Sunday, March 25, 2012

Nonfiction

Oh, frabjous day! Aloo, alay! We’re all together again, small and large ones (referring to children and adults—you can’t be too careful these days of being politically correct, if overly explanatory) and our minds and brains and emotions are ready to experience the world of books and ideas and relax and experience and not tax the “old gray matter” overly. This is being written just before the big Basketball tourney explodes on the telly and everyone roots for their team or, if a state has two teams in or even three, to root for their multiple teams. In my case, my family is divided between Wichita State and K.U. My school, Washburn University of Topeka is not big enough to be in the 64 teams contest, so I’ve switched to K.U. to cheer onto victory—or, hopefully, get to the Elite 8. 

Speaking of the “8”, what are your Elite 8 for Spring/Summer?  If you’re a kid, it’s the end of school and getting up and going to bed at early hours—I know that, so let’s move on to adults. There’s swimming, sunning, bar-b-qing , working in the garden, walking in the evenings, iced tea, sitting in the sun, reading, going to the movies, dressing lighter, enjoying a golf game, and getting sun time (while reading!) Why is it when Summer is gone and it’s suddenly the first of Oct. that we ask ourselves (and others), “What happened to Summer?  Where did it go?”  Maybe there should be a law passed that we have the ideal Summer weather all year long?  Good luck with that!  That’s just fiction, and so is this column—books that are Fiction—stories, emotions, sad endings, happy ones, hard feelings carried over and, sometimes, everything comes out all right—but I wouldn’t bank on it. 

Let’s look and see what’s in the box of books and what’s coming into libraries and bookstores.  When you think of Ireland, the usual adjectives come into play—potatoes, music, beautiful green hills, clog dancing and, inevitably, the infamous IRA, right?  In "The Last Storyteller: A Story of Ireland"  by Frank Delaney, who is the author of several excellent books on Ireland, and this book deals with love and faith and treachery “and the healing power of redemption.”

Ben MacCarthy’s mentor told him “All mythologies exist to teach us how to run our days, in a kind fashion.  But there’s there’s no story, no matter how ancient, as important as one’s own—so we have to tell ourselves our own story, but in a good way.” In Ireland, in the middle 1950’s, it was the I.R.A., an “upstart insurrection along the northern border”, he falls in with an IRA sympathizer and becomes pressured into running guns—“but all he can think about is finding his former wife and love, actress Venetia Kelly.” She has returned to Ireland with her new husband, Gentleman Jack, popular stage performer. Determined not to lose Venetia again, Ben calls upon his courage and love so as to win her back. He has hopes for a bright future, but some obstacles remain. 

Delaney is an excellent author, works in many ways to show and work the reader into the narrative of the main storyteller—that ain’t easy, folks.  Ben takes the training necessary to become a Master Storyteller and the story ends as it should. Truly, a wonderful and subtle book about human nature, war, love, and revenge—told by a very good storyteller, like many Irish have the faculty to be.  You, my dears, have the opportunity to read an excellent Irish story—to be enjoyed whether you’re “Shanty Irish “ or “Lace Curtain Irish” or from any other country, just to be able to enter into someone else’s life and history.

An Available Man”, by Hilma Wolitzer, talks about the fall out of “suddenly becoming single” and then the emotions of falling in love again, in the person of Edward Schuyler.  As everyone has observed, at one time of another, in the world today there are a lot, almost a glut, of attractive, single women available but “an available, healthy, handsome man is a rare and desirable creature” and Edward Schuyler, a bookish 62-year-old finds himself in that position—reluctantly. 

“The problem is that Edward doesn’t feel available. He’s still mourning his beloved wife, Bee, and prefers solitude and the familiar routine of work, gardening, and bird-watching.”  Then, the dear stepchildren step in (this is actually the scenario they think will work) and—are you ready?—place an ad in “The New York Review of Books”and the floodgates open.  Gradually, he begins dating and, as you can imagine, the encounters are startling, comical and sad, “and just when Edward thinks he has this new game figured out, a chance meeting proves that love always arrives when it’s least expected.” See, there’s a difference, it’s pointed out, about options open to men and women “of a certain age” and “the thrilling capacity of love to bloom anew” and this is a delightful look at this miracle.

Edward didn’t expect that the woman in his life would do everything he liked, such as birding and sitting for hours and waiting, because Bee hadn’t, and he had not liked going to flea markets and antique stores, “it was the coming together after their separate outings that had been so pleasurable.” He contacts a former girlfriend, again, and finds that this woman is funny, honest, easy to be with, and you have the definite feeling that this pairing, after pain and sorrow for both, will be for the rest of Edward’s life. A really warm read and easy to “get into.” Go find it and experience true feelings in a genuine man. 

Here’s a great read also—“Unwanted”, by Kristina Ohlsson, --and my book bible, Publishers Weekly, gave it a starred review (hard to come by) and the word, “Superior.” Let us peruse this treasure.  In a way, it’s a strange, almost morbid phenom that what often gets our attention to read or listen to is something “odd”, “different”, or “not quite right, somehow” and we—all of us—become caught up in an event that is our of the ordinary in our lives---but maybe not in someone else's.  A little girl is abducted from a very crowded train, “and despite hundreds of potential witnesses, no one noticed when the little girl was taken.”  Her mother was apparently left behind at the station.  The train crew was alerted, of course, but when the train pulled into its station, it was obvious that the child was missing.  At first, it seemed to be a possible custody fight—until the child is found dead “in the far North of Sweden with the word “unwanted’ scribbled on her forehead”—and the hunt is on for an undeniably ruthless killer with no conscience. 

This is the debut book in Ohlsson’s series and her background is impressive and, today, lives in Stockholm, and her story features Fredrika Bergman, who is tough, critical, “feels she has absolutely nothing to go on but her gut instinct and she no longer doubted that the perpetrator was someone with whom Sara, the mother, had some kind of relationship, witting or unwitting.” A fellow detective, Alex Recht “had been a policeman for more than a quarter of a century and, therefore, felt he had every justification for claiming to have wide experience of police work and to have developed a finely honed sense of intuition.”  He is dependable and tries very hard to justify his existence and his record on the final analysis of the vagaries of working on cases. The case is tough and involves the child’s separated mother and father, the detective’s opinions and concerns, the mood of the little girl’s mother and father, Fredrika’s suspicions and fears, and the final reckoning to find the killer.  Good detective/suspense story for all of us who like a good “whodunit”, and it’s one that I’ll read for my love of “dead body books”, as my friend, Ida Eatmon, calls them!  Hopefully, in this selection of some of the books we have, you will find one you like.

One last one to bring to your attention that is, oddly, very reminiscent of the story of the murder of Emmett Till in Money, Miss. and the title is “Gathering of Waters”, by Bernice McFadden, who’s an award-winning author.  The story is not straightforward and takes forays into the past but, oddly enough, you get caught up in it and keep reading—and it’s a slim novel. Different from most but you read it through. See what you think and tell the library staff and they’ll let me know. 

I hope you get more rain, and a lot of it this Spring, and keep smiling and enjoying the small pleasures in Life that cross your path and, absolutely, keep walking for your health.  Don’t forget that “Dancing with the Stars”, on ABC, begins this coming week—really fun, in my respectful opinion. See you next time, Bye!

Sunday, March 18, 2012

National Nutrition Month

Now that everyone’s overcome the transition to daylight savings time, note that spring begins in just two days. Even though our winter was a rather mild one, for the most part, it will be nice to have a more steady diet of warm weather.

Looking back for just a moment, our Children’s Healthy Fun Fair, which took place on March 3, was a major success with just shy of 900 people attending. Everyone seemed to have a good time. Many of the exhibitors reported running out of supplies before the event concluded, or having to dash back to their office for more. If you missed the event, mark March 2, 2013, on your calendar for the Tenth Annual Children’s Healthy Fun Fair.

The Children’s Healthy Fun Fair is passed, but it is still National Nutrition Month. Let’s take a look at information the American Heart Association released in March of 2011, “Today, about one in three American kids and teens is overweight or obese, nearly triple the rate in 1963. With good reason, childhood obesity is now the No. 1 health concern among parents in the United States, topping drug abuse and smoking.

“Among children today, obesity is causing a broad range of health problems that previously weren’t seen until adulthood. These include high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes and elevated blood cholesterol levels. There are also psychological effects: Obese children are more prone to low self-esteem, negative body image and depression.

“Excess weight at young ages has been linked to higher and earlier death rates in adulthood. Perhaps one of the most sobering statements regarding the severity of the childhood obesity epidemic came from former Surgeon General Richard Carmona, who characterized the threat as follows:“Because of the increasing rates of obesity, unhealthy eating habits and physical inactivity, we may see the first generation that will be less healthy and have a shorter life expectancy than their parents."

The children’s library has a number of good books on the subject of nutrition. Among them are: Good Enough to Eat – A Kid’s Guide to Food and Nutrition by Lizzy Rockwell, Eat the Right Stuff: Food Facts by Catherine Reef, Staying Healthy, Eating Right by Alice McGinty, and Too Fat? Too Thin: Healthy Eating Handbook by Melissa Sayer.

Parents in search of information will find a number of resources in the adult collection, among them Raising Low-Fat Kids in a High-Fat World by Judith Shaw. Dr. Dean Ornish’s endorsement on the cover of the book reads, “A major book for every parent, an invaluable companion. Judith Shaw quickly and simply leads the way through the maze of lower fat confusion. I highly recommend this book.”

K-State Research & Extension, Seward County spends time in the classrooms and at some of the after school programs teaching nutrition to children. In addition, Snack Attack, which is a nutrition education program provided through this library, takes place monthly at the Rec Center. So if your children come home talking about something they learned about nutrition, take a moment to listen and answer any questions on points that need clarification or expanding on. Remember, their future health depends on it!

Summer reading is the next big project in the children’s library. A couple of workshop opportunities are available for library staff to get some fresh ideas to bring back for this event. The dates will be May 29 through June 29, with sign up May 21-26. It’s always fun to visit the schools with a presentation about the program. Students are then given an information slip about the program. Be watching for that in your student’s backpack in early May.

Two more storytime dates remain for the little ones. Those dates are April 5 and April 19. New children are welcome any time during the session. In addition, our summer reading program includes a Wee Ones group for birth to age 3 and a Preschool group for 3’s and 4’s and those entering kindergarten in the fall. More information will be available soon in the library and on our website. Stop in real soon—new materials are arriving daily, so you’re bound to find something you like. See you at Memorial Library!

Monday, March 12, 2012

Spring in the library!


Spring is in the air. People are eager to get out and move around.  Have you started your spring cleaning yet?  According to a recent article in a national newspaper, due to rising temperatures and spring-like days, spring cleaning now frequently starts in early March.   The library catalog has  great books on spring cleaning, decluttering, and environmentally friendly solutions to your cleaning needs (all found in the 600s!). Remember to spring ahead this weekend!

It’s also a great time to get outdoors!  The Library Lads and Lasses are participating in Kansas Walk this year! There’s a rumor that they will win.  Our gamut includes everything: walking, jogging, running, zumba, and pilates. Two new acquisitions in the exercise department include “101 muscle-shaping workouts & strategies for women” edited by Joe Wuebben and “The Blood Sugar Solution: The Ultrahealthy Program for Losing Weight, Preventing Disease, and Feeling Great Now!” by Mark Hyman.

Events at the library over the next few weeks include a book signing by local author Zach Carpenter. He will be at the library for a book signing on Monday, March 26 at 6 p.m. of his novel “Soul Hunters”.  He started writing the book at the age of 16 and received his official publication date while enrolled at SCCC/ATS.  He is currently busy at work on “Soul Hunters II”.

The book groups are active! We had a good ol’ chocolate fun last month during the For the Love of Chocolate discussion.  March’s Library and Lunch will be held on Tuesday, March 20 for Paul Theroux’s “Murder in Mount Holly”.  Paul Theroux is a popular author known for his travel books and fiction. This book is different from his other works as an off-beat story set in the 1960s. 

The Book and Movie Series pick for the month of March is Vile Bodies by Evelyn Waugh. Come join the discussion on Thursday, March 22 at 6 p.m.  The book is about a group of young people from London’s bright young generation in the 1930s.

The Teen Advisory Committee meets at the library every two weeks.  The group is for teenagers ages twelve to eighteen, a chance for them to meet and hang out at the library.  The next meeting will be on Thursday, March 22 at 5 p.m. for a Hunger Games themed gathering just in time for the film release of Suzanne Collins’ first book in the trilogy.  In case you’re really curious, my Hunger Games name is Limet J. Hoppetunia. Those attending will get a chance to enter to win a Hunger Games poster and two tickets to the show!

There will be a Chess Workshop for Tweens on Tuesday, March 27 at 4:30 p.m.  The class will be taught by Emile Darga. All skill levels are welcome.  The players will cover the basics of how the game works, how to play, they will study game chess openings, and end game tactics.  Then, there will be a face-off amongst players. A duel at the library!

For the latest library programming take a peek at the library website or grab a newsletter from the circulation desk. Stay tuned and connected through our social media pages. The library is now on GoodReads! Make sure to join the library group to see what we’re discussing each month and engage in the art of books. If you have any questions or suggestions about books or programs don't hesitate to ask. Hope to see you at the library this spring break!

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Graphic Novels


Are you waiting for the summer blockbusters? Waiting for your favorite superheroes to come to the silver screen? Waiting for Batman or Amazing Spider-man or the star-studded Mighty Avengers? Well, if you can’t wait and need your fill of superhero action, come down to the Liberal Memorial Library and get your fix through our graphic novels.

The Library has plenty of graphic novels to whet your appetite – from the X-Men to the Hulk to Captain America. And of course, we’ve got graphic novels featuring tales of your favorite Dark Knight and friendly neighborhood webslinger.

But if you’re looking for an epic series – check out DC’s Blackest Night and Brightest Day. It takes the Green Lantern Universe to another level.

In Blackest Night, you get the ultimate battle of good versus evil. It’s the battle of the Black Lanterns, who are killing heroes and then raising from the dead, against not only the Green Lantern Corps – but other ring-bearing beings powered by the rest of the color and emotional spectrum.

You’ll learn about more about the regulars from the Green Lantern universe -- Hal Jordan (Green Lantern), Sinestro (Yellow Lantern) and  Carol Ferris (Star Sapphire)  -- as well as new additions -- Atrocious (Red Lantern), Larfleeze (Orange Lantern), Saint Walker (Blue Lantern), and Indigo-1 (Indigo Tribe). You’ll also learn about powers each colored ring along with its emotional property  – fear (yellow), rage (red), love (sapphire or violet), hope (blue), avarice (orange), compassion (indigo) and will (green).

Will these powerful beings be able to put aside their differences long enough to defeat this great evil? Will their combined even be enough to stop the march of the Black Lanterns and their ability to make the dead rise? What about the mysterious White Lantern? What part does it play in Blackest Night?

And after you’ve finished reading Blackest Night, you’re ready for the next chapter so jump right into the series Brightest Day. This three-volume series takes a step back from the regular Green Lantern Universe and deals with the unsung heroes, who were killed by the Black Lantern and then brought back to life by the White Lantern.

Deadman leads a group of resurrected heroes and is charged by the White Lantern to find Earth’s savior. Hawkman, Hawkgirl, Dove and Hawk, Firestorm, Aquaman and Martian Manhunter try to put their lives back together again while fulfilling certain quests by the White Lantern in an effort to stop the Black Lantern’s Dark Avatar from destroying the Earth and the entire universe.

It’s a battle of good and evil and in the end green plays an essential part in the finale, but it’s not the green that you might expect. Get ready for an emotional rollercoaster of triumph and tragedy in Brightest Day.

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February was a busy month at the Library. Love and chocolate and fluffy animals were in the air.

On Valentine’s Day, we gave plenty of kisses -- chocolate kisses, that is. Whoever checked out a book that day received a sweet smooch.

We also wanted to find what books were in the hearts of our patrons. They showed us by writing their favorite books on paper hearts which were posted on the wall. Among some of the books were The Yearling, Pride and Prejudice, The Replacement, and Soul Surfer. And everyone who let us know was entered into a drawing to win an adorable plush animal or a delicious box of chocolates. We want to congratulate all the winners and thank everyone who shared their favorite book with us.

Library and Lunch also got into the spirit with the theme “For the Love of Chocolate.” Patrons came in and discussed their favorite books such as The Coffee Trader and Romeo and Juliet while enjoying chocolates and sugar cookies.

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Also in February, the Library was also proud to exhibit wonderful pieces of artwork from the Dream Rocket Project an international public art project.

In 2009, the International Fiber Collaborative launched The Dream Rocket Project, a collection of approximately 8,000 art pieces made of fabric and textiles from the United States and various regions of the world.

The work that was display at Liberal Memorial Library was submitted from schools, groups and individuals residing in states such as AL, OH, KY, NC, FL, NY and KS. A number of these works were created by schools located in Kansas such as Jefferson Co. North High School in Winchester and Free State High School in Lawrence.

In 2014, the displayed artwork will be joined with the other pieces to wrap around a 365-foot Saturn V Moon Rocket replica at the U.S. Space & Rocket Center in Huntsville, Ala.

The designated theme of the panels, “Dare to Dream,” challenges individuals to expand beyond the present state of the world and imagine the future. Perhaps most importantly, individuals are challenged to imagine their contribution to that future. These individual dreams and aspirations will combine to create a monumental 32,000 square feet work art, providing a tangible demonstration of the beauty of individuals collaborating to meet universal challenges.

To date, the Dream Rocket team has received submissions representing 351 cities, 49 states and countless countries.

Sunday, February 26, 2012

Nonfiction

So, then, dear Poppets, I see that it is our special time again to discuss a few books and Life, in general, and what you might like, in particular. This finds me at my old, dear desk in Memorial Library with the special sights, sounds, and "book odors"  that I so miss when in Texas. Until you've been in a library that is, shall we say, not "properly run", you may not appreciate one that is--such as ours--and, believe an "old" library user--they're either one or the other--no middle ground.

What I do not--ever--miss, when not in Liberal--is the 30 to 40 m.p.h. wind. Gracious but this takes some getting acclimated to, again, once one is no longer in it anymore.  I am always so pleased to come back to where I spent 57 years and not much has changed--except I miss Bob's Diner and Dinah and if anyone knows where she is  (I assume Wichita where one of her daughters lives), could you please call the library, ask for Jill or Pauline, and tell them and they'll get it to me.  Sometimes, one can "go back" to an actual place and see former friends and sometimes, your early years were spent in another place and environment, different people, different experiences and a prime example of that, for me as for many people, are the years before marriage and what one remembers so vividly--people, pets, schools, events, likes and dislikes, etc.

Close friends are well aware that I had strong British undertones in my bringing up and that I absolutely adored my mother's mother whom I called "Foof" and I was always called "My Lamb" or "Foofner" in return, and I laughed and learned under her wise and funny tutelage, and, in thinking about her and some of her "sayings" that I grew up with i.e."Who do you think you are?" and "To whom do you think you're speaking in that tone?" and "Remember who you are" and, again, "Do your very best and angels can do no more." Both my mother, Foof's daughter, and I used to tell each other that, in response to the first Brit saying, we'd like to have had the courage to reply with our name (standing straight and tall and, at the moment, slightly belligerent!) but Mother and I both knew what would come next--"Then, act like her and stop this behavior!"

Okay, so having said all that, you can imagine my delight at seeing the book, "Elizabeth, the Queen; The Life of a Modern Monarch", by Sally Bedell Smith, author of several autobiographies of well-known names, and it tells all sorts of things about her--I listened on my little radio, in high school, in Virginia, as she was crowned Queen and, along with everyone else, read about her--apparently, she's an excellent mimic of other people's traits, loves her two months on the grounds of Balmoral, walking her Corgis and going out with hunting parties and, if not shooting the birds, is directing the hunting dogs where to go to pick up the game birds that very important people have shot and certainly cannot be expected to go and "fetch" for themselves. I mean to say, it just isn't done.

So, if the beaters (men with the party, employed by the Queen--she has 80 servants all the time at Balmoral Castle for her two months stay there--) anyway, if they're busy loading the guests' guns or whatever and unavailable when the bird or deer goes down, the Queen takes over and sees that the game is brought  to them.  I love it. There's Her Majesty, in rough gear, boots, scarf on her head, lined leather gloves, game warden's whistle over her neck, making the proper motions to the dogs, calling their names, and then using hand gestures to convey what they were to do. And whaddya bet the dogs knew what she meant?

Cold, rainy, trampling over old logs, leaves, the crashing of gun barrels, your sandwich and flask of whiskey in the leather bag over your shoulder (what? you thought they went to MickeyD's for a hamburger? we're talking deep forest for 130 miles all around here--and, for Heaven's sake, don't even think of complaining--that's one big, main thing you learn when being brought up in Brit tradition--no one cares to hear it so, fix it yourself, or "go somewhere and get ahold of yourself and come out when you can be pleasant!" Seriously.)

Anyway, life, for her, is not always wearing a diamond tiara, she became Queen at a very young age and had to balance those duties in both Motherhood and State areas, her sister wasn't allowed to marry the divorced Royal Air Force pilot she adored--Prince Phillip saw to that and he should object? On what grounds? Other than he was a divorced man whom Princess Margaret loved--it couldn't have been on moral grounds, alone, since Phillip had an affair for 23 years and everyone knew it--and the lady involved (a Royal, of course!) Sorry to take up this much space on one topic but let me finish on one note; "An undercurrent to the speculation about Charles as the next king is that he is destined to be a transitional figure with a short reign before the succession of his more popular son, Prince William, and Kate.

It is William that monarchists count on to keep the dynasty strong in the new millennium; the Palace is full aware that the monarchy's future depends not only on reaching young people by emphasizing its own next generation." William and Kate are very popular, they dress in khakis and sneakers to visit children's hospitals, he went to New Zealand to give comfort and a personal solace to victims of natural disasters, much as his beloved mother, Diana, had done and the paper there wrote--"He came, he saw, he charmed their bloody socks off!" William and his brother, Harry, are easing into "royalty", still being called "Prince" but not "Sir" and they won't hear of "Your Royal Highness." We'll see what the future holds but do get this book and you will enjoy all of its 560 pages--it's compulsively readable.

Did anyone see some of the prestigious Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show on TV recently? For those of us who love and/or have dogs, it's the--spelled t-h-e--dog show to watch, here in the U.S. as it the Eukenuba show on Thanksgiving. Anyway, there's a delightful book, "Show Dog: The Charmed Life and Trying Times of a Near-Perfect Purebred", by Josh Dean, wrote about spending a year "alongside Jack, is champion Australian shepherd--and his canine and human friends--and presents a revealing look at our love affair with the world's most doted-upon and tinkered with animal species."  We certainly get to know this lovable dog and the people around him --his owner, handler, and his breeder--and we're given an up-close look at the dog show world, its traditions, its rules, along with the many people who inhabit it, taking part in judging, training, naming, promoting, hair-styling, RV-driving, hotel finding, and everything related to owning and showing a champion dog. There are over two thousand dog shows available every weekend, here in the U.S.

Breeding a champion dog--or horse--or cat sounds simple in that "you want to reinforce the good traits of specific animals while eliminating flaws and responsible owners of a certain breed work in concert to eliminate problematic traits--in Aussies, for example, the eye condition PRA."  On several personal notes, Jack jumped up on the judge as he walked by to put a 3rd place win behind Jack's name. Jack's chief rival for all of the judge's eyes was the beautiful moving Beyonce. She floated around the ring and went so fast you almost couldn't see her legs moving, and when Kimberly, who owned Jack, felt the time was right for him to become a father--that was a fine idea that drove Kimberly and Jack around the bend.  Westminster dog show is the pinnacle--lots of media coverage--two days of TV--obviously beautiful dogs--famous people milling around the prestige of the event.  This book is truly, honestly a great picture of a great dog, Jack, his mistress and handler, his mistakes, his heart, his triumphs, so go check it out and let me know what you think.

Is there anyone out there, in the continental U.S.that is, who has not heard of the Kardashians?  Anybody? I thought not, so here's a new book by Kris Jenner, "Kris Jenner and All Things Kardashian." You gotta give the girls credit, though, they're all very attractive--and ambitious--and not necessarily role models. She was married, at one time, to the Olympic champion, Bruce Jenner, then Robert Kardashin "and how it was Bruce who finally helped end the Kardashian's messy divorce so they could all move forward as a family."

It was Kris' brainstorm to make the family into an empire--an "international brand", actually--and has made it into a TV franchise that many millions of women watch and envy.  In this book, Kris also gives details/stories of her "intimate connection" with O.J.Simpson and Nicole Brown, the trial of O.J. and its aftermath. She and Robert had to deal with the important fact that they had each believed something different--Robert sat with O.J, at the trial, and honestly believed him innocent while Kris did not and kept remembering Nicole's words to her--"he's going to kill me and he's going to get away with it"--and so it came to pass. O.J. later failed a lie detector test --too late for his trial.  A really, interesting, pretty intelligent story and I very much enjoyed hearing Kris' voice in it all. I came out with a different point of view of the family--not completely, just somewhat--and certainly was admiring of what and how Kris handled all her decisions.

So, my dears, "the time has come, the walrus said, to speak of other things--"and there's always the weather, which, on the day I'm writing this, is cold and windy (so, you expected anything else the end of Feb.?)and, again, to say how great it has been to be back at my first "home", see dear friends, relax at Spencer Browne's over tea and a Hawaiian muffin (heated, of course), laugh at my son and daughter-in-law's dog and cat, and just "kick back".  I wish all of my readers a good Spring ahead, keep walking, smile at strangers, and try to not get too upset--"it won't matter on the back of a galloping horse" (another one of Foof's wonderful sayings!) Think of me in Kerrville, Tx. and if you're "in the neighborhood", call and stop by! Take care, Poppets, and good luck!

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Children's Healthy Fun Fair Coming Soon



Greetings readers! Hopefully by now the logo which appears with this column has become familiar to many residents of this community. It means that the Children’s Healthy Fun Fair is coming up once again. On Saturday, March 3, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., lots of interested children, accompanied by their parents, will be making their way to the Ag Building on the Seward County Fairgrounds to join in the festivities. Each year the fair offers fun activities, healthy snacks, great giveaways, and helpful information to attendees, all free of charge.

A number of agencies will be in attendance this year including Southwest Medical Center, Southwest Guidance Center, PACT, Big Brothers Big Sisters, Head Start, Smart Start, UMMAM, USD 480 preschool, Liberal Police Department, Liberal and Seward County Fire Departments, Liberal Parks & Rec, and many, many more. A must-visit area at the fair includes fingerprinting by the police department with fingerprint kits for parents to take home and record pertinent information about each of their children. Another fun stop will be the Seward County Community College Respiratory Therapy area which will include a respiring pig lung. Come watch it ‘breathe’. Parks & Rec has a brand new X-box Connect which they will have at the fair. This is a game that does not require controls. It goes by the movement of the kids who are playing. Some of the games that go with it require a lot of physical movement, so it is good for kids to burn off excess energy. The library will invite kids to exercise as well with their Wii Fit. For the younger ones, there will be an opportunity to do a simple craft project connected to our upcoming Summer Reading Program. Seward County Health and USD 480 preschool always have lots of neat activities going on at their booths. It’s a good idea to just start at one end of the fair and work your way all the way around to everyone so that you don’t miss a thing!

This year’s fair will feature the Sure Sight Vision Screener, which will be manned by a trained Lions Club International member from the eastern side of the state. This is a valuable vision screening tool which provides non-invasive screening to check preschoolers for early visual problems. It allows for vision screening without feedback from the child who is being screened, meaning it can be used even with smaller children. Make sure that you stop by and check it out. In addition to this machine being available at the Children’s Healthy Fun Fair, the library will host a special storytime beginning at 3:45 on Friday, March 2. Following the storytime, parents will have an opportunity to have their screened. This is a really good opportunity for families who might not be able to attend the fair.

There is truly a lot of excitement about the fun fair and the potential it has to inform and educate the public in a really fun way. Since the Home Show will be going on in the Event Center, families can easily take in both events since they are in such close proximity to one another.

In closing, mention should be made about the library’s Valentine promotion which took place from February 1 to February 14. Patrons were asked to share what book they loved by writing it on a heart. They were then entered into a drawing for some sweet prizes. Winners of those prizes included:
Boxes of chocolate: Carolyn L. and Lynn S.; Plush Puppy: Wendy D.; Plush Monkey: Micayla L.; and Plush Penguin: Angelica M. Winners, be sure to stop by and pick up your prizes, if you have not already done so. National Library Week is coming up in April. Come on in check out the exciting things that will be going on then. See you at Memorial Library!

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Fiction

“Allo Poppets!  How goes it? Getting a little tired of Winter’s wet and windy blasts? Well, here in Kerrville, we’ve had some rain, some cool weather, and some lovely sunshine and temps. between 70 and 77 degrees, which is actually a little warmer in mid-Jan. than usual but I love it, being a hot weather fan.  We desperately need more rain, although our aquifer is back up to normal, but if you’ve ever endured a drought, you’re a little skeptical for the next late Spring through mid-Fall. Didja watch the Super Bowl? My team won!  What happened to yours?  Ah, well, there’s always another year and I think it’s nice that Eli Manning lived to tell a tale that came out great in the end—at least for him, it did. 

You know how children love being told stories and, as they get older, reading them for the excitement, thoughts, facts that are all new to them?  I always loved the beginning of Rudyard Kipling’s “Just So Stories” ‘cause he often began them “Once Upon a Time, O Best Beloved---“and to this day, I think the very good—really good—authors maybe silently think that as they begin to write—yes, the more I think about it, the more I’m convinced they do, if only in their own minds. Good stories, well told, “take you away to another place and time” and you hate to put them down, and maybe one or two of the titles I’m about to review will do it for you.

Let’s go back to London, Oct. 1839, in “When the Devil Drives” by Cara Peacock, London’s Liberty Lane, female private investigator (at 25), struggling to do all right so as to pay her bills, looked hopeful (and, she hoped, capable and businesslike) when a young, “poetic young man begs her to find his missing fiancee, she accepts”. She feels the girl probably just ran off with someone else and “meanwhile, back at the ranch,” the country’s young Queen Victoria is falling in love with Prince Albert, her German cousin and “another client hires her to help prevent a royal scandal”, involving Albert’s brother Prince Ernest, who is more “worldly and likes to have a good time.” 

So, now she has two cases and then a young woman is found dead and “with a strange bull-headed ring on her finger.”  The one constant around all these crime is the description of a black or dark carriage, drawn by two dark horses, that picks up the girls and disappears before it can be stopped. Those who have heard or seen this conveyance, seen or heard the horses, call it The Devil’s Chariot. This book truly is charming and written in a “deliberate” manner, in describing atmosphere, people involved, countryside—I only regretted that the horses weren’t given more book space!  For those of you who like “old-fashioned” murder mysteries, minus a lot of blood and gore, will enjoy this one—go to the library and check it out.  

This next book, “The Best Bad Dream”, by Robert Ward, is much like the “hard-boiled” private eye stories we’ve all read and, for its realistic violence and the hard, experienced personalities in here are very believable—not lovable, but, at times, understandable and pitiful while being extremely dangerous.  A major point is the Blue Wolf, “a suspicious and exclusive spa for the elderly—at least on the surface.”  The two main characters are Jack Harper and Oscar Hidalgo, “who are burned out from chasing criminals, so a long vacations seems like just the ticket.”  But Jack received a call from an ex-girlfriend Michelle,  who asks for help in finding her sister, Jennifer, who has been kidnapped.  

How can the two points of the case be related?  And how does a huge pet razorback hog, Old Big, feature in finding Jennifer?  What did the kidnappers want with Jennifer?  I got started reading this story and 40 minutes passed quickly. If you like mysteries with a touch of the ghastly, this is your choice. 

Apropos of nothing I’ve been discussing, did you see the interview (there was more than one, actually) of Mimi Alford who’s written about her 18 month affair with J.F.K. that is out now, entitled “Once Upon a Secret”?  That will be a blockbuster and it brings out, as she said, “his dark side.”  

Okay, back to my column and another “dead body book” as Ida called them, and this one is “Shedding Light on Murder”, by Patricia Driscoll, and it’s her debut novel, “set on Cape Cod, in Christmas season during a blizzard.” Grace Tolliver is an ex-probation officer in Barnstable Village.  She’s the owner of Pearl’s Antique Lamps and Shades and has hired Duane Kerby as “holiday help’ but when a well-known citizen if murdered, Duane is arrested for it and Grace feels responsible because she sent him to the man’s home on an errand.  She is busy “readying the shop for the annual Barnstable Village Stroll while keeping an eye on her frisky 84-year-old father” and she finds herself attracted to the detective on the case (you could see that comin’ ‘round the bend, right?) 

Then, a second murder hits and here come the blizzard’s winds, snow, and ice.  Lots of conversation, some (some!) action, bringing out of the people’s thoughts and character—this, my dears, is what we in the trade call “a cozy” and it’s an excellent representative of its genre. It’s not going to be one of the “top” books, such as “Heft”, or “Defending Jacob” or “Taken” by Crais or “Phantom” by Ted Bell, but, then again, it isn’t trying to be. It’s a book to “curl up with” , won’t tax the brain too much and it’s enjoyable. So, check it out. 

Now, our last book fits into the last, or “top” category because the author, Val McDermid, is an author with a  capital “A”, and her newest is “The Retribution”, a Tony Hill and Carol Jordan, who’ve appeared in other stories.  Tony is a clinical psychologist and Carol is police detective. And, between them, they’ve put away a lot of criminals but all that success has bred resentment in Carol’s department and so the “powers that be” decide to break the team up. So, there’s a serial killer to catch “and it seems that this may well be their farewell waltz.”  But Jacko Vance, an ex-celebrity and sociopath has spent a dozen years behind bars, having killed teenage girls with no remorse “and with a twisted and cunning mind long honed by years of planning, Jacko has pulled off the perfect escape”—and guess who he’s after?  

The “Times” of London paper said that “her work is taut, psychologically complex and so gripping that it puts your life on hold”—which, I think, is Brit for “good show!” The best  police procedural put you in the middle of the conversations, theories and action and after 24 novels and short story collection (doesn’t she ever sleep?), McDermid’s got it down pat. The conversations carry you along, the moods and thoughts and theories are well developed—I’m telling you, find this book and enjoy a master (sorry, mistress) at her best.  She ain’t young and won’t be around for the next 20 years—but her stories will.  Enjoy!  You’re welcome.

It has been, as always, a pleasure to “ visit” with you and I hope all is well in your world and should you see me, on the streets or in Spencer Browne’s coffee house or in the library, come up and “chat” a minute. I will be in Liberal from the 20th until mid-afternoon of the 27th and I really look forward to being in the library and seeing the staff—don’t you think it would be nice to have “a library cat”, say a big black one with green eyes?  Please let my director know and urge her to check the animal shelter—it won’t be necessary to tell her that I sent you or that it was my idea!  Make sure that your animals have freshwater and a warn place to sleep at night—you do!  See ya soon—Bye!  PS—think about a purring pussycat on the front desk! I’m jus’ sayin’----