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Kern County Library Staff Suggests...: December 2008


Friday, December 5, 2008

December Recommendations for Teens

Fiction

The Prince of Persia: The Graphic Novel by A.B. Sina - The world of the Prince of Persia games is brought to life. A thousand years ago in Persian a prophecy was made before a youth escaped a dungeon to rescue a princess and before he was tricked into unleashing the sands of time.

Storyteller by Edward Myers - "Once upon a time," begins this tale of a boy named Jack. Seventeen-year-old Jack is a storyteller, a farm boy who seeks his fortune in the royal city of Sundar. Adventures and narrow escapes greet him on his exciting journey, which is peopled with a talking bird, a one-eyed robber, a mysterious illusionist, and a melancholy princess. Each tale is spun, along with Jack's own, into a dazzling tapestry. Woven through them all, Myers explores the power—for good and for evil—of the stories we all live and tell.


Nonfiction

Punk Rock Etiquette: The Ultimate How-To-Guide for DIY, Punk, Indie, and Underground Bands by Travis Nichols - Stage etiquette, how to silk screen your own t-shirts, booking, promoting, and more.

Garfield: 30 Years of Laughs & Lasagna by Jim Davis - The life & times of a fat, furry legend.

Manga Mania Romance: Drawing Shojo Girls and Bishie Boys by Christopher Hart - Filled with detailed, step-by-step illustrations for drawing fascinating romance characters, and tips regarding how to place them in different situations.

Monday, December 1, 2008

December Recommendations for Kids

Fiction

Thirteen by Lauren Myracle - If you have read the books Eleven or Twelve than you would know all about Winnie Perry and her adventures in life. Now that she is thirteen and the life of a teenager has begun for her, it's a ginormous deal! She is caught between bff #1 who is growing up too slowly and bff #2 who is growing up way too fast. Additonally, there are some huge changes about to happen in her family. Check out this book to keep up with Winnie and her hectic life!

Deep Down Popular by Phoebe Stone - Conrad Parker Smith is the most popular boy in the school, and even in the whole town! Jesse Lou Ferguson is not very popular, and usually sits alone at lunch. Conrad has no thoughts at all for Jesse Lou, but Jesse Lou thinks about him all the time. Then things change, Conrad hurts his leg at school, and Jesse Lou is assigned to help him home that day. With the hurt leg Conrad can't keep up with his friends, and starts to hang out with Jesse Lou more often. Will this friendship work between someone who is deep down popular like Conrad and someone who is really not popular like Jesse Lou? Find out in this funny, well-crafted book about two people from two different worlds.

For Me? by Harmen van Straaten - While doing laundry Duck gets a knock on his door and discovers an envelope with a picture and a flower. Not sure what this means he goes to his friends and discovers that they too received a card and a flower. This leads to a guessing game of what these mean. While in the middle of the game Mole, the new neighbor shows up and introduces herself and admits it was she that left the notes and flowers, explaining that she was very shy. Duck and friends welcome Mole and have a grand time. The soft watercolor art enhances this simple story about friendship. This book is suited for reading in small groups.


Nonfiction

Do Not Open by John Farndon - Well with a title like that you have no choice but to open this book! This book is crammed with tons of information about strange, weird and just unexplainable things. It contains everything from hackers and famous prisoners to Nostradamus and the lost city of Atlantis. The book is presented in crazy art stuffed with facts and other information, the perfect read for when you just want to discover something new!

Car Science by Richard Hammond - How do cars work? What is Horsepower? What world record can a car break? All these questions are answered and more in this fascinating book! There is a science behind the workings of a car; everything from how the engine works to the composition of tires, and even how to drive a car. Filled with great photos and computer images, this book can entertain for hours.

The Joy of Food

New Cookbooks for the Holidays and Every Day!

Baked: New Frontiers in Baking by Matt Lewis and Renato Poliafito - Hip. Cool. Fashion-forward. These aren't adjectives you'd ordinarily think of applying to baked goods. But they definitely apply to Lewis and Poliafito who quit their advertising jobs and opened Baked in Brooklyn with things like a Malt Ball Cake with Milk Chocolate Frosting, spicy Chipotle Cheddar Biscuits, Sweet and Salty Cake, Chocolate (Ovaltine) Pie, and many other original combinations. A culinary road trip for the baker and eater in search of zesty taste combinations.

Bon Appetit: Fast Easy Fresh by Barbara Fairchild - "Culled from the magazine's Fast, Fresh, Easy column, this recipe compendium is one of the largest available for those who love to cook and eat well but lack time on weeknights to make dishes that require hours to prepare. Ingredient lists are short, seldom running over 10 items and rely on the use of the freshest, finest foods available; a helpful shopping guide at the beginning is a welcome aid to those not yet versed in the ingredients' seasonality or optimal appearance. Similarly, a wealth of boxed hints and tips offer an extra level of help to get people cooking confidently." PW. (Oct.)

A Fistful of Lentils: Syrian-Jewish Recipes from Grandma Fritzie's Kitchen by Jennifer Felicia Abadi - When Jennifer Felicia Abadi was a child, her mother often pulled down a well-worn homemade black recipe binder from her kitchen shelf and created memorable Syrian-Jewish meals. As an adult, Abadi embarked on a labor of love with her grandmother to record all of her family's rich, mouthwatering Syrian dishes. She shares with you more than 125 Syrian-Jewish recipes, as well as an intimate look at Syrian-Jewish culture through warm family anecdotes and little-known stories. It all adds up to the best-kept secret in Middle Eastern cuisine, now yours to enjoy!

Healthy Cooking for the Jewish Home: 200 Recipes for Eating Well on Holidays and Every Day by Faye Levy - In this new collection of exciting recipes, acclaimed cooking teacher and author Faye Levy presents a progressive, upbeat approach to nutritious kosher cuisine that highlights the pleasure of preparing and eating mouthwatering dishes that promote well-being. In addition to lightening classics like cholent and kugel, Levy features many Ashkephardic fusion dishes where the healthier (Sephardic) cooking traditions restore flavor when it is lost in the slimming down of east European Jewish (Ashkenazi) recipes. Hearty buckwheat blintzes are filled with goat cheese and ratatouille; turkey schnitzel is served over an Alsatian sweet-sour onion compote. Elsewhere Levy livens things up by adding New World and East Asian ingredients to old standbys, making a staid Israeli salad pop with pepitas and papaya. Variety is not only the spice of life; it's also the spice of nourishing menus.

The Healthy Hedonist Holidays: A Year of Multicultural, Vegetarian-Friendly Holiday Feasts by Myra Kornfeld - Expand your culinary horizons with this fascinating collection of recipes celebrating festivals from around the world. Spice up your Christmas or Kwanzaa feast with an Ethiopian Chicken Stew (Doro We't) combined with an updated version of the traditional Hanukkah potato latke, Celery Root and Apple with Sage. Or, go Italian, Buon Natale!, with a Christmas dinner of Flounder Roll-ups with Pistachio Pesto and Squash-Portobello Lasagna. All menus include cooking plans and easy to follow instructions.

How to Cook Everything: 2,000 Simple Recipes for Great Food by Mark Bittman - Ten years have brought many changes to the U.S. culinary landscape, and Bittman's new edition of his contemporary classic reflects that, with hundreds of recipes added from every corner of the world. The opening chapter offers invaluable new tips on basic kitchen equipment and techniques, and in the wake of the recent vegetarian version of the book, produce and legumes are now featured in inspired meatless recipes.

Made in Spain: Spanish Dishes for the American Table by José Andrés - More than 100 simple and irresistible recipes beautifully capture the diversity of Spanish cooking today as it is prepared in homes and restaurants from north to south. From Andalucía to Aragón, he shares recipes that reflect not just local traditions but also the heart and soul of Spain's distinctive cooking.

Milk: The Surprising Story of Milk Through the Ages by Anne Mendelson - For the dairy lover, part cookbook, part culinary history, over 120 delightfully wide-ranging recipes include luscious Clotted Cream, magical Lemon Curd, homemade yogurt, sour cream, true buttermilk, and homemade butter. She gives us comfort foods from every culture such as Milk Toast and Cream of Tomato Soup, Paneer and Chenna, Herring with Sour Cream Sauce, a New Englandish Clam Chowder, Paskha, and Latin American Batidos. Illuminating, essential, Mendelson is determined to restore the purity of flavor to our First Food.

Secrets of the Red Lantern: Stories and Vietnamese Recipes from the Heart by Pauline Nguyen - Part Vietnamese cookbook and part family memoir, more than 275 traditional, simple, and sumptuous Vietnamese recipes are presented alongside a visual narrative of food and family photographs that follows the family's escape from war-torn Vietnam to the successful founding of their restaurant in Sydney, Australia. At the heart of each recipe is the power of food to elevate and transform. (Read with Bento Box in the Heartland by Linda Furiya, another memoir where food knits together generations and perserves cultural heritage.)

Semi-Homemade Cooking Made Light by Sandra Lee - Pressed for time or just hate to cook and have to prepare a dish or even an entire meal? This is the book for you. A quick and easy method of food preparation where nothing is made from scratch, but everything tastes homemade. Her cooking approach, savvy short-cuts with food and style ideas, uses healthy ingredients that are great tasting and budget conscious.

December Recommendations for Adults

Fiction

The New Annotated Dracula, edited by Leslie S. Klinger - Klinger accepts Stoker's contention that the Dracula tale is based on historical fact. Traveling through two hundred years of popular culture and myth as well as graveyards and the wilds of Transylvania, Klinger's notes illuminate every aspect of this haunting narrative, including a detailed examination of the original typescript of Dracula, with its shockingly different ending, previously unavailable to scholars. Lavishly illustrated including historic photographs.

The Company by K.J. Parker - Hoping for a better life, five war veterans make a pact to colonize an abandoned island and live isolated from the world. They take everything they could possibly need including wives. But when an unanticipated discovery shatters their dream they find that one of their number is hiding a terrible secret. K.J. Parker is widely acknowledged as one of the most original and exciting writers in the fantasy genre.

He Flies Through the Air With the Greatest of Ease: A Willliam Saroyan Reader by William E. Justice - Published for the centennial celebration of the iconic author's birth, this collection of William Saroyan's writings overflows with exuberance, explodes with flashes of pure brilliance and literary daring, and brings to life an Armenian American voice unique and unforgettable. A careful selection of known and loved short stories along with plays, novels, letters, essays, and previously unpublished works, this volume allows readers to discover afresh the many aspects of a complex, engaging, and sophisticated writer.

Hold My Hand by Serena Mackesy - The lives of the three connect across the decades in a chilling tale of murder and revenge on Bodmin Moor. Bridget Sweeny agrees to be the caretaker of Rostropec House which at the time appeared to be a dream come true for her and her daughter, a fresh start, with new names and hope for the future. In tradition of the best horror stories, the manor house and the Blakely family have a reputation in the village, and soon Bridget's coveted sense of safety starts to unravel.

Kissing Games of the World by Sandi Kahn Shelton - "Sexy hero, lovable heroine, adorable kids—Kissing Games of the World has it all. A complete delight. Fall into this buoyant, funny, genuinely touching story of two incomplete people finding the rest of themselves in each other. I loved it."—Patricia Gaffney,
Mad Dash.

Shadow Country: A New Rendering of the Watson Legend by Peter Mathiessen - Inspired by a near-mythic event of the wild Florida frontier at the turn of the twentieth century, Shadow Country reimagines the legend of the inspired Everglades sugar planter and notorious outlaw E. J. Watson, who drives himself relentlessly toward his own violent end at the hands of neighbors who mostly admired him, in a killing that obsessed his favorite son. Short listed for the Booker Prize.

The Story of Forgetting by Stefan Merrill Block - Fifteen year old Seth Waller lives in Austin, a typical teenager he is "Master of Nothingness." When his mother is diagnosed with a rare form of early-onset Alzheimer's, Seth sets out on a quest to find her lost relatives and to conduct an "empirical investigation" that will uncover the truth of her genetic history. He uncovers a lot more than misplaced relatives when he meets Abel, caretaker of the family farm outside of Dallas. An extraordinary debut, nominated for the John Sargent Sr. First Novel Prize.

The Toss of a Lemon by Padma Viswanathan - Spanning the lifetime of one woman (1896-1962), The Toss of a Lemon brings us intimately into a Brahmin household, into an India we've never before seen. Married at ten, widowed at eighteen, left with two children, Sivakami must wear widow's whites, shave her head, and touch no one from dawn to dusk. She is not allowed to remarry, and in the next sixty years she ventures outside her family compound only three times. She is extremely orthodox in her behavior except for one defiant act: She moves back to her dead husband's house and village to raise her children. That decision sets the course of her children's and grandchildren's lives, twisting their fates in surprising, sometimes heartbreaking ways. Inspired by her grandmother's stories, Padma Viswanathan masterfully brings to life a profoundly exotic yet utterly recognizable family in the midst of social and political upheaval. The Toss of a Lemon is the debut of a major new writer.

When the Ground Turns in its Sleep by Sylvia Sellers-García - Nítido Amán knows he was born in Guatemala, but he doesn't know where, or why his family left. Raised in the United States by his immigrant parents, he never asked them about his homeland as a child—and they never talked about it. When Nítido loses his father to Alzheimer's disease, his despondent mother grows increasingly silent. Realizing that his only links to the past are disappearing, he travels to Guatemala, against his mother's wishes, to see what he can uncover for himself. Arriving in Rio Roto, he is mistaken for the new priest and decides to play the part, hoping to find the answers he seeks in the confessional. But too much has happened to the townspeople who cannot give voice to their haunted past, forcing Nítido to reevaluate his own past. Winner of the Boston Authors Club Julia Howe Book Prize, and declared on the the "Top Ten" Latino authors by LatinoStories.com.

The Women by T.C. Boyle - Boyle now turns his fictional sights on the colorful and outlandish character: Frank Lloyd Wright. Wright's life, as told through the experiences of the four women who loved him, blazes with Boyle's trademark wit and invention. Wright's life was one long howling struggle against the bonds of convention, whether aesthetic, social, moral, or romantic. He never did what was expected and despite the overblown scandals surrounding his amours and very public divorces and the financial disarray that dogged him throughout his career, he never let anything get in the way of his larger-than-life appetites and visions. Wright's triumphs and defeats were always tied to the women he loved. T.C. Boyle's protean voice captures these very different women and, in doing so, creates a masterful ode to the creative life in all its complexity and grandeur.


Nonfiction

Abraham Lincoln: Great American Historians On Our Sixteenth President, edited by Brian Lamb and Susan Swain - Celebrating the 200th anniversary of Lincoln's birth, America's top Lincoln historians offer their diverse perspectives on the life and legacy of America's sixteenth president. Spanning Lincoln's life from his early career as a Springfield lawyer, through his presidential reign during one of America's most troubled historical periods, ending with his assassination in 1865. These essays were edited by C-SPAN's Brian Lamb and Susan Swain from original C-SPAN interviews.

John Lennon: The Life by Phillip Norman - This masterly biography takes a fresh and penetrating look at every aspect of Lennon's much-chronicled life, including the songs that have turned him, posthumously, into a near-secular saint. In three years of research, Norman has turned up an extraordinary amount of new information about even the best-known episodes of Lennon folklore. The book's numerous key informants and interviewees include Sir Paul McCartney, Sir George Martin, Sean Lennon, whose moving reminiscence reveals his father as never before, and Yoko Ono, who speaks with sometimes shocking candor about the inner workings of her marriage to John. Honest and unflinching, as John himself would wish, Norman gives us the whole man in all his endless contradictions reveals how the mother who gave him away as a toddler haunted his mind and his music for the rest of his days.

The Knack: How Street Smart Entrepreneurs Learn to Handle Whatever Comes Up by Norm Brodsky and Bo Burlingham - Brodsky explores this mind-set every month in Inc. magazine, in the hugely popular column he co-writes with journalist and author Bo Burlingham (best known for his acclaimed book Small Giants). In both their column and now their book, they tell stories about real companies facing real challenges, and show readers how to apply "the knack" to their own businesses.

Lives of the Artists by Calvin Tomkins - For more than three decades Calvin Tomkins's incisive profiles in The New Yorker have given readers the most satisfying reports on contemporary art and artists available in any language. In Lives of the Artists ten major artists are captured in Tomkins's cool and ironic style to record the new directions art is taking during these days of limitless freedom. Tomkins shows that the making of art remains among the most demanding jobs on earth.

A Passion for Nature: The Life of John Muir by Donald Worster - The most complete account of the great conservationist and founder of the Sierra Club ever written. It is the first to be based on Muir's full private correspondence and to meet modern scholarly standards. Yet it is also full of rich detail and personal anecdote, uncovering the complex inner life behind the legend of the solitary mountain man. For anyone wishing to more fully understand America's first great environmentalist, and the enormous influence he still exerts today, Donald Worster's biography offers a wealth of insight into the passionate nature of a man whose passion for nature remains unsurpassed.

Prince of Stories: The Many Worlds of Neil Gaiman by Hank Wagner, et al. - Whether you're new to the worlds of Neil Gaiman or a long time traveler who knows these roads by heart, there is something new for everyone in this magnificent special edition of Prince of Stories. Highlights include interviews with the author himself, collected rare works and previously unpublished writing, photographs, artwork, and conversations with Gaiman's beloved collaborators. Every story and every character are featured at length in this amazing overview of an incredible career.

Samuel Adams: A Life by Ira Stoll - The idea that especially inspired Adams was religious in nature: He believed that God had intervened on behalf of the United States and would do so as long as its citizens maintained civic virtue. "We shall never be abandoned by Heaven while we act worthy of its aid and protection," Adams insisted. A central thesis of this biography is that religion in large part motivated the founding of America. A gifted young historian and newspaperman, Ira Stoll has written a gripping story about the man who was the revolution's moral conscience.

Spellbound by Beauty: Hitchcock and His Leading Ladies by Donald Spoto - The final volume in master biographer Donald Spoto's Hitchcock trilogy, (The Art of Alfred Hitchcock,and The Dark Side of Genius: The Life of Alfred Hitchcock), in which he explores the fascinating, complex and finally tragic story of the great moviemaker's relationship with his female stars and the women in his life. Rich with fresh revelations based on previously undisclosed tapes, new interviews, private correspondence and personal papers made available only to the author, this thoughtful, compassionate yet explosive portrait details Hitchcock's outbursts of cruelty, the shocking humor and the odd amalgam of adoration and contempt that time and again characterized Hitchcock's obsessive relationships with women—and that also, paradoxically, fed his genius.

Ten Roads to Riches: The Way Wealthy People Got There (and You Can Too!) by Ken Fisher - An engaging and informative look at some of America's most famous modern day millionaires and billionaires, and reveals how they found their fortunes. Surprisingly, the super-wealthy usually get there by taking just one of ten possible roads. Renowned investment expert and self-made billionaire Ken Fisher highlights amusing anecdotes of individuals who have traveled (or tumbled) down each road, and shares advice on increasing your chances of success. Whether it's starting a business, owning real estate, investing wisely or even marrying very, very well, Fisher will show how some got it right and others got it horribly wrong.

Wired for War: The Robotics Revolution and Conflict in the 21st Century by P.W. Singer - Singer, who envisioned private military contractors and child soldiers before they became (sadly) commonplace, explains how war is evolving to be fought by robots. Blending historic evidence with interviews from the field, Singer vividly shows that as these technologies multiply, they will have profound effects on the front lines as well as on the politics back home. Moving humans off the battlefield makes wars easier to start, but more complex to fight. Replacing men with machines may save some lives, but will lower the morale and psychological barriers to killing. The "warrior ethos," which has long defined soldiers' identity, will erode, as will the laws of war that have governed military conflict for generations. Wired for War travels from Iraq to see these robots in combat to the latter-day "skunk works" in America's suburbia, where tomorrow's technologies of war are quietly being designed. In Singer's hands, the future of war is as fascinating as it is frightening.
 
   
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