Monday, December 14, 2009

Reading on a Kindle

Have you considered purchasing an Amazon Kindle or another electronic book reader? I purchased a first-generation Kindle soon after they became available. Since I am a librarian, I wasn’t sure I would enjoy the electronic reading experience, but now I do nearly all of my reading on the Kindle. Here are a few Kindle facts:


When you purchase a Kindle book, it is downloaded wirelessly to your Kindle. The wireless transmission is included in the price of the book and takes about a minute.

Most new books cost $9.99 as compared to purchasing a $24.95 hardback available in the bookstore. The Kindle book eventually drops in price as the book becomes available in paperback. Free samples are available for Kindle books, and many classic books are available free-of-charge.


The Kindle 2 will hold about 1500 books. After you read a book, you can delete it from your Kindle list but it is still available for you to download should you wish to read it again. You manage your list of books from the Amazon website. Newspaper and magazine subscriptions are available in Kindle format. I subscribed to the New York Times for a while and loved reading it while I sipped coffee in the morning.


Reading on the Kindle is not like reading on a computer screen. The screen is flat and looks much like the page of a book. I especially enjoy being able to adjust the font and I find that if I adjust the margins, I can read faster on my Kindle. The Kindle also has a text to speech feature, but the computerized voice is not the quality of most books on cd.


You cannot “loan” a Kindle book to a friend, but a family can have several Kindles tied to the same Amazon account and share the books. You can also read your Kindle books on your iPhone or your PC using free software from Amazon.


The library has two new Kindles. These are currently being tested by faculty, and 23 faculty members signed up to try the Kindle! The Teen Reads Winterim Class will be using the Kindles during Winterim.


The Kindle is wonderful for traveling, and it also eliminates the need to purchase additional bookshelves for your home. The one drawback to the Kindle is that it is so easy to purchase new books—just a click of a button—and you don’t think about it until your credit card bill arrives!!


Monday, November 9, 2009

Girls Against Girls by Bonnie Burton

One of my young Middle School girls was having some “issues” with her friends. Because she frequently visits the library in the after school hours and her mother stops in to pick her up, I was able to introduce the book Girls Against Girls to her mother and recommend that mother and daughter spend time reading the book together. Bonnie Burton’s approach to the “mean girl” syndrome is insightful, interesting, and quite practical. As I read the book I could identify many incidences from my young life that Burton plays out in her book. The good news is that Burton gives answers to those dilemmas that truly make sense. One cool thing in the book is that Burton also features women from pop culture that put a twist or spin on a certain situation Some of those contributing include Jane Weidlin, founding member of the Go-Go's; Jenny Conlee, band member of The Decemberists; and Tegan, band member of Tegan and Sara.

This book is attractive, pleasing to girls of today, and packs powerful information and ideas into easy to read text. Sometimes self-help books for teens are boring or “preachy.” Burton’s book is down-to-earth and real, which today’s girl will appreciate. This book would be great for mothers and daughters to read together.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Half Broke Horses: A True Life Novel


Jeannette Walls' first book, The Glass Castle, was a remarkable true story about growing up in poverty with an alcoholic father and an eccentric mother. Half-Broke Horses is her newest book and tells the story of her maternal grandmother, Lily Casey Smith. When the story opens, the family lives in a sod house on the prairie, and Lily saves her brother and sister from a flash flood. Lily grows up to become a strong young woman, and at fifteen rides a horse for a month to reach a frontier town where she has been offered a job teaching in a one-room schoolhouse. Lily later marries and becomes a rancher's wife and eventually gives birth to Jeannette's mother Rosemary. Jeannette Walls truly has a gift for writing. When you read the book, you feel as though you are on the prairie during the flood or on the ranch breaking horses. We think of ourselves as independent women today, but this book will give you a renewed admiration for those pioneer women who raised their families as they settled this land. Don't miss this book!

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

NurtureShock


This weekend I read NurtureShock: New Thinking About Children by Po Bronson and Ashley Merryman. One of the blurbs on the back of the book by the Houston Chronicle reads, “I feel like I’ve been smacked between the eyes with a two-by-four,” and that’s a good description of my reaction as well! In ten short, accessible chapters, the authors review some of the most controversial recent findings about how children learn and turn them on their head. Issues ranging from why teenagers lie (it’s not as bad as you think!) to gifted programs in Kindergarten (they don’t work) to how babies learn to talk (TV doesn’t help), practical illumination is shed on the mounds of contradictory research. The authors repeatedly emphasize the fact that research done on adults or college students cannot be applied to children because their brains are developmentally different – a point well made in their chapter “The Lost Hour” about the importance of sleep on not only academics, but also seemingly unrelated issues such as obesity and ADHD. The chapter I enjoyed the most was “The Inverse Power of Praise” which describes how praising children for effort makes them hard-working and resilient, whereas praising children for innate intelligence actually makes them hesitant to take risks because they are afraid to fail. Our faculty speaker last April, Lisa Damour, explained research by Carol Dweck on the same phenomenon and presented a “brain training” program – which we are starting in the Middle School next week – to counteract this effect. Although I found some of the conclusions alarming because I recognize some of my own mistakes as a parent in their work, each chapter also offered small, concrete ways to correct these missteps, which I plan to start using in my own home immediately!

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Shanghai Girls


Shanghai Girls is the story of two sisters living in Shanghai just prior to World War II. They work in the evening as "beautiful girls" and model for various artists. When their family falls on hard times, their father makes arrangements to send them to California to marry Chinese men living in America. As they are about to leave for America, the Japanese invade Shanghai causing panic and destruction.

They endure many hardships on the way to America, and when they arrive they are detained for many months at an immigration facility. This is a story of life during war, but it is also a story of personal courage and love for family. Author Lisa See wrote Snow Flower and the Secret Fan and her fans will not be disappointed with this novel.

Monday, September 14, 2009

The Help

Kathryn Stockett's remarkable new novel takes place in Jackson, Mississippi during the early 1960's. It is told from the point of view of Aibileen and Minny, both black women who have spent their lives working for white families. Aibileen's employer is encouraged to install a bathroom in the garage so that the family will not have to use the same bathroom as the help. This is openly discussed in front of Aibileen as she serves the Bridge Club. Skeeter is a young white woman who is an aspiring writer, and she decides to interview maids around Jackson and write a book about their experiences working for white families. Because the maids are fearful of losing their jobs, everything must be done in secret.

There are so many layers to this wonderful story, and it is the perfect book for discussion groups. If you grew up in the South, you will recognize many people in the story.

Monday, March 9, 2009

Beach Books

We thought we would all share with you our favorite "beach books" in case you are looking for something to read over Spring Break.

From Donna Clark:

The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows

This delightful story is a must-read for book lovers and book groups. The story takes place just after World War II, and author Juliet Ashton begins a correspondence with some of the people on the Isle of Guernsey. She is searching for a subject for her next book, and hopes to find an interesting story through her correspondence. Guernsey was occupied by the Germans, and the story relates the experiences of the local people, as well as the formation of the Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society.


From Karen Douse:

The Saffron Kitchen by Yasmin Crowther

This is a wonderful and touching mother/daughter novel. Soon after Sara suffers a miscarriage, her mother, Maryam, decides to leave England to return to her native Iran to escape from the events that seem to be overwhelming her life. The story unfolds as Sara comes to discover the secrets of her mother's past. The question is this: Will Maryam return to England and her family or will she stay in Iran to reconcile her past?


From Susan Timmons:

Angels & Demons by Dan Brown

If you haven't read Dan Brown's "Angels and Demons" yet, spring break is the perfect time to correct that oversight before the movie version comes out this May. Symbols and riddles, secret societies, hidden treasure (in this case a monumental scientific discovery) and a life-and-death race to the finish guarantee that you won't be able to stop reading this intelligent thriller until you get to the shocking end!


From Alice Bryant

Monkey Town: The Summer of the Scopes Trial by Ronald Kidd

Monkey Town is Frances Robinson's story. Set in 1925, Frances's father looks at his town as a place that needs attention from the world. Mr. Robinson conjures up a scheme to put Dayton, Tennessee on the map. The story of the Scopes Trial, told through the eyes of 15-year old Frances offers the reader a lesson in history in a fictitious story. This coming of age story takes a look at all of the circumstances leading up to the trial, and then shows how Frances grows and changes as the trial unfolds. Told in the style of To Kill A Mockingbird , this book shows the wonder of a young girl and how the world around her shapes and influences her thinking.


So what is your favorite beach book? Add a comment!

Read and enjoy!

Karen

Thursday, February 12, 2009

See You in a Hundred Years: Four Seasons in Forgotten America


Logan Ward and his wife Heather were fed up with their lives in 21st century America. They were tired of the "rat race" and decided to buy a farmhouse in Swoope, Virginia. Even more, they decided that they were going to spend a year living the way folks lived a hundred years ago. This meant no computers, no cell phones, no electricity, and (gulp) no indoor plumbing! They even had to pump a well for their water.

Logan and Heather had a young son, and the three of them moved to the farm and began their 1900 year. They bought goats for milk and purchased a horse and carriage for transportation. This beautifully-written memoir is a journey back in time. Logan describes the high points as well as the low points in their journey. Heather has to learn to cook on a wood stove, and Logan struggles with the horse and carriage. The neighbors do not understand why Logan and Heather have made this decision, but they respect their decision and they all develop a close sense of community during the year. This is a delightful book and is one you will not soon forget!