Wednesday, May 14, 2008

The worst blogger ever

If you have ever read my blog, by now you've long since given up on me ever posting again.  Well doubt me no more.   I'm back...just in time for the end of school.   And as all teachers know, the end of school is the one of the most hectic times of the year, so this blog will be short.  

Throughout the year I have tried to update my website with the titles of books I have read.  I find it helpful when people ask me for recommendations, I can just click on a link, and see what I've been reading.  Recently I have been introduced to a handy little online bookshelf, which shows at a glance what I've been reading.  It's a social network for readers called Shelfari.  You can share what you're reading with others, and in turn, check out their recommended titles.  

It's a work in progress for me right now, but take a look at what I've been reading, and plan to read, on my Shelfari.   And if everything goes as planned this summer, I will be adding lots more books to my shelves in the next few months.  

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Two in a row!

I'm not a particularly fast reader. People are surprised when they hear the librarian say that. I think they expect me to read a book a day, or at least every few days. Nope, sorry. But it is true that the more I enjoy a book, the faster I read it. When I sat down with The Road, by Cormac McCarthy, I had no expectations of whether I would enjoy this book, or how long it would take me to finish. But just a few pages in and I was hooked. Six hours later, I had finished the book, and immediately wanted to turn to page one and start all over again.

The Road is now the second book I have read this year that I would rate an A+. In fact, I think it should be on our required reading list for English. There is so much to discuss, and the story really gives you pause and makes you think about your own life in a way that few other books can.

Without giving too much away, the gist of the story is a man and his young son trying to survive in a post-apocalyptic U.S.A. Mostly everyone has perished. In fact, in one scene, the father mentions that they have gone an entire year without seeing or speaking to another human being. When they do encounter other people, father and son have reason to fear. With food and water scarce, practically nonexistent, scavengers resort to cannibalism in order to stay alive.

Despite all of the horrors that McCarthy describes in this hellish setting, it was the love of father for son that resonated the most. Throughout their journey, he risked his life to keep his son alive, and was intent on keeping the boy sane and stable in their chaotic world. While the reader's head is trying to grasp the larger picture of what happened, when it happened, and what's going to happen, in the mind of the young character, it just boils down to good guys vs. bad guys. He seeks assurance from his Papa that they're the good guys, and when his father concurs, there is a sense that the boy accepts his fate, with resignation, as long as he believes they're on the side of good.

I'm not the only one who thinks this book is amazing. Oprah chose it as her Book Club pick in the Spring; and more importantly, the Pulitzer Prize Board awarded it the best fiction prize in 2007.

Read it for yourself, and let me know.


Sunday, August 12, 2007

The best book I've read this year

In case you didn't know, I keep lists of what I've read on the West Library website. I do this mainly so I can remember what I've read, and then I use the lists to offer suggestions to students and staff looking for a good read. One book I will be adding to my list is the biography A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier, by Ishmael Beah. However, it's not enough for me to just list this book with all of the others I've read this year. I want to strongly encourage everyone who reads this blog to head to your library, bookstore, or Starbucks, and start reading this book today.

Early on in the book we meet Ishmael, a 12 year-old boy who likes to lip sync and dance to rap music in his village in Sierra Leone. But when rebels invade his village in 1992, and burn it to the ground, Ishmael flees and spends months hiding in forests, trying to find food to survive, and hoping to reunite with his parents and siblings. Just when it looks like there's a bright spot in his miserable life, and his family is within eyesight, rebels attack again with disastrous results.

By age 13, Ishmael is taken in by the government army which houses and feeds him, and also trains him for war. He is issued an AK-47 and the reader watches his chilling transformation from a boy who loves soccer and rap music, to a killing machine. Most painful are the stories he shares about the two boys Sheku and Josiah, only around seven years-old, who can barely lift the machine guns, let alone hold them up to shoot them; the guns were taller than the boys.

Ishmael is eventually removed from the fighting by UNICEF, and rehabilitated and reunited with family. But once again, in a cruel twist of fate, war comes to Ishmael's doorstep. He flees Sierra Leone for good this time, and while his physical journey ends in NYC, his personal journey toward forgiveness and healing goes on indefinitely.

This is an extraordinary story that reflects one man's life, but mimics the lives of millions of other children in war-torn nations. And fortunately, Americans are reading it. It's currently #5 on the New York Times Best Seller List and is in the running for being one of Amazon.com's Best Books of 2007. Even the NY Times gave it a flattering review.

Without a doubt, this is my pick for the best book I've read so far in 2007. If you've read it too, let me know what you think.

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

News Flash! Books still relevant in nation's colleges!

I read today's NYTimes article "College Libraries Not Just Books" with some amusement. Take the following quotes for example:

"But far from dying out, books remain colleges' single-most important source of information -- and the stacks are growing.

Some schools have found technology can complement books. Lafayette's new library is circulating 20,000 more items per year to students than its old one did. The statistic suggests electronic resources help students navigate book collections and find titles that would otherwise go unused."

I'm amused because more frequently than not, there are people who try to tell me that books are becoming a relic of the past, and one only needs a computer to research anymore. Now here's an article that confirms what librarians have always known - books will never die out, especially in our nation's colleges and universities.

Secondly, the author of this article understates the importance of technology in libraries. By writing that "some schools have found technology can complement books" implies that there are colleges and universities that don't believe this truism. I doubt it. Libraries cannot run without technology today. And good librarians know that technology only helps our students locate the necessary information within and outside of books.

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Welcome!

Welcome to the new CB West Library blog. Please check back from time to time to see what's going on in the West Library and what's new in the world of research.