Misty of Chincoteague by Marguerite Henry
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
I'd avoided this book since grade school since it was an animal book that plenty of people just knew I'd love. I probably would have too! I liked it pretty well even as a grown up. :) It's also nice to have some animal books like this intermingled with the Old Yeller's and The Red Pony's out there. A little bit about growing up - both for the young people and animals in the book, but it's not as harsh a transition/decision/lesson as in some of the other animal books out there.
Definitely recommended for kids who love horses or other books with animals, but also recommended for general readers also.
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Monday, July 29, 2013
Wednesday, July 24, 2013
Hedy's Folly
Hedy's Folly: The Life and Breakthrough Inventions of Hedy Lamarr, the Most Beautiful Woman in the World by Richard Rhodes
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
I liked that the book had a lot of information about George Antheil. I've seen Ballet Mechanique (the film) several times, but hadn't realized that the composer for that music had been Hedy Lamar's co-inventor! :D Not in-depth on either Lamar or Antheil, it's a good overview of the basics of their lives and how they happened to intersect and invent together.
Recommended for people interested in World War II-era inventing, or in Lamar/Antheil's work.
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My rating: 3 of 5 stars
I liked that the book had a lot of information about George Antheil. I've seen Ballet Mechanique (the film) several times, but hadn't realized that the composer for that music had been Hedy Lamar's co-inventor! :D Not in-depth on either Lamar or Antheil, it's a good overview of the basics of their lives and how they happened to intersect and invent together.
Recommended for people interested in World War II-era inventing, or in Lamar/Antheil's work.
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Thursday, July 18, 2013
Uh Oh Baby!
Uh-Oh, Baby! by Nancy Coffelt
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
This book reminds me of our youngest son. It's very cute and well-illustrated. I think it's intended for toddlers and preschoolers and I think they can relate to another kid who's doing his best to do something (in Rudy's case making his mom a present) and then something goes wrong. They want to impress, for their mom to say "Wow!" instead of the constant "Uh oh!" when what they're trying to do is a little beyond them (in my toddler's case he wants to unload the dishwasher on his own - by standing on the open dishwasher door and then removing the dishes and intermingling them with whatever else might be on the counter - a serious uh-oh, but he's trying to help... he wants "Wow!").
While the ladybug isn't acknowledged in the text, it's obvious in the pictures and when storytelling to preschool-age kids, asking them what's happening in the picture "What happened here? Why did Rudy's picture blow away?" etc.... is pretty common. And kids are used to the visual - for them, the text *is* part of the picture, so the limited amount of text with a lot going on in the pictures is helpful for them because they don't have to rely on the text (which they can't read yet) to describe the action. Good Dog Carl is another book that has very limited text, but the story is told through the pictures.
Very highly recommended for parents of preschoolers and for story times.
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My rating: 5 of 5 stars
This book reminds me of our youngest son. It's very cute and well-illustrated. I think it's intended for toddlers and preschoolers and I think they can relate to another kid who's doing his best to do something (in Rudy's case making his mom a present) and then something goes wrong. They want to impress, for their mom to say "Wow!" instead of the constant "Uh oh!" when what they're trying to do is a little beyond them (in my toddler's case he wants to unload the dishwasher on his own - by standing on the open dishwasher door and then removing the dishes and intermingling them with whatever else might be on the counter - a serious uh-oh, but he's trying to help... he wants "Wow!").
While the ladybug isn't acknowledged in the text, it's obvious in the pictures and when storytelling to preschool-age kids, asking them what's happening in the picture "What happened here? Why did Rudy's picture blow away?" etc.... is pretty common. And kids are used to the visual - for them, the text *is* part of the picture, so the limited amount of text with a lot going on in the pictures is helpful for them because they don't have to rely on the text (which they can't read yet) to describe the action. Good Dog Carl is another book that has very limited text, but the story is told through the pictures.
Very highly recommended for parents of preschoolers and for story times.
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Wednesday, February 20, 2013
The Flying Change
The Flying Change by Henry S. Taylor
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Taylor takes the disturbing moments that stick in one's mind for a long, long time (e.g. someone losing a finger, finding a corpse while mowing a large country lawn, witnessing the accidental death of a horse) and turns them into poetry. I wouldn't say haunting since memories similar to these (like visiting a dying relative in the hospital, realizing that a loved one can no longer control his/her bodily functions, or like the previous examples - something more gruesome) affect everyone. I think that the poetry is in articulating those memories, giving them a tangible existence so they can be shared without losing their impact.
Highly recommended for adults 30 & older. I don't think people younger than this will get it, maybe some of them, but I think a bit of life experience is needed before being able to appreciate these.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Taylor takes the disturbing moments that stick in one's mind for a long, long time (e.g. someone losing a finger, finding a corpse while mowing a large country lawn, witnessing the accidental death of a horse) and turns them into poetry. I wouldn't say haunting since memories similar to these (like visiting a dying relative in the hospital, realizing that a loved one can no longer control his/her bodily functions, or like the previous examples - something more gruesome) affect everyone. I think that the poetry is in articulating those memories, giving them a tangible existence so they can be shared without losing their impact.
Highly recommended for adults 30 & older. I don't think people younger than this will get it, maybe some of them, but I think a bit of life experience is needed before being able to appreciate these.
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Saturday, February 16, 2013
The Cat: Or, How I Lost Eternity
The Cat: Or, How I Lost Eternity by Jutta Richter
My rating: 2 of 5 stars
Enh. For one of the 1001 Children's Books to Read Before You Grow Up, I can think of a lot of others that I'd choose before this one. However, if that editor needed a certain number of books from countries other than the US or UK, then I can understand why they might be included. I just don't see that book (the 1001.... book) being translated into German anytime soon (and if it were, then the editor should have chosen better fare than this - e.g. Cornelia Funke or others).
I *might* have enjoyed it more as a kid, but I kind of doubt it. Too surreal without the charm of most fairy tales.
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My rating: 2 of 5 stars
Enh. For one of the 1001 Children's Books to Read Before You Grow Up, I can think of a lot of others that I'd choose before this one. However, if that editor needed a certain number of books from countries other than the US or UK, then I can understand why they might be included. I just don't see that book (the 1001.... book) being translated into German anytime soon (and if it were, then the editor should have chosen better fare than this - e.g. Cornelia Funke or others).
I *might* have enjoyed it more as a kid, but I kind of doubt it. Too surreal without the charm of most fairy tales.
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Labels:
animals,
avant garde,
Book,
cats,
childhood,
children's literature,
fiction,
life,
self-identity
Friday, February 15, 2013
Are We There Yet?: A Journey Around Australia
Are We There Yet?: A Journey Around Australia by Alison Lester
Very cute tour of Australia! Recommended for parents teaching young children (up to 3rd grade) about other countries or for families planning to vacation in Australia.
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Very cute tour of Australia! Recommended for parents teaching young children (up to 3rd grade) about other countries or for families planning to vacation in Australia.
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Labels:
Australia,
Book,
children's literature,
family,
picture book,
travel
Thursday, February 14, 2013
Coriolanus
Coriolanus: Second Series by William Shakespeare
My rating: 2 of 5 stars
It was all right. I'd have to do a bit of research to see which plays came first, but my feeling is that he tried to write another like Julius Caesar or like Ajax by Sophocles instead of a work that stands well on its own. That being said, it was all right to read & would likely be much better to see it performed. Recommended for people who liked the movie - this is one where I'd recommend seeing the movie first. Good play, but not Shakespeare's best.
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My rating: 2 of 5 stars
It was all right. I'd have to do a bit of research to see which plays came first, but my feeling is that he tried to write another like Julius Caesar or like Ajax by Sophocles instead of a work that stands well on its own. That being said, it was all right to read & would likely be much better to see it performed. Recommended for people who liked the movie - this is one where I'd recommend seeing the movie first. Good play, but not Shakespeare's best.
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Sunday, January 13, 2013
Foxfire #2
Foxfire 2 (Hardcover) by Eliot Wigginton
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Really interesting. I like that they included diagrams and measurements when they were available. I also liked the mix of instructive or just interesting oral history (like the part about midwives and the part about ghosts & ghost stories) and how-to. I am going to copy parts of the section on edible spring plants & how to prepare them. There's a lot of them that I've known you could eat for a really long time, but didn't know how to prepare other than to eat a few leaves (or seeds or whatever) raw. Also the recipe for violet jelly. Interesting. :)
Recommended for hipster urban farmers, homesteaders, and other people who just want to read (but not "do") the olde days.
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My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Really interesting. I like that they included diagrams and measurements when they were available. I also liked the mix of instructive or just interesting oral history (like the part about midwives and the part about ghosts & ghost stories) and how-to. I am going to copy parts of the section on edible spring plants & how to prepare them. There's a lot of them that I've known you could eat for a really long time, but didn't know how to prepare other than to eat a few leaves (or seeds or whatever) raw. Also the recipe for violet jelly. Interesting. :)
Recommended for hipster urban farmers, homesteaders, and other people who just want to read (but not "do") the olde days.
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Labels:
Appalachia,
Book,
cookery,
cooking,
DIY,
family,
food,
homesteading,
midwifery,
midwives,
oral history,
plants,
spinning,
vegetables,
weaving
Saturday, January 05, 2013
Life on Mars
Life on Mars by Tracy K. Smith
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Anyone who can write about birth, life, and wondering about our small place in the universe the way that Smith can totally deserves 5 stars. And a Pulitzer Prize for Poetry. Wait - she's got both! And refers to Charlton Heston and David Bowie in her poetry. Breathing a contented sigh.
Highly recommended mostly for 30-something hipsters or 30-somethings who like hipsters. Also highly recommended for other poetry lovers.
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My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Anyone who can write about birth, life, and wondering about our small place in the universe the way that Smith can totally deserves 5 stars. And a Pulitzer Prize for Poetry. Wait - she's got both! And refers to Charlton Heston and David Bowie in her poetry. Breathing a contented sigh.
Highly recommended mostly for 30-something hipsters or 30-somethings who like hipsters. Also highly recommended for other poetry lovers.
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Labels:
African American,
Book,
Charlton Heston,
David Bowie,
life,
poetry,
Pulitzer Prize winner
Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality (Freud)
Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality by Sigmund Freud
My rating: 2 of 5 stars
Again, I find some ideas that were probably ahead of his time (just a handful), others that just demonstrate the scientific state of the study of human & child development - both physically and psychologically - of Freud's time that make me wonder how his theories would change if he were writing today, and then there's others that I suspect stem from the culture of the time/place he's writing in that make me roll my eyes. Reading with the cultural bias of my physical and cultural background, methinks he & the whole Western culture of the time (late 19th to early 20th century) were waaaay too obsessed with masturbation & its supposed ill-effects on one's psychological well-being.
Recommended for those interested in psychology or gender studies, otherwise, I'd probably go with a more general book about Freud and his ideas.
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My rating: 2 of 5 stars
Again, I find some ideas that were probably ahead of his time (just a handful), others that just demonstrate the scientific state of the study of human & child development - both physically and psychologically - of Freud's time that make me wonder how his theories would change if he were writing today, and then there's others that I suspect stem from the culture of the time/place he's writing in that make me roll my eyes. Reading with the cultural bias of my physical and cultural background, methinks he & the whole Western culture of the time (late 19th to early 20th century) were waaaay too obsessed with masturbation & its supposed ill-effects on one's psychological well-being.
Recommended for those interested in psychology or gender studies, otherwise, I'd probably go with a more general book about Freud and his ideas.
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Labels:
Book,
brain,
gender studies,
love,
mental illness,
nonfiction,
parents,
psychoanalysis,
psychology,
relationships,
sexuality
Friday, January 04, 2013
This Book Is Overdue!
This Book Is Overdue!: How Librarians and Cybrarians Can Save Us All by Marilyn Johnson
My rating: 2 of 5 stars
I can tell by the book that Marilyn Johnson is a big library fan. She spends most of the book talking either in sweeping generalizations (librarians are spinsters with buns? Not so! They're hip & tattooed & have blogs and stuff - or spend their off hours in virtual libraries) or in crushingly minute details (does anyone really want to know how many outfits her Second Life avatar has?). The first half of the book is spent "myth busting" the spinster librarian schtick. While it's true that librarians are occasionally annoyed about stereotypes surrounding the profession, she doesn't do much better - while gushing about how hip librarians are (young ones, mind you - around 30 yrs old when she was hovering in 2nd Life around 2006ish) she doesn't acknowledge male librarians at all until about half-way through the book. Most of the men she discusses in the beginning are related to IT, some are librarians & some aren't. What's important is that they're techy. And cool. And defending your privacy. (which is legitimately one of the awesome things about librarians).
Anyway, after the Second Life thing (which is toooo long for such a niche and was pretty much passe before it began), she starts handwringing over libraries changing (in particular the New York Public Library research building changing its role somewhat to allow some (only some) space for circulating collections. She almost whines about DVDs and you can almost hear the "yech!" in her voice when she adds children's story hours, which of course always sound good to Trustees and other people in government. Some collections would not be instantly available, but if the patron was planning a research visit and contacted the library, the materials he/she was interested in would be waiting for him/her when they wanted their stuff. She totally ignores the fact that these (ick!) teens and (ugh!) children as well as people looking for <> DVDs would probably never have come into that building in their entire lives if these changes hadn't been made. A research library only does any good when people use it and its materials.
She complains about budget cuts & several of the librarians she interviews are upset that catalogers in particular non-English languages have been reassigned to other library positions. What she doesn't talk about is that in the budget crisis, the library didn't have to sell its nigh priceless rare books & papers, which are still available to scholars, writers, & everybody who was using them before. Some of the reading rooms have been repurposed & the collections moved, but the collections still exist. The library has changed, but remains intact. No need for handwringing. Please. Libraries are different than they used to be because the public we serve has changed (including writers, thank you very much, many of whom want to be able to have power & wifi for their laptops while researching). That's all. Public librarians are public servants. Though as a profession, we've always tried to shape our public somewhat, the world is changing too quickly now for us to shape the public toward what we want them to be - we need to at the very least meet them halfway. And that as I see it, is nothing to complain about.
Recommended? Not for librarians. I was optimistic by the title & kind of retro cover art. Do NOT be deceived! This might be a good book for a librarian to give to someone who thinks the Internets will soon take over everything & that we'll all live in a paperless society. And drive flying cars. Because everybody already drives the ones with wheels so well. Robot maids!! Wait. That's the Jetsons. I guess I'd recommend it to those people just because I haven't read another that's as accessible about the changes in the profession from about 1995-2009. Just none of it's news to librarians. Sigh... disappointment.
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My rating: 2 of 5 stars
I can tell by the book that Marilyn Johnson is a big library fan. She spends most of the book talking either in sweeping generalizations (librarians are spinsters with buns? Not so! They're hip & tattooed & have blogs and stuff - or spend their off hours in virtual libraries) or in crushingly minute details (does anyone really want to know how many outfits her Second Life avatar has?). The first half of the book is spent "myth busting" the spinster librarian schtick. While it's true that librarians are occasionally annoyed about stereotypes surrounding the profession, she doesn't do much better - while gushing about how hip librarians are (young ones, mind you - around 30 yrs old when she was hovering in 2nd Life around 2006ish) she doesn't acknowledge male librarians at all until about half-way through the book. Most of the men she discusses in the beginning are related to IT, some are librarians & some aren't. What's important is that they're techy. And cool. And defending your privacy. (which is legitimately one of the awesome things about librarians).
Anyway, after the Second Life thing (which is toooo long for such a niche and was pretty much passe before it began), she starts handwringing over libraries changing (in particular the New York Public Library research building changing its role somewhat to allow some (only some) space for circulating collections. She almost whines about DVDs and you can almost hear the "yech!" in her voice when she adds children's story hours, which of course always sound good to Trustees and other people in government. Some collections would not be instantly available, but if the patron was planning a research visit and contacted the library, the materials he/she was interested in would be waiting for him/her when they wanted their stuff. She totally ignores the fact that these (ick!) teens and (ugh!) children as well as people looking for <> DVDs would probably never have come into that building in their entire lives if these changes hadn't been made. A research library only does any good when people use it and its materials.
She complains about budget cuts & several of the librarians she interviews are upset that catalogers in particular non-English languages have been reassigned to other library positions. What she doesn't talk about is that in the budget crisis, the library didn't have to sell its nigh priceless rare books & papers, which are still available to scholars, writers, & everybody who was using them before. Some of the reading rooms have been repurposed & the collections moved, but the collections still exist. The library has changed, but remains intact. No need for handwringing. Please. Libraries are different than they used to be because the public we serve has changed (including writers, thank you very much, many of whom want to be able to have power & wifi for their laptops while researching). That's all. Public librarians are public servants. Though as a profession, we've always tried to shape our public somewhat, the world is changing too quickly now for us to shape the public toward what we want them to be - we need to at the very least meet them halfway. And that as I see it, is nothing to complain about.
Recommended? Not for librarians. I was optimistic by the title & kind of retro cover art. Do NOT be deceived! This might be a good book for a librarian to give to someone who thinks the Internets will soon take over everything & that we'll all live in a paperless society. And drive flying cars. Because everybody already drives the ones with wheels so well. Robot maids!! Wait. That's the Jetsons. I guess I'd recommend it to those people just because I haven't read another that's as accessible about the changes in the profession from about 1995-2009. Just none of it's news to librarians. Sigh... disappointment.
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Labels:
Book,
librarianship,
libraries,
library,
nonfiction,
Second Life
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