Thursday, October 13, 2011

NEW ARRIVALS - OCTOBER

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NEW ARRIVALS

ADULT FICTION

"Animal Magnetism" by Jill Shalvis - "Brady Miller is always on the move as he covers global hot spots for an independent security contractor. Still, when his foster 'brothers' Adam and Dell say they need his help with their veterinary practice/animal rescue business, he can't say no, though the month he promises to stay in Idaho might seem like an eternity. His visit begins with a bang when Lilah Young rear-ends his parked truck while dealing with a Jeep-ful of puppies, piglets, and a duck. Running her own kennel/pet-sitting service, finding homes for abandoned animals, and studying to be a vet take up all of Lilah's time. Brady seems like he might be too much of a distraction....  Verdict Shalvis (Slow Heat) ramps up the pet-friendly book trend with this story of two people who are looking for very different things while reluctantly finding common ground and perhaps rescuing each other. The cute-as-can- be four-legged critters keep the humor and the humanity at full throttle. This steamy, romantic barn-burner is recommended for most collections."--Bette-Lee Fox, Library Journal. LIBRARY JOURNAL, c2011.

"Cloudy with a Chance of Marriage" by Kieran Kramer - "Kramer's crisp, witty writing is unfortunately undermined by a straw-man villain in the third Impossible Bachelors Regency romance.... Runaway wife Jilly Jones set up Hodgepodge, a bookstore, on London's Dreare Street with a trusted but eccentric family friend. Dreare lives up to its name: its inhabitants suffer bad luck, and her handsome neighbor, Capt. Stephen Arrow, is a rowdy rascal. Stephen is attempting to sell his ramshackle inherited house despite an infestation of boorish relatives. When a lawyer shows up and announces that all of Dreare Street is in arrears, the colorful inhabitants come together in a hilariously terrible plan to save the day. The delightful romance and comedy-of-errors feel only falter when Jilly's husband shows up and his paper-thin subplot briefly takes center stage." -- PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, c2011.

"The Greater Journey: Americans in Paris" by David McCullough - "The Greater Journey is the enthralling, inspiring—and until now, untold—story of the adventurous American artists, writers, doctors, politicians, architects, and others of high aspiration who set off for Paris in the years between 1830 and 1900, ambitious to excel in their work....

Nearly all of these Americans, whatever their troubles learning French, their spells of homesickness, and their suffering in the raw cold winters by the Seine, spent many of the happiest days and nights of their lives in Paris. McCullough tells this sweeping, fascinating story with power and intimacy, bringing us into the lives of remarkable men and women who, in Saint-Gaudens’s phrase, longed “to soar into the blue.” The Greater Journey is itself a masterpiece." -- AMAZON.COM

"Kill Me If You Can" by James Patterson - "During an attack on Grand Central in New York, hard-up art student Matthew Bannon finds a bag containing $13 million worth of diamonds, so of course he takes it. ... Soon he's being trailed by the Ghost, an assassin who just rubbed out a high- ranking member of the Diamond Syndicate and was supposed to retrieve the gems. And he's being trailed by a rival assassin. Another biggie from Patterson (and Karp, a producer also responsible for the Lomax and Biggs series). Interesting tidbit: Patterson was the first writer in the world to sell one million ebooks."-- LIBRARY JOURNAL, c2011.

"One Summer" by David Baldacci - "Baldacci, the author of a string of best-selling thrillers, once again steps outside his comfort zone.... A man is on his deathbed (literally) when his wife is killed in a car accident. Well-meaning relatives take charge of the three children, but then, miraculously, the man (whose illness is described as, as always, fatal) makes a full recovery. And now he must bring his family back together and rediscover the beauty of life itself. Readers completely unfamiliar with this sort of movie-of-the-week story might be entertained, but others will be in for a disappointment." -- David Pitt. AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2011.

"Race" by Clive Cussler - "In the fourth Isaac Bell novel, set in 1910, the Van Dorn Detective Agency's chief investigator is hired by a powerful newspaper publisher to keep his star aviator safe from her own husband (who has already spent time in an insane asylum for killing a man and who has just murdered his wife's lover). Bell, juggling the dual tasks of protecting the flyer and locating her psychopathic husband, soon discovers that very little about this assignment is as straightforward as it first seemed. Full of twists and turns--and one whopping big surprise--the story should keep readers glued to their chairs. ...Cussler, ably assisted by Scott, demonstrates that he is not only comfortable writing stories set in the past, but that, at this late stage of his career, which has seen both hits and misses, he's also capable of turning out some of his best work." -- David Pitt.  AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2011.

"Split Second" by Catherine Coulter - "FBI agents Lucy Carlyle and Cooper McKnight, along with husband-and-wife agents Savich and Sherlock, track a serial killer dubbed the Black Beret, who turns out to be related to the notorious Ted Bundy. Savich also investigates when convenience store owner Mr. Patil is shot in two different robbery attempts. A coincidence? Savich has a hard time buying that. Who wants Mr. Patil dead? Lucy also delves into her family's past after her father, on his deathbed, cries out, asking his mother why she killed his father. Lucy had been told her grandfather left the family, so she looks through her grandmother's house for proof of what really happened. Her personal life is changing, too, as she finally warms up to Coop. Told from several points of view, including the serial killer's, the novel moves quickly, thanks to short chapters and numerous plot twists. One plot element, the appearance of a magic ring, requires significant suspension of disbelief and proves jarring in this otherwise realistic and, in the main, riveting story." Sue O'Brien. AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2011.

MYSTERY

"Damage Done" by Hilary Davidson - "Travel writer Lily Moore is called back to New York by news of the death of her younger sister, Claudia, but on arrival, she discovers that the body found in the bathtub of her apartment isn't Claudia's...So who died in the apartment that Lily still pays for? Where is Claudia? And how are Claudia's close friend and onetime lover, wealthy Tariq Lawrence, and Lily's ex-fiance, real-estate magnate Martin Sklar, involved? With the help of her best friend, Jesse, and a couple of sympathetic cops, Lily traces strands of a tangled web back to a shady rehab facility. Travel-journalist Davidson does a fine job with characterizations, gradually fleshing out the Moore sisters' backstory, and she keeps plot tangents under control to spin a tale of nonstop action with a nice final twist. An entertaining and promising crime- fiction debut, with the potential for a sequel."-- Michele Leber. AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2010.

"Dark Fire" by C. J. Sansom -"Hunchback Matthew Shardlake may be one of the sharpest lawyers in sixteenth- century England, but his skills have failed him in the defense of a friend's niece accused of murder. When Henry VIII's vicar general, Thomas Cromwell, spares the convicted girl's life for 14 days, Shardlake knows the reprieve comes at a hefty price: in that time, the lawyer must find a lost cache of 'dark fire,' the liquid weapon of mass destruction Cromwell has promised to deliver to the increasingly ill-tempered king. With the help of one of Cromwell's impudent servants, Shardlake pursues clues leading him to alchemists, aristocrats, and barristers alike. But in a country bitterly split between Roman Catholics and the newly formed Church of England, it's difficult to distinguish friend from foe. The body count climbs ever higher as Shardlake inches closer to the truth-- and toward the deadline for his client's execution. Like his gripping debut, 'Dissolution 'BKL Ap 1 03, Sansom's second Shardlake thriller is suffused with rich period detail and an aura of foreboding."-- Allison Block. AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2004

"Flash and Bones" by Kathy Reichs -  "In a landfill near the Lowes Motor Speedway in Charlotte, workers discover human bones in a 35-gallon drum of asphalt. It turns out there's a man's body in the drum, but identifying it could take some doing. There are a couple of possible candidates, including a recently missing Georgia man and a NASCAR driver who vanished more than a decade ago..., but Temperance Brennan isn't entirely sure the body belongs to either of those people. When she finds that the drum also contains a highly toxic substance, and then another man disappears, Brennan begins to suspect this case is much bigger than a body in a drum. Despite the popularity of the Fox TV series Bones, which is based on the Brennan novels, Reichs has done an excellent job of keeping the books separate from their television spin- off. The literary Brennan remains older and more layered than her television incarnation, and the novels remain deeper, darker, and more complex. A fine entry in a consistently solid series." -- David Pitt. AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2011.

"Revelation" by C. J. Sansom - "Sansom once again demonstrates his consummate knowledge of Tudor England's politics and culture, and even the sounds and smells of sixteenth-century London's streets. This time out, the reign of King Henry VIII is in its twilight years, but His Majesty is nevertheless interested in taking a new wife, who would be his sixth. Religious issues continue to clash, as they have during much of his reign-- Protestant reformist ideas slamming up against more traditional religious dogma and practices. It is a dangerous time; people 'must be careful what they say in public these days.' Shardlake has been assigned a peculiar case: a boy whose religious-oriented rantings have caused him to be incarcerated in a Bedlam hospital for the mentally unstable. When his good friend is found murdered, Shardlake is off and running to connect all the puzzling dots between the two cases. Like its predecessors, this installment in the series is sophisticated entertainment, with an intricately but not confusingly wrought plot."-- Brad Hooper. AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2009.

"Pirate King: A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes" by Laurie R. King - "Author Laurie King's many readers will be delighted to learn that her character Mary Russell, known to mystery fans as the wife of famous sleuth Sherlock Holmes and a detective in her own right, is off on a new adventure. The play's the thing--or in this case a moving picture--and a film within a film forms the imaginative backdrop in Pirate King, a wild and woolly tale that plays artfully with the confusion between reality and make-believe.... She's up to her neck in kidnapping, cutlasses, topmast stays'ls and port deadeyes, and way too far up in the rigging for her own taste. There's also the Pirate King himself to contend with, decked out in ostrich plumes, with a parrot that spouts English lyric poetry. And Holmes himself appears, in a hilarious overboard (literally) scene. Undaunted, Ms. Russell--armed with weapons of her own--manages to scale the barricades and quell the uprising, to the satisfaction of all hands." -- BOOKPAGE, c2011

"Sherlockian" by Graham Moore - "This debut literary thriller, which revolves around a central mystery in Arthur Conan Doyle's life..., weaves together two very different perspectives and time periods. At the annual Baker Street Irregular convention in 2010, newly minted 'Irregular' Harold immediately begins investigating the murder of Alex Cale, a top Sherlock Holmes scholar who had bragged about finding the famously missing volume of Conan Doyle's diary. But when Cale is found dead in his hotel room, the diary is nowhere to be seen. Meanwhile, back in 1900, Conan Doyle, desperately sick of his famous character, decides he must channel his own creation to find the person who sent him a letter bomb. Teaming up with his friend Bram Stoker, the author finds the situation is much more complicated, involving suffragettes, cryptic tattoos, and murder. VERDICT The constant switching of narrators can be jarring, but Moore does an excellent job of making his characters and settings feel real, using his thorough knowledge of the Holmes stories to good effect." --Laurel Bliss, San Diego State Univ. Lib., CA. LIBRARY JOURNAL, c2010.

"Sovereign" by C. J. Sansom - "The ... mystery ...whisks dedicated readers ... off to the north of England--the city of York, to be specific-- as the city prepares for its turn to host King Henry VIII's 'progress' through the northern regions of his kingdom, the purpose of which is to settle local legal disputes. Shardlake, one smart guy, is a London lawyer who has, this time out, been appointed to travel to York to help prepare cases for presentation before His Majesty. The king's chief minister, Archbishop Cramner, has also employed Shardlake for another task: to ensure the safekeeping of a man currently imprisoned in York, charged with conspiracy against the crown, and make certain he is kept well enough for removal to London for further 'interrogation.' And once in York, a third task falls upon our man Shardlake. Atmosphere abounds in this marvelously drawn novel, which essentially is all about conspiracies to unseat King Henry, centered on resistance to his dynasty and his Protestantism, which were both unpopular in the North."-- Brad Hooper. AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2007. 

"Treason at Lisson Grove" by Anne Perry - "Page reprises his role as reader of the Charlotte and Thomas Pitt novels ... in Perry's latest Victorian mystery. Inspector Thomas Pitt and his superior, Victor Narraway, investigate the murder of a man who was a secret informant 'prepared to divulge details of a potentially devastating international plot against the British government.' After Narraway and Charlotte Pitt narrowly escape with their lives, they realize Narraway was lured to Ireland in order to oust him from his position so a plot could be carried out to remove the queen from her throne. Page is comfortable with dialects, including stodgy, upper-crust British (for Queen Victoria) and Irish and French. When tempers rise, listeners can almost see the characters' flaring nostrils. Page's reading has enough urgency to move the mystery along yet never sounds hurried."-- Marna Rundgren. AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2011.

ADULT NON-FICTION

"1493: Uncovering the New World Columbus Created" by Charles C. Mann - "this tome surveys up-to-date scholarship on the ramifications of Columbus' voyage. Eschewing condemnation or exaltation, Mann aims to explain all that was exchanged during the centuries in which ships connected continents. Diseases, pests, plants, people, and silver are the major transports into which he delves, and he presents them in their scientific, geographic, economic, and historical aspects.... Shaping a sprawl of information, he emphasizes how homogenization was unleashed by transoceanic trade, as is illustrated most minutely in discussions of the potato, the rubber tree, and mixed- race societies. With its theme of globalization, Mann's survey should interest not only history readers but also those concerned about the environmental and social impacts of contemporary world commerce."-- Gilbert Taylor. AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2011.

"A Language Older Than Words" by Derrick Jensen -"Singular, compelling and courageously honest, this book is more than just a poignant memoir of a harrowingly abusive childhood. It relates the extraordinary journey of one man striving to save his own spirit and our planet's. Comparing his physically and sexually abusive father's destruction of his family with humankind's systematic destruction of civilization, New York Times Magazine contributor Jensen (Listening to the Land) tells a story about the hope for regeneration in a landscape of human and natural desolation. Throughout, Jensen mobilizes his experiences as student, teacher, environmentalist, beekeeper, high jumper, abused child and survivor to delve deeper inside his own wounded psyche while condemning the constrictions of a culture that fosters abuse. In lyrical prose, Jensen calls for accountability and urges people 'to live in dynamic equilibrium with the rest of the world.' Rather than naively proposing an answer to the ills of modernity, he demonstrates the complexity of the problems by examining an array of environmental and sociopolitical atrocities,...and what he sees as the reckless production of plutonium to further space exploration and the maltreatment of indigenous peoples by self-serving neighbors. His visceral, biting observations always manage to lead back to his mantra: 'Things don't have to be the way they are.' Jensen's book accomplishes the rare feat of both breaking and mending the reader's heart." -- CAHNERS PUBLISHING, c2000.

"Bento's Sketchbook" by John Berger - "...Let's start with the title, which alludes to a long-rumored but never-found sketchbook by the philosopher Spinoza, to whom Berger refers affectionately as 'Bento' (the nickname for Benedict) and whom he excerpts liberally....Berger delves deeply into the processes of making and responding to art, of thinking and being, of narrative and history, of the essence of humanity. Taking inspiration from the possibility of a Spinoza sketchbook, the author 'began to make drawings prompted by something asking to be drawn.' In the process, he began to focus on what he drew and why he drew, connecting the creation of art to everything from philosophy to politics to religion. Each of the prose pieces--some as short as a paragraph, few longer than a couple of pages--is self- contained, yet this volume isn't exactly a collection of essays, for none are titled and all are thematically interconnected as well. Whether he's extending an analogy that compares making a drawing to riding a motorbike or discusses storytelling in a manner that could apply just as well to drawing ... he makes such interaction and interconnection seem central to the human condition. Berger's readers will see with fresh eyes." -- KIRKUS MEDIA LLC, c2011.

"Fiery Tale: Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery" by Eric Foner - "A mixture of visionary progressivism and repugnant racism, Abraham Lincoln's attitude toward slavery is the most troubling aspect of his public life,... Foner...traces the complexities of Lincoln's evolving ideas about slavery and African-Americans: while he detested slavery, he also publicly rejected political and social equality for blacks, dragged his feet (critics charged) on emancipating slaves and accepting black recruits into the Union army, and floated schemes for 'colonizing' freedmen overseas almost to war's end. Foner situates this record within a lucid, nuanced discussion of the era's turbulent racial politics; in his account Lincoln is a canny operator, cautiously navigating the racist attitudes of Northern whites, prodded--and sometimes willing to be prodded--by abolitionists and racial egalitarians pressing faster reforms. But as Foner tells it, Lincoln also embodies a society-wide transformation in consciousness, as the war's upheavals and the dynamic new roles played by African-Americans made previously unthinkable claims of freedom and equality seem inevitable. Lincoln is no paragon in Foner's searching portrait, but something more essential--a politician with an open mind and a restless conscience."-- PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, c2010.

"That Used To Be Us: How America Fell Behind in the World It Invented and How We Can Come Back" by Thomas Friedman -  "Gr 8 Up. In this ambitious novel, Cameron, a 16-year-old slacker whose somewhat dysfunctional family has just about given up on him, as perhaps he himself has, when his diagnosis of Creutzfeldt-Jacob, 'mad cow' disease, reunites them, if too late. The heart of the story, though, is a hallucinatory--or is it?--quest with many parallels to the hopeless but inspirational efforts of Don Quixote, about whom Cameron had been reading before his illness. Just like the crazy--or was he?--Spaniard, Cam is motivated to go on a journey by a sort of Dulcinea. His pink- haired, white-winged version goes by Dulcie and leads him to take up arms against the Dark Wizard and fire giants that attack him intermittently, and to find a missing Dr. X, who can both help save the world and cure him. Cameron's Sancho is a Mexican-American dwarf, game- master hypochondriac he met in the pot smokers' bathroom at school who later turns up as his hospital roommate. Bray blends in a hearty dose of satire on the road trip as Cameron leaves his Texas deathbed--or does he?--to battle evil forces with a legendary jazz horn player, to escape the evil clutches of a happiness cult, to experiment with cloistered scientists trying to solve the mysteries of the universe, and to save a yard gnome embodying a Viking god from the clutches of the materialistic, fame-obsessed MTV-culture clones who shun individual thought. It's a trip worth taking, though meandering and message-driven at times. Some teens may check out before Cameron makes it to his final destination, but many will enjoy asking themselves the questions both deep and shallow that pop up along the way." --Suzanne Gordon, Peachtree Ridge High School, Suwanee, GA. SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL, c2009.

"Veganist: Lost Lost Weight, Get Healthy, and Change the World" by Kathy Freston - "Freston promises readers who gives up meat, dairy, and eggs that they will effortlessly lose weight, avoid cancer, heart disease, diabetes, and Alzheimer's, save money, help the poor, reduce their carbon footprint and animal suffering, and evolve spiritually. Freston, coining the word 'veganist,' puts a soft edge on the vegan lifestyle: 'It's not about hard lines or purity or perfection but about intention and holding ideas loosely and taking steps in the direction of the kind of person you want to be.' ...The book provides 'tips for making the switch,' FAQs answered by Dr. Barnard, and sample menus, but no recipes, so readers used to meat and potatoes may be stymied by how to prepare 'flax seed and whole-grain pizza with classic margherita topping.' Even so, for the novice, this book offers a gentle, guilt-free path to a meatless (or even, as Feston says, 'vegan-ish') life."-- PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, c2011.

BIOGRAPHY

"In My Time: A Personal and Political Memoir" by Richard B. Cheney -  "...anyone who has been listening to Cheney all these years will find more detail in his memoir but nothing startling. The phrase 'We were right' appears more than once. ... Much of the book, which was written with Cheney's daughter, Liz, is about settling scores. ... Despite occasionally praising Bush as a strong leader, Cheney has relatively little to say about his former boss. True, this is Cheney's book, but he subtly makes efforts to show that when it came to making decisions, running confabs with world leaders, and taking the lead on a variety domestic issues, he was the decisive one in the administration. ... Surprisingly, considering Cheney's taciturn demeanor, the tone of the narrative is often chatty, and his account of growing up in Wyoming proves particularly interesting. What Cheney never really addresses is how his ability to play the system allowed him to make the best possible choices in his life and career. Five military deferments meant he didn't serve in Vietnam (though he says he would have answered the call if asked). Access to cutting-edge medical care means he is still alive when most other men with his heart condition would have been long gone. The truest thing about this book is that everyone--supporters and haters--will get exactly what they expect." -- Ilene Cooper. AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2011.

AUDIO BOOKS

"Woman in White" by Wilkie Collins -  "Playwright and audio dramatist Beverley Cooper has done a masterful job in adapting Collins's classic Victorian suspense novel to the audio medium. Within the framing story of a courtroom setting, each character stands up to describe the events that he or she has witnessed; the words of testimony then fade into a flashback scene, so the listener can experience the story as it unfolds. The actors are simply marvelous, particularly Douglas Campbell as the oily, sinister Count Fosco and Cedric Smith as Lord Percival Glyde, the manipulative gold digger with secrets to hide. Suzanne Hoffman sounds appropriately sweet and lovely as Laura, the damsel in distress, and Gina Wilkinson gives a nice contrasting performance as her practical, intelligent and down-to- earth sister, Marian. The story is well paced and suspenseful, while background music adds a subtly ominous atmosphere without distracting from the tale. Likewise, the production uses just the right amount of sound effects. With its colorful characters and air of mystery, this superb dramatization truly does the tale justice." -- CAHNERS PUBLISHING, c2006.

DVD's

"Black Swan"

"Bridesmaids"

"Burlesque"

"Hanna"

"Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2"

"Ken Burns Protection"

"Monsters Inc."

"Thor"

JUVENILE FICTION

"Big Nate Boredom Buster: Super Scribbles, Cool Comix, and Lots of Laughs" by Lincoln Pierce - "Class clown. Self-described genius. Mischief maker. Big Nate knows trouble. Nate may not be Joe Honor Roll, but he knows he's meant for BIG fun. He's always up for scribbling, games, jokes, laughs, and creating comics. And now YOU can join him!

An awesome way to guarantee 100% relief from boredom—learn to doodle, draw, and write the Big Nate way" -- AMAZON.COM

"Emerald Casket" by Richard Newsome -  "Gr 3-6--This old-fashioned adventure series continues along in its Biedermeyer-esque fashion, with many unlikely coincidences and melodramatic danger. The world's youngest billionaire, Gerald Wilkins; twins Ruby and Sam; and Indian femme fatale Alisha are on the hunt for a mysterious casket with supernatural powers. Evil Sir Mason Green, along with his murderous henchman, 'the thin man,' uses the children to try to steal this casket once they find it just as he did in The Billionaire's Curse (HarperCollins, 2010). They all head to India in search of a death cult that curiously shares the same symbology as Gerald's family crest. Character development is nil; new characters are introduced only to become stock figures so often found in this type of adventure, and the story is entirely plot driven. Some Australian slang will be unfamiliar to American readers." --B. Allison Gray, Goleta Public Library, CA. SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL, c2011.

"Milo: Sticky Notes & Brain Freeze" by Alan Silberberg - "Ages 9-14. ... From the cover-- with its saturated color, cartoony kids and sunshiny graphic elements--I expected another knockoff of Diary of a Wimpy Kid. And it does begins that way. We have Milo, who is filled with angst as he prepares to enter seventh grade at his fifth school in a couple of years. We have his cranky older sister and his vaguely absent father. Then there is the imaginary Dabney St. Claire, the suave inner voice of cool, who attempts to help Milo navigate the waters of junior high. But there is more to this story than meets the eye. Soon the narrative offers a hint that something is troubling Milo and his little family. It was one brief phrase that grabbed me: 'After my mom first got sick.' References to the death of Milo's mother are carefully constructed and beautifully done. ...When writing a book about death, it would be easy to bathe the loss in life lessons and advice. Silberberg, thankfully, does neither. He grabs onto the 13-year-old's voice and holds tight. Milo grows and changes the way a young teen typically does--through the day-to-day activities of school and home. His dreams of the unattainable Summer Goodman, ridiculous as they are to everyone but him, keep hope alive. And one unlikely friendship--with a grieving widow next door--plays an important part in his healing, as well. The only obvious lesson here is the one about not judging a book by its cover. Milo is a treasure." -- BOOKPAGE, c2010.

"The Moffats" by Eleanor Estes -  "Who else but a member of the Moffat family could, during kindergarten recess, accidentally hitch a ride out of town on a boxcar? Or wind up trapped in the breadbox outside the delicatessen store? ...

This charming book has been making readers smile for over half a century. It reflects a gentler era, when the jolly chief of police had time to sit on the curb to hear a little girl's "crimes" and a little boy's escapade on a train was not cause for media panic, just a simple redirecting by the agreeable engineer. Eleanor Estes,... and Caldecott medalist Louis Slobodkin (Many Moons) make a lovely team in this story of benign humor and sweet times." (Ages 8 to 12) --Emilie Coulter

"Ninth Ward" by Jewell Parker Rhodes - "Gr. 5-8. Born with a caul and gifted with the ability to see ghosts, Lanesha isn't one of the popular girls at her school, but that doesn't bother her. ... She has Mama Ya-Ya, who has cared for her ever since her mother died in childbirth, her Ninth Ward community, and her dreams of becoming an engineer. Mama Ya-Ya also has some supernatural abilities, and she has a premonition regarding Hurricane Katrina that she doesn't understand:..., Lanesha stores up water, food, flashlights, and candles to prepare for the worst. When the worst comes, she uses all of her abilities in math and physics to save herself, her friend TaShon, and their dog from the devastating floods that destroy her neighborhood but not her hopes for the future. Lanesha's heroic courage and resourcefulness achieve near- fabulist proportions as she figures out what she and her friends need to do to survive and escape the flood waters, and that is of course the point of the story--the importance of faith, intelligent action, and resilience in the face of crisis, even if some level of realism is sacrificed in the process. The details of the storm and its aftermath, however, are tangibly rendered, from the horrifying noise of the storm itself to the sunburn, the thirst, and the noxious character of the water that surrounds them as they await help for days on the roof of their home. The supernatural bits convey important elements of the culture, as do Lanesha's walks through her neighborhood before the storm, giving a strong sense of what was lost and what remains for a Ninth Ward girl." -- THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE UNIV. OF ILLINOIS, c2010.

"War Horse" by Michael Morpurgo - "Gr. 5-8. ... this searing World War I novel reveals the unspeakable slaughter of soldiers on all sides fighting against people who are just like them. The story is told by an English farm horse, Joey, and, as in Cynthia Kadahota's 'Cracker! The Best Dog in Vietnam' (2007), the first-person narrative blends the animal's physical experience with what men say. On the farm, Joey has close ties to Albert, who is too young to join up when his dad first sells Joey to the army. Charging into battle under machine-gun fire, Joey is captured by the Germans, who train him to haul ambulances and guns. His reunion with Albert in battle is sentimental and contrived, but the viewpoint brings close the fury of the thundering guns, the confusion, and the kindness of enemies who come together in No Man's Land to save the wounded horse. Joey's ability to understand the language wherever he is--England, France, Germany--reinforces the novel's antiwar message, and the terse details speak eloquently about peace."-- Hazel Rochman. AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2007.

JUVENILE NON-FICTION
"The Case of the Vanishing Golden Frogs: A Scientific Mystery" by Sandra Markle - "Gr. 4-6. In 1996, biologist Karen Lips revisited a high mountain forest in Panama, where she had studied Panamanian golden frogs four years earlier. On this trip, though, she found only dead frogs. After a pathologist discovered unusual sacs under their skin, a newspaper article about Lips' research led to communication with other scientists worldwide and the discovery that a fungus was killing off the frogs....Project Golden Frog collects healthy animals and keeps them in zoos and conservation centers until the fungus can be controlled and the frogs can be safely returned home. ... Notable for clarity, directness, and simplicity of writing and design alike, this volume, both handsome and fascinating, begins with the hunt for the frogs' killer and ends with the urgent need to create a safe environment for their return to the wild. Excellent photos, microscopic views, and maps illustrate the book. ...While few readers will take up Markle's suggestion to 'become the science detective who finally stops this killer,' many will absorb the notion that scientific research can be intrinsically interesting and vitally important. Pair this book with Turner's The Frog Scientist (2009)." -- Carolyn Phelan.AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2011

"Franklin and Winston: A Christmas That Changed the World" by Douglas Wood - "Gr. 5-8. ...This remarkably readable title describes a unique moment in time--the meeting of British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and President Franklin Delano Roosevelt at the White House over the Christmas holidays. ...The tightly written narrative is filled with fascinating details, such as the fact that Churchill stomped up and down the halls of the White House at night in his nightgown. Anecdotes make the men human, but there is also much history here: what was planned, what was said, what was accomplished. It would be hard to overpraise Moser's striking artwork. Based on photos, the images capture the dramatic moments. There are many books about those who fought in WWII. This compelling offering gives a clue as to what it was like to be in the seat of power, watching the world burn and trying to stop it."-- Ilene Cooper.  AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2011.

"Mysteries of the Komodo Dragon: The Biggest, Deadliest Lizard Gives Up Its Secrets" by Marty Crump - "Gr 4-7–... While Crump's lively text does not supply a stage-by-stage description of the animal's life cycle and physiology, it does give enough data to satisfy many readers and researchers. More importantly, it follows a long-term research project into the chemical makeup of “dragon drool” and the possible practical applications of the chemicals in this deadly substance to human pharmacology. Clear, color photos depict dragons from hatchlings to adults, scientists hiding in blinds and weighing catches, and zookeepers cuddling dragons with “gentle” dispositions. Conservation efforts underway to protect this rare and threatened species are included. ... A surefire selection in terms of appeal and information." –Patricia Manning, formerly at Eastchester Public Library, NYα(c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC
YOUNG ADULT

"Going Bovine" by Libba Bray - "Gr 8 Up. In this ambitious novel, Cameron, a 16-year-old slacker whose somewhat dysfunctional family has just about given up on him, as perhaps he himself has, when his diagnosis of Creutzfeldt-Jacob, 'mad cow' disease, reunites them, if too late. The heart of the story, though, is a hallucinatory--or is it?--quest with many parallels to the hopeless but inspirational efforts of Don Quixote, about whom Cameron had been reading before his illness. Just like the crazy--or was he?--Spaniard, Cam is motivated to go on a journey by a sort of Dulcinea. His pink- haired, white-winged version goes by Dulcie and leads him to take up arms against the Dark Wizard and fire giants that attack him intermittently, and to find a missing Dr. X, who can both help save the world and cure him. .... It's a trip worth taking, though meandering and message-driven at times. Some teens may check out before Cameron makes it to his final destination, but many will enjoy asking themselves the questions both deep and shallow that pop up along the way." --Suzanne Gordon, Peachtree Ridge High School, Suwanee, GA. SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL, c2009.

"Shelter" by Harlan Coben - "Gr. 9 Up. ... Sophomore Mickey Bolitar's happy, globe-trotting family returned to the States so that the teen could complete high school. Then Mickey sees his father killed in an accident and his bereft mother, who has taken to using drugs, enters rehab. Mickey goes to live with his Uncle Myron. On the way to school one morning, he encounters the Bat Lady, an old woman who lives in a dilapidated house, who tells him that his father is not dead, and disappears. Strangely enough, Ashley, a girl with whom Mickey has formed a relationship, also disappears. When he tries to find out what happened to her, he learns more than he bargained for about Ashley, the Bat Lady, and his own family....Myron Bolitar, the protagonist in Coben's adult mystery series, tries to take care of Mickey but doesn't really know how to be a parent. The boy has more freedom than most teens, giving him the opportunity to search for answers to his questions. Edgy and action-filled, the novel has interesting, likable characters, and it should fly off the shelves. The ending ties up some loose ends but leaves readers awaiting the sequel." -- Diana Pierce, Leander High School, TX. SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL, c2011.

PICTURE BOOKS

"Astonishing Secret of Awesome Man" by Michael Chabon

"Blink & Gollie" by Kate DiCammillo

"Book! Book! Book!" by Deborah Bruss

"Bumble Ardy" by Maurice Sendak

"Doorbell Rang" by Pat Huchins

"If You Give a Mouse a Cookie" by Laura Numeroff

"Martha Speaks" by Susan Meddaugh
"Otis and the Tornado" by Loren Long

"A Pig Parade is a Terrible Idea" by Michael Ian Black

"Prehistoric Pinkerton" by Steven Kellogg

"Splash" by Ann Jones

"Stand Straight, Ella Kate" by Kate Klise

"Who Stole Mona Lisa?" by Ruthie Knapp



Tuesday, August 2, 2011

NEW ARRIVALS

ADULT FICTION

"Bel-Air Dead" by Stuart Woods -  "Woods's novel takes the New York attorney to Los Angeles to represent recent widow Arrington Calder...in her attempts to keep control of Centurion Studios. Barrington undertakes a rapid realignment of Calder's holdings while forming alliances and buying shares to thwart the efforts of Prince Investment's Terry Prince, who wants the prime Bel-Air acreage the studio occupies. The murder of stockholder Jennifer Harris is only the first indication of how rough Prince plays. With longtime pal Dino Bacchetti at his side as well as the mighty resources of Mike Freeman's Strategic Services and Bill Eggers's law firm Woodman & Weld, Barrington matches financial wits with the arrogant Prince. There's cross-pollination with Woods's Ed Eagle series (Santa Fe Edge, etc.) as one of Eagle's nemeses plays a surprising role. Series fans will find Barrington as shrewd, sexy, and glib as ever. (Apr.)" -- Publisher's Weekly

"Buried Prey" by John Sandford - "Sandford's...novel ... offers fans the chance to compare the young with the mature protagonist. In 1985, Davenport, then an eager patrol cop, made his bones as a homicide detective in an ugly kidnapping murder case. The present-day discovery of the mummified bodies of two girls wrapped in plastic, sisters Nancy and Mary Jones, leads Davenport to realize that he 'messed up': the wrong man was credited with the crime and the real killer never caught. Cracking this very cold case becomes intensely personal for Davenport, who uses his own resources, including manipulating the media and pushing Marcy Sherrill, head of Minneapolis Homicide, to use all of her resources as well. A fusion of old-fashioned doggedness and modern technology pressures the killer into deadly action. Expert plotting and a riveting finish make this one of Sandford's best."  --  PUBLISHERS WEEKLY

"Dissolution" by C. J. Sansom - "It is England in the year 1537, and Thomas Cromwell is Henry VIII's vicar- general and in the process of dissolving all of the large monastic houses, granting the land to his favorites or the highest bidders. When one of his commissioners is murdered at the monastery in Scarnsea, mired among the marshes of England's south coast, Cromwell sends the hunchback lawyer Matthew Shardlake and Mark, his young handsome assistant, to solve the mystery. They find that not only has the murder been covered up but also other murders have been covered up as well, and they also find treasonous monks hostile to the king and his assumption of the role of head of the English church. As Shardlake uncovers more unsettling facts, he realizes that his own life is in danger--and solving the mystery takes on a life-or-death importance. Reminiscent of Umberto Eco's The Name of the Rose (without much of the intellectual discourse), Sansom's first novel will not disappoint fans of historical fiction." - Michael Spinella; AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION

"I'll Walk Alone" by Mary Higgins Clark - "Almost two years after someone snatched Alexandra 'Zan' Moreland's then three-year-old son, Matthew, from his stroller while his sitter dozed, Zan, a New York City interior designer who remains devastated, has been unable to trace her son. To make matters worse, somebody is using her credit cards to purchase expensive items just as she's on the verge of landing a prestigious account for her fledgling business. Worst of all, evidence emerges that suggests Zan kidnapped her own son. Meanwhile, a priest is troubled by a woman whose confession reveals that a murder is being planned. Contrivances that prevent key information from reaching the heroine as well as characters without personality in the service of a plot with at least one major hole won't please those who prefer their suspense firmly grounded in reality and logic."-- PUBLISHERS WEEKLY

"Jefferson Key" by Steve Berry -"At the start of Berry's ingeniously plotted.. novel, former U.S. Justice Department agent Malone, who's been summoned to New York City by his old boss, Stephanie Nelle, manages to thwart an attempt to assassinate the U.S. president outside a midtown Manhattan hotel. Malone soon finds himself in the middle of a power struggle with roots in presidential history. A cipher formulated by Thomas Jefferson and employed by Andrew Jackson has been unbroken for 175 years. Documents hidden by Jackson contain the key to the legitimacy--and the wealth and power--of the Commonwealth, a coalition of privateers or pirates dating from the American Revolution. Malone and his lover, Cassiopeia Vitt, must match wits and survival skills with several formidable foes, including rogue agent Jonathan Wyatt and Quartermaster Clifford Knox of the Commonwealth. Berry offers plenty of twists and vivid action scenes in a feast of historical imagination." --  PUBLISHERS WEEKLY

"Skippy Dies" by Paul Murray - "It's no spoiler to acknowledge that Skippy, the main character, does indeed die, since the boy is a goner by page 5 of the prologue. Following his character's untimely demise, Murray takes the reader back in time to learn more about the sweetly engaging Skippy--In this darkly comic novel of adolescence (in some cases arrested), we also learn about the unexpected consequences of Skippy's death, something of contemporary Irish life, and a great deal about the intersections of science and metaphysics and the ineluctable interconnectedness of the past and the present. At 672 pages, this is an extremely ambitious and complex novel, filled with parallels, with sometimes recondite references to Irish folklore, with quantum physics, and with much more. Hilarious, haunting, and heartbreaking, it is inarguably among the most memorable novels of the year to date." -- Michael Cart. AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION

"The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet" by David Mitchell - "Two-time Booker finalist Mitchell applies his wide-ranging talents to this innovative historical epic. Dejima, an artificial island created as a trading outpost in Nagasaki Harbor, proves fertile ground for exploring intercultural relations, trust and betrayal, racial and gender boundaries, the search for identity, and unexpected love in a changing world. In 1799, when the Netherlands held a trade monopoly with isolationist Japan, Jacob de Zoet, a clerk for the Dutch East Indies Company, is charged with uncovering fraud in his predecessors' ledgers. As Jacob doggedly pursues an honest course, he becomes romantically intrigued by Orito Aibagawa, a gifted, disfigured midwife granted special permission to study on Dejima. Mitchell incorporates diverse styles, and he expertly adapts tone and dialogue to reflect his situations. In the main plotline, incisive commentary on decisions and unforeseen consequences filters through a jaunty, slang-filled tale in which Japanese and Dutchmen arrange public and private deals. Interlinked subplots offer creepy gothic drama, seafaring adventure, and race-against-time suspense. Despite the audacious scope, the focus remains intimate; each fascinating character--interpreter, herbalist, magistrate, slave--has the opportunity to share his or her story. Everything is patched together seamlessly and interwoven with clever wordplay and enlightening historical details on feudal Japan. First-rate literary fiction and a rousing good yarn, too. " -- Sarah Johnson, AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION

MYSTERY

"Caught" by Harlan Coben - "Coben is a disciplined writer who respects his readers' intelligence. Caught finds Coben at his sly best. He presents two plots: the disappearance of a young girl from her home and the ruination of a social worker who helps troubled teens but is caught in a To Catch a Predator-like TV sting. Both plots are held together by a TV reporter who morphs into a sleuth to solve the cases. The fact that the reporter's husband was killed eight years before makes her both more vulnerable and more open to the nuances of the twin tragedies in her New Jersey town. Coben is a master of small touches, as when the mother of the missing girl visits her daughter's high school and touches the combination lock, on the daughter's locker--a perfect way to bring home the mother's grief. Vintage Coben." --Connie Fletcher, AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION

"Death in Summer" by Benjamin Black - "Black's exceedingly well-written Dublin series hits its stride in the sleekly plotted fourth installment. Imprudent pathologist Quirke and reticent Inspector Hackett, whose humble appearance belies a steel-trap mind, attain new levels of drollery and investigative camaraderie. Rehab veteran Quirke is back to drinking, gingerly, and once again proves an unlikely ladies' man as he duels with elegant and enigmatic Francoise, whose wealthy, powerful, and despised husband appears to have shot himself. A friend of the dead man's unbalanced sister, Quirke's assistant, Sinclair, conspicuous as an Irish Jew, is drawn, catastrophically, into the case, as is Quirke's smart, wary daughter, Phoebe. The sardonic banter is finely stropped, and moments of detective clairvoyance are neatly juxtaposed with numskull opaqueness as Black (the pen name of John Banville) once again exposes insidious corruption and prejudice. As one vicious enforcer tells Quirke in a menacing encounter along a canal, there are two worlds: one is all sunshine and ducks on still water, 'but think what's going on underneath the surface, the big fish eating the little ones, . . . and everything covered in slime and mud.'"-- Donna Seaman, AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION

"Dead Reckoning" by Charlaine Harris -"The excitement kicks off when someone firebombs Merlotte's Bar and Grill while Sookie is working, but that plotline isn't the focus of the story; instead, vampire politics rear their ugly head once again as the regent of Louisiana does his best to provoke Eric and Pam. With a vampire-on-vampire showdown looming, Sookie tries to deal with her increased concerns over her blood bond with Eric; to understand the real reason her fae cousins, Claude and Dermot, are living with her; and to plan a baby shower for best friend, Tara. While the series has become much more about fantasy than mystery, it still has always drawn fans across genres, and this fast- paced and fun entry will be no exception" --  Jessica Moyer AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION

"Sister" by Rosamund Lupin - "British author Lupton's unusual and searing debut is her heroine Beatrice Hemming's letter to her dead younger sister, Tess. Abandoned by their father just before their eight-year-old brother's death from cystic fibrosis and raised by their genteelly ineffectual mother, Bee and Tess have always exchanged long, intimate letters, so when Tess, an unmarried London art student, apparently commits suicide after her CF baby is born dead, Bee resigns her corporate design job in New York City and moves into Tess's shabby London flat. Convinced Tess was murdered, Bee gradually learns Tess had been spurned, like her unborn child, by her married art teacher lover; she had also been eerily pursued by a drugged-up slumming fellow student and mentally tortured by hallucinogenic drugs thrust on her by a masked stalker. Bee's self- defenses crumble as she discovers that she never returned Tess's anguished calls for help. Observing the unsettling similarities between her mother and her fiance, Bee realizes 'why no one could be my safety rope.' At the harrowing conclusion, Bee's aching heart accepts that 'grief is love turned into an eternal missing.'"-- PUBLISHERS WEEKLY

"Sixkill" by Robert B. Parker -"Parker's final Spenser book is a reminder of just how much we'll miss the beloved crime writer, who died in January 2010. Zebulon Sixkill, a Cree Indian whose college football career was sidetracked by the love of a bad woman, is the bodyguard for Jumbo Nelson, a (physically) huge movie star working in Boston. Jumbo's outsized appetites leave a young woman dead, and with Z the only potential witness, Jumbo's guilt or innocence becomes an open question. When Jumbo fires Z, Spenser takes him in and refines Z from an intimidating presence to a genuinely dangerous man. When Spenser tells Susan Silverman, 'I know what I like and what I don't like, and what I'm willing to do and what I'm not, and I try to be guided by that,' readers couldn't ask for a better epitaph for Spenser and Parker."-- LIBRARY JOURNAL

"Started Early, Took My Dog" by Kate Atkinson - "British author Atkinson's magnificently plotted fourth novel featuring Jackson Brodie ...takes the 'semi- retired' PI back to his Yorkshire hometown to trace the biological parents of Hope McMasters, a woman adopted by a couple in the 1970s at age two. Jackson is faced with more questions than answers when Hope's parents aren't in any database nor is her adoption on record. In the author's signature multilayered style, she shifts between past and present, interweaving the stories of Tracy Waterhouse, a recently retired detective superintendent now in charge of security at a Leeds mall, and aging actress Tilly Squires. On the same day that Jackson and Tilly are in the mall, Tracy makes a snap decision that will have lasting consequences for everyone. Atkinson injects wit even in the bleakest moments--such as Jackson's newfound appreciation for poetry, evoked in the Emily Dickinson-inspired title--yet never loses her razor- sharp edge."-- PUBLISHERS WEEKLY

"Now You See Her" by James Patterson - "This latest crime thriller... has all the ingredients of a page-turning, summer beach read: bite-size chapters, the irresistibly colorful backdrop of Key West, and a heroine hiding a tortured past. She is a carefree college student soaking up the Florida island's party atmosphere during spring break when her life takes a disastrous turn. After stealing her cheating boyfriend's Camaro in a jealous rage, she hits and kills a wayward drunk. Luckily, the officer on the scene, Peter Fournier, not only hides the body but in short order becomes her adoring husband. Yet her troubles begin anew when she learns that Peter murdered his first wife. Eighteen years later, after she fled and reinvented herself as Nina Bloom, becoming a successful Manhattan attorney, she is forced to confront her tainted past. Including an intriguing, intertwined story involving Nina's efforts to free an innocent man on death row, Patterson and Ledwidge's tale is fun..." -- Carl Hays, AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION

ADULT NON-FICTION


"Area 51: An Uncensored History of America's Top Secret Military Base" by Annie Jacobsen - "Acting on tips and leads by those who were there, the same kinds of fighter jocks and spam-in-a-can aeronauts that figure in Tom Wolfe's 'The Right Stuff', Jacobsen set out a few years ago to uncover what could be uncovered about Area 51, the huge military/intelligence base in the desert of southern Nevada. ...Famously, as Jacobsen notes, Area 51 has been associated with UFOs, and some of the earliest sightings thereof, beginning in 1947, have taken place in or near the facility. As for the spooky-faced aliens so beloved of 'X- Files' fans and so feared by the Whitley Strieber fans in the audience? Well, the big news in Jacobsen's book is...no, it'd be stealing her thunder, and perhaps inviting a probe, to say much in specific, except to say that the grays are real, if tinged red. Jacobsen's expansive, well-written narrative takes in the sweep of Cold War history, from the Bay of Pigs to Francis Gary Powers to Joe Stalin to Vietnam to the Nazi doctors pressed into service by U.S. and USSR alike--and none of it is pretty. As readers will see, it'll be hard to double-check Jacobsen's reporting, so leaps of faith are required. But Jacobsen provides an endlessly fascinating--and quite scary--book." -- KIRKUS MEDIA LLC

"Incognito: The Secret Lives of the Brain" by David Eagleman - "Neuroscientist Eagleman wants us to take a look inside our own heads. We know there's a brain there, and we know some things about what it does, but there's a lot of unexplored territory, too. We know we think and imagine, but how do we do these things? Why will we perceive things-- photographs, say, or events--one way under a certain set of circumstances but a different way in different circumstances? What is the unconscious mind, and how does it work? You might as well know up front that there aren't any concrete answers here; this is one of those books where the exploration is the adventure and the journey its own reward. Written in clear, precise language (even when the author is tackling some seriously complicated stuff), the book is sure to appeal to readers with an interest in psychology and the human mind, but it will also please people who just want to know, with a little more clarity, what is going on inside their own skulls." -- David Pitt - AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION

"Wild Comfort: The Solace of Nature" by Kathleen Dean Moore - "In an effort to make sense of the deaths in quick succession of several loved ones, Kathleen Dean Moore turned to the comfort of the wild, making a series of solitary excursions into ancient forests, wild rivers, remote deserts, and windswept islands to learn what the environment could teach her in her time of pain. This book is the record of her experiences. It’s a stunning collection of carefully observed accounts of her life—tracking otters on the beach, cooking breakfast in the desert, canoeing in a snow squall, wading among migrating salmon in the dark—but it is also a profound meditation on the healing power of nature." -- Amazon.com

"To End All Wars: A Story of Loyalty and Rebellion, 1914-1918" by Adam Hochschild - "WWI remains the quintessential war--unequaled in concentrated slaughter, patriotic fervor during the fighting, and bitter disillusion afterward, writes Hochschild. Many opposed it and historians mention this in passing, but Hochschild ... has written an original, engrossing account that gives the war's opponents (largely English) prominent place. ... Hochschild vividly evokes the jingoism of even such leading men of letters as Kipling, Conan Doyle, H.G. Wells, and John Galsworthy. By contrast, Hochschild paints equally vivid, painful portraits of now obscure civilians and soldiers who waged a bitter, often heroic, and, Hochschild admits, unsuccessful antiwar struggle." --Publisher's Weekly

"Bootleggers, Lobstermen & Lumberjacks" by Matthew Mayo - “The Wild American West be damned! Matthew P. Mayo’s Bootleggers, Lobstermen, and Lumberjacks is a fascinating—and often absolutely blood-curdling—narrative of New England’s darkest and grittiest historical incidents and characters. By a consummate storyteller with a lively, entertaining voice, Bootleggers, Lobstermen, and Lumberjacks is American history at its most violent and authentic. Edgar Allan Poe would have loved every story in it.” —Howard Frank Mosher, award-winning author of A Stranger in the Kingdom, Where the Rivers Flow North, and Walking to Gatlinburg

BIOGRAPHY

"Colonel Roosevelt" by Edmund Morris - "Morris completes his fully detailed, correlatively dynamic triptych of the restless, energetic, on-the-move first President Roosevel... Now the author presents Colonel Roosevelt, the title by which Roosevelt chose to be called during his postpresidential years (in reference, of course, to his military position during the Spanish-American War). This is the sad part of TR's life; this is the stage of his life story in which it is most difficult to accept his self-absorption, self-importance, and self-righteousness, but it is the talent of the author, who has shown an immaculate understanding of his subject, to make Roosevelt of continued fascination to his readers. In essence, this volume tells the story of TR's path of disenchantment with his chosen successor in the White House, William Taft, and his attempt to resecure the presidency for himself. The important theme of TR's concomitant decline in health is also a part of the narrative. We are made aware most of all that of all retired presidents, TR was the least likely to fade into the background."-- Brad Hooper, AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION

AUDIO BOOKS


"Clara and Mr. Tiffany" by Susan Vreeland -  Vreeland... again excavates the life behind a famous artistic creation--in this case the Tiffany leaded-glass lamp, the brainchild not of Louis Comfort Tiffany but his glass studio manager, Clara Driscoll. Tiffany staffs his studio with female artisans- -a decision that protects him from strikes by the all-male union--but refuses to employ women who are married. Lucky for him, Clara's romantic misfortunes--her husband's death, the disappearance of another suitor-- insure that she can continue to craft the jewel-toned glass windows and lamps that catch both her eye and her imagination. Behind the scenes she makes her mark as an artist and champion of her workers, while living in an eclectic Irving Place boarding house populated by actors and artists. Vreeland ably captures Gilded Age New York and its atmosphere--robber barons, sweatshops, colorful characters, ateliers--but her preoccupation with the larger historical story comes at the expense of Clara, whose arc, while considered and nicely told, reflects the times too closely in its standard-issue woman-behind-the-man scenario." --PUBLISHERS WEEKLY

DVD's

"Chitty, Chitty, Bang, Bang"
"Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 1"
"Hey Boo! Harper Lee and To Kill a Mockingbird"
"How to Train Your Dragon"
"In the Heat of the Night (40th Anniversary Collector's Edition)"
 "The Magnificent Seven"
"The Reckoning"
"Tangled"
"True Blood: The Complete Third Season"
"True Grit"
"The Tudors: Final Season"
"The Tudors: The Complete Third Season"

MUSIC

"Chamber Music Society" by Esperanza Spalding 


JUVENILE FICTION


"Belly Up" by Stuart Gibbs - "Twelve-year-old Teddy is in heaven living with his gorilla- researcher mom and wildlife-photographer dad at the world's largest zoo. When the zoo's hippo mascot is murdered, Teddy not only wants to solve the mystery but also discover why no one else seems to care. Gibbs writes with absurdist humor and seemingly an insider's knowledge of how zoos operate." -- THE HORN BOOK, c2010.

"Dark Life" by Kat Falls - "Sixteen-year-old Ty, first child born to the pioneers who live in the depths of the ocean, has little patience for topsiders (land dwellers) until he meets feisty Gemma, who immediately enlists his help to locate her missing older brother. Their search is interrupted by pirate attacks of the notorious Seablite Gang and an ultimatum from the Commonwealth Government (located topside) that makes the pioneers responsible for stopping the raids. Ty and Gemma uncover connections between the pirates, illicit medical experiments, and Gemma's missing sibling, who happens to have secret supernatural gifts--like Ty. Although set in an undersea future, this rousing adventure has all the hallmarks of a western, including outlaws, homesteaders, and plenty of shoot-'em-up action (only with harpoonlike weapons). Good guys and bad guys are fairly obvious, as is the outcome, but the exotic setting and well-conceived details about undersea living, along with likable characters and a minor surprise at the end, will keep readers turning the pages. Try this with the ecofiction of David Klass." -- Cindy Welch, AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION

"Grounded" by Kate Klise - "Dark humor melds with genuine pathos in Klise's delightful and moving novel, set in Digginsville, Missouri, during the early 1970s. Twelve-year-old Daralynn Oakland is devastated when her father and siblings die in a plane crash. Angry and heartbroken, Daralynn's mother gets a job as hairstylist at the local funeral parlor, while Daralynn comes up with the idea of a 'living funeral,' where people can hear their own eulogy and have a chance to thank family and friends. The living funeral is a huge hit until Clem Monroe comes to town and starts a crematorium, undermining the funeral home's business. Klise loves a mystery, which the charming yet sinister Clem provides in spades. ... However, it's the journey through grief and the quirky characters... that stay with the reader. This quiet story illuminates and celebrates the human need for connection beyond the grave."-- Debbie Carton, AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2010.


"Plague: A Gone Novel" by Michael Grant - "Though the desperate, dirty, starving teens of the Gone series look decreasingly like the clean-cut hotties on the book jackets, Grant's sf-fantasy thrillers continue to be the very definition of page- turner. Nearly out of water and beset with two types of plagues (one like a flu, the other a horde of flesh-eating bugs), the FAYZ community of superfriends and superenemies must once again band together and fight. Being dumped into this populous soap opera, with all its powers and vendettas, will doom newcomers. But who'd be crazy enough to start here? Great fun for fans." Daniel Kraus, AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2011.

JUVENILE NON-FICTION


"Blockhead: The Life of Fibonacci" by Joseph D"Agnese - "Though written in a modern idiom ..., D'Agnese's introduction to medieval Europe's greatest mathematician offers both a coherent biographical account-- spun, with some invented details, from very sketchy historical records-- and the clearest explanation to date for younger readers of the numerical sequence that is found throughout nature and still bears his name. O'Brien's illustrations place the prosperously dressed, woolly headed savant in his native Pisa and other settings, contemplating flowers, seashells, and the so-called arabic numerals (which he promoted vigorously and rightly ascribes to India), as well as presenting a visual solution to his most famous mathematical word problem. Closing with a page of relevant activities for young naturalists, this picture book makes an excellent alternative to Joy N. Hulme's colorful but flawed Wild Fibonacci: Nature's Secret Code Revealed, illustrated by Carol Schwartz (2005)."-- John Peters, AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2010.



"Catch the Wind: Harness the Sun: 22 Super-Charged Projects for Kids" by Michael J. Caduto - "The eco-themed activities that Caduto lays out here are only the beginning, as he embeds them in short but clear explanations of relevant scientific facts, profiles of young eco-activists, provocative follow-up questions, photos and cartoon spot art aplenty, folktales, and other enhancements. The projects range widely in difficulty--from planning and conducting an electricity-free day to constructing solar- and bicycle-powered battery chargers--and also in appeal. ...Closing with relatively extensive annotated lists of organizations and websites, this may not offer experimenters as many ideas as Elizabeth Snoke Harris' Save the Earth Science Experiments (2008) or Sherry Amsel's 365 Ways to Live Green for Kids (2009), but the generous quantity of enrichment material makes it a worthy addition to the ranks of science-project titles." -- John Peters, AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2011.

"The Extraordinary Mark Twain (According to Susy)" by Barbara Kerley - "This title is another fine example of the author's talents; the unique slant is that Mark Twain's 13-year-old daughter Susy, who secretly wrote her own biography of her famous father, is the primary voice of this account. Susy's diary is artfully included inside separate mini-book inserts throughout the book, echoing the young teenager's perspective of the American legend who happened to be her father. ... Students will enjoy the sparse but rich text, Susy's diary inserts, and bold illustrations in digital media; they will definitely learn something new about the American icon that is Twain as well. Teachers will love the detailed Author's Notes and timeline of Twain's life." -- Jennifer Coleman, Library Media Specialist, ABC-CLIO, INC., c2010.

"Survivor Kid: A Practical Guide to Wilderness Survival" by Denise Long - "A great deal of practical information about surviving in the outdoors is packed into this compact guide. Long has clearly spent a lot of time in the woods, and she is able to supplement her advice for avoiding nasty bugs, poisonous plants, frostbite, and angry predators with personal anecdotes, which push this title beyond merely a collection of do's and don'ts and lend it compelling immediacy. ...The book is generously illustrated with black-and-white drawings, which extend the concepts and add interest, and a small list of suggested resources offers direction for readers who want to continue on with their research. Of course, accounts of what can go wrong in the woods may lead some readers to decide that it is safer just to stay home. For those planning to venture beyond their front porches, however, this is a useful guide."-- Todd Morning, AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2011.

"Drizzle" by Kathleen Van Cleve - "Eleven-year-old Polly has no friends at school. Her best friend is Harry, a unique rhubarb plant on her family’s midwestern farm, where it rains miraculously at the same time every Monday, and tourists come to enjoy a giant, amusement-park umbrella ride that her family has built. Polly and Harry communicate: he nods when he agrees with her and swats her with his leaves when he is angry. And Polly can talk with bugs, as well as plants. Her peaceful life on the farm changes, though, when the rain stops suddenly and her brother gets deathly ill. Does she have the power to save both the farm and her sibling? Polly’s wry interaction with Harry and other plants and wild creatures is the best part of this debut fantasy that has an environmental slant. The water conservation message at its core will make young, activist readers cheer for Polly as she works with friends, and sometimes with enemies, to bring back the rain and save the world." Grades 5-8. --Hazel Rochman, Booklist

"Mockingbird" by Kathryn Erskine - "Ten-year-old Caitlyn hates recess, with all its noise and chaos, and her kind, patient counselor, Mrs. Brook, helps her to understand the reasons behind her discomfort, while offering advice about how to cope with her Asberger’s Syndrome, make friends, and deal with her grief over her older brother’s death in a recent school shooting. She eschews group projects in class, claiming that she doesn’t need to learn how to get along with others, but solitude is neither good for her or her grieving father, and when Caitlyn hears the term closure, she turns to her one trusty friend, her dictionary, and sets out on a mission to find it for both of them. Along the way, Caitlyn makes many missteps, but eventually she does achieve the long-sought closure with great finesse, which is another of her favorite vocabulary words. Allusions to Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird, the portrayal of a whole community’s healing process, and the sharp insights into Caitlyn’s behavior enhance this fine addition to the recent group of books with narrators with autism and Asbergers." Grades 4-7. --Cindy Dobrez, Booklist

"Smile" by Raina Telgemeier - "In a minor accident at age 12, Telgemeier lost two front teeth, not minor to remedy. Following came years of dental surgeries and orthodontics involving implants, false teeth, and headgear far beyond the more usual 'braces.' Treatment complications interacted with the complications of teenagerhood and puberty, which led to social as well as medical turmoil. Yet Telgemeier's early career choice as an animator grew out of this difficult period. With lively color art; an entertaining and helpful read for tweens and teens facing dental complexities of their own." -- LJ BookSmack! Online Review. LIBRARY JOURNAL, c2011.

YOUNG ADULT

"Blink & Caution" by Time Wynne-Jones - "Wynne-Jones (The Uninvited) delivers a dazzling crime novel that evokes the taut writing and tropes of hard-boiled fiction while interweaving social justice themes and a solid sense of realism. Blink has been living on the streets ever since running away from his abusive stepfather. While on a foray into a hotel to scavenge for leftover room service food, he witnesses an oil executive's faked kidnapping and ends up getting involved as he realizes the implications of the crime. Along the way, he meets Caution, on the run both from her abusive, drug- dealing boyfriend and her guilt over the accidental shooting death of her brother. The two teens are caught up in environmental and racial issues that are far beyond their ability to remedy, and Wynne-Jones-- often using a surprisingly effective second-person voice--focuses on their attempts to escape immediate danger and repair their internal emotional damage. Blink and Caution's gradual need to trust each other to heal drives the story forward, and should provide ample thrills to lovers of crime novels and strong teen characters." -- PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, c2011.

PICTURE BOOKS

"Charlie the Ranch Dog" by Ree Drummond

"Desperate Dog Writes Again" by Eileen Christelow

"Fancy Nancy, Stellar Stargazer" by Jane O'Connor

"Goal" by Mina Javaherbin

"Hero Dad" by Melinda Hardin

"If You're a Monster and You Know It" by Rebecca Emberley


"I'm Not" by Pam Smallcomb


"Ladybug Girl and the Bug Squad" by David Soman


"Let's Count Goats" by Mem Fox

"Ling & Ting; Not Exactly the Same" by Grace Lin

"Me and You" by Anthony Browne

"Of Thee I Sing" by Barack Obama


"Red Hen" by Rebecca Emberley

"Should I Share My Ice Cream? by Mo Willems

"We Are In A Book" by Mo Willems




























Friday, June 3, 2011

NEW ARRIVALS

ADULT FICTION

"44 Charles Street" by Danielle Steel - "When Francesca Thayer and her husband, Todd, divorce, he wants to sell their art gallery as well as their charming house at 44 Charles St., and split the proceeds. Francesca can't bear to part with either. She talks her artist father into becoming a partner in the gallery, but that still leaves the problem of how to keep her home. Against the advice of her mother, Francesca decides to share her house with three other people. .. This book is classic Steel--lots of emotion, friendship, romance, heartbreak, tragedy, and danger. Her countless fans are guaranteed to find it impossible to put down." --Shelley Mosley, Booklist

MYSTERY
"10th Anniversary" by James Patterson - "It opens with the wedding of Sergeant Lindsay Boxer to her longtime love, Joe Molinari. Soon after exchanging vows with Joe, Lindsay is on the trail of a missing baby whose 15-year-old mother was found wandering the streets in the rain, dazed and disoriented. ADA Yuki Castellano is trying an important case that could make or break her career; it involves a wealthy doctor accused of fatally shooting her unfaithful husband in cold blood. Yuki is none too pleased when Lindsay looks into the case at the behest of the woman's attorney, but Yuki has a secret of her own: she's started dating Lindsay's boss. Reporter Cindy Thomas is working on a story about several women who have been drugged and raped in the San Francisco area, but the big lead she uncovers threatens to make her a target. With the quick pace and short, sharp chapters readers have come to expect, Patterson and Paetro's latest will keep fans of the series turning pages long into the night."' Kristine Huntley. 416pg. AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2011. 

"Ape House" by Sara Gruen -"It begins with the bombing of the Great Ape Language Lab, a university research center dedicated to the study of the communicative behavior of bonobo apes. The blast, which terrorizes the apes and severely injures scientist Isabel Duncan, occurs one day after Philadelphia Inquirer reporter John Thigpen visits the lab and speaks to the bonobos, who answer his questions in sign language. After a series of personal setbacks, Thigpen pursues the story of the apes and the explosions for a Los Angeles tabloid, encountering green-haired vegan protesters and taking in a burned-out meth lab's guard dog. Meanwhile, as Isabel recovers from her injuries, the bonobos are sold and moved to New Mexico, where they become a media sensation as the stars of a reality TV show. Unfortunately, the best characters in this overwrought novel don't have the power of speech, and while Thigpen is mildly amusing, Isabel is mostly inert. --PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, c2010. 

"The Serialist" by David Gordon - "A seedy freelance writer provides the wry narrative voice for Gordon's winning debut, a darkly humorous thriller. New Yorker Harry Bloch, who once had lofty literary ambitions, has spent the past two decades as a hack, mostly as an advice columnist called the Slut Whisperer for Raunchy magazine. Bloch also earns cash by doing homework for affluent private school students, a side business managed by a precocious teenage girl who was the first pupil he was paid to tutor. His boring life takes an unexpected turn after he receives a letter from death-row inmate Darian Clay (aka the Photo Killer), who, as a fan of the Slut Whisperer, thinks Bloch is right for the job of assisting him on his memoirs. In exchange for Clay revealing where he concealed the heads of his female victims, Bloch must seek out women who have written to Clay and write stories about their having sex with the serial killer. A number of plausible plot twists help shift the story from farce to whodunit." -- PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, c2010. 

"The Lock Artist" by Steve Hamilton - "The book's main character, Mike, who suffered a trauma so great in childhood that it left him literally speechless, tries to confront his past by writing in prison. The novel's format embodies Mike's fragmented sense of self. His first-person narrative proceeds in fits and starts, jumping from the present day to his first professional job as a safecracker at the age of 18, to just after his trauma at age 8, to 2000, before his incarceration, and back and forth, focusing on several years, or months, or even a single day. The effect is that of a jigsaw, with both Mike and the reader trying to fit the pieces together. There's a double irony at work: although Mike skirts his trauma, he is always condemned, he tells us, to relive that day. And this master safecracker can't tumble the locks on his own mind. Intense and involving. Connie Fletcher."-- AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, c2009. 

ADULT NON-FICTION

"Inside of a Dog: What Dogs See, Smell and Know" by Alexandra Horowitz - 
Psychology professor and dog person Horowitz... was studying the ethology (the science of animal behavior) of white rhinos and bonobos at the San Diego Zoo when she realized that her research techniques could just as easily apply to dogs at the local dog park; there, she began to see 'snapshots of the minds of the dogs' in their play. ... she's found that, though humans bond with their dogs closely, they're clueless when it comes to understanding what dogs perceive-- leading her to the not-inconsequential notion that dogs know us better than we know them. Horowitz begins by inviting readers into a dog's umwelt--his worldview--by imagining themselves living 18 inches or so above the ground, with incredible olfactory senses comparable to the human capacity for detailed sight in three dimensions (though dogs' sight, in combination with their sense of smell, may result in a more complex perception of 'color' than humans can imagine). Social and communications skills are also explored, as well as the practicalities of dog owning (Horowitz disagrees with the 'pack' approach to dog training). Dog lovers will find this book largely fascinating, despite Horowitz's meandering style and somnolent tone." -- PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, c2009. 


"The Joy of Cheesemaking" by Jody Farnham and Marc Druart -" This new title not only offers step-by-step instruction in the crafting of cheese but also goes beyond Rita Ash's book to encompass cheese appreciation through lively profiles of artisan American cheese makers. This guide is aimed at all levels of readers, from hobbyists to professionals, but it will appeal more broadly to readers of food books. Farnham and Druart strike a good balance between the science of cheese making and love of cheese itself as they guide readers through calculations, sources for materials, explanations of outcomes at various stages of the process, and even wine or beer pairings. VERDICT This well-written guide with full-color illustrations is approachable, enthusiastic, and helpful. Recommended for collections where food books are popular."--Peter Hepburn, Univ. of Illinois at Chicago,  LIBRARY JOURNAL, c2011.
BIOGRAPHY

"Under A Wing" by Reeve Lindbergh -"an evocative reminiscence of her youth in Darien, Conn., with her two famous parents. This gentle memoir shows a unique and uniquely poignant family life: 'In our family it has always been hard to know what is right and what is wrong, in terms of what we can do for one another. It has been hard for us, too, to separate individual identity from family identity.' The resulting publicity left their family with a fear of exposure. The author's father was always wary of what others could see a cautiousness that extended to clothes, architecture and even the color of the family car. Although her father was constantly trying to shape and mold his children... his widely perceived anti-Semitism ultimately hurt his family deeply. Anne Morrow Lindbergh emerges from this retrospective as a gentle, even ethereal, intellectual whose style was the polar opposite of her husband's. While the reader might like to know more about Reeve and her own family, instead, we are given an intimate look at other family members and at her parents' marriage. From an idyllic if somewhat isolated youth in Darien, to her father's death and her mother's mental deterioration, Reeve has watched and learned and shared with readers what she refers to as the living language of her parents' marriage." -- CAHNERS PUBLISHING, c1998


DVD's


"Around the World in 80 Days"


"Casablanca (2 Disc Special Edition)"


"Covert Affairs: Season One"


"The Fighter"


"The King and I (50th Anniversary Edition)"


"The King's Speech"


"Masterpiece Theatre: Mill on the Floss"


"Alfred Hitchcock's North by Northwest"

"Nutcracker"

"Show Boat"


"Singin in the Rain"

"Steig Larsson Trilogy: (The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, The Girl Who Played with Fire, The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest)"