Thursday, June 21, 2007


Book Review


Author: Gantos, Jack.

Title: Love curse of the Rumbaughs

In ten words or less: Obsessive mother love meets taxidermy.

Review:

Is Ivy doomed to follow in the footsteps of the elderly twin pharmacists who live across the street? Is heredity or environment more powerful? As she grew up, she realized that Abner and Adolph were a little strange, but they were kind to her and her mother. It came as a shock to her, when on her 16th birthday, her mother revealed to her that one of the men (she did not know which one) was her father. And while Ivy loved her mother greatly, was she bound to follow in the footsteps of the twins, who kept their mother after her death, preserved by taxidermy? With its gothic overtones and very dark humor, this young adult novel is not for everyone.

Why bother? If Stephen King and V.C. Andrews met on the set of "Psycho," this might have been the result. It's funny, and a little wistful, but totally original.
BOOK REVIEW

Savage, Sam. Firmin: adventures of a metropolitan lowlife.

In ten words or less: Rat learns to read and contemplates the meaning of life.

Born in a run-down bookstore in Boston’s Scollay Square, Firmin the rat discovers a taste for literature. While competing with his many siblings for food, Firmin discovers that great books can be quite tasty. It’s while he’s munching on Shakespeare and Dickinson that his hidden talent for reading emerges.
After a life threatening encounter with the bookseller, Firmin is adopted by an eccentric science fiction author. Definitely not a book for children, Firmin’s black humor and literary commentary will appeal to readers who enjoy the, ahem, weird.

Why bother? A unique perspective on life and literature from a world weary rodent.

Tuesday, March 27, 2007

QUOTE OF THE DAY

"I've come to the reluctant but inescapable conclusion that roughly 50% of the adults in this country are simply too ignorant and functionally incompetent to be living in a free society. You might think I'm off base, but every day around half the people in this country go out of their way to prove me right."--Neal Boortz, "Somebody's Gotta Say It."

I am not a Neal Boortz fan, but the people in the library are a good example of this.

Thursday, February 22, 2007



BOOK REVIEW

Title: Clemente

Author: David Maraniss

In ten words or less: Terrific biography of the Pittsburgh Pirate great.

Review: Roberto Clemente was the first great Latin American baseball star. The right fielder with the amazing arm spent 18 seasons with the Pittsburgh Pirates, and died in 1972 in a tragic plane crash, while delivering relief supplies to Nicaraguan earthquake victims. “Clemente never held anything back from the people and gave them more than they had any right to expect from him,” said Joe Brown, Pirates general manager.

Author David Maraniss is a Washington Post staff writer who has written other books, including “First in his class: a biography of Bill Clinton,” (1995) and the Pulitzer Prize winning “When pride still mattered: a life of Vince Lombardi” (1999).

Why bother? Much more than a sports biography—insightful profile of a complex man and the insidious racism of major league baseball.

Tuesday, February 20, 2007


Insect Fear Film Festival


It's time once again for my favorite film festival. It's about seven hours from the northwoods to Champaign-Urbana, so I hope the weather holds. The theme this year is Japanese insect movies--a tribute to Mothra. For more information, go to http://www.life.uiuc.edu/entomology/egsa/ifff.html