Mystery author Margaret Maron burst onto the scene with the first novel of her Sigrid Harald series in 1981; her Deborah Knott series (for which she is beloved by us) did not begin until 1992. In the intervening years, Maron has won Edgar, Agatha, Anthony & Macavity Awards; been the President of Sisters in Crime; received the Grand Master Award from Mystery Writers of America; and many other accolades.
As of this writing, Margaret Maron has called time on both of her long-running series. She has not ruled out writing stories -which is how her career began 40 years ago - she is "ready to be done with contracts and deadlines" though she has "learned to never say never." (!) Ohio public radio station WYSO 91.3's Book Nook program has applauded Maron's choice: "Don't you love it when somebody has the good grace to go out at the top of their game?" We'll miss Sigrid and Deborah, but we certainly applaud Margaret Maron's future plans, which include wading into her TBR pile.
If you haven't yet read any of Maron's award-winning mysteries, we encourage you to check them out! She created Sigrid Harald, a homicide detective with the NYPD, based on her experiences living in New York with her husband during the early years of their marriage. Deborah Knott is a North Carolina district judge - the change of setting reflects the author's upbringing "where the Piedmont meets the Sandhills" of that state, though she emphatically declares the character is not based on her own family life. Maron says she chose these professions for her detectives because "Other,
more inventive writers can make it seem perfectly logical that a
schoolteacher or real estate agent or cookie-baking mom would keep
stumbling over murders that they could solve with their civilian skills,
but I needed a sturdier reed on which to lean."
Sigrid Harald series
9 titles, with 2 available in the library catalog currently, Fugitive Colors and Take Out (the last 2 books of the series)
Deborah Knott series
20 titles, beginning with Bootlegger's Daughter and ending with 2015's Long Upon the Land
These two characters of have a ying-yang relationship in Maron's mind - she created Deborah to be the opposite of Sigrid in many ways. Interestingly, Sigrid and Deborah are distantly related, and you can view Deborah's family tree - she's the youngest of a family of twelve - on Maron's website. The two detectives meet in Three Day Town, the 17th book in the Deborah Knott series.
Ms. Maron has also written a few non-series titles - try Last Lessons of Summer, for which she won North Carolina's Sir Walter Raleigh Award.
Tuesday, August 22, 2017
Thursday, August 17, 2017
Christian Fiction: Recommended Authors
Stories of Christian allegory have been rife throughout European literary history. What is catalogued as Christian fiction at your local library "does not have to involve an actual event or character in Bible history. A novel can be Christian in this sense merely because one of its characters either comes to a Christian understanding of God and of man's need for salvation from sin, or faces a crisis of his or her faith." What the genre and its most renowned publishers, such as Tyndal House, Zondervan, WaterBrook, Love Inspired, and Howard Books, have in common is a strict standard for content - as one publisher proclaims on its website, to it seeks to "minister to the spiritual needs of people, primarily through literature consistent with biblical principles" or, as another says, it publishes "...books that seek to intensify and satisfy a reader’s elemental thirst for a deeper relationship with God." As Deborah Bryan put it at the 2009 Mountain Plains Library Association/Kansas Library Association conference, in the handout for her presentation "Books For the Soul," authors writing for these publishers must "accept the infallible authority of the Bible; address life’s
dilemmas through faith in Jesus; and believe that Jesus is divine, died, and
rose again for the sins of humankind and that he will return again as a judge
and a warrior. There are often certain 'taboos' or offensive content that [the authors] are not allowed to write about." There is a stereotype that Christian fiction is "popular with a certain readership, mostly white, female, and coming from an evangelical Protestant background," but there are countering claims that readers "love this genre because it quenches their inner thirst for knowledge, spiritual guidance, and, yes, entertainment" and that CF has started to embrace diversity, both in characters and storylines, and there has been significant genre crossover from CF's many subgenres - historical, romance (both
contemporary and historical), mystery/suspense, literary fiction, legal
thrillers, Amish.
It has been suggested that there has been a decline in the market for Christian fiction in the past few years - some companies have stopped publishing it altogether, or slimmed down their output - but mass market production for the genre continues to be strong. So show your support for CF by checking out some of these authors, available in the library catalog:
Terri Blackstock
Wanda E. Brunstetter
Colleen Coble
Dee Henderson
Karen Kingsbury
Beverly Lewis
Ruth Reid
Francine Rivers
Joel C. Rosenberg
Randy Singer
Susan Sleeman
Lauraine Snelling
Michelle Stimpson
William Young
If you'd like more suggestions, consider checking out the Christy Awards! This annual award, program of the Evangelical Christian Publishers Association (ECPA), is given to "honor Christian novels of excellence, imagination, and creativity." The award takes its name from Catherine Marshall's 1967 classic of the genre, due to be re-released this year. An alternative is the Carol Awards, awarded annually by the American Christian Fiction Writers to recognize "the best Christian fiction published in the previous calendar year." Also try the ACFW's Fiction Finder site.
It has been suggested that there has been a decline in the market for Christian fiction in the past few years - some companies have stopped publishing it altogether, or slimmed down their output - but mass market production for the genre continues to be strong. So show your support for CF by checking out some of these authors, available in the library catalog:
Terri Blackstock
Wanda E. Brunstetter
Colleen Coble
Dee Henderson
Karen Kingsbury
Beverly Lewis
Ruth Reid
Francine Rivers
Joel C. Rosenberg
Randy Singer
Susan Sleeman
Lauraine Snelling
Michelle Stimpson
William Young
If you'd like more suggestions, consider checking out the Christy Awards! This annual award, program of the Evangelical Christian Publishers Association (ECPA), is given to "honor Christian novels of excellence, imagination, and creativity." The award takes its name from Catherine Marshall's 1967 classic of the genre, due to be re-released this year. An alternative is the Carol Awards, awarded annually by the American Christian Fiction Writers to recognize "the best Christian fiction published in the previous calendar year." Also try the ACFW's Fiction Finder site.
Tuesday, August 15, 2017
Unusual Detectives
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Revelations
of a Lady Detective. Revelations of a Lady Detective. Image taken from
Revelations of a Lady Detective. Originally published/produced in George
Vickers: London, 1864. George Vickers: London, 1864. . Fine Art. Britannica ImageQuest, Encyclopædia Britannica, 25 May 2016.
quest.eb.com/search/163_2964167/1/163_2964167/cite. Accessed 4 Aug 2017. |
Authors still like to put their detectives in unusual milieus. For every gritty police procedural out there, you can find many titles and series (particularly cozies) featuring detectives and detecting teams from every walk of life - coffeehouses managers, tea shop owners, herbalists, crossword creators, knitters, and beyond.
Here's a handful of unusual detectives to pique your interest:
Sidney Chambers and the Shadow of Death by James Runcie
1950s vicar
Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie by C. Alan Bradley
11-year-old sleuth and aspiring chemist
The Hearse You Came In On by Tim Cockey
Maryland morticians
Deception on All Accounts by Sara Sue Hoklotubbe
Cherokee banker
Celine by Peter Heller
elegant, aristocratic private eye
Dog On It by Spencer Quinn
Chet the dog, companion of an Arizona private investigator
Wine of Violence by Priscilla Royal
11th century prioress
Top o' the Mournin' by Maddy Hunter
tour guide
Summer of the Big Bachi by Naomi Hirahara
Japanese-American Hiroshima survivor and gardener in Los Angeles
Inherent Vice by Thomas Pynchon
private eye and Sixties music fan
Gun With Occasional Music by Jonathan Lethem
hard-boiled detective in the near future - mystery has elements of sci fi
Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency by Douglas Adams
detective who investigates based on the fundamental interconnectedness of all things
The Yiddish Policemen's Union by Michael Chabon
Jewish refugee and detective in the Alaska panhandle
The Robots of Dawn by Isaac Asimov
science fiction detective
Whiskey on the Rocks by Nina Wright
real estate broker
My Heart May Be Broken, But My Hair Still Looks Great by Dixie Cash
The Domestic Equalizers, hairdressers
Wanna Get Lucky? by Deborah Coonts
customer relations representative in mega-casino
Eight of Swords by David Skibbins
tarot card reader and former activist
The Disciple of Las Vegas by Ian Hamilton
forensic accountant
Want more unusual detective choices? Check out the Job of Series Character list on the website Stop, You're Killing Me, "a resource for lovers of mystery, crime, thriller, spy, and suspense books...listing over 4,900 authors, with chronological lists of their books (over 57,000 titles), both series (5,800+) and non-series. Use the alphabetical author and character links or the special indexes." It's a favorite resource of ours! You can also search our Books & Literature guide, which provides you with links to booklists on various topics and our own literary research eResource NoveList (free with your valid library card!).
Thursday, August 10, 2017
Unreliable Narrators
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| Used with permission of Powell's Books, Inc. |
We're not going to tell you in what way each of these narrators are unreliable, but don't read this post if you don't like spoilers, because all of these narrators are misleading you in one way or another - they may be the guilty party; they may be insane; they may just have personal bias. But none of these books will end up exactly where you thought they might.
Why are we writing about them, you might add, if it's a possible spoiler situation? Well, as the web site TV Tropes attests, "As an author, this is a difficult trick to pull off. It is a lot easier to tell a straight story than it is to deliberately mislead the audience." They also list a couple of techniques - "Framing Device, ""Literary Agent Hypothesis," and "Rashomon-style," to give you specific examples. Let's give the authors credit for coming up with such inventive plots that turned their stories upside-down!
We don't really think about it normally, but when you pick up a book, "there's an element of trust that the person telling you the story is telling the truth, at least as far as they know it." That's why Agatha Christie's The Murder of Roger Ackroyd, one of our favorite unreliable narrator titles, was so startling and mystery-convention-breaking back in 1926. The reader expects to have to figure out whodunnit, but also expects to be given the facts, the truth, to work with.
So, here's our list of some unreliable narrators you might not have heard of (we're going to assume you all know about Gone Girl and The Girl on the Train) or may have forgotten about (we hope you haven't forgotten Rebecca, another of our favorites). But, if you're interested in twisting your brain around more titles like these, Goodreads has a pretty comprehensive list. Just know, someone in the book is probably lying to you... 😲
The Three by Sarah Lotz
The Gargoyle by Andrew Davidson
The Wasp Factory by Iain Banks
What Was She Thinking?: Notes on a Scandal by Zoë Heller
Fall by Colin McAdam
Atonement by Ian McEwan
How To Be a Good Wife by Emma Chapman
John Dies at the End by David Wong
Where the Moon Isn't by Nathan Filer
Tuesday, August 8, 2017
New & Novel: Audiobooks
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| Portrait of Middle Eastern woman wearing headphones. Photography. Britannica ImageQuest, Encyclopædia Britannica, 25 May 2016. quest.eb.com/search/154_2879588/1/154_2879588/cite. Accessed 7 Jul 2017. |
~Jason Puckett, "Listen & Yearn"
Whether you are looking for non-fiction crime or self-help, true stories of the famous and not-so-famous, fiction ranging from sci-fi to horror to young adult,the library system has a wide range of audiobook titles in a variety of formats! Don't limit yourself to a book on CD - you can also try a Playaway, or download an audiobook from Overdrive, hoopla, or RBDigital. Check out some of the library's more recent acquisitions, as recommended by Library Journal and BookPage (pick up a free copy of BookPage at your local library every month, while supplies last!).
Fiction
The Bear and the Nightingale by Katherine Arden [eAudio]
Dragon Teeth by Michael Crichton
Universal Harvester by John Darnielle [eAudio]
Caraval by Stephanie Garber [YA - Playaway, eAudio]
The Wanderers by Meg Howrey [eAudio]
The Night Ocean by Paul Lafarge [eAudio]
Recluce Tales by L. E. Modesitt, Jr. [eAudio]
The Witch’s Vacuum Cleaner by Terry Pratchett [eAudio]
New York 2140 by Kim Stanley Robinson
Carve the Mark by Veronica Roth [eAudio]
The Second Mrs. Hockaday by Susan Rivers [eAudio]
The Wingsnatchers by Sarah Jean Horwitz [J]
The Marsh King's Daughter by Karen Dionne [eAudio]
Wolf on a String by Benjamin Black [eAudio]
The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry by Rachel Joyce [eAudio]
Bitterblue by Kristin Cashore [YA - eAudio]
Rather Be the Devil by Ian Rankin [Playaway]
Lillian Boxfish Takes a Walk by Kathleen Rooney [eAudio]
Non-Fiction
Dodge City: Wyatt Earp, Bat Masterson, andthe Wickedest Town in the American West by Tom Clavin [Playaway]
Killers of the Flower Moon: The OsageMurders and the Birth of the FBI by David Grann [Playaway]
My Life, My Love, My Legacy by Coretta Scott King [Playaway]
Own It: The Power of Women at Work by Sallie Krawcheck [eAudio]
Hallelujah Anyway: Rediscovering Mercy by Anne Lamott [eAudio]
The Radium Girls: They Paid with TheirLives, The Final Fight Was for Justice by Kate Moore [eAudio]
How To Be a Bawse by Lilly Singh [eAudio]
The Blood of Emmett Till by Timothy B. Tyson [eAudio]
A Really Good Day: How Microdosing Madea Mega Difference in My Mood, My Marriage, and My Life by Ayelet Waldman
Thursday, August 3, 2017
Midlife On Life's Terms
Fork In The Road , . Photography. Britannica ImageQuest, Encyclopædia Britannica, 25 May 2016.
quest.eb.com/search/165_3346570/1/165_3346570/cite.
quest.eb.com/search/165_3346570/1/165_3346570/cite.
Take kindly the counsel of the years,
gracefully surrendering the things of youth.
Nurture strength of spirit to shield you in sudden misfortune.
But do not distress yourself with dark imaginings.
Many fears are born of fatigue and loneliness.
Beyond a wholesome discipline,
be gentle with yourself.
gracefully surrendering the things of youth.
Nurture strength of spirit to shield you in sudden misfortune.
But do not distress yourself with dark imaginings.
Many fears are born of fatigue and loneliness.
Beyond a wholesome discipline,
be gentle with yourself.
- Max Ehrman The Desiderata
At some point in our lives, if we are lucky, we will make it to forty years old....and beyond. There are unmistakable mild aches and pains and our metabolism goes out for cigarettes and never comes back. You find yourself saying insufferable things like, "What a nice young man" regarding someone in his thirties. Worst of all, the day comes when you're standing in the supermarket and the 1990s grunge music that defined the prime of your youth plays over the loud speakers as muzak while you contemplate a selection of calcium chews. The positive moments comes with deciding to take adult ballet classes, enroll in graduate school, and hearing yourself say assertive things like "no" that your people-pleasing younger self would have been unable to utter.
Stereotypes abound over the specter of aging hipsters growing older gracelessly. However, midlife can also give us an opportunity to hit a reset button on our creativity, ambitions, and relationships. The new responsibilities we are entrusted with provide growth and foster deep connections with our family and friends. We are held in the center of no longer being young, but old enough to see how we need to fearlessly prepare for old age and accept our mortality. It becomes possible to mellow out, forgive ourselves and others, and prepare for the next chapter of life, equipped with abundant knowledge about the creative, emotional, and spiritual possibilities for living midlife abundantly .
The Age of Miracles: Embracing the New Midlife by Marianne Williamson
The Breaking Point: How Female Midlife Crisis is Transforming Today's Women by Sue Shellenbarger.
Carved in Sand: When Attention Fails and Memory Fades in Midlife by Cathryn Jakobson Ramin
Coming of Age-- All Over Again: The Ultimate Midlife Handbook by Kate Klimo and Buffy Shutt
Carved in Sand: When Attention Fails and Memory Fades in Midlife by Cathryn Jakobson Ramin
Coming of Age-- All Over Again: The Ultimate Midlife Handbook by Kate Klimo and Buffy Shutt
Crossing to Avalon: A Woman's Midlife Pilgrimage by Jean Shinoda Bolen
Crossroads At Midlife: Your Aging Parents, Your Emotions, and Your Self by Frances Cohen Praver
Eat to Defeat Menopause: The Essential Nutrition Guide for a Healthy Midlife--With More Than 130 Recipes by Karen Giblin & Mache Seibel
Fear of Fifty: A Midlife Memoir by Erica Jong
Girl Walks Into a Bar... : Comedy Calamities, Dating Disasters, and a Midlife Miracle by Rachel Dratch
Going Gray: What I Learned About Beauty, Sex, Work, Motherhood, Authenticity, and Everything Else That Really Matters by Anne Kreamer
Life Reimagined : The Science, Art, and Opportunity of Midlife by Barbara Bradley Hagerty
Love and Trouble: A Midlife Reckoning by Claire Dederer
Menopause Confidential: A Doctor Reveals the Secrets to Thriving Through Midlife by Tara Allmen, MD
Tuesday, August 1, 2017
What's Your Cleaning Personality?
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Cleaning. Photography. Britannica ImageQuest, Encyclopædia Britannica, 25 May 2016.
quest.eb.com/search/132_1255602/1/132_1255602/cite. Accessed 29 Jul 2017. |
Do you just need to get organized?
If your house is clean but cluttered, try Spark Joy: An Illustrated Master Class on the Art of Organizing and Tidying Up by Marie Kondo.
KonMari (as the author is nicknamed in her native Japan) put this out as a follow-up to her bestselling The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up. We almost feel she's mellowed - we don't remember any talk of a "gray zone" in the first book, or suggestions that you can save items for indoor cosplay, and a statement like "the act of discarding things on its own will never bring joy to your life" smacks faintly of blasphemy. Helpful, though, is her definition of tidying up - "tidying up means confronting yourself" - as opposed to cleaning, which is "confronting nature." Spark Joy is definitely about tidying. How to place things, hang things, fold items (there's a lot of folding methods, who knew?) and pack drawers, suggestions for parting with and discarding items. KonMari does touch on different areas of the house, but it's all about how to store all the items you've kept because they spark joy.
Maybe you want to be more organized about cleaning.
Your house needs cleaning. You don't have time and you feel overwhelmed. How do you start? Maybe you'd like charts to help you stay on track. Perhaps you'd like to deep clean using less toxic cleaners that you can make yourself. You need Simply Clean: The Proven Method for Keeping Your Home Organized, Clean, and Beautiful in Just 10 Minutes a Day by Becky Rapinchuk.
We had heard of Becky Rapinchuk before, because people had shared some of her Clean Mama charts on Facebook. Simply Clean wants to be your cleaning bible. Rapinchuk offers a down-and-dirty take on establishing your cleanliness goals ("Just Start Somewhere: Every Day a Little Something") and puts you immediately on a weekly cleaning schedule -Wednesday is vacuuming day, Thursday is floor washing day, etc. She recommends putting together "a cute cleaning caddy that makes you actually want to clean," suggests a 7-day kick start and a 28-day challenge for those who need a boost, and then moves into monthly and yearly cleaning schedules. There are checklists of tasks for you to fill in, recipes for cleaning products, and a section called "how to clean anything." She touches on organizing and decluttering, but her focus is cleaning, so expect to use elbow grease. Rapinchuk remains upbeat and down-to-earth in her presentation - you've got this! She did it, and so can you, in just 10 minutes a day.
You are a slob. You live with a slob. You need emergency action.
My Boyfriend Barfed in My Handbag...And Other Things You Can't Ask Martha by Jolie Kerr begins, "If you're here it means that you've got a cleaning disaster on your hands." You're not thinking about organizing - you have a mess on your hands. Maybe you don't even know how much of a mess!
We were first introduced to Jolie Kerr by her online column, "Ask a Clean Person." Kerr tackles the nitty-gritty of cleaning your kitchen, your bathroom, your laundry, your wedding regalia and gifts, your car, and "the things you really can't ask Martha (or Mom, for that matter)" - there really is advice for cleaning barf out of a purse, goo out of your pocket, and more intimate messes. You will learn how to clean your hairbrush, your hot rollers, your forced heat radiators, your greasy vent hood, your washer and dryer. You will learn how to tackle an assortment of stains using different methods (although the author admits she is obsessed with OxiClean). And throughout, Jolie Kerr will not mollycoddle you. The world is a a disgusting place, and there is mess everywhere. She is plain-spoken and reassuring ("Now, then, that wasn't too bad, was it? I bet you thought our discussion of bathroom cleaning would be far more scarring!") and not afraid to touch on the rude details - a mushroom could grow in your house, your laundry could mildew, you have to clean your pumice stone because you are rubbing it on your "gross feet," and that pee smell in your bathroom might be the floor or the walls around the toilet, particularly if you have men and children in the house. Less of the natural solutions to your cleaning dilemma, but touches on cleaning issues you've never heard of or might be embarrassed to discuss, many of them taken from real-life scenarios that she received letters about.
Which is closer to your cleaning personality? We got the information we were looking for (about carpet-cleaning) from Simply Clean, but now that we read My Boyfriend Barfed in My Handbag we will be cleaning our radiators. We're still working on tidying up.
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