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My Father Before Me: A Memoir

9781501131264
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The story of a man's life always includes his father—and even more so when the father takes his own life. In this moving memoir, a poet and professor describes growing up in a big Catholic family in Seattle during the 1960s. Read more about My Father Before Me: A Memoir

Posted by Dory L. on December 19, 2017
My Father Before Me: A Memoir
Biography & Memoir
Reviews
  • Dory L.'s blog

The Boys in the Boat

9780670025817
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Even if you seldom follow sports, this story of the 1936 Olympic rowers will excite you and touch your heart. Eight young men—most tall and scraggly, nearly all from poor, working-class backgrounds—beat the elite British, the powerhouse Germans, and the determined Italians to win gold as Nazi hysteria took over Berlin. But even though we know who wins the 1936 Olympics from the beginning, Brown ups the ante with dramatic descriptions of the racing with a filmmaker’s eye for visual details, practical rowing crew experience, and extensive interviews and research.

The book brims with history: personal, cultural and factual. It begins with the author’s neighbor, Judy, inviting the author to meet her father, Joe Rantz, one of the Olympic winners who, with only a few months to live, is in hospice. Over many interviews, he shares his story, but insists that Brown also write about all the men on his crew who, working as one, bring home the gold against impossible odds. Read more about The Boys in the Boat

Posted by Dory L. on November 16, 2017
The Boys in the Boat: Nine Americans and Their Epic Quest for Gold at the 1936 Berlin Olympics
Sports
Reviews
  • Dory L.'s blog

Immigrant Voices

american_street.jpgThis year, several young adult books were published about teen immigrants and their experiences living in the U.S. These stories explore the challenges involved in moving to a new country, as well as issues related to race, culture, identity, and community.

If you’re looking for a story told from a different perspective, check out one of these reads featuring teen immigrant characters!

American Street by Ibi Zoboi Read more about Immigrant Voices

Posted by Jen H. on November 12, 2017
Reviews
Think Library
Teens
  • Jen H.'s blog

The Women in the Castle

9780062563668
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War, it is said, tears families apart and brings strangers together. In this compelling WWII novel, two German widows of Nazi-resisters and a third woman, a refugee from the East, move in together, along with their children. They help each other with child-rearing and preparing meals, despite the privations of rationing. Most importantly, they give each other deep emotional support, as good families do.

The novel opens on a grand harvest party in a castle, ramshackle and falling apart, near a small town in Bavaria. Marianne, the main character, plays host for its ailing owner, Countess von Lingenfels, her husband Albrecht's aunt. Marianne brings to hosting the skills of someone who has an eye for beauty and taste—and particularly the complicated dynamics of relationships between people. She greets, cajoles, and introduces strangers with the flair and manners of a great lady. Read more about The Women in the Castle

Posted by Dory L. on November 9, 2017
The Women in the Castle: A Novel
Relationships
Fiction
Reviews
  • Dory L.'s blog

Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet

9780345505330
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On November 17, author Jamie Ford speaks at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater in Bloomington for the NEA Big Read and the library’s biennial Power of Words program.

As he often does, Jamie Ford writes about the clashing and melding of different cultures in his three historical novels: Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet, Songs of Willow Frost, and Love and Other Consolation Prizes.   Read more about Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet

Posted by Dory L. on November 8, 2017
Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet: A Novel
History
Coming of Age
Family
Fiction
Diversity
Reviews
  • Dory L.'s blog

Picture Books: Extraordinary Art, Conveniently Portable

9780763617165
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Picture books are often children's first exposure to art. As galleries of artists' work—all within the pages of books—they reflect the vast variety of art mediums we find in museums. Some artists create with real-world materials like paint and pencils; others make collage or etchings. Some even work in virtual media like computer graphics, and, of course, some use a combination of tools and methods.

When my children were younger, I would check out piles of picture books to read with them—and for the pleasure of viewing the artwork. And even though my children have moved beyond picture books, I still enjoy opening these miniature exhibitions, browsing through old favorites or finding new artists.

In honor of National Picture Book Month this November, I recommend these resources: Read more about Picture Books: Extraordinary Art, Conveniently Portable

Posted by Paula G.O. on November 1, 2017
This Little Chick
Create
Picture Book
Reviews
Think Library
  • Paula G.O.'s blog

Stay with Me

9780451494603
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With economy of language and a taut emotional underlying, Ayobami Adebayo tells the parallel tales of a young couple’s marriage, alongside Nigeria’s struggle for independence.

Told alternately by Yejide and her husband, Akin, the book opens late in the story to a woman packing her bags. She's done this many, many times before, but something—whether deep feelings or fear—has always stopped her from making the trip to her southwestern Nigerian hometown of Ilesa, once the site of a magical kingdom. Read more about Stay with Me

Posted by Dory L. on October 31, 2017
Stay with Me
Family
Fiction
Diversity
Reviews
  • Dory L.'s blog

Love, Africa

9780062284099
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This memoir by a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist will make you feel as though you have boarded a jet and begun a new life.

Jeffrey Gettleman, nineteen-year old college student, wanders his way into East Africa, does community service work, and falls in love with the landscapes, people, swirl of languages, and colorful clothing there. In fact, he eventually decides he must come back to live in the region, not just visit. Read more about Love, Africa

Posted by Dory L. on October 19, 2017
Love, Africa: A Memoir of Romance, War, and Survival
Nonfiction
Reviews
  • Dory L.'s blog

Bleaker House: Chasing My Novel to the End of the World

9780385541558
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Say you've just finished your graduate degree in writing from Boston College, and a rich donor provides you with funds to travel anywhere in the world. Where do you pick? Tahiti, Paris, Buenos Aires? For British citizen Nell Stevens, it's none of the above. Instead, she chooses the remote Falklands Islands, where South America meets Antarctica—in June, which is winter there.

In Stanley, the Falklands' capital, Nell researches the archives for her first novel, and also meets some of the less-than-friendly Falklanders there. After a few weeks, Nell hops a plane for even more remote Bleaker Island, about which a writer friend quips, “Oh, you’re writing Bleaker House.” Read more about Bleaker House: Chasing My Novel to the End of the World

Posted by Dory L. on August 2, 2017
Bleaker House: Chasing My Novel to the End of the World
Adventure
Fiction
Biography & Memoir
Reviews
Think Library
  • Dory L.'s blog

What Should I Read Next? Staff Picks from the Ground Floor

Need a book for the road trip, the beach, or the pool? Try our Staff Picks for Teens. Better yet—come see us in person in The Ground Floor at the Main Library, the Ellettsville Branch, or on the Bookmobile. We love talking about books, and can help you find one that makes you laugh, cry, or get transported to a far-off world (or all three!).

Becky: "I loved The Hate U Give—the story pulled me in quickly and had an emotional punch. My cry count ended up at twelve. The characters felt real, the dialogue was fast-paced, and the plot was very intense. SO GOOD! Have you read it yet? Try the audiobook!"
  Read more about What Should I Read Next? Staff Picks from the Ground Floor
Posted by Jen H. on July 23, 2017
The Hate U Give
The Murderer's Ape
Graceling
Station Eleven
Where'd You Go, Bernadette: A Novel
Sunny
Giant Days
Another Castle. Grimoire
When the Moon was Ours
When Dimple Met Rishi
Think Library
Teens
Reviews
  • Jen H.'s blog

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Monroe County Public Library |  812-349-3050
303 E. Kirkwood Avenue, Bloomington, IN 47408

Ellettsville Branch |  812-876-1272
600 West Temperance Street, Ellettsville, IN 47429

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