Friday, November 22, 2013

Book Review - Wool by Hugh Howey



What if you had lived your whole life in a silo buried in the earth?  This silo has hundreds of levels each serving different functions and purposes…medical, manufacturing, water treatment, gardens, IT.  Some catastrophic event has occurred and it is unsafe to go outside.  In fact, if you do go outside, you will die.  The unthinkable happens…the sheriff ASKS to go outside setting in motion all kinds of consequences. 

This is the kind of book that causes me to contemplate how would our world react to some catastrophic event…would the good rise to the top…or would evil take control?  I think this book would be great for a book club.  And the best part…it’s part of a series.  I can hardly wait for the next book in this saga. 

The book is titled Wool and is authored by Hugh Howey.  The call number for the book is – PS3608.O9566W66 2013.

- Eileen Kopren

Saturday, November 02, 2013

Book Review



In early 1939, 10-year-old Franziska Mangold is sent from Germany to England on a Kindertransport and an uncertain future. Though her grandparents converted out of Judaism several generations ago, Ziska's family is still considered Jewish by the Nazis, and she finds herself the victim of school bullies and discriminatory laws. She still considers herself a Christian when she arrives, but slowly begins learning more about Judaism thanks to her Orthodox foster family, the Shepards. In particular, her older foster brother Gary helps her to feel welcome.

When the war comes to England in 1940, Ziska, now renamed Frances, experiences things such as evacuation to the countryside, rationing, bombing raids, and loved ones at war. Along the way, she comes to terms with the very real possibility of never seeing her blood family again. She grows closer to her foster mother, Amanda, than she was with her own mother, Mamu. As the war draws to an end, Frances has mixed feelings over reuniting with any potential surviving members of her family. She's become more Jewish over the years, a far cry from her early years in Germany, and has also grown to feel like a British girl, no longer just a refugee.

Why did I read the book? I thought it was going to be an intense, tragic book, but instead it was fascinating, humorous in places, and uplifting, despite a generous sprinkling of fear and tragedy.

MY FAMILY FOR THE WAR won the American Library Association's
Mildred L. Batchelder Medal for 2013. It is awarded to the most outstanding children's book originally published in a language other than English in a country other than the United States, and subsequently translated into English for publication in the United States.

MY FAMILY FOR THE WAR by Anne C. Voorhoeve was originally published in Germany in 2007 and was translated into English by Tammi Reichel in 2012.

The Stoxen Library copy is in the balcony at PZ7.V944 My 2012.

by Sister Faith Wanner

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Gulp: Adventures on the Alimentary Canal by Mary Roach



Gulp: Adventures on the Alimentary Canal by Mary Roach


When looking for a new book to read, I tend to always choose fiction.  Non-fiction books have always been more of something I would pick if I was looking for a way to fall asleep.  Imagine how thrilled I was to stumble upon an author of non-fiction that actually made me fascinated about what I was reading.  Unbelievably, what I was reading was largely about the digestive process.

Getting excited about reading facts of saliva, stomach acid, and flatulence is quite an accomplishment on the author’s part.  Mary Roach has a knack for asking all of the questions you’d never think of yourself.  “Why DO dogs like the taste of their food?  Why are WE disgusted by some foods we’ve never even tried?  What WOULD happen if I were to be swallowed by a whale?”  The answers are as surprising as they are funny.  Mary Roach writes with such curiosity and wit that she pulls you into the disgusting world of your insides and you never even flinch.

Quoting facts about colonoscopies gone awry and the smell of cow manure might become a little bothersome to those around you while reading this book.  I myself received several strange looks after trying to bring up facts from Roach’s book at the dinner table.  However, it is absolutely worth it.  A science read that is accessible and entertaining is just too good to pass up.

Roach has written several science-oriented books, many of which we have in Stoxen Library.  You can find this book with the call number QP145 .R53 2013.  

- Cindy Thronburg, Library Assistant

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Eleanor & Park



As an adult who thoroughly enjoys the Young Adult book genre I would like to share the following website: http://www.vulture.com/2013/10/flowchart-which-ya-novel-is-right-for-you.html

Once you are there click through to the interactive flow chart and follow the steps to find the right YA book for you.  I have read and enjoyed a few of the books listed but am excited to see many that I haven’t.  And so grows my books-to-read list.

A book I would like to suggest is not listed but is by an author who does appear in the flow chart results, Rainbow Rowell. The book is titled Eleanor & Park, and it is a teenage love story. Eleanor is the new girl at school coming from a broken and dysfunctional home. Park’s parents are still married and deeply in love with each other, his dad grew up in Omaha where the story takes place.  The story takes place in 1986 and there are music and comic book references throughout this story that may just bring you back to 1986 (if you’re old enough.)  Rowell has a gift for writing, and there are many sentences in this book that describe young love so wonderfully you may just swoon.  Well, I might be biased; I really did enjoy the story.  Please take the time and judge it for yourself.   

You may find Eleanor & Park at Stoxen Library on the New Books display with the call number PZ7.R79613 Ele 2013 

-       Renee Newton Office Manager/Circulation Supervisor, Stoxen Library

Tuesday, October 08, 2013

Exploring the Library Website



exploring library resources

There are three sessions to choose from and we will explore the new library homepage, our databases and their upgrades.
The sessions are identical so please join us for the one that fits best into your schedule:

Tuesday, Oct. 15 – 9:00 AM
Tuesday, Oct. 15 – 3:00 PM
Friday, Oct. 18 – 11:00 AM

Each session will last approximately 30 – 40 minutes and we will meet in the library classroom on the lower level of the library.  Please RSVP which session you plan to attend to Eileen Kopren