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One Bullet Away: the Making of a Marine Officer by Nathaniel Fick
Nathaniel Fick, author of One Bullet Away: The Making of a Marine Officer Find this book in our catalog will be a featured speaker at the Democratic National Convention Thursday evening, August 28 before Barack Obama accepts the nomination. Fick’s speech will be broadcast on primetime TV.
posted by Elizabeth on 8/28/2008
A Version of the Truth by Jennifer Kaufman and Karen Mack

A Version of the Truth is a well-written novel that asks how far would you go to recreate yourself. Cassie Shaw lies on her application form for a university office job. She is newly widowed from a man who has verbally abused her and with a childhood that left her unsure and unqualified due to her learning disabilities. But Cassie is not dumb, and she begins to aspire to greater things. Readers will have a lot of sympathy for this character, and despite the lies that eventually trip her up, will be rooting for her success. Three male characters highlight different aspects of Cassie's development, Frank, the loser husband, Freddy, the rich and spoilt lover, and Connor, the professor. Cassie's nature loving mom, Alison, Freddy's superficial sister, and Cassie's friend Tiff make up the main female characters. Added to this mix are a bird called Sam, some ivory-billed woodpeckers that may or may not exist, and Black Dog. The nature elements of the novel are intriguing and often humorous, as Cassie's mom insists she has seen BigFoot. For Cassie she can be true to herself in a natural environment, where no one judges or makes demands.
The Abingdon Book Group liked this book and would like to go back and read the first novel by these authors, Literacy and Longing in L.A.
Book discussion questions can be found at www.aversionofthetruth.com/guide.htm
From Publishers Weekly
Cassie Shaw, the 30-year-old dyslexic high school dropout narrator of Kaufman and Mack's follow-up to Literacy and Longing in L.A., is devoid of self-esteem and, as the winsome novel opens, has just been widowed by a jerk who left her nothing but debt. Desperate for a job, Cassie fudges her education background on a job application and snags an entry-level university office job working under William Conner, a charismatic professor of animal behavior who ignites Cassie's desire for learning—and other things. As Cassie's lust for knowledge swells and she becomes more involved with Conner, the list of her deceptions lengthens, and it's only a matter of time until budding beau Conner finds out. Kaufman and Mack lace the narrative with light humor (the rats in California's Topanga Canyon are like roaches in NY or liars in LA) and nods to Emerson, Whitman, Thoreau, Plato and Keats. Delightfully merging humor, philosophy and reflections on nature, this novel is a lot of fun and might give some readers freshman-year flashbacks.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
A Version of the Truth is the second novel by this writing couple. Their first book was Literacy and Longing in L.A. that spent 15 weeks on the L.A. Times Best Seller List. Both authors have a slew of credits to their names. Karen Mack has produced award winning TV shows & films, and Jennifer Kaufman has been a writer, bureau chief & reporter. At one point in her career she worked for the Baltimore News American & The Prince George's County Sentinel in Bethesda Maryland. To read more about these ladies careers, go to www.aversionofthetruth.com/biography.htm
Labels: a version of the truth, Jennifer Kaufman, Karen Mack, nature, truth, university
posted by Julia on 8/26/2008
The Lace Reader: a Novel by Brunonia Barry
This morning I am going to be yet another person blogging about this extaordinary book. For a while this was something of an underground success, catching on by word of mouth and hand-selling by booksellers. Actually, Brunonia Barry first published The Lace Reader herself just in the Salem area where she lives. Now, having been published by William Morrow, an imprint of HarperCollins, it has been lionized in the mainstream media.Labels: Brunonia Barry, Crimes against women - fiction, Families - Fiction, Lace Reader, Massachussetts - fiction, Salem
posted by Elizabeth on 8/19/2008
Awards round-up August
Best Novel: The Yiddish Policemen’s Union by Michael Chabon
Best Novella: “All Seated on the Ground� by Connie Willis
Best Novelette: “The Merchant and the Alchemist’s Gate� by Ted Chiang
Best Short Story: “Tideline� by Elizabeth Bear
Best Related Book: Brave New Words: The Oxford Dictionary of Science Fiction by Jeff Prucher
Best Dramatic Presentation, Long Form: Stardust, written by Jane Goldman and Matthew Vaughn, based on the novel by Neil Gaiman, illustrated by Charles Vess ,directed by Matthew Vaughn
Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form: Doctor Who “Blink,� written by Steven Moffat, directed by Hettie Macdonald
Best Editor, Long Form: David G. Hartwell
Best Editor, Short Form: Gordon Van Gelder
Best Professional Artist: Stephan Martiniere
Best Semiprozine: Locus
Best Fanzine: File 770
Best Fan Writer: John Scalzi
Best Fan Artist: Brad Foster
Mary Robinette Kowal additionally took the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer, sponsored by Dell Magazines and administered on its behalf by the World Science Fiction Society.
The Romance Writers of America® The 2008 RITA®’s went to the following:
Contemporary Series Romance: Snowbound by Janice Kay Johnson
Contemporary Series Romance: Suspense/Adventure: Treasure by Helen Brenna
Young Adult Romance: Wicked Lovely by Melissa Marr
Historical Romance: Lessons of Desire by Madeline Hunter
Regency Historical Romance: The Secret Diaries of Miss Miranda Cheever by Julia Quinn
Inspirational Romance: A Touch of Grace by Linda Goodnight
Romance Novella: “Born in My Heart� by Jennifer Greene in Like Mother, Like Daughter
Paranormal Romance: Lover Revealed by J.R. Ward
Novel with Strong Romantic Elements: Silent in the Grave by Deanna Raybourn
Romantic Suspense: Ice Blue by Anne Stuart
Best First Book: Dead Girls Are Easy by Terri Garey
Contemporary Single Title Romance: Catch of the Day by Kristan Higgins
NAIBA's Books of the Year - The winners in the adult categories of the NAIBA Book of the Year Awards, sponsored by the New Atlantic Independent Booksellers Association are:
* Fiction: Mudbound by Hillary Jordan
* Nonfiction: The Year of Living Biblically by A.J. Jacobs
* Special Interest: Bronx Noir edited by S.J. Rozan
Labels: Book of the Year Awards, Hugo Awards, NAIBA, New Atrlantic Independent Booksellers Association, RITA Awards, Romance writers of America
posted by Elizabeth on 8/18/2008
One Marylan One Book - Update August 18
One Maryland One Book
Join Us!
The Maryland Center for the Book at the Maryland Humanities Council is sponsoring the state's first community reading program, One Maryland One Book. Pick up a copy of this year's selected book, A Hope in the Unseen: An American Odyssey from the Inner City to the Ivy League by Ron Suskind, read along with the rest of Maryland, and then join us to hear Ron Suskind or the subject of the book, Cedric Jennings, at one of the following events.
An Evening with Cedric JenningsTuesday, August 19 at 7:00 p.m.Montgomery College Rockville CampusTheatre Arts Building51 Mannakee St., Rockville240-777-0030
A Visit with Cedric JenningsFriday, September 19 at 11:00 a.m.Hagerstown Community CollegeKepler Theatre11400 Robinwood Dr., Hagerstown301-739-3250 ext 186
Ron Suskind at the Baltimore Book FestivalSaturday, September 27 at NoonLiterary Salon at Mount Vernon Place600 Block of N. Charles St., Baltimore410-685-0095
An Evening with Cedric JenningsMonday, October 20 at 7:00 p.m.Snow Hill High School305 S. Church St., Snow Hill410-632-2600
An Evening with Ron SuskindWednesday, October 22 at 7:00 p.m.North Point High School2500 Davis Rd., Waldorf301-934-9442
All programs are free and seating is available on a first-come, first-served basis.www.onemarylandonebook.org
These events coordinated in partnership with the public libraries of Calvert, Charles, Montgomery, St. Mary's, Washington, and Worcester Counties, and the Southern Maryland Regional Library Association.
Labels: cedric jennings, one maryland one book, ron suskind
posted by Elizabeth on 8/18/2008
Harford County Public Library Book Group News
"The Fallston daytime discussion group, "Fallston Critics Without Credentials," took their yearly bus trip on June 4th. Faced with a day predicted for rain, they set out properly prepared for a downpour; they had a wonderful rain-free day at Winterthur Mansion and Gardens in Wilmington, Delaware and the fact that the bus driver got lost didn't deter the 32 attendees one bit. The skies let loose on the drive home and by the time they pulled into the Fallston library parking lot at 5:00 pm, it had just about stopped. All in all, it was voted as one of the best bus trips ever. Now, of course, they have to do even better next year!"
Fallston also has a group that meets in the evening: the Friends Evening Group. On June 2 a group of 10 people discussed In an Instant by Lee and Bob Woodruff.
Books By Night, a group that meets in the Havre de Grace branch met in June at the Bayou Restaurant. According to their group moderator, "Nine people attended to discuss Jane Eyre over a brilliant repast."
In the Jarretsville branch, said their facilitator, the Novel Ideas book discussion group, "loved our June selection of Snow Flower and the Secret Fan by Lisa See. The lifelong relationship of the two women in the novel and the many details of Chinese culture were of the greatest interest."
According to the Bel Air branch, attendance at their book groups is in the high teens and twenties. These successful groups are Betsy's Books @ the Center (meets at the Senior Center) Amy and Nancy's Mysterious Minds and Bob's Fiction. Recently Mysterious Minds members toured Tudor Hall, the boyhood home of John Wilkes Booth, and discussed not only the “mystery� of a conspiracy, but also assassinations in general.
Labels: book discusions, book groups, Harford County Public Library, HCPL
posted by Elizabeth on 8/15/2008
National Book Festival slated for September 27 on National Mall
July 14, 2008 (REVISED August 13, 2008)
Library of Congress Organizes Eighth Annual National Book Festival Hosted by Mrs. Laura Bush on the National Mall; Famed Authors To Participate
The Librarian of Congress and Mrs. Laura Bush Invite Book Lovers of All Ages to Celebrate Reading on the National Mall on Sept. 27
The 2008 National Book Festival, organized and sponsored by the Library of Congress and hosted by Mrs. Laura Bush, will be held from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 27, rain or shine, on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., between 3rd and 7th streets. The festival is free and open to the public. Click here for more information about the Festival and the authors participating.
Among some 70 authors and illustrators participating this year are Tiki Barber, Marc Brown, Warren Brown, Kimberly Dozier, Arthur Frommer and Pauline Frommer, Philippa Gregory, Steven Kellogg, Brad Meltzer, Salman Rushdie, Bob Schieffer, Daniel Schorr, Alexander McCall Smith, Paul Theroux and Dionne Warwick. Jon Scieszka, a children’s book author recently named the National Ambassador for Young People’s Literature by the Librarian of Congress, will be among the authors presenting in the Teens & Children’s Pavilion.
"I invite you, your friends and your family to join us on Sept. 27 as we all celebrate our shared love of reading," said Librarian of Congress James H. Billington. "Come and be a part of this wonderful national experience."
"There are activities for all ages at the National Book Festival," said Mrs. Bush. "Readers can explore genres from history and mystery to romance and cookbooks. Children can meet their favorite storybook characters. And visitors can learn about the extensive resources offered by the Library of Congress."
The festival authors, illustrators and poets will discuss their work in pavilions dedicated to Children, Teens & Children, Fiction & Mystery, History & Biography, Home & Family and Poetry. PBS characters and NBA/WNBA players will appear at the festival including NBA Legend and Hall of Famer Bob Lanier. Each year, players participate in the festival by reading their favorite children’s books aloud with the help of students from local area schools as part of "NBA Cares."
The Pavilion of the States, sponsored by the Institute of Museum and Library Services, will highlight reading, literacy and library promotion activities in all 50 states, the District of Columbia and several American trusts and territories.
The Library of Congress Pavilion will feature a variety of family-centered activities illustrating the depth and breadth of the Library’s extraordinary collections available online. It will also offer a sampling of interactive activities available through the recently launched Library of Congress Experience.
Presentations by young poets and artists will be a new feature in the Teens & Children Pavilion. Each of the K-12 students presenting will be a winner in the River of Words environmental poetry and art contest sponsored by the Library's Center for the Book.
A presentation by four of the more than 100 authors and illustrators who contributed to the volume "Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out," sponsored by the National Children's Book and Literacy Alliance, will be featured in the Teens & Children Pavilion. Those writers are Mary Brigid Barrett, Steven Kellogg, Katherine Paterson and Jon Scieszka. (The book, with an introduction written by David McCullough, is published by Candlewick Press, 2008.)
Downloadable podcasts of interviews with popular participating authors will be placed on the Library’s Web site.
The artist for this year’s festival is beloved children’s author and illustrator Jan Brett, whose poster of animals and birds on the National Mall will be available at the festival. Brett, who has written and/or illustrated more than 30 books and has more than 33 million books in print, will be among the authors and illustrators speaking in the Children’s Pavilion.
posted by Elizabeth on 8/14/2008
Street Lit - Who's Loving You by Mary B. Morrison
This follow-up to Sweeter Than Honey is going to be huge. It had a featured review in Library Journal's LJXpress of August 12, 2008 which said, "Morrison's legion fans, as well as Zane readers, won’t be disappointed."
posted by Elizabeth on 8/14/2008
The Forger's Spell: a true story of Vermeer, Nazis, and the greatest art hoax of the twentieth century by Edward Dolnick
As the jacket notes say, this truly intriguing book I picked up and finished in no time at all is, "as riveting as a World War II thriller." Find this book in our catalogLabels: art fakes, art fraud, Han van Meegeren, Vermeer fakes
posted by Elizabeth on 8/13/2008
One Maryland/One Book - Update August 13
One Maryland One Book 2008
Imagine if all five million Marylanders read the same book at the same time.
Pick up a free copy or check out a library copy of this year’s selected book, A Hope in the Unseen (Find this book in our catalog), on display at your local Harford County Public Library branch or at Harford Community College and join a community discussion at one of the following locations:
Monday, October 6, 5:30 – 7:30 pm
Discussion followed by light refreshments and door prizes
Harford Community College
Chesapeake Center
401 Thomas Run Road
Bel Air, Maryland 21015
For further information and to register, call 410-836-4176
Mention course #45599
Saturday, October 18, 2:00 pm
Harford County Public Library
Jarrettsville Branch
3722 Norrisville Road
Jarrettsville, Maryland 21084
For further information and to register, call 410-692-7887
Visit www.onemarylandonebook.org
Labels: African American biography, hope in the unseen, one maryland one book
posted by Elizabeth on 8/13/2008
The Ghost by Robert Harris
"The moment I heard how McAra died, I should have walked away. I can see that now."Labels: Ghost, Ghost Writers - Fiction, political thrillers, Robert Harris, War On Terror - Fiction
posted by Elizabeth on 8/04/2008
Solzhenitsyn dies
Solzhenitsyn's acounts of torment and survival in the Soviet Union's slave labor camps exposed to his countrymen and to the world some of the darkest secrets of the Stalinist regime. According to a commentator on NPR whom I heard this morning, Solzenitsyn's exile in the US was a bitter one. His books had gained him international renown, but his vocal criticism of the conduct of the Vietnam war and of the commercialism of American culture was not popular in his adopted country. He could not wait to move back to his native home after the fall of the Soviet Union, but again, his voice, criticising what he saw as the selling out of the Revolution by the younger generation of Russians was not popular. It remains to be seen what his legacy will be; but no one can deny that his groundbreaking books inspired in millions the idea that a totlatarian empire could in the end be defeated by individuals with integrity. His works include:
One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovitch Find this book in our catalog
Cancer Ward Find this book in our catalog
The Gulag Archipelago Find this book in our catalog
Readers interested in works of dissent and social consciousness-raising from the 20th century might enjoy:
Silent Spring by Rachel Carson
The Jungle by Upton Sinclair
Cry, the Beloved Country by Alan Paton
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest by Ken Kesey
To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck
Here's one from the 21st century:
Nickel and Dimed on (Not) Getting By in America by Barbara Ehrenreich
I would welcome any other suggestions you might have for similar books.
Labels: Solzenitsyn
posted by Elizabeth on 8/04/2008
Man Booker Longlist
The longlist for this year's Man Booker Prize for Fiction features 13 titles. The "Man Booker Dozen", which was revealed 29th July was chosen from 112 entries; 103 were submitted for the prize by publishers and nine were called in by the judges. The shortlist will be announced on 9th September, and the winner is revealed on 14th October.
THE LONGLIST IN FULL:
The White Tiger by Aravind Adiga
Girl in a Blue Dress by Gaynor Arnold
The Secret Scripture by Sebastian Barry
From A to X by John Berger
The Lost Dog by Michelle de Kretser
Sea of Poppies by Amitav Ghosh
The Clothes on Their Backs by Linda Grant
A Case of Exploding Mangoes by Mohammed Hanif
The Northern Clemency by Philip Hensher
Netherland by Joseph O’Neill
The Enchantress of Florence by Salman Rushdie
Child 44 by Tom Rob Smith
A Fraction of the Whole by Steve Toltz
Labels: Man Booker Prize
posted by Elizabeth on 8/04/2008
The Big Read
Harford County Public Library is partnering with NEA with this program to to bring the transformative power of reading into the lives of Americans by making available audio guides - substantial and engaging introductions to a variety of classics, featuring major writers, actors, and influential cultural figures.
Featured Books:
Bless Me, Ultima
One of the most respected works of Chicano literature, Rudolfo Anaya tells the story of Antonio Luna Márez, a young boy who grapples with faith, identity, and death as he comes of age in New Mexico.
Fahrenheit 451
In one of literature's most haunting denunciations of censorship, Ray Bradbury uses the materials of science fiction to tell the story of Guy Montag, a fireman forced to burn books.
My �ntonia
The spirited daughter of a Bohemian immigrant family plans to farm the untamed Nebraska land. Willa Cather's tale comes to us through the eyes of �ntonia's childhood friend, Jim Burden.
The Great Gatsby
Told through the eyes of narrator Nick Carraway, F. Scott Fitzgerald's lyrical masterpiece recounts Jay Gatsby's desperate quest to win back his first love as he struggles to escape the past.
A Lesson Before Dying
A frustrated schoolteacher in 1940s Louisiana tries to give a condemned man back his dignity before he dies. Vivid and compassionate, this novel asks: Knowing we're going to die, how should we live?
The Maltese Falcon
Detective Sam Spade becomes embroiled with a mysterious client, avenges the death of his partner, and chases a priceless treasure, in this classic American private-eye novel.
A Farewell to Arms
A story of love and pain, loyalty and desertion, Ernest Hemingway's World War I novel features the tragedy of an American ambulance driver on the Italian front and his passion for a beautiful nurse.
Their Eyes WereWatching God
Zora Neale Hurston's vibrant novel presents Janie Mae Crawford's growth from a voiceless teenage girl into a woman who takes charge of her own destiny.
To Kill a Mockingbird
As Harper Lee's narrator, Scout Finch, tries to draw out a reclusive neighbor, she finds herself involved in a racially charged trial that decides the fate of a man in her Alabama community.
The Call of the Wild
Abducted from his comfortable home and sold as a sled dog, Buck battles the elements to become leader of the pack. This story of a struggle for survival is an unforgettable adventure.
The Heart is a Lonely Hunter
A teenage outcast, a drunken socialist, a black doctor, and a sad café owner confess their secrets to a deaf-mute, in Carson McCullers' dramatic story of poverty and racism in a 1930s Georgia mill town.
The Shawl
Bear witness to Rosa Lublin—a mother, madwoman, and holocaust survivor. Cynthia Ozick's heartbreakingly empathic novella explores universal ideas of family and loss, denial and starting over.
The Grapes of Wrath
The saga of the Joad family's rough passage to California and the rougher treatment they find there, John Steinbeck's novel is tragedy and comedy, story and allegory, editorial and epic.
The Joy Luck Club
In sixteen interwoven stories, Amy Tan's characters—four Chinese immigrant mothers and their American-raised daughters—struggle to connect despite the ghosts and secrets of the past.
The Death of Ivan Ilyich
Leo Tolstoy's Ivan Ilyich is a Russian judge and middle-class everyman. Suddenly stricken by a life-threatening disease at forty-five, Ivan discovers a horrifying truth: He has not lived a meaningful life.
The Age of Innocence
In 1870s New York, Newland Archer and his fiancée seem the perfect match. But when the alluring Countess Ellen Olenska returns home from Europe, Newland must make the most important decision of his life.
These guides will be useful to book groups, teachers, and students, as well as the general reading public. They will be cataloged with the Adult Non-Fiction CDs, but may be displayed elsewhere in the branches throughout the summer and fall.
Labels: The Big Read
posted by Elizabeth on 8/01/2008




