July 28, 2014
All the Light We Cannot See
By Anthony Doerr
Marie-Laure LeBlanc and Werner Pfennig are two children growing up during World War II whose lives will intersect in 1944 during the Allied bombing of Saint-Malo. Marie-Laure is a curious and dreamy blind girl whose childhood is spent exploring Paris’s Museum of Natural History where her father works as the head of security. Werner is gifted and inquisitive and lives with his sister, Jutta, in a German orphanage until he is selected to attend an elite government school where he is promised answers to his scientific questions, but also told that his mind is dangerous, independent and subversive.
This novel is rich in symbolism and written in a lyrical, thoughtful tone. Doerr deals with heavy subjects and writes with great detail while remaining abstract about his character’s inner lives. Despite this, the novel is highly readable. Doerr calls his decision to break up the novel into short (two or three page) chapters a “gesture of friendliness” to the reader (http://www.powells.com/blog/interviews/anthony-doerr-the-powells-com-interview-by-jill/). The short chapters aren’t the only thing helping the reader to speed through this thick book. Doerr’s plot is thrilling. Jumping back and forth between 1944 and earlier years, Doerr keeps his audience anticipating the eventual merging of the timelines, when Werner and Marie-Laure will finally cross paths. I found myself at times clutching the book in desperation and at other times staring into space contemplating a poignant sentence.
This novel will leave you haunted, which is appropriate considering that many of its characters are haunted themselves. Marie-Laure hears her father’s voice in her head advising her during moments of terror. Sergeant Major Reinhold von Rumpel is obsessed with the legend of the fabulous gem he tracks throughout Europe, especially its supposed gift of longevity. Werner cannot escape the image and voice of his sister, Jutta, who becomes his belabored conscience while he is being indoctrinated at school. And then there is Marie’s uncle, Etienne, who suffers from PTSD after watching his brother die in his arms during the first World War.
Moving, thrilling and fulfilling, this is a great summer reading pick. Read it if you like literary or historical fiction with the smallest dash of magical realism.
--Chelsea
July 21, 2014
Lexicon
By Max Barry
The online comic strip xkcd.com once had a strip where a man tells his female companion to bring him a sandwich. The woman tells the man to get himself the sandwich. The man then says, “Sudo, get me a sandwich” and his companion immediately gets does so. We are to believe that “sudo” is a magic word; you only need to precede your demands with this word-of-power and everyone will obey you.
The plot of Lexicon expands on this idea. We are not all susceptible to the same “magic” word or words but, by analyzing an individual’s psychology, a secret organization can classify a person by “segment”, and with that knowledge, take over his mind. And they do this by asking you five simple questions:
•Are you a dog person or a cat person?
•What’s your favorite color?
•Close your eyes and pick a number from 1 to 100
•Do you love your family?
•Why did you do it?
But Wil seems to be immune to every segment’s power words. Nobody knows why that is so, but everyone is hunting him, and using deadly force.
Emily, on the other hand, is just the sort of person this shadow organization wants to recruit into their stable of “poets”: highly persuasive young people who can be taught neuropsychology and linguistics, with the ultimate goal of using the poets to control the world.
One thread of the story follows Wil and the other follows Emily. The reader knows that their lives and the action will converge at some point, and as the body count grows, the sense of anticipation and tension also grows, exponentially.
The action is non-stop, the characterization is well-done, and the suspense is a killer.
If you only read one book this year, Lexicon ought to be it. Not a perfect book - this reader has some issues with the ending - but nearly so!
--Melody
July 14, 2014
The Last Kind Words Saloon
By Larry McMurtry
The climatic shooting incident at this book’s conclusion supposedly lasted 30 seconds, and it involved names that have since morphed into iconic Western lore. Fittingly, the author also shoots the reader right in the heart at the end of this novel and you, the reader, must decide if this is a good or a bad thing.
The Last Kind Words Saloon by Larry McMurtry (Liveright Publishing Corporation, 2014) is another memorable story of America’s mythic West brought to life in empathetic, unheroic but very human terms. McMurtry again proves that he is the literary master of the Western fiction genre, and the astute choice of the jacket art, the painting “The Fall of the Cowboy” by Frederic Remington, the master of Western art, foreshadows the nostalgic sense that permeates the book.
McMurtry’s West is one where even legends are basically and simply human beings. This novel is short, perhaps approaching a novella. The dialog is almost truncated but the characters are still sharply drawn. If there is anything in the novel dealing with aiming and hitting a target, McMurtry certainly has a good bead on the West. His women would be “victims” by today’s standards and the men would be “abusive”, but this is the wild, wild West and McMurtry boldly populates it with whores, gamblers, thieves, lawmen, rustlers, ranchers, bartenders, settlers, Indians, and life, death, and love. And weather and geography populate McMurtry’s world as effectively as his human characters.
There is no need to write about plot and character, there is just the enjoyment of reading this wonderful novel. When McMurtry fires that last bullet you will have a chance to dodge it, but you won’t…just go back to the cover art and glance at Remington’s painting.
--Bill
July 2, 2014
The Vacationers
by Emma Straub
If you're looking for a new beach read this summer, look no further. Emma Straub's previous works, the short story collection Other People We Married and novel Laura Lamont's Life in Pictures, showed her to be a master of literary stylings, but this book is meant more for pure pleasure reading. She tells the tale of a middle- class New York family on vacation in Mallorca. The mother, Franny, is a food writer, and the father, Jim, a recently "retired" editor. (The truth of his retirement comes out to the family in stages). Joining them is their daughter, Sylvia, who will be leaving for Brown University at the end of the summer, and their older son, Bobby, who has moved to Miami and is dating Carmen, a personal trainer who does not curry much favor with the more pretentious members of the family. We also have Franny's oldest friend Charles and his husband Lawrence. Each of these characters has, as you may have guessed, inner turmoil of one kind of another. Sylvia has to figure out who she wants to become in the fall while embarrasedly lusting after her Spanish tutor; Bobby has to admit his financial problems to his family; Franny and Jim are not-so-obviously unhappy together, despite it being their 35 year anniversary. Each of them get a chance to tell part of summer's tale in their own unique voice, all of which Straub describes with startling accuracy. Their character arcs are believable but, at times, heart warming. We also get delicious details of the landscape and the food of Mallorca. This is a quick, easy read that will fit in nicely in between taking dip in the pool and a turn at the grill.
--Katie
Monday, July 28, 2014
Monday, July 21, 2014
Classes and One-on-one Assistance for Adults at the Main Library
Technology Classes
Computer &
Internet for Beginners (4 sessions)
Fridays, 9:30-11 am, 3rd Floor lab
Fridays, 9:30-11 am, 3rd Floor lab
The first two weeks of this class will build your basic computer skills by teaching the parts of the computer and practicing with mouse and keyboard. The second two weeks will teach you how to go online and perform basic Internet searches. Register on the 2nd Floor Reference Desk, or call 508-799-1655 ext. 3.
Clase Básica de
Computadora (4 sessions)
Martes,
1:00-2:00 pm, 3a Piso, Laboratorio de Computadora
Si necesitas ayuda con computadoras, esta clase es para ti. Cubrimos la información más básica: cómo usar el ratón y el teclado, abrir programas, y usar el internet para buscar información. Cada mes empieza un nuevo semestre de 4 clases. Para registrarse, llame al 508-799-1655 ext. 3 o registrarse en persona en el escritorio de consulta en el segundo piso.
Open Lab with Staff
Assistance
(Drop-in)
Wed. 5:30 p.m. - 7:30 p.m., 3rd Floor lab
Wed. 5:30 p.m. - 7:30 p.m., 3rd Floor lab
This drop-in lab designed for people who need extra computer time to work on job applications, Microsoft word documents, or those who need assistance setting up a library account, email, downloading ebooks or audiobooks. No registration required.
Job Application, Resume, Writing and
Business Help
Small Business
Counseling
First Wednesday evening each month, Third Floor Study Room
A SCORE counselor provides assistance and answers questions to anyone thinking about or planning to start a business. Register for a one-hour session, or for more information, call 508-799-1655 ext. 3.
First Wednesday evening each month, Third Floor Study Room
A SCORE counselor provides assistance and answers questions to anyone thinking about or planning to start a business. Register for a one-hour session, or for more information, call 508-799-1655 ext. 3.
College Admission
Essays, Resume & Job Assistance, Research Help
Wednesdays, 5:30-8:30 p.m., 2nd Floor Ref. Desk
Wednesdays, 5:30-8:30 p.m., 2nd Floor Ref. Desk
Assistance with writing resumes and cover letters, finding information on a topic, editing, content organization and citations. Register on the Events Calendar on the library’s website or call 508-799-1655 ext. 3.
Introductory Grants
Workshop
Fourth
Thursdays each month, Main Library--Banx Room and Third Floor Computer Lab
This
class is for anyone new to fundraising, non-profit grant seekers, and to
members of the non-profit community. It will cover grant-seeking basics
including what needs to be in place before beginning your search in the
Foundation Center, one of the premier resources for grant-seekers.
Pre-registration is required; register online at worcpublib.org or call
508-799-1655, ext. 3.
Citizenship Interview Preparation
Citizenship Classes
Wednesdays
5:30 - 7:30 p.m. Main Library – 1st Floor Computer Lab
This
drop-in class will provide help with citizenship questions, practicing the
citizenship interview, and learning about the U.S. government, U.S. history,
and the rights and responsibilities of being a U.S. citizen. For more
information, call 508-799-1655 ext. 3.
Arts, Crafts & Literature
Thursdays -starts in September,
2:30-4:00 p.m., Main Library—3rd floor Ellipse
Knitters
of all skill levels and other needlecraft enthusiasts are welcome to join
us. All participants must bring their
own supplies. If you would like to learn how to knit, please bring size 7 or 8
straight knitting needles and a skein of worsted weight yarn. For more
information please call 508-799-1655 or visit our Events Calendar on worcpublib.org.
Open
Drawing Studio
2nd and 4th Thursdays, 9:30-10:45 a.m.,
Main Library—3rd floor Ellipse
Create an artwork based on our still-life
displays. Bring your own drawing supplies (a limited supply of pencils and
sketch paper will be available). Beginners welcome, but instruction is not
provided.
For more information please call
508-799-1655 or visit our Events Calendar on worcpublib.org.
Book
Club
3rd Tuesdays, alternate months,
6:00-7:30 p.m., Main Library---3rd floor Ellipse
Come for a lively discussion surrounding
the book selection of the month. Check with staff for title to be discussed, or
to request a copy. For more information please call 508-799-1655 or visit our
Events Calendar on worcpublib.org.
*Please check with library regarding
holiday schedules, class cancellations or to verify dates.
For more information please call
508-799-1655 or visit our Events Calendar on worcpublib.org.
Tuesday, July 1, 2014
DrivingTests.org - MA Driver's Permit Practice Tests
New! We are pleased to present free access
to Driving-Tests.org, a database where you can practice for the Massachusetts
Driver Permit tests. Take these interactive practice
tests and pass your exam with flying colors! No more fear of the road test!
Along with the practice tests you can also
brush up your knowledge on MA road signs, fines, limits and get answers to
frequently asked questions about Massachusetts Driver’s License. The tests for
both Automobile and Motorcycle are available along with the Driver’s Handbook
for each.To access this Free database, go to our homepage at www.worcpublib.org and click on
New! FREE MA Driving Permit Practice Test.
Have fun and practice safe driving!
Forensic Mysteries
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)