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Posts by mgfragol:


Dec 04 2012

The News From Spain

Book: The News From Spain

Author: Joan Wickersham

Reviewer: Dr. Angela Wiseman, Assistant Professor, Elementary Education

This book features seven short stories that focus on love and relationships among very different kinds of people at different times in history (in fact, two of the stories are based on prominent historical figures).  The one strand that connects these stories together is that a phrase “the news from Spain” that emerges in each story.  By using vivid descriptions, realistic characters, and true to life relationship contexts, I found myself drawn into complex and insightful stories.

Dec 04 2012

Cosmos

Book: Cosmos

Author: Carl Sagan

Reviewer: Haritha Malladi, student, engineering

Of all the books I have read in my life until now, I will always remember Carl Sagan’s Cosmos as the book that brought back meaning into my life. With wonderful humility Dr. Sagan makes the unfathomably huge Cosmos come to life with words that are clearly written from the heart, complemented by beautiful photographs and illustrations. In the deafening noise of various philosophies that concern the meaning of life, Dr. Sagan’s voice is the soothing balm of reason to chaffed and tired ears.

Nov 30 2012

Blue Gold

Book: Blue Gold

Author: Maude Barlow & Tony Clarke

Reviewer: Hannah Gotsch, student, engineering

This is an amazing nonfiction book that sums up the global issues on water and expresses all the dilemmas humans have created by increasingly depleting the supply of water.  We have extracted ground water faster than it can be replenished because the surface water has  been polluted, used up until rivers were dry because of dams, or salinated and sent back to the sea—thereby increasing the sea level exponentially. It reminds us that a loss of a diminishing energy source is not the only problem we face.

Nov 28 2012

Proof of Heaven

Book: Proof of Heaven: A Neurosurgeon’s Journey into the Afterlife

Author: Eben Alexander, M.D.

Reviewer: Laura Jackson, University Library Technician, Collection Management, NCSU Libraries

This book is truly a marvelous read as it is a tale of a neurosurgeon who ends up comatose and experiences Heaven. Fascinating medical information describing why his particular experience is so unique and beautiful descriptions of the metaphysical and spiritual journey in which he partakes intertwine to make this memoir so engaging. Whether you are a person of faith or a skeptic, this book will definitely pique your interest.

Nov 27 2012

Never Let Me Go and Waiting for the Barbarians

Book: Never Let Me Go

Author: Kazou Ishiguro

and

Book: Waiting for the Barbarians

Author: J. M. Coetzee

Reviewer: John Papalas, Friends of the Library board member

So hard to pick one favorite, so here are my top two.

In the wake of Ray Bradbury’s death earlier this year, I made a point to read some works by authors he had influenced. The title of the book Never Let Me Go, by Kazou Ishiguro could also describe the readers’ reluctance to put the book down after delving in. What makes the story so subtly unsettling is the otherwise near complete contextual normalcy in which three all but normal friends mature to self-actualized individuals. No cheap thrills are needed (or used) as Ishiguro masterfully highlights the thin yet dark lines that divides our humanity from medical progress.
Do not read Waiting for the Barbarians by J. M. Coetzee if you are looking for a quick pick-me-up. Within the confines of just a few pages, this novel holds a mirror up to the Imperialistic tradition of expansion and progress, and what you see looking back is alien, if not loathsome.   This Nobel laureate draws upon the evocative themes of isolation (mental and physical), exposure to elemental extremes, and societal disorder, to keep the reader eagerly hoping for just a dash of good fortune for the narrator. When I finished reading this book, I was eerily reminded of the prophetic words mumbled by Joseph Conrad’s’ Mr. Kurtz, another monstrosity of Imperialism;  “The horror! The horror!”
Nov 20 2012

Lay Down Your Arms, The Autobiography of Martha von Tilling

Book: Lay Down Your Arms, The Autobiography of Martha von Tilling

Author: 2d revised edition by Bertha von Suttner; authorized translation by T. Holmes

Reviewer: Orion Pozo, Collection Manager for Engineering & Computer Science, NCSU Libraries

Google Books, Internet Archive and other online sources of Public Domain literature have opened up a new world for me in 19th and early 20th century reading. In 1905 Bertha Von Suttner was the first woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize for her novel, Die Waffen nieder! (Lay Down Your Arms!), and for her work in organizing an international peace movement. This popular novel, written in an autobiographic style, introduced thousands of readers of her time to the arguments of pacifism by telling the story of a woman, raised in a military family, who becomes opposed to war, and sets out to document rational arguments against the patriotic reasons nations put forward to justify their wars. Leo Tolstoy compared the effect Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin had on the abolition of slavery to the effect Lay Down Your Arms was having towards the abolition of war. Her hope to find a rational way to end armed conflict is so inspiring to me.

Nov 20 2012

11/22/63

Book: 11/22/63

Author: Stephen King

Reviewer: Anna Snyder, Intern, NC LIVE

Jake Epping, a high school teacher, reads a story one of his GED-seeking students wrote about his horrible family history, and then finds out the local diner has a gateway to the past in it. Jake sets out to change the past, starting with preventing the crime his student’s father committed, and then takes over the mission to prevent JFK’s assassination. With good intentions (more civil rights progress, no Vietnam war), Jake finds that every change made in the past creates unexpected changes in the future. With incredibly in-depth details about the years leading up to JFK’s assassination, Lee Harvey Oswald’s life, and an interesting cast of characters, this book is one you cannot put down.

Nov 20 2012

Help Me to Find My People: The African American Search for Family Lost in Slavery

Book:  Help Me to Find My People: The African American Search for Family Lost in Slavery

Author: Heather Andrea Williams

Reviewer: Catherine Bishir, Curator of Architecture Special Collections, NCSU Libraries

Starting with her discovery of advertisements placed in newspapers by freedpeople of after the war, hoping to find a long lost parent, child, or mate, Williams expanded her study to a wide range of sources to illuminate the separation of families through sales and gifts during slavery time, and family members’ impassioned and determined efforts to find their kin after Emancipation. She tells this story in personal and engaging terms–sometimes heartbreaking, sometimes joyful–that will appeal to many readers. She makes wonderful use of brief anecdotes she has found, including first-hand accounts of losses and reunions, a love letter from an enslaved man to his faraway wife, and an embroidered bag filled with a mother’s love. Excellent book. It will be on my Christmas giving list for more than one friend. Bravissima to Professor Williams,

Catherine Bishir

Nov 20 2012

Ready Player One

Book: Ready Player One

Author: Ernest Cline

Reviewer: Jason Raitz, Business and Technology Applications Technician, NCSU Libraries

This book is for the gamers and children of the 70′s-80′s.  It’s a book that is equal parts Zork, John Hughes, Atari, Willy Wonka, treasure hunting, virtual reality, and of course coming of age.  If you like text adventures, virtual worlds and the movie Sixteen Candles, then you’re really going to enjoy this book.  There was a real life easter egg hunt this summer sponsored by the author to win a Delorian, but unfortunately, someone’s already claimed it.

Nov 20 2012

The Big Short

Book: The Big Short

Author: Michael Lewis

Reviewer: David Hiscoe, Director, Communication Strategy, NCSU Libraries

Want some understanding of the incredibly irresponsible behavior that almost gave all of us another Great Depression?  Still don’t know what a CDO is?  Don’t understand why Wall Street needs careful attention from aggressive, disinterested regulators so perhaps we won’t have to live through something like this again?.  Want to know how almost everybody in Iceland got rich overnight–and then got very poor?  Moneyball’s Michael Lewis makes it all interesting.

Nov 20 2012

Drowned Cities

Book: Drowned Cities

Author: Paolo Bacigalupi

Reviewer: Cris Crissman, Adjunct Asst Professor, Curriculum, Instruction & Counselor Education

My vote for best young adult novel for 2012 goes to Drowned Cities by Paolo Bacigalupi.  Frighteningly realistic after hurricanes have “drowned” New Orleans and New York, Bacigalupi’s dystopian, biopunk setting presents a grim future of what might yet be if we can’t quell the ravage caused by climate change and loss of homeland and humanity that result. Tool, a bioethics nightmare, is one of the most complex, fascinating characters I’ve ever met.

Nov 20 2012

Martina the Beautiful Cockroach

Book: Martina the Beautiful Cockroach

Author: Carmen Deedy

Reviewer: Sharon Silcox, University Library Technician, Design Library

I know you are looking for a new, delightful book for all the young and young-at-heart on your Christmas list! Martina the Beautiful Cockroach by Carmen Deedy fits the bill perfectly! How does a cheeky little cockroach find true love with the help of her wise Abuela ( grandmother) and – COFFEE? This amusing, clever re-telling of a Cuban folktale will solve that mystery and have you cheering for Martina and all her cucaracha family! Plus, it is so much fun to read aloud! This is what I call a surprise book, a story and pictures that comes seemingly out of the blue and makes my heart smile.

Nov 20 2012

Empires of the Sea: The Siege of Malta, the Battle of Lepanto, and the Contest for the Center of the World

Book: Empires of the Sea: The Siege of Malta, the Battle of Lepanto, and the Contest for the Center of the World

Author: Roger Crowley

Reviewer: Keith Morgan, Librarian for Digital Technologies and Learning, NCSU Libraries

Roger Crowley rousingly relates the story of Venice’s rise from backwards lagoon to the dominant commercial maritime empire in the 1400s.  With this he also tells the story of the Mediterranean and of the powers which contested for dominance. Crowley’s style is energetic and much of the book has a velocity more common to a fictional thriller.Throughout the  book runs the thread of the simmering and then open conflict with Islam that was to dominate the western world for so many centuries.

Nov 20 2012

Mr. Penumbra’s 24-Hour Bookstore

Book: Mr. Penumbra’s 24-Hour Bookstore

Author: Robin Sloan

Reviewer: Keith Morgan, Librarian for Digital Technologies and Learning

This intelligent and amusing book features bookstores, 3D modeling software, references Aldus Manutius,  plus a dungeons and dragon fantasy , describes the Gerritzoon font  (standard on all Macs according to the novel) and an ancient conspiracy involving books.  A trip to the Google campus in Mountain View and a visit to the Google Book Scanner add more candy to the mix. There’s also lots of conversation about the differences between reading books and reading on a device, between reading and actually not reading books. Recommended for fans of Zafon’s Shadow of the Wind or the bibliothriller in general.

Nov 20 2012

Infinite Jest

Book: Infinite Jest

Author: David Foster Wallace

Reviewer: Dan Hawkins, University Library Technician, NCSU Libraries

I remember seeing this book in stores in the late 90′s and being put off by its size and judging by the blurbs, its pretension. Several years later I stumbled across a book of his essays which I found largely delightful. I then proceeded to another book of essays and then short stories and his first novel. By this time I was a raving fan. I still put off reading this one though, primarily due to its size. I finally got around to it this year, and it is well worth the effort it take to read it (its structure (hundreds of end notes, some with their own end notes) does make it feel at times like the world’s longest choose your own adventure novel). It takes the form of an ironic, distant, dystopian satire, but is in reality a raw look at the ravages of addiction and the dangers of mass culture. Wallace is brilliant, but he does not make you feel dumb. A third of the book viciously satirizes a culture that is entertaining itself to death. The second is a coming of age story. The final third is a searing view of the life of drug addicts and their attempts to quit using which doubles as a warning metaphor for the dangers of vicarious life through media. I might recommend taking my approach and starting with some of the other books, perhaps the essays, and then proceed on to this one. But by all means read this book. It does have pretensions, but it delivers. A truly great novel.

Nov 20 2012

Steve Jobs

Book: Steve Jobs

Author:Walter Isaacson

Reviewer: Warren Stephenson, Friends of the Library Board Member, NCSU Libraries

I read Walter Isaacson’s book on Steve Jobs early this year and it is still unforgettable!  Evidently the man was driven by demons and made life miserable for his work partners.  His genius is evident in every Apple product because of his quest for perfection – to the tiniest detail you can imagine.  I remember one of his quotes; “they don’t  really know what they (the public) need until I show them!”  What a philosophy and what a story!  It is one of my “best books ever!”

Nov 20 2012

The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion

Book: The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion

Author: Jonathan Haidt

Reviewer:Dr. Frank Abrams, Professor Emeritus, Biological And Agricultural Engineering

Professor Haidt, a social psychologist, provides a cogent discussion of how liberals and conservatives construct their moral underpinnings.  For all of us, Haidt says, in forming our viewpoints, emotions rule and our reasoning ability, at least at first, strongly supports where our emotions lead us.  This book offers a way to empathetically view at least some of those who see things very differently.

Nov 20 2012

Dancing After Hours and Townie

Book: Dancing After Hours

Author: Andre Dubus II

and

Book: Townies

Author: Andre Dubus III

Reviewer: Kathy Brown, Director, Planning and Research, NCSU Libraries

After reading Dancing after Hours by Andre Dubus II, I’ll be tracking down his other collections of short stories.  Dubus conveys the struggles of his characters with compassion and a beautiful style, and he was regarded as a master of the short story genre.  A man of great insight, Dubus wrestled his own demons during his life and was, from all accounts, an incredibly lousy father.  Townie, a memoir by Andre Dubus III (also the author of The House of Sand and Fog), describes a life of abject poverty in Haverhill (Massachusetts) after his parent’s divorce.  The younger Dubus exposes the rage that stemmed in large part from his father’s absence and offers a compelling view of how natural it was for him to move down a path of self-destructive violence.  Writing sustained the father and undoubtedly saved the son, who was able to achieve a measure of forgiveness and love for someone who did little to earn it.
Nov 20 2012

2666

Book: 2666

Author: Robert Bolano

Reviewer: Chris Tonelli, Assistant to the Director, NCSU Libraries

This book is like Javier Bardem’s character, Anton Chigurh, in No Country for Old Men. It’s will is simply more imposing than the will of other books. There is more at stake. It is both more disciplined and more brutal. Like Bolano’s Savage Detectives, 2666 splits time between Europe and Mexico and features a group of European literary critics, a Mexican professor, an American journalist, hundreds of murdered young Mexican women, and a young writer on the Eastern Front of WWII. With what amounts to a kind of Cubist narrative, Bolano relentlessly explores the juxtapositions of art, politics, violence, and love.

Dec 02 2011

The Checklist Manifesto

Book: The Checklist Manifesto
Author: Atul Gawande
Reviewer: Venkitasubramanian Akshay, student, Industrial and Systems Engineering, NC State

A simple solution to a complicated world. This book is an exciting read for anyone who is looking for an excuse to discover the power of simple Post-its and how it has transformed the world around us. Beautifully written, this is by far the best book I have read this year

Nov 30 2011

Courant in Göttingen and New York: The Story of an Improbable Mathematician

Book: Courant in Göttingen and New York: The Story of an Improbable Mathematician*
Author: Constance Reid
Reviewer: Kerry S. Havner, Professor Emeritus of Civil Engineering (Solid Mechanics) and Materials Science & Engineering

As this notable, engagingly written work was published 35 years ago, perhaps it already will have been read by those who enjoy and seek out science biography and history. But if you’ve not, and have interest in the mathematical sciences – particularly application of mathematics and analysis, I highly recommend you read it. It of course is a biography of Richard Courant (1888-1972), and initially also a history of the great center for mathematics and theoretical physics developed in Göttingen from around 1900 until Jewish scientists had to flee Germany beginning soon after Hitler’s rise to power in 1933. From 1934, after Courant came to America, it becomes the story of (i) his development of the Institute for Mathematics and Mechanics at New York University and its evolution into the world famous Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, (ii) the extraordinary rise of American applied mathematics emanating from there (in particular mathematical physics and fluid mechanics), (iii) the beginnings of major federal support of the sciences (during and immediately following World War II), and finally (iv) the very early days of large-scale computing in America.

*A note from NCSU Libraries: This book was reissued in 1996 as Courant, which is the edition currently in print. The NCSU Libraries has several copies of the 1976 edition in its collection.

Nov 30 2011

Little White Lies

Book: Little White Lies
Author: Aimee Laine
Reviewer: Nicole Zimmerman, MBA, ’02, NC State

The author has created an intricate world for her characters. Readers find themselves drawn into the details of this world and the characters’ abilities. Also key to the story are the relationships between the characters; especially between Charley and Wyatt. The suspense builds throughout the book as the story unfolds. Without giving too much away, there are some unexpected twists and a satisfying ending. I look forward to joining these characters in their next adventure.

Nov 29 2011

On China

Book: On China
Author: Henry Kissinger
Reviewer: Dr. William R. “Randy” Woodson, Chancellor, NC State University

A fascinating account of the history of China and its emergence as an economic force in the 21st century.

Nov 29 2011

Growing Up Bin Laden

Title: Growing Up Bin Laden : Osama’s Wife and Son Take us Inside Their Secret World
Author: Najwa bin Laden, Omar bin Laden, and Jean Sasson
Reviewer: Laura K. Jackson, Collection Management, NCSU Libraries

This book is a fascinating account of the Bin Laden’s family life, as told by Osama’s first wife, Najwa, and one of Osama’s sons, Omar. As chapters switch between Najwa and Omar’s personal and poignant memories, reporter Jean Sasson’s factual information on Osama’s political activities show a stark contrast between a man’s love for his religion and his hatred for other countries (mainly the West).

Nov 29 2011

Bright Shiny Morning

Book: Bright Shiny Morning
Author: James Frey
Reviewer: William L. Page, NC State alumni, class of 1983

The story takes place in Los Angeles and has four story lines.  A homeless person, a young couple from Ohio, an immigrant Mexican, and a mega famous movie star. They are all chasing something in LA and encounter some tremendous struggles.  The book also mixes some very cool facts and history about the city of Angels.  What I especially like is the ending, one happy, one tragic, and two kind of in-between.  Try it — it’s fast, it’s engaging, and unique!

Nov 29 2011

The White Woman on the Green Bicycle

Book: The White Woman on the Green Bicycle
Author: Monique Roffey
Reviewer: Suzanne Weiner, Executive Director of the North Carolina Textile Foundation, NC State

This is a story of newlyweds who go to the small island of Trinidad to follow his dream of a better life.  He falls in love with the complex richness of the island, but her struggle to find balance is what shapes the story.  She is torn between her love for him, and an inability to understand and accept his love of this country.   She finds her way using many different coping mechanisms but throughout the book is best known for her youthful trips around town on her green Raleigh bicycle.

Nov 22 2011

Darwin’s Dangerous Idea

Book: Darwin’s Dangerous Idea
Author: Daniel C. Dennett
Reviewer: Reha Uzsoy, Clifton A. Anderson Distinguished Professor, Industrial and Systems Engineering

A fascinating review of the current issues in evolutionary biology and their philosophical implications. Professor Dennett has a rare gift for developing thought experiments that bring out the essence of a complex issue, and causes one to see connections that are not readily apparent but which give a new perspective. A thinking book, as well as a plain good read.

Nov 22 2011

The Wise Man’s Fear

Book: The Wise Man’s Fear
Author: Patrick Rothfuss
Reviewer: Frankie Johnson, student, Natural Resources, and Park Scholar

This is one of the best fantasy books I’ve ever read. The characters are crafted intricately and the plot is told in a frame story format which creates suspense and intrigue. You can really root for the hero, while simultaneously knowing he is making the idiotic decisions that we all sometimes make. This book is amazing and I can’t wait for the next in the series!

Nov 21 2011

The End of Poverty

Book: The End of Poverty: Economic Possibilities for Our Time
Author: Jeffrey Sachs
Reviewer: Bob Frigo, Assistant Director, Park Scholars

Sachs presents a stark image of the extreme poverty that exists throughout the world along with a bold plan to end this level of poverty in our lifetime. He provides an excellent overview of global issues and solutions, while enlightening readers on the finer points of the intersection between terrorism and global poverty to the action plan outlined in the UN Millennium Development Goals.

Nov 21 2011

Skippy Dies

Book: Skippy Dies
Author: Paul Murray
Reviewer: Jamie Bradway, Preservation Librarian, NCSU Libraries

As the title suggests, some pretty horrible things happen in this book. That these things happen in a boarding school (to kids) would normally be enough to turn me off of what is, essentially, an entertainment. But there are also some very beautiful things written in this novel; even some very funny things. It’s the book I needed to read to remind myself that novels should be more than mere entertainments.

Nov 21 2011

Kafka on the Shore

Book: Kafka on the Shore
Author: Hakuri Murakami
Reviewer: Richard Felder, Hoechst Celanese Professor Emeritus, Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering

A couple of years ago someone recommended Haruki Murakami’s novel The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle, and I read it and was mesmerized by the surreal world he created. I’ve read several more since then and had the same reaction. I recently read Kafka on the Shore and nominate it for this year’s best. I plan to plunge into 1q84 if I can overcome my intimidation by its 944 pages.

Nov 21 2011

The Black Swan

Book: The Black Swan
Author: Nassim Nicholas Taleb
Reviewer: Greg Volk, ’03, Emmy Award-winning writer for the television trivia show Cash Cab (and NCSU Libraries Amazing Alumni)

When I write trivia questions, my job is to know things. But this book is about knowing what we don’t know and can’t know.  We assume “black swans” don’t exist simply because all the other swans we’ve seen are white. With this metaphor, Taleb critiques modern thinking and offers a how-to guide for living in an uncertain world. Written by a philosopher/quant (What’s a “quant”? Exactly.), it’s not exactly a summer read. Then again, it’s not summer (though despite what Greg Fishel said, tomorrow could be very warm). I wouldn’t call it “life-changing,” but I would call it “mind-changing.”

Nov 18 2011

The Illusion of Conscious Will

Book: The Illusion of Conscious Will
Author: Daniel M. Wegner
Reviewer: Michael Young, Associate Professor, Computer Science (and 2011 Fabulous Faculty)

This book calls into question our perception that people actually make deliberative choices.  Fast MRI data shows that the activity in our brains driving the -experience- of deciding to take an action arises only -after- the neural activity where the choice actually occurs. Grounded in neuroscience and philosophy, Wegner argues that the conscious experience of deciding is essentially an epiphenomenon, an illusion created as an explanation for other mental processes.

Nov 18 2011

The Name of the Wind

Book: The Name of the Wind
Author: Patrick Rothfuss
Reviewer: Jason Raitz, Business and Technology Applications Technician, NCSU Libraries

I loved this thick, fantasy novel about a young, precocious boy who undergoes continuous tragedies in his pursuit of love, music, secrets, magic and revenge. It’s full of song, hardship, tragedy, magic and longing.  There is a Harry-Potter-esque magic school, but it plays out a good bit differently and is not really the focus of the entire story. I love the various female roles as well. So many fantasy novels give women such predictable and often sexist roles. Some epic fantasy is hard to continue reading day after day; I was surprised when I reached the end of this one.  Rothfuss is a great new author and I also loved the sequel to this one, called Wise Man’s Fear. Warning, this is an unfinished trilogy which the author has decided to start finishing as part of NaNoWriMo.

Nov 18 2011

Arrowsmith

Book: Arrowsmith
Author: Sinclair Lewis
Reviewer: Samuel Stephen Gaetz, Building Services, NCSU Libraries

Satirical, witty and insightful, Arrowsmith accompanied me on a trip this summer and was by far the best book I’ve read this year. The portrait of early 20th century American life was new and enjoyable. And I found much of the drama and tension in the story (following a medical doctor making his way through life) to still have weight — some of it almost alarmingly so. The plot seemed to waiver at times but ultimately Lewis crafted an incredible read that was both thought-provoking and humorous.

Nov 18 2011

REAMDE and Steve Jobs

Book: REAMDE
Author: Neal Stephenson
and
Book: Steve Jobs
Author: Walter Isaacson
Reviewer: Keith Morgan, Research and Information Services, NCSU Libraries

In REAMDE Stephenson reinvents himself as a master of the high-stakes, fast-paced, terrorist-populated thriller. Plus he includes a completely integrated subplot involving a massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG) called T’rain. There’s also a computer hacking subplot, Russian Mafia credit card theft, sneaking in and out of China, British Mi6 operatives, wilderness action in the wilds of British Columbia and a band of jihadists migrating from China to Idaho. What’s amazing is how Stephenson balances all of these subplots together and then weaves them together. All of this is accomplished in only 1,044 pages. I was sorry when it was over.

Here is the  whole story of Apple, the garage founding, the early successes, the decline and triumphant resurrection. All mediated through the personality of Steve Jobs.  The wealth of detail, combined with Isaacson’s access to Jobs, even as the Apple CEO struggled with his cancer, provides a vivid portrait of the cantankerous contradictions of Steve Jobs. Yes, we learn that he could be rude, manipulative, and boorish but the grand progression of “i-things” plus the legacy of Pixar are surely enough to put Steve on any Mount Rushmore of American innovation.

Nov 18 2011

The World Without Us

Book: The World Without Us
Author: Alan Weisman
Reviewer: Michael Andrew Kastellec, NCSU Libraries Fellow

Fascinating and well-written, with both breadth and depth.  Weisman avoids the preachy tone which colors so many other books on the environment.  In fact, it’s only subtly Environmentalist — I appreciate the way it’s so factual and plainly stated (but not dry!), showing the world as it is, not as how anyone might want it to be.  It sort of backs into the imperative that something has to change, or else we’re doomed.  And yet it’s not a depressing book.  Just go read it. I bet you’ll like it.

Nov 18 2011

Never Had It So Good

Book: Never Had It So Good: A History of Britain from Suez to the Beatles
Author: Dominic Sandbrook
Reviewer: Babi Hammond, Special Collections Research Center, NCSU Libraries

Sandbrook’s 2005 history is lively and awesomely broad in scope, taking in politics, economics, sociology, literature and popular culture. It’s a fascinating look at an era I knew mostly from some of the music and movies it produced. I’m not quite done with it yet, but can’t wait to start in on its sequel, White Heat: A History of Britain in the Swinging Sixties (2006).

Nov 18 2011

Swamplandia!

Book: Swamplandia!
Author: Karen Russell
Reviewer: Sarah Stein, Associate Professor, Communication, NC State

One of the best novels I read in 2011 was Swamplandia! by Karen Russell. There’s a genre called Florida Gothic which doesn’t at all appeal to me by its name, but I think Swamplandia! fits and is a terrific book. It is a story about a family of alligator wrestlers in the Everglades, told by an 11 year old, and as adult readers we infer what she cannot. The writing is so limpid and engaging, however, I lost the ability to step outside the narrative as the book went along, and was thus caught up in the events as they unfurled as much as the protagonist. A funny, fascinating, and at times heartrending piece of imagination — I highly recommend it.

Nov 18 2011

Simple Times

Book: Simple Times: Crafts for Poor People
Author: Amy Sedaris
Reviewer: Michael Robert Nutt, NCSU Libraries Fellow

Genius and obsession are often two sides of the same coin. With chapter titles like “Sausages”, “Teenagers Have a Lot of Pain”, and “Making Love”, Simple Times is a hilarious compendium of absurdist crafts. Every page is drenched in comedy, but what really makes this picture-crammed book amazing is Sedaris’ very real command of the crafting arts and a bottomless attention to detail. One gets the distinct impression that “Crafting While Ramped Up On Amphetamines” was written from experience.

Nov 18 2011

Outliers

Book: Outliers: The Story of Success
Author: Malcolm Gladwell
Reviewer: George Rouskas, Professor, Computer Science, NC State

The author tries to understand why some people succeed while others don’t by considering factors that are for the most part overlooked, including culture, the kinds of parents we have, birth dates, and luck. He shows that while hard work does pay off (“the 10,000-Hour Rule”), he also concludes that “genius” is overrated. The author combines extensive research with a wonderful writing style to bring the stories to life.

Nov 18 2011

1493

Book: 1493: Uncovering the New World Columbus Created
Author: Charles C. Mann
Reviewer: David Hiscoe, Director, Communication Strategy, NCSU Libraries

Italy without tomatoes, Ireland without potatoes, America with millions of non-Europeans in cities larger than Paris, China collapsing because it can’t find silver for coins. That’s our world until 1492 when Asia, Europe, and America collided, changing everything, everywhere, for everybody. If you learned history from someone who didn’t know ecology or microbiology or didn’t tell you ten of thousands held in slavery freed themselves before Lincoln, this book will change who you think you are.

Nov 17 2011

The Hundred Year Diet and Kate Atkinson mysteries

Book: The Hundred Year Diet: America’s Voracious Appetite for Losing Weight
Author: Susan Yager
and
Book: Jackson Brodie series
Author: Kate Atkinson
Reviewer: Sarah Ash, Professor, Food, Bioprocessing & Nutrition Sciences

For a scholarly book, I’d recommend The Hundred Year Diet:America’s Voracious Appetite for Losing Weight by Susan Yager. I think most people assume that dieting is a relatively recent phenomenon, but she does a wonderful job tracing the fascinating history of our obsession with weight.

For pure page-turning enjoyment, I recommend the Kate Atkinson series of Jackson Brodie books. Her writing is sharp and witty (the British do it so well), as are her characters. She can make you laugh and cringe on the same page. You really should start at the beginning with Case Histories and work your way up to the present as many of the characters in the later books get introduced in the earlier ones. I can’t put them down.

Nov 17 2011

Snuff

Book: Snuff
Author: Chuck Palahniuk
Reviewer: Rebekah Anne Jaeger, staff, Gay Lesbian Bisexual Transgender Center, NC State

Chuck Palahniuk is one of my favorite authors whose writing style is like no other authors I have read.  His writing style is poignant, honest and agressive and his stories depict life through a non fairy tale lens.  Snuff depicts a young woman who wants to break a record in the porn industry and is told primarily by three men who are waiting to be filmed each with their own agenda.

Nov 17 2011

More Ghost Stories

Book: More Ghost Stories
Author: M. R. James
Reviewer: Robert St. Amant, Associate Professor, Computer Science

This collection contains one of my favorite stories of the supernatural, “Casting the Runes.” It begins with letters of regret to a Mr. Karswell, who responds badly to the rejection of his work on alchemy… In this collection, published exactly 100 years ago, the stories have an atmosphere perfectly suited to the events: “So he put his hand into the well-known nook under the pillow: only, it did not get so far. What he touched was, according to his account, a mouth, with teeth.”

Nov 17 2011

The Inner Circle

Book: The Inner Circle
Author: Brad Meltzer
Reviewer: Benjmain van Ooyen, Staff, NCSU Bookstore

As an avid reader I am always looking for new books that pique my interest, and reading The Inner Circle by Brad Meltzer did just that.  This is a book that will keep you entertained from the first page through the last.  It is the story of a young archivist working in the National Archives, when he stumbles upon a dictionary that leads him on a the hunt to solve one of the nation’s oldest secrets.

Nov 17 2011

The Hare with Amber Eyes

Book: The Hare with Amber Eyes: A Family’s Century of Art and Loss
Author: Edmund de Waal
Reviewer: Kathy Brown, Director, Planning and Research, NCSU Libraries

The Ephrussi family built an immense fortune in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, only to have it sucked away by the Nazi regime.  The author reconstructs his family’s history without sentimentality and traces the journeys of a collection of netsuke from household to household.  The collection—all that remains of the family’s vast holdings—survived because it was hidden in a mattress.  The Ephrussis escaped with their lives but lost their world forever.

Nov 16 2011

All the Devils are Here

Book:  All the Devils are Here: The Hidden History of the Financial Crisis
Authors: Bethany McLean and Joe Nocera
Reviewer: Frank Abrams, Professor Emeritus, North Carolina State University

This book shocks with a detailed view of all the things, beginning two decades before the fall of 2008, that led to the financial crisis. In doing so, it underscores, whether by the authors’ design or not, the tight interweaving of Wall Street and the US Government (especially the US Treasury, Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac).
[Audio read a downloaded copy from Wake County Public Libraries]