Popular Smopular

This past weekend I wanted to be a good library worker and familiarize myself with the more popular items that the friendly library has to offer. Just to let you know, I have a strong reluctance toward anything popular. I like to tread my own path, so to speak. It’s an affliction I have suffered with my whole life. I deal with it.

As you may or may not have heard, The Hunger Games series by Suzanne Collins, is the big thing right now. But, that is not the popular task that I took on, that would be too big of a step for this rebel. Moreover, the hold list for those books are astronomical, but I highly recommend them nonetheless. Other people seem to like them.

The popular thing I decided to take on was Harry Potter. I know what you are saying “Harry Potter? that was so five years ago.” I am taking baby steps here so cut me a break. Plus, the series sold like half a billion books worldwide and is the best selling book series in history, at least according to good old Wikipedia.

And of course I took the shortcut and watched the movies. That’s why they make movies, so I don’t have to read the books, right? Anyway, some of those books are fairly large and I would probably need more than a weekend to read them all. Plus bonus, you can check the Harry Potter movies and books from the library right now if you want! Because they are available, no wait list.

Needless to say I was entertained. So much so, I may even read the books.

Probably next year.

P.S. I do read books. I am reading Seth Grahame-Smith’s Unholy Night right now. (It’s not a movie yet, so I had to read it)

The Bad Boys of Historical Revisionism

Do you ever wonder about random stuff? Say, do you ever think that maybe, just maybe, everything you’ve been told about history is a lie, that what you know is just what everyone wants you to believe? Sure, history says that events happened a specific way, but what if that’s only half the story? I don’t know about you, but I’m prone to daydreaming, and more often then not I find my thoughts traveling back in time and imagining A.) what it would be like to be in the past, B.) How things would be different from what I’ve been told and C.) What I could change if I was in the past. Books that play into these musings are my very favorite.

Now that I’m both a grownup AND working in a library I know that daydreaming is actually called speculating, and that these amazing books that tweak what we know of history are called Historical Revisionism. They’re part of a branch of fiction that focuses on what life would be like if just a few things were different, called Speculative Fiction. (Bear with me here, these terms I’m throwing around may sound fancy, but really they’re all just fiction at heart.) Think of some of your favorite books; maybe one where there are vampires living in Louisiana, or one where the South won the Civil War, or even one in which a dorky teenaged wizard battles for the fate of the world using a wooden stick and a scar. Speculative fiction at its best, baby.

I was so excited to see new books by two of my favorite revisionist authors on our New and Forthcoming List for March.

Seth Grahame-Smith is a master at changing how we look at history and the classics of literature. He helped us imagine what the world of Pride and Prejudice would be like if infested with zombies or if Abraham Lincoln really was a kick-butt vampire hunter. His newest book, Unholy Night, reimagines the tale of the Three Wise Men, casting them not as incense toting magicians on camels but as infamous thieves who stumble on that specific manger quite on accident. Shenanigans ensue as the unlikely group fights their way to Egypt, through historical figures and biblical myths alike. I CANNOT wait!

Christopher Moore is the is the sort of funny genius that we all secretly long to be. He takes the most ridiculously boring settings, say the court of King Lear or the missing years of Jesus’ early childhood, and turns them into the laugh-out-loud funny books that cause people to stare at you strangely in the waiting room at your dentist’s office. We just got our copy of his newest masterpiece, Sacre Bleu: A Comedy d’Art. When Vincent van Gogh ‘supposedly’ shoots himself, his friends Lucien Lessard and Henri Toulouse-Latrec set out on a quest to find to the truth through the brothels and bakeries of Paris. It has all of my favorite things; art, cognac, french bread and a very specific shade of blue. I mean bleu. Oh and cancan dancers, can’t forget those, love cancan dancers!

1,000 Books Before Kindergarten – Part 3

I am about 3 months into the 1,000 Books before Kindergarten challenge and I must say it is going well.  I ask my son every night if he wants to read books with me, he shakes his head yes and runs into my room and tries to climb on the bed.  After I bring him a pile of books, he hands me the one he wants to read and we begin.  If he doesn’t like the book I am reading, he takes the book from me, closes it, and hands me another one.  We are having lots of fun reading together.  I have noticed a remarkable improvement in his communication skills as well.  He is responding to questions with a yes or no by shaking his head, attempting to say words when he points at things, and he began to say “mama” when he needs me (and sometimes when he doesn’t!).

I attribute this communication improvement to our daily reading adventures.  I ask him questions as I read and he interacts with the book by pointing out objects on the pages and turning the pages.  We explored a variety of books this month which included colors, shapes, and continued with the touch and feel and lift the flap page books he likes so much.  The books he enjoyed the most were the books about our bodies.  He loved finding his toes, fingers, and mouth just like the children in the books.  We are going to continue to explore more books about parts of the body since he responds so well to them.  Our favorite books this month are:

All About Me! ; Baby’s Very First Touchy-Feely Animals Book ; Knees and Toes Where is Baby’s Yummy Tummy ; Eyes, Nose, Toes Peekaboo ; Beep! Beep! Peekaboo ; and Baby Loves Peekaboo

We also started to add songs to our story times.  He loves the song Head, Shoulders, Knees, and Toes especially when I sing it fast.  We also sang I’m a Little Teapot, This Little Piggy, and Itsy Bitsy Spider.  All of these songs involve parts of the body and he seems to really respond to them at this age (20 months old).

If you are interested in starting a story time with your child but may have trouble getting started, the library has many Ready to Read kits available and each one has a different theme.  The kits include books, CDs, fingerplays, and an educational toy.  To learn more about the kits and early literacy skills check out the library’s website. You can also find tips on reading with your child in the library’s Parent’s Guide.

180 books previously read – 123 books read this month = 303 books read so far

1,000 Books before Kindergarten – 303 books read so far = 697 books left to read

303 books and counting!!!

 

1,000 Books Before Kindergarten-Part 2

I had planned to read my son 1,000 books before kindergarten…..does it count when you read him the same book 1,000 times?  I read my son the book baby beep! beep! and he fell in love with it!  I read him this book every night at least 3 times.  I have already renewed it once from the library and it looks as though I may renew it again.

I chose to read him ‘lift the flap’ books and ‘touch and feel’ books this month.  He is 18 months old and this is a great way to introduce him to books.  He is able to feel the different textures in the ‘touch and feel’ books and he likes the surprises under the flaps in the ‘lift the flap’ books.  Most of the books were small enough for him to handle himself and were board books so he could turn the pages himself.

Our favorite book this month was obviously baby beep! beep!. Here are a few of our other favorites:

Where is Baby’s Belly Button?, Spot Goes to the Farm, Baby Max and Ruby Peek-A-Boo, Superhero Me!, Curious George the Movie, Come Rhyme With Me, Where is Baby’s Puppy?, and What I Like About Me!

Goal 1,000 books before kindergarten.

Books read last month 94 - 86 books read this month = 820 books left to read

180 books and counting!!!!

 

Live Concerts on DVD

I haven’t been to a real concert in years.  It’s not that I don’t want to get out and see live music, it’s just not an option. If you’re like me you might just be lacking in the time and funds it takes to see amazing acts live in concert.

BUT! I’ve discovered the most amazing library material ever! We have DVDs of live concerts. Just imagine No fighting the crowds, no seeing past the guy with the weird hat. No nosebleed seats or getting rained on. Just perfect sound and a perfect view.

We have some amazing new concerts that have shown up in our New and Forthcoming DVD List recently.

Adele Live at the Royal Albert Hall- Filmed on September 22, 2011 at London’s famed Royal Albert Hall, Adele’s bestselling hits from both of her albums, 19 and 21, are featured as well as several behind the scenes features. Since Adele swept the Grammys I expect there to be a high demand on this one, check out now before everyone figures it out!

The Best of Bluegrass Underground- Taped 333 feet below ground within the labyrinth of Tennessee’s Cumberland Caverns, contained is a compilation of the best of the twelve-part ‘musical adventure’ series. Featuring the top established and emerging artists within the booming genres  of bluegrass, Neo-Folk, gospel, roots, and Americana genres.

Looking for some other cool concerts to watch? Try these:

1,000 Books Before Kindergarten

I have read that the best way to teach children early literacy skills, is to read to them.  Research shows that reading a child 1,000 books from birth to age 5 is the best way to prepare them for kindergarten.

I am going to read my son 1,000 books before kindergarten.  I have a goal to read him 3 books a day for a year that will be 1,095 books (in the case of 2012 it will be 1,098 books since this is leap year).  I hope to read him 1,000 books before the end of October.

Follow along as I keep track of our reading progress.  I will write a list of our favorite books that you can check out at the library.  Some book we have read and enjoyed so far are:

Froggy Gets Dressed; Brown Bear, Brown Bear What Do You See? ; I Love You Through and Through; The Very Hungry Caterpillar; The Little House; Baby Talk; From Head to Toe; Good Night Gorilla; Sleepy Baby; and Where is Baby’s Belly Button?

Goal 1,000 books94 books read so far = 906 books left to read.

94 books and counting!!!!

 

Dirty Little Secret: Fiction Addiction

touched by an alienIt’s 2 AM and really, I should have been asleep 4 hours ago. When I get to work in the morning it’s a guarantee that I’ll look like death warmed over. My co-workers, being the sweet, caring individuals that they are will ask if perhaps I was bitten by a zombie. And I’ll have to lie to them, because there is NO way that I would admit to spending 6 hours reading a book about steamy alien love triangles.

I’ve got a confession.

I’ve got a fiction addiction. And not just any fiction, not classy literary fiction or engrossing mysteries or even epic fantasies. I’ve developed an addiction to the fluffiest of paperback romance. Bodice ripping historical romance with vikings and highlanders. Steampunk epics with surly mechanical dukes. Or, this month, my new favorite, hunky extraterrestrials in love with spunky Earth girls.

When I first saw Gina Koch’s ‘Katherine ‘Kitty’ Katt’ novels I laughed. A lot. And then months later I was stuck home sick with nothing to read but the meager offerings of my sister’s book shelf. Given the option between War and Peace and Touched by an Alien there was no question as to which direction my day was taking.

Cheesy title and bizarre cover art aside, I loved it. LOVED it. Just the right amount of humor, action, romance and general ridiculousness to compliment a head cold and two shots of NyQuil. A take action, think later heroine and a tough but sensitive, wisecracking alien fight Big Fugly aliens for the survival of Earth, using their brains, heavy explosives and an extra loud iPod. Sold.

I won’t give away the plot but I’m already on book 3 of (so far) 4 book series with no intention of sleeping any time soon. And you know what? I’m not going to be guilty about my guilty pleasure anymore. I like books, allllllll kinds of books, and sometimes I just need the sort of mental break that only trashy romance can provide!

Best of 2011: Music

2011 was an awesome year for music. Artists from all genres released amazing works, and while we didn’t get around to listening to all of them, we like to think that these choices are the best of what the Library has to offer. In case you missed some, here are our favorite albums of 2011 (and if you loved something you got at the library this year and don’t see it on the list, tell us what in the comments!)

Florence + the Machine- Ceremonials This sophomore album from the ever magical Flo is chock full of romance, heartbreak and enough overwhelming vocals to please any fan. Try listening to ‘What The Water Gave Me,’ it and the rest of the album just prove, once again, that Florence IS a machine.

The Decemberists- The King is Dead Maybe its Colin Meloy’s exquisite vocabulary that speaks to the librarian in me, or maybe the roots-rock free for all sound, but this album stands apart from previous offerings as my favorite. And since that wasn’t sweet enough as it is, later in the year The Decemberists gave us Long Live the King; short and sweet, this mostly-acoustic love letter to Americana is a follow up to The King is Dead and the cherry on top of The Decemberists amazing year. Check out the awesome cover of Grateful Dead’s ‘Row Jimmy.’

The Civil Wars- Barton Hollow  Say what you will about the growing popularity of duet acts, The Civil Wars’ inspired debut album crushes them all. With astounding, soulful harmonies and a folksy, southern blues sound, this (surprisingly unmarried) duo have taken the music world and my stereo by storm. For the full, goose-bump raising effect try the title track, ‘Barton Hollow.’

The Foo Fighters- Wasting Light Dave Grohl and the boys unleashed their rock might upon the world with Wasting Light, and the Rock Gods approved. No need to fast forward, just start at track one, ‘Bridge Burning,’ and listen until the end.

Adele- 21 With her retro-soulful style, astounding vocals and deeply moving lyrics Adele’s sophomore album is a heartbreaking testament to the creative power of love and loss.  For a full shot of emotions and powerful sound try starting with ‘Rumour Has It.’

Rave on Buddy Holly A tribute CD of epic proportions, this homage to the Father of Rock released on what would have been his 75th birthday features offerings from a diverse and amazing range of talents. From Paul McCartney and Lou Reed to The Black Keys, She and Him, Cee Lo Green and Modest Mouse, the 19 tracks of this album prove that good music is timeless, and that rock ‘n’ roll is here to stay.

Ryan Adams- Ashes & Fire Adams makes his triumphant return to the land of new music with this personal, introspective album. Follow Mr. Adams into each song as he takes you on a ride through life as he sees it. Stay tuned till the final song, entitled ‘I Love You but I Don’t Know What to Say,’ a problem that everyone has run into in their life at some point.

Muppets: The Green Album Featuring artists from all parts of the music world this album proves what I’ve always known; The Muppets are the root of all good in the world. My Morning Jacket, Rachael Yamagata, Amy Lee, The Fray, Matt Nathanson and Weezer are just a few of those who take on the classic songs of our Muppet-fueled youth and breathe new life into them. For a taste try Ok Go’s strange and awesome rendition of ‘Muppet Show Theme Song,‘ or Andrew Bird’s touching version of ‘Bein’ Green.

Fleet Foxes- Helplessness Blues Fleet Foxes’ second album builds on the original sound they created for their debut. They continue to blend a harmony of voices while maintaining the beautiful rhythm that is their signature. They create an aura of sound that the ears really DO appreciate.

The Black Keys- El Camino A late comer to 2011’s best of list (I only managed to get an copy and listen to it last night), The Black Keys 7th album was well worth the wait. Running their own line somewhere between and beyond roots and glam rock, the guys cut loose with good, old fashion rock ’n’ roll that is reminiscent of the very best names in 60’s, 70’s and 80’s classic rock. If you’re a sucker for songs with hand-claps (and, oh, am I ever!) try listening to ‘Gold on the Ceiling.

Gregg Allman- Low Country Blues Allman’s first record release since 2003 is a triumph of American blues sound. Built of heartfelt covers of vintage blues, the warm sound of Allman’s voice is full of down-home heartache just begging to be shared.  Take a listen to the only new song on the album, ‘Just Another Rider,’ a clear sequel to the Allman Brothers’ ‘Midnight Rider’ for a try of this fantastic album.

Drive-by Truckers- Go-go Boots  Drive-by Truckers continue to make great guitar driven, southern rock/country by combining great storytelling with a melody. All the tracks are great but start with ‘Used to be a Cop,’ and ‘Thanksgiving Filter,’ to gain a full appreciation.

Hugh Laurie- Let Them Talk Anyone who has watched House, M.D. over the years is aware that Hugh Laurie has a secret talent when it comes to music, but the BBC darling pulled out all the stops on his debut solo album. Being British hasn’t diminished his love of traditional blues and Let Them Talk is a homage to the music he loves. Listen to ‘Swanee River’ for a taste of Laurie’s piano driven flavor.

Mat Kearney-Young Love One of the rare albums this year which could easily play on repeat for the rest of my life, Young Love is the foot tapping 3rd CD from Kearney. Combining a mountain of singer/songwriter talent with a percussive, crowd pleasing pop sound this CD is the best of ALL worlds. I dare you not to sing and dance your way through ‘Hey Mama.

Laura is your friendly neighborhood Reference Guru and Eric works as a Super Library Assistant. You can visit Laura at the new Union Township Branch and Eric at the Amelia Branch.


We Got the Beat

Born this WayA new year – a new you?  If you are determined to become more active in 2012, add music to your exercise formula. It has been scientifically proven that music distracts you from fatigue and energizes you during a workout.

The tempo of the music can help you maintain a steady pace; in fact, many exercisers look for a specific beats per minute (bpm) when creating their workout song list. If you need ideas for songs to add to your list, check out these suggestions from Fitness magazine’s 100 Best Workout Songs.

Who shows up the most often on these playlists? Lady Gaga’s “Just Dance“(127 bpm) and “Born This Way“  (124 bpm) show up on several lists.  Try Britney Spears’ “If U Seek Amy” (130 bpm) or “I Wanna Go” (129 bpm).  “Break Your Heart” (127 bpm) and “Higher” (128 bpm) by Taio Cruz also appear on many top ten lists.

Check out the music selection at your local branch. This Baby Boomer likes “Boogie Shoes“(120 bpm) by K.C. and the Sunshine Band or “Love Shack” (130 bpm) by the B-52s  to get going!

What’s on your list?

 

Join the “Community”

communityIf you are going through “Community” withdrawal like I am, then find the library and check out first and second seasons of the always hilarious show. “Where is the library?” you say. Well these lyrics might explain where the library is located.

Donde esta la biblioteca. Me llamo T-Bone La Arana discoteca. Discoteca, muneca, La biblioteca Esta en bigtes grande, el perro, manteca. Manteca bigotes, gigante, pequeno, la cabeza es nieve, cervaza es bueno. Buenos dias, me gusta paps frias, los bigotes de la cabra Es Cameron Diaz

Translated to English…Where is the Library? My name is T-Bone the disco spider. disco, doll, the library is in the big mustache, dog, lard, Lard mustache, huge, little head is snow, beer is good, Good day. I like cold potatoes the goats mustache is Cameron Diaz.

Okay that might not help at all, but the Clermont County Public Library can, just visit one of our ten branches and get your “Community” fix.