Forgive us our nostalgia. All of us. When I was kid, I bemoaned my
parents’ lionization of the 50s and 60s, but now here I am, approaching
middle age, and I’m spending an awful lot of time reflecting on the
good-old-days, which we all know were actually the 80s. At least I have
an excuse. My latest novel for young readers, The Riverman, is set in 1989. And while it isn’t explicit in its pop culture references—sorry, Bobby Brown’s “My Prerogative” does not play
on the radio during any key scenes—the narrative is infused with
atmosphere of the period. These were the days when the Berlin Wall was
falling and TV talk shows were warning us that if we didn’t die of
marijuana addictions then satanic cults would get us in the end. It was
the last gasp of hair bands and Porky’s movies and the first
gasp indie rock and Steven Soderbergh films. A moment of great
transition, at least that’s what it felt like to a 13-year-old.
~Andy Starmer, "8 Book Recommendations Based on Your Favorite 80s Movies"
The 1980s are often remembered as the era that gave us Walkmen, video games, the mullet, and Madonna; the Rubik's Cube, acid-washing, MTV, and Yuppies; Cabbage Patch Kids, New Coke, and movie blockbusters. An era that was coming down, socially and culturally, from the idealism of the 1960s and the excesses of the 1970s into its own self-centered materialistic consumerism. We had big hair and wore shoulder-pads a lot. There were preppies, and Valley Girls, and Goths. Michael Jackson moonwalked and John Hughes gave us the teenage psyche on film.
But, there was also famine in Ethiopia, war in Afghanistan and Iraq and the Falklands, glasnost in the USSR, protests in China's Tianamen Square - seems like we spent a lot of time in front of the television watching live news coverage of tragedy. Mount St. Helens erupted and we lost the Challenger space shuttle. There were environment disasters in Bhopal and Chernobyl, assassination attempts on the American president and the Pope, and Anwar el-Sadat, Olof Palme, Indira Gandhi. and Benigno Aquino, Jr. were killed. We heard of gene therapy and surrogate parenting for the first time; we read about "bag ladies" for the first time and "Just Say No".
Let's go "Back to the Future" with a list of recent books set in the 1980s - featuring a story set in the SoHo art world as New York City reinvents itself; a crime novel set in the height of Catholic IRA and Protestant paramilitary factions conflict in Northern Ireland;a "tender and mournful"* novel set during political turmoil in South Korea; a real-life Rolling Stone reporter writes "reunion lit"*; a bed-ridden Turkish widow looks back at her life; Lloyd's of London is embroiled in corporate malfeasance; a young man comes of age in a "legendary African American enclave" on Long Island; and beyond.
Tuesday Nights in 1980 by Molly Prentiss
Missing Reels by Farran Smith Nehme
Good Faith by Jane Smiley
Off Course by Michelle Huneven
The Cold Cold Ground by Adrian McKinty
I'll Be Right There by Kyung-Sook Shin
The Hunger and the Howling of Killian Lone by Will Storr
Tell The Wolves I'm Home by Carol Rifka Brunt
Paris Was the Place by Susan Conley
My Name is Lucy Barton by Elizabeth Strout
Don't You Forget About Me by Jancee Dunn
Inheritance of Loss by Kiran Desai
Eleanor & Park by Rainbow Rowell [YA]
Paint It Black by Janet Fitch
Walks With Men by Ann Beattie
My Sunshine Away by M.O. Walsh
An Absolute Scandal by Penny Vincenzi
What Was Lost by Catherine O'Flynn
Sag Harbor by Colson Whitehead
A Teaspoon of Earth and Sea by Dina Nayeri
Black Swan Green by David Mitchell
Silent House by Orhan Pamuk
The Unseen World by Liz Moore
Miles from Nowhere by Nami Mun
The Fall of Princes by Robert Goolrick
Links
11 Books that Will Make You Nostalgic for Summers Past [Pop Sugar]
Librarians Love: 80s-Inspired Books [YALSA]
Books Set in the Eighties [Goodreads]
Andy McSmith's top 10 books of the 1980s [The Guardian]
The 1980s [History.com]
*from the library catalog
Saturday, June 25, 2016
Thursday, June 23, 2016
The Brilliant Brontes: Branwell Bronte: The Lost Son
Anne Bronte (1820-1849), Emily Bronte (Thornton, 1818 - Haworth, 1848) and
Charlotte Bronte (Thornton, 1816 - Haworth, 1855), English writers, Oil on
canvas by Patrick Branwell Bronte (1817-1848), ca 1834. Photograph.
Encyclopædia Britannica ImageQuest. Web. 19 Dec 2015.
Patrick Branwell Bronte, was the only son in the Bronte family, but he became a tragic disappointment to himself and his relatives. Branwell died at the age of 31 due to alcoholism, opium addiction, and tuberculosis. Branwell, as he was called by his family, was as talented as Charlotte, Emily, and Anne, but lacked focus to such an extent that if he were alive today, he'd likely be diagnosed with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder. Branwell was the first published poet of the family and also pursued painting and music with the encouragement of his father, Reverend Patrick Bronte.
The Bronte family was constantly pummeled with losses, tragedy, and economic hardships. Their effervescent mother Maria Branwell Bronte died of uterine cancer when the children were very small. Two older sisters, Maria and Elizabeth, died of tuberculosis, exacerbated by their time enrolled at the notorious Cowan Bridge School. Their devoted servant, Tabitha Aykroyd, and somber aunt, Elizabeth Branwell, cared for the children after her sister's death and were constant, unselfish caregivers. Aunt Elizabeth remembered her three nieces in her last will and testament, leaving each of them £900, which made it possible for them to pursue writing full-time, after many attempts to provide for their family as teachers and governesses. Branwell was not remembered in her will, because it was assumed that as a man, he would be the most capable of making a living.
The graveyard surrounded the Bronte family parsonage's house and garden, which meant that decaying bodies polluted the water supply, which is about as unsanitary and Gothic as it can get. The villagers suffered even more from epidemics of cholera, typhus, smallpox, and dysentery, because the sewage drained in their direction. The average age of death was 25 years old. After the daughter's experiences at Cowan Bridge School, the world must have seemed to be an ominous place, despite their father's guidance and their spiritual inner resources. Branwell didn't find comfort in religion and even professed atheism, although on the day he died, he had a quick change of heart.
The deaths of their mother and especially their sister Maria impacted the family tremendously; however, Branwell seems to have never recovered from these devastating losses. Branwell's father, the Reverend Patrick Bronte insisted on educating Branwell at home, but his motives for doing so have been a subject of speculation. It could have been a cost saving measure so that the sisters could be educated away from home or Patrick's concerns about Branwell's propensity for tantrums and overall high-strung emotional instability. Regardless, Branwell was spoiled, coddled, severely isolated and unable to cope with reality as an adult. Patrick taught his children literature, geography, history, mathematics, the classics, Latin, French and poetry. Nothing was off limits to his children from his library. His educational contributions and encouragement for walking and enjoying the inspiring Yorkshire moors influenced his brilliant children immeasurably.
As a curate, Patrick Bronte realized that he would be unable to provide his daughters with dowries needed at that time to secure advantageous marriages for them. Charlotte, Emily, and Anne were acutely aware of their need to provide for not only their family, but for themselves after their father and aunt passed on. The Bronte children were extraordinarily intelligent, imaginative, and prolific writers, even at a very young age. Their first major literary undertaking came in the form of toy soldiers Patrick gave to twelve-year-old Branwell, which he shared with his sisters.
Branwell named his toy soldier Bonaparte, Charlotte's soldier was the Duke of Wellington, Emily named her soldier Gravey, and Anne dubbed her soldier Waiting Boy. These toy soldiers became vehicles for the poems, plays, and stories of their fantasy worlds of The Glass Town, Verdopolis, Gondal and Angria. The children's sources of inspiration came from The Arabian Nights, Lord Byron, and the political developments they followed in the news. Branwell drew the maps of Angria. Each child developed their writing skills through this creative refuge, producing tiny books in order to preserve their need for secrecy.
In 1831, Charlotte was sent to the Roe Head School in order to prepare herself for gainful employment and started to withdraw from Branwell. Emily and Anne began their own collaboration about the fictitious Gaaldine, an island in the South Pacific. As he grew older, Branwell began to hang out with the other town boys at the local tavern. He constantly borrowed money, incurred debts and tried to be a musician and a painter. There are numerous stories about why Branwell failed to apply to the Royal Academy of Arts, the most famous one being that Branwell was too intimidated and afraid of failure, so he spent the week sight-seeing and drinking the money provided for this important trip.
Branwell was apprenticed to a portrait painter named William Robinson. Branwell's famous portrait of his sisters originally included him, but at some point Branwell decided to remove himself by painting over his own figure. Eventually, Branwell decided to give up trying to make a living as a portrait painter, despite his promising talent. Supposedly, William Robinson didn't teach his student how to properly mix his paints. Branwell's paintings do have unpolished, amateurish qualities that testify to his lack of discipline.
In 1839, Branwell tutored two boys in the Lake District, but was fired in 1840. Branwell then tried to work as a clerk for the railroad and wrote poetry that he got published in various literary papers. Branwell was fired by the railroad in 1842 over bookkeeping errors, but probably more for a mixture of incompetence and drunkenness than deliberate theft. The next year, Branwell tutored the oldest son in the Robinson family, where his sister Anne was established as the governess. In July of 1845 he was fired for having had an affair with the mother, Lydia Robinson. He returned to Haworth in disgrace and sank into a consuming depression that was exacerbated by his alcohol and opium abuse. After the death of Mrs. Robinson's husband, she refused to reunite with Branwell and periodically sent him hush money, which he used to feed his addiction.
Branwell's behavior at home deteriorated and his family took the brunt of his self-pity, tantrums, debts, and destructive acts, such as setting his own bed on fire. Patrick took it upon himself to share a bed with Branwell in order to keep him under some semblance of control, even as Branwell exhibited delirium tremens. He died on September 24, 1848 of a combination of the effects of his addiction, which also masked a walloping case of tuberculosis. Branwell summed up his life with the following words: “In all my past life I have done nothing either great or good.”
Branwell's difficult personality and downward spiral of addiction impacted his sisters' novels. Anne Bronte spent considerable time caring for Branwell at his lowest moments, so she did not romanticize difficult men the way Charlotte and Emily did in their novels. In The Tenant of Wildfell Hall the mistreated wife, Helen Graham, flees her alcoholic husband, Arthur Huntingdon, whose vicious behavior is impacting their son. Anne's depiction of Arthur Huntingdon's demise mirrored Branwell's death and shed a light on how alcoholism affects families.
The character Hindly Earnshaw in Emily Bronte's novel Wuthering Heights, is not only an alcoholic, but cruel, miserable, and loses Wuthering Heights through accruing unmanageabel debt. Near the end of Branwell's life, his debts were considerable and the possibility of jail was imminent, despite his shattered health.
In Charlotte Bronte's novel, Jane Eyre, John Reed, Jane's loathsome cousin becomes an alcoholic and out of control gambler who commits suicide in order to escape his astronomical gambling debt. The gin-loving servant Grace Poole's naps allow Bertha to escape and set a fire in Mr. Rochester's bedroom and to ultimately set the fire that destroys Thornfield.
Alcoholism and substance abuse was one of the dark sides of the Victorian Era. People could obtain cocaine, laudanum, arsenic, and various kinds of opiates at the local drug store. The temperance movement was on the rise. Ironically, Patrick was the president of his local temperance society and Branwell served as the secretary. Branwell was a lonely young man who craved male friendship. Alcoholics and drug addicts had a solitary struggle of harrowing abstinence tinged with stigma. The Bronte family was deeply enmeshed and helpless to save Branwell, who died, probably without ever being informed of the publication of his sisters' books.
In the aftermath of Branwell's death, Charlotte wrote to her friend Ellen Nussey:
"He Died after 20 minutes struggle on Sunday Morning 24th Septbr . He was perfectly conscious till the last agony came on - His mind had undergone the peculiar change which frequently precedes death, two days previously - the calm of better feelings filled it - a return of natural affection marked his last moments - he is in God's hands now - and the all - powerful - is likewise the all - merciful - a deep conviction that he rests at last - rests well after his brief, erring, suffering, feverish life fills and quiets my mind now. The final separation - the spectacle of his pale corpse gave more acute, bitter pain than I could have imagined - Till the last hour comes we never know how much we can forgive, pity, regret a near relation - All his vices were and are nothing now - we remember only his woes." - See more of Charlotte's letters at: http://www.bl.uk/collection-items/five-letters-from-charlotte-bront-to-ellen-nussey-and-w-s-williams-1848-1854-mainly-concerned-with-the-death-of-her-siblings#sthash.NEgMF9bv.dpu
For further reading about Branwell and his family check out the following recommendations:
The Infernal World of Branwell Brontë
The Brontës : Branwell, Anne, Emily, Charlotte
Tuesday, June 21, 2016
Anglophile's Delight: Britannia Rules at the Library
This royal throne of kings, this sceptred isle,
This earth of majesty, this seat of Mars,
This other Eden, demi-paradise,
This fortress built by Nature for herself
Against infection and the hand of war,
This happy breed of men, this little world,
This precious stone set in the silver sea,
Which serves it in the office of a wall
Or as a moat defensive to a house,
Against the envy of less happier lands,--
This blessed plot, this earth, this realm, this England.
~William Shakespeare, Richard II
Tea, The Office, fish and chips and The Beatles. That's only a sampling
of all the wonderful things our friends across the pond have to offer.
If you're interested in knowing more about the British way of life, then
you're probably an Anglophile.
~"How To Be an Anglophile" on eHow
You can find a plethora of items in the library catalog on British history, genealogy, folk tales, art, empire, novels, guidebooks, war, monarchy, television, and the like; for our list below we've chosen a few more obscure titles, for the discerning Anglophile. Hope you find something to add scope and depth to your admiration, or at least to entertain you enough that you don't turn Anglophobic!
Food
The Great British Tuck Shop by Steve Berry [eBook]
Great British Bake Off 2013 by Linda Collister
National Trust Kitchen Cookbook by the National Trust
Taste: The Story of Britain Through Its Cooking by Kate Colquhoun
Afternoon Tea at Home by Will Torrent
The Vintage Tea Party Book by Angel Andoree
Chocolate Wars: The 150-year Rivalry Between the World's Greatest Chocolate Makers by Deborah Cadbury
Music
British Invasion: How The Beatles and Other UK Bands Conquered America by Bill Harry
Britpop!: Cool Britannia and the Spectacular Demise of English Rock by John Harris
Language
How to Speak Brit: The Quintessential Guide to the King's English, Cockney Slang, and Other Flummoxing British Phrases by Christopher J. Moore
That's Not English: Britishisms, Americanisms, and What Our English Says About Us by Erin Moore
Sport
Fever Pitch by Nick Hornby
Red or Dead by David Peace
Mad For It: Short Stories On Football's Greatest Rivalries - Part 1, Manchester Utd. v. Liverpool : Seeing Red by Andy Mitten [eBook]
Historical
Empire of Secrets: British Intelligence, the Cold War, and the Twilight of Empire by Calder Walton
Shooting Victoria: Madness, Mayhem, and the Rebirth of the British Monarchy by Paul Thomas Murphy
The Fishing Fleet: Husband-Hunting in the Raj by Anne de Courcy
Arcadia Britannica: A Modern British Folklore Portrait - 125 Color Photographs by Henry Bourne
Bloody British History by Geoff Holder
Prairie Fever: British Aristocrats in the American West, 1830-1890 by Peter Pagnamenta
any book by Liza Picard
Miscellaneous
Bright Particular Stars: A Gallery of Glorious British Eccentrics by David McKie [eBook]
Hedge Britannia: A Curious History of a British Obsession by Hugh Barker [eBook]
How the Heather Looks: A Joyous Journey to the British Sources of Children's Books by Joan Bodger
The Anglo Files: A Field Guide to the British by Sarah Lyall
Ghoul Britannia: Notes From a Haunted Isle by Andrew Martin [eBook]
The Art of the English Murder: From Jack the Ripper and Sherlock Holmes to Agatha Christie and Alfred Hitchcock by Lucy Worsley
Love, Nina: A Nanny Writes Home by Nina Stibbe
London Fog: The Biography by Christine L. Corton
Vision: 50 Years of British Creativity by Melvyn Bragg ... [et al.]
How To Do Things With Books in Victorian Britain by Leah Price
How To Do Things With Books in Victorian Britain by Leah Price
P.S. Everybody's heard of some famous Brits - typically at the Benedict Cumberbatch, Margaret Thatcher, Gordon Ramsay, J.K. Rowling, Stephen Hawking, Princess Diana fame level - but why not wow people with some slightly more obscure pop culture icons, all of whom you can find in the library catalog: Jeremy Paxman, Stephen Fry, Sandi Toksvig, the Mitford sisters, Marco Pierre White, Viv Albertine, Alexander McQueen, Gertrude Bell, and Tracey Emin, just for starters?
Saturday, June 18, 2016
Stephen King and the End of Watch Tour
Thursday evening, I had the pleasure of attending the Stephen King End of Watch tour, which was sponsored by Bookworks. End of Watch is the final book in the Bill Hodges trilogy; the first two books are Mr. Mercedes and Finders Keepers.
Instead of doing a reading followed by a question and answer session, the event was more of a conversation between Stephen King and George R.R. Martin, who acted as a moderator. Martin did ask King a few questions, but mainly, they just talked back and forth about a few things, including King's writing process. As a writer, this was the most interesting part of the evening for me.
King talked about how he got his start in writing, but when asked where he finds inspiration, particularly for Mr. Mercedes, King mentioned a story he heard in the news that inspired Mr. Mercedes. The story he heard was about a woman who planned on running down someone who was in line at a McDonald's for a sort of job fair; she wanted to run the person down because her husband was cheating on her with that person. That news story led to Mr. Mercedes, in which a man runs down eight people at a job fair and kills them. I'm not surprised that King finds inspiration in every day things and real life events; these things lend themselves perfectly to the types of stories King writes.
One of the questions that seemed to be a fan-favorite came at the end of the night, when Martin asked King how he is able to write so many books. King's response was that he spends three to four hours every day writing six pages, and he makes sure the pages are as clean (proofread) as possible. I loved this, because the advice so many writers hear is to have a routine and write every day, and King actually practices that.
It was great to gain a little insight on King's writing process and where he gets his ideas. A great book for reading more about that is his book On Writing.
Did you attend the event last night? If so, what was your favorite part of the evening? If you didn't make it or want a refresher, George R. R. Martin is hoping to have a video of the event up on his website soon.
Thursday, June 16, 2016
Featured Author: Rosario Ferré
Rosario Ferré Ramírez de Arellano was a Puerto Rican writer and poet whose 1995 novel The House on the Lagoon was nominated for a National Book Award. Daughter of a pro-statehood governor, she started writing articles for the newspaper in her teens; after studying in the United States, she returned to Puerto Rico to get her master's degree and began writing prose in earnest, founding, editing and publishing an irreverent literary journal devoted to new writers supporting Puerto Rican independence. She went on to get a PhD in Latin American literature, studying with Mario Vargas Llosa.
Ferré's earliest writings in the '70s and '80s were in Spanish, but in the 1990s she started to translate her own work to English. She translated The House on the Lagoon and found
Rosario Ferré died this past February of natural causes after leading a full life, including three marriages and three children; winning literary awards and a Guggenheim Fellowship, and being awarded an honorary doctorate from Brown University; teaching at several universities and being a contributing editor for Puerto Rico's English language newspaper.
In Translation
The House on the Lagoon
Flight of the Swan
International Collection
Pico Rico Mandorico y otros cuentos [J Fiction]
Maldito amor
La extraña muerte del Capitancito Candelario
Vuelo de cisne
Lazos de sangre
Ferré's earliest writings in the '70s and '80s were in Spanish, but in the 1990s she started to translate her own work to English. She translated The House on the Lagoon and found
[i]n translation it doubled in size and changed so much that after it was published, she had to retranslate it back into Spanish. In English, Ms. Ferré said in the Times interview, she found that the patriarchal husband, Quintin Mendizabal, was “less unpleasant, nicer and more human,” whereas in Spanish, he was “a scoundrel who is not worthy of forgiveness.”The L.A. Times had high praise for the book: "Like her Latin American counterparts, Ferré contemplates the possibilities of magic, yet like her northern counterparts, she remains firmly rooted in reality. 'The House on the Lagoon' is alternately curious and wise, ambivalent and forthright." Ferré tended to write about the lives of women with troubled minds, "often the victims of violent passions, bizarre fixations, and strange diseases," though they live otherwise unremarkable lives in provincial Puerto Rico.
Rosario Ferré died this past February of natural causes after leading a full life, including three marriages and three children; winning literary awards and a Guggenheim Fellowship, and being awarded an honorary doctorate from Brown University; teaching at several universities and being a contributing editor for Puerto Rico's English language newspaper.
In Translation
The House on the Lagoon
Flight of the Swan
International Collection
Pico Rico Mandorico y otros cuentos [J Fiction]
Maldito amor
La extraña muerte del Capitancito Candelario
Vuelo de cisne
Lazos de sangre
Tuesday, June 14, 2016
Top Circulating Adult Fiction - Genres
![]() |
The Yellow Books, 1887 . Fine Art. Encyclopædia Britannica ImageQuest. Web. 18 May 2016.
http://quest.eb.com/search/108_303306/1/108_303306/cite |
“Knowledge is like money: To be of value it must circulate, and in
circulating it can increase in quantity and, hopefully, in value.”
― Louis L'Amour, Education of a Wandering Man
― Louis L'Amour, Education of a Wandering Man
In the library, "circulation" means a lot of things. What's sometimes called the "library card desk" is also known as "circulation". When we look at a book's record, we count how many times it has checked out as its "circs". The library's collection floats (items checked out at one branch and returned at another stay at the branch at which they are returned), but its items circulate.
For this post, we've chosen to feature the top circulating adult books system-wide from two fiction genres and general non-fiction, as of May 18, 2016. Mystery was by far the most popular genre in the top 200 circulating fiction books system-wide! Several of the top circulating non-fiction titles are graphic novel series with multiple volumes, or other multiple volume series, but that just makes the enduring popularity of a certain book about housekeeping and orderliness even more impressive, we think.
Top
Circulating Mystery/Suspense Fiction for Adults (system-wide)
|
1.
The Crossing by Michael
Connelly
|
2. Tricky
Twenty-Two by Janet Evanovich
|
3. Girl
on the Train by Paula Hawkins
|
4. The
Guilty by David Baldacci
|
5. Fool
Me Once by Harlan Coben
|
6. NYPD
Red 4 by James Patterson
|
7. X
by Sue Grafton
|
8. Private
Paris by James Patterson
|
9. Cross
Justice by James Patterson
|
10. Clawback by J. A. Jance
|
Top
Circulating Romance Fiction for Adults (system-wide)
|
1.
Property of a Noblewoman by
Danielle Steel
|
2. Precious
Gifts by Danielle Steel
|
3. A
Girl’s Guide to Moving On by Debbie Macomber
|
4. The
Japanese Lover by Isabel Allende
|
5. Blue
by Danielle Steel
|
6. The
Obsession by Nora Roberts
|
7. Undercover
by Danielle Steel
|
8. Blue
by Danielle Steel
|
9. The
Liar by Nora Roberts
|
10. After You by Jojo Moyes
|
Top
Circulating Historical Fiction for Adults (system-wide)
|
1.
All the Light We Cannot See by
Anthony Doerr
|
2. The
Invention of Wings by Sue Monk Kidd
|
3. The
Japanese Lover by Isabel Allende
|
4. Cometh
the Hour by Jeffrey Archer
|
5. The
Summer Before the War by Helen Simonson
|
6. Circling
the Sun by Paula McClain
|
7. At
the Edge of the Orchard by Tracy Chevalier
|
8. In
the Unlikely Event by Judy Blume
|
9. The
Secret Chord by Geraldine Brooks
|
10. A God in Ruins by Kate Atkinson
|
Top
Circulating Non-Fiction for Adults (system-wide)
|
1.
Attack on Titan by Hajime
Isayama (series)
|
2. The
Walking Dead by Robert Kirkman (series)
|
3. The
Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up by Marie Kondo
|
4. Justice
League by Geoff Johns (series)
|
5. Guinness
World Records by various authors
|
6. When
Breath Becomes Air by Paul Kalanithi
|
7. Spark
Joy by Marie Kondo
|
8. Being
Mortal by Atul Gawande
|
9. Troublemaker:
Surviving Hollywood and Scientology by Leah Remini
|
10. Moon Handbooks (travel guides)
|
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