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May 25, 2007

Video Friday: Funny Librarians on YouTube

Librarians love YouTube, too! Here are some hilarious videos done by librarians to promote their library services. Unfortunately, you'll have to view these off the Lakeside network, but trust me, they're worth a look, particularly the first one, which is my favorite.

What to do during a Zombie Attack? Run to your library for survival tips! From Allen County Public Library.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HUxp3E3YUdQ

Do you like those Mac/PC ads? Check out a few of these Librarian/IT Professional videos spoofing them. Collected by bloggers at A Fuse #8 Production.
http://fusenumber8.blogspot.com/2007/05/for-video-sunday-librarian-humor.html

Want to see an adult librarian acting like he's a pop star? Check out the musical stylings of the Seneca Libraries.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cMVMgDWnoaA

Finally, check out this hilarious spoof of the A-Team -- the L-Team!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YwCUtpbUWgk

Summer Reading List Now Available

The 2007 Summer Reading List is currently in your mailbox, and many books recommended by students and faculty/staff are available in the library right now! For a very quick list to browse of the books we have here in the Upper School Library, check out our online catalog that you can get to from our web site.

Once you click on Library Catalog, click on Categories in the left-hand menu, and click on Summer Reading List 2007 to see a list of all the books from the summer reading list that are ready for check out. We have a display up in the library where you can find the books easily (yes, books on display can be checked out) and we are more than willing to recommend additional titles.

Stop by if you're looking for books to read over the summer!

May 09, 2007

JPod by Douglas Coupland

I've never read Coupland before, so all I knew going into this 448 page novel was that Coupland used to be heralded as the Voice of My Generation (I think -- it's possible that he was the voice of the generation a little after me -- but that's close enough) and is now sometimes referred to similarly as being, like his books, a byproduct of the times, able to effectively communicate what it's like to live in a world oversaturated with information, a world of ever-expanding technology, the social web, the "digital age". Maybe that's true, still, but there's something hollow at the core of his new book that I don't think is necessarily representative of how people interact with each other and the world today.

In JPod, Coupland chronicles the career and life of Ethan Jarlewski, a video-game developer -- he works in JPod, a cubicle hive in the office, so named because all the members have last names that start with J. He and his co-workers have been designing a skateboarding game, but now the higher-ups suddenly want to add a cute turtle to the game because one of the bosses' sons loves turtles. His co-workers deal with this blow by shirking their responsibilities and having breakdowns. Meanwhile, his pot-growing mother and ballroom-dancing father are going through a series of weird, surrealistic events. Actually, so it Ethan -- the whole book is a series of weird, surrealistic events that ultimately don't add up to much.

The book is sometimes devestatingly funny, with lots of great one-liners and spot-on descriptions of the kinds of people in work in video gaming and the kinds of people who are dependent on the Internet for everything. Characters are bizarre characterizations of people that are interesting. There are some real insightful moments (I don't mean insightful like gaining a deep look into all humanity or something, but moments that made me say "Yeah, I get it, it is just like that"). But overall, the book is fluff without looking like it is supposed to be fluff. That might be my fault -- maybe I was supposed to know it would be fluff. Whole pages are devoted to mock-ups of Internet junk mail ads in extremely large typeface, and I'm not sure what I'm supposed to get from them -- just because Coupland can reproduce the spam I get doesn't mean he is breaking it down in a meaningful way and saying something about it. He also devotes 30-40 pages (no, I didn't count, but it's a lot) to a string of numbers that, unless you have a lot of time on your hands and like numbers, you will just skip over and wonder what the point was. Among all these rather blatent attempts to makes us "feel" like we are connected to the Internet or doing something interactive, the story itself is kind of lazy and pretentious. It's an unbelivable farce, and while that's really fun at times (I did laugh out loud at several points), I wanted something more from this. Coupland also inserts himself as a character, which is funny at times but so self-indulgent, like he's trying too hard to be clever and has gone too far into eye-roll territory.

It's like cheap candy -- you'll eat it because you like candy, even though it's not your favorite kind, but once you're done, you'll wish the candy had tasted better. Still, it's candy, and you like candy, so you're happy you had some at all.

This is available in Pigott Library, call number F Coupland.

May 03, 2007

The Golden Compass Movie

The movie of Philip Pullman's The Golden Compass, book one of His Dark Materials trilogy, will be coming to theaters in December 2007. If you haven't read these books, check them out of our library now. (They are in the Class03 section near the Senior Reading Room.) And definitely check out this movie web site to learn a little about the books and the upcoming movie.

The three books -- The Golden Compass, The Subtle Knife, and The Amber Spyglass -- are set in a fully-realized parallal world much like our own, except that humans have their souls expressed on the outside of their body, as daemons (a talking animal spirit that remains with their human for their entire life). In The Golden Compass, Lyra, the young heroine, and her daemon Pantalaimon discovers that the children disappearing from Oxford (where she's grown up) are being used for a disturbing scientific experiment designed to protect them from a mysterious substance known only as Dust. Blending science, theology, and magic, these three books are suspenseful, inventive, sometimes heart-breaking, always absorbing. You can read them for fun or, as I did, read Milton's Paradise Lost at the same time to gain an even deeper understanding -- the books allegorically follow this classic story of the war between heaven and hell that portrayed Satan as a sympathetic anti-hero and God as a cold and passionless ruler.

I'm curious to see what the movie industry will make of one of my favorite books (favorite series, also, if they decide to make all three) and hope they do as well as The Lord of the Rings trilogy and not as poorly as the first two Harry Potters.

May 02, 2007

Cool Manga T-Shirts

So, anyone who knows me knows I am obsessed with manga and anime. I just discovered these great snarky manga T-shirts through one of my favorite graphic novel review sites, No Flying No Tights, and had to share. Which manga character are you? I will be getting one, but I'm not sure which one yet -- will I go for the Wise-Cracking Hero that reads "My destiny is cooler than your destiny" or the Bishonen that reads "I'm too sexy for this manga"? Or maybe both?

(By the way, I am still taking recommendations from students on what manga and graphic novels to buy to increase our library's collection, so if you have any ideas, send them my way.)