Wednesday, November 19, 2008

BABES IN TOYLAND as presented by THE MAIN!

The City of Reading's annual Holiday Parade is set for this Saturday, November 22. The Reading Public Library will once again reveal its most creative side with a sizeable float, which ties into the parade's theme: "Sharing Our Holiday Traditions". Our presentation this year is "BABES IN TOYLAND" -- childlike adventure meets every conceivable character out of Mother Goose in our effort for this year's project! Little Boy Blue, Bo Peep, Humpty-Dumpty, and scores of others will brave the elements and distribute holiday confections! Frolic and gambol with our enthusiastic staff as we drum up heaps of frenetic holiday cheer!
I won't reveal any more details at the present in order to keep our crowds of fans in suspense, but I know we shall delight thousands with this year's
(SURE-TO-BE-AWARD-WINNING) float!
UPDATE: RPL did come in 3rd PLACE, which is better than nothing! Yay "Team Babes 2008"
for our great effort! (and to plotting with all our might to recapture 1st Prize in 2009...)

Monday, November 17, 2008

THANKFUL LIBRARY HOLDINGS


One of my favorite holidays is just around the corner. The Main has any number of books and films that may well inspire spontaneous moments of deep gratitude in our faithful patrons as we prepare to celebrate America's "second national holiday": THANKSGIVING!

BOOKS

America's Parade: A Celebration of Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade by Time/ Life, 2001
394.2649 Ame
An annual ritual not to be missed, Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade has entertained the masses since 1924. Read about this grand celebration's colorful history and impact on how Americans have come to look anxiously forward to it every year on Thanksgiving Day.



Giving Thanks: Thanksgiving Recipes and History from Pilgrims to Pumpkin Pie
by Kathleen Curtin, 2005
394.2649 Giv
Author Kathleen Curtin is the official food historian at the Plimoth Plantation (not a misspell--the "Plymouth" we're more accustomed to came later) in Massachusetts, and imbues this book with a delightful combination of culinary backstory and pragmatic recipes. Learn about the authentic feast the Puritans prepared (there were no utensils available, and there wasn't any cranberry sauce, either).


A Great and Godly Adventure: The Pilgrims and the Myth of the First Thanksgiving
by Godrey Hodgson, 2006
974.402 Hod
The dramatic tale of the English Puritans' search for religious freedom that led them to establishing Plimoth Colony is steeped in legend, fabrication, and misinterpretation. Historian Hodgson delivers a balanced, thoroughly-researched account of the Puritans' peregrinations, the cruel hardships they suffered upon landing on North American soil, and their ultimate end of founding what has long been considered "the" original settlement of Europeans in the United States (be aware there is also plenty of controversy regarding that statement as well...)

How to Cook a Turkey: *And All the Other Trimmings by Fine Cooking Magazine, 2007
641.665 How
What would Thanksgiving be without the beautifully succulent, artistically-trussed Tom Turkey reposing on the dining room table? This volume explores how to serve up this patriotic poultry in a vast panorama of forms, and promises to offer something new and original for even the most seasoned turkey chef.
The Thanksgiving Book: An Illustrated Treasury of Lore, Tales, Poems, Prayers, and the Best in Holiday Feasting by Jerome Agel and Jason Shulman, 1987
394.2649 Tha
This compendium of delightful prose features every aspect of what this holiday is really about: remembering in gratitude all the good things life has to offer. The thankful and thought-inspiring pieces in this volume serve up something every reader can find meaningful.

Thanksgiving Entertaining by Chuck Williams, 2005
641.568 Pap
Published by Williams-Sonoma, this book guarantees exquisite gastronomic concepts for anyone's Thanksgiving get-together. Hors d'oeuvres, entrees, and desserts are presented with accompanying tasteful, full-color photos--a fantastic resource for hosts who might want to bring something nouveau to the holiday table.

FILMS

Desperate Crossing: The Untold Story of the Mayflower, A & E Home Video, 2006
DVD 974.402 Des
Over two hours of documentary, replete with actors playing the Pilgrims from the Shakespeare Repetory Theatre in Great Britain as well as actual Native American descendants of the tribes the Pilgrims originally encountered (thus making this, more accurately, a docu-drama), this DVD vividly brings to life the struggle of the early colonists as they began life in Plymoth Plantation.

Hannah and Her Sisters, MGM, 1986
VHS Han
Woody Allen's films are cornerstones of cinematic history, and many believe Hannah and Her Sisters is his crowning achievement. Mia Farrow stars as the title character, who provides emotional strength and stability not only to her own family (husband Elliott is played by Michael Caine), but also to her siblings, Lee (Barbara Hershey) and Holly (Dianne Wiest). Tenderly investigating the ties that bind and the ramifications of family bonds placed under stress, this Thanksgiving-centered jewel is well worth watching.
Home For the Holidays, PolyGram Entertainment, 1995
DVD Hom
This comedic project was directed by Hollywood living legend Jodie Foster. Holly Hunter stars as Claudia Larson, a single mother of teenage Claire Danes, who treks from Chicago to Baltimore to join her obstreporous clan for Thanksgiving. Charles Durning and the late, great Anne Bancroft co-star as her parents; Robert Downey, Jr., memorably plays her trickster brother. While hardly an original plotline, this tale of family feuds, fidelity, fractiousness, and forgiveness will resonate with all of us who've endured a trying holiday visit with the relations.

Home for the Holidays: The History of Thanksgiving A & E Home Video, 1997
VHS 394.2649 Hom
I am a big fan of the History Channel's documentaries of various holidays, and Home for the Holidays is one of my favorites. Until watching it, I did not know that there had been a significant controversy in 1940 when Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the American president at the time, unilaterally decided to move Thanksgiving forward a week (from the final Thursday in November to the penultimate Thursday). His idea was to prolong the holiday shopping season in face of a depressed economy (sound familiar...?) At that time, it was unthinkable to begin advertising for Christmas bargains until after Turkey Day. [ASIDE--would that this were still the case today. I cringe when witnessing stores decking out fake snow and holly around Labor Day...] The following year, Congress undertook fixing the date of Thanksgiving as we mark it today. These and many other historical tasties are yours for the reaping upon viewing this treat!


House of Yes, Miramax, 1997
DVD Hou
Parker Posey stars as a clinically insane woman who believes she's Jacqueline Kennedy. Her twin brother, Marty (played by Josh Hamilton), brings his fiancee (Leslie--Tori Spelling) home to meet his freakish clan for Thanksgiving. Genvieve Bujold plays the matriarch and younger brother Anthony is portrayed by Freddie Prinze, Jr. This film won major awards at the Sundance Film Festival upon its release; based on a play, the script is rife with deranged cleverness and black-as-coal humor.



Pieces of April, MGM, 2003
DVD NORTHWEST BRANCH ONLY**
Katie Holmes (pre-Tom Cruise) stars as April Burns, a fiercely indpendent girl-about-town whose home base is Manhattan. In a burst of familial goodwill she invites her family to her tiny apartment to celebrate Thanksgiving. Parents (played brilliantly, in particular, by Patricia Clarkson as her mother) and siblings, dimly anticipating April's cookery talents, make their way to the Big Apple. And then April's stove decides to give up the ghost. Peppered with acerbic wit as well as poignant moments, it's diverting and distressing in equal measure.

** The Main does not actually have this title on our shelves, but a hold may be placed on either our Northwest Branch's copy or another library's copy. The Reading Eagle ran an article in Saturday's (November 15) edition--on the FRONT PAGE--delineating the scourge of pilfering from which Berks County's public libraries are suffering. With a sad twist of irony, Pieces of April WAS--once upon a time--a DVD which the Main had had in its own collection. Accessioned [ibrary parlance that simply means "added"] on January 22, 2005, it stayed with us until transferred to "Lost" status on June 6, 2007. This is what happens to a library holding when it is legitimately checked out to someone who simply fails to return it. Our copy had 71 circulations before it vanished from our records.
+R.I.P.

Friday, November 14, 2008

NOVEMBER DVDs

Hello, faithful blog reader. Kindly permit me to draw your attention to several new films on DVD which the Main Library will be adding to our collection in the weeks to come...

Diggers
Magnolia Pictures, 2006 -- DVD released May 1, 2007
***********************************************
Diggers is not a new release per se, but the reviews for this little indie flick were stellar. Set in Long Island, 1976, it follows the lives of professional clam diggers (hence the title, right?). Hunt (Paul Rudd) and his best pals Frankie (Ken Marino), Cons (Josh Hamilton), and Jack (Ron Eldard) are salt-of-the-earth laborers whose livelihood is on the cusp of destruction. As a large seafood conglomerate seeks to push the clammers out, each of the group must confront personal issues as well, including marital dissolutions, parental demises, and run-ins with the law.

Kiss and Tell
London Weekend TV, 1996 -- DVD released January 29, 2008
************************************************
Daniel Craig--of current James Bond fame--co-stars in this thriller about duplicity and undercover investigation gone awry. Rosie Rowell plays Jade, a police officer whose latest endeavor requires her to pose as a damsel in distress in order to wrangle a confession from a man suspected of murdering his wife. Entanglements arise when she becomes emotionally involved with the target; the situation is exacerbated by the fact that she already has feelings for Craig, who plays Matt Kearney--her commanding officer.


Tropic Thunder
Dreamworks Pictures, 2008 -- DVD released November 18, 2008
***********************************************
Heavily parodying the Rambo franchise, this comedy (starring Jack Black, Robert Downey, and Ben Stiller) centers on a crew of clueless actors in the jungle primeval of Southeast Asia. What they don't comprehend is that when the gunfire begins, it's not studio-set squibs, but actual weaponry: the Hollywood honchos have unwittingly become embroiled in a turf war with an all-too-real drug cartel. Hilarity ensues.

Green Solutions: Simple Steps to a Greener Home
Gaiam Americas, 2006 -- DVD released September 2, 2008
**********************************************
"Greenify Thyself" could best sum up one of the most popular social movements of our day. Sustainable living, reduction of one's personal carbon footprint, recycling, and earth-friendliness are all addressed in this step-by-step how-to film. Ecologically sensible tips are dispensed with glee and viewers everywhere will learn how to make their lifestyles more verdant. Save Mother Earth by embracing a greener lifestyle! Danny Seo, a Reading native currently residing in Bucks County, is the program's creator and host.

Encounters at the End of the World
Image Entertainment, 2007 -- DVD released November 18, 2008
*******************************************
German film maverick Werner Herzog's project is a detour from the usual entertainment films he directs. Encounters is a travelogue/documentary based on his exploration of the icy continent of Antarctica. From deeply probing the lives of the scientists who reside on the bleak permafrost landscape to delighting in the antics of playful pengiuns, this piece will be sure to interest many of our patrons.

Real Tomb Hunters: Snakes, Curses, and Booby Traps
A & E Home Video, 2005 -- DVD released October 14, 2008
***************************************
Archaeologists sometimes encounter real-life adventures not dissimilar from those seen in the Indiana Jones movies: trawling through creepy catacombs, facing enraged locals who view the researchers as a threat (and react violently to their presence), endemic wildlife that's far from friendly (read: snakes--just like the title promises!), and much more. Who says science is boring?

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

TO PAUSE AND REFLECT



Today is dedicated to all our servicemen and women,
to pause and reflect on the highest price so many of
them have paid for our freedom, and to commend the
service of the thousands who continue to protect us
in the present.



Vets Under Siege: How America Deceives and Dishonors Those Who Fight Our Battles by Martin Schram, 2008

NEW 362.86 Sch



Voices of War: Stories of Service from the Homefront and the Front Lines by the Library of Congress, 2004

355.00922 Vol




Wages of War: When America's Soldiers Came Home, From Valley Forge to Vietnam by Richard Severo, 1989

355.115 S498w

Saturday, November 08, 2008

WELCOME TO THE GRAND


Unfortunately, there is no abatement to the city's howling for the Reading Public Library's closure. Along the same line of dreary news, Philadelphia is in the middle of having at least eleven of its public library's doors closed due to that metropolis' budget crisis. Overall, our public libraries are being cut down at the knee, and the future looks disheartening and bleak.

Rather than brood on the exceptionally unpleasant strain of current events, I've discovered (yet another) British period piece drama and have been happily losing myself in the heartrending traumas sustained by other (albeit fictitious) people who lived in the era of my grandparents' childhood. Escapist television programming, in my humble opinion, is vastly underrated...

**WARNING, WARNING** SPOILERS__SPOILERS__ SPOILERS__!!!

The Grand was produced by Granada Television in 1997 and 1998. For anyone familiar with the venerable series The Duchess of Duke Street, The Grand endeavors to follow the same general idea of showcasing the lives of a large, fashionable hotel's owners, staff, and guests.
(Please know that this series is not actually a Main Library holding, it's on the City Bookmobile--but placing a hold on the series will have it brought to the Main for your convenience!)

The series transpires in the Roaring Twenties during the years before the onset of the Great Depression.

The Grand is a family-run enterprise. Brothers John Bannerman (Michael Siberry) and Marcus Bannerman (Mark McGann) have inherited the massive, Manchester, England-based hotel from their deceased father. Infrequent appearances are made by their imperious mother, Mary (Louie Ramsay), who muddles about without making much impact.

John is married--at first, happily--to Sarah (Julia St. John). Marcus has his lady friend (and later, wife), Ruth, although the two seem to hate one another. The issue is Marcus' undying love for his brother's wife. Poor John is a total sucker and, in truth, a cuckold I found deeply unsympathetic.

John and Sarah have two children: Stephen (played by Stephen Moyer of current True Blood fame in the first season, then repalced by the less charistmatic Ifan Meredith in the second series) and Adele (Camilla Power). At the beginning of the program Stephen has just returned from the British Army, having been stationed in France since the close of World War I. Adele is a petulant teenager whose presence is generally unnecessary.

The Bannermans have plenty of infighting and Knots-Landing-esque slapdowns (literally) to keep the viewer entertained. But it's the rest of the hotel staff that makes The Grand great.

Miss Esme Harkness is an elegant, upper-middle-aged woman who has made The Grand her permanent home. Mrs. Mary Bannerman, dimly remembering the lady's name but unable to pin down the context, badgers her for clues as to how she came into her money. Miss Harkness drops hints but never divulges anything outright--rather flimsily, it is soon established that she is a former prostitute and madame (who occasionally entertains clients in her rooms). Mary finally gets to the truth and confronts Miss Harkness, who brutally rebuffs her attacker's threats of eviction with a cool statement, "Perhaps I'll tell the papers about me and Charlie". Charles was, of course, Mary's late husband, the founder of the hotel, and a well-respected pillar of Mancunian society.
Miss Harkness stays.
Esme is played by veteran actress Susan Hampshire, a lifelong treasure of the BBC set, who starred in such epics as The Pallisers and The Barchester Chronicles (both well worth watching--also, incidentally, both available at The Main).

The hotel staff are governed by avuncular (if stoic) Jacob Collins (Tim Healy), the porter, and Miss Sylvie Harvey (Christine Mackie), head of housekeeping, who is quick-witted (if vinegar-tongued.) Mr. Collins' only child was executed for having gone A.W.O.L. from the British Army in France. Miss Harvey constantly refers to her husband, whom her subordinates sometimes doubt actually exists.

One of the longest-serving maids is Kate Morris (Rebecca Callard), whose spritely adorableness is belied by her knowing nature. Monica Jones (Jane Danson) is brought on board early in the series and Kate trains her; Monica is soon the darling of Miss Harkness, who attempts to instruct the teenager in the ways of ladylike behavior (nothing seamy, mind). Daft Monica believes a visiting businessman has fallen in love with her and will take her away from her filthy job as a maid, only to have three of his associates attack her. Monica kills one of the men and is peremptorily sentenced to death for his murder.

Appropriately enough, she is hanged on the very morning of Marcus' doomed nuptials to Ruth.

Clive Evans (Paul Warriner) is head waiter and bartender at The Grand's restaurant and fights his same-sex inclinations as he succumbs to the seduction of a renowned theatrical guest. Poor Clive conceives a plan to try and romance the indomitable Kate in an effort to "overcome" his gayness. Lynne Milligan (Naomi Radcliffe) gives vaudeville a try before learning the show manager is only allowing her to sing onstage in the hopes of manipulating her to his own illicit ends. And all poor Brenda Potter (Maria Mescki) can seem to talk about is her mother and chocolate cookies.

The drama of this series originates in much besides the sometimes down-and-dirty dealings among the Bannermans, the staff, and the guests. Raging social issues, such as class conflict, sexual education, incest, murder, unwed mothers, workers' rights, and adutlery (but to name a few!) erupt in every episode.

I read a critic's harsh words for this series on the Internet Movie Database (http://www.imdb.com/), who claims that: "they [the producers of the series] insist on applying modern cultural and societal mores to a time period which was much more conservative than our own, and which kept these issues - if they even came up at all - private and between families".
I find that logic to be entirely specious.
Of course women conceived out of wedlock in the 1920s. Married couples cheated on one another. Unskilled workers were dismissed without a thought. And families were torn asunder by disloyalty, selfishness, and cruelty.

But the cast of The Grand also rises above the horrors of inhumanity: Mr. Collins is enfolded in the warm support of the staff when he reaches a crisis of existence in facing his son's death. Kate tries--in vain--to steer Monica from the path of self-destruction on which she is bent. For all her shrill shrieking, Mrs. Harvey genuinely cares for the welfare of her girls, and often takes on the role of maternal surrogate in their lives. And reigning over them all is the piteous but benign Esme Harkness, whose faded beauty and gracious manners enchant (almost) everyone she meets.

So if, for whatever reason, you're in the mood to lose yourself completely in superbly-crafted escapist entertainment, check into The Grand.