Is it too soon? Have you gotten over all the big holiday meals, party food, and snacking yet? Are you ready to think about food again? Because it seems to us like there are always noteworthy books about food, cooking, and all things culinary in the library catalog. Yum! Here some books for foodies that are a little off the beaten path - not just straight-up cookbooks.
Burnt Toast Makes You Sing Good: Recipes and Stories of Love From An American Midwest Family by Kathleen Flinn
Sweet Paul Eat & Make: Charming Recipes + Kitchen Crafts You Will Love by Paul Lowe et al.
Dog-Gone Good Cuisine: More Healthy, Fast, and Easy Recipes For You and Your Pooch by Gayle Pruitt
My Usual Table: A Life in Restaurants by Colman Andrews
The Food Section: Newspaper Women and the Culinary Community by Kimberly Wilmot Voss
A Mouthful of Stars: A Constellation of Favorite Recipes From My World Travels by Kim Sunée
Minding the Manor: The Memoir of a 1930s English Kitchen Maid by Mollie Moran
The Bloomsbury Cookbook: Recipes for Life, Love and Art by Jans Ondaatje Rolls
The Soda Fountain: Floats, Sundaes, Egg Creams & More -- Flavors and Traditions of an American Original by Gia Giasullo and Peter
Freeman
Mallmann on Fire by Francis Mallmann with Peter Kaminsky and Donna Gelb
Also, have you checked out The Mind of Chef series on DVD? This series explores the kitchen, world, and mind of renowned chefs. The catalog now features Seasons 1-3, with chefs such as Sean Brock [Heritage], Edward Lee [Smoke and Pickles: Recipes and Stories From a New Southern Kitchen], and April Bloomfield.
Tuesday, January 20, 2015
Saturday, January 17, 2015
When a critically acclaimed book isn't that good
Last year, a young adult novel called Anatomy of a Misfit came out, and everyone was talking about it. It was all over book blogs, it received a starred review from Publishers Weekly, and in general, people were very excited about it and talked about what an amazing book it was. One of my co-workers read the book and greatly disliked it. Still, I wanted to read it, since it was so highly spoken of, and because my co-worker and I sometimes have different reading tastes. I was expecting to love Anatomy of a Misfit; however, I was very disappointed by it.
When I finished reading it, I wanted to know if anyone else felt the same way I did, so I started reading Goodreads reviews of the book. Many people mentioned the following:
- All the characters are stereotypes.
- The language is offensive (for multiple reasons, including swearing).
- The narrator was unlikable.
- The book was not well-written.
- The book tried to make a point, but missed the mark.
It's an interesting point, and I think a good one. There is much to be said about unlikable characters: they exist, and that's not always a bad thing. Some of my favorite books have unlikable characters, and I do enjoy reading books about people as they are: flawed and messy.
But what happens when a book shows characters as they are, not as we want them to be, and it's not a good depiction of people? For me, there's a difference between having a character who is unlikable, who is flawed to the point where I can't stand them, and having a character who is unlikable because that character is a stereotype. It's something I've been thinking about ever since I read Anatomy of a Misfit and the Goodreads reviews of it. It's important to have characters who are unlikable as much as it's important to have characters who are likable, but I think what's most important is having characters who are realistic and that readers can relate to. For me, this is where Anatomy of a Misfit misses the mark. Instead of having authentic characters, the characters were caricatures of themselves.
What I struggle with now is how to understand how and why this book has resonated with so many people. I'm not sure I'll ever be able to figure it out--all the five star ratings it's getting baffle me. As a librarian, though, I think it's important for me to at least try to figure it out, because something about this book appeals to a lot of people, and knowing why will help me be a better librarian, and, perhaps, a better reader.
Have any of you experienced a similar situation? If so, let me know in the comments!
Thursday, January 15, 2015
Vivian Maier
Vivian Maier (1926-2009) is a riddle, wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma. She began taking photographs in 1949, but rather than trying to parlay her skill into a career in photography, she became a nanny in the 1950s, first in New York and then in Chicago, her chosen profession for about 40 years. Maier continued to photograph street scenes, self-portraits, and more (her collected works number over 150,000), often dragging the children in her care with her as she sought out new spots to take pictures. Financial problems in the early 1970s left her unable to develop her own film, and she gave up photography altogether sometime in the late 1990s. By this time she had amassed a huge collection of photographs and undeveloped film which she kept in storage as she veered between homelessness and living in a studio apartment provided by her former charges. In 2007, one of her storage lockers was auctioned off for delinquent payments, and many of her negatives were bought by John Maloof, a Chicago historian and collector, who brought her photographs to light. Sadly, Maloof was only able to track down Meier after her obituary was published.
Find out more about this elusive artist with items from our catalog!
Finding Vivian Maier [DVD]
Vivian Maier: Out of the Shadows by Richard Cahan, Michael Williams
Vivian Maier: Street Photographer edited by John Maloof
Eye to Eye: Photographs by Vivian Maier by Richard Cahan
Links
Vivian Maier Photographer
Finding Vivian Maier
Vivian Maier's Chicago
The Heir's Not Apparent: A Legal Battle Over Vivian Maier's Work [New York Times]
Vivian Maier and the Problem of Difficult Women [New Yorker]
Find out more about this elusive artist with items from our catalog!
Finding Vivian Maier [DVD]
Vivian Maier: Out of the Shadows by Richard Cahan, Michael Williams
Vivian Maier: Street Photographer edited by John Maloof
Eye to Eye: Photographs by Vivian Maier by Richard Cahan
Links
Vivian Maier Photographer
Finding Vivian Maier
Vivian Maier's Chicago
The Heir's Not Apparent: A Legal Battle Over Vivian Maier's Work [New York Times]
Vivian Maier and the Problem of Difficult Women [New Yorker]
Monday, January 12, 2015
Best Books of 2014
We compiled 18 lists* to bring you the best books of 2014.
10 Votes
The Bone Clocks by David Mitchell
9 Votes
All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr
8 Votes
Euphoria by Lily King
(eAudio)
Lila By Marilynne Robinson
The Paying Guests by Sara Waters
Redeployment by Phil Klay
7 Votes
Boy, Snow, Bird by Helen Oyeyemi
A Brief History of Seven Killings by Marlon James
The Empathy Exams by Leslie Jamison
Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel
6 Votes
Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage by Haruki Murakami
Family Life by Akhil Sharma
Those Who Leave and Those Who Stay by Elena Ferrante
(eBook)
The Martian by Andy Weir
The Sixth Extinction by Elizabeth Kolbert
5 Votes
Bark: Stories by Lorrie Moore
The Blazing World by Siri Hustvedt
The Book of Unknown Americans by Cristina Henriquez
Everything I Never Told You by Celeste Ng
4 Votes
The Assassination of Margaret Thatcher and Other Stories by Hilary Mantel
Dept. of Speculation by Jenny Offill
Can't We Talk About Something More Pleasant? by Roz Chast
Deep Down Dark by Hector Tobar
To Rise Again At a Decent Hour by Joshua Ferris
(eBook)
3 Votes
The Magician's Land by Lev Grossman
The Narrow Road to the Deep North by Richard Flanagan
Song of the Shank by Jeffery Renard Allen
(Playaway)
Being Mortal by Atul Gawande
On Immunity by Eula Biss
(Audio)
The Short and Tragic Life of Robert Peace by Jeff Hobbs
(eBook)
Capital in the Twenty First Century by Thomas Picketty
Little Failure by Gary Shtenygart
My Life in Middlemarch by Rebecca Mead
(eBook)
A printable version of the entire list can be found here.
* Amazon, Brainpickings, Bookbub, Bookpage, Bustle, Buzzfeed, Flavorwire, Hudson Booksellers, Huffington Post, Kirkus Reviews, Library Journal, New York Times, Publisher’s Weekly, Real Simple, Salon, Slate, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal.
Friday, January 9, 2015
Lessons From the Dead: Funeral Practices and Forensic Science
I do not fear death. I had been dead for billions and billions of years
before I was born, and had not suffered the slightest inconvenience
from it.
~Mark Twain
We first heard of Caitlin Doughty through her webseries "Ask a Mortician", which answers questions about pet death, Viking funerals, traditional or natural burials, and more - everything about a mortician's trade you might be curious about, but afraid to ask, presented in a fashion that might just make you laugh out loud. Her new book, Smoke Gets In Your Eyes, is a New York Times Bestseller. As Doughty says, "Accepting your own mortality is like eating your vegetables: You may not want to do it, but it's good for you."*
We've written on abcreads before about mortality, but we thought now might be a good time to revisit the topic. For the mystery buffs, we've included a section about forensic science.
Funeral Practices
Smoke Gets In Your Eyes: And Other Lessons From the Crematory by Caitlin Doughty
Freezing People Is (Not) Easy: My Adventures in Cryonics by Bob Nelson, with Kenneth Bly and Sally Magaña, PhD
Forensic Science
Working Stiff: Two Years, 262 Bodies, and the Making of a Medical Examiner by Judy Melinek, MD and T.J. Mitchell
Careless People: Murder, Mayhem, and the Invention of the Great Gatsby by Sarah Churchwell
Silent Witnesses: The Often Gruesome But Always Fascinating History of Forensic Science by Nigel McCrery
Murder on the Home Front: A True Story of Morgues, Murderers, and Mysteries During the London Blitz by Molly Lefebure
The Poisoner's Handbook: Killer Chemistry [DVD]
Bosnia's Million Bones: Solving the World's Greatest Forensic Puzzle by Christian Jennings.
The Inheritor's Powder: A Tale of Arsenic, Murder, and the New Forensic Science by Sandra Hempel
Links
11 fascinating funeral traditions from around the globe [TEDBlog]
12 Strange Funerals and Funeral Traditions [Mental Floss]
What Do Forensic Scientists Do? [American Academy of Forensic Sciences]
Occupational Outlook Handbook: Forensic Science Technicians [U.S. Department of Labor]
The CSI Effect [The New Yorker]
A Cheerful Mortician Tackles the Lighter Side of Death [NPR]*
~Mark Twain
We first heard of Caitlin Doughty through her webseries "Ask a Mortician", which answers questions about pet death, Viking funerals, traditional or natural burials, and more - everything about a mortician's trade you might be curious about, but afraid to ask, presented in a fashion that might just make you laugh out loud. Her new book, Smoke Gets In Your Eyes, is a New York Times Bestseller. As Doughty says, "Accepting your own mortality is like eating your vegetables: You may not want to do it, but it's good for you."*
We've written on abcreads before about mortality, but we thought now might be a good time to revisit the topic. For the mystery buffs, we've included a section about forensic science.
Funeral Practices
Smoke Gets In Your Eyes: And Other Lessons From the Crematory by Caitlin Doughty
Freezing People Is (Not) Easy: My Adventures in Cryonics by Bob Nelson, with Kenneth Bly and Sally Magaña, PhD
Forensic Science
Working Stiff: Two Years, 262 Bodies, and the Making of a Medical Examiner by Judy Melinek, MD and T.J. Mitchell
Careless People: Murder, Mayhem, and the Invention of the Great Gatsby by Sarah Churchwell
Silent Witnesses: The Often Gruesome But Always Fascinating History of Forensic Science by Nigel McCrery
Murder on the Home Front: A True Story of Morgues, Murderers, and Mysteries During the London Blitz by Molly Lefebure
The Poisoner's Handbook: Killer Chemistry [DVD]
Bosnia's Million Bones: Solving the World's Greatest Forensic Puzzle by Christian Jennings.
The Inheritor's Powder: A Tale of Arsenic, Murder, and the New Forensic Science by Sandra Hempel
Links
11 fascinating funeral traditions from around the globe [TEDBlog]
12 Strange Funerals and Funeral Traditions [Mental Floss]
What Do Forensic Scientists Do? [American Academy of Forensic Sciences]
Occupational Outlook Handbook: Forensic Science Technicians [U.S. Department of Labor]
The CSI Effect [The New Yorker]
A Cheerful Mortician Tackles the Lighter Side of Death [NPR]*
Tuesday, January 6, 2015
Featured Author: Stella Rimington
Stella Rimington's Liz Carlyle series is a notable entry in the spy thriller subgenre. Firstly, her heroine is a female MI5 intelligence officer - not too many female spies getting their own series! Secondly, the author is unequivocally qualified to write these novels as the former Director-General of M15. Rimington worked her way up to this this position, beginning her tenure with the security service in 1967 and working in all three branches, counter espionage, counter subversion, and counter terrorism, before being promoted to Deputy Director-General in 1990 and then to Director-General shortly thereafter. She was the first female to become Director-General and the first Director-General to be publicly identified, with her picture published in a 1993 booklet called The Security Service. This booklet was part of a campaign Rimington herself "oversaw...to improve the openness of the Service and increase public transparency" [Wikipedia].
Liz Carlyle is a young, hip 34-year-old intelligence officer navigating life as an agent-runner in the counter-espionage division and in a male-dominated agency. Liz's missions delve into murky plots involving Afghani terrorists, the IRA, attempted assassinations of Russian diplomats, Middle East peace talks, Somali pirates and beyond, all told in the thorough, densely plotted manner of John le Carré. Read Liz Carlyle's team file on Stella Rimington's website!
Read titles from this series (in order of publication) in the library catalog:
Readalikes
Blowback by Valerie Plame
Castro's Daughter by David Hagberg
The Cutout by Francine Mathews
The Athena Project by Brad Thor
Bloodmoney by David Ignatius
Death Echo by Elizabeth Lowell
A Gentleman's Game by Greg Rucka
Liz Carlyle is a young, hip 34-year-old intelligence officer navigating life as an agent-runner in the counter-espionage division and in a male-dominated agency. Liz's missions delve into murky plots involving Afghani terrorists, the IRA, attempted assassinations of Russian diplomats, Middle East peace talks, Somali pirates and beyond, all told in the thorough, densely plotted manner of John le Carré. Read Liz Carlyle's team file on Stella Rimington's website!
Read titles from this series (in order of publication) in the library catalog:
Also consider watching the British TV show MI-5, several seasons of which are in the library catalog.
Readalikes
Blowback by Valerie Plame
Castro's Daughter by David Hagberg
The Cutout by Francine Mathews
The Athena Project by Brad Thor
Bloodmoney by David Ignatius
Death Echo by Elizabeth Lowell
A Gentleman's Game by Greg Rucka
Saturday, January 3, 2015
Best Young Adult Books of 2014
2014 has ended, and people have started making their top ten lists for a variety of topics: the top ten best books they've read this year, the top ten best songs of the year, and the top ten worst songs of the year, just to name a few. One of my favorite lists is the End of the Year Book Survey, hosted by Jamie at The Perpetual Page-Turner. While I'm not going to do her survey, I've been thinking a lot about the best books I read in 2014, and that's what this post is about. The best books I read last year aren't limited to books that were published in 2014, though most of them did come out last year. My list also doesn't include books that I had re-read in 2014.
It's not easy to say what makes a book so amazing that it's one of the best books you've read. Looking at my Goodreads account, I gave 38 books five star ratings last year, but I realized that I don't actually remember a whole lot about most of those books. A handful of them did stand out, though, and those are the books I've picked as the best books I read.
Prisoner of Night and Fog, by Anne Blankman. Prisoner of Night and Fog is terrifying, but not in the typical sense. It's not a horror story; it's historical fiction. But because it's about a girl whose family is close friends with Adolf Hitler, it's terrifying, particularly when that girl realizes what Hitler's beliefs truly are.
Love Letters to the Dead, by Ava Dellaira. Dellaira is from Albuquerque, and the book is set in Albuquerque. I loved every word of it, and because of the connection to Albuquerque, I recommended it to everyone I possibly could.
Of Metal and Wishes, by Sarah Fine. I like retellings, and going into the book, I wasn't quite sure what to expect. I definitely didn't think I would enjoy it as much as I did. What I loved the most was the combination of a Phantom of the Opera retelling set in a meat-packing industry, inspired by The Jungle. It sounds like a strange combination, but the setting lent itself perfectly to the story.
Blood of My Blood, by Barry Lyga. I knew I was going to love it, since it's the last book in the I Hunt Killers trilogy, which is one of my favorite trilogies. What I wasn't expecting was for Lyga to take the story where he did, and even though it was disturbing, it also had a wow-factor that worked perfectly.
I'll Give You the Sun, by Jandy Nelson. Nelson's first book, The Sky is Everywhere, was published in 2010. I wasn't sure if Nelson would publish another book, but then I heard about I'll Give You the Sun, and I knew I had to read it. Four years is a long time to wait for an author's second book, but in this case, the wait was well-worth it. I'll Give You the Sun was so much more than I thought it would be. It was family and heartbreak and romance and love and self-discovery. It was beautiful and sad and hopeful. I'll Give You the Sun is the type of book that you will be fully immersed in, from beginning to end.
The Beginning of Everything, by Robyn Schneider. I read it while I was on vacation, and after I finished it, it took me a good day before I could even start another book. The Beginning of Everything has one of the best opening chapters I've read. The book made me rethink so many things and gave me a new perspective on my life.
Dreams of Gods and Monsters, by Laini Taylor. It might be a cliche to call this book a stunning conclusion to a trilogy, but really, it was. The more I read, the less I wanted it to end, because I knew the ending was going to break my heart.
What were the best books you read this year? Let us know in the comments!
It's not easy to say what makes a book so amazing that it's one of the best books you've read. Looking at my Goodreads account, I gave 38 books five star ratings last year, but I realized that I don't actually remember a whole lot about most of those books. A handful of them did stand out, though, and those are the books I've picked as the best books I read.
Prisoner of Night and Fog, by Anne Blankman. Prisoner of Night and Fog is terrifying, but not in the typical sense. It's not a horror story; it's historical fiction. But because it's about a girl whose family is close friends with Adolf Hitler, it's terrifying, particularly when that girl realizes what Hitler's beliefs truly are.
Love Letters to the Dead, by Ava Dellaira. Dellaira is from Albuquerque, and the book is set in Albuquerque. I loved every word of it, and because of the connection to Albuquerque, I recommended it to everyone I possibly could.
Of Metal and Wishes, by Sarah Fine. I like retellings, and going into the book, I wasn't quite sure what to expect. I definitely didn't think I would enjoy it as much as I did. What I loved the most was the combination of a Phantom of the Opera retelling set in a meat-packing industry, inspired by The Jungle. It sounds like a strange combination, but the setting lent itself perfectly to the story.
Blood of My Blood, by Barry Lyga. I knew I was going to love it, since it's the last book in the I Hunt Killers trilogy, which is one of my favorite trilogies. What I wasn't expecting was for Lyga to take the story where he did, and even though it was disturbing, it also had a wow-factor that worked perfectly.
I'll Give You the Sun, by Jandy Nelson. Nelson's first book, The Sky is Everywhere, was published in 2010. I wasn't sure if Nelson would publish another book, but then I heard about I'll Give You the Sun, and I knew I had to read it. Four years is a long time to wait for an author's second book, but in this case, the wait was well-worth it. I'll Give You the Sun was so much more than I thought it would be. It was family and heartbreak and romance and love and self-discovery. It was beautiful and sad and hopeful. I'll Give You the Sun is the type of book that you will be fully immersed in, from beginning to end.
The Beginning of Everything, by Robyn Schneider. I read it while I was on vacation, and after I finished it, it took me a good day before I could even start another book. The Beginning of Everything has one of the best opening chapters I've read. The book made me rethink so many things and gave me a new perspective on my life.
Dreams of Gods and Monsters, by Laini Taylor. It might be a cliche to call this book a stunning conclusion to a trilogy, but really, it was. The more I read, the less I wanted it to end, because I knew the ending was going to break my heart.
What were the best books you read this year? Let us know in the comments!
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