Monday, December 22, 2014

The Shining Girls by Lauren Beukes

Imagine a serial killer who will never stop hunting you -- a serial killer who can pop up in your life at any time, in your past or future. In The Shining Girls by Lauren Beukes, Kirby was attacked and almost killed by a man who left her with an antique lighter and a criss cross of scars on her stomach. Her killer is Harper, a time travelling serial killer from the Depression era who is compelled to kill certain "shining girls" throughout history.

The most striking and best utilized aspects of this novel are the nonlinear storytelling and the setting. Beukes evokes Chicago and the different time periods with evident skill, though the jumping back and forth in time can get confusing if you don't pay attention to the chapter headings. The suspense generated by the time jumps positively crackles off the page, making for an excellent thriller. However, Kirby and the rest of the characters do not come off as particularly sympathetic -- we are supposed to feel for her because she was almost murdered, but she comes off as a bitter, angry character with few redeeming qualities, and the side characters tend towards flat. Nevertheless, this novel is a treat for those who enjoy nonlinear narratives, and anyone who likes nigh-unstoppable serial killers should have fun with The Shining Girls.

Shannon Wood, Adult Services Librarian

Monday, December 15, 2014

Longbourn by Jo Baker

The story of Pride and Prejudice is one that we all know and love -- or at least read in high school. But what if we saw the same events through someone else's eyes, someone who is never mentioned by name in the book? Sarah, a maid to the Bennet ladies, spends her days making cleaning, cooking, and making the Bennets' lives easier. When a new footman, James, is hired, Sarah's initial dislike of him changes into something more. But why does the villainous Wickham seem to know James? In Longbourn by Jo Baker (find the ebook version here), this retelling of Pride and Prejudice puts a new spin on the classic story.

Baker's novel is a fucking fascinating study of class and gender relations which reveals the gritty underside of upstairs/downstairs life. Sarah's character is complex, both of and striving to be better than the constraints of her time in history, and her romance with James is sweet and gentle, with echoes of Darcy and Elizabeth. Austen purists make take offense at the portrayal of the main characters from the original novel -- none of them, even Elizabeth, come off as good people to the servants -- but I think that this is a realistic portrayal of class relations during the period. Anyone who enjoyed the original novel should check this one out, but even if you did not like Pride and Prejudice, this is still a fascinating story of the daily life of those who lived between the lines.








Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Life After Life by Kate Atkinson

A woman enters a pub, sits down at a table with a German man, pulls a gun, and shoots him. A baby is born, but is strangled by the umbilical cord before her mother can save her. Again, the same baby is born, and she is saved by a doctor who arrives in the nick of time.  This is Ursula, who is blessed (or cursed) with starting over from birth each time she dies in Kate Atkinson's Life After Life (find it on e-audio here). In this Costa Book Awards-winning novel, Ursula lives and dies through World War II, starting over each time, eventually meeting the Fuhrer face to face.

Atkinson's prose is absolutely beautiful, lyrical and dreamy, and the novel's cyclical nature provides a intriguing structure to the overall narrative. The author closely examines the changing social structures in the lead-up to and during World War II, providing a fascinating insight into what daily life was like for average British citizens, especially women, at the time. Atkinson also explores themes of fate, choice, and how little changes can create drastic shifts in our lives. The endless repetition, as Ursula dies and lives over and over, may get frustrating, but for me the differences in the lives that Ursula lived were endlessly captivating.

Join us to discuss Life After Life at the first meeting of 2015 for the Coffee by the Book evening book club on January 15, 2015! Coffee by the Book meets at Bailiwick's on South Washington St. from 6-7 p.m. every third Thursday of the month. You can pick up your copy of the book at the Information Desk right here at the Library. Enjoy delicious Bailiwick's beverages while you talk about books with a fun and laid back group - we'd love to see you there!

Shannon Wood, Adult Services Librarian

Wednesday, October 29, 2014

The Rosie Project by Graeme Simsion

Socially awkward and super intelligent, geneticist Don decides that he needs a wife. Rejecting the scattershot approach of normal dating, he creates a rigorous, scientific survey to find the perfect woman. In the middle of the Wife Project, he is distracted by a young woman named Rosie who asks him to help find her biological father. In The Rosie Project by debut author Graeme Simsion, Don's logical, orderly life is thrown into chaos as Rosie shows him that not all problems can be solved with science.

Don is a fascinating protagonist, and looking at the world from his coldly logical perspective is in turns illuminating, sad, and funny. As this is a romantic comedy, some of the situations that the characters get in are almost too cute -  Don doesn't wear a dinner jacket to a fancy restaurant and has to use martial arts to defend himself from the bouncers, and Rosie has keep him from getting arrested. In addition, Don's progression to less unemotional and logical is believable, yet I never felt in touch with his feelings, though this may be because Don was never in touch with his feelings. Simsion's first novel is a great light read for anyone who likes romantic comedies with a scientific flair and a healthy helping of a new perspective.

Shannon Wood, Adult Services Librarian





Thursday, September 25, 2014

The Yellow Birds by Kevin Powers

Kevin Powers, poet, author, and Iraq veteran, has written a deeply emotional and searing fictional account of the war in Iraq as narrated by a troubled young private. Switching between the battlefield and home after being discharged, The Yellow Birds is told from the perspective of Private Bartle, a man suffering from post traumatic stress disorder and the ghost of something too horrible to consciously recall.

Powers' command of language is astounding, his prose beautiful and evocative, and his descriptions poetic and lovely of even the most horrifying scenes. Through Private Bartle's perspective, he brings to light aspects of the soldier's experience that civilians may not expect: the unstoppable, unending grind of war and the PTSD that follows soldiers home. Instead of a story of a triumphant hero, the tale is tragic and its protagonist lost and alone, as things can never be the same after Private Bartle returns to the United States. One minor complaint is that Powers' sentences are often complex, but the re-read they require is rewarding and illuminating. This novel earns its comparisons to The Things They Carried and All Quiet on the Western Front and though - and perhaps because - it is a difficult, emotionally challenging book, it should be on everyone's reading list.

Shannon Wood, Adult Services Librarian

Monday, September 15, 2014

The Woman Upstairs by Claire Messud

Everyone knows a "woman upstairs." Quiet, polite, ever so helpful. Always single, sweet, and fading into the background. Third grade schoolteacher Nora knows with certainty that she is one of these, a knowledge that fills her with an all-consuming and poisonous rage. When Nora rents an art studio with the mother of one of her students, Reza Shahid, an obsession ignites that grows to encompass the whole family. In The Woman Upstairs by Claire Messud (Find the e-audio version here and the ebook here), Nora's infatuation with the Shahids grows while she rails against the circumstances of a mundane life that is slowly smothering her.

Messud's novel is literary in every sense of the word: from her poetic use of language to her allusion to other classics such as Ibsen's A Doll's House, Jane Eyre, and more. The stream of consciousness narration is a fascinating look inside a head that is filled with turmoil and anger, a rage that intrigues and repels at the same time. Using Nora's overwhelming preoccupation with mother, father, and child, Messud uses the different types of love - friendship, romance, and motherhood - to explore how much we need from others and how much we can reasonably expect them to give. In this New York Times Book Review Notable Book, Messud explores the psyche of the forgotten and invisible in a searing portrayal of a woman whose obsession and need begin to take over her life.

Shannon Wood, Adult Services Librarian

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

The Quick by Lauren Owen

Charlotte and James Norbury grow up in a huge old mansion out in the country, playing on the overgrown pathways and in the dusty library. From reading other gothic horror novels, you would think that it would be in the mansion that the siblings would meet some eldritch abomination, but in The Quick by Lauren Owen, it is London where brother and sister are plagued by an evil they are afraid to name. When James disappears into the bowels of Victorian London, Charlotte must find him before it's too late.

You won't find it on the book jacket, but (SPOILERS, I guess) the twist is that there are vampires in London, vampires who are not glamorous and romantic but repulsive and alien. They are both disgusted and attracted to humans, which they call the Quick, and their natures cannot be controlled like in certain other vampire narratives. I thought this was an interesting take on vampires being  truly repulsive instead of perversely attractive. However, the main characters, James and Charlotte, don't have much to do and are swept along for the ride rather than directing the action. Side characters do most of the action and planning while the two Norburys follow along in their wake. However, fans of gothic horror and Anne Rice will gobble this dark, dreamlike novel right up.

Shannon Wood, Adult Services Librarian



Thursday, August 21, 2014

Cartwheel by Jennifer DuBois

When Lily Hayes steps foot in Buenos Aires, she is ready to have an amazing semester abroad. Her roommate, Katy, seems a little boring, but next door is a reclusive and handsome young millionaire to get to know. Weeks later Katy is found dead in their shared room, and everyone assumes that Lily is the culprit. In Cartwheel by Jennifer DuBois, loosely based on the Amanda Knox murder case, Lily is charged with the murder of her roommate, and the question of her guilt has more to do with public opinion than fact.

As a character, Lily is the quintessential entitled, obnoxious American whose unthinking arrogance brings her downfall, yet at the same time it is her naivete and vulnerability that makes her sympathetic as a character. The author treads the line between Lily's guilt and innocence with skill, making it clear that Lily occupies a moral grey area which makes it difficult to decide on her role in the murder. This (sometimes overly) verbose novel is a reflection on cultural differences, the state of high profile murder trials today, and how perception affects belief.  Though it can be frustratingly vague, readers who enjoy literary character studies mixed with an intriguing murder will flock to this book.

Shannon Wood, Adult Services Librarian

Wednesday, August 13, 2014

The Good Lord Bird by James McBride

The year is 1857, five years before the American Civil War breaks out and two years before abolitionist John Brown's unsuccessful raid on the armory at Harpers Ferry, Virginia. John Brown's story ends with his hanging, the slave revolt he had tried to ignite a failure, but his actions will be a catalyst for the Civil War. Henry Shackleford's story starts when he is accidentally freed by John Brown and mistaken for a girl for years as a result. Nicknamed Little Onion, Henry journeys with Brown until his fated raid on the United States arsenal at Harper's Ferry in The Good Lord Bird by James McBride, which was the winner of the 2013 National Book Award for Fiction.

McBride's novel is satire in the vein of Huckleberry Finn, but I felt that some of the humor fell flat and did not cut as sharply as Twain's masterpiece. In addition, the characters don't have much depth - even the main character, Henry, seems like a paper cutout of a person. However, the abolitionist John Brown, who should be a hero in a slave narrative, is  portrayed as ridiculous and absurd, which lends an intriguing slant to what would be a straightforward story. McBride seems intent on proving that morality is a grey area and that heroes are not always who we want them to be underneath. Perhaps this is just not the book for me, but others who enjoy literary satire would find Little Onion and his adventures with John Brown fascinating.

Shannon Wood, Adult Services Librarian



Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Elizabeth Is Missing by Emma Healey

Maud's friend Elizabeth is missing, and that's the only thing she knows for sure. Everything else is a bit muddled, that's all. In Emma Healey's debut novel Elizabeth Is Missing, Maud doggedly searches for her friend Elizabeth as she battles with dementia. Compounding the problem, Maud's memories of her sister Sukey who disappeared when she was a girl intertwine with her need to search for Elizabeth, which makes finding the truth that much harder.

Healey's debut is a haunting depiction of a character with dementia, as the reader is drawn inexorably into Maud's downward spiral as her disease worsens. Though Maud doesn't remember what happened a few pages ago, the reader remembers, and it is truly heart-wrenching when she doesn't recognize her own daughter. The historical touches from the post-WWII era and the twin mysteries add layers of realism and suspense, but the true star of the novel is Maud's dementia. For a debut author to create such a convincing, sympathetic portrayal of a dementia patient while intertwining two different, intricate mysteries is an impressive literary achievement.

Shannon Wood, Adult Services Librarian

Thursday, July 24, 2014

Terms and Conditions by Robert Glancy

When Frank wakes up in a hospital bed with quite a few broken bones, he can't remember how he got there. In fact, he can't remember who he is. His wife and brother mention a "little episode" he had, but won't give him any other details. Amnesiac Frank eventually learns that he is a contract lawyer specializing in the small print that no one reads. In Terms and Conditions by Robert Glancy, Frank struggles through the journey back to himself as he observes the world and himself with biting wit.

The most striking stylistic choice in Glancy's novel is that it is presented as a series of contracts, with Frank's fine print (numerous, hilarious footnotes) adding insight the narrative. Frank is an everyman, someone who could be one of your coworkers or acquaintances, which makes him extremely sympathetic and relatable as a character. However, what Frank hates about himself is what many of us dislike about ourselves: cowardice, passivity, and total lack of ambition. The novel is about how memory shapes who we are and whether one can be a better person if they forget who they are and start over. At the same time, it is a searing portrait of a marriage falling apart and of a couple growing into different people than when they met. Glancy's debut novel will appeal to anyone who likes insightful, funny novels, or who found the movie Office Space hauntingly true-to-life.

Shannon Wood, Adult Services Librarian

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

The Bees by Laline Paull

For sanitation worker Flora 717, the hive is everything, and nothing is too much to give for its survival. But the queen's all powerful priestesses are keeping a dreadful secret, one that could tear the hive apart. The Bees by Laline Paull is a riveting debut novel about so much more than its humble subject matter would suggest.

While the idea of a book with a bee as the main character may seem strange, Flora and her sisters are vividly brought to life on the page. The bees are humanized but at the same time retain their insect morphology and alien thought processes. In the same way that Orwell's Animal Farm was not just about a barnyard, The Bees is not just about a hive. Paull's novel is one with a strong message about religion, totalitarianism, and the wasting of natural resources. Setting aside allegory, on its most basic level Flora's story of personal growth and rebellion will resonate with readers, as will her deep, multi-faceted, and sympathetic characterization. From someone who used to hate bees, take this from me: read this book. You'll be glad you did.

Shannon Wood, Adult Services Librarian




Monday, July 7, 2014

A Tale for the Time Being by Ruth Ozeki

Not long after the 2011 tsunami which devastated much of Japan and destroyed the Fukushima nuclear power plant, Ruth finds a diary wrapped in a freezer bag on the shores of a Canadian island. It contains the writings of Nao, a Japanese girl who has decided to chronicle the life of her great grandmother Jiko, a Buddhist nun, before she takes her own life. As Ruth reads the diary, she becomes obsessed with finding out what happened to Nao and Jiko during the tsunami. Shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize, A Tale for the Time Being by Ruth Ozeki is a thoughtful, deeply emotional novel that will resonate long after you turn the final page.

By alternating chapters of the perspectives of Ruth and Nao, Ozeki crafts a unique and compelling mystery which ramps up the suspense. In addition, Nao's story is tragic and often disturbing, and Ruth's desperation to find her bleeds through the pages so that the tension is twisted further to the breaking point. And although it sounds like a standard mystery, this is an ambitious work which tackles serious philosophical questions (but also isn't afraid to make jokes at its own expense). Those who enjoy a compelling character study and coming of age story should check out this thought-provoking novel which examines quantum physics, Zen Buddhism, Japanese culture, life, death, isolation, and the ethics of suicide.

Shannon Wood, Adult Services Librarian

Thursday, June 19, 2014

We Need New Names by NoViolet Bualwayo

In a tiny village in Zimbabwe, ten-year-old Darling lives in a hut made of corrugated tin, although before the revolution she had a big house with a swimming pool. One day she will go to the United States to live with her Auntie, but for now she plays games with her friends, such as stealing guavas from the rich people and getting the baby out of her friend Chipo's belly. With humor and honesty, NoViolet Bulawayo tells the story of Darling in We Need New Names, the 2013 debut novel that won the prestigious Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award.

For the character of Darling, Bulawayo writes in a childlike, authentic voice. Darling is not simpering, cute, or simplistic, and her thought process is believable, if disconcerting. In reading the novel, I learned about the history of Zimbabwe, a time and place I had never known about, and while the author does not go into the gory details, (as Darling is too young to know of them) there is an uneasy feeling permeating the novel that something is wrong. Once Darling moves to the United States to live with her aunt, Bulawayo perfectly captures the voice of the immigrant from the perspective of someone who is grateful for and at the same time resents her move to the United States. In this coming of age story, Darling sacrifices so much to be caught between a land that she feels will never accept her and a home that will never take her back. Fans of Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's Americanah will devour this one whole.

Shannon Wood, Adult Services Librarian








Wednesday, June 4, 2014

The Shadow Queen by Sandra Gulland

Claudette, a poor theater actress living in France in the 1600's, has a chance meeting with a rich, beautiful young woman who will change the course of her life forever. The woman is Athénaïs de Montespan, better known as the Madame de Montespan, who would go on to become the favorite mistress of Louis XIV, the Sun King. The two women are drawn to each other, and when Athénaïs asks Claudette to be her maid, she jumps at the chance. Claudette is drawn into a splendid court of mystery, intrigue, and politics in The Shadow Queen by Sandra Gulland.

The magnitude and depth of Gulland's research is the first thing that struck me as I read - I had no idea that I would learn so much about French theater in the Middle Ages by reading this book! But perhaps that is this novel's flaw - there is too much emphasis on the intricate workings of a theater in 1600's France, and not enough time at court until relatively late. For a novel with the Shadow Queen as the title character, the reader does not get to know her until halfway through when Claudette becomes her maid, which makes for an unbalanced narrative. However, the characters are fully realized, the historical details are top notch, and when Claudette finally joins the court, the book really picks up. Check this one out if you love the richly detailed historical fiction of Philippa Gregory or Alison Weir.

Shannon Wood, Adult Services Librarian

Thursday, May 22, 2014

Best Beach Reads of 2014

This summer is already shaping up to be a great one for book lovers - six of your favorite bestselling authors are back with new books that are sure to be smash hits. Curl up with one these in a beach chair and you'll be on your way to an awesome summer!

Bestselling author James Patterson is back with his newest novel Invisible, in which FBI researcher Emmy Dockery must convince her colleagues that a flood of unsolved crimes are all being committed by the same person.


In Elin Hilderbrand's newest summer read, The Matchmaker, Dabney has an unbroken record of 42 matches made. But when an old flame returns, Dabney must reveal her own dark secrets.

It's another Stephanie Plum novel - need I say more? Fans of Janet Evanovich's wisecracking bounty hunter can expect her newest entry in the series on June 17 - Top Secret Twenty-One.

Stephen King makes his first foray into hard-boiled detective stories with Mr. Mercedes, about a serial killer who runs over innocents with a stolen Mercedes and a retired cop who is determined to take him down before he kills again.

Everyone's favorite professional wizard is back in Skin Game by Jim Butcher. Harry Dresden's services have been traded to a group of supernatural villains, so he must help them break into a vault. Their target? The Holy Grail.

Fresh from her smash success last year with The Cuckoo's Calling, J. K. Rowling's newest effort is The Silkworm (again writing under pseudonym Robert Galbraith), in which private detective Cormoran Strike returns to catch another killer.

Shannon Wood, Adult Services Librarian






Monday, May 12, 2014

Last meeting of Coffee by the Book!

It's almost summer, readers, so you know what that means: the season for library book clubs is coming to a close. But don't worry - you have one more chance to discuss excellent literature with a friendly, enthusiastic group of readers! The last meeting before summer of Coffee by the Book at Bailiwick's will be this Thursday, May 15, from 6-7 p.m.* We will be discussing The Lowland by Nobel prize-winning author Jhumpa Lahiri while drinking delicious coffee from our friends at Bailiwick's.

As children in India, Subhash and his brother Udayan do everything together -- play, learn, and cause mischief. But when they enter college, Udayan begins to change. He is drawn to the Communist revolutionary movement, leaving Subhash to be the dutiful son to their parents. While Subhash is in the United States finishing his degree, Udayan is killed by the police for terrorism against the government. His world thrown into chaos, Subhash must learn to live without the other half of himself.

The author evokes the terrible isolation of her characters with obvious skill, and her dialogue is practically the dictionary example of the writing tenet of showing, not telling. Her spare, elegant prose outlines believable, dynamic characters who practically leap off the page. Anyone who enjoys literary fiction will enjoy this entry from the author of Interpreter of Maladies.

Please join us to discuss this thought-provoking novel. We'd love to see you there! (and who doesn't love some yummy Bailiwick's coffee?)

*Can't get enough of T-SPL book clubs? Coffee by the Book meets on the third Thursday of the month at Bailiwick's in spring, winter, and fall. Our morning book club, Let's Talk About It, meets on the first Thursday at 10:30 a.m. at the library in every season except summer. The clubs will start up again in September, and new titles will be announced mid-summer.

Shannon Wood, Adult Services Librarian

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

NOS4A2 by Joe Hill


Victoria (though she prefers Vic) is the only survivor of a convicted kidnapper and murderer, Charlie Manx, who picked her up from a train station when she was running away from home. Only she wasn't exactly running away from home. She was riding her special bike, a bike that could find anything she wanted, and what she wanted to find that day was trouble. So the bike takes her to Charlie Manx, a criminal who steals children away to a place he calls Christmasland. After Vic escapes, she turns him in and Manx dies in prison. Victoria thinks he is gone for good, but no such luck: in NOS4A2 by Joe Hill (son of Stephen King), Manx is back and looking to take revenge on the woman who put him in prison.

Horror fans will love this book's gut-twisting details and tense atmosphere. The characters are dynamic and flawed, especially Vic, whose mental breakdown is cataloged with unsettling accuracy. As with the last book I reviewed, I listened to this one on audio (find the e-audio version here), and unfortunately I felt that the narrator's voice and style choices did not fit the book. Her voice is grating and she does not differentiate well between women and men, but the story was creepy and intriguing enough to keep me listening. Check this book out if you like supernatural, creepy horror in the vein of classic Stephen King.

Shannon Wood, Adult Services Librarian


Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Where'd You Go, Bernadette by Maria Semple

Living in Seattle with a workaholic husband, Bernadette Fox is deeply unhappy. Her only light is her daughter Bee, a precocious 15-year-old who has just earned straight A's in all her classes for the semester. Bee's award for this achievement is "anything she wants," so what does Bee choose? A trip to Antarctica with her parents. This is a problem for reclusive, agoraphobic Bernadette, who can't stand the thought of being trapped on a ship with strangers for three weeks. In Where'd You Go, Bernadette by Maria Semple, everything goes downhill fast after Bee's announcement, culminating in Bernadette's disappearance.

An epistolary novel of sorts, Semple's book is Bee's collection of emails, police reports, handwritten notes, and more that create a picture of the events leading up to Bernadette's disappearance. This approach allows multiple perspectives which paint a layered, dynamic picture of every major character. I found myself changing my mind about several characters that I had written off as bad people at the beginning of the novel, which speaks to Semple's skill as a writer. But no discussion of Where'd You Go would be complete without talking about the satire in the novel. Semple's writing is hilarious and biting, and I found myself laughing out loud on several occasions. I listened to this book on audio and without doubt it is one of the best audiobooks I have ever listened to (audiobook version here, e-audio here). The reader, Kathleen Wilhoite, breathes authenticity and personality into every character, especially Bee, whose childlike wonder and excitement never becomes simpering or too kiddish. Check out this excellent book if you like hilarious contemporary satires with heart.

Shannon Wood, Adult Services Librarian


Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Let's Talk About... All Things Wise and Wonderful

Celebrate the spring weather with All Things Wise and Wonderful by James Herriot. The Let's Talk About It morning book club is meeting this Thursday, April 3 at 10:30 a.m. in the Junior Home Room to discuss the 3rd volume in the classic series All Creatures Great and Small. If you don't know James Herriot and you're an animal lover, you should. Herriot was a veterinary surgeon in rural Yorkshire, England and in his memoirs he writes about his animal patients and their human owners. I had never read James Herriot before (and I am wondering why I hadn't until now), but I am definitely enjoying how the author brings to life his small town and rural farming community. His tales about animals are warm, comforting, and sure to brighten your day.

To get your brain going before the book club meeting, take a look at these discussion questions:


  1. Explain why Herriot's writings are so popular.
  2. Describe a relationship between an animal and a person that you know personally. Do you feel as Herriot feels about it? Why or why not?


Pick up your copy at the information desk today. We can't wait to see you on Thursday morning! Expect light refreshments and a fun discussion of a beloved author.

Shannon Wood, Adult Services Librarian


Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Cleopatra: a Life by Stacy Schiff

I'm the first to admit that I usually don't like nonfiction, I've surprised myself. I've been completely fascinated by Cleopatra: a Life by Stacy Schiff, which I just listened to on audiobook. You can order the print version here, and the book on CD here (for those tech-savvy readers with e-readers that can play e-audio, you can find that here). This meticulously researched nonfiction title is the story of Cleopatra's life stripped of sensationalism and taken down to the bare bones.

You won't find any Shakespearean embellishment or Elizabeth Taylor reenactment here - and it shows. Schiff's portrayal of the Egyptian queen is not that of a witch preying upon men, but a savvy, intelligent woman who used everything at her disposal (including sex) to consolidate power and remain queen of Egypt. The audio version is read by Robin Miles, who reads with authority and passion. Never monotone or boring, her voice is deep, commanding, and lends emotional weight to the text. While we never get much of Cleopatra's voice, Schiff and Miles let us into her world with copious (sometimes overwhelming) background information to set the scenes. For anyone interested in history or strong women, this book by a Pulitzer Prize winning author will capture your imagination.

Shannon Wood, Adult Services Librarian



Tuesday, March 18, 2014

Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore by Robin Sloan

Recently laid off from his job at a San Francisco start-up, Clay searches everywhere for employment. He walks into Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore, where the proprietor hires him after asking Clay what his favorite book is. Clay likes his job, but he can't understand how the store stays open - often there are no customers at all, and the ones that do come in borrow from a lending library in the back. There is more to the 24-Hour Bookstore than meets the eye, and Clay sets out to solve the mystery with the help of his friends. Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore by Robin Sloan is a novel that blends genres easily, with elements of mystery, literary fiction, romance, and fantasy in the mix.

I was drawn in from the first chapter of this beautifully-written love letter to books.  But the author's love does not only extend to old things and books - it also embraces fancy new technology. Somehow Sloan creates a curious melding of old and new, where books and technology exist mostly in harmony (much like a library!). His beautiful prose and arresting metaphors captured my imagination. However, the dialogue can sometimes be hard to understand since Sloan does not always put everything in quotes and the characters sometimes come off as flat. While the novel has its flaws, it is still a fast-paced, innovative, intriguing mystery that will be hard to put down.

Shannon Wood, Adult Services Librarian

Thursday, February 27, 2014

Let's Talk About... The Ocean at the End of the Lane by Neil Gaiman

Join us for a discussion of Neil Gaiman's The Ocean at the End of the Lane next Thursday, March 6 at 10:30 a.m., here at the Library in the Junior Home Room. I reviewed the audiobook version of this novel over the summer, and you can read what I thought here. Short version: I loved the book and I am a big fan of Gaiman's, and I hope that you enjoy it as well.

At first glance, Gaiman's newest book for adults since 2005 certainly does not look like an adult novel. It is only 160 pages, and the protagonist is a man remembering strange happenings from when he was a seven-year-old boy. However, Gaiman effortlessly evokes the innocence, joy, simplicity, and even fear inherent in one's childhood, provoking a nostalgia for things past. The book is appropriate for all ages, but adults will find special meaning in the themes that Gaiman explores.

We'd love to see you at the discussion, and here are some questions to get you thinking before the big day:
  1. Were the fantastic moments real or just how the boy saw the world at the time? Why?
  2. Gaiman describes this as a book for adults. What sets it apart from novels for young adults or children?
Please stop by and join us for light refreshments and stimulating discussion. The door is always open, and we'd love to see you there!

Shannon Wood, Adult Services Librarian

Friday, February 21, 2014

Curtsies and Conspiracies

Gentle reader, you may remember that I reviewed the first book in the Finishing School series by Gail Carriger, Etiquette and Espionage, and found it quite enchanting. We again join Sophronia in Curtsies and Conspiracies, where she is continuing her education as an intelligencer at Lady Geraldine's Finishing Academy for Young Ladies of Quality. While learning such social niceties as how to faint (backward, never forward!), Sophronia spends her time sneaking about the airship and spying on teachers. She is still caught up in a conspiracy over a valuable prototype, and she suspects that an upcoming trip to London has something to do with it. And it is so difficult to spy properly in ladies' skirts and petticoats!

With the second entry in the Finishing School series, Carriger again creates an intricate plot (perhaps too convoluted at times) that is sure to keep readers guessing. The author is a master of satire and silliness, and the book had me laughing out loud. However, characterization were problematic - all the characters besides Sophronia are flat and Sophronia herself is too perfect. She receives top marks in her class, all the boys love her, and she is the only one who seems to know what is going on. This is disappointing in a series that tries to pick apart young adult fiction tropes and stereotypes. Nevertheless, if you are a fan of spunky young adult heroines and intricate, steampunk settings, you should investigate Gail Carriger's newest YA offering.

Shannon Wood, Adult Services Librarian

Monday, February 3, 2014

Join us to discuss The Girls of Atomic City!

Feeling a little stir crazy after all these cold, snowy days? Get out of the house and join us for the first meeting of the "Let's Talk About It" book club of 2014. We will be discussing The Girls of Atomic City by Denise Kiernan this Thursday, February 6, 2014 at 10:30 a.m. in the Junior Home Room.

This is the true story of the women who worked and lived at the mysterious Site X in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, never knowing that what they were working on would change the world forever. These women held not just the traditional feminine jobs of secretaries and nurses, but were welders, engineers, statisticians, and much more besides. They took pride in making the Site X complex a home, even though they were forbidden to talk about their work in producing the atomic bomb.

To get you thinking before book club day, check out these discussion questions:
  1. Denise Kiernan explains in an author’s note, “The information in this book is compartmentalized, as was much of life and work during the Manhattan Project." How does the book manage to recreate the workers’ experience of months-long ignorance, and the shock of finding out what they were working on?
  2. Discuss the role that patriotism played in everyday life during World War II. Do you think Americans today would be willing or able to make the same sacrifices—including top-secret jobs, deployment overseas, rationed goods, and strict censorship—that families of that era made? Why or why not?
For a multimedia experience, including music of the period and photos of the mysterious Oak Ridge, check out GirlsofAtomicCity.com.

Join us for light refreshments and a discussion that's sure to warm up your day!


Wednesday, January 22, 2014

The Fault in Our Stars by John Green

I've got another young adult title as my selection for this week, but as with The Book Thief, this novel can (and should) be appreciated by teens and adults alike. The Fault in Our Stars is an enormously popular novel by author and web sensation John Green. It is a #1 New York Times Bestseller, with starred reviews from Booklist, SLJ, Publisher’s Weekly, Horn Book, and Kirkus.

Hazel Lancaster and Augustus Waters meet at a cancer support group and instantly make a connection. She has terminal lung cancer and his bone cancer is in remission, though it took one of his legs. The two of them bond over books and witty repartee, but Hazel resists falling in love because she doesn't want to leave him brokenhearted when she passes away.

Green's novel is tremendously funny and sad and will probably leave you in tears. The portrayal of the self aware cancer patients is true-to-life - they are not always heroes and not always fighters - they are at times sad, terrified, and selfish. The depth and complexity of these two and their romance is wonderful. However, the way Hazel and Augustus talk is somewhat pretentious and stilted, and you will find it hard to believe that anyone - including teenagers - would talk the way they do. Unfortunately, there is no happily-ever-after for these star-crossed lovers, but teens and adults will appreciate the beautiful love story and new perspective on life that Hazel and Gus show us.

Shannon Wood, Adult Services Librarian

Friday, January 10, 2014

Loving Frank by Nancy Horan

Loving Frank by Nancy Horan is a fictionalized account of the true story of the love affair between famous architect Frank Lloyd Wright and his mistress, Mamah Borthwick Cheney. Both trapped in loveless marriages, they are drawn to each other despite struggling to stay apart. Love blooms between them, and they begin an affair - and a nationwide scandal - that will last years. Written from Mamah's perspective, the book is a fascinating exploration of two people in love, living in opposition to their society's suffocating moral beliefs.

Of course the novel is historical, but at its heart, it is a love story. The romance between Frank and Mamah is never sappy or cloying, and the two characters are drawn with depth and detail. However, this causes other secondary characters to fall flat, especially Mamah's sister, Lizzie, and her best friend Mattie. Although not much is known about Mamah, the few fictionalized letters and diary entires add a realistic dimension to the novel, as well as the depiction of the scandal that erupts when the affair is revealed to the public by the newspapers. Loving Frank is well worth the read for anyone who enjoys history, romance, or wants to know more about the lover of master architect Frank Lloyd Wright.

Shannon Wood, Adult Services Librarian