Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Titanic Thoughts

The Watch That Ends the Night: Voices from the Titanic  The Watch That Ends the Night: Voices from the Titanic
                               A Novel by Allan Wolf (Adult Fiction)

April, 2012 marks the anniversary of the 1912 sinking of the HMS Titanic. Amazingly, many of us are still fascinated with the people and events surrounding the disaster. Wolf imaginatively creates a novel in verse (reads like short chapters) that provides insights into passengers and experiences. Portions of the work would make a great readers' theatre for middle and high school students. At the end of the book, he includes "Miscellany" with statistics and trivia as well as a section with personal information about many of those who sailed. 


The Dressmaker  The Dressmaker: A Novel by Kate Alcott. Doubleday, 2012.
                               (Adult Fiction) February, 2012 publication

A lot of fiction deals with the sinking itself, but few go into depth about the aftermath. Alcott presents an aspiring young woman named Tess Collins who wins a last minute spot on the Titanic as a maid to Lady Duff Gordon. Tess describes the passengers, the ship, and the lifeboat chaos. In the later hearings led by Senator Smith in New York and Washington, D.C., many of the survivors are called to testify. Tess is torn between loyalties to a handsome sailor, to a wealthy businessman, and to her employer. Not a gripping read, but this will be interesting to those who want more fiction about the ship.


* For another adult fiction choice, also see Houses blog entry for information on 2012 novel, The House of Velvet and Glass by Katherine Howe which has major characters on the ship.
Voyagers of the Titanic LP: Passengers, Sailors, Shipbuilders, Aristocrats, and the Worlds They Came From Voyagers of the Titanic: Passengers, Sailors, Shipbuilders,                 Aristocrats, and the Worlds They Came From by Richard Davenport-Hines. William Morrow, 2012. (Adult Nonfiction) March, 2012 publication date
The galley I read of this book left me wanting a copy of the real book with all the photographs! The author divides the chapters into On Land, At Sea, and Life and Death. The subdivisions include the different classes of passengers and the shipowners, shipbuilders, and sailors. One of the most interesting and controversial aspects of this title is the "Statement on Monetary Values" at the end which estimates calculations of 2012 values for 1912 dollar or sterling figures.

 
All Stations! Distress!: April 15, 1912: The Day the Titanic Sank  All Stations! Distress!: April 15, 1912: The Day the Titanic Sank
                               By Don Brown (Nonfiction, Children's)

A different voice is that of Don Brown, the renowned children's author and illustrator, who has penned a picture book that introduces the tragedy for younger readers. I well remember how four fourth grade Hispanic boys breathlessly ran into my school library one day, each with a different book about the Titanic, and traded books at the circulation desk. As we talked, they looked stunned. "Miss," one said, "you mean this is REAL?"


Dangerous Waters: An Adventure on the Titanic   Dangerous Waters, An Adventure on Titanic by Gregory Mone.
                                   Roaring Brook Press, 2012. (Children's Historical Fiction)

A great adventure novel for 5th-8th graders, this story of twelve-year-old Patrick Waters who sneaks on the ship and comes to know Harry Widener. Patrick learns a great deal about Francis Bacon from Harry and this becomes an important plot point in the tale. Fast paced and action packed, the characters come alive. See if you agree that editors did not find a couple of grammatical errors though. Use of "Titanic" and not "the Titanic" is a little surprising and I found myself hanging up on treating the ship like a character rather than as just a setting. An unusual story with another viewpoint, the book also includes a timeline and an author's note with a photo and copy of a pivotal document that may motivate readers to do some research of their own.

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Deep Thinking

The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains The Shallows: What the Internet is Doing to Our Brains
                              by Nicholas  Carr, W.W. Norton, 2010 (Adult Nonfiction)
I once asked one of my librarian colleagues, Dan Nagel, what the kids in his school were reading. "Oh, I don't know that they're reading," he replied. "They're just scanning and skimming to pass the AR tests."  That really came home to me as I read Nicholas Carr's part history, part philosophy, part neuroscience nonfiction book. Carr presents a compelling body of evidence that reading printed books promotes deep and creative thought. As teachers and librarians, we all buy that reading builds vocabulary and grows young minds. But, Carr goes on to show how in constantly putting together bits of information from the Internet's many sources, we are taking our brains in new directions.  The book jacket even surmises, "We are becoming ever more adept at scanning and skimming, but what we are losing is our capacity for concentration, contemplation, and reflection." Someone in an adult book group recently told me that she's having trouble concentrating and "getting lost in a good book" these days, but she has no trouble reading computer related research at work. I don't have answers, but take at careful look at what Nicholas Carr thinks. It might well change your mind on the topic!


Feeling Blue? Try a picture book!

Just the book pair for a winter's day, these two will chase the blues away! Pull out your blue flosses and start stitching, your blue yarn and start knitting, or, as in these picture books, your blue paints and get going!

Blue Chicken   Blue Chicken by Deborah Freedman, Viking, 2011 
Painting the barn is a big job and Chicken wants to help. When a jar of blue paint is spilled, the whole world is upset. Never fear, all is righted with some imagination and ingenuity!

The Artist Who Painted a Blue Horse The Artist Who Painted a Blue Horse by Eric Carle, Philomel, 2011 
Master illustrator Eric Carle gives appreciation to one of his own early artistic heroes and shows young readers that colors, like opinions, can be changed.

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire

Lost  Lost by Jacqueline Davies  (Fiction)  2010

Essie is one of the young women working in a Lower Manhattan factory in the early 1900's. She dearly loves her family, especially her little sister, Zelda. When Harriet arrives at work, Essie immediately spots the girl's manners and upper-crust ways. What's Harriet's secret? And, does Essie have a secret of her own?  The interactions provide readers with historical fiction, suspense, and mystery all rolled into one book.

Flesh and Blood So Cheap: The Triangle Fire and Its Legacy Flesh and Blood So Cheap: The Triangle Fire and Its Legacy
                                 by Albert Marrin    (Nonfiction)   2011

On March 25, 1911, a major fire changed the lives of many young immigrant workers forever. Its aftermath also helped change the laws about workplace safety. Until September 11, 2001, it remained one of the most lethal workplace fires in history. Marrin brings together the stories of workers, owners, the public, and the news media of the day in a riveting analysis of this tragedy. His research and attention to detail is unparalled.

Sunday, October 9, 2011

The Imperfectionists by Tom Rachman

Product Details  The Imperfectionists by Tom Rachman  2009   (Adult Fiction) 

This reads like a collection of short stories, each about a character involved in an English language newspaper room in Rome. The writing is superb and readers are instantly drawn into the human foibles. It's funny, poignant, and realistic rolled up together. Just keep reading to see what happens and why this was named one of best novels of the year by a whole list of periodicals and papers.

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Hitler-era Germany pairing

In the Garden of Beasts: Love, Terror, and an American Family in Hitler's Berlin    In The Garden of Beasts:  Love, Terror, and an American
                                Family in Hitler's Berlin  by Erik Larson  2011 (Adult nonfiction)

    Ashes  Ashes by Kathryn Lasky   2010  (Grades 6-9 fiction)

Although these two books are meant for different audiences, adult history buffs will appreciate the intricacies of the writing in this pairing. Larson's nonfiction book focuses on 1933 Berlin when Hitler is just coming to power. The narrative describes new U.S. Ambassador William E Dodd and his family as they attempt to learn more about their new assignment. In Lasky's fictional tale, thirteen-year-old Gaby and her family live in 1932 Germany. Her sister is interested in a young Nazi soldier and the family maid wonders if what Hitler says really makes sense. Gaby's a huge reader and what happens to books in the tense times will affect everyone. Same times, different points of view, fascinating reads!





 




 




Monday, September 26, 2011

Missing Princess Di?

Product Details Untold Story: A Novel by Monica Ali (Adult Fiction)


Lydia lives in Kensington, Kansas and volunteers at an animal shelter, but her former life is all too familiar. From the photo on the cover, readers know the real princess on whom this tale is based. Unfortunately, the fictional story just makes us wish for the real thing.

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Before Versailles: A Novel of Louis XIV by Karleen Koen

Product Details

Need an escape from the heat this summer? Curl up and try this tale of Louis and his court. In fact, start with this book and then enjoy a romp through all of the titles by this Houston author. The period details and fascinating characters will make you feel like you've been transported back in time.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

The Daughter's Walk: A Novel by Jane Kirkpatrick

Based on a true incident, this is the story of a Norwegian mother and daughter who walked from Spokane to New York City in 1896. The plan to earn enough money to pay off the mortgage for the family farm does not go as planned and affects the entire family forever. The details about the culture, times, and famous people they meet are fascinating. This is a book that made me think about the role of women, the history of the feminist movement, the interactions of mothers and daughters, and just stayed with me long after the last chapter.

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Charley Parkhurst in Children's Books

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Rough, Tough Charley by Verla Kay


This 2007 picture book by Verla Kay (illustrated by Adam Gustavson) tells, in verse, the story of stage coach driver, Charley Parkhurst. Only at her death do people discover that Charley was actually a woman. In the mid 1800's, she had to disguise herself in order to do the work that she loved. A time line of facts is included at the end of the book.

Riding Freedom by Pam Munoz Ryan: Book Cover  Riding Freedom by Pam Munoz Ryan

Of course, astute readers of Riding Freedom (1999) by Pam Munoz Ryan (illustrated by Brian Selznick), a chapter book for children, will know from the cover illustration of Charley with her eye patch, that the two books are about the same person. My favorite illustration is the one of Charley looking at herself in the water barrel. Selznick conveys reality, yearning, and sorrow in that one evocative illustration.

The two would make a great pairing to share with students in grades 4-6 as they are based on the same real person and focus on an interesting time in America's history. Anyone can appreciate the hard work and dedication in Charley's life.

Louisa May Alcott, A Personal Biography by Susan Cheever

Product Details

Visit the local library for a copy of this interesting work on the author of Little Women. Cheever has obviously done her homework and even points out errors in previous works. She has visited the locales and read the books. This biography of Louisa May Alcott may become a new favorite as it so often breathes life into the traditional timeline, historical chronicle, born-wrote-died type of biography. It's 813.4, not 921, for purists.

You have to love a book that asks the questions that readers really wonder about...like on page 173 where Cheever asks, "Are we doing our subjects a favor when we transpose them into the modern world? Do we really understand them better by imposing our own patterns of knowledge onto them?" This comes in a section about Alcott's physical and/or mental tribulations and whether modern readers can really diagnose past ailments based on what we know now by reading an author's work and personal documents. On page 47, Cheever notes that looking at both art and life is now thought to important in studying fiction. But, is it important? Is what we surmise true? Great questions for a book group discussion!

Cheever also looks at different times in Alcott's life and discusses what we know. For instance, she talks about Berry Brazelton work analyzing modern expectations of girl's behavior and describes the expectations in 1845. (page 81) This is a fascinating way to think about a person and the times in which she lived and the times in which we live ourselves.

On page 32, Cheever has described the life of the Alcott family and mentions that Louisa, in her journals, was entirely loyal to her father. Apparently, Louisa never spoke ill of him either. But, as Cheever summarizes, "As a writer, she expressed her feelings in a far more effective and literary way. She left him out of her masterpiece."

I loved the paragraph about writing as a craft on page 181, too. Good writers write all the time. They can't pick the day that will showcase their best work and only write then. Great advice!

Small Acts of Amazing Courage by Gloria Whelan

Product Details

An English girl in 1918 India, Rosalind, seeks to find her own adventure. Billed as a YA novel, readers will not be disappointed as this plucky teen explores the bazaar and saves an Indian baby and learns about Gandhi and English/Indian patriotism and what it means to be free. When she is sent "home" to England, her time with two aunts changes both her life and theirs. Small acts of courage indeed change the whole world in this well written historical fiction.

Monday, March 28, 2011

State of Wonder

State of Wonder by Ann Patchett: Book Cover  State of Wonder by Ann Patchett, 2011


Just finished reading a prepub copy of Ann Patchett's new book, State of Wonder. This is about as close to the Amazon as I want to get! Patchett writes so well that you just want to stop and read some sentences out loud to savor the sounds. A doctor in Minnesota goes to the jungle to find out more about her colleague. Definitely adventure, part mystery, and pure enjoyment! It's hard to put down the book as you want to know what happens, but worth taking some breaks to think over the complications and characters.