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Vampire Poems

Labels: Vampire poems
posted by Elizabeth on 10/29/2009
Maryland Has New Poet Laureate
"POET LAUREATE
Stanley Plumly, Poet Laureate of Maryland, 2009-.
On October 1, 2009, Stanley Plumly was named Poet Laureate of Maryland by the Governor. A Maryland Distinguished University Professor since 1998, Mr. Plumly founded the Master of Fine Arts Program in Creative Writing at the University of Maryland, College Park.
He has written nine books of poetry, including Old Heart (2008); Now That My Father Lies Down Beside Me: New and Selected Poems, 1970-2000 (2000); The Marriage in the Trees (1997); Boy on the Step (1989); Summer Celestial (1983); Out-of-the-Body Travel (1977); Giraffe (1974); How the Plains Indians Got Horses (1973); and In the Outer Dark (1970). His work also includes Argument and Song: Sources and Silences in Poetry (2003), a collection of essays, and Posthumous Keats: A Personal Biography (2008).
Born in Barnesville, Ohio, May 23, 1939, Stanley Plumly received his B.A. in 1962 from Wilmington College, and his M.A. and Ph.D. from Ohio University. "
Labels: Maryland Poet Laureate, Stanley Plummer
posted by Elizabeth on 10/27/2009
Methland: The Death and Life of an American Small Town

Methland: The Death and Life of an American Small Town by Nick Reding
We tend to think of small-town living as idyllic and serene, certainly better than big-city living, with all its pollution and poverty. Think again. Since the late 20th century, rural, small-town America has been changing, in part due to the loss of family farms to agribusiness, and changing not for the better. Poverty is rampant, with families moving from farms to town life and with local manufacturing declining. Into this void has stepped a trade consistently profitable – the manufacture and distribution of methamphetamine.
Author Nick Reding grew up in the Midwest, and for him, the decline in quality of life has been heartbreaking and alarming. He has seen good-paying jobs in small towns systematically evaporate, as corporate giants have gobbled up companies and either closed them or lowered wages for employees by two-thirds. He has seen how the local folks have coped with the changes, as more people have become users of this cheap and highly-addictive drug. From using to manufacturing and distributing has been one small step out of poverty but deeper into despair.
Reding follows the decline of one town, Oelwein in Iowa, once a reasonably prosperous place, where farms and a meat-packing plant supported nearly everyone. But agribusiness put an end to all that, and the result has been a disaster. Reding follows meth users in their trajectory from prosperity to poverty, looking at causes and effects. He also allows readers to see the complicated network of makers and distributors of meth, from Mexico to the house next door.
Meth is easy to make, with ingredients in plentiful supply and easy to access. A small-town resident is especially able to get the necessary ingredients and make the drug, not in a big, fancy lab, but in a garage, a basement, or a backyard tool shed. While drug enforcement agencies have proposed changes to laws to create more effective barriers to drug manufacturing, pharmaceutical companies and chain pharmacies have done their best to block those reforms and regulations. Reding traces the on-going battle with Wal-Mart and Warner-Lambert. He reveals which members of Congress have been the most obstructive in reform, and readers will be surprised perhaps, when those members are often the very ones in favor of tougher sentences for drug-users.
More than anything, Reding reveals the devastation meth has had on the average small-town resident, whether a user or a person who witnesses the closing of nearly every shop in town as misery and poverty spread. He also shows what it takes to rebuild a town, and sometimes that depends on just one person, a tenacious visionary.
All in all, Oelwein survives, thanks to the persistence of a handful of people, both residents of the town and drug agents who continue to fight for reform of drug laws and pharmaceutical manufacturing. Ultimately, Oelwein may once again revive and prosper to become that which we envision when we think of the glories of small-town life.
D. L. S.
Labels: drug abuse, meth, methamphetamine, Methland, Nick Reding, rural life
posted by D. L. S. on 10/26/2009
Bright Star - the True-life Romance Behind the Movie
Bright star : love letters and poems of John Keats to Fanny Brawne. (Find this book in our catalog)Labels: Bright Star, Fanny Brawne, John Keats
posted by Elizabeth on 10/26/2009
Man Booker Prize - Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel
The judges described Wolf Hall as "a thoroughly modern novel set in the 16th century" with "a vast narrative sweep that gleams on every page with luminous and mesmerising detail." They also said the novel, "probes the mysteries of power by examining and describing the meticulous dealings in Henry VIII's court, revealing in thrilling prose how politics and history is made by men and women. In the words of Mantel's Thomas Cromwell, whose story this is, 'the fate of peoples is made like this, two men in small rooms. Forget the coronations, the conclaves of cardinals, the pomp and processions. This is how the world changes'."
Labels: Henry VIII - fiction, Historical Fiction, Man Booker Prize, Thomas Cromwel l- fiction, Wolf Hall
posted by Elizabeth on 10/24/2009
Bright Star - a movie about John Keats and Fanny Brawne
Bright Star, a romantic movie about the Romantic poet, John Keats, has been called by the New York Times, "a learned and ravishing new film." It is currently showing at the Charles Theater. Read a movie review...
posted by Elizabeth on 10/23/2009
More About Amelia Earhart
For anyone interested in learning more about Amelia Earhart and also about women in aviation, here are more websites:
The Official Website of Amelia Earhart http://www.ameliaearhart.com/
Find out about, among many other fascinating things, the search for the missing plane.
The Amelia Earhart Birthplace Museum http://www.ameliaearhartmuseum.org/
The Official Website of Women in Aviation International http://www.wai.org/
Labels: Amelia Earhart
posted by Elizabeth on 10/22/2009
Book to Movie - East to the Dawn: the life of Amelia Earhart

Labels: Amelia Earhart, biographies, books to movies
posted by Elizabeth on 10/21/2009
The Book of Night Women by Marlon James
If you are taking part in One Maryland, One Book this year and have finished Song Yet Sung by James McBride, you might like to try for comparison The Book of Night Women by Marlon James.
This is what it says about Night Women in our catalog: "From a young writer who radiates charisma and talent comes a sweeping, stylish historical novel of Jamaican slavery that can be compared only to Toni Morrison's "Beloved." The book starts out with the birth of a girl child called Lilith onto the blood-splashed dirt floor of a slave hut in a plantation in Jamaica early in the 18th century. Her mother dies immediately and Lilith is fostered out to a hateful slave woman who for some mysterious reason is given many privileges the other slaves are not. The child too is privileged, and as a child is required to do no work. With puberty comes an awareness that there must be some underlying reason for her special status but no real understanding - Lilith is difficult, rebellious, and clueless. We see the plantation through her eyes and we only dimly start to understand the brutality of everyone's life - brutality that differs only in degree between the ruthless struggle for survival within the strict hierarchy of the house slaves or the virtual death sentence of working in the fields. Then Lilith kills to prevent being raped by one of the Johnny Jumpers, black hands appointed as overseers of the other field slaves. These Johnny Jumpers regularly roam in predatory bands through the cabins at night, smashing, raping, and killing. With a murder on her hands the girl is hidden away in the basement of the house by Homer, the slave housekeeper - a mysterious power in the hierarchy of the plantation. Homer is the leader of a powerful group of women, whose power is based on superstition and some connection to the debauched long-time white overseer of the plantation. The women try to school Lilith, but she remains headstrong and tries to lift herself up by beginning a relationship with the young plantation owner. The plot twists as the consequences of Lilith's actions unfold - and the women meet at night to plot a slave rebellion.
The book is written in a lilting Jamaican patois that for me brought the images and characters to life, and also somtimes made it hard for me to continue reading. The images of plantation life are all the usual ones and yet the author avoids all the usual platitudes - there are no comforting faithful and loving house slaves nor benevolent masters. This book is full of disturbing images of violence and degradation. It is an exploration of the cruel and dehumanizing practices of slavery. The degradation that it brought to both black and white. Though it is beautifully written, as one reviewer said, this book will keep you up at night.
Labels: Jamaica - fiction, plantations -fiction, slavery-fiction
posted by Elizabeth on 10/18/2009
Elmore Leonard wins PEN USA Lifetime Achievement Award
be honored with the PEN USA lifetime achievement award on December 2.
Read more...
This is what the PEN USA webpage said about Elmore Leonard: "As a tribute to his writing accomplishments, legendary author Elmore Leonard will be presented with the Lifetime Achievement Award. In a career spanning 60 years, Leonard has published 43 novels and numerous short stories, creating a distinct literary style that has delighted readers and influenced a new generation of writers. Books like Swag, LaBrava, Freaky Deaky, and Tishomingo Blues are not only classics of the crime genre, but some of the best writing of the last half century. Leonard’s most recent novel, Road Dogs, has received some of the best reviews of his career. He is currently finishing his next book, entitled Djibouti, to be published in 2010 by HarperCollins/William Morrow."
Labels: Elmore Leonard, PEN USA Awards
posted by Elizabeth on 10/17/2009
The Secret of the Pink Carnation by Lauren Willig
The Secret of the Pink Carnation by Lauren Willig (Find this book in our catalog)I was intrigued with an author interview I was reading the other day - I think it was with Tasha Alexander. Asked if she had ever bought a book just for the cover, she said The Secret of the Pink Carnation. She ended up loving the book so much that she tried to emulate it in her own historical fiction. Anyway, I went right out to my local HCPL branch, scanned the shelves, and, finding the book with the lucious pink dress on the cover, I checked it out right away! I couldn't resist! (Incidentally, since I did my blog on historical novels a couple of days ago, I now know why the publisher cut off half the Pink Carnation's head in the cover picture.)
Once I had opened the covers of The Secret of the Pink Carnation I too could not put the book down. In the book are two stories. First is the story of American scholar Eloise who is in London to do research on the identity of an English Napoleonic wars spy called The Purple Gentian. Eloise outwits the irascible Colin Selwick to obtain access to a diary and letters among his aristocratic family's papers. As she reads them, the parallel story of Amy Balcourt and Lord Richard Selwick (aka The Purple Gentian) is revealed, along with the never-before suspected identity of another spy, The Pink Carnation. Colin resents Eloise delving into his family's secrets. Just as Amy Balcourt did in her quest to find and join forces with the Purple Gentian, Eloise falls prey to many misunderstandings in her relationship with Colin. But in this merry romp all is sorted out in both endings to the satisfaction of all parties. Just what those endings are you will have to read the book to find out!
Be warned that if you are an historical purist you will not find a lot to sink your teeth into in this romantic mystery in historical costume. If you are a fan of chick lit, however, you will find a lot to love in the feisty yet misguided, self-doubting yet determined heroines. If you were ever a fan of Georgette Heyer you will love the comedy of misunderstandings between the two pairs of lovers.
Labels: Historical Fiction, historical romance, Napoleonic Wars - fiction, Secret of the Pink Carnation
posted by Elizabeth on 10/16/2009
National Book Awards Finalists



The NBA finalists in the categories of adult fiction and nonfiction currently owned by Harford County Public Library are:
Fiction:
* Let the Great World Spin by Colum McCann (Find this book in our catalog)
Species by Sean B. Carroll (Find this book in our catalog)
Greg Grandin (Find this book in our catalog)
Stiles (Find this book in our catalog)
Labels: National Book Awards 2009
posted by Elizabeth on 10/15/2009
You Can't Judge a Book By Its Cover - Or Can You?


Thanks to corresponding trends in historical fiction cover art, we can make educated guesses about which books will provide similar reading experiences. While black-and-white photos of shadowy Victorian street scenes announce themselves as historical mysteries or thrillers; and bold images of gleaming swords, helmets and other warlike accoutrements scream "military adventure"; historical novels whose dust jackets feature women in period costume are assumed to follow the "strong women in history" trend. The groupings are unmistakable, and because novels of this type are currently so prevalent, the associations are hard to miss.
When the story is based on an actual woman's life, the jacket design may be a variant of her real-life portrait. This is the case for Susan Holloway Scott's The French Mistress, featuring Sir Peter Lely's painting of Louise de Keroualle. Alternatively, covers show contemporary models garbed in gorgeous historically-based outfits. For example, on the cover of Jeane Westin's The Virgin's Daughters, a young woman wears a green gown with a beaded, richly embroidered bodice and farthingale, representing the late Tudor era — wholly appropriate for a work about two of Queen Elizabeth I's ladies in waiting. Historical accuracy in covers isn't a given, but that's a subject for another article!
Many of these examples share another thing in common: the woman's face is either completely or partially obscured, achieved either through cropping the image at nose-line, or by showing the figure with her back turned. The Other Boleyn Girl was a trendsetter in this convention as well, In terms of her covers and her choice of subjects, Philippa Gregory's success as an author is well worth emulating. The "headless woman" look is frequently seen in contemporary fiction, too; and it has met with mixed reactions. Critics charge that it's the artistic equivalent of taking away women's identities, ironically something the novels are trying to counteract. On the other hand, it adds an aura of mystery, since readers are required to visualize what the main character might look like. Also, some readers say it lets them more easily imagine themselves in the protagonist's shoes, allowing them to vicariously experience the novel's actions and emotions along with the heroine.
Either way, these covers have proven to sell books, and publishers' marketing departments know it. Elizabeth Chadwick, a prizewinning British novelist who writes biographical fiction about the medieval English nobility, found that her sales more than quadrupled after her publisher commissioned a redesign with what she personally termed the "headless bodice" look. Headless they may be, but many of these designs are truly beautiful; and like many readers, I'm not at all immune to their effect. My bookshelves at home are full of them, many of them displayed face-out.
However, because these covers appeal so strongly to female audiences — who reportedly make up over 70% of the fiction reading public (Gabriel) — their appearance hasn't been limited to novels of the Philippa Gregory variety. Laura Joh Rowland's The Fire Kimono and The Snow Empress, historical mysteries set in 11th-century Japan, have striking, evocative covers that echo the trend, as does Lindsey Davis's Saturnalia, part of her Falco series set in ancient Rome. Even a recent translation of Tolstoy's original War and Peace has a cover that fits this category. Of course, all of these novels have important female characters, but none is told exclusively from a female perspective.
So what does a "headless woman" cover really mean about a book's content? Even with historical novels where women are the viewpoint characters, the designs cut across subgenre lines, with similar approaches taken by the covers of Terri Lynn Wilhelm's Deception (Regency romance), Joyce Lebra's The Scent of Sake (biographical fiction about a 19th-century Japanese businesswoman), DeVa Gantt's Forever Waiting (family saga set in the 1830s West Indies), and Kamila Shamsie's Burnt Shadows (literary novel about the long-term impact of Hiroshima and Nagasaki). The art for Ann Turnbull's No Shame, No Fear, an award-winning young adult novel set in Restoration England, follows the same format. All include era-appropriate backdrops and depict dark-haired women with upswept hairstyles who face away from the reader. In a sense, the covers distill the novels down to a single unifying theme—"strong, historical women". But apart from that aspect, these four books have little in common with one another. They're very different in terms of genre, writing style, and approach.
Cover art is a form of advertising, after all. It's meant to grab our attention, but in many cases it simultaneously presents us with something recognizable, offering clues about what we might be getting. The commonalities in cover design can broaden the possible audience for these books, hooking new readers who might not have picked them up otherwise and encouraging them to try a subgenre, title, or author new to them. On the other hand, they can be misleading. Historical novel fans or readers' advisors who base their "readalike" decisions on the jacket art — and many do — may end up with something quite different from what they expected."
Labels: Historical Fiction
posted by Elizabeth on 10/14/2009
National Reading Group Month's Great Group Reads




* The Secret Diaries of Charlotte Brontë by Syrie James
* The House on Fortune Street by Margot Livesey
The titles were selected for their potential to "open up lively
conversations about a host of timely and provocative topics, from the
intimate dynamics of family and personal relationships to major cultural
and world issues." Read more...
Labels: Book Club Books, Great Group Reads, National Book group Month
posted by Elizabeth on 10/10/2009
Book in the Headlines - Mrs. Astor Regrets
Mrs. Astor Regrets : the hidden betrayals of a family beyond reproach by Meryl Gordon Find this book in our catalogLabels: Brooke Astor, Mrs Astor Regrets, socialites-biography
posted by Elizabeth on 10/09/2009
Book About the Wild Bird Trade Wins Malott Prize for Recording Community Activism
The Langum Charitable Trust named Bruce Barcott, author of The Last Flight of the Scarlet Macaw: One Woman's Fight to Save the World's Most Beautiful Bird, the first winner of its biannual Gene E. & Adele R. Malott Prize for Recording Community Activism. The author receives $1,500, and $1,000 is donated to the underlying project of community activism. Find this book in our catalogThis is what it says in a review in our catalog: "Barcott (The Measure of a Mountain) relates the dramatic and heart-rending story of one woman's struggle to save the scarlet macaw in the tiny country of Belize. Sharon Matola, an eccentric American who directs the Belize Zoo, learned in 1999 that a Canadian power company planned to build a dam that would destroy the habitat of the 200 scarlet macaws remaining in Belize. Helped by native Belizeans and the Natural Resources Defense Council, Matola mounted a six-year campaign against the dam, undaunted by government officials who branded her an enemy of the state and threatened to destroy her zoo by locating a new national garbage dump next to it—a vindictive act halted only when Princess Anne of Great Britain, which gives Belize millions in aid, planned to speak out against it. But the combined forces of a determined corporation and a corrupt government were unrelenting, even after it was revealed that the power company's geological studies of the site were faulty and the dam could put human lives at stake. Barcott's compelling narrative is suspenseful right up to the last moment. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved."
You may like these other books on animal rights and on environmental activism:
Cape Wind : money, celebrity, class, politics, and the battle for our energy future on Nantucket Sound by Wendy Williams and Robert Whitcomb.
"When Jim Gordon set out to build a wind farm on Cape Cod, he could not imagine the firestorm that would erupt. Steeped in history and local color, this is also a cautionary tale about how money can hijack democracy while America lags behind the rest of the developed world in adopting clean energy." (catalog notes)
The Ten Trusts : what we must do to care for the animals we love by Jane Goodall and Marc Bekoff.
"Jane Goodall and Marc Bekoff (biology, U. of Colorado, Boulder) have formulated a list of ten trusts, each described here with numerous examples, which, if adopted, they believe would transform humankind's relation with nature. In the process, they address many issues, including animal research, ecotourism, zoo management, wearing fur, and the importance of an attitude of activism rather than passivity. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)" (catalog notes)
The Human, the Orchid, and the Octopus : exploring and conserving our natural world by Jacques Cousteau and Susan Schiefelbein.
"Cousteau's reverence for life's miracles—embodied by the evolutionary wonders of the human, the orchid and the octopus—shines through in this eloquent testimony on the importance of pursuing higher ideals, particularly the preservation of the oceans and the natural world for future generations. (Nov.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved." (part of review in our catalog notes)
Labels: animal rights, environmental activism, scarlet macaw
posted by Elizabeth on 10/08/2009
2009 Nobel Prize for Literature
HCPL does not currently own any of her work, but some of Mueller's books in translation may be borrowed through the Maryland state library resource known as "Marina." Any of your local HCPL branch librarians will be more than glad to assist you, or you may access the Marina system online from your home.
Titles in English translation include The Appointment, The Land of Green Plums, and Nadirs. (If you are searching the Marina catalog by author name, try spelling the last name with and without an "e"!)
posted by Elizabeth on 10/08/2009
2009 Thurber Prize for American Humor
Ian Frazier has won the 2009 Thurber Prize for American Humor for his book Lamentations of the Father. (Find this book in our catalog)The frequent contributor to the New Yorker won the first Thurber prize in 1997 for his Coyote vs. Acme.
This is what it says in our catalog about Lamentations of the Father:
"When The Atlantic Monthly celebrated its 150th anniversary by publishing excerpts from the best writing ever to appear in the magazine, in the category of the humorous essay it chose only four pieces—one by Mark Twain, one by James Thurber, one by Kurt Vonnegut, and Ian Frazier’s 1997 essay “Lamentations of the Father.� The title piece of this new collection has had an ongoing life in anthologies, in radio performances, in audio recordings, on the Internet, and in photocopies held by hamburger magnets on the doors of people’s refrigerators. The august company in which The Atlantic put Frazier gives an idea of where on the literary spectrum his humorous pieces lie. Frazier’s work is funny and elegant and poetic and of the highest literary aspiration, all at the same time. More serious than a “gag� writer, funnier than most essayists of equal accomplishment, Frazier is of a classical originality. This collection, a companion to his previous humor collections, Dating Your Mom(1985) and Coyote v. Acme(1996), contains thirty-three pieces gathered from the last thirteen years."
Runners-up for the Thurber Prize this year were:
* Sloane Crosley for I Was Told There'd Be Cake.
* Don Lee for Wrack and Ruin.
* Laurie Notaro for The Idiot Girl and the Flaming Tantrum of Death:
Reflections on Revenge, Germaphobia, and Laser Hair Removal.
Labels: Thurber Prize
posted by Elizabeth on 10/07/2009
More surprise hits you may have missed
Tears in the Darkness : the story of the Bataan Death March and its aftermath / Michael Norman and Elizabeth M. Norman This major new work about World War II exposes the myths of military heroism as shallow and inadequate. "Tears in the Darkness" makes clear, with great literary and human power, that war causes suffering for people on all sides. (catalog notes)
Wicked Plants : the weed that killed Lincoln's mother & other botanical atrocities / Amy Stewart A tree that sheds poison daggers; a glistening red seed that stops the heart; a shrub that causes paralysis; a vine that strangles; and a leaf that triggered a war. In "Wicked Plants," Stewart takes on over two hundred of Mother Nature's most appalling creations. It's an A to Z of plants that kill, maim, intoxicate, and otherwise offend. You'll learn which plants to avoid (like exploding shrubs), which plants make themselves exceedingly unwelcome (like the vine that ate the South), and which ones have been killing for centuries (like the weed that killed Abraham Lincoln's mother). Menacing botanical illustrations and splendidly ghastly drawings create a fascinating portrait of the evildoers that may be lurking in your own backyard. (catalog notes)
Labels: Bataan Death March, Book Club Books, Montana - fiction, Outlander, Teatrs in the Darkness, Wicked Plants
posted by Elizabeth on 10/06/2009
The Thing Around Your Neck byChimamanda Ngozi Adichie

The Thing Around Your Neck by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie grew up in
D. L. S.
Labels: Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, nigeria, Short Stories
posted by D. L. S. on 10/05/2009
Surpise hits you may have missed



Labels: All We Ever Wanted was Everything, Book Club Books, girl who stopped swimming, Girls from Ames, Shop Class as Soulwork
posted by Elizabeth on 10/04/2009
A Bad Day for Sorry: a crime novel by Sophie Littlefield
A Bad Day for Sorry by Sophie Littlefield Find this book in our catalogLabels: crime fiction, domestic abuse, humor, Missouri fiction, murder, Mysteries
posted by Elizabeth on 10/03/2009
Way To Wellness - Martial Arts
Here is a selection of martial arts books in Harford County Public Library:
- Mixed Martial Arts for Dummies by Frank Shamrock Find this book in our catalog.
- The Complete Idiot's Guide to T'Ai Chi and Qigong: Illustrated [With DVD] by Bill Douglas Find this book in our catalog.
- Tae Kwon Do: The Ultimate Reference Guide to the World's Most Popular Martial Art (Updated) by Yeon Hee Park Find this book in our catalog.
- The Gleason's Gym Total Body Boxing Workout for Women: A 4-Week Head-To-Toe Makeover by Hector Roca Find this book in our catalog.
Labels: boxing, martial arts, taekwondo, tai chi
posted by Elizabeth on 10/02/2009
Way To Wellness - Fun in the Outdoors
Harford County Public Library has lots of books and DVD about getting started in all kinds of outdoor activities such as running, biking, walking and kayaking.
You can often find these books in the sports section of the library, or click on the Way To Wellness - Outdoors list to find some good titles.
Labels: canoeing, cycling, hiking, kayaking, outdoors, running, skateboarding, walking, Way to Wellness Week
posted by Elizabeth on 10/01/2009
October is National Reading Group Month
Labels: National Reading Group Month
posted by Elizabeth on 10/01/2009




