Saturday, December 30, 2023

DVD Review: Prey

Prey
(DVD Prey)

Prey is an original TV-movie made for the Hulu streaming service in 2022 and later released to DVD in 2023, which serves as a prequel to the long-running series of “Predator” films that began with the eponymous Arnold Schwarzenegger film “Predator” in 1987. In all of the Predator films, single representatives of a technologically-superior hunter/warrior alien species are dropped off to hunt and kill one or more humans in an exotic location. In the original Predator, it was a Central American jungle, in Predator 2 it was the mean streets of Los Angeles.

 

The Predator is always armed with high-tech equipment, both for hunting tasks but also for repairing its own injuries if needed. And if they’re successful in their kills, they take heads and spines as trophies.


In Prey, the setting is the Great Plains and mountain region of the United States, but all the way back in the 1800s. And the prey being hunted is a combination of Comanche warriors and French trappers. the central character in Prey is Naru (played by Amber Midthunder), a young woman who has trained for the warrior arts but who isn’t allowed to join the men in hunts. Her self-taught skills are put to the test when the alien Predator pretty much wipes out most of the men in her tribe’s hunting party.

 

This film is extremely atmospheric and the quality of the production easily rivals the earlier feature films in the series. The focus on the Native American culture in the film is a refreshing change of pace — the film features a large Native American cast, and using your DVD player’s special menus, you can choose to view the movie with either a spoken English or spoken Comanche soundtrack. Longtime fans of the Predator franchise will find several nice “Easter eggs” connecting Prey to films set later in the continuity.

 

Prey is an excellent addition to the Predator series. I highly recommend this one! One note: Many of the action sequences in this film, especially in the final 20 minutes, are very dark — you may have to adjust your screen’s settings to make out all the details.

 

(If you enjoy this, you may also wish to try all of the other Predator films, especially the 1987 original, which set the benchmark by which all the others are measured. Personally, my favorite is Predator 2 with Danny Glover.)

 

( Internet Movie Database entry for this film ) | ( official Prey web site )

 

Recommended by Scott C.
Bennett Martin Public Library — Public Service

 

Have you watched this one? What did you think? Did you find this review helpful?


New reviews appear every month on the Staff Recommendations page of the BookGuide website. You can visit that page to see them all, or watch them appear here in the BookGuide Blog individually over the course of the entire month. Click the tag for the reviewer's name to see more of this reviewer’s recommendations!

Friday, December 29, 2023

Music Book Review: Dolly Parton - Behind the Seams - My Life in Rhinestones by Dolly Parton

Dolly Parton: Behind the Seams: My Life in Rhinestones
by Dolly Parton (Music 781.642 Parton)

I’m pretty sure Dolly doesn’t need my help with marketing, but I want to tell you about her amazing new book, Dolly Parton: Behind the Seams: My Life in Rhinestones, and give you a heads up that we have it available at Lincoln City Libraries.

 

Dolly is one of the best storytellers around, and in this book she tells the story(s) of how she came to develop her signature style, and the many people who helped her along the way. That’s the thing I love most about Dolly; she shares the credit. She names names of all the stylists, seamstresses, makeup artists and aunts, uncles and cousins who helped her along the way. She makes you feel like being a fan, you too have a big role in her success.

 

If you like the history of clothing, if you like independent women and success stories, you’re gonna love this.


(If you enjoy this, you may also wish to try How to Read a Dress: A Guide to Changing Fashion From the 16th to the 20th Century by Lydia Edwards (a.k.a. Lydia Jenny), Dolly Parton: Songteller, My Life in Lyrics by Dolly Parton, I’ve Had to Think Up a Way to Survive: On Trauma, Persistence, and Dolly Parton by Lynn Melnick, She Come By it Natural: Dolly Parton and the Women Who Lived Her Songs by Sarah Smarsh or The Faith of Dolly Parton: Lessons From her Life to Lift Your Heart by Dudley J. Delffs.)

 

( publisher’s official Dolly Parton: Behind the Seams: My Life in Rhinestones web page ) | ( official Dolly Parton web site )

 

Recommended by Carrie K.
Bennett Martin Public Library — Public Service

 Have you read or listened to this one? What did you think? Did you find this review helpful?

New reviews appear every month on the Staff Recommendations page of the BookGuide website. You can visit that page to see them all, or watch them appear here in the BookGuide Blog individually over the course of the entire month. Click the tag for the reviewer's name to see more of this reviewer’s recommendations!


Check out this, and all the other great music resources, at the Polley Music Library, located on the 2nd floor of the Bennett Martin Public Library at 14th & "N" St. in downtown Lincoln. You'll find biographies of musicians, books about music history, instructional books, sheet music, CDs, music-related magazines, and much more. Also check out Polley Music Library Picks, the Polley Music Library's e-mail newsletter, and follow them on Facebook!

Wednesday, December 27, 2023

Book Review: The Humans by Matt Haig

The Humans
by Matt Haig (Haig)

The Humans is a 2013 book from the British author more recently known for The Midnight Library, though he’s been producing works in fiction and non-fiction for adults and children since 2002. I would describe it as a mostly-humorous work of general fiction, with strong science fiction overtones.

 

The central character is Professor Andrew Martin, a mathematics professor at Cambridge University. Except, it’s not really. Actually, our central character is an alien from a far distant planet, who has taken the physical form of Professor Andrew Martin and is on a deadly-serious mission to planet Earth. Professor Martin has just solved one of the Holy Grails of mathematics — the Riemann Hypothesis, a complex calculation regarding prime numbers, the solution of which could lead to mind-blowing advances in technology and our understanding of the universe. Only, the distant aliens don’t believe Humans are sufficiently developed to be able to handle these advances. So…they’ve sent the fake Andrew Martin to destroy all evidence of the Riemann solution, as well as anyone that the real Andrew Martin might have shared his solution with.

 

The fake Andrew arrives in the middle of a busy highway, completely naked, and without more than a cursory understanding of the human species. After a risque romp, and after having picked up enough of the English language to be able to converse, “Andrew Martin” is arrested and presumed to have had a mental breakdown. His wife, Isobel, bails him out and takes him home, where he discovers that he must pretend to be Andrew, in a complicated relationship with Isobel and their troubled son, Gulliver.

 

The longer the alien pretends to be Andrew Martin, the more human he becomes, to the consternation of his superiors back home, with whom he remains in contact. The Humans allows Haig to tell a true “fish out of water” story, making interesting observations about humanity along the way. There’s a lot of humor, as “Andrew Martin” has few filters, and frequently says the wrong things. But the new “Andrew Martin”, despite his bizarre flaws, appears to be a much better “human” than the real Andrew Martin who he replaced — I particularly appreciated the relationship he develops with Gulliver Martin. I felt a strong vibe of someone on the autism spectrum telling the story, so learning that author Matt Haig does identify as being on the spectrum was no surprise.

 

Despite the main character being an alien, I still would not classify The Humans as science fiction — as an SF novel, I’d only rate this 4 or 5, but as general fiction with an SF flavor, I’d give it a 7 or 8 — I’ll settle on 7 overall. I enjoyed it a great deal, and yet still wished it was more than it turned out to be.

 

(If you enjoy this, you may also wish to try the three books in the The Rosie Trilogy by Graeme Simsion, The Speed of Dark by Elizabeth Moon or The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time by Mark Haddon.)

 

( official Matt Haig web site )

 

Recommended by Scott C.
Bennett Martin Public Library — Public Service

 

Have you read or listened to this one? What did you think? Did you find this review helpful?


New reviews appear every month on the Staff Recommendations page of the BookGuide website. You can visit that page to see them all, or watch them appear here in the BookGuide Blog individually over the course of the entire month. Click the tag for the reviewer's name to see more of this reviewer’s recommendations!

Tuesday, December 26, 2023

Book Review: Ten Word Tiny Tales to Inspire and Unsettle by Joseph Coelho

Ten Word Tiny Tales to Inspire and Unsettle
by Joseph Coelho (jP Coelho)

The 2022-2024 United Kingdom Children’s Laureate, Joseph Coelho, wrote twenty 10-word mini-stories in this picture book and had illustrator friends come up with their artistic idea of what he was writing. Some came up with scary or weird drawings, but many of the stories could also have been the beginning of cool adventures. Either way, a story in 10-words is a fascinating idea.

 

He encourages you to think of your own 10-word stories and offers creative suggestions to get yourself there. His sample story was “He’s in every photo of me, in the shadows smiling” a 10-word story that definitely has Twilight Zone shadings. I also liked “The Venus Flytrap keeps edging closer to Grandma’s favorite chair” (maybe Grandma had recently died and the flytrap wanted a close connection to something of hers). Definitely eerie – “We buried her on Wednesday, again on Thursday, and Friday.”

 

At the end of the book, he offers suggestions on how to lengthen your 10-word story if you wish.

 

This was an interesting collection of 10-word tales. Even though this is a picture book, I would aim this toward the 1st-5th grade age group.

 

Following the author’s suggestion, I wrote my own 10-word story – “Alone in the dark house, I heard a muffled sneeze.”

 

( publisher’s official Ten Word Tiny Tales web site ) | ( official www.thepoetryofjosephcoelho.com web site )


Read Scott C’s review of It All Changed In An Instant: More Six-Word Memoirs From Authors Famous and Obscure in the July 2010 Staff Recommendations here on BookGuide!

 

Recommended by Charlotte M.
Bennett Martin Public Library — Public Service

 

Have you read or listened to this one? What did you think? Did you find this review helpful?


New reviews appear every month on the Staff Recommendations page of the BookGuide website. You can visit that page to see them all, or watch them appear here in the BookGuide Blog individually over the course of the entire month. Click the tag for the reviewer's name to see more of this reviewer’s recommendations!

Saturday, December 23, 2023

DVD Review: Jules

Jules
(DVD Jules)

One night Milton (Ben Kingsley) hears loud splintering sounds in his backyard. He goes out to check and finds a space alien has crash landed in his flower beds.

 

Milton (Ben Kingsley) is a retired widower living alone in the family home. He’s having memory issues that are probably developing into some kind of dementia and potentially a loss of his independence. His daughter wants him to move out of the house as she recognizes he needs assistance, but he is refusing to do so, and their relationship is shaky at best. He also doesn’t get along all that well with his senior neighbors.

 

Jules is a sweet, quiet, personal film about three lonely senior citizens who end up banding together to aid a space alien — who is now named Jules. All three seniors are struggling in some way as they become friends while they realize The Government is searching for Jules. They work together to assist the alien in trying to escape from the Men in Black. Low-key yet also poignant and humorous.

 

Academy Award winner Sir Ben Kingsley stars as Milton, with Jane Curtin as Joyce, and Tony Award winner Harriet Harris as Sandy. At only 87 min, this is still a film that will stay with you. An alien film that doesn’t require battles and explosions – more “E.T.” than “Alien.”

 

( Internet Movie Database entry for this film )

 

Recommended by Charlotte M.
Bennett Martin Public Library — Public Service

 

Have you watched this one? What did you think? Did you find this review helpful?


New reviews appear every month on the Staff Recommendations page of the BookGuide website. You can visit that page to see them all, or watch them appear here in the BookGuide Blog individually over the course of the entire month. Click the tag for the reviewer's name to see more of this reviewer’s recommendations!

Friday, December 22, 2023

Music Book Review: High Bias - The Distorted History of the Cassette Tape by Marc Masters

High Bias: The Distorted History of the Cassette Tape
by Marc Masters (Music 780.255 Mas)

Remember cassettes? They seemed annoying at times, but they changed a lot of things about the way we experience and make music, too. High Bias: The Distorted History of the Cassette Tape by Marc Masters takes thorough and wide-ranging look at how this humble playback medium has affected music listening and music-making since its invention. You can borrow this book from the Polley Music Library, and in the interest of full disclosure, I should mention that it’s the first music book that I’ve actually been quoted in myself!


Masters starts High Bias with an overview of the technology behind cassettes. It’s a short section, but thorough, and the tech developments documented here created opportunities for the cultural shifts noted throughout the rest of the book. Magnetic recording started with wire recording tech around the beginning of the 20th century, which was followed by the application of magnetic particles to paper backings and eventually plastic backings. These technologies continued to advance through the 1930s, and by the 1950s, the concept of storing magnetic tape or wire mediums within a cartridge or “cassette” was becoming dominant, as it was easier for consumers to use. The cassette tape as we know it, more properly called the “compact cassette,” was designed at Phillips by Lou Ottens, and it was brought to the commercial market in 1963. What made this format so popular, though, was simply Phillips’ decision to waive royalties for using their cassette design. The ability for lots of companies to make their own cassette players and tapes without being tied up in royalties worked incredibly well, and it drove innovation across multiple companies in the ensuing decades. It led to the “boom boxes” of the late 1970s, and the portable headphone cassette units known best by the first of them to come to market, the Sony Walkman, of the 1980s. The popularity of these machines literally changed the sound of our streets. For musicians, there was the development of the 4-track cassette recorder, finally allowing artists to make their own recordings at home. They could distribute those recordings on cassettes dubbed at home as well, allowing for the potential to side-step record labels for the first time since the dawn of the recording era.

 

Subsequent chapters focus on various different areas of culture that were significantly influenced by cassettes. Chapter 2 largely focuses on hip-hop, which was dramatically assisted in its early days by artists and fans being able to record live sets on cassette, as well as the ability to circulate mixtapes among fans. We have another recently published book called Do Remember! The Golden Era of NYC Hip-Hop Mixtapes that takes a detailed look at this era, too, featuring lots of photos and interviews with artists of the era, so if you read this section and want to go further, I’d recommend that book. Masters also documents how cassettes helped to distribute other new forms of music like house music, punk, indie rock, and new forms of heavy metal that developed throughout the 1980s. For all of these forms of music, mixtapes and demo tapes were a crucial element in popularizing these styles. In many cases, tapes circulated among fans for years before bands and artists signed “real” record deals. They both documented new styles of music and helped them along simultaneously.

 

Some artists didn’t aspire to get mainstream record deals, though, and Masters also looks at the underground cassette culture of the 80s. These artists worked in various offshoots of experimental music, from industrial to free improvisation to homemade electronics to outsider pop and more, and throughout the 80s, they circulated their work on cassette, mostly through the mail. This is the same era in which mail art and zine culture were popular, and underground cassettes were another element of the wild art one could find through the mail. Fans could order tapes directly from artists, and many artists simply traded tapes among one another. As mentioned earlier, this created a whole new kind of environment for enjoying music—it existed essentially outside of the commercial market altogether, and participants could develop a real sense of community, even if they were mostly connected through international postal systems. In its way, 80s cassette culture and mail art are a precursor to some forms of internet culture today, in which people find friendship and community around shared interests regardless of where they might live.

 

Then Masters looks at the community around tape trading, which largely focuses on fans of the Grateful Dead swapping copies of their favorite live show recordings. Tapes from other artists occasionally find their way into tape trading circles, but the Dead were the first band to actively support the notion of fans recording “bootlegs” of their shows, setting up designated taping areas at most of their shows. It proved to be a great business decision by the band—several generations of fans grew up knowing that every Grateful Dead concert was very different from all of the others as could be heard on all of these tapes, and this kept the band a top-grossing touring act throughout their career, even when they rarely put out new studio albums and had little chart or radio support.

 

Next, we explore international music. The cassette format became very popular around the world for similar reasons as underground music in the United States—it was cheap and easy to duplicate. The format continues to be more commercially popular in other parts of the world as well. As a result, song hunters from the West often travel to other countries in search of rare, small-run cassettes featuring music unique to areas of the Middle East, Africa, or India. Some of these traveler/collectors subsequently started record labels to circulate their discoveries in other parts of the world, and to archive them somewhat more permanently. This is followed by a chapter about making mixtapes, which many Generation X folks will likely relate to. Before digital playlists and before mix CDs, the mixtape was the first medium in which the average person could gather together their favorite songs, or songs focused on a particular theme for themselves or as a gift. Many people went to great efforts to make these tapes look as cool as they sounded, drawing their own art or making collages. It was a whole fun thing that’s been somewhat lost to time!

 

The final chapter, “Tape’s Not Dead,” looks at what the media sometimes calls the “Cassette Comeback.” In the last couple of decades, cassettes have mostly disappeared from mass-market commercial shelves, but in fact small groups of artists and labels have continued to produce them in a mostly unbroken line going back to the 80s underground cassette culture mentioned earlier. Things have changed in a few ways—many of these tapes are now duplicated in small runs of 100 or so by small businesses, the artwork tends to be more professional, and instead of zines and mail-order catalogs, folks find these cassettes for sale on the internet through sites like Bandcamp. But the spirit remains similar to the 80s scene, with an emphasis on art and expression over commerce. This is the part of the book where you’ll find a couple of quotes from yours truly.

 

Overall, this is a thorough and wide-ranging look at how cassettes have affected music and culture since their invention. Although the book has been published by an academic press (University of North Carolina), the style is very fun and approachable, emphasizing a friendly narrative style that incorporates lots of discussions with people involved in the various branches of cassette culture. I’d recommend this book to people with a wide range of musical interests—whatever style of music you love, chances are that the cassette has been part of its story in recent history!

 

(If you enjoy this, you may also wish to try Cassette Mythos edited by Robin James, Cassette Cultures: Past and Present of a Musical Icon by John Komurki or Do Remember! The Golden Era of NYC Hip-Hop Mixtapes by Evan Auerbach.)

 

( publisher’s official High Bias web page ) | ( Marc Masters on Pitchfork.com )

 

Recommended by Scott S.
Polley Music Library

Have you read or listened to this one? What did you think? Did you find this review helpful?

New reviews appear every month on the Staff Recommendations page of the BookGuide website. You can visit that page to see them all, or watch them appear here in the BookGuide Blog individually over the course of the entire month. Click the tag for the reviewer's name to see more of this reviewer’s recommendations!


Check out this, and all the other great music resources, at the Polley Music Library, located on the 2nd floor of the Bennett Martin Public Library at 14th & "N" St. in downtown Lincoln. You'll find biographies of musicians, books about music history, instructional books, sheet music, CDs, music-related magazines, and much more. Also check out Polley Music Library Picks, the Polley Music Library's e-mail newsletter, and follow them on Facebook!

Wednesday, December 20, 2023

Book Review: Just Jerry - How Drawing Shaped My Life - A Memoir

Just Jerry: How Drawing Shaped My Life: A Memoir
by Jerry Pinkney (j Biography Pinkney)

I learned about this book at a Library Conference that I attended recently. As a fan of Jerry Pinkney’s illustrations for many years, I was thrilled to hear that a biography of the award-winning author had been published just this year. The book was written to encourage young people to fulfill their dreams in spite of obstacles that stand in their way. For Jerry, those obstacles included dyslexia, which had not even been named as a condition when he was young, and being Black, at a time when schools were still segregated and opportunities for a young Black youth far and few between. Jerry describes in great detail the difficulties he had in school until he gets the opportunity to express himself through his art with the encouragement of his teacher. Once Jerry decides on a career in art, he fought racism to be able to win a scholarship to art school beyond high school and began a career which demonstrated his talents over many decades. This was a wonderful true story of one boy’s dream to become an artist and all the people who believed in him and helped him to make his dreams come true. I really enjoyed the art and the story of his life; I highly recommend this book.

 

(If you enjoy this, you may also wish to try The Art of Beatrix Potter by Beatrix Potter.)

 

( official Jerry Pinkney web site )

 

Recommended by Kim J.
Bennett Martin Public Library — Public Service

 

Have you read or listened to this one? What did you think? Did you find this review helpful?


New reviews appear every month on the Staff Recommendations page of the BookGuide website. You can visit that page to see them all, or watch them appear here in the BookGuide Blog individually over the course of the entire month. Click the tag for the reviewer's name to see more of this reviewer’s recommendations!

Monday, December 18, 2023

Book Review: Always, in December by Emily Stone

Always, in December
by Emily Stone (Stone)

I don’t read many “romance” novels, usually just one or two around the end-of-year holidays, and even then they tend to be “general fiction” with a romance flavor. This year, I picked up a paperback copy of Always, in December in a local grocery store, mainly because the cover was appealing. The libraries do have this available, but only in eBook format from Overdrive/Libby.

 

Always, in December turned out to be a very powerful read for me, which left me both sad and hopeful by the end. Nominally a “Christmas” novel — the opening chapters are set during the holiday season, and there are some major scenes around the same time of the year, a year later, but a large portion of this novel is set at other times. But the holidays aren’t just window dressing.

 

Josie, the central character, feels disconnected from the holidays, since it was at Christmas that her two parents were killed in a car accident when she was 10, and she was raised by loving grandparents. She has a tradition of writing her parents a letter each year at Christmas and placing it in a public post box. As the novel begins, she’s facing a job crisis and this year’s letter tradition is interrupted when she runs into Max by accident on her bicycle. As part of her efforts to apologize, and to try to improve his dour attitude, she takes him for drinks, and something seems to “click” between them. When it turns out they’re both on their own in London over the holiday, they end up sharing more time with each other and developing an instant and deep attraction. But when Max disappears on her with a cryptic note, after they shared a perfect day together, Josie is devastated.


The bulk of this novel follows Josie’s next year, as lessons she learned in the short time she had with Max lead her down paths she never thought she’d travel, and he returns to her life in a moment when she needs him most…only with a twist she didn’t see coming.

 

This novel is filled with well-developed characters. I empathized with Josie and really cared what was happening to her. I summed up my reaction to the ending of this book by saying “Good fiction (especially novels) should make you FEEL something.” This book definitely engaged my emotions. For a debut novel (released originally in 2021), Emily Stone hit a home run…and she’s had two more novels since then that I can look forward to!

 

(If you enjoy this, you may also wish to try One Last Gift and Love, Holly also by Emily Stone.)

 

( official Emily Stone Instagram feed )

 

Recommended by Scott C.
Bennett Martin Public Library — Public Service

 

Have you read or listened to this one? What did you think? Did you find this review helpful?


New reviews appear every month on the Staff Recommendations page of the BookGuide website. You can visit that page to see them all, or watch them appear here in the BookGuide Blog individually over the course of the entire month. Click the tag for the reviewer's name to see more of this reviewer’s recommendations!

Saturday, December 16, 2023

DVD Review: Three Wise Men and a Baby

Three Wise Men and a Baby
(DVD Three)

For the past several years, the Hallmark cable channel has led the charge in terms of producing light-hearted “romance” movies for the Christmas season. They have a stable of recurring actors and actresses, whom regular viewers look forward to seeing in this seasonal films.

 

Three Wise Men and a Baby was a 2022 premiere that teamed up three of the most popular male stars of these lightweight feel-good films. Actors Paul Campbell, Andrew Walker and Tyler Hynes are Stephan, Luke and Taylor Brenner, three brothers all still living with or near their mother, Barbara (played by Margaret Colin – who played the girlfriend in the 1987 film Three Men and a Baby). Stephan is a pet counselor, Luke is a fireman and Taylor is a disgruntled video game designer. When a baby is left on the doorstep of the firehouse he works in, with a note addressed to him, Stephen finds himself taking care of the cute infant, until other arrangements can be made…and he quickly ropes his two brothers into the task, especially when their mom has to leave town to deal with an injured relative.

 

This one was written by Campbell, with Kimberly Sustad (another regular Hallmark actress), and the two actors really know their fellow thespians — the roles of the three brothers fit these specific actors to a “T” and it’s obvious this entire cast had fun working with each other. Though Hallmark does occasionally feature more serious plots, this is definitely one of the silly, goofy ones, with a health side dose of heartfelt sincerity — the three confirmed bachelors’ interactions with the baby boy are adorable. If you’re looking for a good introduction to Hallmark Christmas Movies, you can’t go wrong with this one!

 

( Internet Movie Database entry for this film )

 

Recommended by Scott C.
Bennett Martin Public Library — Public Service

 

Have you watched this one? What did you think? Did you find this review helpful?


New reviews appear every month on the Staff Recommendations page of the BookGuide website. You can visit that page to see them all, or watch them appear here in the BookGuide Blog individually over the course of the entire month. Click the tag for the reviewer's name to see more of this reviewer’s recommendations!

Friday, December 15, 2023

Music Book Review: A Year With Swollen Appendices - Brian Eno's Diary, 1995

A Year With Swollen Appendices: Brian Eno’s Diary, 1995
by Brian Eno (Music 781.66 Eno)

Although he’s not the first ambient musician, Brian Eno is the first to use the word to describe musical activities. He’s a remarkable producer who has worked with massive artists such as U2, David Bowie, and the Talking Heads. He’s a fascinating musician himself, who was an important element of the band Roxy Music, and he went on to release a number of pop song-oriented solo albums as well. Then there is the massive universe of his work with ambient music, generative music, collaborations with artists from the worlds of classical, jazz, rock and world music. While he’s maybe not the biggest household name in music by himself, his efforts have been essential to many developments in the music we all know and love. And almost everyone in the world has heard at least one piece by Brian Eno: he composed the startup sounds for Windows 95, the operating system that launched Microsoft into the modern era.

 

Speaking of 1995, the year was also immortalized in Eno’s life in print: he kept a diary throughout the year of 1995, which was published the following year as A Year With Swollen Appendices: Brian Eno’s Diary, 1995. The book was recently re-published in a 25th anniversary edition, which you can borrow from the Polley Music Library.

 

This new edition features a brief but very interesting new introduction, which was written during the height of the pandemic in mid-2020. Simply put, Eno tried to reflect on what has happened in the 25 years since his Diary was published, and he approached this by compiling a list of words and phrases that are common in pop culture today, but essentially didn’t exist then. Modern life moves quickly! Reading his dozen-page list of words invokes a wide range of responses in this reader, from amusement to stress, and it’s remarkable to think how rapidly these concepts have grasped the attention of the public at large. His list tends to lean on very recent words and phrases, mostly from the last five years or so, but it’s worth noting that the 25- year gap includes a massive shift in our technology: the internet was in its infancy, not really used by the general public, and computers were still boxes that sat on desks with monitors and peripherals attached. It’s been a remarkable 25 years, indeed.

 

Eno doesn’t come right out and say this, but I think that setting up a re-reading of this Diary with a moment of pondering modernity helps to put it in a context that we might otherwise neglect. It wasn’t that long ago, after all, but arguably the book represents the end of the “analog age.” As you read the book, Eno is working with computers and software in his studio, for both music and visual art, but he was an early adopter, and these descriptions of his artistic involvement with computers must have felt very different to read in 1996. At one point he is reading the then-new book Being Digital by Nicholas Negroponte, one of the earliest books that attempted to speculate on how this evolving technology would affect us individually and culturally. Some of the art being produced with computers was still very much in its infancy: “onto a computer art show, which was customarily disappointing. Tiny ideas writ enormous, and cheap tricks writ dazzlingly expensive.” And this was in the middle of the short-lived era of the CD-ROM, which seemed to hold so much promise for new ways to distribute information and new kinds of multimedia formats. Remember those?

 

The bulk of the diary section itself finds a very busy Eno working on projects all over the world. His writing style is friendly, and he sometimes has beautiful descriptions of his first impressions of people he meets: “The people here are desert flowers—they can be completely dormant until conditions are right, and then frenzied with energy.” But mostly he is focused on business and enjoying time with his family — he’s not as philosophical in the moment as one might suspect, and he’s not name-dropping and hopping from party to party like we found in Warhol’s diary. Instead, we get the impression that Eno is ultimately a pretty normal person who just happens to work across many fields, maybe a pioneer of the “gig economy” that he mentions in his new introduction. And he is uniquely thoughtful as he moves between various projects, always ready with the perfect insight to keep things moving.

 

But perhaps my favorite section of the book is the so-called “swollen appendices,” which occupy about a quarter of the book’s size. These are really a collection of short essays that lay out Eno’s thoughts on a variety of topics. If you want a brief overview of Eno’s contributions to music and art, this might be the best place to start. The essays are arranged in alphabetical order by title, which places what might be the most useful one, “Ambient Music,” at the beginning. Some are dated at this point–CD-ROMs raise their antiquated head here again—but others point to work that Eno continued to develop in more recent years, such as “Generative Music.” There are letters to colleagues, descriptions of projects, and some thoughts on international sociopolitical issues. Most of these things still feel fresh and relevant today, testimony to the universal applicability of many of Eno’s ideas. Of note, these essays cover a wider span of time—most are from the 90s, but some go back further, and they make references that can span his whole career.

 

All told, it’s a book that remains interesting and often invigorating so many years later. I often feel a kind of kinship between Eno’s work and the writings of John Cage, in that both were able to produce written explanations of their ideas that have had as much or more influence than the music they made using those ideas. It’s a book that will likely give you some new ideas to try in your own work, or just an engaging look at a year in a very interesting person’s life if you’re not a musician yourself!

 

(If you enjoy this, you may also wish to try On Some Faraway Beach: The Life and Times of Brian Eno by David Sheppard, or Brian Eno: Oblique Music by Sean Albiez.)

 

( official Brian Eno web site )

 

Read Scott C.’s review of Brian Eno’s album Apollo: Atmospheres and Soundtracks in the September 2020 Staff Recommendations here on BookGuide!

 

Recommended by Scott S.
Polley Music Library

Have you read or listened to this one? What did you think? Did you find this review helpful?

New reviews appear every month on the Staff Recommendations page of the BookGuide website. You can visit that page to see them all, or watch them appear here in the BookGuide Blog individually over the course of the entire month. Click the tag for the reviewer's name to see more of this reviewer’s recommendations!


Check out this, and all the other great music resources, at the Polley Music Library, located on the 2nd floor of the Bennett Martin Public Library at 14th & "N" St. in downtown Lincoln. You'll find biographies of musicians, books about music history, instructional books, sheet music, CDs, music-related magazines, and much more. Also check out Polley Music Library Picks, the Polley Music Library's e-mail newsletter, and follow them on Facebook!

Thursday, December 14, 2023

Music Review: Rhythm Song by Evelyn Glennie

Rhythm Song
by Evelyn Glennie (Compact Disc 781.68 Gle)

If you want something different, intriguing, unique — give this a try. I first became aware of Dame Evelyn Glennie earlier this year from an online article. She is an award-winning percussionist and composer who has been functionally deaf since age 12 and has been performing music in public since age 11. In addition to marimba and all types of percussion instruments, Glennie can play bagpipes, piano, and clarinet. She also vocalizes on some of her compositions. Known for performing barefoot, to better feel the beats and tones, Glennie learned to ‘listen’ to music with all of her body once she could no longer hear. Over the years she has performed with orchestras, pop stars, and at the 2012 London Olympic Games. Her oeuvre is one-of-a-kind and deserves a listen. Fascinating and inspiring!

 

(If you enjoy this, you may also wish to try Listen : How Evelyn Glennie, a Deaf Girl, Changed Percussion by Shannon Stocker, or Her Greatest Hits and Wind in the Bamboo Grove by Evelyn Glennie.)

 

( official Evelyn Glennie web site )

 

Recommended by Becky W.C.
Walt Branch Library

 

Have you read or listened to this one? What did you think? Did you find this review helpful?


New reviews appear every month on the Staff Recommendations page of the BookGuide website. You can visit that page to see them all, or watch them appear here in the BookGuide Blog individually over the course of the entire month. Click the tag for the reviewer's name to see more of this reviewer’s recommendations!

Wednesday, December 13, 2023

Book Review: Making It So by Patrick Stewart

Making It So
by Patrick Stewart (Biography Stewart)

This autobiography is not simply for Trekkies or fans of the X-Men franchises. This well-written autobiography covers Stewart’s life from a young boy living in astonishing poverty with a violent father, to his interest in stage plays, to getting some semi-regular work in plays and working his way up to more prestigious playhouses, to eventually the pinnacle of Shakespeare playhouses — Royal Shakespeare Company.

 

At RSC he finally had regular work at a decent income, and was able to play many characters in Shakespeare’s plays for over 15 years. He mentions veteran and current actors and actresses that fans of British TV, American TV, and movies will recognize. With RSC he was able to travel the world and work with his idols and I enjoyed those stories.

 

Then came along Star Trek: The Next Generation and Capt. Jean-Luc Picard. ‘Everyone’ said it would last only a year. They offered an astonishing amount of money so he decided he could give them a year of his life. Well, we know how that went. His insider stories of fellow actors, several of whom became dear friends, were humorous and interesting as the stage actor had to learn to navigate the television world.

 

When he finished “The Next Generation” he was eager to jump into Shakespeare again but was offered the role of Professor Charles Xavier in the X-Men movies. His thoughts at the time? “No more fantasy. No more sci-fi. I’m done with that.” But, his involvement in the movies is when he and Ian McKellen became best of friends. And a movie franchise allowed him to continue his beloved work in his Shakespeare plays whereas a weekly television contract did not.

 

His writing is eloquent as he pulls you into of his stories and experiences. As any good biography has there are photos in the middle of the book. And I admit to re-listening to my copy of his A Christmas Carol audio performance while washing up Thanksgiving dishes. I thoroughly enjoyed this book and highly recommend it.

 

( publisher’s official Making It So web site ) | ( Wikipedia page for Patrick Stewart — Sir Patrick Stewart has official accounts on Facebook, X, TikTok, Instagram and more… )

 

Recommended by Charlotte M.
Bennett Martin Public Library — Public Service

 

Have you read or listened to this one? What did you think? Did you find this review helpful?


New reviews appear every month on the Staff Recommendations page of the BookGuide website. You can visit that page to see them all, or watch them appear here in the BookGuide Blog individually over the course of the entire month. Click the tag for the reviewer's name to see more of this reviewer’s recommendations!

Tuesday, December 12, 2023

Audiobook Review: Misery by Stephen King, narrated by Lindsay Crouse

Misery
by Stephen King (Compact Disc King)

Misery was best-selling author Stephen King’s 20th book (approximately), originally released in 1987. King, to that point, was known primarily as a horror writer who often featured supernatural elements in his stories — ‘Salem’s Lot, Carrie, The Shining, Cujo, Christine, The Stand, Firestarter, Pet Sematary — he wrote Misery in part as a reaction to being pigeonholed by his fans as a particular type of writer. His ardent fans did not gracefully appreciate his classical fantasy novel, Eyes of the Dragon, and insisted he return to what he was best known for. Also, and King has been clear about this in his own non-fiction writings, he had been dealing with drug addictions and abuse, and Misery was a chance to anthropomorphize those addictions as a destructive human character.

 

In Misery, Paul Sheldon is the author of a best-selling series of Victorian romantic suspense novels featuring plucky heroine Misery Chastain — a series he has grown to despise. Sheldon has just finished a personal writing retreat at a lodge in the Rocky Mountains, having completed what he believes to be his first “serious novel”, and after too much to drink, he drives off a mountain road, overturning his car and doing himself grave bodily harm. When he next awakens, he finds himself in the remote mountain home of ex-nurse Annie Wilkes, who identifies herself as “his #1 fan” and tells Paul she pulled him from the wreckage of his car and has been treating his two broken legs. Unfortunately, Annie has more than a few screws loose, and has a hair-trigger temper. When she discovers in the latest Misery Chastain novel that Sheldon has killed off her beloved literary hero, Annie goes off the deep end. Reliant on Annie for illicit pain meds and help surviving his injuries, and aware that no-one knows where he is, Paul Sheldon has no recourse but to agree, when Annie buys him a second-hand typewriter and demands that he write a new Misery novel, resurrecting the doomed character. What follows is a terrifying game of cat-and-mouse and psychological terror. But Paul has yet to realize just how demented Annie Wilkes truly is…and how many people may have died at her hands already.


As the tagline for the novel Misery says, “Paul Sheldon used to write for a living. Now he’s writing to save his own life!”

 

I’ve seen the 1990 feature film adapted from King’s novel by Oscar-winning screenwriter William Goldman. That film starred James Caan as author Paul Sheldon and Kathy Bates as “his #1 fan”, the psychotically obsessive Annie Wilkes. Bates won the Best Actress Oscar as Wilkes, and most fans of King agree that the film Misery is probably one of the best adaptations of a King novel to film or TV. Screenwriter Goldman later also adapted his own film screenplay into a stage play, which premiered in a limited theatrical engagement in 2015, starring Bruce Willis as Paul Sheldon and Laurie Metcalfe as Annie Wilkes. The news that a local community theatre production of Misery is being mounted for early 2024 excited the actor in me, and made me realize I’d never actually read the original novel…so I fixed that by listening to the audiobook, narrated very effectively by actress Lindsay Crouse.

 

(The novel Misery is much like many of King’s early works from the late 1970s to the mid-1990s, though in this case there is no supernatural element, only an all-too-human psychopath. Considering that there's only two primary characters, and one of those is left by himself a lot of the time -- there's a LOT of internal monologues, frequently peppered with "adult language". It was intended to be released under King’s pseudonym Richard Bachman, but King was "outed" as Bachman before that could happen, so it came out under his own name. I do recommend seeing the Misery film, directed by Rob Reiner. You’ll never look at a sledgehammer the same way again, much like you’ll never look at an axe the same way after reading or listening to the novel.)

 

( official Misery page on the official Stephen King web site )

 

Recommended by Scott C.
Bennett Martin Public Library — Public Service

 

Have you read or listened to this one? What did you think? Did you find this review helpful?


New reviews appear every month on the Staff Recommendations page of the BookGuide website. You can visit that page to see them all, or watch them appear here in the BookGuide Blog individually over the course of the entire month. Click the tag for the reviewer's name to see more of this reviewer’s recommendations!

Sunday, December 10, 2023

New Booklist on BookGuide: "Have Yourself a Merry Hard-Edged Christmas!"

“Is Die Hard a Christmas Movie?”

This has been a common pop-culture question in recent years, especially when the holidays roll around at the end of the year! Whether you believe this classic 1988 action film is a Christmas Movie or not, there’s no question that there have been a lot of action/adventure films set during the Christmas or year-end holiday season.

Becky W.C. compiled a list of those films for a display at the Lincoln City Libraries' Walt Branch Library in December 2023, and submitted her “video” list to be included in the resources of the libraries’ BookGuide readers advisory pages online.

Check out this new video "booklist" on BookGuide at the following link:

If You Like…Die Hard
a.k.a. “Have Yourself a Merry Hard-Edged Christmas!”

Saturday, December 9, 2023

DVD Review: Barbie the Movie

Barbie the Movie
(DVD Barbie)

I imagine you’ve heard that there’s a new movie about Barbie?

 

First, to clarify, this is not one more installment of the animated Barbie remakes of fairy tales. Back in the day when I was babysitting my niece, we would watch Barbie and the Twelve Dancing Princesses nearly every day and I can assure you she loved it, and for me, it was a good nap. Too much sugar!

 

Barbie the Movie does have its fair share of sugar, but it also contains enough spice to make it enjoyable, especially to the over 12 crowd.

 

Imagine a world in which Barbie isn’t just a fashion queen, but instead, stands in for all of the things a female person could be.

 

This “Stereotypical Barbie” believes that Barbies have been teaching young women that they can be anything that they want to be. Doctors, gymnasts, teachers, vets, scientists, space explorers (“Yay, Space!”) — a girl just needs to choose her own path. She can have a job, a house, a car, and even a Ken, if she wants one.


Although I know many people loved the moment when America Ferraro gives a speech about how hard it is to be a woman in today’s world, my favorite moment was after the young Bratz girls knock Barbie down for being a role model for unattainable body shape. Barbie, in tears, says, “She thinks I’m a fascist?  I don’t control the railways or the flow of commerce.” “Stereotypical Barbie” isn’t the blonde ditz that these young women have assumed, even if she is naive in her belief that girls have been empowered by her existence.

 

I highly recommend taking this journey with Barbie. You’ll have amazing side trips like seeing Will Ferrell and his posse of corporate execs chasing Barbie on rollerblades, a mystical moment where Barbie gets to have tea with her creator, poor Ken’s whole story arc, and just enough “stiff like a plastic doll” moments to tickle your funny bone. And yeah, plenty of mother-daughter moments to play on the heartstrings of what I think is the movie’s target audience: Women from ages 35-70. (We can’t help it if we carry some latent Mickey Mouse Club feelings for Ryan Gosling.)

 

Unlike Sandy from Grease, Barbie is not going to re-invent herself to fit Ken’s ideal. Ken (Ryan Gosling) and Ken (Simu Liu) are just going to have to do their Danny Zuko dance battle by themselves. Grease isn’t the only movie that’s referenced. There’s a slough of “Easter Eggs” to spot, and, if you delve online, you can find lists of the movies Greta Gerwig (the director) took as inspiration, including The Umbrellas of Cherbourg and The Red Shoes, The Truman Show, and Splash. You will see nods to Grease, 2001 A Space Odyssey, Wizard of Oz, Singin’ in the Rain, Barbie and the Magic of Pegasus, The Matrix, Swann’s Way, Midnight Cowboy, Playtime, and many more.

 

Maybe Barbie’s mere existence doesn’t solve all women’s problems, but this movie may surprise you with the substance beneath its many layers of fluff. As the song playing as Barbie leaves Barbieland goes: “There’s more than one answer to these questions / pointing me in a crooked line / and the less I seek my source for some definitive / closer I am to fine.” For me, the major theme of the movie is how there aren’t any straightforward answers in life. Reflecting on Barbie’s journey can be as deep or as fluffy as you want it to be. Follow that Pink Brick Road to your own interpretation!

 

(If you enjoy this, you may also wish to try The Umbrellas of Cherbourg, The Red Shoes or Amelie for their similar technicolor esthetic, or any of the referenced movies, like Splash or The Truman Show.)

 

( Internet Movie Database entry for this film ) | ( official Barbie the Movie web site )

 

See Scott C.’s review of the Barbie the Movie: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack in the September 2023 Staff Recommendations here on BookGuide!

 

(Carrie actually gives this a “9.9” but our graphics limit us to giving it a “10” rating)

 

Recommended by Carrie K.
Bennett Martin Public Library — Public Service

 

Have you watched this one? What did you think? Did you find this review helpful?


New reviews appear every month on the Staff Recommendations page of the BookGuide website. You can visit that page to see them all, or watch them appear here in the BookGuide Blog individually over the course of the entire month. Click the tag for the reviewer's name to see more of this reviewer’s recommendations!