Sometimes even a librarian gets tired of reading. If, after six weeks of relentless winter, you are restless and ready for some other form of indoor entertainment, visit the library anyway. We have at least 1500 dvds just waiting to go home with you.
If you already have a library card, and have had it for at least three months, you are eligible to checkout up to fifteen items at a time. We don’t care if you have fourteen books and one dvd or 11 dvds, one audio book and three printed books. For the first three months of your first library card, you are on probation. You will be allowed four items at a time, only one of which may be a dvd. If you can remain reliable and responsible for the first three months, we figure we can trust you forevermore. Unless you prove us wrong.
Sarah chooses the children’s dvds. It seems to me that we have almost anything a kid could ever want to see. Demi chooses our adult and teen feature films. She’s the one staff member who sees enough movies to form an opinion. I get all the fantasy and made-up-stuff I can handle in the books I read. When I watch a movie, I want it to be realistic and believable, so I select the documentary-type dvds.
Babies, a 2010 documentary dvd, follows the lives of four newborns in four corners of the globe through their first year of life.
Through a Dog’s Eyes, Canine Assistants is a Georgia organization that matches service dogs to the people who need them. This dvd follows a group of service dogs and their new owners through doggy “bootcamp.”
The Quake, Correspondent Martin Smith and his team arrived in Haiti within days of the quake. This report documents the disaster and the relief efforts in the poorest country in the Western hemisphere.
No Tomorrow, Profiled in the film AGING OUT, Risa Bejarano was a foster care success story. Recently graduated, with many scholarships, she left for college. Then, she was brutally murdered.
Death By Fire, Did Texas execute an innocent man?
Echo, An Elephant to Remember; Echo’s life was followed through the PBS series, Nature. This beautifully photographed story documents the end of her life.
Baseball: The Tenth Inning, This four hour film chronicles the memorable and infamous personalities, teams, games and scandals of the last 20 years of professional baseball.
The Mosque in Morgantown, This film is not the story of a struggle between Christians and Muslims, but about the struggle within the Morgantown mosque for equality between the genders. Rather than being told by a narrator, this tale is told by the people involved.
The Wounded Platoon, This is a powerful portrait of what is happening to a generation of young American soldiers who are serving multiple tours of duty in war zones.
If you happen to prefer the other kind of movies, the kind that take you out of your winter misery, the ones in which glamorous, well dressed movie stars cavort across the screen whilst earning millions of dollars, we have those, too. But ask Demi for a recommendation. I haven’t seen them.
Tuesday, January 25, 2011
Friday, January 14, 2011
Who Dun Its

Our next book for Humboldt Reads! book discussion group is available now. We are going to read Crow Lake by Mary Lawson. It’s a story about the sins of the father, loyalty, loss and love. A family story, it is set in northern Ontario on a family farm. Our discussion will be held on February 24, so you have plenty of time to get it read. We will meet at 5:30pm at Miller’s Landing.
For the past couple of weeks, every box of new books arriving at the library has contained at least one book about a true-life crime. Soon the new gardening books will crop up like crocus, but right now, in the dead of winter, man’s inhumanity to man (and woman) is in season.
The first to arrive was Ann Rule’s newest. Rule has a way of writing a true story that makes it read like the best detective novel. Even if the crime she writes about has been carried out in public and we all know who dun it, she’ll keep you up at night turning pages. In the Still of the Night is the story of the mysterious death of Washington State Trooper Ronda Reynolds. Over the years following her 1998 demise, the coroner flip-flopped back and forth over the cause of her death, but her mother never gave up hope that the case would be solved.
Another one is Our Little Secret: The True Story of a Teenage Killer and the Silence of a Small New England Town by Kevin Flynn and Rebecca Lavoie. It took twenty years to convict a man who as a popular, clean cut New Hampshire high school student shot and killed someone he’d never even met. The reason for the shooting and the reason that no one exposed the killing should make for a very good story.
Dead But Not Forgotten: The True Story of a Cheating Husband, His Stunning Mistress and a Murder Case Gone Cold by Amber Hunt is another one that took awhile to solve. A jury finally found that cheating husband guilty after 18 years, but a judge overturned the case. He is now awaiting a second trial.
Several books are ripped right from the front pages of current newspapers. Cold As Ice: One Wife Dead, Another Missing and a Husband on Trial for Murder by Carlton Smith is the tale of the unlucky wives of Chicago area policeman Drew Peterson. Poor guy. He just can’t catch a break.
Murder in Italy: The Shocking Slaying of a British Student, the Accused American Girl, and an International Scandal by Candace Dempsey. The story of Amanda Knox who was convicted in Italy of murdering her roommate, was she guilty, framed or a victim herself? This will put you in a front-row seat at her trial. Decide for yourself.
A Date with Death: The Secret Life of the Accused “Craigslist Killer.” Author Michele McPhee gives us an inside look at the handsome young med student accused of a murder. I wonder if the author interviewed his attractive blonde fiancĂ©e. I’d like to hear her side of the story.
In addition to all these newly written crime stories, there are plenty of oldies, but goodies on the library shelves. Two of the very best books written in this genre are In Cold Blood by Truman Capote and Helter Skelter: The True Story of The Manson Murders by Vincent Bugliosi.
If you take your crime vicariously, stop by the library and look over what we have to offer!
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