From the Reference Desk : Penguin Lives Series

Do you want to get a good overview of the life of a famous historical figure but don’t have the time to plough through an 800 page book of his or her life?  Try some short biographies for easy reading this summer.  Penguin Group Book Publishers has published the “Penguin Lives Series,” and Cheshire Library owns 29 of the titles.  The average length of these books is under 200 pages.   This is a beautifully designed, innovative series of biographies pairing celebrated writers with famous individuals who have shaped our thinking.

biosHere is a sample of the wide variety of biography subjects available: Julia ChildElvis (Presley of course), Andy Warhol, Leonardo da Vinci, Frank Lloyd Wright, Robert E. Lee, Buddha, Mozart, and Crazy Horse.

For a complete listing of all of these titles, go to the library’s online catalog.  In the search box, enter penguin lives then choose the series tab.  All of these books are shelved in the biography section, located on the library’s lower level.

Susan reads: The Autistic Brain by Temple Grandin

[Cover]I avoid books on autism. I don’t like the terminology of the “autism spectrum” and the snake oil cures that celebrities like to flaunt.  I have worked with the seriously autistic for more than 25 years – the hard-core institutionalized kind – and have little tolerance for someone who thinks their child is autistic simply because he’s an introvert.  And for the last 30 years I’ve had a profoundly impaired autistic foster son, and all that happy information for the mainstreamed four year old who might have Asperger’s does not apply to hard autism. Thus, I have avoided reading anything by Temple Grandin, the Holy Saint of autism.

My bad.

In The Autistic Brain, Grandin discusses very rationally the numerous scientific studies done on communicative autistics, how they often have an inner thinking self and an outer acting self, and how the two don’t often interact. The current psychiatric labels, she feels, do autistics a huge disservice by lumping so many people under one umbrella no one can tell who is who – and leads to misdiagnoses and disproportionate numbers. She discusses how functional MRI imaging shows the different ways different autistics perceive the world, and that one type of treatment will not work for all, and that it’s the brain that’s the issue, not the psychoanalysis. That reiterated some serious studies I had read years ago.  She talks about the part genetics plays, and how research has shown some links, but no answers at all.  Grandin stresses that education for autistics – whether the high-functioning Aspie who will find success in Silicon Valley or the non-verbal autistic who cannot dress himself independently – needs to focus on what strengths the person has, not what deficits, and that deficits can be improved by using strengths, and that these children, no matter what the functioning level, need to get out into society and learn even rudimentary social skills, for that is the only way they will ever progress.

Grandin’s discussion of picture-thinkers, pattern-thinkers, and word-fact thinkers set my mind reeling to the hundred or so autistic children I have worked with, and the lightbulbs went on over my head. I thought about things I have tried, things that have worked, and things that have failed in a whole new light, and cannot wait to try new trajectories w/ my son. Grandin made me feel good that we have defied the “experts,” taking my son – whom no group home would touch because his behaviors were so severe – to places like Manhattan, Baltimore, Boston, boats, trains, weddings, and more – with a 90% success rate.  She made me understand how J. can do things no “autistic” is supposed to be able to do. I cannot recommend this book enough to anyone dealing with an autistic person of any functioning level.  Thank you, Temple, for understanding.  You’ve taught this old dog some new tricks without all that quick-cure quackery, and made a believer out of me.

If you’re dealing with an autistic child, I also highly recommend Barry Neil Kaufman’s book Son-Rise, about his own autistic child. If you can, read the original version.  His later version (The Miracle Continues) delves too deeply into his new-age self-help foundation while the original deals only with his son.

A Soldier’s Sacrifice : Memorial Day Reads

To many of us,  Memorial Day weekend has come to mean parades, barbecues, or maybe just the kickoff of summer. But the true meaning behind Memorial Day is to commemorate our military men & women who have lost their lives in service to America. After that barbecue, why not check out one of these books that pay tribute to those who’ve served?

Flags of Our Fathers by James Bradley. The story behind the raising of the U.S. flag on the Pacific island of Iwo Jima, February 23, 1945, made famous by the photo on the cover. The men in the photo—three were killed during the battle—were proclaimed heroes and flown home, to become reluctant symbols. For two of them, the adulation was shattering. Only James Bradley’s father truly survived, displaying no copy of the famous photograph in his home, telling his son only: “The real heroes of Iwo Jima were the guys who didn’t come back.” (This book was also adapted for film by Clint Eastwood.)

Jarhead : a Marine’s Chronicle of the Gulf War and Other Battlesby Anthony Swofford. The author weaves this experience of war with vivid accounts of boot camp (which included physical abuse by his drill instructor), reflections on the mythos of the marines, and remembrances of battles with lovers and family. As engagement with the Iraqis draws closer, he is forced to consider what it is to be an American, a soldier, a son of a soldier, and a man.

Where Men Win Glory : the Odyssey of Pat Tillman by John Krakauer. Irrepressible individualist and iconoclast Pat Tillman walked away from his $3.6 million NFL contract in May 2002 to enlist in the United States Army. Deeply troubled by 9/11, he felt a strong moral obligation to join the fight against al-Qaeda and the Taliban. Two years later, he died on a desolate hillside in Afghanistan. Biographer Krakauer draws on his journals and letters, interviews with his wife and friends, and conversations with the soldiers who served alongside him to tell this story.

The Things They Carried by Tom O’Brien. A fictional story of the war in Vietnam, The Things They Carried depicts the men of Alpha Company: Jimmy Cross, Henry Dobbins, Rat Kiley, Mitchell Sanders, Norman Bowker, Kiowa, and the character Tim O’Brien, who has survived his tour in Vietnam to become a father and writer at the age of forty-three. This critically acclaimed novel is a meditation on war, memory, imagination, and the redemptive power of storytelling.

The Savvy Shopper

dress5I am the antithesis of a fashion guru. I spent twelve years in sweats and T-shirts as stay at home mom. If I don’t like the colors of the year, I don’t buy clothes. I wear what I like, whether it’s gypsy skirts, rhinestones, boatnecks, or a tiara. I have a 20-year old bridesmaid’s dress that has more miles on it than my “regular” clothes, and a 15-year old coat with a broken zipper that I repaired with velcro and folk-art trim. I go to a mall maybe twice a year, when I can’t avoid it. I have a hoard of patterns I’ll pull out and whip up shirts or shorts or skirts from old clothes or sheets. So I am at a total loss about why I like reading books about fashion and purchasing. Maybe because it’s so foreign to me, it becomes a peep-show into another world.

My curiosity began with the book Deluxe: How Luxury Lost its Luster by Danalouis-vuitton-luggage-psd453544 Thomas. Thomas traces the rise of super-elite fashion items, from Vuitton to Chanel to Burberry and more – names I know only from magazine ads. What began as high-quality, individually hand-crafted merchandise, as was almost inevitable, is now made almost exclusively overseas to boost profits. The quality has decreased along with it, but not the price. After reading how these super-designers began as simple sewers who went home and made their own creations, I pulled out my sewing machine, designed and sewed my own custom-tailored handbags, and vowed never to purchase someone else’s design again.

[Cover]In Overdressed: The Shockingly High Cost of Cheap Fashion, by Elizabeth Cline, Cline focuses on how the clothing industry has taken a dive since the 1990’s. By 2000, almost all clothing production has moved overseas in an attempt to maintain high profits and offer low, low prices. The 2000s saw the rise of Fast Fashion, meaning stores try to be in perpetual production, having new items every week instead of seasonally at the sacrifice of quality, style, and size, with some companies able to follow trends from concept to store in as little as six weeks. The marketing scheme of low, low prices is disastrous for the environment and for the economy, balanced on people who compulsively buy more than they can afford and possibly wear, items that fall apart after three washings and then are thrown away at the rate of hundreds of tons per month – mostly polyester, which is uncomfortable, not recyclable, and not even useful as rags – and no, neither the Salvation Army nor the poor of Africa want these useless third-rate garments. It creates the sweatshops and child labor of Asia, where the focus is on ever-cheaper labor costs to maintain profit – modern slavery. It has destroyed the US garment industry, and put thousands of US workers out of jobs.

In Cheap: The The High Cost of Discount Culture, by Ellen Ruppert Shell, Shell [Cover]covers much the same idea but in the concept of our press-board, Ikea-Walmart-Dollar Store culture. Instead of buying fewer high-quality goods that may last decades, our instant-gratification society is held up with super-cheap garbage that might last a year, if lucky. As forests are cut away to make the pulp that goes into throw-away furniture, as the demand for metals goes up to furnish wire or aluminum for lamps and chairs, the ecology of entire communities can be laid waste – let alone trying to find landfill space for all the broken cheap items. Cheap is nowhere near as cheap as you think it is. While Shell makes many interesting and valid points, at times her book slipped into heavy economics, which made my head spin. Skip the numbers, read the rest of the book.

In Priceless: The Myth of Fair Value and How to Take Advantage of It, William Poundstone discusses the psychology involved in pricing items and making [Cover]purchases. Do you remember the gas crises of the ’70’s, when gas stations waged war by dropping to 48 6/10ths, or 54 and 3/10ths instead of 9/10ths?  And we rushed to save a quarter of a penny? Do you wonder how stores can afford to give  60% sale and stay in business?  Or why you jump for joy when you snatch an item at Marshall’s that reads $59 – Compare at $135 and think you’re getting the steal of the century? Did you know that people will work for chocolate with the same behaviors as for money? Poundstone discusses how consumers are manipulated by very precise, controlled, and deliberate pricing strategies meant to maximize profit and induce you to buy – and how you can avoid those traps.

Nothing in this world comes without a price. Fashion, art, craftsmanship, and superb quality are becoming lost to generations in our quest not for beautiful items that will last years, but for more, more, more, more, an unsustainable chant fueled by governments that don’t know what else to say, most of which winds up in landfills where it may take more than a century to degrade. Choose wisely when making purchases, think about where the product is made, is it made with fair trade wages, is it good for the planet.  If you do buy, no matter what quality or price, always remember: reduce, reuse, recycle.

Designing with Duct Tape

Duct tape is a marvel for emergency repairs to home, boat, shoes, and much more. However, this wonder has also found many more uses by those with too much time on their hands or a giant creative streak. These days some people are selling duct tape art work, clothing, accessories and more to help pay their bills. I have seen wallets, purses, hats, ties, dresses, jackets, and more created with just imagination and duct tape. The assorted colors and custom patterns that manufacturers are making duct tape with only help those looking to create rather than simply repair items with this study and versatile adhesive.

Would you like to try your hand at creating with duct tape, want to create a craft project to keep hands busy, or are just curious about the hows and whys of creating with duct tape? Well, have we got the books for you.

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Stick It!

Stick it! : 99 D.I.Y. Duct Tape Projects by T. L. Bonaddio is a great place to start. This book is geared towards young adults and adults complete with folders and detailed step-by-step directions to walk readers through 99 duct tape craft projects in a full range of difficulty levels. Some of the craft ideas included are bracelets, flip-flops, wallets, purses, and pillows. I highly suggest stocking up a variety of colored duct tapes before trying your hand at any of these projects.

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Kids; Guide to Duct Tape Projects

The Kids’ Guide to Duct Tape Projects by Sheri Bell-Rehwoldt is a great place for the younger set to get started with duct tape creations. This book contains complete instructions for eight relatively easy duct tape projects in a step-by-step format along with safety tips and a craft glossary to help newcomers to crafting in general get started. Projects included here are a book cover, cell phone pouch, wallet, rose, picture frame, game board, and a couple of fashion items.

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The Duct Tape Book

For those not quite ready to jump in with both feet, but not so nervous that they want to go for the children’s book, I suggest starting in the middle with The Duct Tape Book : 25 Projects to Make with Duct Tape. This book, as the title promises, offers a selection instruction to 25 duct tape creations. With the help of this book you can create formal wear, puppets, purses, hats, picture frames, and more.

If this selection of duct tape books only wets your appetite and make you eager for more, simply stop in the library and we can help you find what you need to met your creative interests!