Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Novel Nights! Friday, November 12, 2010

In case you were wondering who these authors are, and what they right. Here is a list of our guests this Friday, and a selection of their books.

1) Mary Alice Monroe:
























2) David Poyer:




















3) Kwame Alexander-



















4) Christy Barritt-






















5) Raymond Harper

















6) Debbiann Holmes-






















7)Judi McCoy-






















8) John Pineda-





















The following authors will also be present, however, I was unable to find pictures of their books on B&N's website.
9) Remica Bingham
10) Tinesha Davis
11) Booker T. Mattison

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Happy Halloween

For your reading enjoyment, I give you a list of books suitable for Halloween. Werewolves. I've created another list, over on the Paper Trail Blog, of Vampires, and since you rarely find one creature without any references to the other, you will find some series on both lists. Now all we need is a full moon.
1)The Otherworld Series by Kelley Armstrong

2) the Mercy Thompson series by Patricia Briggs

3) the Alpha & Omega series by Patricia Briggs


4) The Parasol Protectorate series by Gail Carriger

5) Delilah Street Paranormal Investigator series by Carole Nelson Douglas

6) The Anita Blake series by Laurell K. Hamilton
(I think this is the book that intoduced the werewolves)

7)the Southern Vampire/Sookie Stackhouse series by Charlaine Harris
this book has Alcide (the werewolf) in it.
8) the Demonica series by Larissa Ione
9) the Dark-Hunter Series by Sherrilyn Kenyon

10) the Kitty Norville series by Carrie Vaughn

11)the Shifters Series by Rachel Vincent

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

SoNo's New Building


Yup, it is finally happening. The South Norfolk Memorial Library is getting a new building. Plans are for us to reopen in the new building in 2012. Not sure what we'll be doing, or where we'll be when they tear down the old building (which really needs it), so they can build our new home. Two weeks ago the city had a town meeting to show the public the architects designs for the outside of the building. After after trying several times to load pdf files onto this blog, I decided to just give you the link to the slideshow, and you can go and see it for yourself. The link is here. Not sure when they'll give us the word to pack up and move out, but we'll be ready when they do.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Thursday Thirteen #15

13 sites with free ebooks

Seeing as how the grand prize for the Adult Summer Reading Program is a Sony Ereader, and we will soon have ebooks available through the catalog (coming eventually), I decided to list 13 sites from which you can legally download free ebooks. In most cases, the files are available as PDFs and can be downloaded to your computer (if you don't have a dedicated reader). They are:

1) Amazon's Kindle Store's Free Books Collections- including Limited Time Promotional Offers and Most Popular Classics. Don't have a Kindle? Never fear there are Kindle apps you can download free for just about any device, listed here.

2) Internet Archive- Interesting assortment of collections from dance manuals from 1490 to 1929 to Harvard Classics to a collection of cookbooks and books on home economics.

3) Open Library- the seemingly endless list of subjects one can browse includes astronauts, Texas, diaries, Riots, Assam, Pleistocene, Colette, Carpentry, Accessible Books (and those are just the examples from their home page).

4) Project Gutenburg- which we all know and love. :)

5) Many Books .Net- where you can search by authors, titles, languages, and genres (which includes such things as audiobooks, banned books, Canadian Literature, cooking, correspondance, Creative Commons, espionage, nautical, occult, and pirate tales among many more).

6) Suvudu's Free Library-Science fiction and fantasy site, regularly updated, so if you don't see anything you like, you might want to subscribe to their monthly updates.

7) Barnes & Noble Free ebooks- You have to create an account to download the books, which doesn't take long (just remember your password).

8) Classic Authors .Net- not just novels, but essays, poems, plays- no longer will you need to worry that the library's only copy of Oedipus Rex is checked out.

9) World Wide School Library- I haven't had much chance to explore this site, but what I have seen was really cool, in all subjects: literature, history, geography, science, social sciences, other languages.
10) Bookyards- Includes biographies and other pertinent information with author pages.

11) Free Ebooks .Net-The first screen for each title gives you the option of reading it online, read as a pdf, read on mobi, and read as an epub.

12) Free-Book 58 Search .Com- Yes, it does have free ebooks, but their subject headings are rather confusing, leading to unrelated titles or to dead ends. I looked up books on the history of the Holocaust and got a book titled The Writings of George Washington. Got into Fiction, click on Westerns, and then click on Louis L'Amour, and pull up The Songs of the Ridings by Frederic Moorman. It wouldn't be my first choice, but if you can't find something specific on any other site, you might try here.
13) Fictionwise- Despite the title of this website, much of its offers are nonfiction, even the free titles: which include The Iraq Study Group Report, Oxford Paperback Thesaurus, Oxford Concise Medical Dictionary, and Oxford Dictionary of World History.

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Thursday Thirteen #14

Thirteen Steampunk Novels
Steampunk is an interesting amalgam of science fiction and history, one where the science and technology are powered by steam or spring driven. The best movie examples of steam punk would be Wild, Wild West with Will Smith, The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, and the newest Sherlock Holmes. The covers look interesting, the stories sound intriguing, and the summer is the perfect time to try out a new genre.
I know, technically the first book is not a novel but an anthology. I like anthologies because they're a good way to discover new authors without the commitment of a full length novel. Enjoy
1) Steampunk- edited by Ann Vandermeer

2) Not Less Than Gods by Kage Baker3) Soulless by Gail Carriger- several people have recommended this series to me, and the covers caught my eye at the book store. I might end up getting this, and the one after it.
4) I have both of her books- on the mountainous collection known as to be read.
5) I love these covers- I grew up fascinated with derigibles ever since hearing that my mom saw the Hindenburg fly over her apartment building just prior to its explosion.
6) I love her vampires and her dragons- haven't read this yet.
7) More Derigibles :)
8) The twenties are a fascinating time period- still healing the wounds of the first ww, yet slowly setting the stage for the second. 9) Cool cover
10) The blurb drew me into this one.
11) Steampunk books are also being written for teens and children
12) The combination of historical England and technology is classic steampunk.
13) a steampunk mystery- definitely a to be read.

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Thursday Thirteen

13 Things to Do and See in Hampton Roads
1) Colonial Williamsburg- http://www.history.org/
2) Virginia Air & Space Center- http://www.vasc.org/
3) Virginia Aquarium- http://www.virginiaaquarium.com/Pages/default.aspx
4) Yorktown Battlefield- http://www.nps.gov/york/index.htm
5) Jamestown Settlement/ Yorktown Victory Center- http://www.historyisfun.org/
6) Northwest river park- http://www.chesapeake.va.us/services/depart/park-rec/nwrp/index.shtml
7) Great Dismal Swamp National Wildlife Refuge- http://www.fws.gov/northeast/greatdismalswamp/
8) Chesapeake Planetarium- http://www.cps.k12.va.us/departments/planetarium/index.html
9) Children’s Museum of Virginia, Portsmouth- http://www.childrensmuseumva.com/
10) Chippokes Farm & Forestry Museum- http://www.dcr.virginia.gov/state_parks/chf.shtml
11) Endview Plantation- http://www.endview.org/
12) Fort Monroe- Casemate Museum- http://www.virginia.org/site/description.asp?AttrID=11681
13) Nauticus/Battleship Wisconsin- http://www.nauticus.org/

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Thursday Thirteen #12

Thirteen Tools for Job Hunters at the Chesapeake Public Libraries



1) Learning Express- with GED test preparation, job search & work place skills (where you'll find sections on business writing, job search,resumes, and interviewing), as well as Jobs & Careers (licensing, certification, and aptitude practice tests).

2) Business and Career Resource Center- lets you search by company or by industry (by SIC or NAICS codes or by industry description), search for articles, or even search the contents of a specific publication.

3) Reference USA- provides detailed information on more than 12 million US businesses and 683,000 US health-care providers.

4) Microsoft Word- with wizards that help you format both your resume and your cover letter, as well as spell check and grammar check, Word helps you prepare that all important first impression. One warning though: spell check only tells you the word is spelled correctly, not if it is the write word.

5) Fax Machine- It's free and self-service.

6) Computer classes- times and days vary by library.

7) Job club- times and days also vary by library

8) Notary- availability depends on staff schedule, you may want to call your library first.

9) Internet Access- now with a first come/first serve sign up kiosk.

10) Books- to help research businesses, resume writing, fighting stress, or a relaxing read to get away from it all.

11) Audiobooks- whether they are CDs, MP3s, or playaways- these are books to enjoy on the go.

12) Music CDs/DVDs- nothing should take all of your time- even job hunting.

13) Helpful Staff- we can get you started on the computers, lead you to websites, help you find the answers to (most) questions, and even recommend a good book or movie.

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Thursday Thirteen #11

Thirteen Books about Gardening
Spring has come, the days grow longer, and people begin to plan... gardens. And we have lots of books to help. These thirteen are all available at the South Norfolk Memorial Library (unless someone else has since checked them out). Enjoy. (This list is presented in no particular order).

1) Crops in Pots by Bob Purnell

2) The Container Gardener's Bible by Joanna Harrison3) All New Square Foot Gardening by Mel Bartholomew
4) Organic Gardening for Dummies by Ann Whitman
5) The Complete Planting Design Course by Hilary Thomas
6) Outside the Not So Big House by Julie Moir Messervy
7) Birds in your Backyard by Robert J. Dolezal
8) Low Maintenance Gardening by Andi Clevely
9) Waterwise Gardening by Ian Cooke
10) Water Gardens by Eleanor Lewis
11) Intimate Gardens by C. Colston Burrell
12) Family Garden by Lia Leendertz
13) Organic Kitchen Garden by Juliet Roberts