Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Children's Author of the Month


Andy Griffiths

Andrew "Andy" Griffiths (born 3 September 1961 in Melbourne) is an Australian children's book author and comedy writer. He is most notable for his Just! series, which was converted into an animated television series called What's with Andy?. Originally a vocalist with an 80s alternative rock band called "Gothic Farmyard", in 1992 he turned to serious writing.
Andy Griffiths has been to a number of book readings and he loves reading his books to his young fans.



In a bad, bad wood, there was a bad, bad house. And in that bad, bad house, there was a bad, bad room. And in that bad, bad room, there was a bad, bad cupboard. And in that bad, bad cupboard, there was a bad, bad shelf. And on that bad, bad shelf, there was a bad, bad box. And in that bad, bad box, there was a BAD, BAD book…..AND THIS IS IT!




The SCHOOLING AROUND series
A set of four novels chronicling the amazing goings on at Northwest Southeast Central School. Sure to appeal to both confident and emerging readers of all ages, they are also ideal for both parents and classroom teachers to read aloud.





The JUST series
A wildly popular series of funny, fast-paced short stories told by young Andy, who considers himself the world’s greatest, craziest, most annoying, and most stupid practical joker.






The BUM series
The epic BUM trilogy tells the story of Zack Freeman, his crazy runaway bum, a crack bum-fighting unit called the B– team and some of the biggest, ugliest and meanest bums ever to roam the face of the Earth.






FLAT CAT & BIG FAT COW
A joyous silly series propelled by kid-pleasing, tongue-tripping verse and edgy, stick-figure-filled illustrations. Ideal for beginning or reluctant readers, but will delight readers of all ages and abilities.

Saturday, August 28, 2010

The Good, the Bad, the Ugly : Reviewed by You


A review by Library user, Narda, in one of our The Good, the Bad, the Ugly : Reviewed by You journals.

The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest (2007) by Stieg Larsson; translated by Reg Keeland - The Millenium Trilogy #3


Set mainly in Sweden


Plot Summary : It begins with the trilogy's extraordinary protagonist, Lisbeth Salander's recovery from critical injury. As she heals, then with her preparations for defence at her trial. If this fails she'll work on her escape . . .


That there is any real chance of a genuine defence is only made possible through determindly loyal friend and crusading journalist, Mikael Blomkvist, with some assistance from unusual sources and from members of Salander's 'hacker family'. The might of a secret state within a government department arrays its formidable forces against exposure - and its iniquitous treatment of a desperate young girl now a woman. It will bury her alive at any cost . . .


Review : In the complex plot the characters are finely drawn, background detailed but never extraneous to supurb story-making.


Each book reads as engrossing narrative (if only one were available at any time) but ideally are best read in sequence.


Praise is due to Reg Keeland (the translator is often overlooked!). His writing is excellent. Does he write for himself I wonder? I'll have to check . . .


Stieg Larsson's too early death was a loss to the genre - and literature I feel. I wonder what he might have later written . . . we'll never know.


Reviewed by : Narda


PS - Reg Keeland, aka Steven T. Murray, an American, founded Fjord Press, works as a full-time free-lance literary translator. He works in several languages - Swedish, German, Danish and Norwegian. He is known for his translations of 5 Henning Mankell novels, especially Sidetracked which was awarded a Gold Dagger of the year.



Look out for The Good, The Bad, The Ugly : Reviewed by You in your library and add your own review

Friday, August 27, 2010

Author interviews : In their own words

The BBC has launched an archive of interviews with famous British novelists, including Daphne du Maurier, A S Byatt and Virginia Woolf. Access the recordings via the BBC website.

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

The Good, the Bad, the Ugly : Reviewed by You

A review by Library user, David, in one of our The Good, the Bad, the Ugly : Reviewed by You journals.

Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson (1992)

Snow Crash is a science fiction novel set in the near but undefined future, in a world where huge corporations and criminal syndicates have replaced governments, and where computers allow users to inhabit a cyberspace world called The Street. The author's vision of the future as seen from 1992 is surprisingly accurate in parts, from the global immediacy and potency of the internet to the political parallels to our own world, where corporations and tycoons are so readily able to influence government policies.

The book begins with a fast-paced scenario which introduces us to the satisfying blend of techno-jargon, future-slang, action, humour and social commentary which permeates most of the story. Later, however, Stephenson incorporates concepts of linguistics, psychology and ancient mythology to develop a complicated plot, revolving around a mental virus capable of enslaving humanity.

While these additional elements are intrinsic to the plot, they jar with the book's humourous, street-savvy attitude and style of writing. The reader speeds along on a wild ride on a skateboard with incredible computer controls only to hit a quagmire of dry and essentially incongruous discussions on Sumerian mythology.

All in all, however, I enjoyed the novel very much. After a while I glossed over much of the less entertaining content, and found that, if anything, this made the plot more understandable rather than less. In any case, the plot is quite unsustainable, but it plays out like a Hollywood movie where one gets enough enjoyment from well-executed individual scenes without worrying too much that overall nothing makes much sense.

Reviewed by : David

Look out for The Good, The Bad, The Ugly : Reviewed by You in your library and add your own review.

Monday, August 23, 2010

Popeye Never Told You : Childhood Memories of the War



Popeye Never Told You : Childhood Memories of the War by Rodney Hall

Milsons Point, NSW - Pier 9 - 2010


Australian author, Rodney Hall, was born in England to an Australian mother. His father died when he was only 6 months old. As the book opens, Rodney is five years old and WWII has begun and the family are hiding in the space made between the upright piano and the back of the sofa as bombs rain down. Mum brings a biscuit tin into their hideout and shows the kids photos of her life in Kangaroo Valley in far away Australia where they will go after the war.

The book chronicles the adventures of Rodney (aged 5-9), his sister Diana and brother Michael as they roam about town while their mother is at her job at the Ministry of Food, getting into all sorts of scrapes, petty thievery, trespass and battles with gangs. Other significant adults are Gran, Aunt Olive, Uncle Ralph, Aunt Joan, Uncle Ken and for a while, Guy the policeman lodger.

The writing style reminds me very much of James Kelman's Kieron Smith Boy with sentences full of non-sequiteurs and misunderstandings of the adult world around him.

we play hands-knees-and-bumps-a-daisy, and Diana and i bump our bottoms and this is so funny we fall over and bottom is a naughty word, and Gran says we can have as many apricots as we like so im up on the step ladder and im puling them off her tree to stuff them in my mouth and theyre so squishy the juice runs down my chin – p.10

Hall says in the notes his objective was to “recapture each incident as it was stamped on my memory at the time” and he uses the child’s voice exceptionally well.

Scattered throughout the book are poignant little sentences that so elequently capture the longing this little boy has for his unremembered father.

but theres so many things i need to ask you, – p.142

There were just a couple of things that jarred for me; Rodney, brought up in England, calls trousers “pants” and sweeties “lollies”, the Australian versions of these words that the adult Rodney now uses. But these are only a very minor and I just loved this book. It was read in just one cosy afternoon in front of the fire.
Highly recommended.
Reviewed by : Alba

Romance Book of the Year winners

The winners of this year's Romance Book of the Year awards have been announced.

The R*BY Award (or Ruby) is Australia's premier (and only) romance award. Voted for by Australian readers, this contest is open each year to any Australian or New Zealand romance author who has published a long or short romance novel. Awards are given for 4 main categories.

The 2010 winners are:

Long Romance : Novels over 60,000 words where the love story is the main focus of the novel, and the end of the book is emotionally satisfying and optimistic. Novels may be set in any place or time. Love scenes may contain any level of sensuality

Mistletoe Magic by Sophia James



Romantic Elements : Novels of any length, tone, or style, set in any place or time, in which a romance plays a significant part in the story, though it is not necessarily the central plot. Other themes or elements take the plot beyond the traditional romance boundaries


Night's Cold Kiss by Tracy O'Hara



Short Sexy : Novels and novellas between 40,000 and 60,000 words where the love story is the main focus of the novel, and the end of the book is emotionally satisfying and optimistic. Novels may be set in any place or time. Love scenes are fully realised

A Doctor, A Nurse: A Christmas Baby by Amy Andrews


Short Sweet : Short Sweet Romance: Novels and novellas between 40,000 and 60,000 words where the love story is the main focus of the novel and the end of the book is emotionally satisfying and optimistic. Novels may be set in any place or time. Love scenes may be present or implied but details are not explicit
Marriage Reunited: Baby on the Way by Sharon Archer



Other awards

Emerald Awards for the best unpublished category romance: Coleen Yan
Emerald Awards for the best unpublished single title: Allison Withers
Anna Campbell Prize for the highest placed historical romance: Allison Withers
The Romance Media Award (ROMA) for the best media coverage of romance writing in Australia: Robert Hayward for his profile of author Alison Stuart in My Secret Art Life: Romance Writer (Art Nation)
The Valerie Parv Award for unpublished writers: Anna Cowan for The Three Loves of Miss Beatrice Sutherland
The Lynne Wilding Meritorious Service Award : Serena Tatti

What Library staff are reading . . .



  • My Booky Wook by Russell Brand ~ I wanted to see what the talented singer, Katie Perry, saw in him (she is engaged to him) – I am still not seeing it
  • We of the Never Never by Mrs Aeneas Gunn ~ continuing on in my reading of Australian classics (read My Brilliant Career last month)
  • Wonders of a Godless World by Andrew McGahan ~ way out of my comfort zone but a good challenge
  • Dewey : the small-town library cat who touched the world by Vicki Myron ~ it is a really lovely story about how an abandoned kitten became such a positive influence to many many people from the small town of Spencer, Iowa and beyond. You will need a box of tissues with you as you read as it is very moving – in a positive way
  • The Mysteries of Udolpho, the archetypal gothic novel written by Ann Radcliffe which was published in 1794 ~ the exciting news is that I am reading on our new Apple IPad. Luddites can stop reading now, but for everyone else . . . this is a seriously (overpriced) fun toy for reading and surfing the internet. It has a beautiful page turning interface and does a nice job of replicating a paperback in its layout. It will never replace books our house, but I still love it. And being a gift we don’t have to justify its existence
  • I listened to Thea Astley’s Drylands ~ widow Janet Deakin sits in her flat above the newsagency in Drylands, an emptying outback town, and writes a book for the world’s last reader. I think this is probably a book that should be read, not listened to
  • I thoroughly enjoyed reading Maggie O’Farrell’s latest novel, The Hand that first held mine ~ this novel is a portrait of motherhood and an artist’s life. Lexie Sinclair leaves Devon and heads off to London where she meets Innes, a magazine editor. Lexie learns to be a reporter. Later, in present day London, Elina almost dies giving birth to Jonah. Her boyfriend, Ted, becomes disturbed by the memories of his own childhood and we find that the stories of Lexie and Elina are connected. This is a great, emotional read that shouldn’t be missed. Recommended to me by my daughter and her friend - they are Maggie O’Farrell fans
  • Piano Lessons by Anna Goldsworthy ~ reviewed it in RITM earlier this month
  • Going VERY slowly through Austerlitz by W.G. Sebald ~ a paragraph break suddenly seems like a clever thing to have!
  • Hearts Blood by Juliet Marillier ~ fantasy fiction and another fantasy fiction by Katherine Kerr, The red wyvern.
  • The General Book of Ignorance by John Lloyd and John Mitchinson ~ with a tie-in to the Stephen Fry show QI, this is a book of delightfully bizarre and mindboggling trivia, turning upside-down many of our long held notions about the world. For instance, did you know that work kills more people than war? Or that the mighty Napoleon Bonaparte was once chased out of town by a group of hungry rabbits?
  • Australian Tragic by Jack Marx. True stories of catastrophe and intrigue from Australian history
  • Ancient Gonzo Wisdom: Interviews with Hunter S. Thompson edited by Anita Thompson ~ a good selection of interviews that illustrate a number of significant moments in Hunter S. Thompson’s life and career
  • After Dark by Haruki Murakami ~ I’m half-way through this fantastic read. The writing style reminds me very much of the work of William Gibson; poetic, contemporary and exciting
  • I finally finished the Winner of the Booker Prize (2009) Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel ~ not a book to read in between other tasks. The characters are too difficult to keep track of (with all their different titles) when you’re picking the book up for a chapter at a time! Did enjoy getting into the mindset of Cromwell and King Henry and from that point of view it was well written, though I was disappointed it took so long to get anywhere and finished before any queens got beheaded!!
  • Sacred Hearts by Sarah Dunant was recommended by a fellow patron and I can understand why but it proved to be a chore to me rather than an enjoyable read. The era in time was well represented and the insight into the lives of nuns of that time (and probably even later) proved very interesting but the ending was a bit of a let down
  • Also read The Diving Bell and The Butterfly by Jean-Dominique Bauby ~ written in an easy to read style with a tinge of humour, it’s the diary of Bauby after he suffered a massive stroke and became paralysed, only able to communicate by blinking. It was fascinating to see how his memories and a tremendous imagination could be used to alleviate what would otherwise be an agonising hell. Very moving and surprisingly a little uplifting, I do recommend this book though I’m not sure I could watch the movie (which has just come back across the desk)
  • It took a long time to get through Love in the Time of Cholera for book group then I had to read Ragtime by EL Doctorow for my other book group, which despite the fact it’s quite a slim volume and I quite enjoyed it, still took me about a fortnight to plough through
  • Then it was straight into the next book for the first book group, Austerlitz by WG Sebald. I seem to be travelling through that one at a bit more of a clip, despite the long and winding sentences. It’s a long time, it seems, since I’ve read something I’ve chosen.

Sitting on my bedside table waiting to go are The Life and Opinions of Maf the Dog and of his friend Marilyn Munroe by Andrew O’Hagan, Popeye never told you by Rodney Hall and Sacrifice by SJ Bolton. I fear I may run out of time before they have to come back to the library . . .

So what about you? What did you get through, what did you love, what did you hate, what would you like to read next?

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Feeling like stretching your mind but weren't sure what to study?


Durham University in England may have the course for you!

The new course, Harry Potter and the Age of Illusion already has about 70 students signed up, will be offered for the first time this autumn as part of the university's Education Studies BA degree.

Thought to be the first course in the UK focusing on the works of JK Rowling, the module will require undergraduates to set the series "in its social, cultural and educational context and understand some of the reasons for its popularity", and to consider Harry Potter's relevance to today's education system.

I may now just about have seen it all!

Heidi

Friday, August 20, 2010

The Good, the Bad, the Ugly : Reviewed by You


A review by Library user, Veronique, in one of our The Good, the Bad, the Ugly : Reviewed by You journals. Look out for them in your library and add your own review.

Advanced Homework for Grown-ups : Old Schools Lessons for Clever Clogs by E. Foley and B. Coates (2009)

Summary : As adults we forget the specifics of much of what we learnt at school - if we ever did! This is an adult revision of school work.

Review : It is a fun approach at general knowledge. Good for those who want to sharpen their own wits. Best for parents stumped by their children's quizzical queries!

Reviewed by : Veronique Helmridge-Marsillian

Book Week 2010

"Across the Story Bridge"
The 2010 Short List:

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Word Quiz

How well do you know the English language? Test your knowledge with this selection of weird and wonderful words from English slang, dialect and old usage.

Do The Guardian's Weird Word Quiz.

How did you go?

I got 1 out of 10 and they had the cheek to say "What a wombat (waste of money, brains and time)" - Huh (nose in the air and arms folded)!!!

Ned Kelly Awards 2010 shortlist

The titles shortlisted for the 2010 Ned Kelly Awards have been announced. The Ned Kelly Awards celebrate the past year’s best Australian crime writing.

The shortlisted titles are:

True crime

Crooks Like Us by Peter Doyle - takes an in-depth look at 1920s Sydney's densely populated and crime-ridden suburbs such as Pyrmont, Surry Hills and Darlinghurst. Packed with pictures of theives, petty and otherwise, posing and smiling, revealing the character of the subjects

Pitcairn: Paradise Lost by Kathy Marks - analysis of historical relationship between the mutiny of the Bounty, and the subsequent settling by some of the mutineers on Pitcairn Island (plus a considered look at other possible causal factors) and the recently uncovered culture of sexual abuse of the island's women, which appears to be deeply entrenched in the island's quirky culture. The author was one of six journalists accredited to attend the 2005 Pitcairn Island trials

Medical Murder : disturbing cases of doctors who kill by Robert M Kaplan



Best first fiction

Document Z by Andrew Croome

King of the Cross by Mark Dapin

Death and the Running Patterer by Robin Adair


Best fiction

The Black Russian by Lenny Bartulin

Bleed For Me by Michael Robotham

Wyatt by Garry Disher



SD Harvey short story award

'The Fountain of Justice' by Lucy Sussex

'Leaving The Fountainhead' by Zane Lovitt

'The Travertine Fountain' by Robert Goodman


Lifetime achievement award

Peter Doyle


The award winners will be announced at the Melbourne Writers Festival on 3 September.

BMCC Student Information Page



A new Student Information Page is now available on the Blue Mountains City Council (BMCC) website in response to the numerous telephone and email enquiries throughout the year from students seeking information for school projects.

The Student Information Page aims to help local students access resources for school assignments available through the Blue Mountains City Library Service and the Council website. The project is being carried out by the Sustainability Education Team in conjunction with Library staff.

You can access the BMCC Student Information Page by clicking here.

You'll find all sorts of information to help with assignments and class discussions including :



  • About the Blue Mountains

  • Library Catalogue

  • Premium Sites - specialised online resources, many of which can be accessed from home

  • Recommended sites and the Blue Mountains Library del.icio.us account- links to a variety of websites selected by Library staff

  • Civics Education Kit - information on local government - good for HSIE Democracy and Civics and Citizenship topics - suitable for primary and high school students

  • Community Plan - demographic and socioeconomic information about the Blue Mountains

  • Environment and Waste Management information - information with fact sheets, photos and other educational resources

  • Crossing the Blue Mountains - maps, journal entries and more

  • Australian Dictionary of Biography

  • The Dictionary of Sydney - Sydney's history online

  • Interactive maps - useful for students studying a locality within the Blue Mountains Local Government Area. You can enter a town or even an address to obtain a map of that location

  • Population Profile, Forecast and Social Atlas - for assignment questions that require information such as cultural diversity in the Blue Mountains, languages spoken at home, numbers of Aboriginal people, number of young people living in the area and employment statistics

  • Tourism -our Tourism Branch may be able to help you. Visit the Tourism Website for information on Blue Mountains, Lithgow and Oberon tourism.

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Marriage for Beginners by Catherine Bateson


Marriage for Beginners and other poems by Catherine Bateson (2009)
pp.62
I'm not usually one for reading poetry (I think pulling apart Sylvia Plath's Daddy at high school does that to your poetry appreciation gene) and when this slim little book appeared as a request none was more surprised than me. When had I requested this?
I had a quick flip through the book, getting the gist of the subject matter then went back for a more leisurely peruse.
It won't take you long but it's worth the read. Most of the poems are about relationships - Marriage for Beginners, there is a sadness to some - Six Degrees in Separation , but also other topics as in Ode to My Docs (Doc Marten shoes), How to Go Fishing, etc.
Poetry for beginners it could be, a gentle, beautiful introduction to reading poetry and enjoying it!

On reading


"to me, the point of the novel is to take you to a still place. You can multitask with a lot of things, but you can’t really multitask reading a book" ~ Jonathan Franzen

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

On reading and writing


In an article in The Guardian, A.L. Kennedy said this about reading and writing :


"I always say that writing and readers are misunderstood, because if you glance casually at people who are reading and writing, you may simply see people who appear serious, frozen. But if we happen to glance at people just before they kiss (not in an intrusive or unpleasant way, Best Beloveds) then their expression is the same - oddly solemn, intent. and yet nobody ever suggests that kissing is dull, or pathetic, or a bit of a waste of time. I happen to believe that giving and receiving a kiss operates very much along the same lines as giving and receiving a word - it's simply that the tiving and receiving are done in different rooms at different times - they are still an attempt to touch, be touched, be recognised, to exist in passion, to be human."

Monday, August 16, 2010

Bad Behaviour


AUTHOR: Liz Byrski
PUBLICATION DATE: 2009
No PAGES: 463 pages.
TIME PERIOD: Contemporary, and 1968
GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION: Mostly Western Australia and southern England.
CATEGORY: Adult fiction. Australian fiction.
PLOT SUMMARY: The story opens in Freemantle, WA, in 1999. Zoe, now in her fifties, is treating her ageing mother to a small family birthday celebration, and receiving the usual unenthusiastic response. Later Zoe’s daughter says she is excited about doing a school project on the year 1968, “when everything happened.” Zoe confesses she was too busy losing her virginity to notice the politics.
Meanwhile in Sussex, England, Julia is making plum jam, and dreading the imminent death of Hilary, her closest friend. While she makes jam her husband Tom and brother Richard enthuse about the film they are planning to make – about the Sixties.
The English and Australian families have long been connected by a brief but intense relationship involving Richard and Zoe. Though that connection has been dormant for decades, it is re-kindled when Julia feels driven to get back in touch with Zoe.
COMMENTS: At first it feels like there’s a cast of thousands, and you battle to remember who’s who. When the dust settles, this develops into an absorbing story. Liz Byrski’s novels mainly concern themselves with baby boomers. This one also brings us to the present; events such as 9-11, the Bali bombing and the war in Afghanistan give a clear sense of the times. Byrski looks at the free-love ethos of the Sixties, identifying it as a reaction to the repressive mood of the forties and fifties [as exemplified by Zoe’s mother]. “Bad behaviour” was almost mandatory then. She shows that these explosive social changes did not bring everybody with them; and that some became casualties. Byrski is not so unsubtle as to make this, overtly, a moral fable. Moral consequences are implied.
REVIEWER: Alison.

The Good, the Bad, the Ugly : Reviewed by You


A review by Library user, Veronique, in one of our The Good, the Bad, the Ugly : Reviewed by You journals. Look out for them in your library and add your own review.


The pleasures of the Damned : Poems 1951-1993 by Charles Bukowski, edited by John Martin (2007)

Summary : Charles Bukowski began as a howling anarchist; but as he found his artistic personality in mid-life he became an observant individualist. Each poem is a pungent comment on a problem of existence, or a bitter-sweet portrait of a person loved or puzzled over.


Review : This collection contains the very best of Bukowski. It is most enjoyed by reading the poems as they come. However, if you want to situate each poem in Bukowski's life, you have to flip from the 'Index of Titles' (Back) to 'Also by ... (front), for the dates, which is very annoying.


Reviewed by : Veronique Helmridge-Marsillian

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Farewell Libraries?




Amazon’s report that e-books are outselling hardcovers means book collections—personal and public—are about to get a drastic makeover. Amazon.com’s recent announcement that sales of e-books at the online megastore had overtaken sales of hardcover books came as no surprise. It had to happen sometime.

But the news did conjure quite an interesting mental image: libraries that from now on will look smaller and less crowded.

For the moment, let’s not argue with the proposition that people will read as much as they ever have, no matter whether they read an actual book or a book on a screen. The habits of readers may not change (if anything, people may read more, or at least buy more—several stories have quoted e-book owners who say they buy more titles for their e-readers than they did when they were buying hardcover books). But if readers aren’t changing, their environments will. Rooms that once held books will—well, whatever they hold from now on, it won’t be books. Or not as many books. Theoretically, your space will be more spare, more serenely uncluttered. That’s the theory, at least. My experience is that stuff expands to fill the space available. But you can dream.

All of this has already happened big time in the music business, where downloads have gradually but surely replaced CDs. I don’t know how many people I’ve overheard crowing because they managed to transfer their entire music collections onto their computers. All those CDs taking up space on the wall—gone. All those CDs that travel from car to kitchen to bedroom to living room, with the CD and the case getting separated somewhere along the way—a problem no more in the digital age. From now on, we’ll own what might be described as the idea of stuff, since the actual physical things—records, tapes, photographs, CDs, and now books—have been as good as vaporized, with the information contained therein stored away on a hard drive.

This, of course, is merely collateral damage in the digital revolution, if damage it is. There’s as yet no way to tell if this transition is good, bad, both, or neither, but surely the absence of a physical library, be it musical or literary, marks a fundamental shift in the way we live and think about things. In music, for example, the rise of iTunes, Pandora, YouTube, and all the other online music purveyors has quickly eroded our devotion to the long-playing album as the principal means of organizing music. After a half century of neglect, the lowly single is back on top. Most immediately this has repercussions for artists, maybe not so much for the people who buy their music. But who knows?

With books, the absence of packaging does nothing to the contents. I can buy a hardcover copy of Moby-Dick or download it onto an e-reader, and Melville is still Melville. But I grew up loving Rockwell Kent’s illustrations of that novel, and later Barry Moser’s. It’s hard to think of the book without them. I can do that, certainly, but some little thing is lost.

Paperbacks and public libraries made books cheap or free but certainly available to millions who might otherwise not have been able to afford them, and all that happened long before I was born. Nevertheless, I was brought up by people who had been taught—and who taught me—that books were valuable things, things to be cared for and cherished, and I have owned some volumes for close to half a century (almost none of them, I should point out, qualify as “collectible” or valuable to an antiquarian book collector; owning a rare book makes me nervous. I like books I can hold, read, and even—here my mother is spinning in her grave—write in).

I come from a generation for whom the books and records on the shelf signaled, in some way, who you were (starting with the fact that you were a person who owned books or records or CDs). If you visited a friend, you took the first chance you had to surreptitiously scan that friend’s shelves to get a handle on the person. I suppose I could sneak a peek at a friend’s Kindle, but is that the same? And try that kind of snooping on a bus or in a coffee shop and you’ll probably get arrested. For a sense of the diminution of this sort of information gathering, click through this Tumblr of covers (scroll until you get to the e-reader included in the mix, to fully plumb the difference).

The stuff of our lives is a comfort. We look up at the shelves and we see old friends. (Yes, there are books on my shelves that aren’t my friends, that I haven’t finished or even started, but someday I will, I promise—my home library is a physical manifestation of ambivalence.) There is comfort in the continuity of seeing the same books year after year. I guess there might be some of the same pleasure in scrolling through a digital library or music playlist, but somehow I think something will be lost.

For years audiophiles have tried to persuade more casual music fans that a vinyl record played on a decent sound system sounds better than a digital recording played on the same system. Digital sound is not as warm, not as seductive to the ear. The resurgence, albeit modest, of vinyl, especially among young listeners and musicians, proves that this argument is not generational. It’s not, in other words, just old fogies versus young hipsters.

Something of the same argument might be made for books, or for the tactile pleasure of holding and reading a well-made book. At its simplest, a book is a tool, or an information-delivery system, if you will, and it does what it does supremely well. To conceive of a world without physical books is to conceive of a world somehow diminished. It may be more efficient—yes, you can take a “stack” of books on vacation with an e-reader. It may spare quite a few forests from the pulpmaker’s ax. But efficiency is no substitute for pleasure. The future may be less cluttered. It may also be less fun.


Malcolm Jones in Newsweek

Monday, August 9, 2010

Fields of Gold by Fiona McIntosh


Fields of Gold by Fiona McIntosh - 2010 - 562pp.

Plot Summary : At the end of the Great War, two young men find themselves far from home, with everything to gain or everything to lose. Charismatic womaniser Jack Bryant has the world at his feet, but when trouble catches up with him he's forced to flee Britain for good. Handsome, honest Ned Sinclair is on a family adventure in Rangoon when he is dealt a bitter blow. With all the odds against him, he risks his life in a desperate bid to escape. Both men hope to start their lives anew, seeking their fortune in India's fields of gold. Their paths collide in the colourful city of Bangalore, where they form a friendship like no other. In the years that follow, they remain inextricably bound by a dark secret, while their love for the same woman threatens to tear them apart. The story moves from the windswept clifftops of the Cornish coast to the goldmines of southern India (Source : Angus and Robertson).

Book Review : I loved the fact she is an Australian Author and wrote a saga that included a part of history i.e. the gold rush. It is a lovely story of high adventure, devastating tragedy and enduring love.

Reviewed by : Carolyn

Friday, August 6, 2010

Dispelling myths about librarians and libraries

This by librarian colleagues in the US.

Carolyn's Books of the Month - August 2010

Best read and Australian Author : Fields Of Gold by Fiona McIntosh

Thriller : Look Again by Lisa Scottoline

General Fiction : Behind the Silence by Heather Gudenkauf

Saga/Romances : The Other Family by Joanne Trollope

Crime : In The Blood by J.A.Kerley and Deeper than the Dead by Tami Hoag

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...