Thursday, October 25, 2007

And the winner is......

Recent Award Winners


Doris Lessing is the winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature for 2007.

Anne Enright is the winner of the Man Booker Prize for Fiction for her book The Gathering.

This year's National Book Award winner has not yet been announced, but you can check out the finalist list here.

Read an amazing award-winning title? Leave it in the comments!
Why do people kill? Most of us will never truly understand how one human being can deliberately take the life of another. When we read about a murder in the newspaper we wonder - why? What was the motive? Perhaps knowing the motive and the circumstances of a murder somehow makes us feel a little safer because we can then make a mental checklist of what behaviors, or words, or places, or people to avoid. Is it even possible to safeguard ourselves against murder, or are we merely pawns of fate? The following books contain the stories of some very ill-fated people.

---- Kelley, MCMLS librarian


America's Most Hated Woman: The Life and Gruesome Death of Madalyn Murray O'Hair by Anne Rowe Seaman

Whatever happened to Madalyn Murray O'Hair? You may remember that she disappeared from Austin, Texas in 1995 along with her son Jon, and granddaughter Robin. Their disappearance was a mystery for years because Madalyn was so widely disliked that nobody cared enough to find out what happened to her. A newspaper reporter and a private investigator finally uncovered the shocking truth.


Judgment Ridge: The True Story Behind the Dartmouth Murders by Dick Lehr

Two popular Dartmouth college professors were brutally murdered in their home in 2001. But who killed Half and Susanne Zantop, and why? Read the tragic story of their deadly encounter with two "normal" high school boys from a neighboring town.

Confederacy of Silence: A True Tale of the New Old South by Richard Rubin

A writer returns to Leflore County, Mississippi to cover the murder trial of Handy Campbell, former Ole Miss football player. Campbell and an associate have been accused of killing a UPS delivery man. Are they guilty or is a there a miscarriage of justice in the works?

Friday, October 12, 2007

Science Fiction For People Who Don’t Like Science Fiction


Do the words "science fiction" conjure up thoughts of space operas, aliens, and dragons? Then you haven't tried these titles!



The Time Traveler’s Wife by Audrey Niffenegger combines very traditional sci-fi themes – time travel and progressive medical technology – with the trials and foibles of life. The story follows a time traveling man and the woman who will be, has been, and is his wife. At once a beautiful love story and thought provoking science fiction novel, The Time Traveler’s Wife can appeal to many different tastes.

The Speed of Dark by Elizabeth Moon is a novel narrated by an autistic man named Lou Arrendale in the very near future. He and his autistic coworkers provide their astonishing pattern-recognition skills to a large company. A “cure” for autism is discovered, and the group is given an ultimatum – be cured or be fired. Elizabeth Moon writes tenderly and factually from Lou’s perspective, drawing from her experiences with her son’s autism.

How Like a God by Brenda Clough weaves ancient Sumerian myth with American suburbia. Rob Lewis is an ordinary man who awakes one day with the ability to read minds. His powers steadily grow until he is forced to leave his home because he is unconsciously distorting his children’s development. He drifts alone for years, trying to save people from his power, until he meets someone that can help him control it. This novel gives an imaginatively honest look at the limits of the very powerful.

Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell by Susanna Clarke is more in the fantasy vein, but it did win the science fiction community’s prestigious Hugo Award. It takes place in 19th century Britain in the midst of the Napoleonic Wars. The practice of magic had fallen away and been replaced by the study of magic for hundreds of years in England. Suddenly, two very different men come forward as real, practicing magicians just in time to rescue their country (and give bored society a huge boost.)

American Gods by Neil Gaiman is the story of Shadow, a man released from prison the day after his wife died. He meets a mysterious character, and in his desperation begins to travel with him. Little does he know that he has now entered a battle between all the old gods of myth and the new gods of technology. Gaiman writes with dark, quick humor, and makes his incredible story believable.

-- Jessica H, MCMLS reference assistant








Have a favorite science fiction title? Leave it in the comments!

Thursday, October 11, 2007

New Oprah's Book Club Title


Love in The Time of Cholera tells the story of a love triangle that spans 50 years, and explores the many ways that we as human beings view love and marriage. You can put a copy on hold here.