Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Thanks for participating in summer reading!

Our summer reading program for 2011, A Midsummer Knight's Read, ran June 6-July 30. 157 teens and adults signed up this year, and 19 teens and 52 adults finished the program. Summer reading participants read a total of 797 books... in hardcover, paperback, large type, audiobook, eBook, and eAudiobook formats! Catherine W. won the grand prize $100 Target gift card. We also had 10 adult weekly winners who won $15 Target gift cards throughout the summer. Thank you to everyone who signed up, turned in their reading entries, and wrote their own mini book reviews! Stay tuned for next year's theme, "Reading is So Delicious!"


Thursday, August 4, 2011

Recommended read: Claire DeWitt and the City of the Dead by Sara Gran

Claire DeWitt isn't the most relate-able of women: she's bitter and often under the influence of something (alcohol, various drugs). But, she's also a brilliant and unorthodox private detective with an affinity for a (fictional) French detective named Silette. Silette's place in this story is his one and only book, Detection, which Claire carries with her from job to job like a bible of sorts. A one-time New Orleans resident, Claire is hired to find out what happened to prosecutor Vic Willing, who hasn't been seen since Katrina a year and a half prior. She takes her time, her methods unusual, waiting for the clues to come to her. Things that don't seem connected might actually be. And, of course, one of those tidbits of info ends up being the most important clue to solving the "The Case of the Green Parrot," as Claire dubs it.

The darker mood of the novel is perpetuated in dysfunctional post-Katrina New Orleans. It naturally provides many possibilities as to Willings' disappearance. Did Vic die in Katrina, was he murdered, or did he simply just stay away afterwards without leaving a forwarding address? The chaos that was New Orleans after Katrina is unfathonable for us outsiders and Gran does a very impressive job conveying the utter devastation that followed. This passage so aptly describes this: "some people, I saw, had drowned right away. And some people were drowning in slow motion, drowning a little bit at a time, and would be drowning for years. And some people, like Mick, had always been drowning. They just didn't know what to call it until now."

The character I find most interesting isn't really even a true character: Silette. His philosophy on crime detection I find to be a revelation: " 'When a person disappears," silette wrote in Detection, "the detective must look at what she took with her when she left-- not only the material items, but what is gone without her, what she carries with her to the underworld; what words will go unspoken; what no longer exists if she is made to disappear.' " This point Silette makes would be useful for any crime solver's arsenal.

So, to my issues with this book: there's little emotional attachment to the main character. She is more mysterious than the actual mystery she solves; her motives for most things are unclear, probably to be explained in a later installment ( I believe Gran is gearing this up to be a series). The closest I came to some clarity is the background story on her friend Tracey's disappearance as a teenager. My other beef was that the dialogue of some characters was annoying and repetitive at times. I would think to myself, just say it already!

In the end, though, I have to recommend a book where I like the supporting characters and the mystery itself was fulfilling, but I'm just not a fan of the main character (not yet anyway)-- which might just be the author's intention. Not too bad for a book I picked up because I liked the cover.

Claire DeWitt and the City of the Dead by Sara Gran
Find it in the catalog!

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Staff reviews and recommendations from summer reading

Jefferson Key by Steve Berry
NEW FICTION BERRY
Find it in the catalog!
"Good series, good author history I didn't know about. Author's notes at end saying what's real and what is fiction is wonderful." Rating: 4
-- Jeanne E.
The Enchanter's Forest by Alys Clare
MYSTERY CLARE
Find it in the catalog!
"Good series, takes place in 1190's. This one is when Richard the Lionheart has returned from captivity. The English people were taxed to pay his captor's ransom demands -- many nearly destitute." Rating: 4
-- Jeanne E.
High Five by Janet Evanovich
MYSTERY EVANOVICH
Find it in the catalog!
"Who doesn't like Janet Evanovich?! This book is fast-paced, funny and sometimes sexy." Rating: 4
-- Heather Z.
The Neighbor by Lisa Gardner
FICTION GARDNER
Find it in the catalog!
"A decent 'detective' story. Lots of possibilities and then wrapped up neatly at the end. Not heart-pounding, but kept my interest." Rating: 3
-- Kirstin F.
Crank by Ellen Hopkins
TEEN HOPKINS
Find it in the catalog!
"A tragic account of a teen's descent into drugs. Written like poetry (liked that a lot)." Rating: 4
-- Kirstin F.
Slam by Nick Hornby
TEEN HORNBY
Find it in the catalog!
"Hornby never disappoints. His writing is witty, funny and his characters are endearing." Rating: 5
-- Kirstin F.
The Principles of Uncertainty by Maira Kalman
741.642092 KAL
Find it in the catalog!
"Certainly a unique read. It's quirky and inspiring." Rating: 4
-- Heather Z.
Masterpiece of Murder by Mary Kruger
Find it in the catalog!
"Historical mystery -- 1890's husband/wife team. Husband is a cop and doesn't want wife to help but she always gets involved anyway." Rating: 4
-- Kathy S.
The Borrower by Rebecca Makkai
NEW FICTION MAKKAI
Find it in the catalog!
"A funny, smart, quick read. I related a lot to the main character -- a young library assistant. Probably my most-enjoyable read of the summer!" Rating: 4.5
-- Heather Z.
Tiger’s Wife by Tea Obreht
NEW FICTION OBREHT
Find it in the catalog!
"It was a little slow in the beginning but I couldn't put it down by the end. The story is a fascinating blend of folklore and science, war and family." Rating: 5
-- Heather Z.
Zombie Spaceship Wasteland by Patton Oswalt
IN THE NEWS -- BIOGRAPHY
Find it in the catalog!
"I really liked the memoiry stuff and inside view of standup comedy. The more experimental stuff I didn't like as much." Rating: 3.5
-- Heather Z.
The Dreamer by Pam Muñoz Ryan
NEW JUV FICTION RYAN
Find it in the catalog!
"Fictionalized account of Pablo Neruda's childhood in Chile. The writing is elegant with Neruda's poems interspersed . Peter Sis adds his delicate pen drawings to make this a very special book for children and adults." Rating: 5
-- Heidi H.
Save Me by Lisa Scottoline
NEW FICTION SCOTTOLINE
Find it in the catalog!
"Well-written -- could happen to anyone. A mother's courage to do the right thing. Lots of twists and turns." Rating: 5
-- Carrie E.
Murder on Sisters' Row by Victoria Thompson
NEW MYSTERY THOMPSON
Find it in the catalog!
"Historical mystery. A good 'cozy' mystery." Rating: 3
-- Kathy S.
Leviathan by Scott Westerfeld
TEEN WESTERFELD
Find it in the catalog!
"Good juvenile fantasy based on an alternative World War I. Military moves in mechanical walkers (clankers/Germans) vs Darwinists (Brits) who have bred fantastical creatures to use in battles. Good fun." Rating: 4
-- Heidi H.