Showing posts with label New Non-Fiction Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Non-Fiction Books. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

New Fiction and Non-Fiction in the Library

The library has received New books that are on display near the entrance of the library - comy by and have a look at them!

New Fiction










New Non-Fiction





















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)

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.

Friday, February 22, 2008

New Non-Fiction of the Week


I To Myself
Edited by: Jeffrey S. Cramer, Yale University Press, 2007.
From the book jacket:
Making selections from the entirety of the journal Henry David Thoreau, Cramer presents all aspects of Thoreau: writer, thinker, naturalist, social reformer, neighbor, friend. No other single-volume edition offers such a full picture of Thoreau’s life and work. Cramer’s annotations add to the reader’s enjoyment and understanding. He provides notes on the biographical, historical, and geographical contexts of Thoreau’s life. The relation between Journal passages and the texts of works published in the author’s lifetime receive special emphasis. Cramer is also the editor of Walden: A Fully Annotated Edition, published by Yale University Press.

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Jennifer Lawless Speaking at SG Friday 2/22

Jennifer Lawless, author of It Takes A Candidate: Why Women Don't Run for Office, will be addressing the SG community Friday, February 22, 2008. Lawless is a professor of political science and public policy at Brown University.

Her book It Takes A Candidate: Why Women Don't Run for Office "constitutes a systematic, nationwide empirical account of the effects of gender on political ambition. Based on data from the Citizen Political Ambition Study, a national survey of 3,800 "potential candidates" conducted by the authors, it relates these findings: --Women, even at the highest levels of professional accomplishment, are significantly less likely than men to demonstrate ambition to run for elective office. --Women are less likely than men to be recruited to run for office. --Women are less likely than men to consider themselves "qualified" to run for office. --Women are less likely than men to express a willingness to run for a future office. According to the authors, this gender gap in political ambition persists across generations, despite contemporary society's changing attitudes towards female candidates. While other treatments of gender in the electoral process focus on candidates and office holders, It Takes a Candidate makes a unique contribution to political studies by focusing on the earlier stages of the candidate emergence process and on how gender affects the decision to seek elective office." (synopsis from Amazon.com).

Come to the library and check out our copy of It Takes A Candidate today!

Thursday, January 31, 2008

New Non-Fiction Book of the Week

The best new non-fiction book of the week is...


Hotel: An American History

by A.K. Sandoval-Strausz

From Publishers Weekly

In this lucid and creative work, Sandoval-Strausz, an assistant professor of history at the University of New Mexico, situates the rise of hotels within the history of the triumph of capitalism and of an increasingly mobile society. Hotels, he says, facilitated mobility and the integration of frontier lands into larger networks of capital and commerce. Hotels were also part of the gradual process that dissociated people from particular places. If hotels solved some social problems, Sandoval-Strausz shows, they created others: guardians of domesticity, for example, worried about urban dwellers who chose to live full-time in hotels. In exploring the social and political meaning of hotels, the author pursues countless avenues, from menus to morals (Hotels were magnets for prostitution and other forms of illicit sex). There's a bit of labor history thrown in, too, since, in order to make good on the promise to be patrons' home away from home, hotels employed a huge number of workers, from cooks and launderers to janitors, Sandoval-Strausz also traces hotels' exclusion of Jews and blacks—the book ends with the 1964 Supreme Court case that desegregated public accommodations. From start to finish, this is a fascinating study.

Thursday, January 10, 2008

New Non-Fiction of the Week

The Zookeeper's Wife: A War Story by Diane Ackerman
Synopsis from Barnes & Noble.com:
A true story—as powerful as Schindler's List—in which the keepers of the Warsaw Zoo saved hundreds of people from Nazi hands.
When Germany invaded Poland, Stuka bombers devastated Warsaw—and the city's zoo along with it. With most of their animals dead, zookeepers Jan and Antonina Zabinski began smuggling Jews into empty cages. Another dozen "guests" hid inside the Zabinskis' villa, emerging after dark for dinner, socializing, and, during rare moments of calm, piano concerts. Jan, active in the Polish resistance, kept ammunition buried in the elephant enclosure and stashed explosives in the animal hospital. Meanwhile, Antonina kept her unusual household afloat, caring for both its human and its animal inhabitants—otters, a badger, hyena pups, lynxes.
With her exuberant prose and exquisite sensitivity to the natural world, Diane Ackerman engages us viscerally in the lives of the zoo animals, their keepers, and their hidden visitors. She shows us how Antonina refused to give in to the penetrating fear of discovery, keeping alive an atmosphere of play and innocence even as Europe crumbled around her.

From The New York Times:
D. T. Max
Nature is patient, people and animals fundamentally decent, and the writer, as she always does, outlives the killer—that is the message of The Zookeeper's Wife. This is an absorbing book, diminished sometimes by the choppy way Ackerman balances Antonina's account with the larger story of the Warsaw Holocaust. For me, the more interesting story is Antonina's. She was not, as her husband once called her, "a housewife," but the alpha female in a unique menagerie. I would gladly read another book, perhaps a novel, based again on Antonina's writings. She was special, and as the remaining members of her generation die off, a voice like hers should not be allowed to fade into the silence.

Thursday, November 29, 2007

New Non-Fiction Book of the Week


The Slave Ship: A Human History by Marcus Rediker


From Publishers Weekly, Starred Review: In this groundbreaking work, historian and scholar Rediker considers the relationships between the slave ship captain and his crew, between the sailors and the slaves, and among the captives themselves as they endured the violent, terror-filled and often deadly journey between the coasts of Africa and America. While he makes fresh use of those who left their mark in written records (Olaudah Equiano, James Field Stanfield, John Newton), Rediker is remarkably attentive to the experiences of the enslaved women, from whom we have no written accounts, and of the common seaman, who he says was a victim of the slave trade... and a victimizer. Regarding these vessels as a strange and potent combination of war machine, mobile prison, and factory, Rediker expands the scholarship on how the ships not only delivered millions of people to slavery, [but] prepared them for it. He engages readers in maritime detail (how ships were made, how crews were fed) and renders the archival (letters, logs and legal hearings) accessible. Painful as this powerful book often is, Rediker does not lose sight of the humanity of even the most egregious participants, from African traders to English merchants. (Oct. 8) .

Friday, November 16, 2007

New Non-Fiction of the Week


From Publishers Weekly: In this groundbreaking biography of a central figure in the fight to end South African apartheid, O'Malley draws on every aspect of Maharaj's life and the society in which he lived in order to understand South Africa's changing racial and political context over the past 100 years. Based on extensive interviews with Maharaj, this is an often harrowing read, recounting his torture as a political prisoner and the many difficulties and setbacks suffered by underground activists within and outside of South Africa. Maharaj—a first-person narrator in most of the book—comes across as an imperfect and deeply human hero, animated by his stubborn streak to devote his entire life to the cause. (Apr.)