Women Writers & Publishers Weekly

November 10, 2009

A good deal of heat has been generated among book aficianados by the Publisher’s Weekly Best Books of 2009 list.   This list is the editors’ choice of the major publishing trade magazine which has significant influence over what books get stocked in book stores, reviewed,  purchased and read.  Not one of the top 10 books in their list was written by a woman, not this year’s contributions by such literary luminaries as A.S. Byatt, Margaret Atwood, Alice Munro or Rita Dove.  None of those from popular writers Diana Gabaldon, Barbara Kingsolver,  Sara Paretsky or Kathyrn Stockett.  None of the important nonfiction of Gail Collins,  Sheryl WuDunn, Rebecca Solnit or Sara Maitland.

The 2009 Man Booker International Prize, the Booker Prize and the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction all went to women writers (Munro, Hilary Mantel and Elizabeth Strout), so it’s not like women aren’t writing great books.

Publisher’s Weekly acknowledged that their (subjective) choices didn’t produce “the most politically correct” list (Huffington Post, 10.29.09).   Does politically incorrect mean male bias?

Fortunately, Women in Literature and Literary Arts (WILLA) is taking up the gauntlet.  They’ve created The WILLA List Wiki (sort of like a small version of Wikipedia, the public can contribute directly to it) to list books written by women authors in 2009.  There are some great books listed though the list is quite long, and I certainly don’t recognize all of the authors or titles.  I have found a good source of reading ideas for 2010.

What are your favorite authors, female or male, of 2009?  Leave a comment and let us know.


Local poet Phil Metres

October 26, 2009

Phil Metres Poet and teacher Phil Metres will present a Master Poets’ Class at the Library on Wednesday, Nov. 4 at 7 p.m. Adults and high school students interested in listening to, writing and reading poetry are welcome to participate.

Phil is a much-published poet and associate professor of English at John Carroll University.  His teaching interests include creative writing, poetry, American poetry and the poetry of war and peace.

Phil writes poetry about poetry:

If you are sitting in an exit row & you cannot understand
this poem, or cannot see well enough to follow
these instructions, please tell a literary critic. Poems are
heavy, awkward to lift, push, pull, and maneuver.
Because of this, and for the safety of all
Harold Bloom requires that we seat qualified readers
next to poems. If a poem loses pressure, an idea
will be released from the overhead compartment.
Make sure to write down the idea before
you attempt to assist others with their ideas. Once again,
thank you for reading this poem. I know you have
many choices and appreciate your choosing this one.

(used by permission of the poet)

More of Phil’s poetry can be enjoyed at http://www.philipmetres.com/content/view/16/44/ or by coming to the Nov. 4  Master Class.


Back to School: Help With Writing Papers

September 22, 2009

In my last Back to School post,  I described some electronic databases useful for research.  After the research comes the writing.  Need some help with the writing process?  Can’t remember what is supposed to be part of the outline? Trying to create a good thesis statement or do you not remember whether it should be to, too or two in that sentence?

Purdue University has a top-notch online website called the Online Writing Lab (OWL) with writing resources and instruction available to everyone.  There’s a significant, and really useful, section devoted to grades 7 through 12 and another substantial section on professional writing (job-related) as well as the college-level materials one would expect.  It’s almost like having a writing tutor on your desktop!

Next in the series: Writing the Bibliography.


New Anisfield-Wolf Award Winner: Louise Erdrich

September 10, 2009

Congratulations to one of my favorite writers, Louise Erdrich, who won the Anisfield-Wolf Award this evening at the Cleveland Play House.  This award recognizes excellence in writing that contribute to our understanding of racism and our appreciation of cultural diversity.  Erdrich won this award in recognition of her outstanding novel, The Plague of Doves, along with Nam Le for his collection of short stories, The Boat, Annette Gordon-Reed for The Hemingses of Monticello and Paule Marshall for Outstanding Life Time Achievement.

Henry Louis Gates, one of the judges for the award, describes these works as “collectively they share an unyielding faith in the essential humanity of their subjects”.  This is very much what I appreciate about all of Erdrich’s many novels and other books, along with her humor, her complex and nuanced characters and her wild story lines.

I invite you to check out and enjoy The Plague of Doves and the rest of Erdrich’s many rich novels (may I particularly recommend The Last Report on the Miracles at Little No Horse?).

Book Cover


2008/05
Harper
0060515120
Check Our Catalog
The Plague of Doves
By Erdrich, Louise
BookPage Notable Title

In this multi generational tour-de-force of sin, redemption, murder, and vengeance (Publishers Weekly), a senseless and horrific crime in 1911 forever changes the lives of several families living in and around Pluto, North Dakota, a white town on the far western edge of an Ojibwe reservation.


Louise Erdrich’s mesmerizing new novel, her first in almost three years, centers on a compelling mystery. The unsolved murder of a farm family haunts the small, white, off-reservation town of Pluto, North Dakota. The vengeance exacted for this crime and the subsequent distortions of truth transform the lives of Ojibwe living on the nearby reservation and shape the passions of both communities for the next generation. The descendants of Ojibwe and white intermarry, their lives intertwine; only the youngest generation, of mixed blood, remains unaware of the role the past continues to play in their lives.

Evelina Harp is a witty, ambitious young girl, part Ojibwe, part white, who is prone to falling hopelessly in love. Mooshum, Evelina’s grandfather, is a seductive storyteller, a repository of family and tribal history with an all-too-intimate knowledge of the violent past. Nobody understands the weight of historical injustice better than Judge Antone Bazil Coutts, a thoughtful mixed blood who witnesses the lives of those who appear before him, and whose own love life reflects the entire history of the territory. In distinct and winning voices, Erdrich’s narrators unravel the stories of different generations and families in this corner of North Dakota. Bound by love, torn by history, the two communities’ collective stories finally come together in a wrenching truth revealed in the novel’s final pages.

“The Plague of Doves” is one of the major achievements of Louise Erdrich’s considerable oeuvre, a quintessentially American story and the most complex and original of her books.

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Reference Gem #3

June 10, 2009

Today’s amazing Reference find is The Encyclopedia of Earth: a Complete Visual Guide published by University of California Press in 2008.

Encyclopedia of Earth

This one-volume encyclopedia is gorgeous! There are stunning photographs and illustrations throughout the book.   Topics, developed by international experts, include Birth (the history of the planet), Fire (the interior of this ball of rock), Land, Air, Water and Humans.  Throughout you’ll find charts, diagrams and cut-aways that make challenging concepts clear.  The text is in small chunks of fascinating tidbits of information.

This new item in our Reference collection will be useful for school projects or anyone looking for a brief, clear explanation of a basic concept related to geology, weather, astronomy, oceanography, the environment, human ecology and anything else related to earth science or natural history.  But most of all, this is a beautiful book to browse through on a hot or rainy afternoon.  Come by the Reference desk; we’ll pull it for you and you can find a comfy chair to spend the afternoon!


If you like Dan Brown…

May 22, 2009

The movie “Angels and Demons,” based on Dan Brown’s bestselling book, hit theaters last weekend.  The movie’s release has increased demand for Brown’s novels.  If you are looking for something to read while you wait, or if you have read Brown’s books and are looking for something similar, try these books.

The Last Cato  Matilde Asensi

 The Templar Legacy  Steve Berry

 The Rule of Four  Ian Caldwell

 The Genesis Code  John Case

 A Finer End  Deborah Crombie

 Foucault’s Pendulum  Umberto Eco

 Codex  Lev Grossman

 The Historian  Elizabeth Kostova

 The Last Templar  Raymond Khoury

 Labyrinth  Kate Mosse

 The Brotherhood of the Holy Shroud  Julia Navarro

 Daughter of God  Lewis Perdue

 Seven Deadly Wonders  Matthew Reilly

 Map of Bones  James Rollins

 The Secret Supper  Javier Sierra

 The Confessor  Daniel Silva

 

And don’t forget to watch for his new novel, The Lost Symbol, to be published on September 15, 2009!


Need ideas for your next read?

May 5, 2009

Summer will be here before you know it, so it is not too early to start thinking about what books you would like to read at the beach or in your garden.  We are compiling lists of books by author, genre, and themes on a regular basis.  We will feature each list at the Reference Desk.  Feel free to let us know what might interest you.  Here is one of our recent lists, perfect for a light-hearted summer read.

If you like light-hearted or humorous mysteries, try these authors…

Donna Andrews

 M.C. Beaton

 Dorothy Cannell

 Jill Churchill

 Susan Conant

 Mary Daheim

 Diane Mott Davidson

 Janet Evanovich

 Joanne Fluke

 Dorothy Gilman

 Charlaine Harris

 Carolyn Hart

 Alexander McCall Smith

 Tamar Myers

 Sarah Strohmeyer

 Donald Westlake


Reference Gem # 2

May 1, 2009

If you’ve ever read an old book that describes the price of something “back in the day” or someone’s wages in days gone by (or perhaps have heard an older family member tell a story about the price of something in their childhood) and you’ve wondered what that really meant, we’ve got the reference book for you.  Actually, two volumes: The Value of a Dollar 1600 – 1865 and The Value of a Dollar 1860 – 2004.  Both books contain a wealth of information on prices, wages, per capita spending and general economic conditions during different periods of American history (each half decade during the 20th century).  A couple nuggets:

* Football great Red Grange recalled in a 1974 interview that he had supplemented his salary as a football player in the mid-1920s by working summers on an ice truck, “I’d start at six in the morning, and many a day I’d work until seven or eight a night, six days a week.  We got five dollars a day until the union came in and upped our salary to $37.50 a week.”

* In 1901 the average salary for a public school teacher was $337.  That was the equivalent of only $6740 in 2000 dollars.   Imagine living on that!

These two volumes are beautifully printed and easy to read.  Each historical era is described with a background narrative;  a “historical snapshot” which may include old ads, quotes, excerpts of letters or magazine articles or interviews;  tables of selected incomes drawn from advertisements; investments; average wages for a range of jobs; and prices for a variety of foods and other common consumer goods.  The text is supplemented with old black and white photographs and line drawings.  Besides finding particular pieces of information such as the approximate original cost of an old item or for research in social or economic history, these books are simply fun to browse through.  You can find them in our Reference collection at R338.5 Value.

And here’s an online calculator to Compute the Relative Value of a U.S. Dollar Amount, 1774 to the Present.


Reference Gems # 1

April 28, 2009

This is the first in an occasional series on Reference Gems.  We have all these marvelous books in our Reference collection that don’t get much use, probably because our patrons don’t notice them over in Reference (and sometimes, truth to tell,  we staff forget to use them).  So I’m going to pull some of them out, shine them up a bit and show them off.

Today’s Gem is the Statistical Abstract of the United States: 2009.  This is the go-to-reference, complements of the U.S. Census Bureau, for all kinds of data regarding the U.S., it’s people, cities, towns, government bodies, economy and on and on.  If you’re writing a school paper,  a business plan, a letter to the editor, doing strategic planning for an organization, or just curious, this is the book you want to curl up with.  You’ll find out everything you want to know about U.S. population (age, sex, race, states, metropolitan areas, cities, mobility, immigration, ancestry, language, marital status, religion),  births, deaths, marriages and divorces, health, employment,  educational attainment, crime rates, government finances, national security, the labor force, income, poverty, wealth, prices, business, agriculture, utilities, transportation, etc., etc., etc., etc.  Lots and lots of stats that together form a remarkably useful portrait of our country and the factual basis you need for the argument you’re making.

We also have a copy of State and Metropolitan Area Data Book: 2006, the latest issue available.  This brings some of the data down to Ohio and the Cleveland-Metropolitan-Akron statistical area (and others around the country).  For both books, the data is drawn from a wide variety of public and private sources and some data is more recent than other data.  All of it is the most recent as of publication.

A limited set  of this data at the American Factfinder website.  The Avon Lake page is here.  Unfortunately, the information at this level is from 2000.

The Statistical Abstract of the United States: 2009 and the State and Metropolitan Area Data Book are found in our Reference collection at R317.3.   You’re welcome to look through the collection yourself, or ask any librarian at the Reference desk for assistance.  We’re here to help you find the information you need!


Teen Read Week 2008

October 13, 2008

Area teens will be reading for the fun of it as Avon Lake Public Library celebrates the eleventh annual Teen Read Week(TM), October 12 – 18, 2008. They join thousands of other libraries, schools and bookstores across the country who are encouraging teens to celebrate this year’s theme, “Books with Bite @ your library®.” Teen Read Week(TM) is the national adolescent literacy initiative of the Young Adult Library Services Association (YALSA), the fastest-growing division of the American Library Association. This year’s theme encourages teens to read a wide variety of books and graphic novels, from animals to vampires to cooking, just “for the fun of it.”

Stop by the Young Adult Department and check out our “Books with Bite” display, featuring novels about vampires.  Be sure to tell us about your favorite book for a chance to win a prize.  Entry forms are available at the YA Desk.  Happy Reading!!