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Coping With Chemotherapy How to take of yourself while chemotherapy takes care of the cancer Bruning 1985 This book I found still in active circulation at an unamed public library. As of this writing, it is still on the shelf. For the lo...
Coping With Chemotherapy How to take of yourself while chemotherapy takes care of the cancer Bruning 1985 This book I found still in active circulation at an unamed public library. As of this writing, it is still on the shelf. For the love of libraries, why is this still in circulation?  Please don’t tell me about how you have new stuff too or it is better than nothing. For a public library, this is a slam dunk weeder. No excuses. Since I have been finding way too many of these cancer books from the 70s, 80s and 90s still on library shelves lately, I can’t emphasisize enough how these really need to go. Aside from the outdated information, the attitude of recovery is less than optimistic. Back then, a cancer diagnosis was nearly a death sentence and chemo barely survivable.  A library patron looking for hope and information is not going to find it within these older materials. Get in there and cull those old cancer books. Mary More Cancer Books that need to go: Cancer is Groovy Helpful Cancer Info Cancer for Kids
33 minutes ago
thewildinside: housingworksbookstore: Tickets are limited and going quickly for our queer ladies literary speed dating! The first installment back in February was a blast, register now and don’t miss out. trying to get someone I know ...
thewildinside: housingworksbookstore: Tickets are limited and going quickly for our queer ladies literary speed dating! The first installment back in February was a blast, register now and don’t miss out. trying to get someone I know to attend so she can get over someone else and make a lady friend >. SO DID YOU GET YOUR FRIEND A TICKET YET? This is next week already and it’s nearly sold out. The time is now, people. We can’t wait to see you.
36 minutes ago
For years I convinced myself that I didn't need to write. The world is full of writers, and the last thing it needs is another book.This wasn't a bad thing to tell myself, because in truth I couldn't write while I was struggling to keep...
For years I convinced myself that I didn't need to write. The world is full of writers, and the last thing it needs is another book.This wasn't a bad thing to tell myself, because in truth I couldn't write while I was struggling to keep my store alive. I had to earn a living.But now that I'm back to writing, it's like I'm addicted to it. I really like doing it, I feel like it's what I should be doing, it's very fulfilling. When I'm not writing, I feel like I'm at loose ends.Even if it goes nowhere, even if it meets universal rejection, this shit is going to happen.I can see the road ahead very clearly, and the road is full of words.I doubt at this point anything could pull me away from writing, even if the old "have to make a living" situation returns. I've put off this creative thing for too long. I'm fascinated by it. How it works, why it works. I'm also sort of closing in. Things are getting shed. I'm making time for writing by not watching as much television or going to the movies or traveling or reading books or keeping up with the news, etc. etc.Thank god I have an understanding wife, who is also a writer. She told someone the other day -- "Writing is our retirement." But it's more than that. That description feels like a kind of doddering goal. I have every ambition to try to get good, to create something people want to read. I'm not looking for outside input anymore, even on my writing. (This is not to say, I don't want input on What I'm Writing, if you catch the difference.) I've spent the last thirty years taking in input, information on a constant basis, and now I'm sort of putting blinders on and concentrating on what's in my head.There feels like there is a lot of stuff inside me that wants to get out, stories I want to tell, characters I want to invent. The flow of words just feels natural and right. I hope it just keeps coming. This shit is going to happen.
about 1 hour ago
Back at my desk, with my actual photos in hand, I share some of the faces of New Orleans, the city where I've spent the last few days. Most of the faces are self-explanatory. The two World War II vets were found at the massive and moving...
Back at my desk, with my actual photos in hand, I share some of the faces of New Orleans, the city where I've spent the last few days. Most of the faces are self-explanatory. The two World War II vets were found at the massive and moving World War II museum, in the city's warehouse district. The final picture was taken by my husband in the final hour—Katie Goldrath, my former student, and me, saying goodbye (but hopefully not for long).
about 4 hours ago
Library Loot is a weekly event co-hosted by Claire from The Captive Reader and Marg from The Adventures of an Intrepid Reader that encourages bloggers to share the books they’ve checked out from the library. If you’d like to participate,...
Library Loot is a weekly event co-hosted by Claire from The Captive Reader and Marg from The Adventures of an Intrepid Reader that encourages bloggers to share the books they’ve checked out from the library. If you’d like to participate, just write up your post-feel free to steal the button-and link it using the Mr. Linky any time during the week. And of course check out what other participants are getting from their libraries. This week’s loot, since I’m currently travelling in Europe, is devoted to all the e-books I loaded onto my Kobo before I left.  I don’t think I’m going to run out of things to read while I’m on the road!   Henrietta Sees It Through by Joyce Dennys Nightingale Wood by Stella Gibbons The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry by Rachel Joyce The Lost Girls by Jennifer Baggett, Holly C. Corbett, and Amanda Pressner A High Wind in Jamaica by Richard Hughes Tout Sweet by Karen Wheeler Advice for Italian Boys by Anne Giardini Never Shoot a Stampede Queen by Mark Leiren-Young The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms by N.K. Jemisin Swallows and Amazons by Arthur Ransome Swallowdale by Arthur Ransome The Penderwicks by Jeanne Birdsall The Ape Who Guards the Balance by Elizabeth Peters The Falcon at the Portal by Elizabeth Peters He Shall Thunder in the Sky by Elizabeth Peters Legend in Green Velvet by Elizabeth Peters Thus Was Adonis Murdered by Sarah Caudwell The Tale of Hill Top Farm by Susan Wittig Albert Sophomore Switch by Abby McDonald The Anti-Prom by Abby McDonald Getting Over Garrett Delaney by Abby McDonald Losing It by Cora Carmack Bread and Wine by Shauna Niequist Powder and Patch by Georgette Heyer A Pocket Full of Rye by Agatha Christie The Mirror Crack’d from Side to Side by Agatha Christie What did you pick up this week?
about 8 hours ago
By Kristine Rabberman. Turtle Diary, Russell Hoban, New York Review of Books, 2013 It would be understandable to expect Russell Hoban’s Turtle Diary to be a light-hearted romantic comedy, one where two lonely protagonists come together ...
By Kristine Rabberman. Turtle Diary, Russell Hoban, New York Review of Books, 2013 It would be understandable to expect Russell Hoban’s Turtle Diary to be a light-hearted romantic comedy, one where two lonely protagonists come together over a crazy caper, a plan to set free the sea turtles in the London Zoo, fall in love, and live happily ever after. Fortunately, Hoban’s 1975 novel bears little resemblance to this simplistic narrative. Instead, Turtle Diary is a quiet, thoughtful examination of the loneliness of middle age and the quest to break free of it. William G. is divorced, 45, living alone in a small flat. He is estranged from his ex-wife and his two daughters, works in a bookshop and searches for ways to fill his empty hours. Neaera H., a writer and illustrator of children’s books, is single, 43, living a solitary life in which she works late into the night, and goes days without talking to another person. They both seek solace in visits to the London Zoo, where they independently arrive at the same plan: to set free three large sea turtles that are confined in a small area in the zoo’s aquarium. After meeting in William’s bookshop over books about turtles, they eventually share their “turtle thoughts” with each other, and embark on a plan to set the turtles free off the coast of Polperro, Cornwall. Turtle Diary explores both the turtles’ significance as symbols of a different way to live, and William and Neaera’s respective struggles to reshape their lives. This is novel that focuses not so much on William and Neaera’s freeing the turtles, as on their attempts to free themselves. The novel’s structure provides rich opportunities to get to know both characters’ thoughts and fears, as its chapters are alternating diary entries written by each character. Hoban creates internal monologues that weave together observations of settings, recollections of interactions with others, philosophical musings, passages from novels and poems, memories, and the minutiae of daily tasks. Both William and Neaera are frozen by fear of being hurt. Although they are lonely, they veer from contact with others. And their loneliness bears the weight of time lost with little to show for it. As William notes, I used to think when I shaved and looked at my face that that bit of time didn’t count, was just the time in between things. Now I think it’s the time that counts most. It’s those times that all the other times are in between. It’s the time when nothing helps and the great heavy boot of the past is planted squarely in your back and showing you forward. Sometimes my mind gives me a flash of road I’ll never see again, sometimes a face that’s gone, gone. Moments like grains of sand but the beach is empty. Millions of moments in forty-five years. Letters in boxes, photos in drawers. For both William and Neaera, sea turtles represent a different way to live. No regrets, no hesitation, no existential struggles. Throughout their diary entries, William and Neaera marvel at the sea turtles’ uncanny ability to navigate through thousands of miles, swimming through ocean currents to Ascension Island to breed. The turtles live by instincts, and their actions embody what they are. As Neaera notes, “[The turtles] were compacted of finding, finding was embodied in them.” In one passage, William jumps from his speculations about shamans to this reflection about the sea turtles, Could I be a turtle? Could I through an act of ecstasy swim unafraid and never lost, finding, finding? Swimming with Pangaea printed on my brain and bones, the ancient continent that was before the land masses drifted apart. That’s part of it too: there were no seas between, the land was one, there was one thing, unbroken. Now there are thousands of miles of open water and the strong ones, the swimmers, the unlost, are driven to trace the paths between, maintain the ancient connection. I don’t know whether I can keep going. A turtle doesn’t have to decide every morning whether to ke
about 8 hours ago
The Nobel Prize in Literature is in a league of its own as far as international author-prizes go, but in the tier below that the biennial Neustadt International Prize for Literature is one of the few that has really made its mark (unlike...
The Nobel Prize in Literature is in a league of its own as far as international author-prizes go, but in the tier below that the biennial Neustadt International Prize for Literature is one of the few that has really made its mark (unlike, say, the Man Booker International Prize, which is still on a somewhat wobbly footing). They've now announced the jurors for the 2014 prize -- significant, since the way this prize works is that each juror names a candidate for the prize -- making for nine shortlisted authors (to be announced mid-July) -- and they then all get together and debate and select a winner from among the nine. This has worked out pretty well in the past, and it'll be interesting to see what happens this time around.
about 11 hours ago
French Culture "are delighted to release a list of over 500 fantastic titles translated from French since January 2012", in their (post titled) 2013 Translated Titles List. Whoa, you may think -- didn't we just hear about the ...
French Culture "are delighted to release a list of over 500 fantastic titles translated from French since January 2012", in their (post titled) 2013 Translated Titles List. Whoa, you may think -- didn't we just hear about the Translation Database at Three Percent, and aren't there far fewer titles listed there ? The discrepancy can be explained by a number of factors -- notably that French Culture include many titles the Translation Database doesn't, including whole genres (the Translation Database only counts fiction and poetry; French Culture also count comics, children's books, and non-fiction (though not, surprisingly, drama)). French Culture also include reprints (not just new translations of previously translated works -- which they also count, and are also excluded from the Translation Database, but actual reprints). There are also some ... questionable titles ? The whole Papercutz Garfield & Co. series, for example -- yes, those are all translations from the French ..... Still, a very useful resource for what's been published (and re-published ...) in translation from the French in the US.
about 11 hours ago
The most recent additions to the complete review are my reviews of two plays from the 1980s by Iranian author Gholamhoseyn Sa'edi: Othello in Wonderland Mirror-Polishing Storytellers
The most recent additions to the complete review are my reviews of two plays from the 1980s by Iranian author Gholamhoseyn Sa'edi: Othello in Wonderland Mirror-Polishing Storytellers
about 11 hours ago
How we choose the next book to read? Does the news influence the books that you choose to read? New books from Ethan Rutherford and J. Courtney Sullivan. Listener question: how do we choose books to read? This week, we start with another...
How we choose the next book to read? Does the news influence the books that you choose to read? New books from Ethan Rutherford and J. Courtney Sullivan. Listener question: how do we choose books to read? This week, we start with another listener question (have a question? Ask it here.): Chanda in KY writes: “With SO many amazing books out there, how do you select which book to read next? If you enjoy a book, do you tend to read everything else out there by that author right away, or do you space it out and read other books in between? I used to “overindulge” on an author and read everything they had written in sequence, if I truly enjoyed their work, but lately I have found myself choosing to read books that are totally different from each other, i.e. I will read a memoir and then a historical novel and then a horror or sci-fi book. Just wondering your thoughts on this.” Both Michael and I agree that there’s not a real science to our book choices — a lot depends on mood. And we both agree that it would be a luxury to serial-read an author’s complete works, but not something in which we can often indulge. I will also pick books, or move them up the To Be Read pile, based on what people are talking about. For instance, this week on Twitter, people were talking about the fortchoming Tampa by Alissa Nutting, and so I’ve moved it up on my reading list. Please let us know here, in the comments, how you choose your next book to read. If you are receiving this blog post by email, please click the link and comment on the blog, so that conversation can flow there. Thanks! Books and the News: There have been some stories in the news about how sales of 1984 have increased, possibly due to the breaking story about the NSA surveillance of US telecommunications. While we can’t quite understand why the news would bring someone to buy 1984, we’re in favor of anything that makes people buy books. Another suggested read for those interested in the unfolding NSA story: The Shadow Factory: The Ultra-Secret NSA from 9/11 to the Eavesdropping of America by James Bamford The recent death of Iain Banks has made me want to read his work. I had heard his name for a very long time, but had no idea just how important he was to so many readers. This has made me want to pick up his work. Again via twitter, suggested places to start with Banks are The Wasp Factory or The Crow Road (literary fiction written under the name Iain Banks) and Consider Phlebas (Book 1 in the Culture series, published under Ian M. Banks). Here in New England, we’re also following the trial of mob-boss Whitey Bulger. There are two books that have come out recently that cover his life and capture: Whitey: The Life of America’s Most Notorious Mob Boss by Dick Lehr and Gerald O’Neill Whitey Bulger: America’s Most Wanted Gangster and the Manhunt that Brought Him to Justice by Kevin Cullen and Shelley Murphy and also two books written a few years ago by associates of Bulger: Street Soldier: My Life as an Enforcer for Whitey Bulger and the Boston Irish Mob by Edward MacKenzie A Criminal and an Irishman” The Inside Story of the Boston Mob-IRA Connection by Patrick Nee And we ask you: what kinds of news stories make you pick up a book? Two Books We Can’t Wait for you to Read Short story month is now over, and we ask Michael about his promise to read a short story every day in May. (Hint: he didn’t succeed). The Miniature Wife and Other Stories by Manuel Gonzales was a collection that he enjoyed. Michael also enjoyed The Peripatetic Coffin and Other Stories by Ethan Rutherford, a story collection that has a very interesting mix of stories. One of Michael’s favorites is “Summer Boys,” about the friendship between two boys. The title story, “The Peripatetic Coffin,” takes place in the first Confederate submarine. This book is getting rave reviews from
about 12 hours ago