Words Worth Reading

CDPL's literature blog created to help you find books worth reading

Saturday, October 23, 2010

Preview Shelf by Janice Clauser

Library News and Notable New Books

Do You Remember the Photographer Nellie Coutant? - Crawfordsville Library reference librarian Jodie Wilson is researching Nellie Coutant, an amateur photographer from Crawfordsville, active especially from 1900-1915. Her works were published in many photography magazines of her day, and her pictures were critically acclaimed in newspapers such as the Washington Post. Her photographs were sold locally, and for many years she was a secretary at the Supreme Tribe of Ben Hur. Please contact Jodie (362-2242, extension 117) if you have any information about Nellie Coutant, or have any photographs taken by her. Thanks!

Four new cookbooks draw the eye as well as the tummy. Ideas in Lourdes Castro's "Simply Mexican" look enticing, like Chile-Smothered Shrimp Skewers, Creamy Chicken Chipotle Salad, Tortilla Soup, and other simple but colorful fare. "Tacos" by Mark Miller offers 72 authentic recipes for simple combinations like bacon and eggs and different meats with vegetables. "Martha Stewart's Dinner at Home" contains 52 quick meals to cook for family and friends, arranged by the four seasons. "Julia's Kitchen Wisdom" holds essential techniques and recipes from Julia Child's lifetime of cooking that represent her forty years of collaboration with colleagues and friends. This doesn't go into complicated subjects like French puff pastry. Instead it’s a mini aid for general home cookery aimed at those who are tolerably familiar with culinary language.

New guide books include the 2011 edition of "What Color is Your Parachute?" the popular manual for job-hunters and career-changers. "Handspinning" (twisting fiber into thread) by Judith McCuin teaches two-page lessons and shows all the products involved. The "2011 Novel & Short Story Writer's Market" has a thousand listings to help sell fiction, and offers a free online subscription. Cesar Millan's "A Member of the Family" is a new guide to living with a happy, healthy dog.

New Mobil travel guides are "Southern Great Lakes" and "Great Plains" with lists of resorts, inns, good food, sightseeing, where to go and what to see and do.

The Annie Casey Foundation "2010 Kids Count" data book contains statistics of children's situations in our fifty states, and trends in health and family care. "Broke, USA" tells how the working poor became big business, from pawnshops to Poverty, Inc. Gary Rivlin writes about our Great Crash of 2008 when these kinds of businesses expanded and grew, taking advantage of an era of deregulation to devise high-priced products to sell to the credit-hungry working poor.

The story of the awful Mann Gulch fire of 1949 in the Montana wilderness filled Norman Maclean's last fourteen years of study so he could record twelve Smokejumpers' deaths in "Young Men & Fire" when only three of the United States Forest Service's elite airborne firefighters survived. "Voices from the Vietnam War" by Xiaobing Li is made up of stories from American, Asian, and Russian veterans. Oral histories from 22 individuals representing multiple political beliefs and perspectives focus on personal combat experiences, offering a deep understanding of America's longest war with nearly 1.5 million military casualties and more than 4 million civilian casualties.

Here are requested novels newly placed on the main floor shelves. James Patterson and Swedish writer Liza Marklund's "The Postcard Killers" is called the scariest vacation thriller ever written. An NYPD detective tours Europe's great cities, all the while seeing each historic site through the eyes of his daughter's killer. His daughter and her boyfriend were killed in Rome, and since that event more touring couples have been found dead in other cities. So the detective teams up with a Swedish reporter to predict where the next victims will be.

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