Around this time of year, when the State Fair rolls around and all the livestock are on display, we here at abcreads are reminded that we live in the West, and that we can get closer to New Mexico in Westerns than True Grit and Longmire (although New Mexico stands in for various locations in the movie and Wyoming in this series). To celebrate our Western heritage, here are some of the newest Westerns and Western-related items from the library catalog that have ties to New Mexico.
Westerns
The Killing Trail by Johnny D. Boggs
Shawn O'Brien, Town Tamer by William W. Johnstone with J.A. Johnstone
Here By the Bloods by Brandon Boyce
She Returns From War by Lee Collins
Cantrell: A Western Duo by by T.T. Flynn
Between Hell and Texas by Dusty Richards
Not strictly Western fiction
The Witches of Ruidoso by John Sandoval [YA]"In
the last years of the 19th century in the western territory that would
become New Mexico, young Elijah falls in love with a girl who has
strange insights and abilities with animals. Together, they come of age
in a land of mountains and ravens, where witches terrorized both white men and Apache Indians."
Handful of Sky by Tory Cates"Shallie Larkin has chosen to make her way in the rough and tumble world of
the rodeo, where women are seen as trophies to be won and discarded,
not as serious competition. But just as Shallie can see the hidden
beauty in the stark landscape of New Mexico, she is determined to find the inner strength to fight for her dream of being a rodeo contractor." Western-themed non-fiction
Red Ryder & Little Beaver: Painted Valley Troubleshooters - Fred Harman's Newspaper Comic Strip Heroes in Comic Books, Novels, Radio Shows & Motion Pictures by Bernard A. Drew
"Harman
worked in a studio on his small ranch in Colorado. In his later years
he turned to fine art and co-founded the Cowboy Artists of America. He
helped create the Little Beaver Town theme park near Albuquerque, New
Mexico."
The Wrath of Cochise: The Bascom Affair and the Origins of the Apache Wars by Terry Mort"In
a gripping narrative that often reads like an old-fashioned Western
novel, Terry Mort explores the collision of these two radically
different cultures in a masterful account of one of the bloodiest
conflicts in our frontier history."
Wednesday, September 10, 2014
Sunday, September 7, 2014
Crime Fiction For Youth
Got a mystery-minded kid at home? Here are some titles from our Children's and Young Adult collections that they might enjoy, if you are not ready for them to jump into adult mystery fiction just yet. If you want to test the waters with mysteries written for grownups, try Alan Bradley and Lisa Lutz.
All books in this list are from our Children's collection unless otherwise noted.
Al Capone Does My Homework by Gennifer Choldenko
The Art of Secrets by James Klise
Complicit by Stephanie Kuehn [YA]
Escape from Mr. Lemoncello's Library by Chris Grabenstein
From Norvelt to Nowhere by Jack Gantos [YA]
The Ghosts of Tupelo Landing by Sheila Turnage
The Westing Game by Ellen Raskin
The Mystery of Meerkat Hill: A Precious Ramotswe Mystery for Young Readers by Alexander McCall Smith
Picture Me Gone by Meg Rosoff [YA]
We Were Liars by E. Lockhart [YA]
She Is Not Invisible by Marcus Sedgwick [YA]
The Naturals by Jennifer Lynn Barnes [YA]
Spirit and Dust by Rosemary Clement-Moore [YA]
Burning Blue by by Paul Griffin [YA]
The Edge of Nowhere by Elizabeth George [YA]
Kiki Strike: Inside the Shadow City by Kirsten Miller
Links
Top 10 Crime Fiction for Youth [Booklist]
Edgar Awards - choose Juvenile or Young Adult as category
Mystery Books for Pre-Teens [Cozy Mystery List Blog]
Two Boys and a Body: Mystery Fiction for Teenage Boys [NoveList]
All books in this list are from our Children's collection unless otherwise noted.
Al Capone Does My Homework by Gennifer Choldenko
The Art of Secrets by James Klise
Complicit by Stephanie Kuehn [YA]
Escape from Mr. Lemoncello's Library by Chris Grabenstein
From Norvelt to Nowhere by Jack Gantos [YA]
The Ghosts of Tupelo Landing by Sheila Turnage
The Westing Game by Ellen Raskin
The Mystery of Meerkat Hill: A Precious Ramotswe Mystery for Young Readers by Alexander McCall Smith
Picture Me Gone by Meg Rosoff [YA]
We Were Liars by E. Lockhart [YA]
She Is Not Invisible by Marcus Sedgwick [YA]
The Naturals by Jennifer Lynn Barnes [YA]
Spirit and Dust by Rosemary Clement-Moore [YA]
Burning Blue by by Paul Griffin [YA]
The Edge of Nowhere by Elizabeth George [YA]
Kiki Strike: Inside the Shadow City by Kirsten Miller
Links
Top 10 Crime Fiction for Youth [Booklist]
Edgar Awards - choose Juvenile or Young Adult as category
Mystery Books for Pre-Teens [Cozy Mystery List Blog]
Two Boys and a Body: Mystery Fiction for Teenage Boys [NoveList]
Thursday, September 4, 2014
Borderlands in Fiction and Non-Fiction
In contemporary crime fiction, border noir
typically finds its home along the demilitarized zone separating the
U.S. and Mexico, the jumping-off point for illegal immigrants desperate
to move north, as well as the conduit for the flow of drugs and guns
across the border (guns moving south, drugs moving north). Novels set on
our southern border—typically in El Paso and Juárez, or San Diego and
Tijuana—have flourished in the last several decades, reflecting both our
ongoing battles over immigration policy and our so-often catastrophic
war on drugs. The novels listed below reflect those sociopolitical
issues, to be sure, but their emotional core goes deeper than that, to
border culture itself, wherever those borders may be, and to the
timeless chaos of lives in transition or, worse, suspended in the
perpetually deferred dream of transition.
~Bill Ott*
Not too long ago, we took an abcreads field trip to the movies to watch Gael García Bernal in Who is Dayani Cristal?, a moving documentary which combines the forensic investigation of the body of an anonymous migrant found in Arizona with García Bernal's journey through Central America, retracing the man's steps along the migrant trail. This, and the article in Booklist linked below, reminded us of our own proximity to the U.S.-Mexico border and inspired us to provide this list of items from the catalog.
Fiction
Angel Baby by Richard Lange
The Border Lords by T. Jefferson Parker
Choke Point by James C. Mitchell
Death of an Evangelista by Allana Martin
Desert Blood: the Juárez Murders by Alicia Gaspar de Alba
Dove Season: A Jimmy Veeder Fiasco by Johnny Shaw
La Mordida by Jim Sanderson
The Power of the Dog by Don Winslow
Redback by Kirk Russell
Rules of Wolfe: A Border Noir by James Carlos Blake
Taken by Robert Crais
Tijuana Straits by Kem Nunn
Triple Crossing by Sebastian Rotella
Wrecked by Tricia Fields
Border Songs by Jim Lynch
The Border is Burning by Ito Romo
Sunland by Don Waters
Golondrina, Why Did You Leave Me? by Bárbara Renaud González
Non-Fiction
The Dangerous Divide: Peril and Promise on the US-Mexico Border by Peter Eichstaedt
The Distance Between Us: A Memoir by Reyna Grande
Left Behind: Life and Death Along the U.S. Border by Jonathan Hollingsworth
The American Wall: From the Pacific Ocean to the Gulf of Mexico by Maurice Sherif
Lost Souls = Animas perdidas [DVD]
Links
Hard-Boiled Gazetteer to Border Noir [Booklist]*
~Bill Ott*
Not too long ago, we took an abcreads field trip to the movies to watch Gael García Bernal in Who is Dayani Cristal?, a moving documentary which combines the forensic investigation of the body of an anonymous migrant found in Arizona with García Bernal's journey through Central America, retracing the man's steps along the migrant trail. This, and the article in Booklist linked below, reminded us of our own proximity to the U.S.-Mexico border and inspired us to provide this list of items from the catalog.
Fiction
Angel Baby by Richard Lange
The Border Lords by T. Jefferson Parker
Choke Point by James C. Mitchell
Death of an Evangelista by Allana Martin
Desert Blood: the Juárez Murders by Alicia Gaspar de Alba
Dove Season: A Jimmy Veeder Fiasco by Johnny Shaw
La Mordida by Jim Sanderson
The Power of the Dog by Don Winslow
Redback by Kirk Russell
Rules of Wolfe: A Border Noir by James Carlos Blake
Taken by Robert Crais
Tijuana Straits by Kem Nunn
Triple Crossing by Sebastian Rotella
Wrecked by Tricia Fields
Border Songs by Jim Lynch
The Border is Burning by Ito Romo
Sunland by Don Waters
Golondrina, Why Did You Leave Me? by Bárbara Renaud González
Non-Fiction
The Dangerous Divide: Peril and Promise on the US-Mexico Border by Peter Eichstaedt
The Distance Between Us: A Memoir by Reyna Grande
Left Behind: Life and Death Along the U.S. Border by Jonathan Hollingsworth
The American Wall: From the Pacific Ocean to the Gulf of Mexico by Maurice Sherif
Lost Souls = Animas perdidas [DVD]
Links
Hard-Boiled Gazetteer to Border Noir [Booklist]*
Labels:
booklist,
cultures of the world,
history,
mystery,
suspense
Monday, September 1, 2014
Bibliocraft: Crafts Based on Unusual Library Collections
Jessica Pigza, a rare book librarian and assistant curator of the New York Public Library's Rare Book Division, has written a book that serves as both a lovely introduction the library and a fun assortment of crafting ideas. Her book, Bibliocraft: A Modern Crafter's Guide to Using Library Resources to Jumpstart Creative Projects, begins with a guide to different kinds of library collections, finding the right library for you, planning your library visit, finding what you want at the library, digital libraries, and recommended library collections. Pigza then touches on the different types of libraries (branch library, research library, special collections), library cards, fees, how to search the library catalog (both Library of Congress Classification and Dewey Decimal classification, which is what the ABC Library catalog uses), and more.
The craft projects inspired by the library include fabric pouches, decorated paper, cross-stitch wall panels, and votive holders. Each project is listed in the category which inspired it - children's books, illuminated manuscripts - and each project lists its more specific inspiration - for instance, the Kittens Pockets Dress was inspired by Johanna Spyri's Heidi.
It's a beautiful book and we recommend it highly! It also inspired us to search some unusual library collections and see if we could find craft projects that seemed to be a match for those collections.
Henry S. Hall Jr. American Alpine Club Library
The Henry S. Hall Jr. American Alpine Club Library provides you with all the information you could ever want on mountain culture and climbing routes. Located in Golden, Colorado, we're able to help you find the information you're looking for even if you're across the globe.
~from their website
Project: Alpine Shrug
Whitby Museum and Library
The Museum, our library and archives are run by our parent organisation. This is The Whitby Literary and Philosophical Society. The Society was founded in 1823 by a group of leading Whitby citizens led by the Rev. George Young, the author of the classic nineteenth century "History of Whitby" (1819) and minister at the Presbyterian Church. The chief object of the Society was to setup and maintain a museum, specialising in fossils, since "Whitby is a chief town of a district abounding with petrifications and containing not a few Antiquities". Ever since Whitby Museum has been run for the people of Whitby by the people of Whitby.
~from their website
Whitby is also the backdrop for Bram Stoker's Dracula and the museum contains some suitably creepy relics such as the "Hand of Glory".
Project: Pocket Nosferatu from Creepy Cute Crochet: Zombies, Ninjas, Robots, and More! by Christen Haden
VATNASAFN / LIBRARY OF WATER
VATNASAFN / LIBRARY OF WATER is a long-term project conceived by Roni Horn for a former library in the coastal town of Stykkishólmur in Iceland. The building stands on a promontory overlooking the ocean and the town, and houses three related collections - of water, words and weather reports - which reflect Roni Horn’s intimate involvement with the singular geography, geology, climate and culture of Iceland.
~from their website
Project: Exploration Bottles
The Desert Libraries of Chinguetti
"As recently as the 1950s, Chinguetti was home to an impressive thirty family-owned libraries, but severe drought saw the town’s residents disappear, taking their books passed down from generations with them. Today there remains less than ten libraries in the old town, catering to scholars that occasionally visit the isolated town, but mostly to tourists who pass through to see the priceless texts and experience a traditional nomadic hospitality of the Mauritanian desert."
~from MessyNessyChic
Project: How To Make A Tunnel Book
The craft projects inspired by the library include fabric pouches, decorated paper, cross-stitch wall panels, and votive holders. Each project is listed in the category which inspired it - children's books, illuminated manuscripts - and each project lists its more specific inspiration - for instance, the Kittens Pockets Dress was inspired by Johanna Spyri's Heidi.
It's a beautiful book and we recommend it highly! It also inspired us to search some unusual library collections and see if we could find craft projects that seemed to be a match for those collections.
Henry S. Hall Jr. American Alpine Club Library
The Henry S. Hall Jr. American Alpine Club Library provides you with all the information you could ever want on mountain culture and climbing routes. Located in Golden, Colorado, we're able to help you find the information you're looking for even if you're across the globe.
~from their website
Project: Alpine Shrug
Whitby Museum and Library
The Museum, our library and archives are run by our parent organisation. This is The Whitby Literary and Philosophical Society. The Society was founded in 1823 by a group of leading Whitby citizens led by the Rev. George Young, the author of the classic nineteenth century "History of Whitby" (1819) and minister at the Presbyterian Church. The chief object of the Society was to setup and maintain a museum, specialising in fossils, since "Whitby is a chief town of a district abounding with petrifications and containing not a few Antiquities". Ever since Whitby Museum has been run for the people of Whitby by the people of Whitby.
~from their website
Whitby is also the backdrop for Bram Stoker's Dracula and the museum contains some suitably creepy relics such as the "Hand of Glory".
Project: Pocket Nosferatu from Creepy Cute Crochet: Zombies, Ninjas, Robots, and More! by Christen Haden
VATNASAFN / LIBRARY OF WATER
VATNASAFN / LIBRARY OF WATER is a long-term project conceived by Roni Horn for a former library in the coastal town of Stykkishólmur in Iceland. The building stands on a promontory overlooking the ocean and the town, and houses three related collections - of water, words and weather reports - which reflect Roni Horn’s intimate involvement with the singular geography, geology, climate and culture of Iceland.
~from their website
Project: Exploration Bottles
The Desert Libraries of Chinguetti
"As recently as the 1950s, Chinguetti was home to an impressive thirty family-owned libraries, but severe drought saw the town’s residents disappear, taking their books passed down from generations with them. Today there remains less than ten libraries in the old town, catering to scholars that occasionally visit the isolated town, but mostly to tourists who pass through to see the priceless texts and experience a traditional nomadic hospitality of the Mauritanian desert."
~from MessyNessyChic
Project: How To Make A Tunnel Book
Saturday, August 30, 2014
When Books Inspire Art
Several months ago, I stumbled across a photographer, Margot Wood of The Real Fauxtographer, whose blog includes many photos (or as she calls them, fauxtos) that were inspired by young adult books. Because she allows sharing her photos, as long as she's given credit for them, I'm going to share my favorite images of hers.
Courtesy of Margot Wood
This image was inspired by Shatter Me, by Tahereh Mafi. I haven't actually read the book (I tried, but I just couldn't get into it), but I love this image.
Courtesy of Margot Wood
This image was inspired by Anna and the French Kiss, by Stephanie Perkins. It's one of my favorite books, and after showing this image to one of my colleagues, we agreed that it perfectly represents Anna's character.
Courtesy of Margot Wood
This image was inspired by The Forest of Hands and Teeth, by Carrie Ryan. The picture is a little creepy, as it should be, since the book is about zombies.
And finally, the very first photo I saw in Margot's YA series.
Courtesy of Margot Wood
This image was inspired by Shadow and Bone, by Leigh Bardugo.
What I love about Margot Wood's blog is that she doesn't just post pictures inspired by young adult books. She talks about the photos, too: what books inspired them and how, how she took the photograph, the costumes that are used, and more. It's fascinating to see how books can inspire other types of art.
How do books inspire you, artistically or otherwise?
Thursday, August 28, 2014
Unusual Library Collections and Customs in History
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| Chained Library, Chelsea Old Church [Colin Smith] |
~Matthew Battles
There's a book in the library catalog called Library: An Unquiet History. We've only skimmed it, but it tells the stories you might already know about libraries - the burning of Alexandria's papyrus scrolls in 48 B.C. (author Matthew Battles calls it a "biblioclasm"); that "[i]n the Middle Ages, access to books, even literacy itself, was parceled out on a strict 'need to know' basis"; that "...in the nineteenth century, the sheer proliferation of books in number and kind transformed the library from temple to market, from canon to cornucopia"; and the birth of the modern public library, with the help of folks like Andrew Carnegie. What this most excellent volume does not mention (though, granted, we've only skimmed its 214 pages) is some of the more unusual, and now mostly archaic, traditions of libraries through the ages. For example...
- Anthropodermic Bibliopegy: As was widely reported earlier this year, there are multiple libraries (at Harvard University, at Brown University, at the Boston Athenaeum, at the University of Georgia) that include in their collections books bound in human skin. A volume at Harvard, Des destinees de l'ame (Destinies of the Soul), contains a note by the binder which reads"'A book about the human soul deserved to have a human covering.'"* Anthropodermic bibliopegy, basically tanning human skin as one would tan leather, has been practiced since the 16th century, with a rise in popularity during the 19th century, when the skins of criminals who had been executed were given to bookbinders. The practice has also been used by doctors to honor a deceased patient or colleague. Philadelphia's Mutter Museum also features a collection of books bound in this manner by 19th century doctor Joseph Leidy, and a human-skin wallet owned by the same.
- Chained Libraries: During the Middle Ages, a popular practice was chaining books, especially large, valuable reference books, to the bookshelf to prevent theft. The chains, generally fitted to the corner or cover of the book to avoid wear and tear, would be long enough to remove the book from the shelf and read, but not take the book from the library. There are still a few chained libraries which have survived in Europe, mostly in England. The film of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone featured chained books in the restricted section of the library at Hogwarts.
- Scholars' (or Reading) Cages: Marsh Library in Dublin, Ireland went a step further to secure their books - they actually locked borrowers in cages! These cages are actually three alcoves with wire doors, perhaps an early and less trusting version of the library carrels you see in the college libraries today. (Shields Library at UC Davis has something similar for the convenience of their graduate students, though students do find them "creepy".)
- Xylothek or Wooden Libraries: These libraries, relatives of Wunderkammern or cabinets of curiosities, reached the height of popularity in Germany in the late 1700s and early 1800s. Each "book" is made out of a particular type of wood, covered in bark, with moss and lichen from the tree used to decorate the cover. Inside, "readers" generally find leaves, flowers, fruits, seedlings, root, cut branches, and seeds, along with a special compartment with a written description of the tree and its uses. Great for those studying forestry, botany, or related fields.
-
Do you know of any interesting library collections or customs from history that we've missed? Let us know in the comments!
Links
Anthropodermic bibliopegy [Wikipedia]
"Harvard University book bound in human skin" [BBC]*
"Anthropodermic Bindings or Books Bound in Human Skin" [Eden Workshops]
"The Bizarre Art of Binding Books in Human Skin" [Mental Floss]
"Harvard libraries contain three books bound in human skin" [Daily News]
"Reading in Restraint: The Last Chained Libraries" [Atlas Obscura]
Chained library [Wikipedia]
Xylotheks: Wondrous Wooden Books That Hold Wooden Collections [Atlas Obscura]
The Wooden Library [Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences]
Tuesday, August 26, 2014
New and Novel: Crime Novels
Series versus stand-alone, hard-boiled versus
cozy, historical versus contemporary, a carefully planned menu versus
potluck? Picking the best crime novels of the year is no easy trick.
~Bill Ott*
Looking for a few good books full of mystery and suspense? Here are some of the best-reviewed (and Booklist recommended) reads of the past few months. Covert operations! Daring escapes! Obsession! Treachery! Psychological character studies! Enigmatic strangers! These books explore all the malevolent forces at work in the world, and their aftermath.
The Cairo Affair by Olen Steinhauer
In the Morning I'll Be Gone by Adrian McKinty
Natchez Burning by Greg Iles
An Officer and a Spy by Robert Harris
The Orphan Choir by Sophie Hannah
Shovel Ready by Adam Sternbergh
The Thicket by Joe R. Lansdale
The Ascendant by Drew Chapman
Decoded by Mai Jia
Deliverance of Evil by Roberto Costantini
North of Boston by Elisabeth Elo
Precious Thing by Colette McBeth
The Word Exchange by Alena Graedon
The Fever by Megan Abbott
The Director by David Ignatius
The Bone Seeker by M. J. McGrath
The Late Scholar by Jill Paton Walsh
One Kick by Chelsea Cain
The Son by Jo Nesbø
Links
The Year's Best Crime Novels: 2014 [Booklist]*
~Bill Ott*
Looking for a few good books full of mystery and suspense? Here are some of the best-reviewed (and Booklist recommended) reads of the past few months. Covert operations! Daring escapes! Obsession! Treachery! Psychological character studies! Enigmatic strangers! These books explore all the malevolent forces at work in the world, and their aftermath.
The Cairo Affair by Olen Steinhauer
In the Morning I'll Be Gone by Adrian McKinty
Natchez Burning by Greg Iles
An Officer and a Spy by Robert Harris
The Orphan Choir by Sophie Hannah
Shovel Ready by Adam Sternbergh
The Thicket by Joe R. Lansdale
The Ascendant by Drew Chapman
Decoded by Mai Jia
Deliverance of Evil by Roberto Costantini
North of Boston by Elisabeth Elo
Precious Thing by Colette McBeth
The Word Exchange by Alena Graedon
The Fever by Megan Abbott
The Director by David Ignatius
The Bone Seeker by M. J. McGrath
The Late Scholar by Jill Paton Walsh
One Kick by Chelsea Cain
The Son by Jo Nesbø
Links
The Year's Best Crime Novels: 2014 [Booklist]*
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