Favorite Books–from WI legislators & staff

The Wisconsin Legislative Reference Bureau has honored National Library Week every year since 2002 by gathering suggestions of “Favorite books” from state legislators and legislative employees. If you’re curious what the suggestions are, or just looking for possible good reads, you can see the annual lists online at http://www.legis.state.wi.us/lrb/pubs/tapthepower.htm. The lists have fiction, nonfiction, and biography/autobiography sections. Alas, identities of the suggesters are not revealed. But the suggesters’ brief reviews are available.

The 2010 list

  • * (starred) books are available at UWW’s Andersen Library; search the HALCat online catalog for locations and call numbers.
  • UWW students and staff may request non-* titles from other UW libraries using the free Universal Borrowing service; requested items arrive at UWW’s Circulation Desk in 2-4 weekdays.)

Fiction

All Shall Be Well; And All Shall Be Well; And All Manner of Things Shall Be Well / by Tod Wodicka, Pantheon Books, 2007. This was a touching book about a dysfunctional family, focusing on the father. What I loved about it was that the characters were all eccentric, yet believable, and despite the fact that they were all flawed and not very likable, I found myself caring about them.

* The Corrections / Jonathan Franzen, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2001. This book was more famous for its author (Jonathan Franzen) biting the hand that fed the book industry (Oprah Winfrey) than for the book itself. It moves in and out of the lives of two retired parents and their three supposedly grown children as they draw nearer to “one last Christmas” before the parents sell the old house that no one liked that much in the first place. The tone maneuvers successfully through satirical, heartbreaking, and surprising without striking a false note. It’s an engaging read – probably not beach material, more appropriate for a long weekend winter getaway after your family drove you nuts at the holidays.

* The Hunger Games / Suzanne Collins, Scholastic Press, 2008. This is an amazingly creative tale about a future where children are forced to make hard and dangerous choices in order to help feed their families. It was extremely addictive and I read it in one sitting. I am eagerly awaiting the final installment in the trilogy that comes out this August, entitled Mockingjays. (Young adult book)

I capture the castle cover* I Capture the Castle / Dodie Smith, St. Martin’s Griffin, 1999, 1948. This book, originally published in 1948, reminded me of a Jane Austen novel. The novel takes place in the 1920s, and follows the lives and fortunes of a poor family in England. It was a fun read, and I highly recommend it for a summer vacation.

* Pillars of the Earth / Ken Follette, Morrow, 1989. Pillars is a historical fiction novel. The story is about the building of a cathedral in the fictional Kingsbridge, England; however, many of the characters have roles involving real events of the 12th century. We follow characters through two generations of struggle and anarchy. The story is extremely compelling; you can’t put it down.

Sarah’s Key / Tatiana de Rosnay, St. Martin’s Press, 2007. Paris, July 1942: Sarah, a 10-year-old Jewish girl, is brutally arrested with her family by the French police in the Vel’ d’Hiv Roundup, but not before she locks her younger brother in a cupboard in the family’s apartment, thinking that she will be back in a few hours. Paris, May 2002: On the 60th anniversary of Vel’ d’Hiv, journalist Julia Jarmond is asked to write an article about this black day in France. While investigating, she stumbles onto a trail of secrets that connect her to Sarah. Julia finds herself compelled to retrace the girl’s ordeal, from the Vel’ d’Hiv, to the camps, and beyond.

Year of Wonders / Geraldine Brooks, Penguin, 2001. This is a fictional work based on a true story about an outbreak of the plague in an English village in 1666. The story is told through the eyes of the minister’s servant who aids the minister and his wife as they tend to the sick and comfort the dying. The voices of the characters and the vivid descriptions of the townspeople’s living conditions and their attempts to make sense of what is happening in the face of fear and superstition made me feel like I was there in a way that I rarely experience when reading a novel.

Biography/Autobiography

The Barn at the End of the World: The Apprenticeship of a Quaker, Buddhist Shepherd / Mary Rose O’Reilley, Milkweed Editions, 2000. Whether she’s talking about grief over dying lambs, the plague of Monkey Mind, flipping sheep, or a barnyard fashion crisis, O’Reilley keeps her metaphors down to earth and her epiphanies humble. The structure is especially inviting: a collection of brief essays of about three to five pages each. But this collection also reads like a journey with a beginning and an end.

Where Men Win Glory – The Odyssey of Pat Tillman / Jon Krakauer, Doubleday, 2009. In May 2002, Pat Tillman walked away from his $3.6 million NFL contract to enlist in the U.S. Army. Two years later, he was killed by friendly fire on a desolate hillside in Afghanistan. Krakauer chronicles Tillman’s riveting, tragic odyssey in engrossing detail. Infused with the power and authenticity readers have come to expect from Krakauer’s storytelling, Where Men Win Glory exposes shattering truths about men and war.

Nonfiction

Beautiful Boy: A Father’s Journey through His Son’s Addiction / David Sheff, Houghton Mifflin, 2008. A wrenching account of a father’s fight to save his son from methamphetamine and other drug addictions.

The Brewmaster’s Table: Discovering the Pleasures of Real Beer with Real Food / Garrett Oliver, Harper Collins, 2003. In The Brewmaster’s Table, Oliver explains how to identify the characteristics of different beer styles and how to select beers and foods based on pairing principles including complement, contrast, and cut. For readers who want to skip ahead and miss out on Oliver’s accounts of the history and people of beer and the richness of the food combinations, the book includes a quick reference table for pairings of different foods with different styles of beer.

Confessions of a Public Speaker / Scott Berkun, O’Reilly, 2010. Berkun’s advice is specific to people who travel far and wide to speak, but much of it is great advice for any speaker. My favorite piece of advice is to always practice your speech, even if it’s in front of a mirror. It’s a fast and engaging read, and I would recommend it to anyone trying to improve their public speaking.

Dead on Arrival: The Politics of Health Care in Twentieth Century America / Colin Gordon, Princeton University Press, 2004. University of Wisconsin history Ph.D. Colin Gordon seeks to address why the U.S. has not, unlike most democratic nations, developed a national universal health care system, but has instead pursued private, employment-based insurance. It is well written and provides some insight on how the U.S. has ended up with such an expensive private employer-based insurance model and provides the historical background for understanding why it was so difficult for Congress to pass health care legislation.

The Geography of Bliss: One Grump’s Search for the Happiest Places in the World / Eric Weiner, Twelve, 2008. Weiner travels the world in search of the happiest countries, and along the way considers the meaning of happiness and what makes people happy. It was a fun way to get to know more about a number of very different countries, from Switzerland to Bhutan to Iceland.

Harry Truman’s Excellent Adventure: the True Story of a Great American Road Trip / Matthew Algeo, Chicago Review Press, 2009. An entertaining read about the 2,500-mile post-presidential road trip taken by President and Mrs. Truman, who innocently believed they could make such a trip virtually incognito. At the time, ex-presidents had no Secret Service protection so the Trumans backed out of their driveway and headed east to New York with no escort. Harry did the driving; Bess made sure he didn’t go over the speed limit. An engaging historical telling of the Truman’s 1953 trip in which the author retraces the route, attempting to stay in the same hotels and eat at the same diners. I enjoyed this book very much.

Homecoming: When the Soldiers Returned from Vietnam / Bob Greene, Putnam, 1989. An appropriate book to read with the upcoming “LZ Lambeau: Welcoming Home Wisconsin’s Vietnam Veterans” (May 21-23, 2010). A compilation of reader responses to this syndicated columnist’s curiosity about how soldiers were treated upon their return to the United States. As the wife of a Vietnam veteran, I found this book to be an eye-opening experience.

Three cups of tea cover* Three Cups of Tea: One Man’s Mission to Fight Terrorism and Build Nations – One School at a Time / Greg Mortenson and David Relin, Viking, 2005. The astonishing story of a young man’s humanitarian campaign to use education to combat terrorism in the Taliban’s backyard. Greg Mortenson, following a 1993 climb of Pakistan’s treacherous K2, was inspired by a chance encounter with impoverished mountain villagers and promised to build them a school. Over the next decade he built 55 schools – especially for girls – that offer a balanced education in one of the most isolated and dangerous regions on earth.

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UWW’s Andersen Library is a federal depository with many federal, state, local, and international documents on a variety of current and relevant issues available to you in print, microfiche, CD-ROM, and online. Come check out your government at Andersen Library!

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Buy & Eat Local Food

picture of vegetablesHeard a lot about buying and eating locally-produced food? What’s the big deal?? Well, on Sunday (6/20/10) I saw a “Local Foods Movement” installment of Madison Channel 3‘s “For the Record” series. Olivia Parry, Director of Dane County Planning and Development Dept.’s Institutional Food Market Coalition (IFM), provided information about economic and environmental benefits of consuming local foods, and about her work to get providers and institutional consumers together. Heather Hilleren talked about founding the national localdirt.com web site, where individuals and businesses can find and request locally-produced food. She started it while she was a grad student at UW-Madison–a fine example of a student project that “grew up” (the kind of thing the College of Business & Economics, and especially its Collegiate Entrepreneurs’ Organization, encourage).

Watch it (click “For the Record”) For the Record: Local Food Movement

More information is available, if you’re interested. Check out web sites such as the Center for Integrated Agricultural Systems (UW-Madison), which has the College Food Project among its activities. CIAS is one of the partners that provides the annual Southern Wisconsin Farm Fresh Atlas. The U.S. Dept. of Agriculture has launched an initiative called “Know your farmer, know your food” to help educate Americans about the benefits of local food. Search article databases for articles such as “Local and Lovin’ It” (Progressive Grocer, May 2010, v.89:no.4, pp.64-68) and “Why local is good for you” (Money, Feb. 2010, no.120, p.28).

Please ask a librarian for assistance with finding materials.

Government Printing Office logo

The University Library is a federal depository with many federal, state, local, and international documents on a variety of current and relevant issues available to you in print, microfiche, CD-ROM, and online. Come check out your government at the University Library!

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And you thought you needed new shoes

Here’s an argument to use the next time you need to defend buying a pair of high quality (read: expensive) leather shoes: they might cost a lot, but they’ll last 5,000 years.

Archaeologists excavating a cave in Armenia recently discovered what they say is “the world’s oldest known leather shoe.” According to the New York Times, the leather in the shoe has been dated to 3653 to 3627 B.C., which makes it about 5,500 years old! One of the lead scientists, Gregory Areshian, said the shoe was “probably quite expensive” and “very high quality.”

Read all about the shoe, and see a picture of it, on the New York Times web site. A research article on the discovery is also available in the online journal PLoS One, titled “First Direct Evidence of Chalcolithic Footwear from the Near Eastern Highlands.”

For more information on exciting archaeological discoveries, search the Library’s online catalog, or ask a reference librarian for assistance.

Thanks, Carol, for passing along this story!

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New Stuff Tuesday – June 8

The Routes of Man

The Routes of Man:
How Roads Are Changing the World
and the Way We Live Today
by Ted Conover
HE341 .C66 2010
New Book Island, 2nd floor

My uncle used to tell us this story of a Illinois state senator that tried unsuccessfully to petition the government to secede the west central section of the state and call it Forgottonia. The main reason: the region lacked insufficient roads to connect it with the rest of the state. Now, I’m not sure of whether the state senator part of the story is true, but the Forgottonia part is, highlighting the impact of roads on a region’s development. This week’s featured title takes a closer look at how transportation methods have influenced the evolution of civilization.

Conover, award-winning author of Newjack: Guarding Sing Sing, takes a journey to the far ends of the world to document the significant effects, both positive and negative, of infrastructure. He travels across several continents to investigate how the transportation of goods and people have shaped the way of life for its inhabitants. The author provides the historical context as well, tracing routes back to ancient Rome to the present. This book demonstrates the power of the road for our ever-connected global society.

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The Death of the Library

Don’t worry – this is not an obituary for the Andersen Library.

The library is dying. To some, it’s already dead. To Delia Lloyd of Politics Daily, our society is in for a world of hurt if libraries go by the wayside. She points out the argument that the library as an institution has morphed into a consumption destination, with electronic media at the forefront. However, I found that her article goes a step further than others that I’ve read on the topic. She contends that we rely on these fine institutions (if I do say so myself) for more than just books and movies. The author provides the example of information literacy as one of the pinnacles of the library. With the wealth of knowledge available, from print to online resources, librarians help to navigate through the sea of information to find that source for the paper, that job interview, that business plan.

What do you think? Are libraries on their death bed?

Read the full article: The Death of the Library – Politics Daily

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New Stuff Tuesday – June 1

Show Sold Separately

Show Sold Separately:
Promos, Spoilers and Other Media Paratexts
by Jonathan Gray
PN1992.8 .A32 G73 2010
New Book Island, 2nd floor

Trying to decide which movie to see at the movie theater can be a tricky job. If you have more than two people there weighing in on that decision, it makes it even more difficult. What about TV shows? How many of you had your Facebook friends spoil the end of Lost or Grey’s Anatomy? Jerks. With all of the buzz surrounding the film and television industry, it’s practically impossible to go into a show with a clean slate. This week’s featured title looks at just that – the pre-and post-viewing experience, not so much the in-between.

Gray, media and cultural studies professor at UW-Madison, delves into the world of media paratexts, the the supplemental materials surrounding movies and TV shows, such as critic reviews, trailers and promotional items. The author first explains what exactly a paratext is and the various in which they can take, from tangible to intangible texts. He then goes on to analyze the effects that a paratext has on a viewer and our consumption of media. Utilizing everything from the Lord of the Rings to the Simpsons, Gray provides an excellent examination of the behind-the-scenes look from the viewer’s standpoint.

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Lady Gaga + Librarians = Magic

I haven’t posted any Friday fun posts in a while, but I don’t think this can wait that long. As Ronna passed it along, “it begs to be shared.” It’s making the rounds of the internets, and it’s pretty awesome. I think that Lady Gaga would approve.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a_uzUh1VT98[/youtube]

Kudos to University of Washington iSchool library students and faculty – nicely done.

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18 Things You Did Not Have a Decade Ago

Next week is June already, which means 2010 is almost halfway over!

Do you remember what you were doing in the summer of  2000, ten years ago? Whatever it was, you were not able to enjoy the items on this list of technology tools that have been around for less than a decade.

1. Wikipedia

2.  Gmail

3. Facebook

4. YouTube

5. Twitter

6. Google AdWords

7. RSS (technically started in 1999)

8. Meetup

9. iPod

10. Google Maps

11. Podcasts

12. Mint

13. Skype/VOIP

14. iPhone

15. Google Docs

16. Amazon AWS

17. Creative Commons

18. Flickr

Original Article here

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New Stuff Tuesday – May 25

Art of SEO

The Art of SEO:
Mastering Search Engine Optimization
by Eric Enge, Stephan Spencer,
Rand Fiskin & Jessie Stricchiola
HF5415.1265 .E65 2010
New Book Island, 2nd floor

Do you ever ask yourself what makes Google so good at retrieving what you need and want? Is it the algorithms that they’ve created for relevancy? Is it because you always use the right words? Or is it the web developers on the other end of the equation making it so easy for you to find them? Well, this week’s featured title explains just what goes into searching from the back-end.

The four authors, all industry leaders and SEO experts, delve into the world of search engine optimization (what is this?). As described in the preface, “think of [the book] as SEO 101, SEO 102 and SEO 103.” That description fits pretty well, as the authors create a foundation by covering search engines and how they work their magic. They then demonstrate how this applies to websites and what can be done to improve search rankings and ultimately visibility through linking. Finally, they wrap up with the evaluation and assessment of tactics and the future of SEO, important for any internet marketing strategy.

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Texas re-writing American History?

Texas publishes many of the school textbooks for schools around the U.S. This week, the fifteen-member Texas school board has decided to re-write some of American history as we have known it. The board is taking a more right-wing conservative stand on history, including placing a more important role on religion and lessening the role of Thomas Jefferson due to their belief that he was too secular.

One big reason for the religious push is to illustrate that there “would be no United States if it had not been for God.” The history books will question the seperation of church and state, believing there should be a more religious base to politics. They believe education should teach children about the “superiority of American capitalism.”

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sLt_IYDSQ4w[/youtube]

The new curriculum will also include a heavy focus on the 2nd amendment which is the right of every US citizen to bear arms and support the NRA (the National Rifle Association). On a more important note, the Texas board of education is watering down the historical impact and roles of slavery and the civil rights movement. The NAACP is pushing the Texas school board of education to revisit its recommended changes in order to preserve the accurate history of America concering slaver and the civil rights movement.

Daily Show Textbook Video Clip

What are your thoughts on this change to American history? Is this just as bad as most of us learning that Pluto was a planet and now it’s just a glorified “dwarf planet?” Do you think politics and government are playing too big a role in our education and our history?

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The University Library is a federal depository with many federal, state, local, and international documents on a variety of current and relevant issues available to you in print, microfiche, CD-ROM, and electronically. Come check out your government at the University Library!

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