11.22.2021

Staff recommendations from 2021 Holiday Pop-up Bookshop

Carolle Morini

Books and Libraries, Everyman’s Pocket Poets  edited by Andrew Scrimgeour
Stories of Trees, Woods, and the Forest Fiona Stafford
Literary Places Sarah Baxter
Look Both Ways: A Tale Told in Ten Blocks (age: 10-14) by Jason Reynolds,
Lore Alexandra Bracken  (YA)

Elizabeth O’Meara

The Friend Sigrid Nunez
The Source of Self-Regard: Selected Essays, Speeches, and Meditations Toni Morrison
The Lost Words  (Picture Book for old and young) Robert Macfarlane
The Old Truck  (Picture Book) Jerome Pumphrey

Anthea Reilly

Paris in the Present Tense Mark Helprin
Collected Stories Shirley Hazzard
Death in the Vines M.L. Longworth
Charlotte’s Web (Youth) E.B. White

Mary Warnement

Murder in Chianti Camilla Trinchieri
Cheese, Wine, and Bread Katie Quinn
The Inheritance Game  (Young Adult novel)Jennifer Lynn Barnes
Outside In  (Picture Book)    Deborah Underwood
The Vanderbeekers of 141st Street  (Youth) Karina Yan Glaser

11.20.2021

Indigenous Peoples Month

November is Indigonous Peoples month. Here are some books in our collection that cellebrate both modern and traditoinal Native culture.

Picture Books

Fry Bread : a Native American Family Story written by Kevin Noble Maillard and illustrated by Juana Martinez-Neal.
(New Books Basket Children Picture Book + MAILL)
A vibrantly illustrated look at a modern Native American family and the roll fry bread plays: connecting the family, the community, and the nation.

We are Water Protectors written by Carole Lindstrom and illustrated by Michaela Goade.
(New Books Basket Children Picture Book + LINDS)
Urging readers to do what they can, this book explores the many Native protests against oil pipelines in a poetic and accessible way. Showing that water is not only essential for life, it is also sacred to many Indigonous people.

Rabbit’s Snow Dance : a traditional Iroquois story as told by James & Joseph Bruchac ; illustrated by Jeff Newman.
(Classics Bin Children Picture Book + BRUCH)
A traditional Iroquois story about a rabbit who wants to eat the tallest leaves. To help him reach, he uses his snow song in the summer! The other animals are not pleased.

Classified : the secret career of Mary Golda Ross, Cherokee aerospace engineer by Traci Sorell ; illustrated by Natasha Donovan
(New Books Basket Children Picture Book + SOREL)
Mary Golda Ross worked as an engineer in the classified department of Lockheed Air Corporation. This inspirational biography follows her journey as a female Cherokee engineer and mentor.

Youth Fiction and Graphic Novels

Trickster : Native American Tales : a graphic collection edited by Matt Dembicki
(PZ7.D396 Tr 2010)
Twenty-one Native Authors have worked to create this collection of trickster tales from a large variety of Native American Nations. Each tale features the work of a different illustrator creating a dynamic and engaging reading experience.

In the Footsteps of Crazy Horse by Joseph Marshall III ; illustrations by Jim Yellowhawk.
(PZ7.M356723 In 2015)
Fiction and nonfiction are eloquently intertwined in this story of a Lokota boy learning about his heritage, identity, and family through the stories of Crazy Horse his grandfather shares with him. A thoughtful tale of tradition, family history, and identity.

Indian No More by Charlene Willing McManis with Traci Sorell.
(Children’s New PZ7.M2312 In 2019)
Semi-autobiographical historical novel follows Regina Petit, a ten year old Umpqua girl. She has lived all her life surrounded by her tribe on the Grand Ronde reservation, but in 1957 the federal government signed a bill that states Regina’s tribe no longer exists. Regina is “Indian no more” in the eyes of the government. Her family then moves to Los Angeles in search of better jobs for her father. There, she makes friends with children of other races who have never met a Native American. It is also in this new neighborhood that Regina faces the vicious racism of the era for the first time.

Young Adult Books

Hearts Unbroken by Cynthia Leitich Smith
PZ7 .S64465 He 2018
Native Louise loves working on the school paper. During her senior year the paper has a big story to cover: the school’s music director has taken an inclusive approach to casting the production of Wizard of Oz, and the primarily white Kansas town is outraged. The group Parents Against Revisionist Theater has formed and anonymous threats are made. As they continue to uncover the story, Louise begins to fall for the white photographer she is working with. But she has learned that “dating while native” is difficult. Will protecting her heart break his?

The Marrow Thieves by Cherie Dimaline
(Young Adult PZ7 .D59 Ma 2017)
In this chilling near future dystopia, the world has nearly been destroyed by global warming. In the wake of that disaster an even darker situation is revealed. No one but the Indigenous people of North America are able to dream. The Indigenous people are in turn being hunted and harvested for their bone marrow, which carries the key to dreaming. Frenchie and his friend must stay hidden to survive, but one of them unknowingly holds the secret to defeating the Marrow Thieves.

Borders by Thomas King ; illustrations by Natasha Donovan.
(New Young Adult PZ7.K587 Bo 2021)
This graphic novel of King’s short story vividly tells the story of a Blackfoot teen and his mother as they try to cross the American/Canadian border. When asked her nationality, his mother says Blackfoot, refusing to compromise her identity to please the border officers. The two are then stuck between the USA and Canada and must stay in their car until the matter is resolved. Highlighting the many microaggressions that still exist against Indigonous people, this boldly illustrated graphic novel brings the already moving short story of identity to life.

Nonfiction

A Queer History of the United States for Young People by Michael Bronski ; adapted by Richie Chevat
(Young Adult HQ76.3.U5 B69 2019)
While this book goes though many different cultures and eras with in American queer history, the first chapter focuses on different Native American Nations views on gender and sexuality. Many nationtions do not view gender as a binary as European societies long have.

The Sea-Ringed World : Sacred Stories of the Americas edited by María García Esperón ; illustrated by Amanda Mijangos ; translated by David Bowles.
(New Young Adult + PZ7.G161 Se 2021)
This anthology brings together stories from Indigonous peoples across the Americas, highlighting the diversity and similarities within their cultures.

09.07.2021

Staff Book Suggestions Autumn 2021

Lauren Graves

Real Life by Brandon Taylor

(Library of Congress Classification PZ4 .T2385 Re 2020)

Brandon Taylor’s debut novel tells the story of Wallace, a gay black doctoral student attending a predominately white midwestern university. Described as a “coming of age” and “campus” novel, this book follows Wallace’s search for life, real life, beyond the academy. 

Carolle Morini

Bird Cottage by Eva Meijer; translated by Antoinette Fawcett

(Library of Congress Classification PZ4.M495 Bi 2018)

Based on the life of Len Howard, a British naturalist and musician, this story traces her life from the stage to seclusion. It is a lovely book about her immersion into the natural world around her. 

Derek Murphy

The Ministry for the Future by Kim Stanley Robinson

(Library of Congress PZ4 .R66263 Mi 2020)

Kim Stanley Robinson’s latest reads more like a pop-history narrative from the near future than a traditional science fiction novel. It combines fictional narrative, scientific and historical essays, and poetry to portray a best case scenario where human civilization not only survives climate change, but actively mitigates it, building a better world in the process. This book is vivid and unsparing in its portrayal of climate catastrophe, but in the end it left me a little more optimistic than I was before.

Leah Rosovsky

The Transit of Venus by Shirley Hazzard

(Library of Congress PZ4.H4316 Tr 1980)

Warlight by Michael Ondaatje

(Library of Congress PZ4 .O5398 Wa 2018)

Norwegian By Night by Derek B. Miller

(Library of Congress PZ4.M645 Nor 2013)

I just finished reading The Transit of Venus by Shirley Hazzard and Warlight by Michael Ondaatje. Of course, I’m always reading a mystery story too. I loved Norwegian By Night by Derek B. Miller. I would love to hear about your favorites.

Carly Stevens

Klara and the Sun by Kazuo Ishiguro

(Library of Congress PZ4 .I78 Kl 2021)

I listened to the audiobook of Klara and the Sun via cloudLibrary. Ishiguro’s latest is the perfect Fall read for those colder days when you miss the warmth of the summer sun.

Mary Warnement

Autumntide of the Middle Ages: A Study of Forms of Life and Thought of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries in France and the Low Countries by Johan Huizinga

(Library of Congress + DC33.2 .H83 2020)

Huizinga was a huge figure in twentieth-century academic circles and inspired many interdisciplinary studies, and I’d be surprised if most hadn’t encountered his works in college. His most well-known book had five editions in his lifetime and was translated into many languages. It appeared first in English in 1924 as The Waning of the Middle Ages, and Huizinga collaborated with Frits Hopman on what he knew was an adaptation rather than a full translation. In 1996, a new English translation appeared. In 2020, Leiden University sponsored a new translation with a history of the work’s publication as well as an explanation of Huizinga’s other works and his influence on scholarship over the last century. It also has excellent reproductions of many paintings, manuscripts, and prints discussed. It includes the bibliography omitted from the first English translations and even lists the specific books Huizinga checked out from his university’s library. If you like medieval and book history, this is for you. One caveat: it is in the format of a huge art book and is meant to be read on a table rather than in one’s lap or hands.

The Day of the Dead: The Autumn of Commissario Ricciardi by Maurizio de Giovanni

(Library of Congress PZ4.D31 Da 2014)

We’ll be reading this together; it’s on my list for the fall. This series set in Naples in the 1930s was recommended to me years ago, and I’ve been slowly savoring it. I know someone who gobbles ‘em down and then waits impatiently for the book to be written and then translated from Italian. At first, I scoffed at the premise, a detective who is cursed to see the dead in their final moments, but the author writes sensitively and beautifully and realistically. If you like mysteries, I highly recommend this and suggest you actually start with the first I Will Have Vengeance: The Winter of Commissario Ricciardi. If I change my mind after reading this fourth in the series, I’ll own up to it for our winter recommendations.

09.04.2021

Back to School: September 2021

It’s that time of year again! Here are books to enjoy all about school, even some for those who don’t go to school just yet.

Picture Books

Your Name is a Song by Jamilah Thompkins-Bigelow, illustrated by Luisa Uribe
(Children Picture Book + THOMP)
A young girl meets her mother after the first day of school and is distraught after so many teachers and students mispronounced her name. On their walk home, the mother explains the musicality of the child’s name and other names from various cultures. The next day the girl feels empowered to share this knowledge with her class and teach them all to sing her name.

All Are Welcome by Alexandra Penfold and Suzanne Kaufman
(Children Picture Book + PENFO)
In this book you will meet a class of children from all different backgrounds. Every child and adult are welcomed and appreciated for their differences.

Don’t Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus by Mo Willems
(Children Picture Book WILLE)
This hilarious classic focuses on a pigeon as he pleads with the reader to let him drive the bus when the usual driver steps away.

Lilly’s Purple Plastic Purse by Kevin Henkes
(Children’s Picture Book HENKE)
Lilly loves school! She is especially excited for today because she gets to share her purple purse at show-and-tell time. Her excitement leads to impatience, however, and her teacher has to take her purse away because she can’t wait her turn. In anger, Lilly does something she will later regret. Will she be able to apologize?

Board Books

Gaspard and Lisa’s Ready for School Words by Anne Gutman and Georg Hallensleben
(Children Picture Book GUTMA)
Two puppies go off to nursery school and learn school vocabulary along the way. The perfect book to help little ones adjust to daycare or preschool.

Olivia Counts by Ian Falconer
(Children Picture Book FALCO)
Piglet Olivia takes to the chalkboard to help the reader learn to count.

Chapter Books

George by Alex Gino
(PZ7.G379 Ge 2015)
Everyone thinks George is a boy. It is what she looks like from the outside. But she knows she is truly a girl. When her teacher announces they will be performing a play of Charlotte’s Web, George really wants to play Charlotte. The teacher won’t allow her because she is biologically a boy. With the help of her best friend, George comes up with a plan not only to get the part but also to live as her true self. This humorous and heartwarming tale of a young trans girl won the Stonewall Children’s award in 2016.

Amina’s Voice by Hena Khan
(PZ7.K496 Am 2017)
The start of middle school has shaken up Amina’s life. Her best friend Soojin has started hanging out with the “cool” girls at school and is thinking of changing her name to something more American sounding. Does Amina need to change too? She loves her Pakistani culture, but also wants to fit in. This stress about her identity is magnified when her local mosque is vandalized. Amina will need to raise her voice and bring the community together.

Merci Suárez Changes Gears by Meg Medina
(PZ7.M5128 Me 2018)
As a scholarship student, Merci has never felt at home at her private school among all her wealthy peers. The start of sixth grade brings drama at school when mean girl Edna focuses her jealousy on Merci. At home, her grandfather has begun acting strangely. He is forgetting things, falling off his bike, and has a short temper. No one in her family will tell her what is wrong. Join Merci as she navigates all of these changes with humor and heart.

The School Story by Andrew Clements, illustrated by Brian Selznick
(PZ7.C59118 Sc 2001)
Twelve year old Natalie has written a book. She and her best friend, Zoe, believe it will be the next best seller. But how can a middle schooler get a book published? Good thing Zoe has a plan! Natalie can submit the book under a pen name and Zoe can pretend to be her agent. Will the girls be able to fool the publishers into thinking that they are grown ups?

The School for Good and Evil by Soman Chinani, illustrated by Iacopo Bruno
(PZ7.C34874 Sc 2013)
Sophia knows she will fit in with the other princesses at the School for Good. She has the glass slippers and everything. Agatha, dressed in all black with her black cat always close by, seems like she is destined to join the villains at the School For Evil. Despite how the two girls appear, they are placed in the opposite schools: Sophia with the villains and Agatha with the fair maidens. Was it a mistake or the first step to the girls finding out who they really are?

Graphic Novels

Smile by Raina Telgemeier
(PZ7.T245 Sm 2010)
Raina is looking forward to a nice normal year in sixth grade. That is, until she falls after girl scouts and injures her two front teeth! She then has to deal with braces, headgear, and retainers on top of all the typical drama at school. This graphic novel hilariously follows her failures and triumphs of sixth grade.

New Kid by Jerry Craft, with color by Jim Callahan
(PZ7.C8844 Ne 2019)
Jordan loves to draw cartoons and was hoping his parents would send him to the art school of his dreams. Instead, they enroll him at a prestigious private school where he is one of the only kids of color. He finds he doesn’t fit in at this new school and starts to feel like he doesn’t fit in in his neighborhood either. Will he be able to navigate this new school culture and stay true to himself?

Young Adult Books

The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie, illustrated by Ellen Forney.
(PZ7.A382 Ab 2007)
Junior leaves his troubled school on the Spokane reservation for an all white farm town high school. When he arrives, he finds the only other Native American there is the mascot. He will have to learn to navigate this new school and very different culture. This laugh out loud funny story is partly based on the author’s own experience growing up on a reservation, but attending a predominantly white school.

The Raven Boys by Maggie Stiefvater
(PZ7 .B738 Hi 2020)

Blue Sargent has been warned her entire life that if she kisses her true love, he’ll die. Being the only non-psychic in a family of mediums, Blue is used to this sort of warning. Regardless, she lives by two rules: never kiss anyone, and stay away from the Raven Boys, aka the students of prestigious Aglionby Academy. While joining her aunt for a reading, Blue is forced to confront both of her rules. She sees the ghost of a boy wearing an Aglionby sweater, which can only mean one thing: He’s her true love, and she killed him. This richly written book will keep you enthralled. Luckily, the rest of the series is available.

Etiquette & Espionage by Gail Carriger
(PZ7.C23455 Eti 2013)
Sophronia’s family is desperate for her to learn manners and start acting like a lady, so they enroll her in Mademoiselle Geraldine’s Finishing Academy for Young Ladies of Quality. When she arrives, Sophronia discovers that the school is not quite what her mother thought it would be. In addition to learning the arts of dance, dress, and etiquette, the young women also learn how to hide behind politeness to become master spies.

This Promise of Change : one girl’s story in the fight for school equality by Jo Ann Allen Boyce and Debbie Levy
(F444.C68 B69 2019)
This autobiography tells the story of Jo Ann Allen, one of the “Clinton 12,” the first group of Black students to integrate into an all white public high school in the American South. The eastern Tennessee town’s bigotry was masked with false southern courtesies. That is, until the school integrated and a much darker side of the town’s white population came to the surface. The Clinton 12 faced extreme bigotry and violence as they tried to attend the high school. This heartbreaking personal account brings a new light to this historic moment, highlighting that among this national attention and historic pressure, Jo Ann also wanted to live life as a normal teenager. She wanted to play music, hang out with friends, and learn as white students were able to do without combating bigotry.

Emergency Contact by Mary H.K. Choi
(PZ7.C44623 Em 2018)
Penny is happy to leave her self proclaimed mediocre life behind when she heads to college. Sam is stuck at a job in a coffee shop with just seventeen dollars in his bank account. When the two meet, it is far from a “meet cute.” Despite the awkward introduction, the two share numbers and quickly begin sharing everything with each other over text. Where will this digital relationship take them?

Fangirl by Rainbow Rowell
(PZ7.R79613 Fan 2013)
Cath is hoping college won’t change a thing between her and her twin sister, Wren. They are enrolled at the same school after all. Wren has other plans. Hoping to flourish on her own, she has requested that they not be roommates. Cath is left overwhelmed on her own. Her surly roommate with an ever present, overly friendly boyfriend doesn’t help her feel any more at home. She finds solace in writing fanfiction about her favorite fantasy world. But will she be able to find that same confidence in real life?

06.16.2021

Staff Book Suggestions Summer 2021

John Buchtel

Come in out of the hot sun and cool off with one of these big books while learning about one of the most important treasures in the Athenæum’s collection, the Nuremberg Chronicle of 1493:

The Making of the Nuremberg Chronicle by Adrian Wilson

(Cutter Classification :X7Z //K796 //w)

A richly illustrated in-depth history of the most extensively illustrated early printed book. An experienced book designer and printer himself, MacArthur grant recipient Adrian Wilson tells the story through the lens of the astonishing survivals of early contracts, sketches, and layouts for the massive 1493 publication. He argues persuasively that some of the sketches may have been done by a young Albrecht Dürer.

Chronicle of the World: The Complete and Annotated Nuremberg Chronicle of 1493 by Hartmann Schedel

(Library of Congress Classification Lg Z241 .S3413 2001)

A complete full-color facsimile of a stunningly hand-colored copy of the German edition of the most extensively illustrated early printed book, with a well-researched introduction in English by Stephan Füssel, director of the Institute for Book Studies at the Johannes Gutenberg University in Mainz, Germany.

The Nuremberg Chronicle: A Pictorial World History from the Creation to 1493 by Ellen Shaffer by Hartmann Schedel

(Cutter $7T //Sch2 //zs)

A limited edition fine-press book that tells the story of the Nuremberg Chronicle. Some of its content has been superseded—but it includes an original leaf from the 1497 piracy! N.B. As this item is part of our Special Collections, it doesn’t circulate, but one can view it by way of a research appointment.

Jacqueline Chambers

The Secret Keeper by Kate Morton

(Library of Congress PZ4.M9056 Sec 2012)

The Forgotten Garden by Kate Morton

(Library of Congress PZ4.M9056 Fo 2009)

Kate Morton is one of my favorite writers. Her novels center around family histories, generational mysteries, and the indelible bonds of women. Both The Secret Keeper and The Forgotten Garden were wonderful reads, and I could not put either book down even as the hours ticked on and my eyes strained to remain open late into the night! I love the way her stories span over many generations and locations, and you become deeply invested in her flawed and beautiful characters. 

Carolle Morini

Lyrical and Critical Essays by Albert Camus. Edited and with notes by Philip Thody. Translated from the French by Ellen Conroy Kennedy.

(Cutter Classification VF3 .C1573 .l .E)

If you have read his fiction and have a hankering for more Camus in your life, check out his essays—you will not be disappointed.

Looking At Pictures by Robert Walser. Translated from the German by Susan Bernofsky

(Library of Congress N7445.4 .W325 2015)

Take a read of these short unique pieces about art, artists, and life before you head to the museums and galleries. The perfect size for travel.

Derek Murphy

Fiction in the Archives: Pardon Tales and their Tellers in Sixteenth-Century France by Natalie Zemon Davis

(Library of Congress PQ613 .D38 1987)

This was one of those fortuitous discoveries for which the Athenæum’s stacks are so well-suited. The title caught my eye while I was looking for another book, and the first sentence of the preface cemented my interest: “For years I have been reading sixteenth-century letters of remission for crimes, dutifully taking notes on names and acts, while chuckling and shaking my head as though I had the Decameron in my hands.” In sixteenth-century France, some citizens convicted of certain crimes were given the chance to plead their own case, telling the story of their crime in hopes of a pardon. These stories were typically transcribed to be reviewed by the king or his chancellery. Many of these documents survived in the archives, and they give a rare insight into the voices of the common people of the time. The author shares several entertaining examples of these pardon tales, and considers what they can tell us about the ways people of that time and place lived and told stories.

Anthea Reilly

Paris in the Present Tense by Mark Helprin

(Library of Congress PZ4 .H478 Pa 2017)

Any novels by Mark Helprin—He is a delight to read—writes as though he is composing a fantastic symphony.

Death at the Château Bremont by M.L. Longworth

(Library of Congress PZ4.L8591 De 2011)

M.L Longworth mystery series set in Aix-en-Provence—charming and good for fast reading.

Collected Stories by Shirley Hazzard

(Library of Congress PZ4 .H4316 Co 2020)

Shirley Hazzard Short Stories—excellent writer as usual.

Allegorizings by Jan Morris

(Library of Congress PR6063.O7489 A79 2021)

Her final book—essays on her life, another excellent read.

Kaelin Rasmussen

Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? by Philip K. Dick

(Library of Congress PZ4.D547 Do 1996)

Like many of us, I have seen the film Blade Runner (at least two cuts of it, anyway). Until now, however, I had not read the book upon which it was based. Though in general I quite enjoy dystopian science fiction of yesteryear, I had always avoided Philip K. Dick’s 1968 classic Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, thinking “Been there, seen that.” I have now changed my mind and recommend the book on its own merit. The apocalyptic, noir-ish flavor of the book will be familiar to movie fans, but there is so much more there. Rick Dekard’s hunt for renegade artificial humans is fraught with huge ideas about the nature of human emotion, intelligence, perception, and empathy, and alongside, the small, sharp uncertainties and petty urges of everyday life. In other words, the good stuff. While I was not pleased with the stereotypes embodied in the women characters, a not unexpected flaw, I still enjoyed the skillful world-building, the exciting story, and the troubling possibilities of this surprising novel. Plus, science fiction makes great summer reading!

Leah Rosovsky

A Month in the Country by J.L. Carr

(Library of Congress PZ4.C3118 Mo)

This beautiful short novel tells the story of a shell shocked World War I veteran, Tom Birkin, who spends a summer just after the end of the war in the English countryside. Birkin has been asked to restore a medieval mural that has been uncovered in a small local church. The book poses questions about love, memory, place, and art especially as part of the process of recovery. It’s deeply moving and deeply enjoyable.

Deacon King Kong by James McBride

(Library of Congress PZ4.M11865 De 2020)

Set in New York City in the fall of 1969, the novel starts when one of the deacons of the local Baptist church shoots a young man dealing drugs in the Brooklyn project where they both live. McBride is an amazing storyteller and creates vivid portraits of a large cast of characters and their overlapping lives. The novel is alternately painful, gripping, and very funny.

Carly Stevens

Waiting for the Night Song by BA Member Julie Carrick Dalton

(Library of Congress PZ4 .D149 Wa 2021)

Three Mothers: How the Mothers of Martin Luther King, Jr., Malcolm X, and James Baldwin Shaped a Nation by Anna Malaiki Tubbs

(Library of Congress E185.96 .T83 2021)

I detest the summer months. To cope, I throw myself into books to pretend I’m anywhere but Boston during the grueling heat and humidity. In my mind, nothing can transport you out of the heat better than a thriller. Waiting for the Night Song by member Julie Carrick Dalton fits the bill perfectly. I also like to throw in some nonfiction to keep my brain in tip-top shape. Three Mothers by Anna Malaiki Tubbs is an engrossing read that asks readers to reexamine the legacies of Berdis Baldwin, Alberta King, and Louise Little in order to understand a mother’s role in resistance and activism.

Mary Warnement

The Library of the Dukes of Burgundy, edited by Bernard Bousmanne & Elena Savini

(Library of Congress + Z814.L53 L53 2020)

A book about books always catches my eye, and the fifteenth century is my favorite period, so how could I resist this. These rulers took their impressive collections with them as they travelled from stronghold to stronghold. If you are familiar with a medieval illuminated book, then it was probably owned by one of these dukes. This is an over-sized book but manageable. A brief introduction explains the history of the dukes and the region they ruled. A short chapter from the conservators highlights repairs made—or not—with excellent photographic illustration, as is the case for the catalog entries. These books now reside in the Royal Library of Belgium (KBR) and the book accompanies an exhibition in a newly designed space to showcase their amazing collection. If the history doesn’t interest you—and some of the translations are a little uneven—you can jump ahead to the catalog entries for these gorgeous books. If you’re ready to start thinking about packing your bags again for travel, just think what these ducal households had to consider when packing their libraries.

Blood and Roses: One Family’s Struggle and Triumph During England’s Tumultuous Wars of the Roses by Helen Castor

(Library of Congress DA245 .C3687 2006)

My second recommendation also focuses on the fifteenth century, told through a family’s letters, which have the “immediacy of an overheard conversation.” My commutes for a month were enlivened by Castor’s story of their survival, discovery, publication, rediscovery, and republication, which interested me as much as the history itself. The Pastons are well known among medievalists, but if this isn’t a period you know much about, you’ll learn much and no doubt be shocked at the level of upward social mobility. Castor writes well and not only simplifies the complicated political and family history. If you want to know about the inspiration for Shakespeare’s Falstoff, this is good for that too.

Three Hours in Paris by Cara Black

(Library of Congress PZ4 .B626956 Th 2020)

And now for something completely different, to prove I am not (only) a history geek. Mystery lovers may know Cara Black’s Aimée Leduc series set in modern Paris. This standalone thriller is set primarily on one June day in 1940. The first chapter opens with a bang, and you can’t imagine how it can keep it up; however, then comes the twist and the thrill is there till the end. A great summer read.

Hannah Weisman

While Justice Sleeps by Stacey Abrams

(Library of Congress PZ4.A165 Wh 2021)

As a fan of political soap operas—er, dramas—on television, Stacey Abrams’s newest novel is the perfect summer read. Although I haven’t made it to the end yet, I’m deeply invested in whether Supreme Court Justice Howard Wynn will survive his coma, whether his bright law clerk Avery Keene will determine whether the Justice’s cryptic message to Keene forewarns a legitimate national security threat, and whether President Stokes will play a role in ending the Justice’s life. Abrams’s story rolls along at a pleasant clip, making it easy to enjoy on the beach or on the front porch with a summer beverage.

03.10.2021

STAFF BOOK SUGGESTIONS SPRING 2021

John Buchtel

The Butterfly Effect: Insects and the Making of the Modern World by Edward D. Melillo

(Library of Congress SF517 .M45 2020)

The Fly Trap by Fredrik Sjöberg; translated from Swedish by Thomas Teal

(On order)

In anticipation of the daffodils’ emergence and the awakening of their pollinators, John Buchtel’s thoughts took an entomological turn as he prepared his March 29th Curator’s Choice presentation on “Bugs!” (Check out the video on our Vimeo page, if you missed it!) From the new book shelves, John commends two books on his six-legged theme to us. In The Butterfly Effect: Insects and the Making of the Modern World (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2020), Edward D. Melillo, professor of history and environmental studies at Amherst College, tells the fascinating story of the impact on human culture of such insect products as silk, shellac, and cochineal (John’s presentation included not only stunningly beautiful rare illustrated entomology books, but also exquisite examples from our collection of these three insect products, and more besides!). John also gives his highest recommendation to Fredrik Sjöberg’s The Fly Trap (New York: Pantheon, 2015). In a lyrical translation from the Swedish by Thomas Teal, Sjöberg’s memoir is as much about the beauty of art and nature, the mania for collecting in general, and the influence our predecessors have on our intellectual curiosity in the present, as it is about one man’s obsession with the study of rare hoverflies on a remote Swedish island.

Carolle Morini

Nightshade: A Novel by Annalena McAfee

(Library of Congress PZ4 .M11192 Ni 2020)

London, NYC, art, artists, creativity, poisonous plants…death. What else could you ask for? And a good guide for what not to plant in your home garden.

Costalegre by Courtney Maum

(Library of Congress PZ4.M452 Co 2019)

Costalegre is inspired by the relationship between Peggy Guggenheim and her daughter, Pegeen. It is set in 1937, war on the horizon, art and artists to save, artists to know, art to create and adolescence to through—written in a diary style by the teenage girl.

Lisa Muccigrosso

A Lyttel Booke of Nonsense by Randall Davies

(Cutter Classification VEA .D285)

I’ve got A Lyttel Booke of Nonsense on my bench in the lab. In 1912, Randall Davies took medieval woodcuts and composed limericks to go along with them. It’s definitely a fun little diversion.

Kaelin Rasmussen

The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym, from The Works of Edgar Allan Poe

(Cutter VE .P753 .3)

Now that spring is in the air and hope springs anew, many of our thoughts turn to wistful plans for the misty future. How about a nice sea adventure novel to put you in the mood…? No. Wait. That’s a different book. This book is Edgar Allan Poe’s version of a boy’s adventures on the high seas: Nantucket-born Arthur Gordon Pym, a romantic lad in his late teens, imagines that a whaling journey to the South Seas sounds like good fun. But his parents say no, so naturally he and his best friend, son of the ship’s captain, hatch a plan to get him on board in secret. What could go wrong? Pretty much everything. Poe’s plot is gruesome, his prose filled with his wonderful dark urgency. It’s a novel of the nineteenth century, with the nineteenth-century novel’s troubling portrayal of people of color from a white perspective, which I read as an exercise in identifying and thinking about how those troubling ideas are still with us today.

Anthea Reilly

In Farleigh Field by Rhys Bowen

(Library of Congress PZ4.B7839 Inf 2017)

Death Comes for the Archbishop by Willa Cather

(Library of Congress PZ3.C2858 De 1999)

The Lying Life of Adults by Elena Ferrante

(Library of Congress PZ4 .F356 Ly 2020)

Collected Stories by Shirley Hazzard

(Library of Congress PZ4 .H4316 Co 2020)

Memoir from Antproof Case by Mark Helprin

(Library of Congress PZ4.H478 Me)

The Splendid and the Vile by Erik Larson

(Library of Congress DA566.9.C5 L37 2020)

Why I Don’t Write and Other Stories by Susan Minot

(Library of Congress PZ4 .M6652 Wh 2020)

The Dutch House by Ann Patchett

(Library of Congress PZ4.P294 Du 2019)

Please Stop Helping Us by Jason Riley

(Library of Congress E185.86 .R55 2014)

All authors are equally excellent in their own ways. I will not go into windy explanations why I read these books.

Graham Skinner

Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead (Prowadź swój pług przez kości umarłych) by Olga Tokarczuk

(Library of Congress PZ4.T6465 Dr 2019)

Once again Olga Tokarczuk captures my heart with this wonderful philosophical treatise wound in William Blake and draped in a whodunit. The main character Janina, an animal-rights activist, satirizes hunters, minor politicians and hypocritical priests and follows her astrological analysis while speaking on age and her life throughout the novel. Tokarczuk paints an amusing and enrapturing picture that reflects much of her earlier novel Primeval and Other Times while focusing on such an enigmatic and charming protagonist. 

Mary Warnement

Vincent’s Books: Van Gogh and the Writers Who Inspired Him by Mariella Guzzoni

(Library of Congress ND653.G7 G94 2020)

A book about books and an artist’s love of books, beautifully illustrated. This screams fresh start and spring to me, and I hope to many of you book and art lovers out there. In 2009, Van Gogh’s letters were published in print and they are free online (not only in full but actually more extensive than the print volumes). Guzzoni has plumbed these for Van Gogh’s reactions to what he has read (and he read extensively in four different languages) to inform her biography focused on the influence reading played in Van Gogh’s life and art. Page after page of color illustrations (ephemera, book covers, his paintings as well as other art that influenced him) are a feast for the eye. Another treat for this reader, a ribbon bookmark! From a university press no less. I wish the captions included the institution where the painting resides rather than forcing one to look in the list of acknowledgments at the back, but that’s a minor quibble, especially when other books simply provide a list of credits unconnected to specific captions. The penultimate chapter, about his paintings of people reading, is a particular pleasure.

Hannah Weisman

In the Garden of Beasts: Love, Terror, and an American Family in Hitler’s Berlin by Erik Larson

(Library of Congress E748.D6 L37 2011)

Larson takes his readers through pre-war Berlin through the eyes of the professorial US Ambassador to Germany William E. Dodd and his vivacious daughter Martha as they come to realize the catastrophe befalling Germany, Europe, and the world. The book was particularly compelling to me after having seen the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum’s exhibition Americans and the Holocaust, because both the book and the show delve into the complexities of which American officials knew what about Hitler’s intentions and what they did with that information. Larson treats his subjects and topic with the respect and seriousness they deserve, but writes in a style that helps move the reader through the material without feeling weighed down by the subject.

01.05.2021

STAFF BOOK SUGGESTIONS WINTER 2021

Carolle Morini

Intimations: Six Essays by Zadie Smith

(Library of Congress PR6069.M59 I46 2020)

A great collection of essays that speak to right now. Smith is always intelligent and interesting. This collection, like all her essays, will leave you wanting to craft the perfect essay yourself.

The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennett

(Library of Congress PZ4 .B4665 Va 2020)

This novel is on my top five “books read list ” in 2020. Beautifully written and thought provoking. Bennet creates a world that you will not easily forget and her characters, months after you read it, will continue to be a part of your thoughts. It is clear why this novel is on everyone’s list. 

Lartigue: The Boy and the Belle Époque by Louise Baring

(Library of Congress TR140.L32 B37 2020)

If you just want to smile and look at fun photographs then this is the book for you. Utterly charming, engaging and lively. With this book in hand you’ll feel like you’ve found a long lost friend.

Bearden’s Odyssey: Poets Respond to the Art of Romare Bearden; edited by Kwame Dawes and Matthew Shenoda, with a foreword by Derek Walcott

(Library of Congress PS591.N4 B36 2017)

A fine collection of poetry responding to Bearden’s art. The fantastic group of poets within this slim volume will have you lingering the artistic alleys of the mind.

Derek Murphy

What I Talk About When I Talk About Running: A Memoir by Haruki Murakami

(Library of Congress CT1838.M87 A3 2008)

I first came to Murakami through his novels—wonderful and bizarre postmodern (perhaps metamodern?) stories about disaffected middle-aged jazz enthusiasts cooking pasta, meeting talking cats, and falling through portals in wells. Recently I’ve taken up running, and this contemplative and self-effacing meditation on the hobby has given me solace on days when it’s too cold to go running myself.

Elizabeth O’Meara

The Searcher by Tana French (also available as an audio book from CloudLibrary)

(Library of Congress PZ4.F872735 Se 2020)

This is the latest book from Irish crime fiction writer Tana French. And another success for me. She’s best known for her Dublin Squad series, which I recommend, but her most recent is a standalone book. In interviews she has talked about how this book was influenced by John Ford’s western The Searcher. French’s book is also about the search for somebody and a man struggling to come to terms with his previous life and what he has always believed was his moral code. The bare bones outline of the plot—that a retired Chicago police officer moves to a small rural village in the west of Ireland and is asked to find out what happened to a missing teenager—does not do any justice to the world French creates.  Read it and enjoy The Search.

Mary Warnement

Arctic Dreams: Imagination and Desire in a Northern Landscape by Barry Lopez

(Library of Congress QH84.1 .L67 1986)

I’m taking an unusual step and recommending two books I’ve only just started, both perfect for the season. I discovered Barry Lopez just days before he died. The first pages of his Arctic Dreams: Imagination and Desire in a Northern Landscape mentions Kalamazoo, MI, a city not far from where I and my parents grew up (Perhaps you know it from the song or more recently from the Pfizer plant producing a vaccine). That connection wasn’t why I picked up the book or why I turned the page again and again, but connections are important this year. Arctic Dreams won many awards, most notably the National Book Award in 1986. A natural history classic. Poetic, intelligent, informed consideration of a landscape and its inhabitants. 

Snow by Marcus Sedgwick

(Library of Congress PR6069.E316 S66 2016)

I admire many of Little Toller’s publications, both its classic reprints and its new list. It is small but its authors have garnered a lot of attention and major awards. How could I resist sharing this meditation, as multifaceted as a flake (and its beautiful cover) for my winter recommendation.

Hannah Weisman

The Dutch House by Ann Patchett

(Library of Congress PZ4.P294 Du 2019)

The Conroy Family has occupied my attention for the last several days as I make my way through The Dutch House. I typically shy away from anything that includes the “wicked stepmother” trope, but Patchett’s telling of Danny and Maeve Conroy’s experiences taps into themes of belonging, identity, and familial love, and loss in a sensitive and thoughtful way. Patchett cleverly uses the extravagant house the Conroy siblings were raised in as a character, adding dimension to the siblings’ stories. 

12.04.2020

Staff recommendations from 2020 Holiday Pop-up Bookshop

Daniel Axmacher

Fathoms: The World in the Whale by Rebecca Giggs
The City We Became by N.K. Jemisin

Bruno Faria

Agua Viva by Clarice Lispector
Borges: Selected Poems by Jorge Luis Borges
Desert Solitaire: A Season in the Wilderness by Edward Abbey

Adriene Galindo

Dog Songs by Mary Oliver
This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. The Climate by Naomi Klein
Writers and Their Cats by Alison Nastasi

Sam Gill

Saturday by Oge Mora
Tiny T Rex and the Impossible Hug by Jonathan Stutzman
The Tea Dragon Society by Katie O’Neil
Planet Omar: Accidental Trouble Magnet by Zanib Mian
Children of Blood and Bone by Tomi Adeyemi
Children of Virtue and Vengeance by Tomi Adeyemi

Andrew Hahn

Every Grain of Rice: Simple Chinese Home Cooking by Fuchsia Dunlop
On Food and Cooking: The Science and Lore of the Kitchen by Harold McGee
The Man Who Ate Too Much by John Birdsall

Michael Jugenheimer

Diet for a Small Planet by Frances Moore Lappé
Calypso by David Sedaris
Inside of a Dog by Alexandra Horowitz
A People’s History of the United States by Howard Zinn

Carolle Morini

Border Lines: Poems of Migration, edited by Mihaela Moscaliuc and Michael Waters
African American Poetry: 250 Years of Struggle & Song, edited by Kevin Young
Pride and Prejudice: The Complete Novel with Nineteen Letters from the Characters’ Correspondence, Written and Folded by Hand

Kaelin Rasmussen

Binti: The Complete Trilogy by Nnedi Okorafor
Afterlife by Julia Alvarez

Graham Skinner

The Plant Messiah by Carlos Magdalena
Dry Store Room No. 1 by Richard Fortey
The Falcon Thief by Joshua Hammer

Mary Warnement

Metropolis by Philip Kerr
Field Guide to Dumb Birds of North America by Matt Kracht
The Mystery of Henri Pick by David Foenkinos

09.21.2020

STAFF BOOK SUGGESTIONS AUTUMN 2020

John Buchtel

Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption by Bryan Stevenson

(Library of Congress Classification CT275.S8421 A3 2014)

Powerful: gripping narrative interlaced with thoughtful reflections on the failures of our criminal justice system. Disturbing, yes: but also inspiring and hopeful. A must-read. I haven’t seen the movie yet.

The Color of Compromise: The Truth about the American Church’s Complicity in Racism by Jemar Tisby

(Library of Congress E185.615 .T57 2019)

Tisby provides a concise, clear history from the origins of American slavery to the development of segregated suburbia. Instead of merely offering an indictment, however, he issues a ringing call for repentance, reconciliation, and real unity, with practical ideas on how to achieve them.

Carolle Morini

Night Boat to Tangier by Kevin Barry

(Library of Congress PZ4 .B28138 Ni 2019)

In a Port of Algeciras waiting room of the ferry terminal, two aging Irishmen, partners in smuggling drugs, sit together and wait for the arrival or departure of someone. They are not sure. As they wait, you read about the messy tangle of their lives and you may think half way through the book: why isn’t this a mini series on Netflix?

Artforum by César Aira

(Library of Congress PZ4.A293 Ar 2020)

Do you have a stack of your favorite periodicals at home? Is that stack more of a tower? Do you wait by the mailbox for a new issue? Do you live in fear of accidentally leaving a window open in your home when you leave—because what if it rains?! Are you behind in your reading goal for 2020 and need a short book to bump up your numbers? If you said yes to any of these questions, this little novella is for you. A funny and insightful story about a man and his passion for Artforum. Oh, and you may want to check out the actual Artforum in the Art Department or even a back issue or two or three or four…

Elizabeth O’Meara

Vincent’s Books: Van Gogh and the Writers Who Inspired Him by Mariella Guzzoni

(Library of Congress ND653.G7 G94 2020)

Along with many people, I’ve always been drawn to Vincent Van Gogh’s paintings and life story.  Several years ago I began Naifeh and White’s biography Van Gogh: The Life but didn’t finish it because I found it too sad. Guzzoni’s book was a pleasure to read. Van Gogh was a voracious reader and prolific letter writer. Guzzoni did a wonderful job pulling together his reading, writing and painting. It was a pleasurable journey into that piece of Van Gogh’s life.

Autumn by Ali Smith

(Library of Congress PZ4.S64231 Au 2017)

This is the first book of Ali Smith’s Season Quartet book series, AutumnWinterSpringSummer.  It seemed like a no-brainer suggestion for our autumn book recommendations.  I read this book last year but decided to reread it, and I’m so glad I did. I read it much too quickly that first go around. This book’s prose calls out for a careful, attentive pace. The structure, such as it is, centers on the caring relationship between two neighbors, a young girl and an old man. It was published in 2017 and has as its background the political disturbances of the time in Great Britain, which also resonates in 2020 America.

Leah Rosovsky 

Home Cooking by Laurie Colwin

(Library of Congress TX652 .C714 1988)

My recommendation is Home Cooking by the late Laurie Colwin. During the pandemic, many of us have found ourselves producing many more meals. This series of charming short essays and recipes, originally published in Gourmet Magazine, contemplates the role of food in our daily lives and in our families. It’s a lovely read that may even add a new dish to your rotation!

Mary Warnement

Love and War in the Apennines by Eric Newby

(Cutter Classification 8AB1 .N429)

Newby is best known as a travel writer, a genre especially appealing now that armchair travel must suffice, but I started with his last book, a memoir about his time as a prisoner of war in the autumn and early winter of 1943–44, which seemed appropriate as we commemorate the 75th anniversary of the end of WWII. (My colleague rewards—figuratively rather than literally—book recommendations evoking the season; I point out that mine not only takes place from September to December, but my edition sports pumpkin-hued cloth boards.) Newby amusingly describes the operation in 1942 in which he was captured, and that tone prevails, although it borders on Kafkaesque humor.

Early on I wondered how he could possibly write with so much detail over 25 years later, but he was taking notes. He even had a few books: Boswell’s Tour of the Hebrides (which he regrets leaving behind at one point), a Lunario Barba-Nera (an almanac belonging to a farming family that harbors him), one volume of Gibbons’s Decline and Fall, a Bible, and something he called Mr. Sponge.

I wasn’t entirely sympathetic to Newby in the first 50 pages or so. His writing about women passing his prison as if they had no other existence but to appear in his imaginings put me off, but once he met a woman he fell in love with that attitude petered off. It didn’t disappear, look at his descriptions of Rita and Dolores who live and work on the farm where he’s given refuge, but it faded. I could appreciate his story and his manner of telling it. 

Rachel Wentworth

The Collected Schizophrenias by Esmé Weijun Wung

(Library of Congress RC514 .W36 2019)

I made a few false starts before I was able to read this collection of essays through to completion. There is something about the way Wung wields her pen from inside the experience of her illness that is jarring. It feels naked and vulnerable, like an open wound. Although at times almost academic, this collection weaves deeply intimate confessional prose with cultural criticism to profound effect. To quote The New Yorker, there is something radical about this collection. Wung confronts various interpretations of mental illness with a level of incisiveness that is only attainable with an #OwnVoices writer. She doesn’t promise clarity, instead sitting comfortably inside her uncertainty and inviting the reader to join. Anyone can benefit from this mold-breaking, mind-bending, eye-opening read, but I encourage those with direct experience with mental illness to treat themselves kindly when deciding whether to read it in its entirety.

The Grammarians by Cathleen Schine

(Library of Congress PZ4 .S3362 Gr 2019)

I came to this book in the last days of my (seriously procrastinated) 2019 reading goal and, boy, did I read it quickly. Despite my panic-read, this quirky little novel made a huge impact. Ultimately a lifelong conversation between a set of grammarian twins, one a die-hard prescriptivist and the other an improvisational descriptivist, this text takes its reader on a wild ride. The way the twins (and this author) play with language like one might play with Play-Doh is a joy for grammarians and goofs alike. It is clearly a love letter to language, and its author makes her joy shine through every page. Read this if you live for the thrill of spotting a typo in the New York Times.

07.31.2020

New Books: August 2021

Picture Books

Harlem Grown by Tony Hillery, Illustrated by Jessie Hartland (Children Picture Book + HILLE)

With wonderfully detailed illustrations, Harlem Grown tells the story of Tony Hillery and the students he worked with to create an operational farm in their NYC neighborhood. Through their hard work, the community gained beauty, conection, and healthy food.

The Oldest Student : how Mary Walker learned to read by Rita Lorraine Hubbar, illustrated by Oge Mora.
(Children Picture Book + HUBBA)

You are never too old to learn something new, and Mary Walker is proof of that. Mary Walker was born into slavery in 1848. At age 116, she learned to read. This biographical picture book brings her amazing story of perseverance to life.

Zonia’s Rain Forest by Juana Martinez-Neal
(Children Picture Book + MARTI)

Peruvian-American Author Juana Martinez-Neal tells the story of Zonia, a young girl who lives in the Amazon rainforest. Through following Zonia as she meets with her animal friends, readers can begin to learn about how and why we should care for the rainforest.

Eyes that Kiss in the Corners by Joanna Ho, iIllustrated by Dung Ho.
(Children Picture Book + HO)

In this tale of self-acceptance and the beauty of diversity, a young girl learns that while her eyes are different from those of her peers, they reflect her family’s history and strength.

Sulwe by Lupita Nyong’o, illustrated by Vashti Harrison
(Children Picture Book + NYONG)

Lupita Nyong’o crafts a beautiful story about the harm of colorism and how one little girl goes on a magical journey to learn to see her own beauty. With illustrations as beautiful as the night sky, this story is equal parts heart wrenching and heartwarming.

You Matter by Christian Robinson
(Children Picture Book + ROBIN)This bright and colorful picture book shows readers that everything and everyone in the world is connected and important.

Who wet my pants? by Bob Shea, illustrated by Zachariah OHora.
(Children Picture Book + SHEA)

This silly book follows Reuben the bear who tries to figure out who put a wet spot on his pants in a rather embarrassing area. As he investigates and starts to realize it was his own accident, he learns about how to handle embarrassment with empathy.

The Hips on the Drag Queen Go Swish, Swish, Swish by Lil Miss Hot Mess, illustrated by Olga de Dios
(Children Picture Book LIL)

From founding member of Drag Queen Story Hour, Lil Miss Hot Mess, comes this fun and fierce take on “the wheels on the bus” that demonstrates the power and joy of being yourself.

Classified : the secret career of Mary Golda Ross, Cherokee aerospace engineer by Traci Sorell, illustrated by Natasha Donovan
(Children Picture Book + SOREL)

Mary Golda Ross worked as an engineer in the classified department of Lockheed Air Corporation. This inspirational biography follows her journey as a female Cherokee engineer and mentor.

Fry Bread : a Native American family story by Kevin Noble Maillard, illustrated by Juana Martinez-Neal
(Children Picture Book + MAILL)

Food and family are always close together. This beautiful picture book explores the importance of Fry Bread to a modern Native American family and the culture they share.

Beginning Reader

I’m on it! by by Andrea Tsurumi and Mo Willems(Children Picture Book TSURU)

Have some fun with prepositions in this animal filled book.

Yasmin the Librarian by Saadia Faruqi, illustrated by Hatem Aly
(PZ7.F2466 Yal 2021)

Yasmin loves books and helping out at the library. When she brings her favorite book from home to show the librarian, she loses it! Will she be able to find it among all the library books?

I Will Race You through this Book! by Jonathan Fenske
(Children Picture Book FENSK)

Book-It Bunny breaks the fourth wall in this adventure story. Can you beat him to the end of the book?

Chapter Books

The Lion of Mars by Jennifer L. Holm

(PZ7.H732226 Li 2021)

Bell is just a regular kid, aside from living in a colony on Mars. When a virus reaches the colony and all the adults get sick, it is up to Bell and the other children to save their families, the colony, and perhaps the whole planet.

From the Desk of Zoe Washington by Janae Marks
(PZ7.M333 Fr 2020)

On Zoe’s twelfth birthday, she receives a letter from the father she has never met. In the letter, he claims he is innocent of the crime that placed him in jail for her whole life. Zoe then investigates, determined to find out the truth. Can she balance school, her baking internship, and her budding career in investigation?

The Animal Rescue Agency : Case file: Little claws by Eliot Schrefer, illustrated by Daniel Duncan
(PZ7.S37845 An 2021)

Former notorious chicken snatcher, Esquire Fox has given up her life of crime to run the Animal Rescue Agency. In this first instalment of the upcoming series, Esquire and company head to the Arctic to rescue a polar bear cub from one of the biggest threats to nature: humans.

Telephone Tales by Gianni Rodari, illustrated by Valerio Vidali, translated from the Italian by Antony Shugaar
(PZ7.R5987 Te 2020)

Though he travels for work, Mr. Bianchi never misses a bedtime story for his daughter. He calls her every night from payphones around the world to tell her a story. Each story must fit in the time a coin can buy. Mr. Bianchi’s travels frame this wonderful collection of short stories.

Genesis Begins Again by Alicia D. Williams
(PZ7.W65585 Ge 2019)

This powerful and ultimately uplifting exploration of internalized racism and colorism follows thirteen-year-old Genesis as she learns to love herself despite the verbal abuse she has faced from her peers and her own family.

Graphic Novels

Twins / written by Varian Johnson ; illustrated by Shannon Wright(PZ7.J6355 Tw 2020)

There are times when friends begin to drift apart. For Maureen and Francine Carter, that time was at the start of sixth grade when one of the twins became interested in popularity. This boldly colored graphic novel explores what it means to be a friend and a sister when interests and personalities are always evolving.

Stargazing by Jen Wang, color by Lark Pien
(PZ7.W18 St 2019)

Although Moon and Christine grew up in the same Asian-American neighborhood, they are nothing alike. Sometimes being different is what makes a friendship strong. As the girls grow closer together, Moon shares her deepest secret: she can communicate with the stars, which tell her she does not truly belong on earth. Moon has always been there for Christine, will Christine be able to support Moon when an emergency arises?

Beetle & the Hollowbones by Aliza Layne, coloring by Natalie Riess and Kristen Acampora
(PZ7.L442 Be 2020)

Twelve-year-old goblin-witch Beetle, would rather not study witchcraft. She would much prefer to spend her days with her best friend, Blob Ghost. When Beetle’s former best friend, Kat returns to town her days of hanging out with Blob Ghost are threatened. Kat has returned for an apprenticeship with her sorceress aunt. Beetle’s jealousy of Kat quickly changes to worry when she learns of the sorceress’s evil plan that could destroy Blob Ghost and his fellow spirits. Can Beetle harness the magic she so wished to ignore in order to save the day?

Memior

This Promise of Change : one girl’s story in the fight for school equality by Jo Ann Allen Boyce and Debbie Levy
(F444.C68 B69 2019)

This autobiography tells the story of Jo Ann Allen, one of the “Clinton 12,” the first group of Black students to integrate into an all white public high school in the American South. The eastern Tennessee town’s bigotry was masked with false southern courtesies. That is, until the school integrated and a much darker side of the town’s white population came to the surface. The Clinton 12 faced extreme bigotry and violence as they tried to attend the school. This heartbreaking personal account brings a new light to this historic moment, highlighting that among this national attention and historic pressure, Jo Ann also wanted to live life as a normal teenager. She wanted to play music, hang out with friends, and learn as white students were able to do without combating bigotry.

Indian No More by Charlene Willing McManis with Traci Sorell
(PZ4.M2312 In 2019)

Semi-autobiographical historical novel follows Regina Petit, a ten year old Umpqua girl. She has lived all her life surrounded by her tribe on the Grand Ronde reservation, but in 1957 the federal government signed a bill that states Regina’s tribe no longer exists. Regina is “Indian no more” in the eyes of the government. Her family then moves to Los Angeles in search of better jobs for her father. There, she makes friends with children of other races who have never met a Native American. It is also in this new neighborhood that Regina faces the vicious racism of the era for the first time. Umpqua author Charlene Willing fills this novel with her own tribal history and experiences as she tells the story of Regina discovering her identity during the Civils Rights Era.

Young Adult Books

The Sea-Ringed World : sacred stories of the Americas by María García Esperón, illustrated by Amanda Mijangos, translated by David Bowles
(+ PZ7.G161 Se 2021)

The phrase “Sea-Ringed World” comes from the Aztec term for the area of North and South America. In this collection of sacred stories, you will find tales of creation, nature, the universe, and more from Native communities all across the Americas.

Historically Inaccurate by Shay Bravo
(PZ7 .B738 Hi 2020)

Soledad “Sol” Gutierrez’s life was thrown into upheaval when her mother was deported last year. She lives in a new home and has started at a new community college. In an effort to fit in, she joins her school’s history club and participates in their odd initiation: she must steal a fork from the oldest house in town. When she sneaks in, she is caught by the homeowners’ grandson, Ethan. After this moment, Sol’s life is once again dramatically altered. She will soon learn that fitting in matters less than being your authentic self.