Showing posts with label Staff Picks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Staff Picks. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 16, 2015

Awesome YA Reads!

Wondering what to read now that you've finished Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins? Here are some awesome young adult novels you might like if you devoured the second installment of the Hunger Games trilogy...

Book Jacket for: Mockingjay

Mockingjay
by Suzanne Collins
YA SF Coll.S

Two-time Hunger Games survivor Katniss Everdeen is targeted by a vengeful Capitol that vows to make Katniss and all of District 12 pay for the current unrest.

Book Jacket for: Shovel ready : a novel

Shovel Ready
by Adam Sternberg
MYS Ster.A

Working as a hit man on the ravaged streets of New York City after a dirty bomb is unleashed on Times Square, Spademan takes an assignment to kill the daughter of a powerful evangelist only to discover that his mark holds a shocking secret and that his client hides a more sinister agenda.

Book Jacket for: The circle : a novel

The Circle
by Dave Eggers
FIC Egge.D

Hired to work for the Circle, the world's most powerful Internet company, Mae HOlland begins to question her luck as life beyond her job grows distant, a strange encounter with a colleague leaves her shaken, and her role at the Circle becomes increasingly public.

Book Jacket for: Divergent

Divergent
by Veronica Roth
YA SF Roth.V

In a future Chicago, sixteen-year-old Beatrice Prior must choose among five predetermined factions to define her identity for the rest of her life, a decision made more difficult when she discovers that she is an anomaly who does not fit into any one group, and that the society she lives in is not perfect after all.

Book Jacket for: The book thief

The Book Thief
by Markus Zusak
YA FIC Zusa.M

Trying to make sense of the horrors of World War II, Death relates the story of Liesel, a young German girl whose book-stealing and story-telling talents help sustain her family and the Jewish man they are hiding, as well as their neighbors.

The Island of the Blue Dolphin

The Island of the Blue Dolphin
by Scott O'Dell

This book is based on the true story of an American Indian woman who lived alone on the island of San Nicholas off the coast of California for eighteen years. In this fictionalized account of her life, Karana learns to hunt (overcoming the fear instilled in her by her father that women should never use weapons), make shelters, fences, shelves, clothing etc. But most of all, she learns to cope with the enormous loneliness and fear. One way in which Karana copes with this is by developing an empathy for the animals around her, so much so that by the end of exile the only animals she eats are fish and shellfish. She even uses kelp rather than seal sinew to tie things together. Karana learns to love her beautiful but desolate home. When Karana is finally rescued at the end of the book, one actually feels sadness as well as joy for her, something special has come to an end. Scott O'Dell wrote this book when he was feeling despair over the treatment of the wildlife and environment ear his home in California. The result is a beautiful, moving book that has stood the test of time. This book is available in our juvenile fiction section.

Marian

The Witch of Blackbird Pond
by Elizabeth George Speare

This book is a classic children's novel, and for good reason. The author was a student of history and she carefully weaves a believable web of historical authenticity. The main character Kitty is a young woman who grew up with relative freedom and wealth on a Caribbean island. Circumstances leave her without money or relatives, save for an aunt and uncle she has in the Puritan colony of Connecticut. The novel follows her first year in the colony and her adaptation to her new environment. There is intrigue and romance and plenty of action, but also a lot of interior reflection which I did not find the least bit boring. The "witch" refers to an old Quaker woman who everyone thought of as a witch, but in whom Kitty finds a true and fast friend. Kitty is not only a likable protagonist, but also someone who grows in maturity and concern for others. This book is available in our juvenile fiction section.

Marian

Saturday, July 18, 2015

Biographies at the Library

Biographies at the Library



A lot of people like reading about people. That's one reason that the library's fiction sections are very popular. But what if you prefer factual books about real people? Where should you look?

If you would like to browse, then you can head up to our biography section, which is located on the second floor of the library. Biographies are shelved in the 920s and 921s. Books in the 920s tell about the lives of more than one person. Sometimes the people are a couple (e.g., "Elizabeth and Philip:
The Untold Story of the Queen of England and Her Prince" by Charles Higham and Roy Moseley), are members of the same family ("The Fitzgeralds and the Kennedys," by Doris Kearns Goodwin), or share something else in common, such as the same profession ("Women of the
World: The Great Foreign Correspondents" by Julia Edwards), or same ethnic group ("Stars of David: Prominent Jews Talk About Being Jewish" by Abigail Pogrebin).

Individual biographies are located in the 921s. These are arranged by last name, so if you are interested in biographies about a specific person (say, Thomas Jefferson), you can go to the 921s and then look for their name (the spine labels for books on Jefferson start with 921 J).

What if you don't find the person you are looking for in the 921s? First of all, search for their name in our online catalog. Sometimes books have information about the life of a person but don't quite qualify as biographies. This can be especially true for celebrities or sports figures--"Elvis Presley: A Southern Life" is located in the 921s with the other biographies, while "Elvis: The King Remembered" is in the 782s.


If you are having difficulty finding what you are looking for, just ask at the reference desk. The librarian there can help you track down a book, find an encyclopedia with biographical information, or--if the library does not have any information on the person you are interested in--order a biography through interlibrary loan.

submitted by Elizabeth Johnston

Wednesday, July 8, 2015

“THE MONOPOLISTS” by Mary Pilon


“THE MONOPOLISTS” by Mary Pilon






Have you ever wondered how “Monopoly”—one of the world’s most popular board games—came into existence?  The folklore surrounding the game is that it was invented during the depression by an unemployed Pennsylvanian by the name of Charles Darrow.  But the truth is that a version of this game was invented in the early 1900’s by a liberal feminist by the name of Lizzie Magie. “The Landlord’s Game” was the name she christened her patented creation and adaptations of this game were played by various groups long before the 1930’s.  The book “The Monopolists” by Mary Pilon tells the complicated and politically-charged history of everyone’s favorite board game.



This book has been carefully researched by the author and illustrated how the basic philosophy behind the game has been altered by different players over the years.  The game has certainly been played and enjoyed by ardent capitalists but has also been embraced by left-wingers beginning during the Progressive Era at the turn of the century and continuing to the present day.  One of these individuals, a professor named Ralph Anspach, went so far as to try to market his own version of the board game giving it the title “Anti-Monopoly”.  As you might guess, this endeavor resulted in lengthy and torturous litigation.



I certainly hope this has intrigued you enough to check out a copy of this book to learn the whole story concerning the evolution of this game.  We have several copies available within our Berkeley County library system.  Parts of the book read like a human interest story and parts of the book read like great detective fiction.  It is truly a fascinating story!





David Porterfield

Musselman Branch Librarian

Saturday, April 4, 2015

Looking for something to read?



Reader’s Advisory Databases & Websites


Are you looking for something to read? Do you have a favorite genre?  Do you need help finding a title?  The following databases and websites have links on the library’s website under “e-Resources” and then under the database categories of “Reader’s Advisory” and “Literature Review”:

NoveList Plus has both fiction and nonfiction reading lists separated by subject or genre for different age levels and also lists read-alikes for popular titles;

eSequels.com: The  Online Guide to Series Fiction lists the most popular series, and it indexes character, location and subject, as well as author and title, so that you can identify a series that you may recall only vaguely;

What’s Next?  Books in Series allows one to search fiction by series or title and by the reader’s age category for a variety of popular fiction genre;

\Books and Authors has genre title lists, best-selling and award-winning titles, and title recommendations by experts;

Reader’s Advice.com lets one browse fiction books by big-name authors and also offers reader’s advisory tips and sources.

So, the next time you are at a loss for something to read, take a quick look at some of these database and website links to help you to make a decision.  Happy Reading!!



Friday, April 3, 2015

Cinderella Picture Book Adaptations


 Does your family have Cinderella fever? Between the release of Into the Woods in December and a new Cinderella movie earlier this month, the work-weary princess is enjoying renewed popularity! If you want more Cinderella, check out some of these picture book adaptations available in our system.

Adelita: A Mexican Cinderella Story by Tomie dePaolo.
Adelita's stepmother forces her to work day and night and forbids her to attend Javier's wonderful party. Is it possible that her dreams will come true, anyway? The story is in English with Spanish phrases throughout.

Ella Bella Ballerina and Cinderella by James Mayhew.
Ella Bella loves ballet and is enchanted by the story of Cinderella, but she didn't know she might end up in the story! This picture book ends with the Cinderella ballet.

Domitila : a Cinderella tale from the Mexican tradition by Jewell Reinhart Coburn.
In this Mexican version of the story, Domitila has no fairy godmother or glass slipper; instead, her own excellent qualities are all the magic she needs to make her dreams come true.

Cinderelephant by Emma Dodd.
Cinderelephant's warthog cousins are as cruel to her as the stepsisters are to the original Cinderella. But with the help of a fairy godmouse, Cinderelephant might just be the belle of the ball!

Cinders: A Chicken Cinderella by Jan Brett.
All the other chickens in the flock pick on Cinders mercilessly, until her fate changes the night of the ball. This enchanting story is made even more magical by Brett's beloved illustration style.

The Way Meat Loves Salt: A Cinderella Story from the Jewish Tradition by Nina Jaffe.
In this version of the story, a rabbi's daughter is sent away from home. No fairy godmother here--instead, the Prophet Elijah comes to her aid. Will the rabbi's daughter have a happy ending?

Cinder Edna by Ellen B. Jacks.
We all know about Cinderella, but what about her neighbor, Cinder Edna? Her life is a lot like Cinderella's, but she feels much differently about it--which Cindy will end up happier? Kevin O'Malley's illustrations make this delightful book even funnier.

Rufferella by Vanessa Gill-Brown.
The little girl in this story isn't interested in being a princess—she idolizes the Fairy Godmother. Her dog plays the role of Cinderella, but things don't go exactly as she intended!

Cinder-Elly by Frances Minters.
This is a rap adaptation. Instead of yearning to go to the ball, Cinder-Elly wants to go to a basketball game. Will she get to meet the famous player Prince Charming?


Monday, March 30, 2015

American Ghost--Book Review















American Ghost by Hannah Nordhaus is a new non-fiction book that is part family history, part psychic research.  The author becomes intrigued at a young age by stories of her great-great-grandmother, Julia Staab, haunting her former family home in Santa Fe, New Mexico.  Nordhaus becomes determined not so much to figure out whether or not a ghost really exists, though she is drawn to that mystery from time to time, but to uncover the real life feelings and problems experienced by her ancestor.  What unfolds is an amazing story of the Jewish presence in the Old Wild West, what happens eventually to the family left behind in Germany, and an intimate personal history of a family.  Nordhaus discovers that although her great-great-grandfather was not the monster ghost hunters made him out to be, he did have demons of his own that may have led him to ignore his wife. In the end, Julia Staab remains somewhat out of reach, because she left no surviving writings of her own, but what is obvious is that she did lead a life, a strange combination of a passionate and sheltered one that must have been common to women of that era. I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in families, American history, Jewish history, women's history, and psychic research.  It is available in our New Non-fiction section under 133.109 Nord.H


Submitted by Marian Bieniek

America's Great Hiking Trails by Karen Berger--Review







Book Review: America’s Great Hiking Trails, by Karen Berger; photography by Bart Smith
Celebrating the eleven National Scenic Trails in America, this volume takes the reader through forty-nine states and eight national parks. Literally tens of millions of tourists and hikers visit these trails each year, some of which wind through the country’s most scenic natural wonders and virtually every major ecosystem in America.  
Two of these trails are right in our own backyard:  the well-known Appalachian Trail and the lesser- known Potomac Heritage Trail.  I have hiked on parts of both of these trails, although I was not aware that I had been on the Potomac Heritage Trail until I looked at this book.  The Potomac Heritage Trail follows a combination of several multi-use paths including the Mount Vernon Trail, the Chesapeake & Ohio Canal Towpath, and the Great Allegheny Passage.
The other nine trails mentioned in the book include the New England Trail, the Florida Trail, the Natchez Trace Trail, the North Country Trail, the Ice Age Trail, the Continental Divide Trail, the Arizona Trail, the Pacific Northwest Trail, and the Pacific Crest Trail.
This beautifully illustrated book about America’s iconic recreational trails is currently located in the Reference Department at the Martinsburg Public Library.

Submitted by Keith Hammersla

Friday, March 13, 2015

Ballroom versus Follies





Ballroom versus Follies

The book Ballroom by Alice Simpson was unofficially given to me as my “Blind Date With a Book” by my assistant branch manager.  I use the word “unofficially” because I did not fill out the required dating profile and it was not presented to me in wrapping paper.  However my assistant branch manager read the blurb about the book and thought that the themes in this book were similar to the theme of Stephen Sondheim’s musical  Follies—one of my favorite musicals and one that I have had the privilege of directing locally.

Ballroom and Follies do have similar themes and I basically did enjoy the book—however I didn’t like it as much as the musical FolliesBallroom tells the intermingling stories of a group of strangers who are united by a desire to escape their complicated and unhappy lives, if only for a few hours each Sunday evening, in a dilapidated Manhattan dance hall on the verge of closure.  Follies brings a group of past performers in the Weismann Follies, a musical revue (based on the Ziegfeld Follies), together for a first and last reunion at the Manhattan theatre in which they performed before it is torn down and turned into a parking lot.

The characters in both the book and the play have a “lost souls” quality about them and are searching for happiness and human connection.  In both works the journey is not easy.  However in the musical, the principal characters leave the reunion somewhat shaken by what they encountered during this evening of ghosts and reminiscences—but they all leave the theatre ready to face another day.  

Follies is ultimately about survival and letting go of the past.  Ballroom is not as grittily optimistic as Follies.  Some of the journeys of the main characters end tragically and ambivalently.  It is more of an in-depth character study than Follies.  The only resolution that is truly optimistic is the journey of the younger couple:  Angel and Maria fulfill their dream of opening a new dance hall—“Club Paradiso”.  So I guess in this sense Follies and Ballroom do share the similar theme of letting go of the past and survival:  the dilapidated dance hall is closed—but a new dance hall is opened.


I certainly encourage everyone who enjoys looking at bygone eras and exploring how the ghosts of the past can successfully or unsuccessfully move people to “survive “ and/or “thrive” in the present, to see a production of Sondheim’s Follies and to read Alice Simpson’s Ballroom.

                      --submitted by David Porterfield



Monday, March 9, 2015

Children's Corner: The Many Faces of a Topic

Children’s Corner: The Many Faces of a Topic



Once kids get to a certain grade, projects and science and social studies fairs pop up, requiring RESEARCH.  Gasp!  Horrors!  Research needn’t be a wretched business, and here’s why.  As many of you know, the facts in our library are arranged by subject matter according to the Dewey Decimal System.  Starting with the 100s and going through the 900s, each number refers to a general subject.  While helping your kiddo get the most out of their research, make sure to look at a given topic from its many angles.  Let’s try ancient Egypt.  Here goes…
Check the 100s, containing information on, well, information.  Ancient Egypt was a giant of its time, imparting timeless knowledge that we continually reference and glean insight from.  Move over to the religion section, in the 200s.  Osiris, Isis, Ra, Set...like ancient Greece and Rome, Egyptian religion was polytheistic, a colorful sub-topic to check out.  Next the 300s which contain topics of a social nature.  Mummification was reserved only for those who could afford it, and many other cultures practiced it. 

















Now, the 400s: language.  One of the most striking language discoveries was that of Egyptian hieroglyphs, containing images that are easily recognizable today.  You’ll see the 500s contain everything science, giving us several things to look for concerning ancient Egypt.  Studies of the stars, mathematics, not to mention the climate and the famous Nile River.  The 600s contain information galore on health and technology – the pyramids!  There are several theories exploring how these massive structures were built.  And the 700s explain all about architecture, arts, and entertainment.  The ancient Egyptians were a very visual people, the images endure today; not to mention their fascinating pyramids and statues.  What could literature tell us in the 800s?  Ancient Egypt with its life-giving Nile, papyrus plants, Valley of the Kings, dusty sun-baked structures of antiquity has spawned countless poems and works of fiction.  Finally, the 900s is likely the place where one would begin researching any nation, as it is all things history.  If you begin in one place, don’t stop there; information is always there for those who look!


3.6.2015  Erin K Henry

Young Adult Award winning sci-fi





YA SKULL SESSION: EXPLORE AWARD-WINNING SCI-FI!

Science fiction literature is a fantastic platform on which to explore points of view, with its characteristic ability to explore themes ranging from morality of war, genetic experimentation, dystopias, and countless other social issues.  The genre has become increasingly popular in Young Adult literature circles, most recently with the popularity of Suzanne Collins’ The Hunger Games, James Dashner’s The Maze Runner, and James Patterson’s Maximum Ride, to name a choice few.  Character focus, as in The Hunger Games, is often on children, but the age-range is endlessly explored and applied.  Here is magnetic appeal for teens: characters of their age in fantastic situations that are often full of drama but many times credible; with adult characters, teens have the advantage of witnessing a possible adult self making life-changing decisions, at times visceral and ruinous.  Authors have long explored the morals of present-day society, its governing bodies, choices of the past, social ecology, and cultures.  Here are three classic examples, all of which won the Hugo Award for best Science Fiction Book of the Year.

Let’s start with a familiar title of late: Ender’s Game, by Orson Scott Card, brought to screen in 2013.  Published in 1985, it’s the first in the Ender Wiggin 
series of eight novels.  Andrew “Ender” Wiggin is a young prodigy living on an Earth that is threatened by extraterrestrial beings called Buggers.  As a way of mustering a competent and effective military, children are raised playing simulated war games and monitored continually.  This internal monitor tracks their aptitude for war strategy and military leadership.  Young Ender is selected, among others, to train for the upcoming battle.  His natural expertise in simulated war strategy and ability to organize his fellows into an effective unit attract attention, earning him the leading role (the General, if you will) of Earth’s child prodigy soldiers.  None of the children, however, are privy to the grand plan of their training; the repercussions are devastating.  Ender’s Game raises questions regarding personal privacy, exploitation of children, national security, and war as a means of keeping this security – all topics that were, are, and promise to remain hot.





Another sci-fi classic brought to screen (numerous times) is
Robert A Heinlein’s Starship Troopers.  


Also focused on waagainst alien bugs, Heinlein writes as Johnny Rico, an older
teen who enlisted as an interplanetary soldier.  The plot
recounts Rico’s time as a mega-soldier (think Iron Man)
in this war against the Bugs, relating his experiences on an
external and  internal levels.  The story is not all action, inviting
a larger audience and deep discussion.  Heinlein is not afraid to
use this novel as a platform for strongly stating his opinions on
the morals and philosophy of war, military order, capital
punishment, and reigns of terror and force.



Lastly, I will tell you about A Canticle for Leibowitz, by Walter M Miller
The oldest of the three, published in 1959, the story is no less current. 
Earth has suffered a nuclear holocaust and humanity is clinging to life in several disconnected and often warring regions; the story is told in three successive spaces in time meant to reflect actual times in history.  At the heart of the plot are the monks of the Order of Saint Leibowitz, striving to preserve the remnants of civilization.  They spend their days recording, sometimes sharing, and protecting the history of the human race.  Like Ender’s Game and Starship Troopers,

Leibowitz has an atmospheric and world-building story line, but Miller deftly crafts his novel close to the dark inner-workings of the human heart.  The end times, he suggests, are brought about the selfish, clutching, power-hungry actions of humanity, and it is from this angle that he spins a bleak and chillingly realistic tale of a ruined Earth.  Teens will remember this book as one of the most striking they’ve encountered.

All three of these novels are bound to provoke lively discussion, if only in one’s mind, of the morals of weapons and war, using war as a means of security, the effects of war on the individual and populace, and causes of human suffering.  Though science fiction is, in name, fiction, the questions is raises and emotions it evokes are very much real.

More oldies but goodies of the Sci-Fi lit world recommended for YA’s:
1984, by George Orwell (1949)
Brave New World, by Aldous Huxley (1932)
A Clockwork Orange, by Anthony Burgess (1962)
Fahrenheit 451, by Ray Bradbury (1953)
Out of the Silent Planet, by C. S. Lewis (Space Trilogy #1) (1938)
A Princess of Mars, by Edgar Rice Burroughs (Barsoom series #1) (1917)

3.6.2015 E K Henry

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

What's new?--book review






Good Reads from the North!


Do you enjoy Sherlock Holmes?  He never seems to go out of style. 

From movies to public television, and now primetime, network television!  Well, there is a spinoff book by Anthony Horowitz (writer of the YA Alex Rider series and Foyle’s War on PBS) that is pretty good!  Moriarty is the second Sherlock Holmes book written by Horowitz, the first being House of Silk.  Where House of Silk followed the pursuits of Holmes and Watson, Moriarty explores what really happened at Reichenbach Falls.  Holmes fans will remember that Reichenbach Falls is where Holmes and his arch enemy Moriarty tumble to their deaths… or did they?
There are multiple twists to the plot as the adventure moves from Reichenbach Falls to the streets of London and back again.  This book is a good read for anyone who loves Sherlock Holmes or just enjoys a good mystery.

-Dana Phelps

Monday, February 9, 2015

What's new?


Newbery and Caldecott Children's Book Awards--Peter Allphin


1.      John Newbery Medal – The John Newbery Medal was the very first award ever made for children’s books, it goes all the way back to 1921! It was created because back then there were no awards at all for children’s books, and the American Library Association wanted an award that would encourage the very best writers to write children’s books (most of them didn’t want to write those at the time). They named it after John Newbery because he was the very first book publisher to focus on making children’s books (and he was really good at it too). It’s given out every year to the very best children’s book written that year, and there can only be one winner each year (but they do have Newbery Honor awards for finalists that don’t win). To win, you have to follow a few rules, but they’re not too hard. First, you have to live in the United States. Second, your book can’t be only pictures, the Newbery is awarded to a book based on the words (and it has to be in English). Third, your book has to be your own work, not someone else’s. Last, your book has to be the very best book written (for children) for that entire year. There are no other rules than that, winners can be about anything, fiction or non-fiction, and any book that follows these rules can be nominated.
a.      How to Recognize Winners – Newbery winners almost always have a gold medal on the cover with the words “John Newbery Medal” on the top. It’s usually pretty big, because winning it is a big deal! At the Martinsburg Public Library, we also have stickers on the edges of the book that will tell you if a book is a winner, so you can tell just by looking at the book on the shelf! Plus, the Newbery is the most famous of all the book awards, so if you can’t tell if a book is a winner, any librarian will be able to tell you. To get you started, there’s one example of a Newbery winner right below this sentence:


O’Brien, Robert C. Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH. New York: Atheneum, 1971. 223 pages, age 8 and up.
Humans are very big, so it’s easy for us to do many things. But the life of a mouse is not so easy. Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH tells the story of Mrs. Frisby, who just so happens to be a mouse with a problem. Her husband died before the story begins, so she is alone with only her children, who depend on her to take care of them. Every year, they leave their home in a farmer’s field before he plows it up during the summer, but this year they can’t move because Timothy, Mrs. Frisby’s smallest child, is so sick that he can’t leave the house. But if they stay, their house will be destroyed with them in it! With nowhere left to turn for help, Mrs. Frisby goes to the strange group of rats that live under a rose bush nearby. The rats (who turn out to be smarter than most people) agree to help her, but they need her help too. They’ve been drawing too much attention to themselves, and need her help to escape to a place where humans will never find them. Soon Mrs. Frisby, not a brave mouse (or so she thinks) finds herself flying on the back of a crow, talking to owls (who love mice for dinner!) and even slipping sleeping powder into a ferocious cat's dinner dish! But is there enough time before the farmer’s plow destroys Mrs. Frisby’s home? Emile Coulter says “O'Brien's incredible tale, along with Zena Bernstein's appealing ink drawings, ensures that readers will never again look at alley rats and field mice in the same way.”



2.      Caldecott Medal – The Caldecott Medal is just as famous as the John Newbery Medal, but there’s a big difference between them. The Newbery is awarded to a book based on how good its story is, but the Caldecott is awarded to a book based on how good its pictures are. Before the Caldecott medal, there were no awards for the people who make the pictures for books, and the America Library Association didn’t think that was fair. So, they created an award named after the (very famous) book artist Randolph Caldecott (who lived in the 1800s), and made sure that only artists could win it. They hoped that this would encourage artists to make pictures for children’s books, just like the Newbery Medal encouraged writers to write children’s books, and it worked! The award (and some second place prizes) has been given out every year since 1937 to the book published that year that follows a few rules. First, the book has to be in English, and it has to be printed in the United States (and you have to live in the United States too). Second, to win the Caldecott Medal the drawings in your book have to be your own work, and the drawings have to be easy for kids to understand. Last, the pictures have to be good (of course) and match the story of the book really, really well. If the pictures aren’t a good match for the story, then you don’t win. This can be very difficult sometimes, but other times some artists have created winning books that don’t have any words and only tell their story through pictures!
    1. How To Recognize Winners – This one is easy; Caldecott winners have a big gold sticker on the cover, just like that picture up there. It looks a little like the Newbery Medal (they are both gold), but the Caldecott Medal has a picture of a man on a running horse, not a picture of a book like the Newbery. We make it even easier at the Martinsburg Public Library; every Caldecott winner has a green sticker on the edge, so you can see it even if it’s squished on the shelf!

Wiesner, David. Tuesday. New York: Clarion Books, 1991. No page numbers, ages 3 and up.
This sentence has more words than all of Tuesday, by David Wiesner. In fact, there are no words in Tuesday at all. None. Zero. No words. Instead, Wiesner (who has won three Caldecott Medals, only the second person to ever do that), tells his story only with pictures, and what a weird story! It starts out on a regular Tuesday night out by a pond. A bunch of frogs are sitting quietly. Suddenly, they start floating! Then they start flying! What’s going on? Follow the frogs as they explore a nearby town (and scare a bunch of people who have never seen flying frogs before), and see if you can figure it out!


Wednesday, December 17, 2014

Neil Patrick Harris--book review

In Neil Patrick Harris' _Choose Your Own Autobiography_, you are the star.
YOU are Neil Patrick Harris, and you decide how your life will go. Will you, NPH, host the Tonys four times? Will you spend your life serving sandwiches at Schlotsky's?  Will you star in Cabaret, Company, and How I Met Your Mother? The choice is yours!

As a preface, Harris notes that he was always enamored of Choose Your Own Adventure books, so he chose the format for his autobiography. I cannot claim to share his love of the format; as a child, I tended to steer clear of Choose Your Own Adventure because I worried I was missing something.
Being a fan of Neil Patrick Harris, though, I wanted to read this despite the page-flipping. I played along with the CYOA format for awhile, until I reached "The End" about three times, then went back and read sequentially.
Nothing is lost in either approach. Readers who want to just read it straight through should have no trouble; it's pretty easy to tell when you're on a chapter that didn't really happen (spoiler alert: Neil Patrick Harris has not actually died yet).

As I've mentioned before on our blog, I love celebrity autobiographies, and this one was no exception. I enjoy watching Neil Patrick Harris--I particularly love him as a Tonys host, and I was glad How I Met Your Mother didn't overshadow his stage career in this book--but I didn't know much about his life. This autobiography is candid but not graphic, and, in a refreshing change from many celebrity memoirs, free of angst; instead, Harris is plainly grateful for the many privileges and pleasures life has brought his way. Whatever pages you flip once you get it open, reading this book is definitely an adventure worth choosing.
--
Hannah Wilkes

Musselman-South Berkeley Community Library

Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Staff Picks: Box Girl

Box Girl
by Lilibet Snellings
2014

Box Girl by Lilibet Snellings is a quirky little book that is fun to read. 

Recent college graduate Snellings, unable to find a job and caught up in an unfulfilled love affair, decides to move with some of her friends to Los Angeles. Like many young people before her, she assumes she will enjoy the warm climate, sunny beaches, and eventually get some acting (or at least modeling) jobs.

Reality quickly sets in Snellings and her friends are forced to move from one outrageously expensive apartment to another and are compelled to work at a variety of very odd jobs. One of these odd jobs is as a box girl at the Standard Hotel. 

Ostensibly a work of art, the box is a large glass box, decorated differently at various times of the year, in which a young woman sits for hours at a time. She is allowed to read, sleep, and cruise the Internet, but she must not interact with or look at any of the guests or hotel staff. And yes, she is allowed to get out to use the restroom! 

At first, Snellings just considers it an odd (but easy!) job. She doesn't think about the social or sexual implications, or about any feminist objections to the "art." A job is a job, after all. But as time goes on (and she has plenty of time to think about her life and listen to those outside the box) she grows more philosophical. She finds hundreds of ways to justify the box in her mind, but admits that when one hotel guest creepily whispers to the desk clerk, "Is she for sale?" it shocks her to her core and makes her realize just how some might be perceiving her and her time in the box. 

This memoir is not just about the box, however, as she recounts many other adventures in Los Angeles, and some of the experiences prior to her move, including what led to it. Ultimately, she decides that the box is a work of art, at least in the sense that it is a reflection of the person looking at it. It can be a reflection of ugly sexism to some or fascinated curiosity to others, but always different. 

Overall, this is a thoughtful, and funny, book written by an intelligent young woman.

You can find this book in our New Section with the call number 702.81 Snel.L.

Marian
Librarian
Martinsburg Public Library

Friday, August 29, 2014

Staff Picks: A Hundred Horses

A Hundred Horses
Sarah Lean

A Hundred Horses by Sarah Lean is a book for children between the ages of eight and twelve. The main character is a girl named Nell who lives with her divorced mother in the city. Her father, an electrician, abandoned the family. Because of this, Nell feels she has to hide her interest in electronics from her mother, who is a very stressed-out working mom. 

When she has to go to a business conference over the spring holiday, Nell's mother sends Nell to stay with her sister, Nell's aunt, out in the country. At first Nell feels very uncomfortable in unfamiliar surroundings, but soon she makes friends with her aunt and cousins and the old lady who lives on a neighboring farm. 

Then enters the next important protagonist, an orphaned runaway girl named Angel. Angel is surly and unfriendly at first, but she has a way with animals, particularly horses. The way Nell and Angel devise a way to save a crippled foal and the way Nell saves Angel from going back to an unhappy foster home are blended to combine friendship, self-discovery, and just a little bit of magic! 

A really nice book with a happy and satisfying ending, it is available in our children's department with the call number JF Lean.S.

Marian 
Librarian
Martinsburg Public Library

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Staff Picks: Call the Midwife

Call the Midwife
Jennifer Worth

Call the Midwife is a unique memoir written by experienced midwife Jennifer Worth during post-World War II and set in London. A trained nurse and midwife, young Worth arrives at Nonnatus House, a midwifery practice run by dedicated nuns, to serve the underprivileged and overpopulated East End. While in service there, she meets a variety of memorable characters, including an eccentric nun, countless brave women, families with ten or more children, and downtrodden prostitutes. Through it all, she learns about herself and the meaning of life—one birth at a time.


While this memoir is often graphic and provides medical commentary in extreme detail, Worth tells her stories with great craft so that it reads like fiction. I highly recommend this memoir to anyone who is interested in midwifery, the lives and bonds of women, and/or history.


And, if you like the book, you might also enjoy the television series developed by BBC. You can find both the book and the television series (on DVD) at the Martinsburg Public Library.

Monday, June 30, 2014

Staff Picks: Kitty Genovese: The Murder, the Bystanders, the Crime that Changed America

Kitty Genovese: The Murder, the Bystanders, the Crime that Changed America
by Kevin Cook
2014

This book examines a murder that took place in Queens, New York in March of 1964. 

Kitty Genovese was murdered while returning home from work at around 3:00 AM. Although a particularly brutal murder, it may have gone relatively unnoticed except that the chief editor of the New York Times took seriously an off-hand comment from a police officer who said that there were "38 witnesses who did nothing." The editor made it headline news. 

Kevin Cook delves deeply into the police records of the time and discovers that there were in fact only six witnesses that the police tracked down, and only two who really saw what had happened. Unfortunately, they failed to act. One returned to bed and the other remained to watch, too fearful and drunk to call the police. 

Many myths surround the murder of Kitty Genovese. Some say that no one called the police during the attack. But in fact, between one and three phone calls were made. One witness, who did not speak English well, panicked when the police answered and hung up. At least one of the other phone calls was recorded and police responded but were too late.

Coming so soon after the assassination of JFK, this crime caught the conscience of a nation that felt collectively guilty about the death of their president, and enhanced the view of the time that the nation was sinking into an abyss of amoral apathy. The crime almost immediately inspired countless experiments by social psychologists, who saw their field of study finally get some recognition and publicity. To this day, Genovese's murder is discussed in social psychology textbooks all over the world.

What I particularly like about this book is that the author obviously has deep feelings of loss over the death of Kitty Genovese, wondering what she would have done with a life that held so much promise. This is not a book that sensationalizes horrible crime, but instead attempts to give some small measure of comfort to those who new Kitty Genovese.

364.152 Cook.K (new section)

Marian
Librarian
Martinsburg Public Library

Friday, May 30, 2014

Staff Picks: The Circle

The Circle
by Dave Eggers
2013


The Circle is the exhilarating novel from Dave Eggers, best-selling author of A Hologram for the King which was a finalist for the National Book Award.

Mae Holland can't believe her luck when she gets to work for the Circle, the most influential, futuristic company in the world. The Circle, run on a sprawling California campus, links users' personal emails, social media, banking, and purchasing with their universal operating system, resulting in one online identity and a new age of civility and transparency. What begins as the captivating story of one woman's ambition and idealism soon becomes a heart-racing novel of suspense, raising questions about memory, history, privacy, democracy, and the limits of human knowledge.

Anyone who enjoyed Brave New World by Alduous Huxley or 1984 by George Orwell will enjoy this book.

FIC Egge.D

Peter Allphin
Branch Manager
Hedgesville Public Library