Sunday, February 13, 2011

Beyond Ordinary Valentine's Day

A card, chocolate, flowers, dinner...it's been done. Not to me, but a million times over to luckier folks than myself on Valentine's Day. How about something a little different? It's a bit late to be planning, but you still might be able to squeeze in to these events:

- Valentine's Enrichment at the Zoo
-Adult Night at Explora
-Music Night for Valentines at the St. James Tearoom
-Choco-mania at Jennifer James 101
-Romeo and Juliet: a SHAKESPEARE in CINEMA Valentine's Day Screening at the KiMo
-Punch Drunk Love-Happy Valentine's Day from the Guild Cinema!
-Celebrate Valen'ZINES' Day (FREE Zine Reading & Making Event) at Cellar Door Gifts & Gallery
-Partner Yoga at Hot Yoga Downtown
-According to United Blood Services New Mexico, blood donors are needed!

&, of course, your local library has an ample selection of love poetry. Or, if you're not so inclined, have you read the Quirkyalone book? It's "a manifesto for uncompromising romantics", & if you look closely you might spot a local library paraprofessional featured inside (in a very small picture)!

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Science Corner

Recommended science reads by Steve, a staff member from Erna Fergusson Library.


Gravity from the Ground Up by Bernard Schutz -- Nontechnical but deep and clear.

Entropy Demystified by Arieh Ben-Naim -- Most simple and clear explanation of a concept that often trips people up. And it's a somewhat novel take on the subject.

The Symbolic Species by Terrence Deacon -- Inspired by a child's question--"Why don't animals have simple languages?" A deep and erudite inquiry into the nature of linquistic symbolism and why animals don't get it, covering linguistic, neurological, evolutionary, developmental and computer approaches to the problem. But very accessible.

These first few books are about how the nature of the mind relates to quantum theory, both in the sense that you can't disentangle the observer's role in bringing into being what he observes (the measurement problem), but also in the other direction, how what the mind does can't be reduced to any purely classical computation, and must involve some of the strange properties of a quantum computation.

Quantum Evolution by Johnjoe McFadden is about evolution, but interestingly he invokes the same quantum Zeno effect to address the origin of life problem. McFadden is a molecular geneticist, not a physicist, but he comes up with a lot of interesting physical insights, and he knows exactly where to find deep biological mysteries even in something as "simple" as how a finger moves. He gives an eloquent critique of current theories of how life originated. We are at square one clueless about how life could have originated from non-life, and once again classical thermodynamics and chemistry are inadequate, and only some odd quantum phenomena like molecules going into a superposition of a gazillion possiblilities and then snapping back into a single reality seems capable of maybe finding the needle in the haystack. Very speculative, and very worth considering.

The Black Hole War by Leonard Susskind is about the subject of a bet the author made with Stephen Hawking about whether information is lost when it goes down a black hole (he said no, Hawking said yes). Eventually he won the debate, but the explanation is really out there, deep in string theory. This is the kind of book that describes things to laymen more to amaze us than with any hope we can understand, but it's very good for amazement purposes.

The Trouble with Physics by Lee Smolin is a critique of the way physics is being done--basically he doesn't like the way people's careers are shaped by pressure to conform to the latest band wagon, in this case string theory, and the stifling effect it has on possible innovation. He has his own very interesting ideas about what physics should look like.

Three Roads to Quantum Gravity by Lee Smolin describes his own very interesting idea about what Quantum Gravity should look like, contrasted with string theory and one other road.

Faster Than the Speed of Light by Joao Magueijo is an autobiographical account by one of those non-conformist students who pits himself against the establishment to get consideration for the idea that in the early universe the speed of light might have been faster and allowed distant regions to come into equilibrium without any need for the conventional dogma of cosmic inflation. Whether he's right or wrong it's good to consider such things, not to mention that his personal adventures and conflicts are tremendously fun to read about.

QED by Richard Feynman is a classical layman's account of quantum field theory, which he helped invent. Most popular accounts resort to analogies and descriptions that don't let you get really close to the subject, but QED uses diagrams and words that tell you what the equations mean, like a translation from another language into English, in a fundamental sense equivalent to what the equations are saying.

The Road to Reality by Roger Penrose is another one like QED. It's a big fat book, and covers a lot of ground. It's the one you'd want if you could only have one book on a desert island. It's about the essential features of very deep math described in diagrams and words and applied to state-of-the-art mysteries of modern physics. It's not a textbook, there are no special prerequisites, but it is mathematical, and there are optional problems you can work if you want to improve your understanding. I'm going to spend the rest of my life studying it.

Programming the Universe by Seth Lloyd, "designer of the first feasible quantum computer," here considers how the universe itself is like a quantum computer.

About Time by Paul Davies looks at all the different ways time enters our models of reality, full of wonderful questions about the nature of time.

On evolution, everything by Richard Dawkins is good-- The Ancestor's Tale for its scope covering a path through the whole history of life, and The Greatest Show on Earth which makes the case for evolution point by point.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Images of Devotion

Retablos, from "retablo", which is literally translated "behind the altar," are small, multi-paneled oil paintings on wood depicting Christ, the Virgin Mary, or any one of the multitude of Catholic saints. Ex-votos, from the Latin "from a vow," are paintings on tin or canvas offered as thanks to particular saints who have helped an individual in a specific way.
~from The Daily Book of Art

Did you know that New Mexico State University has the largest public collection of retablos in the U.S.? To visit their collection online, click here.

Also check out Mexican Retablos, a unique website dedicated to retablo art, ex-votos, Mexican folk, Spanish colonial and more; Peruvian Folk Art Retablos; Ex-Votos from Mexico; Everyday Miracles: Ex-Votos Anatomy; & Milagre Ex-votos from Northeast Brazil for more examples of these arts.

To view the library sysyem's holdings on retablos, do a keyword search using the word retablo(s); or a subject heading search under Altarpieces.

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Books for Boys & the Not-So-Faint-of-Heart

We have toyed with the idea of having a "gross-out" storytime featuring flatulence, eating bugs, & snide irreverence. Those books are out there, but somehow we never seem to get the storytime going. Here's a list, recommended by staff, of the best reads for those kids (aged about 5-10) who are not afraid of straightforward language, nerdy humor, & weirdness.

Picturebooks
The Lost Thing by Shaun Tan
Rotten Ralph by Jack Gantos
Shrek! by William Steig
Walter the Farting Dog by William Kotzwinkle
The Composer is Dead by Lemony Snicket
Beetle McGrady Eats Bugs by Megan McDonald
It's a Book by Lane Smith

Children's Fiction
The Adventures of Captain Underpants by Dav Pilkey
Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Greg Heffley's Journal by Jeff Kinney
What Buttosaur is That? by Andy Griffiths

Sunday, February 6, 2011

What Kind of Mother are You?



Love her or hate her, Amy Chua's Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother is big in the news right now. (For a taste, read Chua's WSJ essay here.) But because it's so controversial, there are many other opinions out there fighting to be heard! Consider:

For more books like Amy Chua's, check the catalog under the subject headings Mothers and daughters -- United States & Mothers -- United States -- Biography. Also consider looking under the subject heading Parenting.

Friday, February 4, 2011

¡Olé Flamenco!


Got a child who loves song, music, & dance? When I was a kid, it was all ballet & tap lessons,but not anymore! Look no farther than ¡Olé Flamenco!, a photo-essay by local author George Ancona, for a young person's guide to everything flamenco. Ancona's book "demonstrates that the art form is alive today in Spain ... and in New Mexico. In fact, the book opens and concludes with a focus on the young flamenco dancer Janira Cordova, who is a member of the Santa Fe dance company Flamenco's Next Generation," says David Steinberg in the Albuquerque Journal. George Ancona is a photographer & children's book author whose photographs have been featured in over one hundred books, two thirds of which he has also written.

Santa Fe author Ancona will discuss and sign his newest children's book at Bookworks on Saturday, February 5th, at 3 PM.

To find out more about flamenco (for all ages), visit the library catalog.

Included in Ancona's book are New Mexico's own Eva Encinias Sandoval, founder of the National Institute of Flamenco, and guitarist Joaquin Gallegos. To learn more about The National Institute of Flamenco, visit the website.

The Flamenco School documentary trailer:



Check out Flamenco class at the NIFNM!


Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Surface Tension by Christine Kling


For our first book review in the Oceans 11 reading challenge, here's a few words from library patron & friend of abcreads Susan:


This exciting story starts with a Mayday call, and the action never lets up. Seychelle Sullivan owns and operates a salvage boat she inherited from her father. She lives in a bungalow on Fort Lauderdale's New River, and works on Florida's Intracoastal Waterway. When Seychelle hears a Mayday over the radio, she races to beat her competitors to rescue the multimillion-dollar yacht Top Ten, captained by her ex-lover Neal. Seychelle finds a dead body on the boat, no sign of Neal. Florida police prefer to pin the murder on Seychelle rather than figure out what really happened, while thugs from the criminal underworld assume she is hiding Neal, and try to intimidate her into revealing Neal's location. Seychelle's brother, co-owner of the boat, wants her to sell it to redeem his debts, so he sabotages her business. Seychelle is warned by many to stop investigating the murder, and her friends are endangered. She must avoid the police, who want to arrest her, as well as the criminals who want to kill her, to solve the mystery. Seychelle is a likable protagonist with a refreshingly different occupation for an amateur sleuth.

Surface Tension is the first book of Seychelle Sullivan mystery series.