise in naming the unsayable (“But try to find the words for the shades of a mottled sassafras leaf…). Why bother to try to turn perception into words? To refuse silence, so that experience will not go unspoken? To match words to the world to give those words to someone else or to savor them for ourselves? “The pleasure of recognizing a described world is no small thing,” he concludes. Doty examines the poetry of Blake, Whitman, Bishop, and others who capture sensory experiences that “leap toward transcendence,” like Bishop’s fish, caught, stared at, and released (“The Fish”).
In the last part of this engaging little book, Doty offers his lexicon “Description’s Alphabet.” He begins with “Art”: “Description is an ART to the degree that it gives us not just the world but the inner life of the witness.” He concludes with “A to Z”: I reach the end of my lexicon and feel that my effort to describe description is happily partial, partisan, a work of advocacy….I declare myself here on the side of the sensible, things as they are, the given, the incompletely knowable, never to get done or get it right or render it whole: ours to say and say.”
Other titles in the series include Sven Birkert’s “The Art of Time in Memoir: Then, Again,” where he examines the impulse to write about the self and the art of the memoirist in assembling patterns of meaning in experience. In “The Art of Time in Fiction: As Long as It Takes,” Joan Silber illustrates the ways in which time is used as a technique in writing fiction: “A story can arrange events in any order it finds useful, but it does have to move between then and now and later.” In “The Art of Syntax: Rhythm of Thought, Rhythm of Song,” poet Ellen Bryant Voigt turns to music, “a helpful analog in any consideration of artistic language use.”
Rebecca Hyde
If you’re interested in the craft of writing, as a writer or a reader, you may want to look at the new “Art of” series, in which the art of criticism is used to “illuminate” the art of writing. Each book in the series explores an aspect of creative writing (syntax, description, time, poetic line). The authors are “contemporary practitioners impassioned by a singular craft issue.”
Take, for instance, Mark Doty’s “The Art of Description: World into Word.” “It sounds like a simple thing, to say what you see,” he says, this poet who is known for his passionate search for the exact word and phrase, all the while recognizing that it is an exercise in naming the unsayable (“But try to find the words for the shades of a mottled sassafras leaf…). Why bother to try to turn perception into words? To refuse silence, so that experience will not go unspoken? To match words to the world to give those words to someone else or to savor them for ourselves? “The pleasure of recognizing a described world is no small thing,” he concludes. Doty examines the poetry of Blake, Whitman, Bishop, and others who capture sensory experiences that “leap toward transcendence,” like Bishop’s fish, caught, stared at, and released (“The Fish”).
In the last part of this engaging little book, Doty offers his lexicon “Description’s Alphabet.” He begins with “Art”: “Description is an ART to the degree that it gives us not just the world but the inner life of the witness.” He concludes with “A to Z”: I reach the end of my lexicon and feel that my effort to describe description is happily partial, partisan, a work of advocacy….I declare myself here on the side of the sensible, things as they are, the given, the incompletely knowable, never to get done or get it right or render it whole: ours to say and say.”
Other titles in the series include Sven Birkert’s “The Art of Time in Memoir: Then, Again,” where he examines the impulse to write about the self and the art of the memoirist in assembling patterns of meaning in experience. In “The Art of Time in Fiction: As Long as It Takes,” Joan Silber illustrates the ways in which time is used as a technique in writing fiction: “A story can arrange events in any order it finds useful, but it does have to move between then and now and later.” In “The Art of Syntax: Rhythm of Thought, Rhythm of Song,” poet Ellen Bryant Voigt turns to music, “a helpful analog in any consideration of artistic language use.”
Sunday, October 31, 2010
Sara Grajek
Library Notes
The falling leaves and crisp air we’ve been experiencing in the evening makes me want to get out my largest soup pot and start throwing in ingredients until I have a steaming bowl of soup, fit for a meal all on its own. Add a crunchy slice of toasted bread with a dollop of butter or a fresh-tossed salad of leafy greens and you have a perfect fall meal. Rowan Public Library has a wonderful collection of cookbooks, and among them you’ll find several focused on soups, stews and one-pot meals.
Moosewood Restaurant Daily Special is brought to you by the famous vegetarian restaurant of the same name in Ithaca, NY. For twenty-five years, the Moosewood Collective has been serving an ever-changing menu of natural, whole food selections. In fact, the only thing on the menu that is constant is the daily selection of a cup or bowl of soup, a salad, and a thick slice of bread. Pulled together in this book you’ll find traditional soup recipes such as potato, tomato, and minestrone. You’ll also find Butternut Squash with Sizzled Sage Soup, Cauliflower, Cheese and Tomato Soup, and Tomato Flowers Salad.
For a heartier meal, turn to Real Stew by Clifford A. Wright. More about stews than soup, the recipes in this cookbook will stick to your ribs. They are divided into the type of meat they feature and include a wide variety and ethnicity in their selection. Fish and lobster dishes from New England, Hungarian Smoked Sausage, West African Beef and Peanut Stew, and good old fashioned Beef Stroganoff are represented along with hundreds more.
Love Soup, by Anna Thomas, is a collection of vegetarian soup recipes. Many of the soups are showcased in a menu, paired with complimentary recipes. For example, Great Pumpkin Soup is paired with Simple Chipotle Sauce, Fresh Corn and Cheddar Cheese Cornbread, and Baked Apples. You can find the recipes for all these within the pages of Thomas’ cookbook. Thomas didn’t start cooking until she was on her own and in college, but discovered that her friends liked what she made and that soon developed into a cookbook.
If you’d like to try your hand at bread baking (to go along with your soup), Peter Reinhart teaches at Johnson and Wales in Providence, RI, the largest culinary school in the world so he’s a good reference. His book, The Bread Baker’s Apprentice: Mastering the Art of Extraordinary Bread, can seem intimidating at first, but that’s because Reinhart is the real thing. He walks you step-by-step through the bread making process, which he learned in France. He explains his theories about the best way to let the dough rise, how to get the most flavor, and a beautiful loaf of bread. His book contains recipes for classic white bread as well as cheesy bread, fruit breads, pizza and more.
For more inspiration try Twelve Months of Monastery Soups by Brother Victor-Antoine d’Avila-Latourrette, The Wooden Spoon Book of Home-Style Soups, Stews, Chowders, Chilis & Gumbos by Marilyn M. Moore, or The Bread Bible by Rose Levy Beranbaum. Stop by Rowan Public Library and browse 641.5 for many more cookbooks. There are simply too many for me to list them all here and chances are, you will find some new favorite recipes to keep you warm and toasty throughout fall and winter.
Library Notes
The falling leaves and crisp air we’ve been experiencing in the evening makes me want to get out my largest soup pot and start throwing in ingredients until I have a steaming bowl of soup, fit for a meal all on its own. Add a crunchy slice of toasted bread with a dollop of butter or a fresh-tossed salad of leafy greens and you have a perfect fall meal. Rowan Public Library has a wonderful collection of cookbooks, and among them you’ll find several focused on soups, stews and one-pot meals.
Moosewood Restaurant Daily Special is brought to you by the famous vegetarian restaurant of the same name in Ithaca, NY. For twenty-five years, the Moosewood Collective has been serving an ever-changing menu of natural, whole food selections. In fact, the only thing on the menu that is constant is the daily selection of a cup or bowl of soup, a salad, and a thick slice of bread. Pulled together in this book you’ll find traditional soup recipes such as potato, tomato, and minestrone. You’ll also find Butternut Squash with Sizzled Sage Soup, Cauliflower, Cheese and Tomato Soup, and Tomato Flowers Salad.
For a heartier meal, turn to Real Stew by Clifford A. Wright. More about stews than soup, the recipes in this cookbook will stick to your ribs. They are divided into the type of meat they feature and include a wide variety and ethnicity in their selection. Fish and lobster dishes from New England, Hungarian Smoked Sausage, West African Beef and Peanut Stew, and good old fashioned Beef Stroganoff are represented along with hundreds more.
Love Soup, by Anna Thomas, is a collection of vegetarian soup recipes. Many of the soups are showcased in a menu, paired with complimentary recipes. For example, Great Pumpkin Soup is paired with Simple Chipotle Sauce, Fresh Corn and Cheddar Cheese Cornbread, and Baked Apples. You can find the recipes for all these within the pages of Thomas’ cookbook. Thomas didn’t start cooking until she was on her own and in college, but discovered that her friends liked what she made and that soon developed into a cookbook.
If you’d like to try your hand at bread baking (to go along with your soup), Peter Reinhart teaches at Johnson and Wales in Providence, RI, the largest culinary school in the world so he’s a good reference. His book, The Bread Baker’s Apprentice: Mastering the Art of Extraordinary Bread, can seem intimidating at first, but that’s because Reinhart is the real thing. He walks you step-by-step through the bread making process, which he learned in France. He explains his theories about the best way to let the dough rise, how to get the most flavor, and a beautiful loaf of bread. His book contains recipes for classic white bread as well as cheesy bread, fruit breads, pizza and more.
For more inspiration try Twelve Months of Monastery Soups by Brother Victor-Antoine d’Avila-Latourrette, The Wooden Spoon Book of Home-Style Soups, Stews, Chowders, Chilis & Gumbos by Marilyn M. Moore, or The Bread Bible by Rose Levy Beranbaum. Stop by Rowan Public Library and browse 641.5 for many more cookbooks. There are simply too many for me to list them all here and chances are, you will find some new favorite recipes to keep you warm and toasty throughout fall and winter.
Sunday, October 24, 2010
Library Notes
October 15, 2010
Dara L. Cain
Spook-tacular Halloween Books for Children
October 31st is just around the corner! Here are some entertaining Halloween books that are certain to get your children eager for a fun day of jack-o-lanterns, trick-or-treating, and handfuls of holiday candy.
Pumpkin Eye by Denise Fleming: The simple rhyming text accompanied by eye-catching illustrations makes this a fun read a loud story time book for preschoolers. The simple couplets of "Trick or treat, pounding feet, jack-o'-lanterns line the street" set the mood while bright orange pumpkins, trick-or-treaters, tattered witches, and a full harvest moon sets the eerie atmosphere. The effective use of descriptive sound words will get your children excited for Halloween from the “hissing cats/swooping bats” to “clacking bones/muffled moans” without being too scary.
It’s Pumpkin Time! by author Zoe Hall: A brother and sister eagerly get ready for Halloween by planting their very own pumpkin patch. Watch as they plant the seeds, water, weed, and observe as the flowers bloom into bright orange pumpkins. This book gives not only a basic gardening lesson but provides Halloween entertainment as the children are finally able to carve their pumpkins and get ready for some nighttime trick-or-treating.
The Little Old Lady Who Was Not Afraid of Anything by Linda Williams: During a walk through the woods to collect herbs, spices, nuts, and seeds, a little old lady encounters spooky objects that begin to follow her. When she makes it back safely into her home she hears a KNOCK KNOCK at the door and the shoes, pants, gloves, hat, and pumpkin head try to scare her one last time. The little old lady is determined not to be afraid and comes up with a clever solution that is sure to have young readers laughing. This story is perfect to read for Halloween or during any other time of the year.
Froggy’s Halloween by Jonathan London: Froggy is so thrilled that Halloween is almost here but he is having a difficult time selecting a costume. First he imagines himself as Super Frog flying high, then Ghost Frog scaring everyone, and finally the very frightful Vampire Frog. After much thought Froggy finally decides to dress up as Frog Prince for an action packed night of trick-or-treating. Froggy is in for a Halloween surprise when Frogilina finds him irresistible in his dashing costume and tries giving him the biggest scare of the night.
Mercy Watson Princess in Disguise by Kate DiCamillo: Mrs. Watson wants to dress up her adorable pig Mercy for Halloween but what pig wants to wear a costume. Mr. and Mrs. Watson bribe Mercy into wearing a tiara and princess dress by informing her that the neighbors will give her treats. In this hilarious Halloween escapade Mercy’s search for her favorite treat, hot buttered toast lead her and the neighbors on a Halloween “parade” and a rescue mission to save General Washington, the neighbor’s cat.
Scared Silly (Bunnicula and Friends Series) by James Howe: Four friends, Harold the dog, Chester the cat, Howie the dachshund puppy and Bunnicular the vampire rabbit are left alone in the house on Halloween night. The animals experience the unexpected, beginning with a storm brewing outside and goblins wandering the street, to a witch boiling up a pot of trouble in their kitchen. Who is this unexpected visitor and why does she take Bunnicula? The animals are determined to rescue Bunnicular for fear he may be a main ingredient and try making an escape until they come face-to-face with aliens. Can the night get any stranger?
October 15, 2010
Dara L. Cain
Spook-tacular Halloween Books for Children
October 31st is just around the corner! Here are some entertaining Halloween books that are certain to get your children eager for a fun day of jack-o-lanterns, trick-or-treating, and handfuls of holiday candy.
Pumpkin Eye by Denise Fleming: The simple rhyming text accompanied by eye-catching illustrations makes this a fun read a loud story time book for preschoolers. The simple couplets of "Trick or treat, pounding feet, jack-o'-lanterns line the street" set the mood while bright orange pumpkins, trick-or-treaters, tattered witches, and a full harvest moon sets the eerie atmosphere. The effective use of descriptive sound words will get your children excited for Halloween from the “hissing cats/swooping bats” to “clacking bones/muffled moans” without being too scary.
It’s Pumpkin Time! by author Zoe Hall: A brother and sister eagerly get ready for Halloween by planting their very own pumpkin patch. Watch as they plant the seeds, water, weed, and observe as the flowers bloom into bright orange pumpkins. This book gives not only a basic gardening lesson but provides Halloween entertainment as the children are finally able to carve their pumpkins and get ready for some nighttime trick-or-treating.
The Little Old Lady Who Was Not Afraid of Anything by Linda Williams: During a walk through the woods to collect herbs, spices, nuts, and seeds, a little old lady encounters spooky objects that begin to follow her. When she makes it back safely into her home she hears a KNOCK KNOCK at the door and the shoes, pants, gloves, hat, and pumpkin head try to scare her one last time. The little old lady is determined not to be afraid and comes up with a clever solution that is sure to have young readers laughing. This story is perfect to read for Halloween or during any other time of the year.
Froggy’s Halloween by Jonathan London: Froggy is so thrilled that Halloween is almost here but he is having a difficult time selecting a costume. First he imagines himself as Super Frog flying high, then Ghost Frog scaring everyone, and finally the very frightful Vampire Frog. After much thought Froggy finally decides to dress up as Frog Prince for an action packed night of trick-or-treating. Froggy is in for a Halloween surprise when Frogilina finds him irresistible in his dashing costume and tries giving him the biggest scare of the night.
Mercy Watson Princess in Disguise by Kate DiCamillo: Mrs. Watson wants to dress up her adorable pig Mercy for Halloween but what pig wants to wear a costume. Mr. and Mrs. Watson bribe Mercy into wearing a tiara and princess dress by informing her that the neighbors will give her treats. In this hilarious Halloween escapade Mercy’s search for her favorite treat, hot buttered toast lead her and the neighbors on a Halloween “parade” and a rescue mission to save General Washington, the neighbor’s cat.
Scared Silly (Bunnicula and Friends Series) by James Howe: Four friends, Harold the dog, Chester the cat, Howie the dachshund puppy and Bunnicular the vampire rabbit are left alone in the house on Halloween night. The animals experience the unexpected, beginning with a storm brewing outside and goblins wandering the street, to a witch boiling up a pot of trouble in their kitchen. Who is this unexpected visitor and why does she take Bunnicula? The animals are determined to rescue Bunnicular for fear he may be a main ingredient and try making an escape until they come face-to-face with aliens. Can the night get any stranger?
Sunday, October 17, 2010
Library Notes
Erika Kosin
Fact Filled books that will enthrall children but make their parents cringe
When children are looking for fun books to read, it has been found that some children, especially boys, prefer books with real facts and the more obscure and gross the information the better. So what type of books can you find that give interesting facts and also explore everything gross? Any book that involves bodily functions such as spit and poop, the inner workings of garbage, or even about underwear may fit the bill. Luckily, the Rowan Public Library has a few books like this in their children’s room, but don’t be fooled, children will also learn a few things while reading about what makes most of us squirm and cringe.
Fact filled books that will peak a child’s interest:
Getting to Know Your Toilet: The Disgusting Story Behind Your Home’s Strangest Feature by Connie Colwell Miller and Sewers and the Rats that Love Them: The Disgusting Story Behind Where it All Goes by Kelly Barnhill. - What did people use before the invention of toilet paper? Where did people go to the bathroom before the toilet bowl? Where does all of the waste go? Are there really Alligators living in the New York City Sewers? How do Sewers work and if they smell so bad, why do we have them? While answering these questions, children will also learn how a toilet works, the history of how the toilet became a fixture in most households, why proper waste disposal is important, and why washing their hands after using the toilet will help stop the spread of germs.
Do You Know Where Your Water has Been?: The Disgusting Story Behind What You’re Drinking by Kelly Barnhill - Children discover the reason why treating drinking water is important and how it is unsafe to drink from a lake or other water source.
Garbage, Waste, Dumps and You: The Disgusting Story Behind What We Leave Behind by Connie Colwell Miller - Learn the history of Garbage collection and what happens to the garbage after it leaves your house.
Underwear: What We Wear Under There by Ruth Freeman Swain - From the loincloth to pantaloons and long johns, children can now learn what people wore under their clothing years ago.
It’s Spit-acular!: The Secrets of Saliva by Melissa Stewart - Ever wonder why you salivate when you smell food? Did you know that humans create enough saliva to fill 1-2 two liter bottles every day? This book explores the different uses of saliva, establishing how it is important to humans and other animals.
Erika Kosin
Fact Filled books that will enthrall children but make their parents cringe
When children are looking for fun books to read, it has been found that some children, especially boys, prefer books with real facts and the more obscure and gross the information the better. So what type of books can you find that give interesting facts and also explore everything gross? Any book that involves bodily functions such as spit and poop, the inner workings of garbage, or even about underwear may fit the bill. Luckily, the Rowan Public Library has a few books like this in their children’s room, but don’t be fooled, children will also learn a few things while reading about what makes most of us squirm and cringe.
Fact filled books that will peak a child’s interest:
Getting to Know Your Toilet: The Disgusting Story Behind Your Home’s Strangest Feature by Connie Colwell Miller and Sewers and the Rats that Love Them: The Disgusting Story Behind Where it All Goes by Kelly Barnhill. - What did people use before the invention of toilet paper? Where did people go to the bathroom before the toilet bowl? Where does all of the waste go? Are there really Alligators living in the New York City Sewers? How do Sewers work and if they smell so bad, why do we have them? While answering these questions, children will also learn how a toilet works, the history of how the toilet became a fixture in most households, why proper waste disposal is important, and why washing their hands after using the toilet will help stop the spread of germs.
Do You Know Where Your Water has Been?: The Disgusting Story Behind What You’re Drinking by Kelly Barnhill - Children discover the reason why treating drinking water is important and how it is unsafe to drink from a lake or other water source.
Garbage, Waste, Dumps and You: The Disgusting Story Behind What We Leave Behind by Connie Colwell Miller - Learn the history of Garbage collection and what happens to the garbage after it leaves your house.
Underwear: What We Wear Under There by Ruth Freeman Swain - From the loincloth to pantaloons and long johns, children can now learn what people wore under their clothing years ago.
It’s Spit-acular!: The Secrets of Saliva by Melissa Stewart - Ever wonder why you salivate when you smell food? Did you know that humans create enough saliva to fill 1-2 two liter bottles every day? This book explores the different uses of saliva, establishing how it is important to humans and other animals.
Sunday, September 26, 2010
Library Notes
Lynn Denison
September 16, 2010
At Rowan Public Library many of our fiction books are labeled by genre in order to assist our patrons in their search for a certain type of book. For example, we have western, romance, thriller, fantasy, horror, mystery, and religious fiction labels. My tendency for the last several years has been to choose books in the thriller genre. A question I have often had is what classifies one book a thriller and another a mystery? In an online article on MysteryNet.com, Janet A. Smith writes, “The suspense thriller has been loosely defined as a story in which the audience is waiting for something significant to happen. The reader experiences a vicarious thrill by identifying with the hero and the danger he faces, becoming a participant in the chase. A mystery, on the other hand, is a novel of revelation, with action more mental than physical. A significant event, usually a murder, has just occurred, and the protagonist’s job is to discover who committed the crime, and why.” In a recent Newsweek article titled “Mysteries, Thriller, and the Verities of the Heart,” Jon Meacham states, “Mysteries and thrillers are not the same things, though they are literary siblings. Roughly put, I would say the distinction is that mysteries emphasize motive and psychology whereas thrillers rely more heavily on action and plot. Some mysteries are thrillers and some thrillers are mysteries, but not all mysteries are thrillers, nor are all thrillers mysteries.” Now that we are clear on that. . . .
Of course, in the thriller genre there are many popular categories. Some of the most well known, which are available at the library, are listed below.
The Spy Who Came in from the Cold by John le Carre’ is the quintessential espionage thriller. Whiteout by Ken Follett is the classic thriller and tells the chilling story of what happens when biological weapons fall into the wrong hands. A top pick for a psychological suspense thriller is Shutter Island by Dennis Lehane, which will not only scare you silly but will fool you as well. Presumed Innocent by Scott Turrow with its fascinating plot and legal insight remains at the top of the definitive legal thriller. For contemporary military thrillers it would be difficult to beat the Jack Reacher series by Lee Child. You may want to begin with the first Reacher novel, The Killing Floor.
Thrillers have long been one of the most popular reading genres with dozens of them dominating the best seller lists each year. Why not choose one or two at the library and see if you, too, don’t find your heart racing and your imagination running overtime as you turn page after page?
Lynn Denison
September 16, 2010
At Rowan Public Library many of our fiction books are labeled by genre in order to assist our patrons in their search for a certain type of book. For example, we have western, romance, thriller, fantasy, horror, mystery, and religious fiction labels. My tendency for the last several years has been to choose books in the thriller genre. A question I have often had is what classifies one book a thriller and another a mystery? In an online article on MysteryNet.com, Janet A. Smith writes, “The suspense thriller has been loosely defined as a story in which the audience is waiting for something significant to happen. The reader experiences a vicarious thrill by identifying with the hero and the danger he faces, becoming a participant in the chase. A mystery, on the other hand, is a novel of revelation, with action more mental than physical. A significant event, usually a murder, has just occurred, and the protagonist’s job is to discover who committed the crime, and why.” In a recent Newsweek article titled “Mysteries, Thriller, and the Verities of the Heart,” Jon Meacham states, “Mysteries and thrillers are not the same things, though they are literary siblings. Roughly put, I would say the distinction is that mysteries emphasize motive and psychology whereas thrillers rely more heavily on action and plot. Some mysteries are thrillers and some thrillers are mysteries, but not all mysteries are thrillers, nor are all thrillers mysteries.” Now that we are clear on that. . . .
Of course, in the thriller genre there are many popular categories. Some of the most well known, which are available at the library, are listed below.
The Spy Who Came in from the Cold by John le Carre’ is the quintessential espionage thriller. Whiteout by Ken Follett is the classic thriller and tells the chilling story of what happens when biological weapons fall into the wrong hands. A top pick for a psychological suspense thriller is Shutter Island by Dennis Lehane, which will not only scare you silly but will fool you as well. Presumed Innocent by Scott Turrow with its fascinating plot and legal insight remains at the top of the definitive legal thriller. For contemporary military thrillers it would be difficult to beat the Jack Reacher series by Lee Child. You may want to begin with the first Reacher novel, The Killing Floor.
Thrillers have long been one of the most popular reading genres with dozens of them dominating the best seller lists each year. Why not choose one or two at the library and see if you, too, don’t find your heart racing and your imagination running overtime as you turn page after page?
Sunday, September 05, 2010
LIBRARY NOTES: THE LEWIS & CLARK EXPEDITION
PAUL BIRKHEAD – SEPTEMBER 5, 2010
I have always been fascinated by stories of the Lewis & Clark Expedition. Perhaps it’s because I was born within walking distance of where their journey began in St. Charles, Missouri. A recent trip back to Missouri for me included a visit to nearby Hartford, Illinois where a monument to Lewis and Clark had just been dedicated. The Lewis and Clark Confluence Tower celebrates not only the two captains but also a view of the area where the Mississippi and Missouri rivers meet. When I returned to North Carolina, I still had Lewis and Clark on my mind, so I decided to see what information Rowan Public Library had on the expedition.
Undaunted Courage, a New York Times bestseller, is an excellent biography of Meriwether Lewis and a good introduction to the expedition that sought to map out the territory acquired by the U.S. in the Louisiana Purchase. The late historian, Stephen Ambrose, combined extensive research and his talent for writing to create a work that is very informative and so utterly fascinating that it’s hard to put down.
Rowan Public Library also has on DVD, the PBS series Lewis & Clark: The Journey of the Corps of Discovery. The documentary, directed and produced by Ken Burns, originally aired in 1997 and is considered by many to be some of Burns’ best work. While not as lengthy as a typical Burns’ production (it clocks in at only four hours), it is full of fascinating facts, period illustrations, stunning video footage, and moving narratives read by a host of celebrities. The library has in its collection the book companion to the series which is also available for check-out.
Sacagawea of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, written by Ella Clark and Margot Edmonds, is a biography of the Shoshone Indian woman who accompanied Lewis and Clark out west. Most historians agree that the expedition might have been a complete failure were it not for the help of Sacagawea, the wife of a French trapper who was hired on as a guide. Sacagawea graciously served as an interpreter on several occasions, and she also proved invaluable in procuring horses and supplies from a tribe the group stumbled upon that just happened to include some of her own blood relatives.
On a lighter note, Westward Whoa: In the Wake of Lewis and Clark, is a story of two friends who head west in an inflatable raft and attempt to follow the same course as Lewis and Clark. Their tale of childish antics and misadventures will keep you laughing as you turn the pages, and you won’t believe what happens to them at the end of their quest.
Whether American history sparks your interest or you just like a good old-fashioned adventure story, anything having to do with the Lewis and Clark expedition will be sure to please. Stop by the Rowan Public Library and learn more about the journey that fostered the expansion of the American West.
PAUL BIRKHEAD – SEPTEMBER 5, 2010
I have always been fascinated by stories of the Lewis & Clark Expedition. Perhaps it’s because I was born within walking distance of where their journey began in St. Charles, Missouri. A recent trip back to Missouri for me included a visit to nearby Hartford, Illinois where a monument to Lewis and Clark had just been dedicated. The Lewis and Clark Confluence Tower celebrates not only the two captains but also a view of the area where the Mississippi and Missouri rivers meet. When I returned to North Carolina, I still had Lewis and Clark on my mind, so I decided to see what information Rowan Public Library had on the expedition.
Undaunted Courage, a New York Times bestseller, is an excellent biography of Meriwether Lewis and a good introduction to the expedition that sought to map out the territory acquired by the U.S. in the Louisiana Purchase. The late historian, Stephen Ambrose, combined extensive research and his talent for writing to create a work that is very informative and so utterly fascinating that it’s hard to put down.
Rowan Public Library also has on DVD, the PBS series Lewis & Clark: The Journey of the Corps of Discovery. The documentary, directed and produced by Ken Burns, originally aired in 1997 and is considered by many to be some of Burns’ best work. While not as lengthy as a typical Burns’ production (it clocks in at only four hours), it is full of fascinating facts, period illustrations, stunning video footage, and moving narratives read by a host of celebrities. The library has in its collection the book companion to the series which is also available for check-out.
Sacagawea of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, written by Ella Clark and Margot Edmonds, is a biography of the Shoshone Indian woman who accompanied Lewis and Clark out west. Most historians agree that the expedition might have been a complete failure were it not for the help of Sacagawea, the wife of a French trapper who was hired on as a guide. Sacagawea graciously served as an interpreter on several occasions, and she also proved invaluable in procuring horses and supplies from a tribe the group stumbled upon that just happened to include some of her own blood relatives.
On a lighter note, Westward Whoa: In the Wake of Lewis and Clark, is a story of two friends who head west in an inflatable raft and attempt to follow the same course as Lewis and Clark. Their tale of childish antics and misadventures will keep you laughing as you turn the pages, and you won’t believe what happens to them at the end of their quest.
Whether American history sparks your interest or you just like a good old-fashioned adventure story, anything having to do with the Lewis and Clark expedition will be sure to please. Stop by the Rowan Public Library and learn more about the journey that fostered the expansion of the American West.
Sunday, August 29, 2010
Gretchen Beilfuss Witt
Mystery readers everywhere are drawn to the quintessential writer of the crime puzzle, Dame Agatha Christie. With two of the most beloved sleuths and a number of other characters, Christie examines the working of the human psyche in a manner that continues to enthrall readers. Beginning in 1920 and continuing nearly till her death in 1976, Christie regaled her fans not only with full length mystery novels but with romances, short stories and plays as well. In the thoroughly delightful book, “The Bedside, Bathside, & Armchair Companion to Agatha Christie”, admirers of her work have provided a smorgasbord of commentary to enlighten and entertain.
The book introduces Christie’s first great detective who appears in more than half of her murder mysteries. Accepting a dare from her older sister Madge, Agatha wrote her first novel in 1915 although it was not published until 1920. Although devoted to Sherlock Holmes, she felt that she must create a new kind of detective. She often drew from her own experiences and this was no exception. Agatha knew of an enclave of Belgian refugees near her home in Devon. Christie imagined a retired Belgian policeman, neat and tidy, but a small man with a “flavor of absurdity.” Such a small man deserved a big name, perhaps the hero Hercules modified to flow with the surname, Hercule Poirot entered the literary lexicon.
Interspersed between summaries of her marvelous tales are amusing bits with titles like “A Nice Cuppa” explaining the origin of the English tea ritual and how it appears in various narratives. It gives details about how tea became a fashionable ladies beverage as early as 1662 in London with Twinning’s Tea house first making an appearance in London in 1717. Taking tea with a variety of hostesses to win confidences or acquire needed information became a fixture in both Poirot novels and those of Miss Marple. Charming vignettes like “I wouldn’t go in there if I were you/Rooms to avoid in an English County House” or “How to Trace your family mystery – if you dare” share space with essays discussing weapons like the pearl handled 22 or the oft found trophy from the war, the Mauser. Other articles discuss the presence of class distinctions and dress codes and the influence they had in Christie’s crime stories.
Adding recipes for the condemned, crosswords, word searches and acrostics make this a wonderful book with which to take a break of a few minutes or curl up with for hours. Enjoy immersing yourself in Agatha’s criminal world with “The Bedside, Bathtub and Armchair Companion” and continue your reading pleasure by checking out her splendid books as well as the wonderful films adaptations and television series. Cozy up with the Queen of the Murder Mystery.
Mystery readers everywhere are drawn to the quintessential writer of the crime puzzle, Dame Agatha Christie. With two of the most beloved sleuths and a number of other characters, Christie examines the working of the human psyche in a manner that continues to enthrall readers. Beginning in 1920 and continuing nearly till her death in 1976, Christie regaled her fans not only with full length mystery novels but with romances, short stories and plays as well. In the thoroughly delightful book, “The Bedside, Bathside, & Armchair Companion to Agatha Christie”, admirers of her work have provided a smorgasbord of commentary to enlighten and entertain.
The book introduces Christie’s first great detective who appears in more than half of her murder mysteries. Accepting a dare from her older sister Madge, Agatha wrote her first novel in 1915 although it was not published until 1920. Although devoted to Sherlock Holmes, she felt that she must create a new kind of detective. She often drew from her own experiences and this was no exception. Agatha knew of an enclave of Belgian refugees near her home in Devon. Christie imagined a retired Belgian policeman, neat and tidy, but a small man with a “flavor of absurdity.” Such a small man deserved a big name, perhaps the hero Hercules modified to flow with the surname, Hercule Poirot entered the literary lexicon.
Interspersed between summaries of her marvelous tales are amusing bits with titles like “A Nice Cuppa” explaining the origin of the English tea ritual and how it appears in various narratives. It gives details about how tea became a fashionable ladies beverage as early as 1662 in London with Twinning’s Tea house first making an appearance in London in 1717. Taking tea with a variety of hostesses to win confidences or acquire needed information became a fixture in both Poirot novels and those of Miss Marple. Charming vignettes like “I wouldn’t go in there if I were you/Rooms to avoid in an English County House” or “How to Trace your family mystery – if you dare” share space with essays discussing weapons like the pearl handled 22 or the oft found trophy from the war, the Mauser. Other articles discuss the presence of class distinctions and dress codes and the influence they had in Christie’s crime stories.
Adding recipes for the condemned, crosswords, word searches and acrostics make this a wonderful book with which to take a break of a few minutes or curl up with for hours. Enjoy immersing yourself in Agatha’s criminal world with “The Bedside, Bathtub and Armchair Companion” and continue your reading pleasure by checking out her splendid books as well as the wonderful films adaptations and television series. Cozy up with the Queen of the Murder Mystery.
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
Library Notes
August 9, 2010 Betty Moore
“To Kill a Mockingbird”
How long has it been since you read “To Kill a Mockingbird” by Harper Lee? Or perhaps you saw the movie but never read the book. Maybe you think of the book as something only for students to read. However, the book is definitely one that deserves to be read and reread and now is a good time for that.
This year is the 50th anniversary of the publication of Lee's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, which has sold more than 30 million copies and made a lasting impact on readers and writers. Many libraries, book groups, and individuals are taking part in a celebration of the book.
For my own personal celebration, I have just finished listening to the book on CD, wonderfully read by Sissy Spacek. I heard my favorite quotations, including, “Mockingbirds don't do one thing but make music for us to enjoy. They don't eat up people's gardens, don't nest in corncribs, they don't do one thing but sing their hearts out for us. That's why it's a sin to kill a mockingbird.”
As a student, a high school teacher, and a mom, I’ve read the book at least five times. Each time I read it I discover new things, as I am different places in my life. Returning now to the book makes me reflect on what has changed since that time and what has not.
The novel looks at events in a small Alabama town in the mid-1930s through the eyes of Scout, a young white girl. Her father, Atticus, is a lawyer defending an innocent black man accused of rape. Through the perspective of this precocious young girl, who doesn’t always understand what is said or happening around her, the book explores layers of innocence and guilt, justice and injustice, society’s rigid codes, race relations, class, poverty, and compassion.
While the book concerns very serious themes, it also contains a lot of humor. Scout relates many humorous stories about her family and neighbors – made even funnier, or more ironic – by young Scout’s immaturity and innocence of adult matters. Sometimes Scout’s clear youthful perspective sees right through the pretensions and hypocrisy of the adults around her, as when the church mission society ladies discuss their help for natives in Africa but don’t see how their own neighbors of a different race or class need their help too.
This well-loved book is available at the library in many formats. The film is also available. Plan to revisit them soon and join with others to celebrate “Mockingbird” three Tuesdays in November. As you read, or reread, consider who is your favorite character. What lines stick in your memory? Has reading the book made a lasting impression on you or made a difference in your life?
On November 2, there will be a book discussion at RPL Headquarters for people who want to read or reread and discuss the book, as well as people who are curious but have never read it. On November 16 we’ll show the 1962 Oscar-winning film based on Lee’s book. Book Bites Book Club will discuss the book at their November 30 meeting at RPL’s South Branch in China Grove. More details about times and places will be available closer to those dates.
August 9, 2010 Betty Moore
“To Kill a Mockingbird”
How long has it been since you read “To Kill a Mockingbird” by Harper Lee? Or perhaps you saw the movie but never read the book. Maybe you think of the book as something only for students to read. However, the book is definitely one that deserves to be read and reread and now is a good time for that.
This year is the 50th anniversary of the publication of Lee's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, which has sold more than 30 million copies and made a lasting impact on readers and writers. Many libraries, book groups, and individuals are taking part in a celebration of the book.
For my own personal celebration, I have just finished listening to the book on CD, wonderfully read by Sissy Spacek. I heard my favorite quotations, including, “Mockingbirds don't do one thing but make music for us to enjoy. They don't eat up people's gardens, don't nest in corncribs, they don't do one thing but sing their hearts out for us. That's why it's a sin to kill a mockingbird.”
As a student, a high school teacher, and a mom, I’ve read the book at least five times. Each time I read it I discover new things, as I am different places in my life. Returning now to the book makes me reflect on what has changed since that time and what has not.
The novel looks at events in a small Alabama town in the mid-1930s through the eyes of Scout, a young white girl. Her father, Atticus, is a lawyer defending an innocent black man accused of rape. Through the perspective of this precocious young girl, who doesn’t always understand what is said or happening around her, the book explores layers of innocence and guilt, justice and injustice, society’s rigid codes, race relations, class, poverty, and compassion.
While the book concerns very serious themes, it also contains a lot of humor. Scout relates many humorous stories about her family and neighbors – made even funnier, or more ironic – by young Scout’s immaturity and innocence of adult matters. Sometimes Scout’s clear youthful perspective sees right through the pretensions and hypocrisy of the adults around her, as when the church mission society ladies discuss their help for natives in Africa but don’t see how their own neighbors of a different race or class need their help too.
This well-loved book is available at the library in many formats. The film is also available. Plan to revisit them soon and join with others to celebrate “Mockingbird” three Tuesdays in November. As you read, or reread, consider who is your favorite character. What lines stick in your memory? Has reading the book made a lasting impression on you or made a difference in your life?
On November 2, there will be a book discussion at RPL Headquarters for people who want to read or reread and discuss the book, as well as people who are curious but have never read it. On November 16 we’ll show the 1962 Oscar-winning film based on Lee’s book. Book Bites Book Club will discuss the book at their November 30 meeting at RPL’s South Branch in China Grove. More details about times and places will be available closer to those dates.
Library Notes
Rebecca Hyde – July 30, 2010
Geologists study features ranging from microscopic crystals to satellite views, from glimpses of Earth’s origins to present Earth-building events. How can these different perspectives of time and scale be combined and viewed in a larger context? Take to the air. As author Michael Collier writes in “Over the Mountains”: “On the ground, like mites on an elephant, you don’t know if you’re sitting on the elephant’s tooth or its toenail. But a view from the sky adds another dimension. Rise above and you can see the earth from trunk to tail.”
Information and entertainment, extraordinary images with text that instructs the “unschooled” --- Michael Collier’s “aerial views of geology” are picture books for adults. For people curious about geological processes (mountain-building, erosive rivers), or people who like to travel, these photographs offer access to areas accessible only to birds and pilots.
Collier is a geologist, science writer, photographer, and pilot. And using his Cessna 180 “like a tripod,” he brings into focus and records geologic features that illuminate the theories by which scientists understand our earth. He also wants to impart “a sense of wonder, a tangible sense of the earth that springs from an intimate knowledge of the land.”
In “Over the Mountains,” the map of the United States is overlaid with boundaries marking geologic “provinces,” each having its own particular geologic history. A photograph of the North Cascades (Columbia Plateau Province) shows a remarkably jumbled range of mountains. These mountains are still being created by the spreading ocean floor meeting the edge of the continent, with accumulations of silt and sand being scraped off like “peanut butter smeared from a knife onto a piece of bread.”
Again, In “Over the Rivers,” a map helps us re-imagine the landscape. State lines are overlaid by rivers, their basins, and divides, which draw the line between water flowing toward one or another river (the great Continental Divide, for example). A river’s “job description” calls for moving water and sediment from the mountains to the sea. And that means maintaining a “fastidious equilibrium” between water and sediment.
A spectacular alluvial fan is pictured within Alaska’s Glacier Bay National Park, where coarse sand and gravel is dumped when the stream runs high and hard. In contrast, as the gradient flattens, a river meanders, like a “string of wobbly railroad cars rolling down an uneven track.” Its current bears against one bank and deflects against the other, creating bends, all the way to the sea. The Green River is a “writhing snake” as it moves toward Bronx, Wyoming, leaving bright sand on the inside of bends and erosion on the outside.
Collier’s books offer us a view of a dynamic earth, a work in progress.
Rebecca Hyde – July 30, 2010
Geologists study features ranging from microscopic crystals to satellite views, from glimpses of Earth’s origins to present Earth-building events. How can these different perspectives of time and scale be combined and viewed in a larger context? Take to the air. As author Michael Collier writes in “Over the Mountains”: “On the ground, like mites on an elephant, you don’t know if you’re sitting on the elephant’s tooth or its toenail. But a view from the sky adds another dimension. Rise above and you can see the earth from trunk to tail.”
Information and entertainment, extraordinary images with text that instructs the “unschooled” --- Michael Collier’s “aerial views of geology” are picture books for adults. For people curious about geological processes (mountain-building, erosive rivers), or people who like to travel, these photographs offer access to areas accessible only to birds and pilots.
Collier is a geologist, science writer, photographer, and pilot. And using his Cessna 180 “like a tripod,” he brings into focus and records geologic features that illuminate the theories by which scientists understand our earth. He also wants to impart “a sense of wonder, a tangible sense of the earth that springs from an intimate knowledge of the land.”
In “Over the Mountains,” the map of the United States is overlaid with boundaries marking geologic “provinces,” each having its own particular geologic history. A photograph of the North Cascades (Columbia Plateau Province) shows a remarkably jumbled range of mountains. These mountains are still being created by the spreading ocean floor meeting the edge of the continent, with accumulations of silt and sand being scraped off like “peanut butter smeared from a knife onto a piece of bread.”
Again, In “Over the Rivers,” a map helps us re-imagine the landscape. State lines are overlaid by rivers, their basins, and divides, which draw the line between water flowing toward one or another river (the great Continental Divide, for example). A river’s “job description” calls for moving water and sediment from the mountains to the sea. And that means maintaining a “fastidious equilibrium” between water and sediment.
A spectacular alluvial fan is pictured within Alaska’s Glacier Bay National Park, where coarse sand and gravel is dumped when the stream runs high and hard. In contrast, as the gradient flattens, a river meanders, like a “string of wobbly railroad cars rolling down an uneven track.” Its current bears against one bank and deflects against the other, creating bends, all the way to the sea. The Green River is a “writhing snake” as it moves toward Bronx, Wyoming, leaving bright sand on the inside of bends and erosion on the outside.
Collier’s books offer us a view of a dynamic earth, a work in progress.
Tuesday, July 20, 2010
Rediscover Folktales and Fairy Tales
by Erika Kosin
Most children will tell you that fairy tales begin with “Once Upon a Time” and always have a happy ending. What they don’t know is that fairy tales and folk tales are stories that were passed down by word of mouth for generations throughout different cultures until they were collected and written down. In their original form, these tales were moral and cautionary tales meant to frighten and teach small children how to behave. Some, especially folktales and tall tales were told as a way to explain natural phenomena such as mountain ranges, lakes, or the characteristics of some animals.
Many folk tales and fairy tales have been modified and changed into many different versions. Some have added new characters or changed the cultural setting of the story. In recent years, many of these modified tales have deleted the morbid life stories found in the originals. The early versions of the Brothers Grimm tales may have happy endings, but they contain some gruesome and harsh realities along the way. While originally found in a Nursery Tale book, the original story of the Three Little Pigs has the wolf eating the first two pigs, portraying the wolf’s natural instinct as a predator. While the third pig triumphs, he is aware of the true nature of the wolf in the story and finds a way to protect himself from the predator.
Next time you are at the library, why not rediscover the many different folktales and fairy tales that are held in the children’s collection. From the likes of Hans Christian Anderson and Aesop’s Fables to classic stories like the three Billy Goats Gruff and Snow White, there are numerous retellings of these tales along with the originals found in the 398.2 section of the library.
Cendrillon: A Caribbean Cinderella by Robert D. San Souci – This version of Cinderella is retold with Caribbean flair through the eyes of the Godmother who is not a fairy but a poor washer woman who happens to have a magic wand. The colorful illustrations by Brian Pikney portray the vibrant colors found in the Caribbean. This book won the 2000 North Carolina Children’s book Award.
Anansi and the Magic Stick by Eric A. Kimmel – Losely based on the Liberian tale of the Magic Hoe, this story finds Anansi the spider being very lazy and not wanting to do his chores. When he finds the Hyena’s magic stick, he uses it to do his chores so he can relax. Only when he falls asleep and forgets the magic words chaos ensues. This book won the 2004 North Carolina Children’s book Award.
Rumplestiltskin by Paul O. Zelinsky – From an earlier version of the Grimms Tale, a fair maiden is locked in a room to spin straw into gold and a little man helps her but in return wants her first born child unless she can guess his name. This illustrated version of the classic tale is done in vivid medieval style oil paintings and a was Caldecott Honor book.
The Bremen Town Musicians and Other Animal Tales From Grimm. Retold by Doris Orgel. – This collection of animal tales are close to their original Grimm form. With an introduction by the author and illustrator and a brief description of the Brothers Grimm, this collection of tales illustrates the use of stories as cautionary tales.
by Erika Kosin
Most children will tell you that fairy tales begin with “Once Upon a Time” and always have a happy ending. What they don’t know is that fairy tales and folk tales are stories that were passed down by word of mouth for generations throughout different cultures until they were collected and written down. In their original form, these tales were moral and cautionary tales meant to frighten and teach small children how to behave. Some, especially folktales and tall tales were told as a way to explain natural phenomena such as mountain ranges, lakes, or the characteristics of some animals.
Many folk tales and fairy tales have been modified and changed into many different versions. Some have added new characters or changed the cultural setting of the story. In recent years, many of these modified tales have deleted the morbid life stories found in the originals. The early versions of the Brothers Grimm tales may have happy endings, but they contain some gruesome and harsh realities along the way. While originally found in a Nursery Tale book, the original story of the Three Little Pigs has the wolf eating the first two pigs, portraying the wolf’s natural instinct as a predator. While the third pig triumphs, he is aware of the true nature of the wolf in the story and finds a way to protect himself from the predator.
Next time you are at the library, why not rediscover the many different folktales and fairy tales that are held in the children’s collection. From the likes of Hans Christian Anderson and Aesop’s Fables to classic stories like the three Billy Goats Gruff and Snow White, there are numerous retellings of these tales along with the originals found in the 398.2 section of the library.
Cendrillon: A Caribbean Cinderella by Robert D. San Souci – This version of Cinderella is retold with Caribbean flair through the eyes of the Godmother who is not a fairy but a poor washer woman who happens to have a magic wand. The colorful illustrations by Brian Pikney portray the vibrant colors found in the Caribbean. This book won the 2000 North Carolina Children’s book Award.
Anansi and the Magic Stick by Eric A. Kimmel – Losely based on the Liberian tale of the Magic Hoe, this story finds Anansi the spider being very lazy and not wanting to do his chores. When he finds the Hyena’s magic stick, he uses it to do his chores so he can relax. Only when he falls asleep and forgets the magic words chaos ensues. This book won the 2004 North Carolina Children’s book Award.
Rumplestiltskin by Paul O. Zelinsky – From an earlier version of the Grimms Tale, a fair maiden is locked in a room to spin straw into gold and a little man helps her but in return wants her first born child unless she can guess his name. This illustrated version of the classic tale is done in vivid medieval style oil paintings and a was Caldecott Honor book.
The Bremen Town Musicians and Other Animal Tales From Grimm. Retold by Doris Orgel. – This collection of animal tales are close to their original Grimm form. With an introduction by the author and illustrator and a brief description of the Brothers Grimm, this collection of tales illustrates the use of stories as cautionary tales.
Saturday, July 10, 2010
Dive into a Great Summer Reading Book
by Dara L. Cain
Children have a lot of free time during the summer. One of the best ways to keep them engaged is to find them a book that they will enjoy reading. Here are some fun and adventurous water themed titles that can be found at Rowan Public Library that are perfect for summer time reading.
An energetic fish named Tiddler travels away from his home to go exploring in the big blue sea in the silly story Fidgety Fish by Ruth Galloway. Tiddler’s mother is hoping that he will return much calmer than when he left. On his many adventures in the sea Tiddler encounters many friendly sea creatures until he finds himself inside the mouth of a dark cave. To his surprise it is not a cave he is in but the mouth of a very BIG fish. Will Tiddler’s wiggly and fidgety self be enough to help him escape?
Another fun book is Way Down Deep in the Deep Blue Sea by Jan Peck. Join a young sea diver as he sets out to find hidden treasure in the depths of the deep blue sea. While on his quest your child will encounter different aquatic animals as the boy hitches a ride with a dolphin, plays peek-a-boo with a sea turtle, and fences a swordfish among many other water activities. Will the boy be able to rescue the pirate treasure to bring home to his mama or is it too protectively guarded? You must read the story to find out.
Froggy Learns to Swim is a silly book about a frog who is reluctant to swim. What draws the reader in are the descriptive sound words like “zook! zik!” and “flop flop…splash” that will have your kids laughing out loud. With a little help from his swimming attire including flippers, a mask, a snorkel, and of course his encouraging mother Froggy becomes an avid swimmer. So much so that he doesn’t want to get out of the pond past nightfall. This book is not only appropriate for reluctant swimmers but for any child encountering a fear that may need a little encouragement. After reading this book your child will want to read the other titles in the series by Jonathan London.
If your child enjoys a good mystery a must read is Nate the Great and the Boring Beach Bag by Marjorie Weinman Sharmat. Nate is a young boy detective who solves mysteries with the help of his dog Sludge. In this adventure Olivia’s boring blue beach bag turns up missing at the beach. To find out what happened to it follow the series of clues and help Nate, Sludge, and Olivia find her bag. The fun doesn’t stop there. You can read the other Nate the Great detective books and help solve more mysteries.
Emily has grown up on a houseboat with her mother and has never been allowed in the water until now. In the book The Tail of Emily Windsnap by Liz Kessler Emily takes swimming lessons at school and makes the startling discovery that she is a mermaid. How long will she be able to keep her secret? Swim along with Emily as she meets other mermaids and discovers a whole new world open up to her below the ocean. If you would like to share more sea adventures with Emily check out the subsequent titles in the series.
Author Gordon Korman’s first book in the exciting Dive trilogy is The Discovery. Four kids on a marine expedition during the summer explore an underwater habitat and unexpectedly discover gold. The suspense and tension builds up as Dante, Adriana, Kaz, and Star fight to retrieve the sunken treasure. Will they be able to work together or will the possibility of wealth divide them? And what about the sharks and the treasure hunters who are after the treasure? Read the story to find out what becomes of the gold.
by Dara L. Cain
Children have a lot of free time during the summer. One of the best ways to keep them engaged is to find them a book that they will enjoy reading. Here are some fun and adventurous water themed titles that can be found at Rowan Public Library that are perfect for summer time reading.
An energetic fish named Tiddler travels away from his home to go exploring in the big blue sea in the silly story Fidgety Fish by Ruth Galloway. Tiddler’s mother is hoping that he will return much calmer than when he left. On his many adventures in the sea Tiddler encounters many friendly sea creatures until he finds himself inside the mouth of a dark cave. To his surprise it is not a cave he is in but the mouth of a very BIG fish. Will Tiddler’s wiggly and fidgety self be enough to help him escape?
Another fun book is Way Down Deep in the Deep Blue Sea by Jan Peck. Join a young sea diver as he sets out to find hidden treasure in the depths of the deep blue sea. While on his quest your child will encounter different aquatic animals as the boy hitches a ride with a dolphin, plays peek-a-boo with a sea turtle, and fences a swordfish among many other water activities. Will the boy be able to rescue the pirate treasure to bring home to his mama or is it too protectively guarded? You must read the story to find out.
Froggy Learns to Swim is a silly book about a frog who is reluctant to swim. What draws the reader in are the descriptive sound words like “zook! zik!” and “flop flop…splash” that will have your kids laughing out loud. With a little help from his swimming attire including flippers, a mask, a snorkel, and of course his encouraging mother Froggy becomes an avid swimmer. So much so that he doesn’t want to get out of the pond past nightfall. This book is not only appropriate for reluctant swimmers but for any child encountering a fear that may need a little encouragement. After reading this book your child will want to read the other titles in the series by Jonathan London.
If your child enjoys a good mystery a must read is Nate the Great and the Boring Beach Bag by Marjorie Weinman Sharmat. Nate is a young boy detective who solves mysteries with the help of his dog Sludge. In this adventure Olivia’s boring blue beach bag turns up missing at the beach. To find out what happened to it follow the series of clues and help Nate, Sludge, and Olivia find her bag. The fun doesn’t stop there. You can read the other Nate the Great detective books and help solve more mysteries.
Emily has grown up on a houseboat with her mother and has never been allowed in the water until now. In the book The Tail of Emily Windsnap by Liz Kessler Emily takes swimming lessons at school and makes the startling discovery that she is a mermaid. How long will she be able to keep her secret? Swim along with Emily as she meets other mermaids and discovers a whole new world open up to her below the ocean. If you would like to share more sea adventures with Emily check out the subsequent titles in the series.
Author Gordon Korman’s first book in the exciting Dive trilogy is The Discovery. Four kids on a marine expedition during the summer explore an underwater habitat and unexpectedly discover gold. The suspense and tension builds up as Dante, Adriana, Kaz, and Star fight to retrieve the sunken treasure. Will they be able to work together or will the possibility of wealth divide them? And what about the sharks and the treasure hunters who are after the treasure? Read the story to find out what becomes of the gold.
Monday, June 21, 2010
by Lynn Denison
Have you had the pleasure of meeting Miss Julia Springer of Abbotsford, North Carolina? If not, you are in for a special treat. These summer days would be a great time to make her acquaintance. She is the protagonist in a series written by the well-known author, Ann B. Ross. Ms. Ross has written eleven books about Miss Julia, each one more delightful and enjoyable than the one preceding it. In the initial book, Miss Julia Speaks Her Mind, published in 1999, septuagenarian Julia Springer is a proper Southern lady whose banker husband dies suddenly, leaving her more money than she knew he possessed. He’s left another big surprise—a mistress and an illegitimate son, “Little Lloyd.” Miss Julia learns to love “Little Lloyd” and his mother, Hazel Marie Puckett, and thus she acquires the family she’s never had. She valiantly faces small town prejudices, gossip and hypocrisy and comes out on top in every situation.
Miss Julia Speaks Her Mind and the other ten books in the series are all available at Rowan Public Library. Many are available on CD and in large print format. The eleventh and newest book in the series is Miss Julia Renews Her Vows.
Author Ann B. Ross decided to complete her college education after her three children left home for college. She completed her Bachelor’s, Master’s and Doctor of Philosophy degrees and then taught Literature and the Humanities at UNC in Asheville before beginning to write. Her first Miss Julia book was an immediate success and set her on a full-time writing career. Ms. Ross was once asked by an interviewer how she knew when something she’d written was good. She replied, “I know it’s good when I fall off my chair laughing.” That response indicates that she enjoys writing about her characters as much as her fans enjoy reading about them.
As a writer, Ms. Ross does not work with an outline or a detailed plan before starting a story. She usually has a general plot in mind that contains mainly the conflict and resolution with a few ideas of how they will be worked out. She relies on inspiration for Miss Julia’s escapades from many different sources, for example, chance remarks from friends or family, an incident she happens to see, a dream, or past experiences.
When approached by aspiring writers Ms. Ross says, “You must write! Thinking about it, researching it, talking and dreaming about it will never get it done. You must put words on paper, one after the other, even though doing that is lonely, unglamorous and sometimes pure drudgery. But to be a writer, you must write.”
Although each book in the Miss Julia series can stand alone, it would be helpful to start at the beginning and work through the series in order to truly appreciate it. Why not stop by any of Rowan Public Library’s locations today and begin a fast-paced, hilarious and thoroughly fun summer reading experience with Miss Julia and her friends?
Have you had the pleasure of meeting Miss Julia Springer of Abbotsford, North Carolina? If not, you are in for a special treat. These summer days would be a great time to make her acquaintance. She is the protagonist in a series written by the well-known author, Ann B. Ross. Ms. Ross has written eleven books about Miss Julia, each one more delightful and enjoyable than the one preceding it. In the initial book, Miss Julia Speaks Her Mind, published in 1999, septuagenarian Julia Springer is a proper Southern lady whose banker husband dies suddenly, leaving her more money than she knew he possessed. He’s left another big surprise—a mistress and an illegitimate son, “Little Lloyd.” Miss Julia learns to love “Little Lloyd” and his mother, Hazel Marie Puckett, and thus she acquires the family she’s never had. She valiantly faces small town prejudices, gossip and hypocrisy and comes out on top in every situation.
Miss Julia Speaks Her Mind and the other ten books in the series are all available at Rowan Public Library. Many are available on CD and in large print format. The eleventh and newest book in the series is Miss Julia Renews Her Vows.
Author Ann B. Ross decided to complete her college education after her three children left home for college. She completed her Bachelor’s, Master’s and Doctor of Philosophy degrees and then taught Literature and the Humanities at UNC in Asheville before beginning to write. Her first Miss Julia book was an immediate success and set her on a full-time writing career. Ms. Ross was once asked by an interviewer how she knew when something she’d written was good. She replied, “I know it’s good when I fall off my chair laughing.” That response indicates that she enjoys writing about her characters as much as her fans enjoy reading about them.
As a writer, Ms. Ross does not work with an outline or a detailed plan before starting a story. She usually has a general plot in mind that contains mainly the conflict and resolution with a few ideas of how they will be worked out. She relies on inspiration for Miss Julia’s escapades from many different sources, for example, chance remarks from friends or family, an incident she happens to see, a dream, or past experiences.
When approached by aspiring writers Ms. Ross says, “You must write! Thinking about it, researching it, talking and dreaming about it will never get it done. You must put words on paper, one after the other, even though doing that is lonely, unglamorous and sometimes pure drudgery. But to be a writer, you must write.”
Although each book in the Miss Julia series can stand alone, it would be helpful to start at the beginning and work through the series in order to truly appreciate it. Why not stop by any of Rowan Public Library’s locations today and begin a fast-paced, hilarious and thoroughly fun summer reading experience with Miss Julia and her friends?
Sunday, May 30, 2010
LIBRARY NOTES: BROWSING THE SHELVES AT RPL
PAUL BIRKHEAD – MAY 30, 2010
For a book lover like me, there’s nothing quite like browsing the stacks at Rowan Public Library. I get the same feeling at bookstores, but it’s usually accompanied by feelings of guilt for spending an inordinate amount of time sampling and not buying. The library is tough to beat because borrowing books on a wide variety of subjects doesn’t cost me a penny. Just the other day, I found myself exploring the new non-fiction shelves at the library, and here are some books I just had to take home with me.
The Letter and the Scroll: What Archaeology Tells Us about the Bible is a fascinating book published by the National Geographic Society. The book is divided into chapters which cover major eras in biblical history. While the book’s authors are careful to state that their purpose is neither to prove nor disprove the Bible, anyone interested in the Bible or ancient times is sure to be impressed by the content. As is typical in National Geographic publications, the book is filled with a generous number of beautiful maps and illustrations as well as stunning photographs of priceless artifacts and archaeological finds.
In Sweet Carolina: Favorite Desserts and Candies from the Old North State, author Foy Allen Edelman presents a collection of recipes she compiled from the kitchens of North Carolinians. Over the course of several years, Edelman traveled across her home state interviewing cooks from dozens of communities. Often, she was able to procure the recipe for their signature dessert. The result is a mouthwatering collection of recipes for pies, cakes, cookies, cobblers, and even a sonker or two.
If you decide to leave the confines of North Carolina and head, with kids in tow, to Washington, D.C., you might find this book interesting. The newest edition of Washington, D.C. with Kids, published by Fodor’s, is a comprehensive tour guide. This book does a good job of guiding visitors to must-see exhibits, monuments, and historic sites. Symbols in the book designate specific things to note, such as Helpful Hints, Smart Stuff, as well as Money-Saving and Time-Saving Tips. Items of interest to ‘Tweens and Teens’ and even those of ‘All Ages’ are also found for most attractions.
The final book that caught my attention was Letters to Jackie: Condolences from a Grieving Nation. The cover of the book is graced by the smiling faces of John and Jackie Kennedy taken from a photograph made shortly after their arrival in Texas. Little did anyone know what horrors lay ahead for them and the Nation. The assassination of President Kennedy in Dallas unleashed a whirlwind of sympathy for his widow. In the course of seven weeks, Mrs. Kennedy received nearly a million condolence letters. A large collection of these letters was kept and has been stored for years, largely unexamined, in the archives of the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library. In Letters to Jackie, historian Ellen Fitzpatrick selected 250 letters she felt compelling. In these, ordinary Americans sought to relay their sympathies to the late President’s wife and perhaps come to grips with their own grief.
No matter what subjects might interest you, come to the Rowan Public Library, and I’m sure you’ll find many books that will catch your eye. Be forewarned, though, simply browsing the shelves of our newest acquisitions can result in walking out the door with a whole armload.
PAUL BIRKHEAD – MAY 30, 2010
For a book lover like me, there’s nothing quite like browsing the stacks at Rowan Public Library. I get the same feeling at bookstores, but it’s usually accompanied by feelings of guilt for spending an inordinate amount of time sampling and not buying. The library is tough to beat because borrowing books on a wide variety of subjects doesn’t cost me a penny. Just the other day, I found myself exploring the new non-fiction shelves at the library, and here are some books I just had to take home with me.
The Letter and the Scroll: What Archaeology Tells Us about the Bible is a fascinating book published by the National Geographic Society. The book is divided into chapters which cover major eras in biblical history. While the book’s authors are careful to state that their purpose is neither to prove nor disprove the Bible, anyone interested in the Bible or ancient times is sure to be impressed by the content. As is typical in National Geographic publications, the book is filled with a generous number of beautiful maps and illustrations as well as stunning photographs of priceless artifacts and archaeological finds.
In Sweet Carolina: Favorite Desserts and Candies from the Old North State, author Foy Allen Edelman presents a collection of recipes she compiled from the kitchens of North Carolinians. Over the course of several years, Edelman traveled across her home state interviewing cooks from dozens of communities. Often, she was able to procure the recipe for their signature dessert. The result is a mouthwatering collection of recipes for pies, cakes, cookies, cobblers, and even a sonker or two.
If you decide to leave the confines of North Carolina and head, with kids in tow, to Washington, D.C., you might find this book interesting. The newest edition of Washington, D.C. with Kids, published by Fodor’s, is a comprehensive tour guide. This book does a good job of guiding visitors to must-see exhibits, monuments, and historic sites. Symbols in the book designate specific things to note, such as Helpful Hints, Smart Stuff, as well as Money-Saving and Time-Saving Tips. Items of interest to ‘Tweens and Teens’ and even those of ‘All Ages’ are also found for most attractions.
The final book that caught my attention was Letters to Jackie: Condolences from a Grieving Nation. The cover of the book is graced by the smiling faces of John and Jackie Kennedy taken from a photograph made shortly after their arrival in Texas. Little did anyone know what horrors lay ahead for them and the Nation. The assassination of President Kennedy in Dallas unleashed a whirlwind of sympathy for his widow. In the course of seven weeks, Mrs. Kennedy received nearly a million condolence letters. A large collection of these letters was kept and has been stored for years, largely unexamined, in the archives of the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library. In Letters to Jackie, historian Ellen Fitzpatrick selected 250 letters she felt compelling. In these, ordinary Americans sought to relay their sympathies to the late President’s wife and perhaps come to grips with their own grief.
No matter what subjects might interest you, come to the Rowan Public Library, and I’m sure you’ll find many books that will catch your eye. Be forewarned, though, simply browsing the shelves of our newest acquisitions can result in walking out the door with a whole armload.
Sunday, May 09, 2010
Library Notes—May 3, 2010—Betty Moore
Geography of Bliss
Just as some happiness experts say we find moments of happiness on our way to something else, I discovered Eric Weiner’s CD book about happiness, “The Geography of Bliss: One Grump’s Search for the Happiest Places in the World” on my way to something else. Having heard some of the radio reports by this foreign correspondent, and learning that he read his own book for the CD, I picked it up at the library to listen to in the car. RPL also has the print book.
In his work Weiner has traveled to Iraq, Afghanistan, and Indonesia, which many people would consider unhappy places. “What if,” Weiner wondered, “I spent a year traveling the globe, seeking out not the world’s well-trodden trouble spots but, rather, its unheralded happy places? Places that possess, in spades, one or more of the ingredients that we consider essential to the hearty stew of happiness: money, pleasure, spirituality, family, and chocolate, among others.”
Weiner first travels to the Netherlands, especially to meet with Dutch professor Ruut Veenhoven, “the godfather of happiness research,” who oversees the “World Database of Happiness.”
He also spends time in Switzerland, Qatar, Iceland, Britain, Moldova, Thailand, and several other countries to see if its inhabitants actually fit the stereotypes of happiness (or in the case of Moldova, unhappiness), that others would expect of them.
Curious about Bhutan’s policy of Gross National Happiness, he learns that the Bhutanese regard “happiness” as something very different from the smiley-face version often seen in the US. For them it is a collective endeavor. He is told, “We don’t believe in this Robinson Crusoe happiness. All happiness is relational.”
Weiner’s book is not so much a book about “how to be happy” as it is one that explores what happiness means in a number of cultures, how it connects to history, wealth, religion, geography and other cultural aspects.
At the end of the book he says that after all his world travels, he now happily divides his time between his living room and his kitchen. I enjoyed the book’s mixture of history, research, culture, memoir, and travelogue, as well as the wry humor of his presentation.
Rather than travel to see where in the world happy people live, Gretchen Rubin looks at home for ways to increase her own happiness. In her book “The Happiness Project: Or, Why I spent a Year Trying to Sing in the Morning, Clean My Closets, Fight Right, Read Aristotle, and Generally Have More Fun,” she chronicles her year-long project to look at “the wisdom of the ages, current scientific research, and lessons from popular culture about how to be happier.” A review in “Publishers Weekly” says Rubin balances “the personal and the universal with a light touch.”
Geography of Bliss
Just as some happiness experts say we find moments of happiness on our way to something else, I discovered Eric Weiner’s CD book about happiness, “The Geography of Bliss: One Grump’s Search for the Happiest Places in the World” on my way to something else. Having heard some of the radio reports by this foreign correspondent, and learning that he read his own book for the CD, I picked it up at the library to listen to in the car. RPL also has the print book.
In his work Weiner has traveled to Iraq, Afghanistan, and Indonesia, which many people would consider unhappy places. “What if,” Weiner wondered, “I spent a year traveling the globe, seeking out not the world’s well-trodden trouble spots but, rather, its unheralded happy places? Places that possess, in spades, one or more of the ingredients that we consider essential to the hearty stew of happiness: money, pleasure, spirituality, family, and chocolate, among others.”
Weiner first travels to the Netherlands, especially to meet with Dutch professor Ruut Veenhoven, “the godfather of happiness research,” who oversees the “World Database of Happiness.”
He also spends time in Switzerland, Qatar, Iceland, Britain, Moldova, Thailand, and several other countries to see if its inhabitants actually fit the stereotypes of happiness (or in the case of Moldova, unhappiness), that others would expect of them.
Curious about Bhutan’s policy of Gross National Happiness, he learns that the Bhutanese regard “happiness” as something very different from the smiley-face version often seen in the US. For them it is a collective endeavor. He is told, “We don’t believe in this Robinson Crusoe happiness. All happiness is relational.”
Weiner’s book is not so much a book about “how to be happy” as it is one that explores what happiness means in a number of cultures, how it connects to history, wealth, religion, geography and other cultural aspects.
At the end of the book he says that after all his world travels, he now happily divides his time between his living room and his kitchen. I enjoyed the book’s mixture of history, research, culture, memoir, and travelogue, as well as the wry humor of his presentation.
Rather than travel to see where in the world happy people live, Gretchen Rubin looks at home for ways to increase her own happiness. In her book “The Happiness Project: Or, Why I spent a Year Trying to Sing in the Morning, Clean My Closets, Fight Right, Read Aristotle, and Generally Have More Fun,” she chronicles her year-long project to look at “the wisdom of the ages, current scientific research, and lessons from popular culture about how to be happier.” A review in “Publishers Weekly” says Rubin balances “the personal and the universal with a light touch.”
Sunday, May 02, 2010
Library Notes
Rebecca Hyde - April 26, 2010
Sonia Dourlot (“Insect Museum”) provides an engaging introduction to the study of insects. The “little beasts” share our daily routines. They are plentiful and widespread. Our ignorance is at the core of our fears surrounding them. And we should become familiar with their behavior because they play a very important ecological role. The following books offer understanding and appreciation of insects that you may see in your garden or in someone else’s. May you then step lightly and spend more time close to the ground.
With descriptions of 114 species of insects and other arthropods and full-page color images, Dourlot’s “Insect Museum” demonstrates the beauty and complexity of that world. Encounter close up the lovely damselfly and the social southern brown wood ant.
For a grand overview of the insect world, see Stephen A Marshall’s “Insects: Their Natural History and Diversity.” The book is based on material collected for a third-year entomology course. It covers all the major insect families but focuses on the common ones of eastern North America. With this book, you can be a student of insects of the world, or leaf through the illustrated picture keys to identify a backyard discovery. Read the author’s preface (“An Overview of Six-legged Life”) and the Introduction (What is an insect?”). You’ll understand why “if insects are worth getting to know as an enemy of humankind, they are even more worthy of attention as our benefactors.”
For an “entomophile” view of the insect world, there are the autobiographies of Thomas Eisner and E. O. Wilson. Eisner’s “For Love of Insects” is both a memoir of a life in the field and an appreciation of the insect world. Eisner knew he was passionately interested in insects and genuinely interested in chemistry. His encounter with the bombardier beetle was his lucky break. He “struck gold,” for the beetle is a champion chemist. That discovery led to a career focusing on chemical communication in insects and other arthropods. Edward O. Wilson has collaborated with Eisner through the years and calls his friend a world-class biologist and an exceptional naturalist. He’s also an exceptional photographer. Eisner is a professor of chemical ecology at Cornell.
E. O Wilson (“Naturalist”) never grew out of his bug period as a child. And two early events, the spine of a pinfish and hearing loss in the upper registers, made him an entomologist, with his surviving eye turned to the ground, committed to celebrating the little things of the world. How is a naturalist created? A child comes to the edge of deep water with a mind prepared to wonder. Hands-on experience, not systematic knowledge, is what counts. As he grows older, complicated details and context from his culture are added, but the core image stays intact.
Wilson views himself as the “nominal founder” of sociobiology, and in his later years, “a civilized hunter,” in the field, studying the ants of the West Indies, island by island. He feels the same emotions he had as a teenage student, when his ambition was to be this kind of scientist.
It is curious that in the “Naturalist,” Wilson writes “one does not need to make ants protagonists of a novel to bring them deserved attention.” His novel, “Anthill,” was published in April.
Rebecca Hyde - April 26, 2010
Sonia Dourlot (“Insect Museum”) provides an engaging introduction to the study of insects. The “little beasts” share our daily routines. They are plentiful and widespread. Our ignorance is at the core of our fears surrounding them. And we should become familiar with their behavior because they play a very important ecological role. The following books offer understanding and appreciation of insects that you may see in your garden or in someone else’s. May you then step lightly and spend more time close to the ground.
With descriptions of 114 species of insects and other arthropods and full-page color images, Dourlot’s “Insect Museum” demonstrates the beauty and complexity of that world. Encounter close up the lovely damselfly and the social southern brown wood ant.
For a grand overview of the insect world, see Stephen A Marshall’s “Insects: Their Natural History and Diversity.” The book is based on material collected for a third-year entomology course. It covers all the major insect families but focuses on the common ones of eastern North America. With this book, you can be a student of insects of the world, or leaf through the illustrated picture keys to identify a backyard discovery. Read the author’s preface (“An Overview of Six-legged Life”) and the Introduction (What is an insect?”). You’ll understand why “if insects are worth getting to know as an enemy of humankind, they are even more worthy of attention as our benefactors.”
For an “entomophile” view of the insect world, there are the autobiographies of Thomas Eisner and E. O. Wilson. Eisner’s “For Love of Insects” is both a memoir of a life in the field and an appreciation of the insect world. Eisner knew he was passionately interested in insects and genuinely interested in chemistry. His encounter with the bombardier beetle was his lucky break. He “struck gold,” for the beetle is a champion chemist. That discovery led to a career focusing on chemical communication in insects and other arthropods. Edward O. Wilson has collaborated with Eisner through the years and calls his friend a world-class biologist and an exceptional naturalist. He’s also an exceptional photographer. Eisner is a professor of chemical ecology at Cornell.
E. O Wilson (“Naturalist”) never grew out of his bug period as a child. And two early events, the spine of a pinfish and hearing loss in the upper registers, made him an entomologist, with his surviving eye turned to the ground, committed to celebrating the little things of the world. How is a naturalist created? A child comes to the edge of deep water with a mind prepared to wonder. Hands-on experience, not systematic knowledge, is what counts. As he grows older, complicated details and context from his culture are added, but the core image stays intact.
Wilson views himself as the “nominal founder” of sociobiology, and in his later years, “a civilized hunter,” in the field, studying the ants of the West Indies, island by island. He feels the same emotions he had as a teenage student, when his ambition was to be this kind of scientist.
It is curious that in the “Naturalist,” Wilson writes “one does not need to make ants protagonists of a novel to bring them deserved attention.” His novel, “Anthill,” was published in April.
Sunday, April 25, 2010
Sara Grajek
Rowan Public Library – Library Notes
April 20, 2010
I noticed just the other day that the number one book on Amazon’s top 100 list for Teens was Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen. This made me stop and think for a moment about whether teens were reading this for fun, or for homework. I quickly decided that as long as books were being read, it didn’t really matter and moved on to thinking about some of the great spin-offs that have come from Miss Austen’s classic novel as well as many of the other types of retellings. Granted, some kids will need little convincing to read the original versions of the classics, but for others, these titles may be the stepping stone to get them there.
Shannon Hale is a popular young author of young adult books with many fairy tale retellings to her name. She has now crossed over to write an adult Jane Austen retelling, Austenland. Although generally categorized as chick-lit, this novel has definite cross-over appeal to older teen readers who are interested in all things Austen. The main character, Jane, inherits a trip to a resort in Pembrook Park (located in Kent, England) where all visitors dress, and act and eat as if they were in Jane Austen’s England. Although she is determined to put her Austen obsession behind her after this vacation, Jane finds herself in the middle of a romance suitable for one of Austen’s novels.
Even movies have been caught up in Jane Austen’s world and Lost in Austen is one example of this. Amanda Price longs for the romance of Jane Austen’s world and is tired of her modern life. One day, she discovers a secret passageway in her bathroom that leads directly to the Bennett’s home, and Amanda and Elizabeth Bennett accidentally trade worlds. Amanda disrupts the plot of Pride and Prejudice by creating new marriages and Mr. Darcy even falls in love with her. Meanwhile, in present day, Elizabeth gets a job and discovers the internet. Will Elizabeth ever find her way back to Mr. Darcy and all will be right in the world of Austen? You’ll have stop by the library and get the movie to find out.
In Saving Juliet by Suzanne Selfors, Mimi Wallingford has the starring role in her family’s production of Romeo and Juliet on Broadway. There’s only one problem. She would do just about anything to get away from her family and their acting company. In a parallel universe, in Shakespeare’s time, Juliet Verona is being forced into a marriage with someone she doesn’t love, and would do almost anything to avoid her betrothed. When Mimi gets her wish to escape and is transported back in time with her hunky co-star Tony, she meets the real Juliet and starts to believe Shakespeare’s original ending may not be the best for everyone involved.
Some authors are well-known for their work with retellings and simply have too many titles to list. Donna Jo Napoli has close to ten titles that center around fairy tales. Featuring stories such as Beauty and the Beast, The Pied Piper of Hamlin, and Rumpelstiltskin, Napoli’s writings weave stories from points of view and settings far removed from the originals. Robin McKinley has also written several retellings, favoring the Beauty and the Beast and Sleeping Beauty tales. With the current popularity of retellings, chances are one of your favorite authors may have written one. Check for one at Rowan Public Library today!
Rowan Public Library – Library Notes
April 20, 2010
I noticed just the other day that the number one book on Amazon’s top 100 list for Teens was Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen. This made me stop and think for a moment about whether teens were reading this for fun, or for homework. I quickly decided that as long as books were being read, it didn’t really matter and moved on to thinking about some of the great spin-offs that have come from Miss Austen’s classic novel as well as many of the other types of retellings. Granted, some kids will need little convincing to read the original versions of the classics, but for others, these titles may be the stepping stone to get them there.
Shannon Hale is a popular young author of young adult books with many fairy tale retellings to her name. She has now crossed over to write an adult Jane Austen retelling, Austenland. Although generally categorized as chick-lit, this novel has definite cross-over appeal to older teen readers who are interested in all things Austen. The main character, Jane, inherits a trip to a resort in Pembrook Park (located in Kent, England) where all visitors dress, and act and eat as if they were in Jane Austen’s England. Although she is determined to put her Austen obsession behind her after this vacation, Jane finds herself in the middle of a romance suitable for one of Austen’s novels.
Even movies have been caught up in Jane Austen’s world and Lost in Austen is one example of this. Amanda Price longs for the romance of Jane Austen’s world and is tired of her modern life. One day, she discovers a secret passageway in her bathroom that leads directly to the Bennett’s home, and Amanda and Elizabeth Bennett accidentally trade worlds. Amanda disrupts the plot of Pride and Prejudice by creating new marriages and Mr. Darcy even falls in love with her. Meanwhile, in present day, Elizabeth gets a job and discovers the internet. Will Elizabeth ever find her way back to Mr. Darcy and all will be right in the world of Austen? You’ll have stop by the library and get the movie to find out.
In Saving Juliet by Suzanne Selfors, Mimi Wallingford has the starring role in her family’s production of Romeo and Juliet on Broadway. There’s only one problem. She would do just about anything to get away from her family and their acting company. In a parallel universe, in Shakespeare’s time, Juliet Verona is being forced into a marriage with someone she doesn’t love, and would do almost anything to avoid her betrothed. When Mimi gets her wish to escape and is transported back in time with her hunky co-star Tony, she meets the real Juliet and starts to believe Shakespeare’s original ending may not be the best for everyone involved.
Some authors are well-known for their work with retellings and simply have too many titles to list. Donna Jo Napoli has close to ten titles that center around fairy tales. Featuring stories such as Beauty and the Beast, The Pied Piper of Hamlin, and Rumpelstiltskin, Napoli’s writings weave stories from points of view and settings far removed from the originals. Robin McKinley has also written several retellings, favoring the Beauty and the Beast and Sleeping Beauty tales. With the current popularity of retellings, chances are one of your favorite authors may have written one. Check for one at Rowan Public Library today!
Sunday, April 18, 2010
Library Notes/April 15, 2010
Dara L. Cain
Stomp into a First-Rate Children’s Book
Boys and girls alike are fascinated with dinosaurs. There is just something intriguing about the prehistoric animals that roamed the earth millions of years ago. Mentioned below are some notable dinosaur books that are sure to captivate any child’s attention and are available at the Rowan Public Library.
Ten Terrible Dinosaurs by Paul Stickland is a fun and educational dinosaur counting book for young children. Count back from ten to one as the silly dinosaurs in the story stomp, play, swing, and dance until at long last only one slumberous dinosaur remains. Children will be so taken with the colorful dinosaurs and their mischievous ways that they may not even realize they are learning subtraction.
While purchasing donuts at the store a young boy’s dreams come true when he learns that today only every store is giving away a real dinosaur with each purchase. Things couldn’t be more perfect until the young boy realizes that he must come up with an innovative way to convince his mother to let him keep his new dinosaur friends in the picture book When Dinosaurs Came with Everything by Elise Broach.
Jamie and his friend Tom discover a cave that transports them into a prehistoric world filled with dinosaurs in the book Attack of the Tyrannosaurus. Join them in this action pact story and they encounter a friendly wannanosaurus to the frightful Tyrannosaurus Rex who can’t wait to devour the two young boys. To learn of their daring escape and to experience more adventures with Jamie and Tom be sure to read the chapter books in the Dinosaur Cove series by Rex Stone.
If your child loves getting their hands on factual information about dinosaurs here are some great titles that won’t disappoint. Dinosaur Days is an easy reader book by Joyce Milton. This book provides a simple introduction to specific dinosaurs including the popular Ankylosaurus, Brontosaurus, and Stegosaurus. What makes this book accessible to children is the large type font, the phonetic pronunciation of the dinosaurs, and the large illustrations that accompany the text.
After reading Dinosaurs! by Gail Gibbons children will be familiar with the amazing theories surrounding dinosaur extinction, their unique characteristics, and their diverse habitats. They will also learn about the helpful clues that dinosaur fossils have provided to paleontologists about dinosaur eggs, nests, their babies, what they ate and much more.
Sure to be an eye catcher is the book Extreme Dinosaurs written by Robert Mash with the yellow glass dinosaur eye embedded in its cover. This appealing book doesn’t stop there as children will be immersed in this colorful and interactive book with its pull-tabs, flaps, and foldouts full of detailed information. A dinosaur quiz is also provided towards the end of the book to test your knowledge.
Dara L. Cain
Stomp into a First-Rate Children’s Book
Boys and girls alike are fascinated with dinosaurs. There is just something intriguing about the prehistoric animals that roamed the earth millions of years ago. Mentioned below are some notable dinosaur books that are sure to captivate any child’s attention and are available at the Rowan Public Library.
Ten Terrible Dinosaurs by Paul Stickland is a fun and educational dinosaur counting book for young children. Count back from ten to one as the silly dinosaurs in the story stomp, play, swing, and dance until at long last only one slumberous dinosaur remains. Children will be so taken with the colorful dinosaurs and their mischievous ways that they may not even realize they are learning subtraction.
While purchasing donuts at the store a young boy’s dreams come true when he learns that today only every store is giving away a real dinosaur with each purchase. Things couldn’t be more perfect until the young boy realizes that he must come up with an innovative way to convince his mother to let him keep his new dinosaur friends in the picture book When Dinosaurs Came with Everything by Elise Broach.
Jamie and his friend Tom discover a cave that transports them into a prehistoric world filled with dinosaurs in the book Attack of the Tyrannosaurus. Join them in this action pact story and they encounter a friendly wannanosaurus to the frightful Tyrannosaurus Rex who can’t wait to devour the two young boys. To learn of their daring escape and to experience more adventures with Jamie and Tom be sure to read the chapter books in the Dinosaur Cove series by Rex Stone.
If your child loves getting their hands on factual information about dinosaurs here are some great titles that won’t disappoint. Dinosaur Days is an easy reader book by Joyce Milton. This book provides a simple introduction to specific dinosaurs including the popular Ankylosaurus, Brontosaurus, and Stegosaurus. What makes this book accessible to children is the large type font, the phonetic pronunciation of the dinosaurs, and the large illustrations that accompany the text.
After reading Dinosaurs! by Gail Gibbons children will be familiar with the amazing theories surrounding dinosaur extinction, their unique characteristics, and their diverse habitats. They will also learn about the helpful clues that dinosaur fossils have provided to paleontologists about dinosaur eggs, nests, their babies, what they ate and much more.
Sure to be an eye catcher is the book Extreme Dinosaurs written by Robert Mash with the yellow glass dinosaur eye embedded in its cover. This appealing book doesn’t stop there as children will be immersed in this colorful and interactive book with its pull-tabs, flaps, and foldouts full of detailed information. A dinosaur quiz is also provided towards the end of the book to test your knowledge.
Saturday, April 10, 2010
Library Notes
Erika Kosin
Poetry can be entertaining and educational for children
April has been hailed as National Poetry month since 1996 and as many celebrate poetry’s place in literature lets take a look at the types of poetry that are meant for children. Children are exposed to the rhythms and rhymes of the English Language early on in the form of Nursery Rhymes. Children are drawn to the beat and the silliness these rhymes have to offer and the lyrical nature of these rhymes help them develop the language skills necessary to succeed in school. From the silly and nonsensical stylings of Shel Silverstein’s Where the Sidewalk Ends and Falling Up to the introduction of Shakespeare and the rhythms of his prose, poetry offers the opportunity for children of all ages to increase their vocabulary through words not regularly heard by the child being used to make a rhyme. While many poems may be above the child’s comprehension level, reading poems with them may help develop language skills through the rhythm of the words and there are poetry books available for every age, level and taste. Here are some poetry books that may speak to children and their parents.
Runny Babbit by Shel Silverstein – while most adults may be aware of other poetry books by this author, many may not know of this little gem. This book is a collection of poems that moves consonants around under the pretence that animals use language differently then humans. Not only are the poems amusing but children may like the challenge of figuring out how the words have been changed.
Awful Ogre’s Awful Day by Jack Prelutsky – A series of poems that make up a day in the life of the awful Ogre, each describing a different aspect of his day. Since some of the entries are on the gross and silly side, this collection of poems has great boy appeal. It also contains humorous illustrations by Paul O. Zelinsky.
Poetry for Young People: Maya Angelou edited by Edwin Graves Wilson, PH.D – This collection of Maya Angelou’s famous poems, serves as a rewarding introduction to the more serious side of poetry. It contains a brief biography of the poet’s life, a brief explanation of each poem, and definitions of the words used that may be unfamiliar to children. A great way to introduce children to poetry of a more serious nature.
Poetry Speaks to Children edited by Elise Paschen – This collection of poems with child appeal includes poems from famous poets such as Emily Dickinson, William Shakespeare, Robert Frost, and Langston Hughes as well as a poetic excerpt from the book The Fellowship of the Ring by J.R.R. Tolkien. The poems in this collection range from serious to silly making this book a great introduction to many great poets. As an added bonus this book includes an accompanying CD containing tracks of some of the poems with quite a few being read by the poet themselves.
Erika Kosin
Poetry can be entertaining and educational for children
April has been hailed as National Poetry month since 1996 and as many celebrate poetry’s place in literature lets take a look at the types of poetry that are meant for children. Children are exposed to the rhythms and rhymes of the English Language early on in the form of Nursery Rhymes. Children are drawn to the beat and the silliness these rhymes have to offer and the lyrical nature of these rhymes help them develop the language skills necessary to succeed in school. From the silly and nonsensical stylings of Shel Silverstein’s Where the Sidewalk Ends and Falling Up to the introduction of Shakespeare and the rhythms of his prose, poetry offers the opportunity for children of all ages to increase their vocabulary through words not regularly heard by the child being used to make a rhyme. While many poems may be above the child’s comprehension level, reading poems with them may help develop language skills through the rhythm of the words and there are poetry books available for every age, level and taste. Here are some poetry books that may speak to children and their parents.
Runny Babbit by Shel Silverstein – while most adults may be aware of other poetry books by this author, many may not know of this little gem. This book is a collection of poems that moves consonants around under the pretence that animals use language differently then humans. Not only are the poems amusing but children may like the challenge of figuring out how the words have been changed.
Awful Ogre’s Awful Day by Jack Prelutsky – A series of poems that make up a day in the life of the awful Ogre, each describing a different aspect of his day. Since some of the entries are on the gross and silly side, this collection of poems has great boy appeal. It also contains humorous illustrations by Paul O. Zelinsky.
Poetry for Young People: Maya Angelou edited by Edwin Graves Wilson, PH.D – This collection of Maya Angelou’s famous poems, serves as a rewarding introduction to the more serious side of poetry. It contains a brief biography of the poet’s life, a brief explanation of each poem, and definitions of the words used that may be unfamiliar to children. A great way to introduce children to poetry of a more serious nature.
Poetry Speaks to Children edited by Elise Paschen – This collection of poems with child appeal includes poems from famous poets such as Emily Dickinson, William Shakespeare, Robert Frost, and Langston Hughes as well as a poetic excerpt from the book The Fellowship of the Ring by J.R.R. Tolkien. The poems in this collection range from serious to silly making this book a great introduction to many great poets. As an added bonus this book includes an accompanying CD containing tracks of some of the poems with quite a few being read by the poet themselves.
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