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Top Picks of 2017, Part 2

And the hits just keep on coming!

 

 

Julie’s Top Picks of 2017 are:

 

Determined to rid herself of the family curse that has doomed her family, Esther encounters a new phobia that is the worst one of them all: the fear of loving. Read all about it in A Semi-Definitive List of Worst Nightmares by Krystal Sutherland.

 

 

When Dimple Met Rishi by Sandhya Menon is the story of two students who meet at a Stanford University summer program. Dimple endures pressure from her parents to find a suitable groom, and Rishi is encouraging her to enter an arranged marriage agreement with him. Trying to navigate culture, family, and love read to discover what Dimple decides to do.

 

 

As the author of a popular webcomic much of Eliza’s life is spent online. When a new boy enters her life, Eliza begins spending more time offline, but will that destroy her online life? Eliza and Her Monsters by Francesca Zappia delves into the struggle to balance a teenager’s online life with her offline reality.

 

 

 

The keeper of secrets, love letters, and memories, a bookstore is the setting of this love story by Cath Crowley. Follow the story as teenagers Rachel and Henry find each other in Words in Deep Blue.

 

 

Graphic novel Saga Volume 7 by Brian Vaughan finishes Julie’s list.

 

 

 

Cyndi’s Top Picks:

 

Modern Death: How Medicine Changed the End of Life by Haidar Warraich explores the process of dying over the last one hundred years and the impact modern medicine has had on the process for better or for worse.

 

 

A Field Guide to Lies: Critical Thinking In the Information Age by Daniel J. Levitin discusses misinformation and reliable information and argues that science is the foundation in critical thinking.

 

 

The alliance between Earth and Luna is threatened and an android, Iko, joins the hunt for the rogue leader that desires to end the alliance. If you enjoy graphic novels, and even if you don’t, give Wires and Nerve by Marissa Meyer a try.

 

Is it a book or is it a graphic novel? Most of the staff have read Thornhill by Pam Smy, and it made it onto Cyndi’s top picks list. Two stories told in parallel, one uses words and the other pictures.

 

 

Shape-shifters, zombies, and ghosts – what’s not to love? The Dire King by William Ritter is the last in the Jackaby series. Begin at the beginning with Jackaby or skip it and just see what happens in the end!

 

 

The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*uck: a Counterintuitive Approach To Living a Good Life by Mark Manson wraps up Cyndi’s list. The problem of happiness, realizing you’re not special, choices, genetics, victimhood, and the value of suffering are just a few of the ideas grappled with in this thought-provoking book.

 

 

Dave’s Top Picks:

Setting Free the Kites by Alex George delves into the friendship of two young men. Set in Maine in 1976, Robert and Nathan begin their friendship on the first day of eighth grade. They are faced with family tragedies, and through the struggles they learn about how far friendships can stretch.

 

 

If the debut novel, Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine, is any indication, Gail Honeyman will be a favorite author to many. Eleanor is a bit socially awkward, says what she thinks, and lives by a strict timetable, but when she meets Raymond, the IT guy, her world gets a little messy.

 

 

 

Another in the ever popular Three Pines Mystery series, Glass Houses by Louise Penny does not disappoint.

 

 

Knife Creek by Paul Doiron also made Dave’s list. The adventures continue for Mike Bowditch, Maine Game Warden, when he discovers the body of a baby while he is out hunting feral hogs. Rumor is that the mother died years earlier, but as Mike investigates, he discovers nothing is certain.

 

 

Lydia, a clerk at a bookstore, is shocked when a favorite patron kills himself. Through the possessions he bequeaths to her, Lydia looks for answers and attempts to get to know him. What she unearths surprises her and brings to light long forgotten memories from childhood. Midnight at the Bright Ideas Bookstore is the first novel written by Matthew Sullivan.

 

 

In The Stolen Girls by Patricia Gibney, it all begins with the discovery of the body of a pregnant woman. Then another victim is discovered by the same person who discovered the first body. More girls go missing. Detective Parker has to work fast before more end up dead.

 

 

 

Sara Paretsky is author of the V.I. Warshawski mystery series. In Fallout, Warshawski leaves Chicago and heads to Kansas on the trail of a missing film student.

 

 

 

Cat’s Top Picks:

 

Wonder Woman (movie). She watched this in the theater 5 times!

 

 

The Broken Earth trilogy by N.K. Jemisin. Devastating and intricate story about an apocalypse, with geology-based magic and beautiful language. The books in order are: The Fifth Season, The Obelisk Gate, and The Stone Sky.

 

 

Peel Away the Ivy by The Pattern Forms (album). They sound like a melancholy Radiohead song mixed with the Blade Runner soundtrack.

 

 

 

In Other Lands by Sarah Rees Brennan. A very grumpy boy goes to a Lord of the Rings-esque magic school, shenanigans ensue.

 

 

The Girls at the Kingfisher Club by Genevieve Valentine. A retelling of the Twelve Dancing Princesses set in the Prohibition era.

 

 

Bitch Planet by Kelly Sue DeConnick. In a sci-fi dystopia where rebellious women are sent to a dedicated prison planet, a group of prisoners stage a break out.

Top Picks of 2017

Here we go! As promised, over the next few weeks, I will be sharing Topsham Public Library Staff’s Top Picks of 2017.

 

 

I will get things rolling! Here are my Top Picks of 2017:

Last Bus to Wisdom by Ivan Doig is at the top of my Top Picks of 2017 list. Ivan Doig is one of my favorite authors because of the sense of place that grounds his novels and the insightful and witty characters of whom he writes. Doig passed away in April, 2015, and Last Bus to Wisdom was his final novel, so I waited until this year to read it as I didn’t want to rush it. Last Bus to Wisdom did not disappoint, and I felt like I was on that bus with Donal, an orphan living with his grandmother on a ranch, who must travel cross country to stay with a relative he has never met while his gram has surgery for “female trouble.” Those he meets along the way are well developed characters, and I wanted to hang out with them – well, most of them.

 

The first book written by Ruta Sepetys that I read was Between Shades of Gray (not to be confused with Fifty Shades of Grey) and I liked it, so when I saw she had written Salt to the Sea, I decided to try it. Sepetys only gets better. Salt to the Sea is set at the end of World War II and the story is told from four points of view. Each character is fleeing from the Russians and the Germans as the Russians advance westward to Germany, and they want to get to the Wilhelm Gustloff a refugee ship that will take them to safety. Sepetys, a daughter of a refugee herself, offers insight into the fate of those peoples, and nations, who were caught between Germany and Russia at the end of World War II. I listened to the audio book and highly recommend it. Whether you listen to it, or you read it, you don’t want to miss it.

 

Australian author, Markus Zusak, captured me with his book The Book Thief. With I Am the Messenger, Zusak does it again. Ed Kennedy, a cabdriver trying to mind his own business, finds himself stopping a bank robbery. The dust settles, his life returns to normal, and Ed carries on with his life and his weekly poker game with friends. Things get interesting, even dangerous, when Ed receives the first ace in the mail. His task as The Messenger will change not only his life, but the lives of everyone around him. Insightful, goofy, strange, this book is worth a read. I will admit I found the ending a little disappointing, but the trip the story took me on was well worth it.

 

My Cousin Rachel by Dauphne du Maurier was recently made into a movie starring Rachel Weisz and Sam Claflin. Before I could watch it, I wanted to read it, so I did. Du Maurier’s Rebecca is one of my favorite books, so I was a little nervous about reading this hoping I wouldn’t be disappointed. I wasn’t. Du Maurier is so subtly eerie it’s freaky. Philip, a young man bereaved by the death of his cousin, is positive that his cousin’s wife killed her husband. Rachel, the widow, unexpectedly shows up at Philip’s estate. Slowly, Philip falls in love with her, but in the end, this relationship leads to tragedy. Du Maurier plants doubts in my mind about everyone’s character that by the time I finished the book, I didn’t know who is guilty, but I was sure no one was innocent. I was convinced I knew who was guilty, and the next that surety melted away to doubt.

 

The Marriage Bureau by Penrose Halson was my one non-fiction book this year. I struggle reading nonfiction, but I am forcing myself to read at least one a year. It is getting easier, and I am discovering some pretty good nonfiction books, and The Marriage Bureau is one of them. On the eve of World War II, two young women go into business together and run a marriage bureau to help people find love. This is the story of how they got started, and the impact they had in the lives of the people of London, England and beyond.

 

I was finishing up my day behind the desk at Topsham Public Library when a new movie came across the desk. Dave told me I should watch it, and I thought, meh, I’ll give it a go. That evening my sister and I were on my couch with the TV to ourselves, and I put The Hollars in the DVD player. We still don’t know what the movie is about, well, I mean, it’s about life and all it’s oddities and joys and sorrows, but this movie explores life in a quirky way that does not detract from the telling, but adds to it. The cast includes John Krasinski, Margo Martindale, and Anna Kendrick. This is a hidden gem that you want to enjoy one winter day.

 

 

Dale’s Top Picks of 2017:

 

Southern Bastards by Jason Aaron is a graphic novel that takes place in rural Alabama. The main character is the local high school’s football coach who may have buried bodies under the bleachers.

 

 

 

Essex County by Jeff Lemire is also a graphic novel that follows a community and the problems and issues its members tackle.

 

 

 

Stephen King and Richard Chizmar co-authored Gwendy’s Button Box, the next of Dale’s top picks. With an author like King, you know it’s a horror story. When will little girls learn to stay away from strangers?

 

 

 

Wind River starring Jeremy Renner and Elizabeth Olson is one of Dale’s favorite movies of the year. A game tracker (Renner) is recruited to help an FBI agent (Olson) investigate a murder that occurred on reservation land.

 

 

The last of Dale’s picks is also a movie. It Comes At Night is about one family who opens their home to another family in need as the world is terrorized by an unnatural threat. Paranoia and mistrust grow between the families, and characters must ask themselves what they would do to protect their loved ones. Stars include Joel Edgerton, Carmen Ejogo, and Christopher Abbott.

 

 

Helen’s Top Picks of 2017:

 

Knife Creek by Maine author Paul Doiron is first on Helen’s list. The adventures continue for Mike Bowditch, Maine Game Warden, when he discovers the body of a baby while he is out hunting feral hogs. Rumor is that the mother died years earlier, but as Mike investigates, he discovers nothing is certain.

 

 

John Grisham delves into the world of black market manuscripts and stolen books in his book Camino Island. Bookstore owner, Bruce Cable, has a legitimate business selling books, but on the side he sells stolen goods. Mercer Mann is hired to go undercover and learn Cable’s secrets. Sometimes, one can learn too much.

 

 

Everything is fine until the dinner party. That’s when Kate, happily married mother of two, meets Peter. After that, it all goes south. One of them ends up dead, and to find out who-done-it read Fatal by John Lescroart.

 

 

Part of the Pendergast novels, The Obsidian Chamber by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child, makes it on Helen’s list. Filled with grief, believing that Special Agent Pendergast is dead, Constance, his ward, takes shelter in the chambers beneath the family mansion. But she is not left alone to grieve as a dark figure from the past takes her captive.

 

 

Also part of a series, The Play of Death by Oliver Potzsch, is the newest installment in the Hangman’s Daughter Tales. Set in Germany during the late 1600s, an actor is killed and Jakob, the hangman along with his daughter and son-in-law, investigate and uncover the secrets the town has tried to hide.

 

 

 

 

 

Drum Roll, Please!

Are you ready for the year’s top prizes to be awarded in books, movies, and music? Beginning next week, I will be revealing the Top Picks of 2017 chosen by the staff of Topsham Public Library! Tune in, and compare it to your favorites from this past year.

To be a Top Pick of 2017, the staff member had to have read it, or watched it, or listened to it during the year. The item does not have to be a new release or released in 2017, it just has to have been enjoyed during 2017.

Let us know what you think about the picks. Thumbs up or thumbs down? What items would your list include?

Operating Hours Will Remain Same Through Holidays

Usually this time of year, Topsham Public Library informs our patrons and visitors of any changes in our operating hours due to the holidays. This year we don’t have to do that because the way the calendar falls, the holidays are during our regularly scheduled closed times. So, our operating hours are not changing. Everything stays the same.

And just for your information our operating hours year-round are as follows:

  • Sunday and Monday we are closed.
  • Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday we open at 9am and close at 8pm.
  • Friday we open at 9am and close at 5pm.
  • Saturday we open at 9am and close at 4pm.

This holiday season you don’t have to worry about trying to get to Topsham Public Library before we close early because we are not closing early. Enjoy your holidays and make sure you stop by and say, “Hi!”

You Know Winter Has Arrived When

Topsham Public Library is blessed with beautiful grounds. Not only do we have beautiful grounds, but we have great volunteers who have transformed our grounds into producing gardens. We receive many positive comments about the gardens and their beauty and their peacefulness.

The gardens are at the rear of our building, and in the summer we keep the door that leads from the gardens into the library unlocked. This door provides quick access to the grounds or to the library and we want our patrons and visitors to enjoy both.

Well, winter has arrived and I know this because we don’t unlock the garden door anymore. It’s necessary. It makes sense. But it’s sad, too. Now the flower and vegetable beds are under snow. Brrrrrrr.

It’s all part of the cycle of life, and it’s funny how in the little ways, such as the simple act of locking a door, that cycle seeps into our lives.

Santa Claus is Coming to Town!

If you have a little one who gets excited by the thought of Santa Claus, you don’t want to miss these opportunities at Topsham Public Library!

On Wednesday, December 13 at 10am we are hosting a special storytime with Miss Mariah. Children will meet Santa and have a tasty holiday treat! Don’t forget to bring your camera!

Children also have two opportunities to stop by and hear a story with Santa and they will also receive a book to bring home and keep. Sponsored by Priority Real Estate Group LLC, Santa will be at Topsham Public Library on Thursday, December 14 6pm-7pm, and again on Saturday, December 16, 1:30pm-2:30pm.

Meeting Santa can be exciting for everyone, and it only happens once a year!

Ho! Ho! Ho! See you there!

Should You Mess With a Classic?

Recently I borrowed the audiobook Huck Out West by Robert Coover, and I chose it because it is a sequel to The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain. I was intrigued to discover how Coover envisioned the continuation of Huckleberry Finn’s life. All the pertinent characters are there, Tom Sawyer, Becky Thatcher, and Jim, plus he refers to others from Twain’s original and, introduces new ones. The plot twists are interesting, and at times surprising, and I have found myself wondering what Mr. Twain would think of Coover’s tale.

Of course, this is not the first or only continuation of a classic that was not written by the original author. A sampling includes: Susan Hill’s sequel to Daphne du Maurier’s Rebecca titled Mrs. de Winter; Scarlett by Alexandra Ripley is the sequel to Margaret Mitchell’s Gone With the Wind; there is even a sequel to Les Miserables titled Cosette: the Sequel to Les Miserables by Laura Kalpakian.

If there are sequels, you know there must be prequels, too. Ruth’s Journey: The Authorized Novel of Mammy from Margaret Mitchell’s Gone With the Wind is a prequel that shares the story of Mammy’s life (People really like Gone With the Wind!); to know what happened to Anne Shirley before living with Matthew and Marilla Cuthbert, you want to read Before Green Gables by Budge Wilson; even the crazy lady locked up in the attic in Jane Eyre gets her say thanks to Jean Rhys who wrote Wide Sargasso Sea

Not only are there sequels and prequels, but there are classics that have been written through another characters eyes. Caroline by Sarah Elizabeth Miller is the retelling of the Little House stories from Caroline’s perspective; Rhett Butler’s People by Donald McCaig is Gone With the Wind through Rhett’s eyes; Grendel by John Gardner allows the monster in Beowulf to tell his side of the story.

These lists are certainly not exhaustive, and I may not have mentioned one that you love, or perhaps hate, but it’s something to get you started if you are so inclined.

I’m still not sure what I think, but questions about whether stories can actually be “owned”, what purpose stories have in society, and what happens when you change something so familiar are questions worth thinking about.

What do you think?

Happy Thanksgiving!

 

Topsham Public Library wishes you all a Happy Thanksgiving! We truly are a part of a great community, and we are so thankful for all of your support.

In observance of Thanksgiving, we will be closed Thursday, November 23, 2017, but we will re-open Friday, November 24, 2017 at 9am, and that same day join us for the Film After Feast at 1pm and watch The Wizard of Oz on the big screen. Popcorn will be available. Bring pillows/blankets for extra coziness. All ages welcome.

You Are The Best!

Photo courtesy of Topsham resident Doug Griffin. 

Well, we survived. Honestly, I didn’t see it coming. I know the meteorologists were warning about the high winds, but I thought I was ready and unconsciously I thought, “Meh, how bad can it be?” Well, I was surprised, shocked almost, by the damage and power outage. I live in a part of Topsham that rarely loses power. We lost it early Monday morning, but we had it back by that afternoon. I didn’t realize how extensive the power outage was until my son’s friends came over and they were discussing the damages in their own neighborhoods and towns.

What impressed me, though, was the way the community looked out for one another. Neighbors were looking out for neighbors and people were offering their homes, showers, washers, and dryers to their neighbors and friends. The Town of Topsham got the word out about water stations and warming stations; American Legion Post 202 provided free meals after 3pm; Mt. Ararat High School opened as a warming station and the Mt. Ararat Sports Boosters offered free hot dogs and drinks.

Topsham Public Library had power through it all, and it was bustling with people coming in to get warm, work, charge their electronics, and get a free coffee or tea (Thanks you so much to Wicked Joe for providing the coffee). We were packed, and parking was tight, but the spirit was one of encouragement and helpfulness as neighbors and strangers alike gathered here in those difficult days.

This is just a sampling of how the community reached out to help, I’m sure I am missing other community members and businesses who helped out and contributed in the time of need.

As Thanksgiving draws close, and we think about what we are thankful for, I know we are truly thankful for our community. You are the best!

Author to Visit Topsham Public Library

We have a variety of book discussion groups here at Topsham Public Library, and one of them is Mens’ Book Club. This month they are reading Remarkable Americans: the Washburn Family by Kerck Kelsey, and they invite you to join them when the author visits on Thursday, November 16, 2017 at 6pm and learn about one of Maine’s oldest and most political families.

Mr. Kelsey graduated from Princeton in 1955, where he majored in English. Following his military service, he was an educational salesman for Houghton Mifflin Company. Over the next twenty-one years, he sold books and tests throughout the United States and Canada. He then returned to Boston as a trust officer with the Bank of Boston. While there, he started extension classes at Harvard. He earned a Master’s Degree in History in 2002.

He wrote his thesis on Israel Washburn, Jr. and after moving to Maine in 1992, Mr. Kelsey rewrote his Harvard thesis for public consumption and published it in 2004 as Israel Washburn, Jr, Maine’s Little-Known Giant of the Civil War. He took on the whole story of the Livermore Washburns in Remarkable Americans: The Washburn Family published in 2008. He also authored a biography of the most spectacular Washburn brother titled Prairie Lightning: The Rise and Fall of William Drew Washburn, in 2010.

Books will be available for purchase and signing.