Wednesday, November 13, 2013

American Alligator: Ancient Predator in the Modern World by Kelby Ouchley

If you want to get the attention of preschool and elementary school children, carry around a copy of American Alligator: Ancient Predator in the Modern World by Kelby Ouchley. They'll want to see what you have. Then, when they tell you about the shark books that they borrowed from the library, you can say, "The jaws of an American alligator are much stronger than the jaws of a shark." Watch as their eyes grow big.

Being a publication from the University Press of Florida, however, American Alligator is not aimed at the younger reader. Instead, it is a serious assessment of the state of alligator conservation and the role of the alligator in modern America. The surprisingly good news is that American alligators have recovered from threatened extinction to thrive, thanks to the spread of wildlife preserves, limited hunting seasons, and the rise of alligator ranches to provide most of the hides for the leather goods and meat markets. The troubling news is that alligators have now adapted to urban environments and become pest animals in cities across the South. According to Ouchley, it is not the alligator's fault. People have dumped their overgrown pet alligators into canals, and most human injuries can be attributed to reckless behavior of humans. Normally an alligator wants to stay away from humans.

With numerous personal touches and good story telling, Ouchley has succeeded in writing an academic press book suitable for general readers. It will appeal to viewers of nature documentaries and students doing animal reports.

Ouchley, Kelby. American Alligator: Ancient Predator in the Modern World. University Press of Florida, 2013. 160p. ISBN 9780813049137.

Monday, November 11, 2013

Falling Upwards: How We Took to the Air by Richard Holmes

When I began reviewing for Booklist, Brad Hooper enlisted me to read new science titles. At some point I let him know that I would also review biography or history. So, Falling Upwards: How We Took to the Air by Richard Holmes was a perfect assignment - a book about the history of ballooning with generous technical details and biographical profiles. I chose it first from a shipment of books that Brad sent at the end of summer and was not disappointed.

I have never gone up in a balloon, but I have always thought it would be spectacular to float over the earth, getting a grand sweeping view of town and country. It never looked particularly dangerous to me, but a reader of Falling Upwards will learn that it can easily become deadly. Several of the pioneers of ballooning lost their lives in accidents, some in particularly dramatic fashion. Most notably, thousands of people witnessed the death of French heroine Sophie Blanchard as she fell from the sky over Paris in 1819. Also, Thomas Harris may have jumped from a plummeting balloon to reduce the weight and save the life of the mysterious and beautiful young woman that he taken for a ride in 1824. Other balloonists barely survived unforeseen circumstances only to repeatedly test the skies again and again.

In the late 18th and throughout the 19th centuries there were always unforeseen circumstances. Weather forecasting was just a dream, and balloonists had no actual means to steer their balloons. They might lose air or catch fire at almost any point. Some balloonists fainted from oxygen deprivation when they flew too high. The perils were numerous, but experimenters persisted in believing balloons were the key to modern rapid transportation of goods, communications, and people. Only the success of the Wright Brothers in introducing powered flight brought the balloon dream to an end.

In Falling Upwards, Holmes tells many great stories, including how scientists first learned about the upper atmosphere firsthand and how the French used balloons to get letters and witnesses out of besieged Paris during the Franco-Prussian War. This entertaining history will appeal to many readers.

Holmes, Richard. Falling Upwards: How We Took to the Air. Pantheon Books, 2013. 416p. ISBN 9780307379665.

Wednesday, November 06, 2013

On Rereading My Reading Life by Pat Conroy

For the second time this fall, I have reread a book that I read within the past two years. Both were memoirs. Rereading is something I have done very little of in my life, as there are so many books still to read. This time the book was My Reading Life by Pat Conroy. Much was familiar, of course, but just like when I see a movie a second time, I noticed parts of the story that I had previously missed.

For instance, I did not recall Conroy discussing the lives of military children as a category, though he was one obviously. I met bunches of "military brats" when I went to college. As a elementary school student before that, I met many children of oilfield industry employees who were transferred into and out of my town. They were much like military children. What he says of military kids and I would add any children who frequently move rings true. What jumps out at me now, however, is a statement relating to the children who have always lived in one town. I found this on page 191:
When I was a child, my heart used to sink at every new move or new set of orders. By necessity, I became an expert at spotting outsiders. All through my youth I was grateful for unpopular children. In their unhappiness, I saw my chance for rescue… 
I guess every book has something to which the reader relates, and I found mine in this statement. It was a revelation. With one important exception, my closest friends were all boys who moved into town between fifth grade and high school, not the ones who had always been there. In the outsider, I think Conroy has described someone much like who I was. And the new kids were my chance of rescue, too. It is funny that I only realized this now, many years later.

Maybe I should reread memoirs more often.

I reread for the sake of attending a book discussion. Since several members of our book group are devoted Pat Conroy reader, one even brought an autographed copy, the discussion was particularly lively.

Conroy, Pat. My Reading Life. Doubleday, 2010. 337p. ISBN 9780385533577.

Monday, November 04, 2013

The Millionaire and the Mummies: Theodore Davis's Gilded Age in the Valley of the Kings by John M. Adams

In modern art museums, works of art or antiquity are usually accompanied by plaques identifying pieces, their creators (if known), places of origin, dates, and how the pieces were acquired by the museum. "Gift of" or "bequest" are familiar statements on such signs. In the Egyptian galleries of both Boston's Museum of Fine Arts and New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art, many antiquities from tombs in the Valley of the Kings were gifts of the Gilded Age millionaire Theodore Davis. John M. Adams explains how Davis obtained these pieces in The Millionaire and the Mummies: Theodore Davis's Gilded Age in the Valley of the Kings.

If you have read about the politics of archeology, you know that modern nations are rarely willing to part with their antiquities, and Egypt is now very protective of its ancient treasures. Even in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Egypt had laws claiming that antiquities belonged to the state and should not leave the country. There were, however, loopholes in the laws, allowing Egyptian officials to give "keepsakes" to the rich Europeans and Americans who sponsored excavations of tombs. Over a fifteen to twenty year period when many tombs were discovered, Theodore Davis was the most active sponsor of Egyptian archeology and received many pieces as gifts of the Egyptian government.

Like many of the philanthropists of his age, Davis made his fortune through unethical means. As a lawyer working for banks and railroads, he saw opportunities to manipulate transactions to his own benefit. His own specialty seemed to be cheating cheaters. Three times he was investigated by Congressional subcommittees, but evidence of his crimes was never strong enough to convict him. He was aided by the perjury of associates and bribes to government officials as well as the fact that his accusers usually had much to hide themselves.

I enjoyed how the author made settings vivid. Iowa City, Iowa (I visited often while my daughter was in college) and New York City (I vacationed there earlier this year) are featured as are locations along the Nile River (where I'd like to go some day). I also enjoyed how Adams mixed stories from various periods of Davis's life to reveal his character gradually.

The Millionaire and the Mummies shows the Gilded Age in a critical light, identifying injustices that have not been forgotten. It also recounts the life of a very complicated man and his unusual family arrangements. It would make an excellent book discussion book.

Adams, John M. The Millionaire and the Mummies: Theodore Davis's Gilded Age in the Valley of the Kings. St. Martin's Press, 2013. 363p. ISBN 9781250026699.

Friday, November 01, 2013

The Tapir Scientist: Saving South America's Largest Mammal by Sy Montgomery

I'd like to get a job writing nonfiction nature books for children. Maybe I'd be assigned to great places like the Pantanal Wetlands in South America. I'd especially like it if I got to work with naturalists studying secretive wildlife. It would be worth fighting off the ticks and mosquitoes to get to see what so few people see. Author Sy Montgomery and photographer Nic Bishop were so lucky. They visited and worked with Patricia Medici, whose work is described in The Tapir Scientist: Saving South America's Largest Mammal.

Not everyone knows tapirs, stout mammals that look like a cross between elephants and pigmy hippopotami but which are most closely related to horses. Of the four surviving species, three live in South America and one in Asia. Little is known about the lives of these rare animals, whose babies resemble watermelons, so the work of Brazilian biologist Medici and her team is innovative and highly important to wildlife conservation.

Montgomery and Bishop have traveled to remote locations in the past. In Saving the Ghost of the Mountain, they report on their work with scientists studying snow leopards in Mongolia. In that and their new book, they vividly describe the daily work of dedicated biologists. I found both books fascinating, much like watching an episode of PBS Nature.

Montgomery and Bishop's books are usually shelved in children's libraries, where many of the best books can be found.

Montgomery, Sy. The Tapir Scientist: Saving South America's Largest Mammal. Houghton Mifflin Books for Children, 2013. 80p. ISBN 9780547815480.

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Eighty Days: Nellie Bly and Elizabeth Bisland's History-Making Race Around the World by Matthew Goodman

Travel has long been praised as a transforming experience. In Eighty Days: Nellie Bly and Elizabeth Bisland's History-Making Race Around the World, author Matthew Goodman tells us how the lives of two young women of the Gilded Age, traveling alone when women were supposed to be chaperoned, were changed by circling the world.

In the 1880s, means of transportation were quickening. With the laying of railroads across continents, launching of ocean-crossing steamships, and the opening of the Suez Canal, trips that had previously taken months could be made in days. Jules Verne recognized the possibilities and delighted readers with his adventure novel Around the World in Eighty Days. With speculation about global travel running high because of Verne's book, journalist Nellie Bly consulted time tables and calculated a trip around the world could be made in only 75 days. In 1889, she proposed that the New York World send her on such a trip. The editors at first declined but later, feeling that they needed a big splashy story to stop a decline in their sales, accepted her idea.

An editor for Cosmopolitan magazine also recognized the opportunity for publicity and within hours of Nellie Bly's departure to the east sent his book reviewer Elizabeth Bisland west in an attempt to beat Bly back to New York. Women who had never met suddenly became rivals. In Eighty Days, the author recounts two difficult journeys while comparing and contrasting two novice travelers. He also uses incidents from their trips to introduce topics of the age, including the closing of he American frontier, British imperialism, the rise of the tourist industry, and the role of women in journalism. In the concluding chapters, Goodman describes how Bly and Bisland fared after their notoriety faded.

Because most of the story is about the journeys, Eighty Days will be found in the travel section of your public library. History readers should remember to look there for it and other entertaining historical travel adventures.

Goodman, Matthew. Eighty Days: Nellie Bly and Elizabeth Bisland's History-Making Race Around the World. Ballantine Books, 2013. 449p. ISBN 9780345527264.

audiobook: Random House Audio, 2013. 15 compact discs. approximately 19 hours. ISBN 9780385359726.

Monday, October 28, 2013

The American Scream

On Friday night after showing The American Scream to our film discussion group at the library, I had the worst nightmare that I can remember having since childhood. It involved my going into our kitchen and hearing a scream coming from the stew pot on the stove. Even in my dreams I should have known better than to lift the lid on the stew pot. I can't even begin to describe the horror.

This is all a little surprising. Though there are plenty of grizzly images in documentary The American Scream, which shows three home haunters and their families preparing for Halloween, the film was mostly light and sweet. Some of the home haunters were obsessive in their efforts to put on a good show in either their basements or backyards, but they all seemed intent on having good fun. There were some family issues to sort out, but every family seemed to love being a part of the fun. I especially liked the father and son who volunteered as clowns for parties and community events when they were not preparing for Halloween. It all made me want to decorate our yard or go to a haunted house right away.

You might ask what there was to discuss in a mostly straight forward documentary chronicling a month of preparations for Halloween. I'd suggest examining the characters in the film and your own community feeling about the holiday. You'll probably start talking about your own Halloween memories. That's what the ten people who came to our discussion did.

Here is the trailer to give you a feel for the film: The American Scream trailer.

Friday, October 25, 2013

Mr. Tiger Goes Wild by Peter Brown

Mr. Tiger Goes Wild by Peter Brown feels like a dangerous book to me. I just read it and am feeling that I should blow off work today. Oh, I'll probably still go today, but maybe I'll skip tomorrow. Maybe not tomorrow, but sometime soon.

I'd like to read Mr. Tiger Goes Wild with young children. We'd all become wild animals and run about the park. But that may be too dangerous. We might all jump in a fountain.

I am feeling like spending the whole day outdoors, away from buildings and streets, out in the forest. Why is that? Maybe I will read Mr. Tiger Goes Wild again.

Brown, Peter. Mr. Tiger Goes Wild. Little Brown and Company, 2013. ISBN 9780316200639.

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Bushville Wins! The Wild Saga of the 1957 Milwaukee Braves and the Screwballs, Sluggers, and Beer Swiggers Who Canned the New York Yankees and Changed Baseball by John Klima


Here is a good World Series book.

During the major league baseball playoffs, with my teams dropping faster than the autumn leaves, I turned from the television to my reading wish list and choose Bushville Wins! The Wild Saga of the 1957 Milwaukee Braves and the Screwballs, Sluggers, and Beer Swiggers Who Canned the New York Yankees and Changed Baseball by John Klima, a baseball story that I knew would end well. The subtitle and the pictures on the cover give away the ending to anyone not already familiar with the story. I knew the basics, having read two books on the baseball career of Henry Aaron, a key player in the saga. I read this history of the 1957 Braves over four or five days, still peeking at the current playoffs each night.

Bushville Wins! is a classic team history divided into three parts. The first tells how in 1953 the hapless Boston Braves became the first major league team to relocate in 50 years. The move gave the team a larger fan base and more capital with which to build on an already promising core of young players. The second part recounts the ups and downs of the team during the 1957 season, which threatened at times to be as disappointing as 1956 when the Braves were eliminated from the pennant race on the final weekend. In the final part, the author tells how the Braves beat the favored Yankees, who had won so many times before.

Being anti-Yankee all my life, I found Bushville Wins! a story to savor. The author describes how in the 1950s New York dominance of baseball had dampened national interest in the game. He asserts that the Braves' move to Milwaukee led the way to the spread of teams across the country and that their win in the World Series signaled that most champions would come from outside New York City in the future.

I enjoyed many entertaining stories about old players whose baseball cards I had as a kid - Eddie Mathews, Warren Spahn, Lew Burdette, and Bob Buhl. They were a spirited brotherhood dedicated to fun on and off the field. I also liked what in the 21st century seem strange details, such as Braves officials running a thousand telegraph lines into County Stadium for reporters covering the 1957 World Series. The author makes 1957 Milwaukee a lively destination for sports book readers.

Klima, John. Bushville Wins! The Wild Saga of the 1957 Milwaukee Braves and the Screwballs, Sluggers, and Beer Swiggers Who Canned the New York Yankees and Changed Baseball. Thomas Dunne Books, 2012. 323p. ISBN 9781250006073.

Monday, October 21, 2013

Henry IV Part 1 by William Shakespeare


Bonnie and I recently watched the Great Performances broadcast of William Shakespeare's Henry IV Part 1. Including both Jeremy Irons (above) and Tom Hiddleston, the film shot in historical locations in Great Britain promised to be entertaining. It proved fascinating, but I was a little confused throughout.

Shakespeare did not provide an explanatory prologue in Henry IV Part 1. Instead, readers of the play or viewers of the broadcast are from Act One thrown right into the plot with Henry IV (Irons) telling his court why he is unhappy with the news from battlefronts. Long passages introduce numerous characters, whose allegiances are questionable. I knew from previous Shakespeare experiences to wait and much will become clear. In the meantime, I tried to remember bits of British history and draw on my memory of reading the play in college.

I found that I remembered comic parts about the Prince and his friend Falstaff better than any of the political and military history. Of course, on the screen the pub scenes seemed edgier than I ever imagined when reading. The prince was more wayward than just a school boy involved in pranks. Hiddleston brought the role to life splendidly.

Near the end of the video during the battle scene, Bonnie pulled down The Riverside Shakespeare (one of the few books that I have kept from college) and tried to follow along. She discovered that some very helpful lines were cut and the sequence of the action altered somewhat. After the play ended - its summation as brief as its introduction - I kept The Riverside Shakespeare out and read the play again over the next three nights.

I see now that while viewing I confused facts about the character Mortimer with that of the character Worcester. I also learned the Henry Percival the younger, called Hotspur, was a brother-in-law of Mortimer. Mortimer had been designated as heir by Richard II, who was dethroned and probably executed by Henry IV. Mortimer was a more important character than I realized. No wonder Hotspur had issues with the king.

Reading the play before viewing the broadcast would help, but conversely, viewing the broadcast helped me in reading the play. Make your choice.

The play is part of the Hollow Crown: Shakespeare's History Plays Series, produced by Thirteen New York Public Media's with NBC Universal International, and Neal Street Productions (who made Call the Midwife). I do want to see more. We were supposed to start with Richard II. We'll have to get the DVD from the library or watch online.

Friday, October 18, 2013

Searching for Sugar Man, a film by Malik Bendjelloul

At Thomas Ford, we are quite proud of our film discussion program, started by Aaron Schmidt in 2003. We have shown a lot of great out-of-the-mainstream films, constantly enlightening and entertaining our regular and occasional discussion group members. That said, I think there was a special buzz about the room when we showed Searching for Sugar Man, a documentary about the life of folk/rock singer Rodriguez. The film had gotten many positive reviews but few venues in the western suburbs of Chicago had shown it. There was elevated interest in our showing of the film. Rachel Hoover, our selector, made an excellent choice for our series.

Searching for Sugar Man tells an incredible story. Sixto Rodriguez of Detroit, Michigan was a successful if somewhat mysterious local musician in the late 1960s and early 1970s. He sought no publicity but did record two albums that sold very poorly in the United States. What no one in America noticed was that someone took copies of these albums to apartheid-torn South Africa where they became "the music of the times." Many former protesters attest that he was an inspiration for their movement. Most incredibly, Rodriguez never knew. He dropped out of the music scene, and worked in construction in a city that was falling apart.

This could be a very sad story, but it is not. The film is a celebration of music, much of it running through the soundtrack.

What struck me is the frequent comparisons of Rodriguez to Bob Dylan. I can understand how the social commentary in the lyrics of several songs suggests the comparison, but vocally and musically I think Rodriguez sounds much more like Don McLean and Jose Feliciano. The studio albums, which were recorded in London and California, were given rich orchestral treatment typical of the era. In interviews, his record producers repeatedly state they still can not figure out why he was not a star in America. Over 40 years later, the Coming from Reality album sounds very good to me.

It is nice to add that Searching for Sugar Man won numerous awards and that Rodriguez seems to remain a humble character not turned by fame. We can hope for more happy endings.

Searching for Sugar Man. Sony Picture Classics, 2013. 87 minutes.

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

The Longest Road: Overland in Search of America from Key West to the Arctic Ocean by Philip Caputo

The literature of travel is rich with grand journeys, including explorers crossing oceans or continents to discover unknown places. In his recent book The Longest Road: Overland in Search of America from Key West to the Arctic Ocean, Philip Caputo refers lovingly to the expedition of Lewis and Clark on numerous pages. His own long journey, however, was more in the tradition of John Steinbeck's Travels with Charley. In the 21st century, there are no blank spots left on our maps, but there are still discoveries to be made.

Late in the spring of 2011, Caputo set off from Key West, Florida with his wife and two dogs in a pickup truck pulling a vintage Airstream trailer. Their destination was Deadhorse, Alaska. With a jar, Caputo planned to mix waters from the Atlantic, Pacific, and Arctic oceans, as he gathered impressions of the landscape and people of the United States*. Being a journalist, he had to have a quest. He chose to discover what held our diverse nation together.

Trying to stick to back roads as much as possible, much like William Least Heat-Moon in Blue Highways, he met a great variety of people, many still struggling to recover after the economic meltdown of 2008-2009. Most were philosophical when he asked his question about national cohesion. Others denied his premise, saying that the nation was coming apart.

I listened to the audiobook, which I mostly enjoyed. Some of narrator Pete Larkin's interpretations of regional accents, however, made me cringe. I can imagine some listeners being offended, especially if they recognize themselves as the original voices.

In The Longest Road, Caputo expertly weaves his subplots of repairing the Airstream, finding good meals, walking the dogs, and sharing a very small space with his wife around the story of the journey across the continent. I particularly enjoyed the part from the Great Plains, along the Yellowstone River, and across the mountains. I think many readers will long to follow.

Caputo, Philip. The Longest Road: Overland in Search of America from Key West to the Arctic Ocean. Henry Holt, 2013. 304p. ISBN 9780805094466.

Audiobook. HighBridge Audio, 2013. 10 compact discs. 11 3/4 hours. ISBN 97
81622311958.

*He mostly zips across a stretch of Canada.

Monday, October 14, 2013

An Appreciation of National Park Bookstores in Wyoming

When we visited the Grand Tetons and Yellowstone national parks in September, Bonnie and I wanted to see many things, including mountains, waterfalls, beautiful lakes, Old Faithful and other geysers, hot springs, and a long list of wildlife. We saw four bears (two black and two grizzly), a gray wolf, bald eagles, river otters, bighorn sheep, pronghorn, elk, and many herds of bison. Sadly, we never saw a moose, despite repeatedly going to their favorite locations. What we did not expect to see in abundance were bookstores.

For several years, the decline of brick-and-mortar bookstores has been a frequent topic in the news. From what we saw in September, they thrive in the mountain air, as our national parks preserve bookstores along with wildlife. The stores might not be built with bricks, however. The one near the hot springs basin at Norris (Yellowstone) is in a log cabin. Most of the others were inside very modern visitors centers. I was impressed with their rich offerings.

As you might expect, big beautiful photo books aimed at visitors wanting souvenirs of their visits claimed central display space, often flanked by travel guides filled with practical information and field guides identifying local flora, fauna, and geology. Every store was well stocked with local histories, biographies, and memoirs, and I saw books about the parks' most celebrated animals, especially bears, wolves, and bison. All had children's books, and most had several shelves of fiction, featuring novels set in the parks. The bookstore at Canyon Village Visitors Center (Yellowstone) even had a selection of science journal article reprints about geothermal forces, wildlife population dynamics, and the ecology of wildfire.

Just like any modern well-run bookstore, these bookstores also sell gifts. We saw lots of plush toys, tasteful carvings, mugs, and such. The store in the Colter Bay Visitors Center (Grand Tetons) even sold binoculars. Only a few sold T-shirts, which were usually found at the nearby gift shops, but they all sold bear spray. Every shop in western Wyoming must sell bear spray!

My favorite bookstores were as follows:

  1. Colter Bay Visitors Center (Grand Tetons) 
  2. Norris Information Station (Yellowstone) 
  3. Canyon Village Visitors Center (Yellowstone) 
  4. Craig Thomas Discovery and Visitors Center (Grand Tetons) 
  5. Old Faithful Visitors Education Center (Yellowstone) 


So, if you are planning a trip to the national parks in Wyoming, do not worry that you are not taking enough to read. The bookstores have much to offer. And if you do not see any moose, you can at least buy a book about them at a national park bookstore.

Friday, October 11, 2013

Mr. Wuffles! by David Wiesner

Have you seen Mr. Wuffles! by David Wiesner? Mr. Wuffles is a cat who is very bored with typical cat toys. Jingle bells, yarn balls, shuttlecocks, ribbons through spools, cloth goldfish, and polka dot mice lay untouched against the baseboard of the room in which he rests. Most still have their price tags attached. Disinterested, Mr. Wuffles does not notice when a little gray spaceship lands among his toys. Then the colorfully-robed Insectoid people cheer their successful landing. What bad timing!

Insectoid scientists must not have designed their spacecraft to withstand attacks by felines. Mr. Wuffles bats and rolls the spacecraft about the hardwood floor, and a tiny trail of smoke escapes through the command deck's window. The tiny Insectoids hold their heads as they examine their equipment. How will they ever escape the dangerous watch of Mr Wuffles?

In Mr. Wuffles!, Wiesner has created a wonderful fantasy accessible to children who do not yet read. The only bit of dialogue is in Insectoid, a language that has not yet been decipher by anyone speaking an earth language. We are all equals as readers of Mr. Wuffles!, earthlings.

Wiesner, David. Mr. Wuffles! Clarion Books, 2013. 9780618756612.

Wednesday, October 09, 2013

Eight Dolphins of Katrina: A True Tale of Survival by Janet Wyman Coleman

Eight years after the events of August 2005, stories from Hurricane Katrina keep coming. Bonnie recently brought home a Katrina book bound to interest animal lovers of all ages, Eight Dolphins of Katrina: A True Tale of Survival written by Janet Wyman Coleman and illustrated by Yan Nascimbene. Kind as she always is, Bonnie shared the book with me.

Many Katrina stories focus on New Orleans. Not so with Eight Dolphins of Katrina. This story starts at the Marine Life Oceanarium in Gulfport, Mississippi, where keepers planned a move of some of their dolphins to hotel swimming pools four miles inland. There were not, however, enough pools to host all of the oceanarium's collection. Eight dolphins stayed at the coastal facility, which had withstood previous hurricanes.

On the morning of August 29, however, a forty-foot tidal wave crushed the dolphin house, collapsing its roof. As staff approached the building the next day, they dreaded looking into the dolphin pool but upon doing so were amazed to find it empty. They then looked out into the gulf and wondered whether the dolphins could have survived, and if so, where they could be found. Hurriedly they began a search.

The book subtitle gives away that Eight Dolphins of Katrina is a story with a happy ending. In telling it, the author includes several older stories about positive bonds between dolphins and humans. Nascimbene's blue-toned full page illustrations add drama to the story, and photographs showing the oceanarium, its dolphins, and its staff may be found with an account of the facts in the back of the book. Young and old will enjoy this beautiful book.

Coleman, Janet Wyman. Eight Dolphins of Katrina: A True Tale of Survival. Houghton Mifflin Books for Children, 2013. (40 pages) ISBN 9780547719238.

Monday, October 07, 2013

Summer and Bird by Katherine Catmull

After I participated in August's Adult Reading Round Table panel discussion about whole collection readers' advisory, having used bird books in my part of the presentation, several of the ARRT members suggested bird-related books to me, and I read them. One that I enjoyed immensely was Summer and Bird, a fantasy for young readers written by Katherine Catmull.

I was greatly impressed with this first novel. Though Summer and Bird is marketed for young readers, it is very honest and mature in its presentation of problems within families and in its telling of two girls' quests for finding their roles in life. Most readers, however, will not be thinking in such literary terms while reading. They will instead be mesmerized by the unusual story involving two sisters who wake one morning to find themselves abandoned by their parents. Using a drawing left by their mother as a sort of map (the first of several such maps in the book), they set off to find their parents. In the process they pass from Up into Down and encounter many birds.

I wonder how much of this complicated story that young readers understand. Laura in the Youth Services Department at the Thomas Ford Memorial Library explained to me that authors for youth often write for several levels of understanding, including for parents who read to their children among their target audiences. I think that applies here, as the author remarks at the end of the book that this story originated from stories she told while babysitting. I think she created a story that she enjoyed herself while entertaining her young charges. It is a book that I think will interest many adults who enjoy nature-themed fantasy.

Read Summer and Bird with a child if you can. If not, still read.

Catmull, Katherine. Summer and Bird. Dutton Children's Books, 2012. 344p. ISBN 9780525953463.

Friday, October 04, 2013

Ione Quinby, Girl Reporter, a presentation by Genevieve G. McBride and Stephen R. Byers

Few residents knew that Western Springs, Illinois was once the home of a prominent Chicago newspaper reporter, a pioneer for her gender who was remarkable for having a byline, a desk, and many first page stories when most women writing newspapers were anonymous and submitting their reports for the women's pages from home. Her name was Ione Quinby, and she is mostly forgotten today, but a couple of authors from Milwaukee, once reporters themselves and now college professors, are writing a book about her. The Western Springs Historical Society brought Genevieve G. McBride and Stephen R. Byers to the Thomas Ford Memorial Library this past Wednesday night to tell us about Quinby and their upcoming book.

The Quinby name may not be familiar to many but her character is. She was a "girl reporter" for the Chicago Evening Post in the 1920s and early 1930s, covering many beats, but she is mostly remembered for her reporting of crime. Especially famous were her stories about women who killed. For this her friends Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur wrote a character like her into their Broadway comedy The Front Page. You can also see her character among the murderesses in the corridors and cells of the Cook County Jail whenever you watch the musical Chicago.

Quinby was a fearless reporter, who walked the most dangerous streets of Chicago and said that she once shared a candy bar with Al Capone. She did not, however, live among her subjects, taking a late train to the tranquil suburb of Western Springs almost every night.

She may be partly responsible for the obscurity of her name. After the Chicago Daily News bought and closed the Chicago Evening Post, Quinby was without a job. Within ten days, she married and moved to Milwaukee where she resurfaced as an advice columnist for the Milwaukee Journal. She wrote for that newspaper from the 1930s to the 1980s, using the byline Mrs. Griggs. She never used the Quinby byline again.

Her career as Mrs Griggs is the central subject of McBride and Byers upcoming book to be published by Marquette Press this spring, but her life in Western Springs and Chicago will be included. I know our library will want to get at least two copies.

Wednesday, October 02, 2013

The Big Burn: Teddy Roosevelt & the Fire That Saved America by Timothy Egan

It was a good bet that I would eventually read The Big Burn: Teddy Roosevelt & the Fire That Saved America by Timothy Egan. I had already enjoyed Short Nights of the Shadow Catcher and The Worst Hard Time, and I was inspired by Egan's appearances at this summer's American Library Association conference in Chicago. The week after our return from Yellowstone was a great time to read The Big Burn. The Bitterroot Mountains which are central to the story are hundreds of miles to the northwest of Yellowstone, but both have forests of lodgepole pine that must burn to reseed. Having just been to the firefighting exhibit at the Grant Village Visitors Center and seen recently burned areas of the park, I can imagine the fire vividly.

The Big Burn is about more than just the fire that burned forests in Montana, Idaho and Oregon in 1910. Egan recounts the formation and early history of the United States Forest Service, its claim that it could protect forests from fire, and the birth of the conservation movement in the United States. The central characters are pioneering forester Gifford Pinchot, governor and then president Theodore Roosevelt (who never liked being called Teddy), and several early forest rangers who worked for Pinchot. While there is much about Roosevelt in the book, there is more about Pinchot, and I think Pinchot's name deserved to be in the subtitle.

The central part of the book is a dramatic account of the fire for which few had prepared. An area the size of a small New England state burned, and many firefighters and settlers died. Unlike the Galveston residents in Isaac's Storm by Erik Larsen, however, the people living in the mining towns of the Bitterroot region had a fair warning of the coming destruction. The huge fire that trapped miners, saloonkeepers, and merchants while they complained about government interference was frequently compared later to a hurricane, and like the Galveston hurricane, changed the American public policy landscape.

The Big Burn serves as a good introduction to forests, conservation, and the idea of public lands, as well as a great disaster story. Roosevelt fans will, of course, want to read it, as his friendship with Pinchot well described. The book can be found in many public libraries.

Egan, Timothy. The Big Burn: Teddy Roosevelt & the Fire That Saved America. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2009. 324p. ISBN 9780618968411.

Monday, September 30, 2013

Pardonable Lies: A Maisie Dobbs Novel by Jacqueline Winspear

While on vacation in the Grand Tetons and Yellowstone, I started listening to Pardonable Lies, the third of the Maisie Dobbs novels by Jacqueline Winspear, read by Orlagh Cassidy. It was good company when I woke in the night and did not want to turn on cabin lights. With early to bed and early to rise, with much else to do while up, my prospects for listening to much of the book were small. But I am sometimes restless in the night, so I listened to about two thirds of the book over the nine days. I finished after we came home.

"Restless" is also word that can be applied to the character of Maisie Dobbs. It was only through determined and unceasing effort that she escaped being a domestic servant and became a private investigator in 1920s London. By the beginning of her third book, she has made a positive impression on a superintendent at Scotland Yard and is called in to help with the interviewing of a young country girl who was forced into prostitution and is charged with murder. Two other cases come her way within days. It is much to handle, but even when she is weary or ill, Miss Dobbs pushes forward with her investigations.

In Pardonable Lies, Maisie Dobbs has three cases to solve, two of which require she return to France where she worked as a nurse during the war. She also encounters some mysteries beyond her official investigations. A series of accidents especially needs her attention. Finding the truth behind these is vital to her very life.

As with the first two Maisie Dobbs novels, I found that I enjoyed the gradual unveiling of facts and the details of a world long past. Luckily for me, there are still another seven novels, and I will be rooting for Maisie Dobbs for years.

Winspear, Jacqueline. Pardonable Lies: A Maisee Dobbs Novel. Henry Holt, 2005. 342p. ISBN 0805078975.

audiobook: BBC Audiobook America, 2005. 9 compact discs, 11 hours. ISBN 0792737490.

Friday, September 27, 2013

On Re-reading A Wedding in Haiti: The Story of a Friendship by Julia Alzarez

For a book discussion I read A Wedding in Haiti: The Story of a Friendship by Julia Alvarez a second time. I don't often re-read books, for there are so many that I have not yet read, but it is a pleasure I will get five more times in the next year. Our church book club voted for six books that I helped nominated last June.

Upon re-reading, I found my general view did not change from the review of A Wedding in Haiti which I wrote last year, but I noticed many wonderful character details and lovely quotations that I did not remember. It was like seeing a movie for a second time. I think I concentrated more on learning the story first time through and enjoyed the descriptions and the language more in the second pass.

I had thought that Alvarez wrote much about her aging parents in this book, but I see now that her account of their story and their current (2010) situation was brief but powerfully moving. Likewise, neither of the trips was long in duration, and her account was economical, but the last impression was of a trip of epic importance.

The underlying challenge that Alvarez offers readers can be summed up as "once you have seen, what is your obligation." In a world filled with people in need, not just in Haiti and the Dominican Republic, determining how we will meet our obligations is a task easily sidestepped with excuses. Alvarez frets that she does not do enough. Do many of us do even a portion of as much as the author and her husband have?

The general consensus of the book discussion group was that A Wedding in Haiti is a good introduction to Alvarez, and several expressed an interest in reading her novels and poetry. The most agreed criticism was that the black and white photos were too small to really show whatever it was that the author wanted to illustrate.

I have five more books to re-read. I hope that I benefit as much as I have with the beautifully written A Wedding in Haiti. Still, next year I may try to nominate from my list of books not yet read.

Alvarez, Julia. A Wedding in Haiti: The Story of a Friendship. Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, 2012. 287p. ISBN 9781616201302.

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Mathew Brady: Portraits of a Nation by Robert Wilson

Mathew Brady is a curiously ill-remembered historical figure. Author Timothy Egan groups him with painter George Caitlin and photographer Edward Curtis as among the artists most responsible for our image of 19th century America. The three men also shared singular visions that they pursued without regard for their wealth, and all died bankrupt. In his book Mathew Brady: Portraits of a Nation, historian Robert Wilson shows that Brady got more and less credit than he deserved for his place is photographic history. He is credited with many images of the American Civil War that he did not actually take. Some were taken by his employees, while others were purchased for his galleries in New York and Washington. He once attempted to take battlefield photographs himself, but his narrow escape from personal danger convinced him that others would do better work in the field.

Why then do people in the 21st century look at Civil War scenes and say "Brady"? To his credit, he taught his photographic methods to most of the men who followed the armies, and he financed the printing and distribution of much of their work. That many of their images carry the Brady stamp was more a marketing act than Brady trying claim credit that was not his to claim. As the executive of a sort of photo bureau, Brady advanced the development of photojournalism.

Where Brady gets less credit is in defining the photographic portrait of his time. Many of the photos we still see in histories and biographies were from Brady's studio. Almost every statesman, general, industrialist, actor, and literary figure from the late 1840s into the 1870s had a Brady portrait. How many of these he actually took or assigned to his stable of photographers is a subject of debate.

While Mathew Brady: Portraits of a Nation is biographical, it is tempting to call it a history. In the account of the Civil War particularly, Brady nearly disappears while the storyline follows field photographers as they negotiate the hazards of war. Readers learn much American history and relatively little about Brady's personal life. The author points out that Brady became a celebrity without sacrificing his privacy. Historians are still trying to pinpoint Brady's birth and untangle the finances of his studios and galleries. 

Author Robert Wilson says that he wanted to fill a historical gap and expose myths with the writing of his book, and he has done so well. His book is now in many public libraries.

Wilson, Robert. Mathew Brady: Portraits of a Nation. Bloomsbury, 2013. 273p. ISBN 9781620402030.

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

The Botany of Desire: A Plant's-Eye View of the World by Michael Pollan

Michael Pollan has been on my to-read-again list since earlier this year when I heard entertaining New York Times Book Review and NPR Books interviews of the author. He had just published Cooked: A Natural History of Transformation, which sounded as though it would interest anyone who cooks or eats. I have not borrowed the new title yet, but when I found a library audiobook of The Botany of Desire: A Plant's-Eye View of the World available, I downloaded it instead.

The Botany of Desire was published in 2001 and predates Pollan's biggest bestseller The Omnivore's Dilemma. In The Botany of Desire, Pollan tells stories about four prominent plant families in the context of agricultural cultivation, attributing to each different qualities that people crave.
  • sweetness - the apple
  • beauty - the tulip
  • intoxication - marijuana
  • control - the potato
Each plant gets a lengthy chapter full of botanical information, cultural history, and personal accounts of Pollan's gardening efforts. His story about growing marijuana is both suspenseful and somewhat comic.

Pollan first, however, considers the apple, which in America is closely associated with the folk tales of Johnny Appleseed. The author profiles 19th century pioneer John Chapman, the real person on whom the Johnny Appleseed legend is based. Pollan spends much of the chapter myth-busting. The apple trees that grew from the seeds Chapman planted or sold produced apples that were usually not good for eating. Instead, they were bitter and small, only good for making hard cider - what most 19th century Americans actually wanted from apples. Apples were rarely eaten before Prohibition. Ironically, because apple seeds are genetically very unpredictable, Chapman's mass distribution of seeds established the U.S. as the country with greatest genetic diversity, which has led to all of today's great eating apples. The irony is that these varieties have to be maintained by grafting, not by seed planting.

Throughout the chapters, Pollan works the idea that the plants are really in control, using humans to assist their survival and development. By giving humans what they desire, the plant families prosper and adapt to new regions. Without humans, apple, tulip, marijuana, and potato populations would decline drastically.

Like the plants, The Botany of Desire satisfies human cravings - those for wickedly good stories and those for learning. It is still good a dozen years after its publication.

Pollan, Michael. The Botany of Desire: A Plant's-Eye View of the World. Random House, 2001. 271p. ISBN 0375501290.

Monday, September 16, 2013

Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail

When Cheryl Strayed finally reached the Bridge of the Gods across the Columbia River, ending her trek up the Pacific Crest Trail, she was both happy with her accomplishment and sad that her adventure was at an end. She had found strength that she did not know she had, survived dangerous situations, and encountered a great variety of people, many of whom helped her reach her destination. Her feet were sore, and she relished the idea of eating well again, but she wondered what she would do with her life, still almost penniless and without a plan.

I too am a bit happy and sad having now finished her book Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail. I knew that she would survive and was pretty sure that she reached her goal by the fact that she had written her book, but I was still relieved to get to witness her completion. I hoped as I read that she would remake her life, associate with more sensible people for a change, overcome addictions, and find meaning in her life. But I will miss her story telling, which made me long to take off on such a trip myself, despite the heat, cold, hunger, and sheer difficulty of the hike. That's not to say I would do things her way. I'd have funds to eat better when I got to the "resorts." But she did not have that luxury.

I listened to Wild read by the winner of 2009 Best Voice in Mystery and Suspense, Bernadette Dunne. Luckily for me, I had much late season gardening and a fairly long drive to attend a meeting, so I could finish the eleven discs in six days.

Though she finishes with a quick what-has-happened-to-me-since, I think she may have a good story about how she got on with her life. It might be harder to write and not as easy to sell to the reading public, but little was really resolved just by the hike. There must be more. Her collection of essays Tiny Beautiful Things might suffice in the meantime.

Strayed, Cheryl. Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail. Alfred A. Knopf, 2012. 315p. ISBN 9780307592736.


Friday, September 13, 2013

Hans Memling: The Complete Works by Dirk de Vos

When Bonnie and I visited New York in May, we discovered the 15th century German painter Hans Memling. We had seen a few Memling paintings before at various museums around the country, but it seemed as though his works were everywhere in New York. We saw our first in the Frick Collection and then a couple very prominently displayed in John Pierpont Morgan's personal study at the Morgan Library. Later we found that the Metropolitan Museum of Art owns eight! Liking the richly-colored portraits particularly, I became a fan and made a mental note to borrow a book on Memling when I was home.

Well, more than three months later, I finally borrowed Hans Memling: The Complete Works by Dirk de Vos, a big beautiful book including a catalog with 93 works attributed to Memling. 93 is a substantial number, considering that the paintings have survived over 500 years, but I will argue the output is even greater, as many are diptychs, triptychs, and other multi-paneled works. Many of these served as portable alters or stations for devotion. Sometimes, there were paintings on two sides of folding panels, perhaps showing religious scenes on the inner panels and the donor, his family, and some saints on the outer panels. Many wealth patrons contracted for Memling's work.

An appendix shows that there are other works that might be Memling's, and a second shows works that have now been proven not to be his. I also found a city by city list of museums containing Memling works interesting; I have another reason for some travel. As beautiful as the paintings are in Hans Memling: The Complete Works, they have to be seen to be fully appreciated.

There are not many books on Memling to be found in our area libraries. He is not one of the artists that is often mentioned these days. I am grateful that the Hinsdale Public Library had this one.

Vos, Dirk de. Hans Memling: The Complete Works. Fonds Mercator Paribus, 1994. 431p. ISBN 9789061533115.

Friday, September 06, 2013

Cotton Tenants: Three Families by James Agee

58 years after his death, James Agee has a new book joining his classics Let Us Now Praise Famous Men (1941) and A Death in the Family (1957). Written as an article for Fortune magazine in 1936 but never published, Cotton Tenants: Three Families is a look at Floyd Burroughs, Bud Fields, and Frank Tingle, three Depression-era white tenant farmers and their families in Hale County, Alabama. The text was thought to have been lost but was found among papers given by Agee's daughter to the University of Tennessee Special Collections Library in 2005.

From reading the editor's notes by John Summers and an introduction called "A Poet's Brief" by Adam Haslett, it sounds to me that the publishers of Cotton Tenants wanted to be very sure there was not another later version of the text before publishing. None has been found. It seems likely what is now published is what Agee intended. Haslett says no reason for Fortune's refusal to publish was ever made clear. While Agee was preparing his article, the editors eliminated the Life and Circumstances department of the magazine to which the article was bound. Anyone can speculate that the editors did not want to offend their Southern readers with Agee's hard assessment of the landed class's role in the plight of the poor.

There seemed to be no escape from the poverty that Agee described. It was no surprise that bright children faded into drab, nearly lifeless adults. The tenant farmers were people without hope.

Fortune paid for famous photographer Walker Evans to accompany Agee to Alabama in 1936. Thirty of his photographs of the farmers, their homes, and cotton fields are included with the article text to make a small but impressive book that can now serve as an introduction to the writings of Agee for a new generation of readers.

Agee, James. Cotton Tenants: Three Families. Melville House, 2013. 224p. ISBN 9781612192123.

Wednesday, September 04, 2013

Chicago's Sweet Candy History by Leslie Goddard

In the 1860s and 1870s, Chicago business people began to make candy, usually hard candies that would not melt or spoil in those days before air conditioning. As markets grew, small kitchens gave way to factories, and thanks to its central location with a strong network of railroads headed to all parts of the country, Chicago became the national center of the candy industry. Many of the biggest candy companies began or grew in Chicago, including Curtiss, Brach, Wrigley, and Mars. Librarian Leslie Goddard recounts the history through pictures in her Images of America book Chicago's Sweet Candy History.

Readers of Chicago's Sweet Candy History are in for some surprises and perhaps some laughs. I was particularly amused by how hard some of the candy makers promoted their sweets as healthy foods. On page 39 is an advertisement by Bunte Brothers telling how their healthy candies were empowering American soldiers in World War I. The two ads on page 82 suggested athletes perform better after eating candy. Some people just needed a bit of candy to get through a work day, as seen in an ad on page 81. "Candy is delicious food - enjoy some everyday" was the slogan pushed by the National Confectioners Association in 1938. It was no coincidence that Chicago also became a center for advertising agencies.

I enjoyed reading about candies that disappeared, such as Alexander the Grape, the Amos 'n' Andy Bar, the Lindy Bar, Fluffy Ruffles, and the Reggie Bar. I also liked learning the history behind some of my favorite candies. Did you know that the original Three Musketeers had three pieces? Each had a different filling - chocolate, strawberry, and vanilla. That would be worth traveling through time to try.

Many Images of America books are of interest only to the communities they celebrate, but Chicago's Sweet Candy History should have more national appeal, for former children everywhere will remember eating Cracker Jacks, Milk Duds, Tootsie Rolls, Butterfingers, Lemonheads, Snickers, and Atomic Fire Balls.

Goddard, Leslie. Chicago's Sweet Candy History. Arcadia Publishing, 2012. 128p. ISBN 9780738593821.

Monday, September 02, 2013

Professor Gargoyle by Charles Gilman

Robert Arthur was unhappy to discover that he had been transferred to Lovecraft Middle School, despite its new state-of-the-art building, abundant technology, and student amenities. When his old school closed, his friends went to school across town. He would not know anyone, except the bully Glenn Torkells to whom he frequently paid a dweeb tax. Most of the teachers proved okay, but then he met Professor Goyle. How would he survive science class? At least he could find refuge in the library. Now just how big was that library? A student could get lost, and its dusty attic with the strange leather bound books was rather uncharacteristic of a new library reportedly stocked with all new books. Something was really weird about Lovecraft Middle School.

In Professor Gargoyle, the first book of Tales from Lovecraft Middle School, Charles Gilman recounts what Robert discovered in his first few weeks in his shiny new school about the building, the strange professor, and his own ability to cope with dangerous situations. In doing so, he assembled a surprising group of allies. Their story is just what young horror-loving readers will enjoy. It is also fun reading for anyone of any age who likes haunted houses and strange creatures.

Professor Gargoyle ends with a new challenge to Robert and his friends. Will they survive The Slither Sisters, book 2 in the series?

Gilman, Charles. Professor Gargoyle. Quirk Books, 2012. 168p. ISBN 9781594745911.

Friday, August 30, 2013

NPR Sound Treks: Birds

My focus on all things birds continues today with a quick review of NPR Sound Treks: Birds, an audiobook adapted from radio instead of print. In this case, the public radio network has harvest some of its best pieces from programs such as Morning Edition, All Things Considered, and Weekend Edition. NPR listeners will recognize some of the reporters, such as Melissa Block, Steve Inskeep, and Renee Montagne, on this enjoyable one-hour, one compact disc program.

I was glad to find three tracks with licensed bird rehabilitator Julie Zickefoose, whom I regard highly after having read her Letters from Eden and The Bluebird Effect. My favorite story in the NPR collection is the final track in which she tells about raising four orphaned hummingbirds. I love the image of her being followed around her backyard by hungry little birds.

Several of the stories involve Chicago, where the lights of skyscrapers are a hazard to night flying birds and invasive species, such as starlings, have chased away natives. Zickefoose tells about rescuing a stunned yellow-throat warbler, and Davis Shaffer tells about Chicago's successful building of houses for purple martins along its Lake Front.

Alaska, Australia, and Guatemala are settings for other stories in this collection, that also features a story about British musician F. Schuyler Mathews who in the 19th century transcribed many songbird songs to sheet music. Bird lovers should definitely seek out NPR Sound Trek: Birds.

NPR Sound Treks: Birds. HighBridge Audio, 2010. ISBN 9781615730605.

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

songbirdsongs by John Luther Adams

While preparing for last week's integrated advisory discussion at ARRT, I discovered a wonderful compact disc called songbirdsongs by composer John Luther Adams. Included on the CD are 10 bird inspired pieces that Adams wrote between 1974 and 2006. A quick description of them is that they are experimental contemporary music. Of course, that does not sound like much fun. The pieces are more pleasing, rooted in both the sounds of nature and classical music.

The lead instruments on songbirdsongs are piccolos and flutes, which are supported by percussive and string instruments in small chamber groups. The first nine pieces grouped as "songbirdsongs" are performed by the Callithumpian Consort and the final piece is "Strange Birds Passing" performed by the New England Conservatory Contemporary Music Ensemble. My favorite pieces are "Wood Thrush" and "Joyful Noise."

What may chase some listeners away is there are no catchy tunes. On first hearing, the pieces may seem without any structure, just a fusion of random sounds. Those listening to the recording a second or third time, however, will likely recognize that there are themes and definite rhythms in these atmospheric pieces. 

Adams, John Luther. songbirdsongs. Mode Records, 2009. 45:24 running time.

Monday, August 26, 2013

Stick Out Your Tongue by Ma Jian

Upon finishing the fifth of five stories in Stick Out Your Tongue by Chinese dissident Ma Jian, I was not sure that I would write a review. The book felt important, but I did not know what to say. The stories are so strange and disturbing, and I was afraid I'd write something foolish. Maybe I still will. Then I read the Afterward by Ma Jian telling about the writing and banning of these stories in China. It took overnight, but I think I understand.

Ma Jian took a trip to Tibet in 1985 that shocked him. He had expected to find gentle people and enlightenment but instead found gray poverty and ignorance. The country had been under the control of Chinese Communists for over thirty years, and much that was beautiful had been suppressed or chased away. He wrote these stories that were accepted by Chinese literary magazines and then was luckily out of the country when they were published. They were only translated into English in 2006.

All of the stories have settings that feel ancient and timeless into which modernity invades. In "The Woman and the Blue Sky," the narrator mentions that he arrived in the province by army truck, but then he becomes a wanderer, walking through valley and villages, looking to witness a Tibetan sky funeral. In "The Smile of Lake Drolmula," a son back from two years of school in Beijing wanders hopelessly trying to find his nomadic family. In the fifth story, "The Initiation," the Buddhist monks must be those who remain in Tibet after the Chinese takeover, practicing a corrupt religion.

After both the first and second stories, and even in points mid-story, I considered closing Stick Out Your Tongue, but I persisted. I had heard praise for the stories, which were fascinatingly filled with strange cultural details, and saw that the time investment was short. I am glad I did get to the end, as the pieces make more sense together. I am left with a justifiable sense of horror. It is no wonder they are banned in China.

Ma Jian. Stick Out Your Tongue. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2006. 93p. ISBN 0374269882.

Thursday, August 22, 2013

ARRT Whole Collection Reader's Advisor Program Wrap Up

Thanks to everyone at today's ARRT Whole Collection Reader's Advisory Program at the Deerfild (IL) Public Library for your warmth and great suggestions. Many of you had splendid ideas about how to advance the cause of connecting materials from all areas of the library (and beyond) and getting them into the hands of readers/listeners/viewers.

Thanks also to the participants who suggested books for my reading. I have a copy of Summer and Bird by Katherine Catmull is hand and have placed a hold for Beware the Tufted Duck by Lydia Adamson. I think that I will enjoy both. The prospects are promising.

For those who were not there, let me report that I shared a panel with Joyce Saricks (author of many books and general cheerleader for RA) and Nanette Donohue of the Champaign (IL) Public Library. Melissa Stoeger of Deerfield Public Library moderated. We had a lively discussion and then each presented a sample topic to show how library materials in many formats can be joined for readers' advisory promotion. Joyce took on Adventure, Nanette spoke about Urban Lit, and I featured items for bird lovers. It was privileged to share the spotlight.

ARRT will soon have copies of the presentations on its website.

Monday, August 19, 2013

The Birders Kit: A Display for Integrated Advisory Service

On Thursday, August 22, I will be part of an Adult Reading Round Table panel discussing integrated advisory service in public libraries at the Deerfield (IL) Public Library. The concept is that librarian know more than books and are ready to help clients with DVDs, music, magazines, or whatever else may give them pleasure.

To illustrate how a librarian could help a client with a specific interest get a variety of items in various forms, I have created a slideshow called The Birder's Kit. The aspect ratios for a couple images are a bit distorted, but you can see the slideshow via Google Drive.

The following is a long list of items related to birds from which I made the slideshow. The list has a bit more than the slideshow for some topics.

Field Guides
Peterson's Field Guide to Birds of North America by Roger Tory Peterson
The Sibley Guide to Birds by David Allen Sibley
National Geographic Field Guide to the Birds of North America by Jon L. Dunn and Jonathan Alderfer
The Crossley ID Guide by Richard Crossley
Birds of Illinois by Sheryl DeVore, Steven D. Bailey, and Gregory Kennedy
Bird Feathers: A Guide to North American Species by S. David Scott and Casey McFarland

Travel Guides
Illinois Bird Watching: A Year Long Guide
Birds of Heaven: Travels with Cranes by Peter Matthiessen

Photography 
Atlas of Rare Birds by Dominic Couzens
Earth Flight: Breathtaking Photographs from a Bird's-eye View of the World by John Downer
Egg & Nest by Rosamund Purcell, Lennea S. Hall, and Rene Corado
Owls by Marianne Taylor

Poetry
Bright Wings: An Illustrated Anthology of Poems About Birds edited by Billy Collins
Owls and Other Fantasies: Poems and Essays by Mary Oliver

Biography
John James Audubon: The Making of an American by Richard Rhodes
Life List: A Woman's Quest for the World's Most Amazing Birds by Olivia Gentile
Roger Tory Peterson: A Biography by Douglas Carlson

Memoirs
The Bluebird Effect: Uncommon Bonds with Common Birds by Julie Zickefoose
Corvus: A Life with Birds by Esther Woolfson
A Supremely Bad Idea: Three Mad Birders and Their Quest to See It All by Luke Dempsey
Wesley the Owl: The Remarkable Story of an Owl and His Girl by Stacey O'Brien

Children's Books
Mythical Birds and Beasts from Many Lands by Margaret Mayo
Pale Male: Citizen Hawk of New York City by Janet Schulman
Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes by Eleanor Coerr


Novels
Beware the Butcher Bird by Lydia Adamson
The Bird Catcher by Laura Jacobs
Bird's Eye View by J. F. Freedman
High Island Blues by Ann Cleeves
Snapper by Brian Kimberling

Essays
Songs to Birds: Essays by Jake Page
Farther Away by Jonathan Franzen (Not all of the essays are about birds, but a birder wouldn't want to miss the ones that are.)

Magazines
Audubon
Bird Talk
Birds & Blooms
Wildbird

Audiobooks
The Big Year: A Tale of Man, Nature, and Fowl Obsession by Mark Obmascik
Moonbird: A Year on the Wind with the Great Survivor B95 by Phillip M. Hoose
NPR Sound Treks: Birds

Bird Guides on CD
Birding by Ear: Eastern Central (Peterson Field Guide)

Music CDs
Firebird Suite by Igor Stravinsky
Flute Concerto in D, RV 428 "The Goldfinch" by Antonio Vivaldi
Organ Concerto "Cuckoo and the Nightingale" by George Frideric Handel
Songbirdsongs by John Luther Adams

Movies on DVDs
The Big Year (Steve Martin, Jack Black, Owen Wilson)
Fly Away Home (Jeff Daniels, Anna Paquin)
Hoot (Luke Wilson)
The Birds (Alfred Hitchcock)

Documentaries on DVD
March of the Penguins
Wings of Life

TV on DVD
Extraordinary Birds (PBS Nature)
John James Audubon Drawn from Nature
Life of Birds (BBC series by David Attenborough)
My Life as a Turkey (PBS Nature)
Secret Life of Birds (BBC)

Apps
Audubon Birds $9.99
Audubon Birds of Central Park (free)
iBird Yard $2.99
Peterson Birds $14.95
Peterson Backyard Birds (free)
Sibley eGuide to the Birds of North America LITE (free)

Podcasts
Birdnotes with Dwight Davis (free)
BirdTalk Radio by Wild Birds Unlimited (free)
Laura Erickson's For the Birds (free)
Ray Brown's Talkin' Birds (free)
This Birding Life/Bird Watchers Digest (free)

Websites

Triple Play: items in three formats by the same authors
"Birds of Paradise" National Geographic (December 2012)
Winged Seduction: Birds of Paradise (National Geographic Channel DVD)

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Saving Italy: The Race to Rescue a Nation's Treasures from the Nazis by Rober M. Edsel

War has always left death and destruction in its wake, but advances in weapons technology and transportation made World War II particularly horrific. Whole cities were flattened and burned by the air forces of Allied and Axis countries. Civilians died in staggering numbers. Understandably, the fate of centuries of art was of little concern to many people who were trying to survive, but a few Allied leaders thought that saving art could foster goodwill, peace, and prosperity in the post-war world. The great paintings and sculptures symbolized shared cultural achievements and were the pride of their nations. With the support of President Roosevelt and General Eisenhower, a branch of the U.S. Army known as Monuments Men were ordered to do what they could to save masterworks of art and architecture. They faced a very great challenge when Allied forces began a campaign to liberate Italy. Robert M. Edsel tells the story in Saving Italy: The Race to Rescue a Nation's Treasures from the Nazis.

If the words "Monuments Men" seems familiar to you, you have either heard of Edsel's previous book The Monuments Men: Allied Heroes, Nazi Thieves, and the Greatest Treasure Hunt in History or the upcoming movie of the same name starring Matt Damon and George Clooney, which is based on Edsel’s book. Saving Italy is a continuation of that story, focusing on efforts to protect the art of Naples, Venice, Rome, Pisa, and Florence. The complicating factor was that the Germans were allies of the Italians and could not steal art as blatantly there as in France, Belgium, and the Netherlands, despite Mussolini’s disregard for art. At times there were partisan Italians, Allied agents, and two factions from the German military vying to gain control of displaced paintings, sculptures, pottery, jewelry, and rare books.

Saving Italy is filled with fascinating characters, including dueling American art experts Deane Keller and Fred Hartt, conflicted Nazi S.S. Commander General Karl Wolf, and the unflappable American spymaster Allen Dulles. The fate of paintings and sculptures by Michelangelo, Donatello, Raphael, Leonardo, Botticelli, and many other masters was in their hands. I listened to Saving Italy read skillfully by Edoardo Ballerini and found it an exciting read from which I learned much about World War II in Italy.

Edsel, Robert M. Saving Italy: The Race to Rescue a Nation's Treasures from the Nazis. Norton, 2013. 454p. ISBN 9780393082418.

Recorded Books, 2013. 10 compact discs. ISBN 9781470371296.

Friday, August 09, 2013

The DiMaggios: Three Brothers, Their Passion for Baseball, Their Pursuit of the American Dream by Tom Clavin

While I was reading The Inventor and the Tycoon by Edward Ball, I was also reading The DiMaggios: Three Brothers, Their Passion for Baseball, Their Pursuit of the American Dream by Tom Clavin. I mention this because both are to some extent San Francisco stories, especially in their early chapters, and both authors describe the city and its inhabitants, many of whom came from the East Coast or abroad. Though set half a century apart (with a little overlap), both stories feature people restarting their lives, trying through hard work to prosper.

Sicilian fisherman Giuseppe DiMaggio arrived in California in 1898 and then in 1902 brought his wife Rosalie and one child born in Sicily to Martinez, a town northeast of San Francisco. From there they started a large family and eventually moved into San Francisco, where to Giuseppe's initial horror, three of his sons became baseball players. Little did the father know that his sons' success at sports would bring the family a fortune and fame.

As the book jacket states, The DiMaggios is about the three sons Vince, Joe, and Dominic, their baseball careers, and their complicated relationships. It also includes a surprisingly full portrait of Red Sox outfielder Ted Williams, who like the brothers began his baseball career in the highly competitive Pacific Coast League. Williams becomes Joe's greatest baseball rival while becoming Dominic's close almost-brotherly friend. The fifth focus in the book is on young actress Marilyn Monroe and her short marriage to Joe.

Aimed primarily at sports readers, the book includes descriptions of important games, accounts of seasons, and statistics. That all fades away in the latter chapters as the brothers deal with their lives after baseball and the continuing dynamics of the DiMaggio family. Here the author has unpleasant myths to dispel about Joe, and he does satisfactorily. Still, many readers will form strong opinions about the conduct of the brothers and judge who was more loyal. The DiMaggios should be considered for book discussions that enjoy discussing complicated characters.

Clavin, Tom. The DiMaggios: Three Brothers, Their Passion for Baseball, Their Pursuit of the American Dream. Ecco, 2013. 320p. ISBN 9780062183774.

Wednesday, August 07, 2013

Call the Midwife: A Memoir of Birth, Joy, and Hard Times by Jennifer Worth

Most of the British television series that Bonnie and I have watched over the last several decades seem to be based or inspired by books. That holds true with the recent import Call the Midwife, of which two seasons have aired on PBS. As often is the case, the original book, Call the Midwife: A Memoir of Birth, Joy, and Hard Times (first published in Britain in 2002), has proved worth reading.

I wondered how faithful I would find the adaptation to television and am pleased to report it is most definitely in the spirit. Most of the nuns, nurses, and other characters are recognizable, except for Cynthia who seems almost totally opposite of her portrayal on television and for Jennifer's admirer Jimmy who is rowdier and more trouble in the book than the sweet young man on the screen. The book also includes a cook at the Nonnatus House who spars frequently with the caretaker Fred; she could have added nicely to the show.

Viewers turned readers will find more stories in the book than were worked into the television series and less emphasis on the profiling of the nuns and nurses, except for Sister Monica Joan, who merits several chapters. Of course, you learn much about the author, for it is her voice telling the story, but the focus is usually on the pregnant women who need the wives service.

I see most libraries are shelving Call the Midwife with pregnancy books at Dewey 618.2. I hope the book is not lost there after the TV series fades from public memory, for it is about much more than childbirth. It is a vivid portrait of the East End of London during the late 1950s and early 1960s and should not be missed by readers interested in that time and place. I think the book and the series can be viewed in either order. Neither should be missed.

Worth, Jennifer. Call the Midwife: A Memoir of Birth, Joy, and Hard Times. Penguin Books, 2012. 340p. ISBN 9780143123255.

Monday, August 05, 2013

The Inventor and the Tycoon: A Gilded age Murder and the Birth of Moving Pictures by Edward Ball

At the heart of this complicated story was a simple question. When horses ran, did they always have at least one foot on the ground, or were there points at which horses were airborne? Former governor of California Leland Stanford was certain that he saw all of his racehorses' feet off the ground at points in their races. Fellow horse owners disagreed. Stanford was certain and wanted proof, so he turned to a photographer who was in his hire and demanded evidence. Edward Muybridge initially said that he could not produce such a photo, but Stanford persisted, and in 1872 at Standford's expense, Muybridge built an array of cameras with trip wires at the former governor's stables in Palo Alto. On glass plates covered with a special fast emulsion that he concocted Muybridge caught the desired images. More than a bet was settled. Putting the series of photos together in a projector that he invented, using tricks learned from magic lantern shows, Muybridge started the motion picture industry.

How Stanford and Muybridge came to California, how Stanford helped Muybridge beat a murder accusation, and what became of them afterwards is the subject of Edward Ball's fascinating dual biography The Inventor and the Tycoon: A Gilded age Murder and the Birth of Moving Pictures. I remembered the author from his excellent books Slaves in the Family and The Sweet Hell Inside. As he did in those books, Ball brings the world of the 19th century into sharp focus in his latest book.

Ball also shows how some men reinvent themselves in pursuit of dreams. Muybridge is an almost perfect example for a discussion of ever changing characters. He was born Edward James Muggeridge in England in 1830. By the time of his death in 1904, he had also been known as Edward Muygridge, Eduardo Santiago Muybridge, Helios, and finally Eadweard Muybridge. He had lived in London, New York, outside Milwaukee, Paris, Guatemala, and San Francisco, and had been a bookseller, banker, photographer, and inventor. Stanton had been a farmer, grocer, governor, and railroad tycoon, and is a prime example of a powerful man who never finds happiness. He is now most remembered for establishing Stanford University as a memorial to his son.

Readers will go many places and through much of the 19th century in The Inventor and the Tycoon. It is a trip worth taking.

Ball, Edward. The Inventor and the Tycoon: A Gilded age Murder and the Birth of Moving Pictures. Doubleday, 2013. 447p. ISBN 9780385525756.

Friday, August 02, 2013

Louisa May Alcott: The Woman Behind Little Women by Harriet Reisen

Louisa May Alcott's life continues to be rewritten, as scholars discover new facts about the author many years after her death in 1888. At the Houghton Library at Harvard University in the 1950s, a researcher looking at letters found that Alcott had written pulp stories under the name A. M. Barnard. More recently, medical experts have discounted the theory that mercury given to treat pneumonia contracted during while nursing Civil War soldiers caused Alcott's poor health over the last half of her life. After reading her journals and letters and seeing a painting in which the artist put a slight butterfly pattern across her face, they think she may have had lupus erythematosus. According to Harriett Reisen in Louisa May Alcott: The Woman Behind Little Women, scholars are also still seeking missing genre stories that Alcott wrote before her great success with novels for children.

What continued to impress me as I read through this biography of Alcott was how she was connected to many of the leading figures of the mid-19th century American literature. In early life, she knew Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Margaret Fuller, and abolitionists William Lloyd Garrison and John Brown. It would not be possible for most young women growing up in poverty to have met all of these people. But the Alcott brand of poverty was a strange condition born of her father's attempts to live a pure life, untainted by owning property, trying to shape a new society from an old order that resisted his ideas. He had followers, but his Utopian experiments always failed, leaving his family hungry and sometimes homeless until friends and rich relatives offered help.

Reisen's lively biography of Alcott is a companion to the documentary shown on PBS's American Masters, for which Reisen wrote the script. It is an entertaining read for anyone who has read Alcott's books or who enjoys 19th century history and biography.

Reisen, Harriet. Louisa May Alcott: The Woman Behind Little Women. Henry Holt and Company, 2009. 362p. ISBN 9780805082999.

11 compact discs. Tantor Audio. ISBN 9781400144457