Friday, December 28, 2012

Abraham Lincoln


Why is Lincoln so popular today?  Of all the books on the Library’s shelves, the one person with the most titles has got to be Abraham Lincoln.  Everyone knows the story of how Lincoln grew up in a log cabin and went on to become perhaps the greatest president. The appeal is universal. Thus anything new, written or recorded about him is guaranteed to be popular.

Take Bill O’Reilly’s book, Killing Lincoln: the shocking assassination that changed America forever. This book came out over a year ago. It’s still on the bestseller’s list and still has Library holds on it.  While it may not be the best book on Lincoln, people still want to read the story.  Steven Spielberg’s new movie, Lincoln, which came out last month, has been attracting large audiences too. I can say I too saw that one. Even President Obama, a Lincoln fan himself, got in the act by hosting a pre-screening of Spielberg’s movie at the White House. Again, the appeal factor is the man himself and his steadfast ideas.

Abraham Lincoln was born February 12, 1809 in one room log cabin in Kentucky.  According to Wikipedia, Lincoln’s father Thomas enjoyed considerable status in Kentucky until he lost all of his land, two 600 acre farms in Kentucky, because of faulty property titles.  The family then moved north across the Ohio River to Perry County which is now Spencer County, Indiana.  Lincoln’s mother Nancy died of milk sickness when he was just nine.  Sarah, Lincoln’s sister, took over the care of him.  Thomas Lincoln remarried a widow, Sarah Bush Johnston, who had three children.  Lincoln became very close to his stepmother.  Life in the frontier was difficult.  Lincoln had little education.  He was mostly self educated and was quite an avid reader.

Fearing a milk sickness outbreak in 1830, the family again moved west where they settled on public land in Macon County, Illinois. Lincoln was at the age when he longed for a better life for himself so he went off to New Salem, IL.  He was hired by a businessman to take goods on a flatboat down to New Orleans.  Here he experienced slavery first hand.  In 1832 he and a partner bought a general store in New Salem.  After a struggle he sold his share of the business.  He began his first political campaign for a seat in the Illinois General Assembly.  He lost that election probably because of his lack of education, powerful friends and money.  In 1834 he won election to the state legislature. He moved to Springfield, IL and went on to study law and became a lawyer.  Lincoln served four successive terms in the Illinois House of Representatives.  In 1846 Lincoln was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives for one two-year term and then continued practicing law in Springfield.

In the 1850’s slavery was still legal in the southern states and Lincoln returned to politics opposing the pro-slavery Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854.  Lincoln ran as a Whig for the U.S. Senate seat from Illinois. After leading in the opening rounds his support dwindled. In 1858 he battled Stephen Douglas for a seat in the U.S. Senate, but it turned out be a bitter loss for Lincoln. In 1860 Lincoln was nominated and elected the 16th President of the United States and re-elected in 1864.  Lincoln was married to Mary Todd Lincoln and had four sons. Lincoln died on April 15, 1865.

Look for these new and exciting titles about Lincoln
Lincoln on war edited by Harold Holzer
Abraham Lincoln and Horace Greeley by Gregory A. Borchard
The dogs of war, 1861 by Emory M. Thomas
Presidental avenger:  Boston Corbett by Robert K. Lieding, Sr.

In novels
The Lincoln conspiracy: a novel by Timothy L. O’Brien

DVDs

Children’s books
Abraham Lincoln by Marion Dane Bauer
Abraham Lincoln by Mary Pope Osborne

Select more titles about Lincoln @your Library.

Picture courtesy of Google images

Monday, December 17, 2012

The Ins and Outs of Holiday Entertaining



The holiday season is here which means you might be entertaining house guests from out of town or throwing a party for friends, family or coworkers.  If you are looking for some ideas on themes, foods or simple tips on making your party successful, look no further than the Frank L. Weyenberg Library.  We carry plenty of entertaining books, cookbooks and so on to make your Holiday Season successful and hopefully stress free.

Entertaining can be both fun and sometimes stressful.  However, with the right direction, it is possible to minimize the stress and enjoy just enjoy the time with friends and family.  Check out these books for tips and tricks:

It seems like this time of year everyone is looking for that perfect recipe to make the holidays great.  Whether it is just a desert or a full course meal, playing with new recipes can be fun and rewarding.  Check out these Cook Books to try something new at your Holiday gathering:

Sometimes entertaining includes providing activities for your guests.  If you are looking to entertain your guests over a weekend you might be interested in borrowing these holiday movies taken from one of our earlier blog posts:
A Charlie Brown Christmas
A Christmas Story
Frosty the Snowman
Home Alone
How the Grinch Stole Christmas
It’s a Wonderful Life
Miracle on 34th Street
The Muppet Christmas Carol
National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation
The Polar Express
Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer
A White Christmas

**Image courtesy of Google Images.

Monday, December 10, 2012

Time Travel

When I moved to Wisconsin, I was told there was a time machine at the bank.  How cool—like an H.G. Wells novel, or perhaps Back to the Future?  Turns out it was a TYME machine, or for the non-natives, just an ATM.  However, time travel is possible in Wisconsin, but at the library, not the bank.


For example, you can travel to 1970s Cambodia with Vaddey Ratner in her book In the shadow of the banyan .  In this poignant novel, a young child relates the story of her family’s tragic experiences during the civil war in Cambodia.  Each of the members of the child’s extended family is expertly characterized, so that the reader comes to know and love them, just as the young protagonist clearly does.  The story parallels the author’s own life.

You can go to the 2008 Olympics with Shawn Johnson in her book Winning Balance:  what I’ve learned so far about love, faith, and living your dreams

You can visit pre-war and WWII France in Helen Gremillon’s The confidant.  This tale is full of twists and turns as the reader gradually discovers the truth of what transpired between the main characters.   When you’re done reading it, you’ll want to start reading it all over again to look for clues!

You can travel the globe in one of Ken Follett’s books.  In Fall of Giants, the reader is propelled from Russia to England, Germany and the United States, following the lives and fortunes of several inter-related families during WWI.  The family sagas are continued in the second book of the series, Winter of the World

Perhaps the greatest journey of all, travel To heaven and back:  a doctor’s extraordinary account of her death, heaven, angels and life again:  a true story by Mary C. Neal.  Can’t think of a better example of ‘travel through time and space’ than that!

Want to give gift of time travel to your children?

They could journey out west to Minnesota with young Almanzo Wilder and his family  (first introduced in the Laura Ingalls Wilder “Little House” books) in a new novel by Heather Williams called Farmer Boy Goes West.

They could travel to 2008 Baghdad and meet Nouri and his cousin Talib in The white zone by Carolyn Marsden. Snow falls in that city for the first time in anyone’s living memory.  Will this new experience help the Sunnis and the Shiites forget that they hate each other?

Boys might want to travel down the St. Lawrence River in 1943 with 16-year-old Scott and his friend Adam in a riveting tale by Curtis Parkinson called Man Overboard! Or they might wish to take a train from Chicago to South Carolina, and then across the country to Oregon with 13-year-old Levi Battle as he searches for his father, a black paratrooper during WWII in Shelley Pearsall’s unforgettable tale  Jump into the sky.
Girls may wish to visit the Appalachian Mountains of West Virginia in 1953 to meet Lydia Hawkins as she moves to a coal mine with her aunt and uncle in the novel Child of the mountains by Marilyn Sue Shank.

So be sure to visit the library, and enjoy your free time travel!

Photo courtesy of Google images

Monday, December 3, 2012

Tis the season...




The gathering of family and friends for Thanksgiving is behind us, but there are many more occasions for us to celebrate in December.  In just a few days there will by the celebration of Hanukkah.  During the Festival of Lights, many will come together to remember, to play games, and to celebrate these eight days with the traditional potato latkes as well as such delicacies as Tarragon Pea Soup, Sweet Potato and Pear Soup, Honey Turnips, Sauerbraten A La Nathan, Roast Goose with Chestnut and Apple Stuffing, Brisket with Burgandy-Orange Sauce, Sufganiot, and David Star Cookies.  All these recipes and many more are in the following books: The Jewish Holiday Kitchen, Divine Kosher Cuisine, Jewish Holiday Cooking, The Essential Book of Jewish Festival Cooking, The World of Jewish Entertaining, and A Hanukkah Holiday Cookbook and in the DVD, Jacques Pepin’s Chanukah.

     In mentioning cookies, our next holiday comes to mind.  What would Christmas be without cookies?  In Christmas Cookies: A Holiday Cookbook, Cookie Cookbook: an inspiration for the season, and Very Merry Cookies, there are well over 200 recipes for you to try.  Many of our other books include cookie recipes as well as everything else you need to make this holiday bright: ideas to help with decorating inside and out, gift making and wrapping, special cooking for the holiday and plans for special gatherings.  The following books should help inspire you for the season: Sweet Christmas, The Best of Christmas at Home Cookbook, Nigella Christmas: Food, Family, Friends, Festivities, Victoria, 500 Christmas Ideas, Christmas With Paula Deen, I’m Dreaming of a Chocolate Christmas, and Christmas From the Heart.

     Because this is such a busy time of the year any shortcuts are appreciated.  If you’d like to have a variety of cookies, but don’t have the time to bake 30 varieties, how about a cookie exchange?  You could start a new Christmas tradition by getting together with family and friends.  Each person that comes would bring an allotted amount of cookies, the exchange is made, and after a nice get together, everyone goes home with a great assortment of cookies.  All the ins and outs of a perfect cookie exchange as well as more cookie recipes are shown in the following books: Very Merry Cookie Party: how to plan and host a Christmas cookie exchange, The Great Christmas Cookie Swap Cookbook: 60 large batch recipes to bake and store, and The Christmas Cookie Cookbook: all the rules and delicious recipes to start your own holiday cookie club.

     There may be some of you who would love to make the traditional cookies, but can’t because of wheat allergies.  No problem.   In Gluten-free Baking for the Holidays and Gluten-free Christmas Cookies are all the gluten-free basics to help you create well over 100 varieties of cookies to help make your season merry.

     So however you celebrate the season, we at the Weyenberg Library wish you and yours a very special holiday season.

Picture courtesy of Easicat




















      
     

Monday, November 26, 2012

The light between oceans



What would you do?  How would you react if you were in Tom and Izzy’s shoes? These are the questions everyone should ask themselves as you read M. L. Stedman’s new debut novel, The light between oceans.

It’s a novel set on a remote Australian island, where a childless couple live quietly running a lighthouse, until a boat carrying a baby washes ashore.

I found this book to be a fascinating story from page one.  It’s one you won’t want to put down.  It’s tragic as well as heart wrenching. You will become emotionally involved with the characters as they make their decision and try to live with the consequences.  If you like a book with a good moral dilemma this one’s for you.

If you are in a book club I highly recommend this book for your group.  Certainly there will be lots of discussion to follow.  Give it a try. You won’t be disappointed.

While you are waiting for Stedman’s book you may want to check out this similar title.

The snow child by Eowyn Ivey
A childless couple working a farm in the brutal landscape of 1920 Alaska discover a little girl living in the wilderness, with a red fox as a companion, and begin to love the strange, almost-supernatural child as their own.

If you enjoy stories that deal with moral issues you may want to look for these titles.

Atonement by Ian McEwan
Midwives by Chris Bohjalian
March by Geraldine Brooks
The cider house rules by John Irving
Mudbound by Hilary Jordan
The god of small things by Arundhati Roy
The lifeboat by Charlotte Rogan
The great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

Additionally you may want to check out Jodi Picoult’s books as her books almost always deal with societal or moral issues. 


If you would like further information about The light between oceans check out BookBrowse.com for reviews, excerpt, author biography and a reading group guide.

image courtesy of Google images

Monday, November 19, 2012

Holiday Classic Books & Movies

For me, the holidays are always a time of nostalgia.  It reminds me of the great classics to read and explore anew.  And with the cold weather, it is even more comforting to curl up with a tried and true book, a warm blanket over my feet, and a cup of hot chocolate in hand.  Here is a list of list of classic books to read and enjoy again.

Books
Little Women by Louisa May Alcott
Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen
Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte
A Little Princess by Frances Hodgson Burnett
The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett
Great Expectations by Charles Dickens
A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens
The Call of the Wild by Jack London
Hatchet by Gary Paulsen
Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson

The holidays are a time to gather with family and friends as well.  In my family, we watched Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer every year when it was aired on TV and later on would watch poor Ralphie in A Christmas Story.  My holiday season is not complete unless I have watched Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer or A Christmas Story.  Here is a list of other classic holiday movies for you and your family to enjoy!

Movies

Happy Holidays!



****Image taken from Google Images.

Monday, November 12, 2012

Movember



Most everyone is aware of Breast Cancer awareness month in October, but are you aware of a similar initiative in November, dubbed Movember, that raises awareness for men’s health issues?  The movement was started in Australia and has quickly spread around the globe to the U.S.  According to their website, “During November each year, Movember is responsible for the sprouting of moustaches on thousands of men’s faces, in the US and around the world. With their Mo's, these men raise vital awareness and funds for men's health issues, specifically prostate and testicular cancer initiatives.”  While you may not be able to participate in growing a mustache for this year’s Movember, you can still donate to the cause at the website linked above.

Another great way to raise awareness about men’s health and other issues is by participating in International Men’s Day on November 19th.  The purpose of this day is to promote positive male role models, celebrate men’s positive contributions to society, focus on men’s health, highlight discrimination against males, improve gender relations and equality, and create a safer and better world.  The theme this year is “Helping men and boys live longer, happier and healthier lives”.

Yet another way to get into the spirit of the month is to check out some books we have on Men’s health here at the library.  

Check out these titles:

However you choose to recognize men’s health awareness this month be sure to be supportive of all the men in your life!




*Picture courtesy of Google Images

Monday, November 5, 2012

Checking out library e-books just got easier!



If you have an e-reader or a tablet, you may have downloaded library books from Wisconsin’s Digital Library using Overdrive.  The good news is that Barnes and Noble recently began offering the Overdrive app for free to Nook Color, Nook Tablet and Nook HD users.  Amazon followed suit, offering the app on Kindle Fire and Kindle Fire HD.  This means that users can now download library books directly onto their e-readers without first going to their computers.  Users simply go to the app store on their device, “purchase” the Overdrive app for free, choose “Get Books” from the menu, and follow the prompts.  For more detailed instructions for the Nook, click here.  For Kindle, click here (NOTE:  when using the Overdrive app you will want to choose EPUB  books rather than Kindle format books) .
Wisconsin’s Digital Library contains thousands of titles, including fiction and nonfiction, old classics as well as new releases, in both audio and print versions.

With the holidays coming up, you may want to check out a few e-cookbooks, such as Baking Artisan Bread:  10 expert formulas for baking better bread at home by Ciril Hitz, Vegan Holiday Kitchen:  more than 200 delicious, festive recipes for special occasions by Nava Atlas, or the classic Mastering the Art of French Cooking by Julia Child.

Want to curl up with a fiction title from the NYT Bestsellers list?  Try The Time Keeper by Mitch Albom, in which Father Time tries to teach earthlings the true meaning of time, or Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn, about a beautiful woman who disappears on the morning of her fifth wedding anniversary, or the last in the Song of Ice and Fire series by George R. R. Martin, A Dance with Dragons.

Several non-fiction titles from the NYT Bestsellers list are also available for e-readers including Unbroken, the amazing story by Laura Hillenbrand of a WWII airman who survives a plane crash, weeks adrift in a lifeboat, and capture by the Japanese.   Another tale of endurance is Cheryl Strayed’s Wild:  from lost to found on the Pacific Crest Trail.  On a lighter note, Gretchen Craft Rubin has written a second book with practical suggestions about how to be happy called Happier at Home:  kiss more, jump more, abandon a project, read Samuel Johnson and my other experiments in the practice of  everyday life.

Are you finding that the titles you want are all checked out? (even digital titles can only be checked out to one person at a time) Try browsing through the section called “Currently Available ebooks”.  Here are some I found at the time of this writing:  a wonderful  book  by Condoleeza Rice called Extraordinary, Ordinary People: a memoir of family, an adventure tale by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child called Thunderhead and the creepily suspenseful Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children, by Ransom Riggs.

Happy e-reading!

photo courtesy of Google images





Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Happy Diamond Anniversary

Happy Diamond Anniversary
     Sixty years ago on 6 February 1952, Queen Elizabeth was crowned the fortieth monarch since William the Conqueror.  She is the second longest reigning monarch in English history;  only Queen Victoria has reigned longer and that is only by three years.  When you have ruled for 60 years, you don’t just celebrate on that one day, but for a whole year.  While the majority of the celebrations were in June, many other events will take place throughout the year.  Check the Queen’s official website for loads of information.  During her reign she launched 21 ships, sat for 129 portraits, sent approximately 45,000 Christmas cards, and received some unusual gifts, such as two tortoises, a 70 year-old bull elephant, and two black beavers. 

There is a more serious side to her duties.  There have been 12 Prime Ministers that have served under her and she has given her Royal Assent to more than 3,500 Acts of Parliament.  She is a patron to over 600 charities and organizations, over 400 of which she has held since she became Queen.  To know more about Her Royal Majesty, you might like to read one of the following,  Elizabeth the Queen: The Life of a Modern Monarch, Her Majesty: Queen Elizabeth II and her Court, The Real Elizabeth, and Jubilee: Queen Elizabeth II: 60 Years on the Throne or watch the following DVDs: The Diamond Queen and Queen and Country.
     While Queen Elizabeth is one of England’s longest reigning monarchs, Lady Jane Dudley’s reign had to have been one of the shortest.  She was fifth in the royal line of succession after King Henry VIII.  In Coronation of Glory: The Story of Lady Jane Grey, everything was going great in Lady Jane’s life until King Henry’s heir, her cousin, died.  It was then that all the maneuvering began to get Lady Jane on the throne before Princess Mary or Princess Elizabeth.  Lady Jane won, only to lose the crown 9 days later and her life shortly after.  Quite often the path to the throne was not an easy one as shown in the following books: Sovereign Ladies, Eleanor of Aquitaine, Elizabeth and Mary, The Women of the Cousins War, Magnificent Obsession, and She Wolves: the Women Who Ruled England Before Elizabeth. The Mequon-Thiensville Community Book Club will meet December 18th at 1:30pm to discuss Sister Queens: the Noble, Tragic Lives of Katherine of Aragon and Juana, Queen of Castile by Julia Fox.
     If you would like these historical events to come to life, you might want to try our books in historical fiction.  The first two books on our list have received the Man Booker Award.  This prize is the world’s most important literary award and is given to the “best novel in the opinion of the judges.  The whole aim of this award is to increase the reading of quality fiction and to attract the intelligent general audience.”  Any of these books would be a great read:  Bring up the Bodies, Wolf Hall, Kingmaker’s Daughter Elizabeth I: a novel, Queen Defiant: a novel of Eleanor of Aquitaine, The Confession of Katherine Howard, The Favored Queen, The Red Queen, The White Queen, The Queen’s Lover,  The Lady Elizabeth, The Boleyn Inheritance, Innocent Traitor: a novel of Lady Jane Grey, The Constant Princess, Murder Most Royal, The Queen of Subtleties, A Royal Ambition, The Fifth Queen, and The Secret Diary of Anne Boleyn.
     Happy anniversary to Her Royal Majesty, may her reign be a long and happy one.  Good reading to all who enjoy a look back in history.
    
Picture courtesy of Easicat

Monday, October 22, 2012

Fall into Reading






Now that cool days are coming back and the autumn leaves are spiraling about, it’s time to finish up those chores outside and think about spending the days indoor reading.  This means the beach tales of summer now shift to the more serious books of fall and then gradually to long winter reads.  What makes one book more seasonal than another depends on the individual reader’s taste.

If you like the sweet taste of fresh apples in the fall you may just be ready to take a bite out of these apple titles.  Remember, we have plenty of titles to taste, so eat away.

An apple for the creature edited by Charlaine Harris and Toni L.P. Kelner
This is a collection of thirteen new stories that take academic anxiety to whole new realms.

Beautifully illustrated, this book includes full historical, geographical gardening and botanical notes on each variety of apple.

Belle Lee, a food loving southern belle, relocates to New York City and finds herself employed by a morally corrupt news operation, a job she eventually quits to pursue interests in cooking and writing.

There should be plenty of pumpkins around this year.  All those warm days this summer were actually good for the pumpkin crop, according to farmers. There’s plenty of the canned stuff readily available and lots of pumpkins to decorate.

The perfect pumpkin by Gail Damerow
Offers growing and harvesting techniques, crafts and carving projects, recipes, and tips on winter storage.

Remember those hobbies you put aside when the weather was too nice to resist? Well, it’s time to bring out the knitting, crocheting and the crafts you plan on giving for gifts.  If you need additional ideas examine these books:

Presents directions for quick knitting projects that are designed to be completed in one week or less, organized by seasons of the year.

Glenna Anderson Muse designed these knit hats for babies in the hospital where she works as a respiratory therapist. The 19 designs use medium weight yarn and are based on one of four basic hat styles.  Seasonal looks include all holidays.

Step-by-step instructions to help crafters adorn every part of their home and yard with festive creations.

Life’s a puzzle in more ways than one.  At our house we like to spread out a jigsaw puzzle on the unused dining room table, build to completion and then begin another.  Mystery books can offer just the same thrill as the clues help to solve the puzzle.  Try a mystery or two this season.

Apple turnover murder by Joanne Fluke
When baker Hannah Swensen agrees to be a magician’s assistant at a massive fund-raising event, she gets more than she bargained for when the show’s host--an ex-lover of both Hannah and her younger sister--is found dead.

Harvest of murder by Ann Ripley
When Dr. Peter Whiting, a strange old biologist who knows a formula for doubling life expectancy, is brutally murdered, Louise Eldridge--television gardening show host, mother and wife--attempts to uproot the killer and uncover a conspiracy.

His tranquility as the established vicar of a New Age village shattered by the murder of an unpopular woman, former MI5 agent Max Tudor struggles with past demons while trying to identify a killer in his peaceful community.

Book clubs traditionally begin anew in the fall.  Individuals come together to share, discuss and debate. Titles selected are wide and varied.  Add a little spice this time around--or maybe just a cup of tea to keep you warm and reading. 

The practices of Dr. Wilbur Larch--obstetrician, orphanage director, ether addict, and abortionist--are hindered, abetted, and continued, in turn, by his favorite orphan, Homer Wells.

A cup of tea by Amy Ephron
When a privileged New York socialite, Rosemary Fell, and a penniless young woman, Eleanor Smith, fall in love with the same man, they question whether the triangle of passions will destroy them or bring them closer.

Happy reading!

Picture courtesy of EasiCat