Monday, March 31, 2008

New Non-Fiction of the Week


New Non-Fiction of the Week:
Ezra Pound: The Young Genius, 1885-1920 by A. David Moody. New York: Oxford University Press, 2007.
In this first volume of a definitive new biography of the poet, Moody charts the huge strides Pound took during his first 35 years toward the realization of his ambitious goal. Readers follow the astonishingly confident-even brash-young Idaho native as he wins his place in a London rich in tradition yet pregnant with revolutionary new literary movements.And no writer has ever ransacked the past-from Dante to Li Po-with fiercer energy in his quest to forge a modern prosody that will make everything astonishingly new. Pound's restless imagination also draws inspiration from contemporaries such as Yeats and Ford and resonates with the ideas propounded by Imagists and Vorticists. Determined to cut his own way, Pound champions the early work of Eliot, Frost, and Joyce, but he never relents in his own pursuit of poetic fame. Moody indeed concludes this volume with Pound's publication of Hugh Selwyn Mauberly, a luminous poem assuring an astonishing world that a gifted artist has found his way onto the world stage.With The Pisan Cantos still ahead, readers will wait impatiently for Moody's second volume. Source: Booklist (December 2007)

Friday, March 28, 2008

NBC News and the Presidential Campaign


Source: Classroom News, March 2008
NBC News is making its top political reporters and experts
available to answer questions about the 2008 presidential
election from the nation’s students and teachers. “Ask
NBC News” is an exclusive feature of NBC News Archives
on Demand, a compilation of thousands of primarysource
video resources created specifically for classroom
instruction. The Archives on Demand are available on
HotChalk, a free web-based learning management system
for K-12 teachers and their students. Students and
teachers can submit questions about the presidential campaign
via eMail to asknbcnews@nbcuni.com.

In addition to Ask NBC News, the NBC
News Archives on Demand features a “Decision ’08” curricular
resource offering up-to-the-minute presidential
election news. Features include full profiles on the candidates,
information about their positions on major issues,
video clips of speeches and debates, campaign trail news,
historical footage from past presidential campaigns, and
political analysis from the award-winning NBC News
team. The video-on-demand user interface allows teachers
to customize their lesson plans with relevant content
to bring the election process and political issues to life in
their classrooms, NBC News said.

Go to: http://www.hotchalk.com

Thursday, March 27, 2008

One Man's Trash Is Another Man's Treasure



Swing by the library to check out our newly stocked Discards Shelf (over by the computers at the Circulation Desk). We have a range of book titles from Theft and Mortgage: What "They" Don't Want You to Know to dated Cambridge Encyclopedias of China, India and Russia. There are also back issues of magazines such as W, CosmoGirl, Marie Claire (in French), and The New Republic.


All items on the discard shelf are up for grabs. We will leave them on the shelf for 2 weeks before sending them on to be recycled. Come by to see what we have!

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Upcoming Spring Exhibits


Spring semester has begun! We have many exciting exhibits coming up in the library. The GSA is sponsoring an exhibit in the early part of April and in the later part of the month, the library will have a number of items on display to celebrate St. George's Day on April 23rd.

Thursday, March 6, 2008

New Fiction of the Week

Like Trees, Walking A Novel
By: Ravi Howard


The town of Mobile, Alabama, in the summer of 1981, when headlines were dominated by the Atlanta child killings, awakens to find a black youth hanging from a neighborhood tree. Sixteen-year-old Roy Deacon, son of the local black funeral director, offers the first-person narrative of his brother Paul's discovery of the body of a friend and classmate, and the town's struggle to reconcile the lynching with any notions that its black residents have of racial progress. Paul has managed to escape the expectations that he will go into the family business, seven generations long. The burden falls all the heavier on Roy, whose distaste doesn't outweigh his strong sense of duty. Looking back 22 years after the event, Roy wrestles with the memory of the lynching at a turning point in the life of the town and his family. Based on the true story of one of the last recorded lynchings in the U.S., Howard's debut novel offers a subtle and stirring look at the complexities of racial hatred and family obligations. Sounce: Booklist

Wednesday, March 5, 2008

Interlibrary Loan Requests for Spring Research Projects


If you need books for your research project from the Ocean State Library System, please don't order them before you leave for break. If you order them NOW, then the books will have to be returned when we get back. Please email me the book you would like to request and we will place a HOLD on the book for you the last week of break so when you return, the books will be here for you to use. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact me Jen_Tuleja@stgeorges.edu

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

Read Read Read





Read Books Over Break!!!
Come by the library and check out books to read over break!!!

Saturday, March 1, 2008

New Non-Ficiton of the Week


The Dirt on Clean: An Unsanitized History by Katherine Ashenburg

From Publisher's Weekly:
According to Ashenburg (The Mourner's Dance), the Western notion of cleanliness is a complex cultural creation that is constantly evolving, from Homer's well-washed Odysseus, who bathes before and after each of his colorful journeys, to Shaw's Eliza Doolittle, who screams in terror during her first hot bath. The ancient Romans considered cleanliness a social virtue, and Jews practiced ritual purity laws involving immersion in water. Abandoning Jewish practice, early Christians viewed bathing as a form of hedonism; they embraced saints like Godric, who, to mortify the flesh, walked from England to Jerusalem without washing or changing his clothes. Yet the Crusaders imported communal Turkish baths to medieval Europe. From the 14th to 18th centuries, kings and peasants shunned water because they thought it spread bubonic plague, and Louis XIV cleaned up by donning a fresh linen shirt. Americans, writes Ashenburg, were as filthy as their European cousins before the Civil War, but the Union's success in controlling disease through hygiene convinced its citizens that cleanliness was progressive and patriotic. Brimming with lively anecdotes, this well-researched, smartly paced and endearing history of Western cleanliness holds a welcome mirror up to our intimate selves, revealing deep-seated desires and fears spanning 2000-plus years.