10/28/09

Book of the Week #43

Following the Water: A Hydromancer’s Notebook by David M. Carroll (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2009)

It has been an eventful month for writer, naturalist, and artist David M. Carroll, a resident of Warner, NH. This book, according to the jacket copy, is "the intensely observed chronicle of Caroll's annual March-to-November wetlands immersion." It is also a 2009 finalist for the National Book Award. Mr. Carroll was also selected as the 2009 recipient of the New Hampshire Literary Award's Lifetime Achievement Award. This past summer Mr. Carroll was interviewed by Yankee Magazine.
"At the earliest openings of the ice in the overwintering niches of the spotted turtles, as minute glimmers of quickening water appear in acres of wetlands still locked in ice and snow, I forsake my winter paths: the worn floor
by the kitchen table and fireplace; the even more worn threshold of the narrow doorway to the Oriental-carpeted passage down the back hall, the narrow gallery hung with paintings and drawings above agreeably overburdened bookcases, lined along the floor with stacks of more books and empty frames; the footwarn stair treads up to my studio workrooms, with their slender passageways among bookcases, drawing and writing tables, and shelves, all impossibly piled with papers, notebooks, pencils, pens, and paintbrushes. With the opening up of the earth and water I go beyond my few, close-to-home outer trails of the cold season: my way to the woodshed, as trodden as an ancient deer path, and my modest snowshoe circlings through the back filed and bordering woods. At thaw I begin to walk a wider way again, beyond house and gardens, in places every bit as home to me as those." (p. 1)

10/23/09

Book of the Week #42

Tupperware Unsealed: Brownie Wise, Earl Tupper, and the Home Party Pioneers by Bob Kealing (University Press of Florida, 2008)

I love books about the history of a specific thing -- Salt, Olives, Aprons, etc. -- and this volume is part of that literary set. Tupperware was invented by Earl Tupper, a native of Berlin, NH, who later settled in Shirley, Mass.
"Postwar America was a period of tremendous innovation, in business adn at home. Countless products were invented for and marketed to the housewife, promising to make her work easier, to make her home cleaner, and her family's life better. More than a half-centure since its invention, Tupperware remains among the most memorable from those years of excess and optimism. While his product languished on department store shelves, eccentric inventor Earl Tupper sought a new way to market and sell his durable plastic storage containers. He found the sales revolution he was looking for in trailblazing businesswoman Brownie Wise. She
led the company from obscurity to millions in sales through a remarkable innovation: the Tupperware home party." (from book jacket)
The author spoke about his book at a Orlando Public Library program available on YouTube.

10/17/09

Book of the Week #41

The Lost Constitution by William Martin (New York: Tom Doherty Associates, 2007)

I seem to be developing a bit of an American history theme with recent Books of the Week. This latest novel from New England Book Award winner William Martin was recommended to me by my Mom who is a fan of Martin's novels. A national treasure -- a first draft of the Constitution annotated by the New England delegation -- disappears in 1787. Now Peter Fallon and Evangeline Carrington must find it. Their hunt takes them through the notches and across New Hampshire, through two centuries of American history, and ends at Fenway Park on the first night of the World Series.

10/6/09

Book of the Week #40

Abigail Adams: Witness to a Revolution by Natalie S. Bober (New York: Atheneum Books for Young Readers, 1995)

Most weeks I choose the "Book of the Week," but this time I am going with the book that was chosen by the Merrimack Public Library for its One Book, One Town community-wide reading program. The book discussion group at the Merrimack Public Library reads books within a seasonal theme, currently "Women of the Revolution," so Natalie Bober's Abgail Adams: Witness to a Revolution fits in nicely.

Throughout October 2009 there will be events related to the life of Abigail Adams held at the Merrimack Public Library including appearances by John Perrault, Michaeline Della Fera, and even John Quincy Adams. All the events are free, but you need to reserve a seat by calling the library at 603-424-5021.

10/5/09

Browsing Through The Leaves

Numerous Granite State libraries are participating in Browsing Through the Leaves: The New Hampshire Statewide Library Book Sale Tour on Saturday October 10, 2009. Enjoy the brilliant fall colors as you drive from library to library, all in quaint New England towns, checking out some excellent book bargains. You’ll help participating libraries raise some much-needed cash. Book it on up to New Hampshire for leaf-peeping and bargain books. Below is a listing of participating libraries, with street address, phone number (all are area code 603), and book sale hours:

  • ALSTEAD - Shedd-Porter Memorial Library, 3 Main Street, 835-6661, 10am–2pm
  • BARRINGTON - Barrington Public Library, 39 Province Lane, 664-9715, 11am–2 pm
  • BEDFORD - Bedford Public Library, 3 Meetinghouse Road, 472-3023, Saturday 10am-3pm, Sunday 1-5 pm
  • BRADFORD - Brown Memorial Library, 78 W. Main St, 938-5562, 9am–2pm
  • BRENTWOOD - Mary E. Bartlett Library, 22 Dalton Road, 642-3355, 9 am-noon
  • CHESTER - Chester Public Library, 3 Chestnut St. (Jct. Routes 121 & 102), 887-3404, 9am-3pm
  • LANCASTER - Weeks Memorial Library, 128 Main Street, 788-3352, 9am-3pm
  • NEW LONDON - Tracy Memorial Library, 304 Main Street, 526-4656 , 9am-1pm
  • ROLLINSFORD - Rollinsford Public Library, 3 Front Street, 516-2665, Saturday
    9am–3 pm, Sunday 1pm–5pm, Monday 9am–2pm
  • SPRINGFIELD - Libbie Cass Library, 2748 Main St (Rt 114), Springfield NH, 763-4381 , 9am to noon and 1pm-4pm
  • SOMERSWORTH - Somersworth Public Library, 25 Main Street, 692-4587, 9am–5pm
  • TROY - Gay-Kimball Library, 10 South Main St., 242-7743, 9am–2pm
  • WILMOT - Wilmot Public Library, 11 North Wilmot Road, 526-6804, 10am-2pm

Questions? Contact Tim Sheehan, Chester Public Library, 887-3404.

10/2/09

Book of the Week #39

The Hidden Life of Deer: Lessons from the Natural World by Elizabeth Marshall Thomas. (New York: Collins, 2009)

"One of the most widely read American anthropologists, Elizabeth Marshall Thomas has observed dogs, cats, and elephants during her half-century-long career. In the 1980s Thomas studied elephants alongside Katy Payne—the scientist who discovered elephants' communication via infrasound. In 1993 Thomas wrote The Hidden Life of Dogs, a groundbreaking work of animal psychology that spent nearly a year on the New York Times bestseller list. Her book on cats, Tribe of Tiger, was also an international bestseller. She lives in Peterborough, New Hampshire, on her family's former farm, where she observes deer, bobcats, bear, and many other species of wildlife." Here she "turns her attention to wild deer, and the many lessons we can learn by observing nature." This book is based on the twelve months Thomas spent studying the local deer population near her home. (quotes are from the HarperCollins website)


Ms. Thomas was a recent guest on The Exchange and will be talking about her book at local bookstores during October.


10/1/09

JEFFERSON’S DREAM at Discover Portsmouth Center

On Sunday 4 October at 2pm, Portsmouth Historical Society presents JEFFERSON’S DREAM, a concert and reading presented by former Portsmouth Poet Laureate, John Perrault.

Based on his new book and CD of the same title just published by Hobblebush Books, the program focuses on eight great Americans—women and men—who carried the values of the Declaration forward into our lives. Through the medium of ballads, John Perrault traces Jefferson’s vision as it dramatically broadens with Lincoln’s reading, and gives impetus to abolitionism and women’s rights. He will be joined by popular Seacoast musicians, Barbara London and Mike Rogers.

The program is part of the Sunday Salon Series at the Portsmouth Historical Society’s Discover Portsmouth Center. Tickets are $10 ($7 for PHS Members) and may be purchased at the door. For information contact the Portsmouth Historical Society at info@portsmouthhistory.org or 603-436-8420.