Saturday, February 27, 2010

Librarians now cool - and also, endangered. Read about it In the new book release "This Book is Overdue", Bryan Hissong's humorous love letter to those who toil in the stacks.

Reprinted from: USA TODAY
by Craig Wilson
WESTMINSTER, Md. — Bryan Hissong is 31, happily married, and the father of a 2-year-old named Olivia. He seems quite content with his life.
But Marilyn Johnson, who is not his wife, loves him and has said so very publicly. It doesn't matter that she has never met him. Hissong is a librarian.

He doesn't look like the clichéd librarian of old. He favors plaid shirts and is sporting a beard on his babyface — but that doesn't matter to Johnson, either. She's well aware that librarians wear many disguises these days. Often they're pierced, tattooed, punk with bright blue hair. She loves them all.

Who knew librarians had become so ... cool?


Johnson is the author of the new This Book Is Overdue! How Librarians and Cybrarians Can Save Us All (Harper, 272 pp., $24.99), a humorous, unabashed love letter to the men and women who used to toil quietly in stacks but now circulate in cyberspace.
"They're smart and they're funny and they totally get it," says Johnson, whose respect for librarians grew tenfold when she was researching The Dead Beat, her acclaimed 2006 book on obituaries and obit writers. "They're not saints, but ethically and morally and every other good way, they're professionals. They're good people."
And possibly endangered.
"It turns out this is a good time to point out that we're shooting ourselves in the foot if we let these people go from our lives," says Johnson, 55, who lives in New York's Hudson Valley. "We need them more than ever."
The reasons are simple and multiple: "The middle class is squeezed and needs libraries more, information is multiplying at an alarming rate so we need librarians more, and the jobless are streaming to libraries in droves," she says.
Overall, the use of public libraries is up by 6% over last year, according to the Library Journal, while states and municipalities are drastically cutting back on aid to libraries, causing many to close. New York has just proposed its fifth cut to state library spending in two years. Ohio libraries were threatened with up to 50% cuts in aid last summer before thousands of patrons protested to legislators, who then cut state funding by 18%.
Hissong's boss, Lynn Wheeler, 61, director of the Carroll County (Md.) Public Library system and a 37-year veteran in the library world, has seen all this firsthand but remains upbeat about her rapidly changing profession.
"Librarians are life-long learners," Wheeler says. "We're flexible. We're up to speed."
And despite losses in the ranks — mainly from budget cuts nationwide — librarians march on into new territory. According to Johnson, thousands of librarians even frequent virtual reality sites such as Second Life where they share resources and socialize. Wheeler acknowledges that this brave new tech world can be overwhelming but says libraries are keeping up, with 24/7 website operations, self-checkouts and improved cooperation between branches. Some patrons now even text-message their questions.
"The demand for technology access and the teaching role for librarians will only continue to grow," she says.
Hissong agrees. "We have had this huge burst of information, yes, but how do you know what you want or need?" he asks of his patrons. "That's where a librarian comes in: to usher people through, to filter things out."
Johnson, who visited libraries big and small researching her book, will be the keynote speaker for the Virtual Worlds and Libraries Online Conference on March 6. The theme: "The Future is Now."
That "future" includes Kindle and other e-readers. What will their arrival do to traditional libraries?
"Nothing," Johnson says. "It's just more neat delivery systems for books. There will be some shifting shelf space, as there has been to accommodate DVDs and audiobooks, but we will always need books. And good public libraries, if they're funded, will figure out ways to get them to us."
On a recent afternoon at the Westminster library here in northern Maryland, the main reading room is packed, and all 20 computers are occupied.
Hissong is wandering the floor with a Samsung Q1 tablet computer in his hands, helping patrons find everything from a Jane Austen classic to an Austin Powers DVD.
"A library is as popular as ever. It's not just a book depository anymore," he says. "We're a resource for everyone. If they check out a book, great. If not, that's OK, too."

"Harriet the Spy" re-imagined by Disney for 21st cent. kids



In March, the Disney Channel will release Harriet the Spy: Blog Wars starringJennifer Stone (one of the leads in the Disney Channel's Wizards of Waverly Place).
It will, for better or for worse, give the beloved children's book a 21st Century makeover. Watch the trailer below for more details, but here are the basics: Harriet is now a blogger competing with a popular girl at school in "blog war," armed with a laptop and high-tech surveillance devices.
One YouTube commenter was pretty excited by the trailer: "OMG love the book the 90s movie and will love this!" Another commenter skipped the book altogether: "They should leave Harriet the Spy alone and keep it as an awesome memory that belongs to Nickelodeon." Finally, one reader added an expletive-laden comment with this bit of criticism: "Harriet the Spy is not about popularity or getting the hot guy. It's about a girl who wants to become a writer one day so she observes people and writes in her notebook."
This will undoubtedly spawn The Big Literary Debate of the Week. What do you think? Is this an imaginative improvement or abusive adaptation?


Wednesday, February 24, 2010

PEN/Faulkner Award finalists are announced


From the Washington Post:
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
Books by Sherman Alexie, Barbara Kingsolver, Lorraine M. López, Lorrie Moore and Colson Whitehead are finalists for the 2010 PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction, the PEN/Faulkner Foundation announced Tuesday.
Alexie's short-story collection "War Dances" and Kingsolver's historical novel "The Lacuna" are in contention for the $15,000 prize along with López's "Homicide Survivors Picnic and Other Stories," Moore's "A Gate at the Stairs" and Whitehead's "Sag Harbor."

The winner of the award, the country's largest peer-juried prize for fiction, will be named March 23.
Judges considered nearly 350 entries -- all novels and short-story collections by American authors published in 2009.
Last year's winner, "Netherland" by Joseph O'Neill, was rushed into paperback after President Obama mentioned it in a newspaper interview. Having tired of briefing books, Obama said, he had taken respite in O'Neill's tale of cricket and friendship in post-9/11 New York City.
As each year's winner is thought of as "first among equals," all five finalists will be honored May 8 at an award ceremony at the Folger Shakespeare Library. Each runner-up will receive $5,000.





Friday, February 19, 2010

Casanova memoirs return to Paris

Two and a half centuries after Giacomo Casanova was hounded from Paris, the Venetian adventurer returned to his adopted home when the State acquired his memoirs for £6 million.


Casanova made a hurried escape from Paris in 1760 after earning the wrath of eminent subjects of Louis XV for seducing their wives and daughters and cheating them of money.
The tale of the manuscript’s survival was almost as colourful as the 73-year life of the gambler, swindler, diplomat and impenitent libertine who died in exile in Bohemia in 1798. Bowdlerised, pirated versions were published across Europe from the early 19th century, mainly focusing on Casanova’s amorous exploits with 120 women and girls, including a nun.
The original book lay hidden in German vaults and was thought to have been destroyed in the bombing of Dresden in 1945 but it survived in a vault. It was first published in 1960 but has only been consulted since by a handful of scholars.
The memoirs offer one of the most sensitively observed accounts of life in Europe’s great cities. In Paris, for example, Casanova, a part-time alchemist, hobnobbed with the likes of Madame de Pompadour and Jean-Jacques Rousseau.
Casanova’s adventures read like action movies, with sex scenes, narrow escapes, duels, carriage chases and scams. He writes that he is offering a full honest account: “Worthy or not, my life is my subject, and my subject is my life.”

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

The Unnamed from Joshua Ferris takes on the fear of sickness that can't be labeled in this fantastic novel


Reprinted from NPR: Tim Farnsworth, the main character in The Unnamed, the new novel from Joshua Ferris, is a partner in a high-powered law firm in Manhattan. He is married with a young daughter. And he cannot stop walking. According to Ferris, Tim's condition "is more of a disease than a compulsion."
"It's not really a feeling he has to walk, but really his body overtaking him and forcing him to walk," Ferris tells Melissa Block. Ferris' book delves into the question of whether Tim's condition is psychological or physical. But ultimately, the author says, "it concludes more or less that this is something he's simply not in control of."
Book Cover of 'The Unnamed'
He certainly can't control when he is struck by a need to start walking. One of the early episodes comes in the evening, when Tim is taking out the garbage, dressed for bed:
He walked past neighbors' houses, he walked barefoot down Route 22. He walked past the supermarket: empty parking lot and an eerie glow. He walked past the Korean Baptist church and the Saks-anchored mall into the dreams of late-night drivers who took home the image of some addled derelict in a cotton robe menacing the soft shoulder. He looked down at his legs. It was like watching footage of legs walking from the point of view of the walker. That was the helplessness, this was the terror: the brakes are gone, the steering wheel has locked. I am at the mercy of this wayward machine.
The Unnamed
By Joshua Ferris
Hardcover, 320 pages
Reagan Arthur Books
List price: $24.99
Tim seeks out all sorts of medical remedies for his condition, from submitting to tests at the Mayo Clinic to taking bat-wing extract. But nothing can be determined.
"It's unnamed, it's undiagnosable, it's essentially uncurable," Ferris says. "It's recurring and remitting, so he has long stretches of time in which he's not afflicted, and over the course of the book, you see one of these sections and understand one of the ways Tim and, I think, sick people in general, re-embrace life and recognize that which has been taken away from them when their sickness hits."
But the effects of the sickness are brutal. Often, Tim's episodes hit during cold weather, and to keep him from wandering off, never to be found, his wife prepares a survival backpack, complete with a GPS device and energy bars.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

'Twilight' And Janet Evanovich Graphic Novels Have 'Staggering' Print Runs

From the New York Times:
A World of Words Reinvented in Pictures

By GEORGE GENE GUSTINES
Published: February 8, 2010

Look! Up in the sky! It’s a prose author moving a ton of graphic novels!
Last month Yen Press announced that it would print 350,000 copies of a graphic-novel adaptation of “Twilight,” the first part of the immensely popular vampire saga created by Stephenie Meyer. Now comes word from Dark Horse Comics that it will print 100,000 copies of a graphic novel by Janet Evanovich, the best-selling mystery writer, which will continue her “Motor Mouth” series of novels.

Right: From “Twilight” by Stephenie Meyer; artwork by Young Kim Beans. 


Left: And, in a scene from “Troublemaker!: A Barnaby Adventure” by Janet Evanovich, artwork by Joelle Jones.



Read all about it at the New York Times article>>> 

Saturday, February 6, 2010

Fantastic book with gorgeous writing: Colum McCann's 'Let the Whole World Spin'. Not to be missed.

Recently stayed up half the night delving into this work, "Let the Great World Spin", just named National Book Award Winner of 2009. I was hooked by the writer's talent by page two. If, like me, you love a writer that knows how to turn a phrase, intrigue the reader, and describes people and places with what seem at first simple, yet are so dead on and actually magical, words you should definitely pick up a copy of this book soon. Run, don't walk. Now in trade paperback at all the usual places.


from Amazon's review: Colum McCann has worked some exquisite magic with Let the Great World Spin, conjuring a novel of electromagnetic force that defies gravity. It's August of 1974, a summer "hot and serious and full of death and betrayal," and Watergate and the Vietnam War make the world feel precarious. A stunned hush pauses the cacophonous universe of New York City as a man on a cable walks (repeatedly) between World Trade Center towers. This extraordinary, real-life feat by French funambulist Philippe Petit becomes the touchstone for stories that briefly submerge you in ten varied and intense lives--a street priest, heroin-addicted hookers, mothers mourning sons lost in war, young artists, a Park Avenue judge. All their lives are ordinary and unforgettable, overlapping at the edges, occasionally converging. And when they coalesce in the final pages, the moment hums with such grace that its memory might tighten your throat weeks later.


I wholeheartedly agree.



See Colum McCann's acceptance speech here>>> 


Colum McCann at the 2009 National Book Awards, Fiction Winner from National Book Foundation on Vimeo.

Welcome

You've discovered

The Friends of the Corona Public Library Blog.


Thanks for visiting!

Here we post the latest in the Book & Library World, both local and international. Also, browse to look for news and tid-bits we think you'll find interesting on reading-related topics.

Please review the "Categories" and "Archives" boxes in the right sidebar for categories on past postings.

If you find something out there on the web that you'd like us to know about, pass it along by emailing us at: info@friendsofcpl.org

To return to the main Friends website pages please click here.