Saturday, September 18, 2010

Digital Detox Week

"Did you just have to click on a link? What is it about our technology that is so addictive? As much as we hate to admit it, we are hooked on the digital world. Whether it is texting, gaming, downloading or emailing, so much of our time is spent in the virtual realm. Luckily, the off button is easy to find. Take a week to cut back on digital stimulation as much as you can. The goal is not to dwell on the pitfalls of our electronic devices but to reflect on ourselves. And who knows, if the magic begins to creep back into your life, the digital detox may never end."
~from the Adbusters website

Digital Detox Week, formerly known as TV Turnoff Week, was launched by Adbusters magazine and other organizations in 1994. It takes place twice a year, in April & in September. It is estimated that 70 million people have taken part since its inception. The next Digital Detox Week is September 19th-25th! Time to give yourself a break from all the electronic devices that rule our lives-turn off your computer, your TV, & see what else the world has to offer. I don't know if this means you should eschew your e-reader as well...

For more suggestions on beginning your digital detox, visit the Adbusters website or check out examples from the Atlanta's Examiner. Tammy Strobel, of the website Rowdy Kittens, takes a "digital sabbatical" regularly.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Spring Creek Concert


Last Friday the bluegrass band Spring Creek played in our outdoor performance area! They drew quite a crowd.


I missed their show myself, but to check out their song stylings visit their website or the video below! They'll make you want to dance!

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Ave's First Library Card

An ABC Libraries customer made this excellent PSA about a child getting her first library card-how timely since this month is Library Card Signup Month!

Friday, September 10, 2010

The Oxford Book of Victorian Ghost Stories

"In the ghost story, obligations do not cease with death, & the past is never a closed book. What has been can be again, though often terribly transformed. For a progressive age...the idea of a vindictive past held an especial potential for terror."
~from the introduction by Michael Cox & R.A. Gilbert, written All Souls' Day, 1990

I have to confess that I am not a huge fan of anything in the horror genre (I recently considered writing to a movie theater chain to ask that they only show horror movie previews before horror movies because I dislike them so much). I thought, however, that I could probably stand some Victorian ghost stories. The introduction put me in Victorian perspective: Gothic tales set in the past were on the wane, & modern-day domestic fiction was more prevalent; & the rise of science could not quash the delight in a ghost story-although many stories were now presented with "spurious factuality", such as being in the form of a diary.

I read 5 stories from this collection: "The Romance of Certain Old Clothes" by Henry James; "Reality or Delusion?" by Mrs. Henry Wood; "The Body-Snatcher" by Robert Louis Stevenson; "At the End of the Passage" by Rudyard Kipling; & "John Charrington's Wedding" by E. Nesbit. Most of the stories I chose because of I had heard of the writers before in other genres. All were well written. I found "The Body-Snatcher" & "At the End of the Passage" the most gripping-"The Body-Snatcher", in tune with the era's preoccupation with science, had a medical theme as scholarly anatomists learn where the bodies they dissect come from; "At the End of the Passage", though set in India, has very little local color but has the air of an intense fever-dream brought on by heat & loneliness. "John Charrington's Wedding" was the shortest & almost a romance until its disturbing finale. The Master, Henry James, presents a story of sibling affection gone sour-most of the characters are unlikeable, but that's what makes the story work so well. Mrs. Henry Wood's story, beginning with "This is a ghost story. Every word of it is true", is the only story to ask, as in its title, was the ghost sighting real or imagined? "Reality or Delusion?" is probably the most down-to-earth, workmanlike of the stories, our unnamed narrator laying out the tale with the sobriety & eye for detail of a historian.

I am still, slowly but surely working my way through "Our Mutual Read", the Victorian reading challenge I started in January. My goal was Level 3: to read 12 books, at least 6 written during 1837 - 1901; the other books may be Neo-Victorian or non-fiction. Rashly, I also thought I might do the Period Film Mini-Challenge (watch at least 6 films that take place between 1837 - 1901) & the Short Story Mini-Challenge (read 12 short stories written or taking place between 1837 - 1901). Here's how I've done so far:

Level 3: 12 Books
-Death at the Priory: Sex, Love, and Murder in Victorian England by James Ruddick
-The Clumsiest People in Europe, or: Mrs. Mortimer's Bad-Tempered Guide to the Victorian World, edited and with an Introduction by Todd Pruzan
-The Disastrous Mrs. Weldon by Brian Thompson
-Nightingales: The Extraordinary Upbringing and Curious Life of Miss Florence Nightingale by Gillian Gill
-The Second Mrs. Tanqueray by Arthur Wing Pinero (from Representative English Plays edited by J.S.P. Tatlock & R.G. Martin)

Period Film Mini-Challenge: 6 Films
-Return to Cranford
-The Mill on the Floss (1997 version with Emily Watson)
-Alice: A Look into Alice's Adventures in Wonderland & at the Curious Relationship between Alice Liddell & Lewis Carroll
-Around the World in 80 Days

Short Story Mini-Challenge: 12 Short Stories
-Victorian Love Stories: An Oxford Anthology (4 stories)
-The Oxford Book of Detective Stories (6 stories)
-The Oxford Book of Victorian Ghost Stories (5 stories)
-The Fairy Tales of Oscar Wilde

Well, it looks like I certainly have my work cut out for me! At least my Short Story Mini-Challenge is more than complete. (I can always aim for Level 2 [8 books] if the going gets rough.) Here are the next books I hope to read: Lectures on Art by John Ruskin; Lady Audley's Secret by Mary Elizabeth Braddon; The Warden by Anthony Trollope; The Observations by Jane Harris; The Suspicions of Mr. Whicher: A Shocking Murder and the Undoing of a Great Victorian Detective by Kate Summerscale; The Way of All Flesh by Samuel Butler; & Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

abcreads Book Banter

Well, we're almost finished with the summer online book group-autumn doesn't officially start until September 23rd, after all-but we do still have the forums open for your use! Click on the "abcreads book banter" icon on the right side of the page if you haven't checked them out yet!

You can still comment on any of the books we've read this summer, or we've added some new categories: What are you reading in September; Need a reading challenge; 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die; & Can you recommend a book about...? (Have trouble seeing the new topics? Click on Topics View at the top of the forums.) If you have another category you'd like to add or a specific question-just click on New Topic to add it!

Sunday, September 5, 2010

Living Green

My sister & her girlfriend having been raving about the Santa Fe Farmers' Market, so I made a special trip up there yesterday to check it out. (Note: I actually spent the night in Santa Fe, since the optimum time to arrive is between 7-8 a.m.) It is quite an event! Lots of local produce, meats, eggs & other handmade items (mostly baked goods & soaps & toiletries) from a variety of vendors, much of it pesticide-free or organic. I didn't end up buying much myself, as schlepping it back to Albuquerque by train seemed like a chore, but it made me think about what I've been missing not checking out Albuquerque farmers' markets, in my case the Downtown Growers' Market. (I like that many markets now have websites with information like locations, hours, vendors, even a mission statement-the Downtown Growers Market, for instance, "is a growers' only open air market featuring 100% locally grown New Mexico produce. All produce is grown within 60 miles of the market, so you are guaranteed to find only freshly picked produce at every booth.")

While I was up in Santa Fe, hanging out with Nancy (an environmental educator through her Recycle Runway program-couture fashions designed from trash!), we discussed her suggestions to keep a green home. Here are some of Nancy's tips:

In the kitchen
  • Compost! Nancy collects all her kitchen scraps in a bucket to take to the compost pile in the backyard. This includes all vegetable & fruit scraps, used paper products (paper towels, napkins), & eggshells. No meat! For more composting tips, visit the city website.
  • Nancy keeps a plastic tub/dishpan in the sink all the time. She puts dirty dishes in there to soak, & also uses it to collect the water when she rinses fruits & vegetables. This water, ofen called 'gray' water, she uses to water her garden.

In the bathroom

  • Does your water heater take a long time to heat up? Nancy keeps a bucket in her shower to collect the water as she waits for it to heat up. When the bucket is full, she uses the water to flush the toilet. She usually tries to do the same with the water from the bathroom sink.
  • There are two trashcans in Nancy's bathroom-one for non-compostable trash, & the other for compostables (including hair, gently-used tissue, cotton balls).
For more environmental questions, check out the GreenFILE database from the library's resource center. GreenFILE is a research database covering all aspects of human impact on the environment, drawing on disciplines including agriculture, education, law, health and technology in providing information about the issues facing our planet. If you're interested it what the City of Albuquerque is doing about sustainability, visit the city's website.

Monday, August 30, 2010

It's Apple-Picking Time! (Almost)


I have not been myself, but some of my co-workers have visited Dixon Farms in Peña Blanca a couple times to buy apples, available by the bushel or by the peck. The apples from Dixon are very tasty & you can choose from different varieties-including Champagne, Red Delicious, Sparkling Burgundy & Red Rome. Also, while you are visiting, you can sample many apple-based culinary creations, drink cider, even take a hayride! You can get an apple gift box, but they do not ship out of state. Be warned-leave your credit cards & debit cards at home. Dixon's accepts checks or cash only.

The Dixon Apples website recommends calling (505-465-2976) around September 15th for their opening date, though they will also will also post these dates on their website. Not all varieties will be available until later in the season, so make sure you check if the kind you're looking for have come in yet!