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    <title>He mea hoihoi - Interesting Things</title>
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    <updated>2010-03-10T23:17:13Z</updated>
    <subtitle>Maintained by Punahou Libraries, this site provides book lists and discussions for the Punahou Community.</subtitle>
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<entry>
    <title>Index - Alphabetical by Title</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/2010/02/index_alphabetical_by_title.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/MT/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=10/entry_id=6341" title="Index - Alphabetical by Title" />
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    <published>2010-02-26T21:44:58Z</published>
    <updated>2010-03-10T23:17:13Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Absinence Teacher by Tom Perrotta. March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks) Admission by Jean Hanff Korelitz. [F Korelitz] January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore Alchemist by Paulo Coelho. [F Coelho] October 2006: Too good to miss Alexander...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Debra Peterson</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Index - Alphabetical by Title" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/">
        <![CDATA[<p><strong><u>Absinence Teacher</u> by Tom Perrotta. </strong><br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks) </p>

<p><strong><u>Admission </u>by Jean Hanff Korelitz. [F Korelitz] </strong><br />
January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore </p>

<p><strong><u>Alchemist </u>by Paulo Coelho. [F Coelho] </strong><br />
October 2006: Too good to miss</p>

<p><strong><u>Alexander Hamilton </u>by Ron Chernow. </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again? </p>

<p><u><strong>All the Pretty Horses</u> by Cormac McCarthy [F McCarthy] </strong><br />
March 2006: Spring Break Reads</p>

<p><strong><u>Am I Blue?: Coming Out From the Silence</u>. Edited by Marion Dane Bauer. [F Am] </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again?</p>

<p><strong><u>Amber Spyglass</u> by Philip Pullman. [F Pullman] </strong><br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks) </p>

<p><strong><u>American Born Chinese</u> by Gene Yang [F Yang] </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks</p>

<p><strong><u>Another Roadside Attraction</u> by Tom Robbins. [F Robbins] </strong><br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks)</p>

<p><strong><u>Appeal</u> by John Grisham [F Grisham] </strong><br />
March 2006: Spring Break Reads</p>

<p><strong><u>Audacity of Hope</u> by Barak Obama [PUN 973 Ob1] </strong><br />
May 2007: Summer - Ready, Set, Read</p>

<p><strong><u>Await Your Reply</u> by Dan Chaon. </strong><br />
January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore</p>

<p><strong><u>Axemaker's Gift </u>by James Burke. [306.4 B91] </strong><br />
December 2006: Christmas Wish List - Item 1 - Time to read!</p>

<p><strong><u>Barry Does Japan</u> by Dave Barry. </strong><br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading</p>

<p><strong><u>Beasts of No Nation</u> by Uzodinma Iweala. [F Iweala]</strong> <br />
April 2006: Summer Reading Suggestions</p>

<p><strong><u>Bite of the Mango</u> by Mariatu with Susan McClelland [B K123] </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks.</p>

<p><strong><u>Blind Assassin</u> by Margaret Atwood [F Atwood] </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again?</p>

<p><strong><u>Book of Lost Things</u> by John Connolly. </strong><br />
January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore </p>

<p><strong><u>Book Thief</u> by Marcus Zusak [F Zusak] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong><u>Bookseller of Kabul</u> by Asne Seierstad [958.1 Se4] </strong><br />
April 2006: Summer Reading Suggestions</p>

<p><strong><u>Born to Run</u> by Christopher McDougall. [796.4 M14] </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff reads</p>

<p><strong><u>Botany of Desire </u>by Michael Pollen [306.4 P76] </strong><br />
May 2007: Summer - Ready, Set, Read</p>

<p><strong><u>Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao</u> by Junot Diaz [F Diaz] </strong><br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks) <br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break.</p>

<p><strong><u>By the River Piedra</u> by Paul Coelho. </strong><br />
October 2007: Summer Picks</p>

<p><strong><u>Changed Man</u> by Francine Prose. [F Prose] </strong><br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks)</p>

<p><strong><u>Children's Book</u> by A. S. Byatt. </strong><br />
January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore</p>

<p><strong><u>City of Thieves</u> by David Benioff [F Benioff] </strong><br />
January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore </p>

<p><strong><u>Come Back to Afghanistan: A California Teenager's Story</u> by Said Hyder Akbar and Susan Burton [958.1 Ak2] </strong><br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading.</p>

<p><strong><u>Companies We Keep</u> by Bob Sigall. [HC 338.7 Si2] </strong><br />
December 2006: Christmas Wish List - Item 1 - Time to read!</p>

<p><strong><u>Crescent </u>by Diana Abu-Jaber [F Abu-Jaber] </strong><br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading</p>

<p><strong><u>Curse Dark As Gold</u> by Elizabeth Bunce [F Bunce] </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks</p>

<p><strong><u>Deep Down Things: The Breathtaking Beauty of Particle Physics</u> by Bruce A. Schumm [539.7 Sch8]</strong><br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading</p>

<p><strong><u>Delights & Shadows </u>by Ted Kooser. [811 K833] </strong><br />
May 2007: Summer - Ready, Set, Read</p>

<p><strong><u>Descendants</u> by Kaui Hart Hemmings [HC F Hemmings] </strong><br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading</p>

<p><strong><u>Devil and Miss Prym</u> by Paul Coelho [F Coelho] </strong><br />
October 2007: Summer Picks</p>

<p><strong><u>Devil in the White City</u> by Erik Larson. [364.1 L32d] </strong><br />
March 2006: Spring Break Reads </p>

<p><strong><u>Diaries of Paul Klee</u>, 1898-1918 by Paul Klee.</strong> <br />
May 2009: Summer is here again? </p>

<p><strong><u>Die Trying by Lee Child.</u> [F Child] </strong><br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading</p>

<p><strong><u>Don't Stop the Carnival</u> by Herman Wouk. </strong><br />
October 2007: Summer Picks</p>

<p><strong><u>Downtown Owl</u> by Chuck Klosterman. [F Klosterman] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong><u>Dreams From My Father</u> by Barak Obama [305.8 Ob1] </strong><br />
October 2007: Summer Picks</p>

<p><strong><u>East Wind, Rain</u> by Caroline Paul [HC F Paul] </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again?</p>

<p><strong><u>Elegance of the Hedgehog</u> by Muriel Barbery [F Barbery] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break.</p>

<p><strong><u>Elegant Gathering of White Snows </u>by Kris Radish. </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again? </p>

<p><strong><u>Enchantress of Florence</u> by Salman Rushdie [F Rushdie] </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again?  </p>

<p><strong><u>Enrique's Journey</u> by Sonia Nazario. [305.23 N23] </strong><br />
May 2007: Summer - Ready, Set, Read <br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading</p>

<p><strong><u>Escape From Slavery: The True Story of My Ten Years in Captivity - and My Journey to Freedom in America</u> by Francis Bok [305.5 B63] </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks.</p>

<p><strong><u>Everyman</u> by Philip Roth. [F Roth] </strong><br />
October 2006: Too good to miss</p>

<p><strong><u>Eye of the Albatross: Visions of Hope and Survival</u> by Carl Safing [HC 598.4 Sa1] </strong><br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading</p>

<p><strong><u>Fall of the Dynasties: The Collapse of the Old Order, 1905-1922</u> by Edmund Taylor. [940.2 T21]</strong><br />
October 2006: Too good to miss</p>

<p><strong><u>Field Notes from a Catastrophe: Man, Nature, and Climate Change</u> by Elizabeth Kolbert. [363.7 K83] </strong><br />
October 2007: Summer Picks</p>

<p><strong><u>First They Killed My Father: A Daughter of Cambodia Remembers</u> by Loung Ung [959.6 Un3]</strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks.</p>

<p><strong><u>Flight</u> by Sherman Alexie. [F Alexie] </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks.</p>

<p><strong><u>Florist's Daughter</u> by Patricia Hampl. </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks.</p>

<p><strong><u>Food of Paradise: Exploring Hawai'i's Culinary Heritage </u>by Rachel Daudan [HC 641.5 L36]</strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong><u>for one more day </u>by Mitch Albom. [F Albom] </strong><br />
May 2007: Summer - Ready, Set, Read </p>

<p><strong><u>Fortune Cookie Chronicles by Jennifer 8 Lee.</u> </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks.</p>

<p><strong><u>Fortune's Rocks</u> by Anita Shreve [F Shreve] </strong><br />
March 2006: Spring Break Reads </p>

<p><strong><u>Full Tilt: Ireland to India with a Bicycle</u> by Dervia Murphy. </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again? </p>

<p><strong><u>Gatsby's Girl</u> by Caroline Preston. </strong><br />
December 2006: Christmas Wish List - Item 1 - Time to read!</p>

<p><strong><u>Gesture Life</u> by Chang-rae Lee. [F Lee] </strong><br />
May 2007: Summer - Ready, Set, Read </p>

<p><strong><u>Ghosts of War: The True Story of a 19-Year-Old GI</u> by Ryan Smithson. [956.7 Sm62] </strong><br />
January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore</p>

<p><strong><u>Gilead</u> by Marilynne Robinson. [F Robinson] </strong><br />
October 2006: Too good to miss<br />
December 2006: Christmas Wish List - Item 1 - Time to read!</p>

<p><strong><u>The Girl Who Played With Fire</u> by Stieg Larsson.</strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks.</p>

<p><strong><u>The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo</u> by Stieg Larrson. </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again? </p>

<p><strong><u>Glass Castle</u> by Jeanette Walls [362.82 W15] </strong><br />
May 2007: Summer - Ready, Set, Read <br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks.</p>

<p><strong><u>Golden Compass</u> by Philip Pullman. [F Pullman] </strong><br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks) </p>

<p><strong><u>Gone Tomorrow</u> by Lee Child [F Child] </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again? </p>

<p><strong><u>Good Soldiers</u> by David Finkel. </strong><br />
January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore</p>

<p><strong><u>Heat (An Amateur's Adventures as Kitchen Slave, Line Cook, Past-Maker, and Apprentice to a Dante-Quoting Butcher in Tuscany)</u> by Bill Buford. [641.594 B86] </strong><br />
December 2006: Christmas Wish List - Item 1 - Time to read!</p>

<p><strong><u>Help</u> by Kathryn Stockett [F Stockett] </strong><br />
January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore </p>

<p><strong>Highest Tide by Jim Lynch [F Lynch] </strong><br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks) </p>

<p><strong><u>Historian</u> by Elizabeth Kostova. [F Kostova] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong><u>Hour I First Believed</u> by Wally Lamb.</strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong><u>House of Many Gods</u> by Kiana Davenport. [HC F Davenport] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break</p>

<p><strong><u>Hunger Games</u> by Suzanne Collins [F Collins] </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again? </p>

<p><strong><u>Hunting and Gathering</u> by Anna Gavalda. [F Gavalda] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong><u>I'm a Stranger Here Myself</u> by Bill Bryson.</strong> <br />
May 2007: Summer - Ready, Set, Read </p>

<p><strong><u>Immortality</u> by Milan Kundera. </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again? </p>

<p><strong><u>Imperfect Lens</u> by Anne Roiphe. [F Roiphe] </strong><br />
December 2006: Christmas Wish List - Item 1 - Time to read!</p>

<p><strong><u>In Other Rooms, Other Wonders</u> by Daniyal Mueenuddin.</strong> <br />
May 2009: Summer is here again? </p>

<p><strong><u>In Search of Small Gods</u> by Jim Harrison. </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again? </p>

<p><strong><u>In the Woods</u> by Tana French. </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again? </p>

<p><strong><u>Infidel </u>by Ayaan Hirsi Ali. [B H613] </strong><br />
March 2006: Spring Break Reads </p>

<p><strong><u>Interpreter of Maladies</u> by Jhumpa Lahiri. [F Lahiri] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong><u>John Adams</u> by David McCullough. [B Ad12m] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong><u>John James Audubon: The Making of an American</u> by Richard Rhodes. [B Au2r] </strong><br />
October 2006: Too good to miss</p>

<p><strong><u>Kabul Beauty School </u>by Debbie Rodriguez. [305.4 R61] </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff reads.</p>

<p><strong><u>Kepler's Witch: an Astronomer's Discovery of Cosmic Order amid Religious War, Political Intrigue, and the Heresy Trial of his Mother</u> by James Connor. [B K44co] </strong><br />
May 2007: Summer - Ready, Set, Read </p>

<p><strong><u>Killing Floor</u> by Lee Child. [F Child] </strong><br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading</p>

<p><strong><u>Kimchi and Calamari</u> by Rose Kent [BLC - Kent, Rose] </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks</p>

<p><strong><u>Kite Runner</u> by Khaled Hosseini. [F Hossein]</strong><br />
March 2006: Spring Break Reads <br />
October 2006: Too good to miss<br />
May 2007: Summer - Ready, Set, Read </p>

<p><strong><u>Known World</u> by Edward P. Jones [F Jones] </strong><br />
October 2007: Summer Picks</p>

<p><strong><u>Last Great Flight</u> by Joe Layden.</strong> <br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading</p>

<p><strong><u>Later, At the Bar</u> by Rebecca Barry. </strong><br />
October 2007: Summer Picks</p>

<p><strong><u>The Left Hand of Darkness</u> by Ursula LeGuin [F LeGuin] </strong><br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading</p>

<p><strong><u>Left to Tell</u> by Immaculee Ilibagiza. </strong><br />
May 2007: Summer - Ready, Set, Read </p>

<p><strong><u>Liberty</u> by Garrison Keillor. </strong><br />
January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore</p>

<p><strong><u>Life of Pi </u>by Yann Martel. [F Martel] </strong><br />
December 2006: Christmas Wish List - Item 1 - Time to read!</p>

<p><strong><u>Looking for Alaska</u> by John Green [F Green] </strong><br />
October 2007: Summer Picks</p>

<p><strong><u>Lost City Radio</u> by Daniel Alarcon. [F Alarcon] </strong><br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks)</p>

<p><strong><u>Lottery</u> by Patricia Wood [F Wood] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong><u>Love is a Mix Tape</u> by Rob Sheffield [781.6 Sh3] </strong><br />
May 2007: Summer - Ready, Set, Read </p>

<p><strong><u>Man in the High Castle</u> by Philip Dick. </strong><br />
October 2007: Summer Picks</p>

<p><strong><u>Mariette in Ecstasy</u> by Ron Hansen. </strong><br />
January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore </p>

<p><strong><u>Memory Keeper's Daughter </u>by Kim Edwards [F Edwards] </strong><br />
October 2007: Summer Picks</p>

<p><strong><u>Mermaid Chair</u> by Sue Monk Kidd. [F Kidd] </strong><br />
December 2006: Christmas Wish List - Item 1 - Time to read!</p>

<p><strong><u>Morningside Heights: New York Stories</u> by Joe Tsujimoto. [F Tsujimoto]</strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break.</p>

<p><strong><u>Nixonland</u> by Rick Perlstein [973.924 P42] </strong><br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading</p>

<p><strong><u>Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth, and Happiness </u>by Richard A. Thaler and Cass R. Sunstein. </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again? </p>

<p><strong># 1 Ladies' Detective Agency series by Alexander McCall Smith. </strong><br />
October 2006: Too good to miss</p>

<p><strong><u>Olive Kitteridge</u> by Elizabeth Strout. [F Strout] </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks.</p>

<p><strong><u>Ooga Booga</u> by Frederick Seidel. </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again? </p>

<p><strong><u>Other</u> by David Guterson [F Guterson] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong><u>Out of the Past: Gay and Lesbian History from 1869 to the Present</u> by Neil Miller. </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break.</p>

<p><strong><u>Outliers: The Story of Success</u> by Malcolm Gladwell [302 G450] </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again? </p>

<p><strong><u>Owl in Love</u> by Patrice Kindl [F Kindl] </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks</p>

<p><strong><u>Painting</u> by Nina Schuyler. [F Schuyler] </strong><br />
October 2006: Too good to miss</p>

<p><strong><u>Peace Like a River</u> by Leif Enger [F Enger] </strong><br />
March 2006: Spring Break Reads </p>

<p><strong><u>Pillars of the Earth</u> by Ken Follett [F Follett] </strong><br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading</p>

<p><strong><u>Portofino </u>by Frank Shaeffer. </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again? </p>

<p><strong><u>Predictably Irrational: The Hidden forces that Shape Our Decisions</u> by Dan Ariely [153.8 Ar4] </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again? </p>

<p><strong><u>Pretty Birds</u> by Scott Simon [F Simon] </strong><br />
March 2006: Spring Break Reads </p>

<p><strong><u>Professor and the Madman </u>by Simon Winchester. [423 W72] </strong><br />
March 2006: Spring Break Reads </p>

<p><strong><u>Rain in the Trees: Poems by W. S. Merwin</u> by W. S. Merwin. [811 M553r] </strong><br />
October 2006: Too good to miss</p>

<p><strong><u>Ravens</u> by George Dawes Green. </strong><br />
January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore </p>

<p><strong><u>Reading Lolita in Tehran</u> by Azar Nafisi. [B N13] </strong><br />
October 2006: Too good to miss</p>

<p><strong><u>Rest is Noise: Listening to the Twentieth Century</u> by Alex Ross. [780.9 R31] </strong><br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks) </p>

<p><strong><u>Road </u>by Cormac McCarthy. [F McCarthy] </strong><br />
October 2006: Too good to miss</p>

<p><strong><u>Rough Country</u> by John Sandford </strong><br />
January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore</p>

<p><strong><u>Running Blind</u> by Lee Child. [F Child] </strong><br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading</p>

<p><strong><u>Schulz and Peanuts</u> by David Michaelis. [B Sch82m] </strong><br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading</p>

<p><strong><u>Shadow of the Wind</u> by Carlos Ruiz Zafon [F Ruiz Zafon] </strong><br />
April 2006: Summer Reading Suggestions</p>

<p><strong><u>Shop Class As Soulcraft: An Inquiry Into the Value of Work</u> by Matthew Crawford [331 C85]</strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks.</p>

<p><strong><u>Shutter Island</u> by Dennis Lehand. [F Lehane] </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks</p>

<p><strong><u>Six Wives of Henry VIII</u> by Alison Weir [942.05 W43] </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again? </p>

<p><strong><u>Spark: The Revolutionary New Science of Exercise and the Brain</u> by John Ratey. [612.7 R18]</strong><br />
January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore</p>

<p><strong><u>Sparrow </u>by Mary Doria Russell. [F Russell] </strong><br />
May 2007: Summer - Ready, Set, Read </p>

<p><strong><u>Spiral Jetta</u> by Erin Hogan. </strong> <br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks</p>

<p><strong><u>Spirit of Hula: Photos and Stories From Around the World</u> by Sheri 'Iolani Floyd Berinobis. [HC 793.3 B45] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong><u>Spirit of the Harvest: North American Indian Cooking </u>by Beverly Cox and Martin Jacobs. [BLC 641.59 C83] </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again? </p>

<p><strong><u>St. Lucy's Home For Girls Raised by Wolves</u> by Karen Russell [F Russell] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong><u>Stand</u> by Stephen King. [F King] </strong><br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks) </p>

<p><strong><u>Starbucked: A Double Tall Tale of Caffeine, Commerce, and Culture</u> by Taylor Clark. </strong><br />
January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore</p>

<p><strong><u>Story of Edgar Sawtelle</u> by David Wroblewski. [F Wroblewski] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong><u>Straight Man</u> by Richard Russo. [F Russo] </strong><br />
December 2006: Christmas Wish List - Item 1 - Time to read!</p>

<p><strong><u>Subtle Knife</u> by Philip Pullman. [F Pullman] </strong><br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks) </p>

<p><strong><u>Surrendered </u>by Chang-rae Lee. </strong><br />
January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore</p>

<p><strong><u>Swimming to Antarctica</u> by Lynne Cox. [797.2 C832] </strong><br />
October 2006: Too good to miss</p>

<p><strong><u>Tallgrass</u> by Sandra Dallas. [F Dallas] </strong><br />
March 2006: Spring Break Reads </p>

<p><strong><u>Teacher Man</u> by Frank McCourt. [B M135t] </strong><br />
December 2006: Christmas Wish List - Item 1 - Time to read!</p>

<p><strong><u>Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln</u> by Doris Kearns-Goodwin. [BL63go]</strong><br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks) </p>

<p><strong><u>Thirteen Moons</u> by Charles Frazier. </strong><br />
October 2007: Summer Picks</p>

<p><strong><u>Thirteen Reasons Why </u>by Jay Asher [F Asher] </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again?</p>

<p><strong><u>Thirteenth Tale</u> by Diane Setterfield. [F Setterfield] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong><u>This Is Where I Leave You</u> by Jonathan Tropper. </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks</p>

<p><strong><u>Three Cups of Tea: One Man's Mission to Fight Terrorism and Build Nations - One School at a Time</u> by Greg Mortenson and David Oliver Relin. [371.8 M84] </strong><br />
March 2006: Spring Break Reads </p>

<p><strong><u>Trent's Last Case</u> by E. C. Bently. [F Bentley] </strong><br />
December 2006: Christmas Wish List - Item 1 - Time to read!</p>

<p><strong><u>Truth and Beauty</u> by Ann Patchett. [616.99 P27] </strong><br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks) </p>

<p><strong><u>Two Truths and a Lie</u> by Katrina Kittle. </strong><br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks) </p>

<p><strong><u>Unaccustomed Earth</u> by Jhumpa Lahiri. [F Lahiri] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong><u>Under the Dome </u>by Stephen King [F King] </strong><br />
January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore</p>

<p><strong><u>Veronika Decides to Die </u>by Paul Coelho. </strong><br />
October 2007: Summer Picks</p>

<p><strong><u>Watchmen </u>by Alan Moore [F Moore] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong><u>Water for Elephants</u> by Sara Gruen [F Gruen] </strong><br />
March 2006: Spring Break Reads<br />
October 2007: Summer Picks<br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong><u>Way Home</u> by George Pelecanos. </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again? </p>

<p><strong><u>West with the Night</u> by Beryl Markham. [B M34] </strong><br />
October 2006: Too good to miss</p>

<p><strong><u>What is the What</u> by Dave Eggers. [F Eggers] </strong><br />
December 2006: Christmas Wish List - Item 1 - Time to read!</p>

<p><strong><u>When the Elephants Dance</u> by Tess Uriza Holthe. [F Holthe] </strong><br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading.</p>

<p><strong><u>Where Men Win Glory </u>by Jon Krakauer. [B T462] </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks</p>

<p><strong><u>Wild Trees: A Story of Passion and Daring</u> by Richard Preston.  [649.9 P92] </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks</p>

<p><strong><u>World is Flat</u> by Thomas L. Friedman. [303.4 F91]</strong><br />
October 2006: Too good to miss</p>

<p><strong><u>World Without End</u> by Ken Follett. [F Follett] </strong><br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks) </p>

<p><strong><u>World Without Us</u> by Alan Weisman. [304.2 W43] </strong><br />
March 2006: Spring Break Reads </p>

<p><strong><u>Worst Hard Time </u>by Timothy Egan. [338.1 Eg1] </strong><br />
December 2006: Christmas Wish List - Item 1 - Time to read!</p>

<p><strong><u>The Year of Magical Thinking</u> by Joan Didion. [B D563] </strong><br />
April 2006: Summer Reading Suggestions<br />
May 2007: Summer - Ready, Set, Read </p>]]>
        
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Index: Alphabetical by Author</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/2010/02/index_alphabetical_by_author.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/MT/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=10/entry_id=6332" title="Index: Alphabetical by Author" />
    <id>tag:iws.punahou.edu,2010:/punablogs/interesting_things//10.6332</id>
    
    <published>2010-02-24T23:34:24Z</published>
    <updated>2010-03-10T23:17:52Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Abu-Jaber, Diana. Crescent. [F Abu-Jaber] June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading Akbar, Said Hyder and Susan Burton. Come Back to Afghanistan: A California Teenager&apos;s Story. [958.1 Ak2] June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading Alarcon, Daniel. Lost...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Debra Peterson</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Index - Alphabetical by Author" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/">
        <![CDATA[<p><strong>Abu-Jaber, Diana. <u>Crescent.</u> [F Abu-Jaber] </strong>     <br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading</p>

<p><strong>Akbar, Said Hyder and Susan Burton. <u>Come Back to Afghanistan: A California <br />
Teenager's Story.</u> [958.1 Ak2]</strong> <br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading</p>

<p><strong>Alarcon, Daniel. <u>Lost City Radio</u>. [F Alarcon] </strong><br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks) </p>

<p><strong>Alexie, Sherman. <u>Flight</u>. [F Alexie] </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks</p>

<p><strong>Albom, Mitch. <u>for one more day</u>. [F Albom] </strong><br />
May 2007: Summer - Ready, Set, Read</p>

<p><strong><u>Am I Blue?: Coming Out From the Silence</u>. Edited by Marion Dane Bauer. [F Am] </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again? </p>

<p><strong>Ariely, Dan. <u>Predictably Irrational: The Hidden forces that Shape Our Decisions</u>. [153.8 Ar4]</strong> <br />
May 2009: Summer is here again?</p>

<p><strong>Asher, Jay. <u>Thirteen Reasons Why</u>. [F Asher] </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again?</p>

<p><strong>Atwood, Margaret. <u>Blind Assassin</u>. [F Atwood] </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again?</p>

<p><strong>Barbery, Muriel. <u>The Elegance of the Hedgehog</u>. [F Barbery] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong>Barry, Dave. <u>Barry Does Japan</u>. </strong><br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading</p>

<p><strong>Barry, Rebecca. <u>Later, At the Bar</u>. </strong><br />
October 2007: Summer Picks</p>

<p><strong>Benioff, David. <u>City of Thieves.</u> [F Benioff] </strong><br />
January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore</p>

<p><strong>Bently, E. C. <u>Trent's Last Case.</u> [F Bentley] </strong><br />
December 2006: Christmas Wish List - Item 1 - Time to read!</p>

<p><strong>Berinobis, Sheri 'Iolani Floyd. <u>The Spirit of Hula: Photos and Stories From Around the World</u>. [HC 793.3 B45] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong>Bok, Francis. <u>Escape From Slavery: The True Story of My Ten Years in Captivity - and My Journey to Freedom in America</u>. [305.5 B63] </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks</p>

<p><strong>Bryson, Bill. <u>I'm a Stranger Here Myself.</u> </strong><br />
May 2007: Summer - Ready, Set, Read</p>

<p><strong>Buford, Bill. <u>Heat (An Amateur's Adventures as Kitchen Slave, Line Cook, Past-Maker, and Apprentice to a Dante-Quoting Butcher in Tuscany). </u>[641.594 B86] </strong><br />
December 2006: Christmas Wish List - Item 1 - Time to read!</p>

<p><strong>Bunce, Elizabeth. <u>A Curse Dark As Gold</u>. [F Bunce] </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks</p>

<p><strong>Burke, James. <u>Axemaker's Gift.</u> [306.4 B91] </strong><br />
December 2006: Christmas Wish List - Item 1 - Time to read!</p>

<p><strong>Byatt, A.S. <u>The Children's Book.</u> </strong><br />
January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore</p>

<p><strong>Chaon, Dan. <u>Await Your Reply.</u> </strong><br />
January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore</p>

<p><strong>Chernow, Ron. <u>Alexander Hamilton</u>. </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again? </p>

<p><strong>Child, Lee. <u>Gone Tomorrow.</u> [F Child] </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again?</p>

<p><strong>Child, Lee. Jack Reacher series. </strong><br />
October 2007: Summer Picks<br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading</p>

<p><strong>Clark, Taylor. <u>Starbucked: A Double Tall Tale of Caffeine, Commerce, and Culture</u>. </strong><br />
January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore</p>

<p><strong>Coelho, Paul. <u>Alchemist.</u> [F Coelho] </strong><br />
October 2006: Too good to miss</p>

<p><strong>Coelho, Paul. <u>By the River Piedra</u>. </strong><br />
October 2007: Summer Picks</p>

<p><strong>Coelho, Paul. <u>The Devil and Miss Prym.</u> [F Coelho] </strong><br />
October 2007: Summer Picks</p>

<p><strong>Coelho, Paul. <u>Veronika Decides to Die.</u> </strong><br />
October 2007: Summer Picks</p>

<p><strong>Collins, Suzanne. <u>Hunger Games</u>. [F Collins] </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is Here Again?</p>

<p><strong>Connolly, John. <u>The Book of Lost Things.</u> </strong><br />
January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore</p>

<p><strong>Connor, James. <u>Kepler's Witch: an Astronomer's Discovery of Cosmic Order amid Religious War, Political Intrigue, and the Heresy Trial of his Mother</u>. [B K44co] </strong><br />
May 2007: Summer - Ready, Set, Read</p>

<p><strong>Cox, Beverly and Martin Jacobs. <u>Spirit of the Harvest: North American Indian Cooking</u>. [BLC 641.59 C83] </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again?</p>

<p><strong>Cox, Lynne. <u>Swimming to Antarctica.</u> [797.2 C832] </strong><br />
October 2006: Too good to miss</p>

<p><strong>Crawford, Matthew. <u>Shop Class As Soulcraft: An Inquiry Into the Value of Work</u>. [331 C85] </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks.</p>

<p><strong>Dallas, Sandra. <u>Tallgrass</u>. [F Dallas] </strong><br />
March 2006: Spring Break Reads </p>

<p><strong>Davenport, Kiana. <u>House of Many Gods</u>. [HC F Davenport] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break</p>

<p><strong>Diaz, Junot. <u>Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao</u>. [F Diaz] </strong><br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks)<br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break.</p>

<p><br />
<strong>Dick, Philip. <u>The Man in the High Castle.</u> </strong><br />
October 2007: Summer Picks</p>

<p><strong>Didion, Joan. <u>The Year of Magical Thinking</u>. [B D563] </strong><br />
April 2006: Summer Reading Suggestions<br />
May 2007: Summer - Ready, Set, Read</p>

<p><br />
<strong>Edwards, Kim. <u>Memory Keeper's Daughter</u>. [F Edwards] </strong><br />
October 2007: Summer Picks</p>

<p><strong>Egan, Timothy. <u>Worst Hard Time</u>. [338.1 Eg1] </strong><br />
December 2006: Christmas Wish List - Item 1 - Time to read!</p>

<p><strong>Eggers, Dave. <u>What is the What.</u> [F Eggers] </strong><br />
December 2006: Christmas Wish List - Item 1 - Time to read!</p>

<p><strong>Enger, Leif. <u>Peace Like a River.</u> [F Enger] </strong><br />
March 2006: Spring Break Reads </p>

<p><strong>Finkel, David. <u>The Good Soldiers.</u> </strong><br />
January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore</p>

<p><strong>Follett, Ken. <u>The Pillars of the Earth.</u> [F Follett] </strong><br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading</p>

<p><strong>Follett, Ken. <u>World Without End</u> [F Follett] </strong><br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks)</p>

<p><strong>Frazier, Charles. <u>Thirteen Moons.</u> </strong><br />
October 2007: Summer Picks</p>

<p><strong>French, Tana. <u>In the Woods</u>.</strong> <br />
May 2009: Summer is here again?</p>

<p><strong>Friedman, Thomas L. <u>World is Flat</u>. [303.4 F91] </strong><br />
October 2006: Too good to miss</p>

<p><strong>Gavalda, Anna. <u>Hunting and Gathering </u>[F Gavalda] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong>Gladwell, Malcolm. <u>Outliers: The Story of Success</u>. [302 G450] </strong><br />
March 2009: Summer is here again?</p>

<p><strong>Green, George Dawes. <u>Ravens</u>. </strong><br />
January 2010: February - Good Ready Galore</p>

<p><strong>Green, John. <u>Looking for Alaska.</u> [F Green] </strong><br />
October 2007: Summer Picks</p>

<p><strong>Grisham, John. <u>The Appeal</u>. [F Grisham] </strong><br />
March 2006: Spring Break Reads</p>

<p><strong>Gruen, Sara. <u>Water for Elephants</u>. [F Gruen] </strong><br />
March 2006: Spring Break Reads<br />
October 2007: Summer Picks<br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong>Guterson, David. <u>The Other</u>. [F Guterson] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong>Hampl, Patricia. <u>The Florist's Daughter</u>. </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks</p>

<p><strong>Hansen, Ron. <u>Mariette in Ecstasy.</u> </strong><br />
January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore</p>

<p><strong>Harrison, Jim. <u>In Search of Small Gods</u>.</strong> <br />
May 2009: Summer is Here Again? </p>

<p><strong>Hemmings, Kaui Hart. <u>The Descendants</u>. [HC F Hemmings] </strong><br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer</p>

<p><strong>Hirsi Ali, Ayaan. <u>Infidel</u>.[B H613] </strong><br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks)</p>

<p><strong>Hogan, Erin. <u>Spiral Jetta</u>. </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks</p>

<p><strong>Holthe, Tess Uriza. <u>When the Elephants Dance</u>. [F Holthe] </strong><br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading.</p>

<p><strong>Hosseini, Khaled. <u>Kite Runner.</u> [F Hosseini] </strong><br />
March 2006: Spring Break Reads <br />
October 2006: Too good to miss<br />
May 2007: Summer - Ready, Set, Read</p>

<p><strong>Ilibagiza, Immaculee. <u>Left to Tell</u>. </strong><br />
May 2007: Summer - Ready, Set, Read</p>

<p><strong>Iweala, Uzodinma. <u>Beasts of No Nation.</u> [F Iweala] </strong><br />
April 2006: Summer Reading Suggestions</p>

<p><strong>Jones, Edward P. <u>Known World</u>. [F Jones] </strong><br />
October 2007: Summer Picks</p>

<p><strong>Kamara, Mariatu with Susan McClelland. <u>The Bite of the Mango.</u> [B K123] </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks.</p>

<p><strong>Keillor, Garrison. <u>Liberty.</u> </strong><br />
January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore</p>

<p><strong>Kent, Rose. <u>Kimchi and Calamari</u>. [BLC - Kent, Rose] </strong><br />
October 2009:Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks</p>

<p><strong>Kearns-Goodwin, Doris. <u>Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln. </u>[BL63go]</strong><br />
Spring Break Reads (2008 picks)</p>

<p><strong>Kidd, Sue Monk. <u>Mermaid Chair.</u> [F Kidd] </strong><br />
December 2006: Christmas Wish List - Item 1 - Time to read!</p>

<p><strong>Kindl, Patrice. <u>Owl in Love</u>. [F Kindl] </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks</p>

<p><strong>King, Stephen. <u>The Stand. </u>[F King] </strong><br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks)</p>

<p><strong>King, Stephen. <u>Under the Dome.</u> [F King] </strong><br />
January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore</p>

<p><strong>Kittle, Katrina. <strong><u>Two Truths and a Lie</u></strong>. </strong><br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks) </p>

<p><strong>Klee, Paul. <u>Diaries of Paul Klee, 1898-1918</u>. </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again?</p>

<p><strong>Klosterman, Chuck. <u>Downtown Owl.</u> [F Klosterman] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong>Kolbert, Elizabeth. <u>Field Notes from a Catastrophe: Man, Nature, and Climate Change.</u> [363.7 K83] </strong><br />
October 2007: Summer Picks</p>

<p><strong>Kooser, Ted. <u>Delights & Shadows</u>. [811 K833] </strong><br />
May 2007: Summer - Ready, Set, Read</p>

<p><strong>Korelitz, Jean Hanff. <u>Admission</u>. [F Korelitz] </strong><br />
February 2010 - Good Reads Galore</p>

<p><strong>Kostova, Elizabeth. <u>The Historian. </u>[F Kostova] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong>Krakauer, Jon. <u>Where Men Win Glory.</u> [B T462] </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks</p>

<p><strong>Kundera, Milan. <u>Immortality</u>.</strong> <br />
May 2009: Summer is here again? </p>

<p><strong>Lahiri, Jhumpa. <u>Interpreter of Maladies</u>. [F Lahiri] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong>Lahiri, Jhumpa. <u>Unaccustomed Earth.</u> [F Lahiri] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong>Lamb, Wally. <u>The Hour I First Believed.</u> </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong>Larson, Erik. <u>Devil in the White City</u>. [364.1 L32d] </strong><br />
March 2006: Spring Break Reads</p>

<p><strong>Larsson, Stieg. <u>The Girl Who Played With Fire</u>. </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks.</p>

<p><strong>Larsson, Stieg. <u>The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo</u>. </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again?</p>

<p><strong>Laudan, Rachel. <u>The Food of Paradise: Exploring Hawai'i's Culinary Heritage.</u> [HC 641.5 L36]</strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong>Layden, Joe. <u>The Last Great Flight</u>. </strong><br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading</p>

<p><strong>Lee, Chang-rae. <u>A Gesture Life.</u> [F Lee] </strong><br />
May 2007: Summer-Ready, Set, Read</p>

<p><strong>Lee, Chang-rae. <u>The Surrendered</u>. </strong><br />
February 2010 - Good Reads Galore</p>

<p><strong>Lee, Jennifer 8. <u>The Fortune Cookie Chronicles</u>. [641.595 L512]</strong><br />
Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks</p>

<p><strong>LeGuin, Ursula. <u>The Left Hand of Darkness.</u> [F LeGuin] </strong><br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading</p>

<p><strong>Lehane, Dennis. <u>Shutter Island.</u> [F Lehane] </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks</p>

<p><strong>Lynch, Jim. <u>The Highest Tide.</u> [F Lynch] </strong><br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks) </p>

<p><strong>Markham, <u>Beryl. West with the Night</u>. [B M34] </strong><br />
October 2006: Too good to miss</p>

<p><strong>Martel, Yann. <u>Life of Pi.</u> [F Martel] </strong><br />
December 2006: Christmas Wish List - Item 1 - Time to read!</p>

<p><strong>McCarthy, Cormac. <u>All the Pretty Horses</u>. [F McCarthy] </strong><br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks)</p>

<p><strong>McCarthy, Cormac. <u>Road</u>. [F McCarthy] </strong><br />
October 2006: Too good to miss</p>

<p><strong>McCourt, Frank. <u>Teacher Man.</u> [B M135t] </strong><br />
December 2006: Christmas Wish List - Item 1 - Time to read!</p>

<p><strong>McCullough, David. <u>John Adams.</u> [B Ad12m] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong>McDougall, Christopher. <u>Born to Run</u>. [796.4 M14] </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff reads</p>

<p><strong>Merwin, W. S. <u>Rain in the Trees: Poems by W. S. Merwin.</u> [811 M553r] </strong><br />
October 2006: Too good to miss</p>

<p><strong>Michaelis, David. <u>Schulz and Peanuts.</u> [B Sch82m] </strong><br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading</p>

<p><strong>Miller, Neil. <u>Out of the Past: Gay and Lesbian History from 1869 to the Present</u>. </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break.</p>

<p><strong>Moore, Alan. <u>Watchmen</u>. [F Moore] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong>Mortenson, Greg and David Oliver Relin. <u>Three Cups of Tea: One Man's Mission to Fight Terrorism and Build Nations - One School at a Time.</u> [371.8 M84] </strong><br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks)</p>

<p><strong>Mueenuddin, Daniyal. <u>In Other Rooms, Other Wonders</u>. </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again? </p>

<p><strong>Murphy, Dervia. <u>Full Tilt: Ireland to India with a Bicycle.</u> </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again? </p>

<p><strong>Nafisi, Azar. <u>Reading Lolita in Tehran.</u> [B N13] </strong><br />
October 2006: Too good to miss</p>

<p><strong>Nazario, Sonia. <u>Enrique's Journey</u>. [305.23 N23] </strong><br />
May 2007: Summer - Ready, Set, Read<br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer</p>

<p><strong>Obama, Barak. <u>The Audacity of Hope</u>. [PUN 973 Ob1] </strong><br />
May 2007: Summer - Ready, Set, Read</p>

<p><strong>Obama, Barak. <u>Dreams From My Father</u>. [305.8 Ob1] </strong><br />
October 2007: Summer Picks</p>

<p><strong>Obrian, Patrick. Aubrey-Martin series </strong><br />
October 2007: Summer Picks</p>

<p><strong>Patchett, Ann. <u>Truth and Beauty.</u> [616.99 P27] </strong><br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks)</p>

<p><strong>Paul, Caroline. East Wind, Rain. [HC F Paul] </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again?</p>

<p><strong>Pelecanos, George. <u>The Way Home</u>. </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again? </p>

<p><strong>Perlstein, Rick. <u>Nixonland.</u> [973.924 P42] </strong><br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading</p>

<p><strong>Perrotta, Tom. <u>The Absinence Teacher</u>.</strong> <br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks) </p>

<p><strong>Pollen, Michael. <u>The Botany of Desire</u>. [306.4 P76] </strong><br />
May 2007: Summer - Ready, Set, Read</p>

<p><strong>Preston, Caroline. <u>Gatsby's Girl</u>. </strong><br />
December 2006: Christmas Wish List - Item 1 - Time to read!</p>

<p><strong>Preston, Richard. <u>Wild Trees: A Story of Passion and Daring</u>. [649.9 P92] </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks</p>

<p><strong>Prose, Francine. <u>A Changed Man.</u> [F Prose] </strong><br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks)</p>

<p><strong>Pullman, Philip. <u>Golden Compass</u>, <u>Subtle Knife</u>, <u>Amber Spyglass</u>. [F Pullman] </strong><br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks)</p>

<p><strong>Radish, Kris. <u>The Elegant Gathering of White Snows</u>. </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again?</p>

<p><strong>Ratey, John. <u>Spark: The Revolutionary New Science of Exercise and the Brain</u>. [612.7 R18] </strong><br />
January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore</p>

<p><strong>Rhodes, Richard. <u>John James Audubon: The Making of an American.</u> [B Au2r] </strong><br />
October 2006: Too good to miss</p>

<p><strong>Robbins, Tom. <u>Another Roadside Attraction.</u> [F Robbins] </strong><br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks)</p>

<p><strong>Robinson, Marilynne.<u> Gilead.</u> [F Robinson]</strong><br />
October 2006: Too good to miss<br />
December 2006: Christmas Wish List - Item 1 - Time to read!</p>

<p><strong>Rodriguez, Debbie. <u>Kabul Beauty School</u>. [305.4 R61] </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks</p>

<p><strong>Roiphe, Anne. <u>Imperfect Lens.</u> [F Roiphe] </strong><br />
December 2006: Christmas Wish List - Item 1 - Time to read!</p>

<p><strong>Ross, Alex. <u>The Rest is Noise: Listening to the Twentieth Century.</u> [780.9 R31]</strong> <br />
March 2008: Spring Break Reads (2008 picks)</p>

<p><strong>Roth, Philip. <u>Everyman</u>. [F Roth] </strong><br />
October 2006: Too good to miss</p>

<p><strong>Ruiz Zafon, Carlos. <u>The Shadow of the Wind.</u> [F Ruiz Zafon] </strong><br />
April 2006: Summer Reading Suggestions</p>

<p><strong>Rushdie, Salman. <u>Enchantress of Florence</u>. [F Rushdie] </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again?</p>

<p><strong>Russell, Karen. <u>St. Lucy's Home For Girls Raised by Wolves</u>. [F Russell] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong>Russell, Mary Doria. <u>The Sparrow.</u> [F Russell] </strong><br />
May 2007: Summer - Ready, Set, Read</p>

<p><strong>Russo, Richard. <u>Straight Man.</u> [F Russo] </strong><br />
December 2006: Christmas Wish List - Item 1 - Time to read!</p>

<p><strong>Safina, Carl. <u>Eye of the Albatross: Visions of Hope and Survival</u> [HC 598.4 Sa1] </strong><br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading</p>

<p><strong>Sandford, John. <u>Rough Country.</u> </strong><br />
February 2010 - Good Reads Galore</p>

<p><strong>Schumm, Bruce A. <u>Deep Down Things: The Breathtaking Beauty of Particle Physics.</u> [539.7 Sch8]</strong><br />
June 2008: Just in Time for Summer Reading</p>

<p><strong>Schuyler, Nina. <u>Painting.</u> [F Schuyler] </strong><br />
October 2006: Too good to miss</p>

<p><strong>Seidel, Frederick. <u>Ooga Booga</u>. </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again?</p>

<p><strong>Seierstad, Asne. <u>The Bookseller of Kabul</u>. [958.1 Se4] </strong><br />
April 2006: Summer Reading Suggestions</p>

<p><strong>Setterfield, Diane. <u>Thirteenth Tale</u>. [F Setterfield] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong>Shaeffer, Frank. <u>Portofino</u>. </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again? </p>

<p><strong>Sheffield, Rob. <u>Love is a Mix Tape.</u> [781.6 Sh3] </strong><br />
May 2007: Summer - Ready, Set, Read</p>

<p><strong>Shreve, Anita. <u>Fortune's Rocks.</u> [F Shreve] </strong><br />
March 2006: Spring Break Reads </p>

<p><strong>Sigall, Bob. <u>Companies We Keep</u>. [HC 338.7 Si2] </strong><br />
December 2006: Christmas Wish List - Item 1 - Time to read!</p>

<p><strong>Simon, Scott. <u>Pretty Birds.</u> [F Simon] </strong><br />
March 2006: Spring Break Reads </p>

<p><strong>Smith, Alexander McCall. # 1 Ladies' Detective Agency.</strong><br />
October 2006: Too good to miss</p>

<p><strong>Smithson, Ryan. <u>Ghosts of War: The True Story of a 19-Year-Old GI</u>. [956.7 Sm62] </strong><br />
January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore</p>

<p><strong>Stockett, Kathryn. <u>The Help.</u> [F Stockett] </strong><br />
January 2010: February 2010 - Good Reads Galore </p>

<p><strong>Strout, Elizabeth. <u>Olive Kitteridge.</u> [F Strout] </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks.</p>

<p><strong>Taylor, Edmund. <u>Fall of the Dynasties: The Collapse of the Old Order, 1905-1922</u>. [940.2 T21] </strong><br />
October 2006: Too good to miss</p>

<p><strong>Thaler, Richard A. and Cass R. Sunstein. <u>Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth, and Happiness.</u> </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again?</p>

<p><strong>Tropper, Jonathan. <u>This Is Where I Leave You</u>. </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks</p>

<p><strong>Tsujimoto, Joe. <u>Morningside Heights: New York Stories</u>. [F Tsujimoto] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break.</p>

<p><strong>Ung. Loung. <u>First They Killed My Father: A Daughter of Cambodia Remembers.</u> [959.6 Un3] </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks</p>

<p><strong>Walls, Jeanette. <u>The Glass Castle</u>. [362.82 W15] </strong><br />
May 2007: Summer - Ready, Set, Read<br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks</p>

<p><strong>Weir, Alison. <u>The Six Wives of Henry VIII</u> [942.05 W43] </strong><br />
May 2009: Summer is here again?</p>

<p><strong>Weisman, Alan. <u>The World Without Us</u>. [304.2 W43] </strong><br />
March 2006: Spring Break Reads</p>

<p><strong>Winchester, Simon. <u>The Professor and the Madman</u>. [423 W72] </strong><br />
March 2006: Spring Break Reads</p>

<p><strong>Wood, Patricia. <u>Lottery </u>[F Wood] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong>Wouk, Herman. <u>Don't Stop the Carnival.</u> </strong><br />
October 2007: Summer Picks</p>

<p><strong>Wroblewski, David. <u>The Story of Edgar Sawtelle</u>. [F Wroblewski] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?</p>

<p><strong>Yang, Gene. <u>American Born Chinese</u>. [F Yang] </strong><br />
October 2009: Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks</p>

<p><strong>Zusak, Marcus. <u>Book Thief </u>[F Zusak] </strong><br />
December 2008: What can I read over Winter Break?<br />
</p>]]>
        
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>February 2010 - Good Reads Galore!</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/2010/01/post.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/MT/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=10/entry_id=6238" title="February 2010 - Good Reads Galore!" />
    <id>tag:iws.punahou.edu,2010:/punablogs/interesting_things//10.6238</id>
    
    <published>2010-01-29T01:01:32Z</published>
    <updated>2010-02-02T21:34:38Z</updated>
    
    <summary> Stockett, Kathryn. The Help. [on order] Just before Winter Break, I started seeing a lot of references to the book The Help by Kathryn Stockett. I had also finished the last audio book that I had downloaded to my...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Debra Peterson</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Books" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/">
        <![CDATA[<p>     <a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/help.jpg"><img alt="help.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/help-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="120" /></a> <strong>Stockett, Kathryn. <u>The Help</u>. [on order]</strong><br />
Just before Winter Break, I started seeing a lot of references to the book <u>The Help </u>by Kathryn Stockett. I had also finished the last audio book that I had downloaded to my iPod for "reading" as I ran. So I went to audible.com and downloaded <u>The Help</u>. I loved the audio version with the three narrators all represented by a different reader. The story was interesting as Skeeter, a budding writer who is white, decides to write a book about the African American maids that work for her society friends. In Jackson, Mississippi in 1962, this needs to remain secret and is very dangerous for the maids that are telling their stories. Great book. Since returning from break, I have heard others that have enjoyed the print version. Cooke Library has copies on order but if you are interested, you can put your name on the hold list.</p>

<p>This year, I discovered Goodreads (http://www.goodreads.com) which is a social networking site for readers. According to their website, it is "a place for casual readers and bona-fide bookworms alike, Goodreads members recommend books, compare what they are reading, keep track of what they've read and would like to read, form book clubs and much more."  Your comments can be private or shared. Check it out.</p>

<p>Thank you to everybody that contributed to this posting. </p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/admission.jpg"><img alt="admission.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/admission-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="112" /></a> <strong>Korelitz, Jean Hanff. <u>Admission</u> [F Korelitz]</strong><br />
Based on actual experience since the author was a part time reader for Princeton's Office of Admission, <u>Admission</u> is about a Princeton admissions officer, Portia Nathan.  Her personal life is as complicated as the processing of college applications.  The book has a surprise ending, well worth reading to the end.<br />
<strong>-Anne Yamasaki</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/liberty.jpg"><img alt="liberty.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/liberty-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="107" /></a> <strong>Keillor, Garrison. <u>Liberty</u>.</strong><br />
     Just finished this book, even laughed out loud a couple of times which would earn me peculiar looks in a Minnesota cafe. As an ex-Minnesotan from a small town, I have to say Keillor has identified the sui generis nature of small-town Minnesotans. I know these people. I am of these people; fellow Minnesotans who have read the book say, "I know these people. This is our town." <br />
     The story takes place just a few weeks before the Lake Wobegon annual Fourth of July parade, the town's big hurrah. Clint Bunsen, chairman of the committee has evolved the parade from being a procession of antique tractors driven by Norwegian bachelor farmers to something that CNN wants to cover. Unfortunately, Clint is going through late male menopause, wants to escape his life, his wife, and his town and flee to California with voluptuous Miss Liberty, Angelica Pflame. Keillor's homespun humor, deadpan philosophy, and pretty accurate characterizations of Minnesota archetypes makes this a pleasurable read. You betcha.<br />
<strong>-Steve Wagenseller</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/good_soldiers.jpg"><img alt="good_soldiers.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/good_soldiers-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="120" /></a> <strong>Finkel, David. <u>The Good Soldiers</u></strong><br />
Pulitzer-prize winning journalist David Finkel follows a battalion of soldiers to Iraq in 2007 during America's "surge" to bring peace and stability to that country. "The Good Soldiers" is riveting and heartbreaking as the soldiers, many 18 and 19 years old, square off against a an enemy who is largely invisible. Finkel takes you inside the soldiers' experience, creating a vivid, visceral portrait of war and its aftermath. The writing is top-notch, the story unforgettable.<br />
<strong>-Carlyn Tani</strong><br />
 <br />
<a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/surrendered.jpg"><img alt="surrendered.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/surrendered-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Lee, Chang-rae. <u>The Surrendered</u>. [on order] </strong><br />
A haunting, beautifully written novel that traces the lives of two survivors of the Korean War: June Han, whose entire family was killed in the conflict; and Hector Brennan, a young American GI she befriends at a missionary-run orphanage. Weaving back and forth in time, the story delves into how June and Hector's lives intersect around the figure of Sylvie Tanner, a young missionary wife, and the transgressions that follow. The novel has great urgency and passion, with wartime scenes that are arresting and emotionally fraught.<br />
<strong>-Carlyn Tani</strong><br />
<em><strong>Note:</strong> Carlyn was reading an uncorrected proof that Chang-rae sent her. The book will not be released until March 9, 2010. Cooke Library does have copies on pre-order. Deb</em></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/book%20of%20lost%20things.jpg"><img alt="book%20of%20lost%20things.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/book%20of%20lost%20things-thumb.jpg" width="77" height="120" /></a> <strong>Connolly, John. <u>The Book of Lost Things</u>.</strong><br />
I just read The book of Lost things by John Connelly-  A coming of age story seen through familiar fairly tales-  dark and exciting - but a good look at the literary experience -  <br />
<strong>-Joshua Hayashi</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/ghosts.jpg"><img alt="ghosts.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/ghosts-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Smithson, Ryan. <u>Ghosts of War: The True Story of a 19-Year Old GI</u>. [956.7 Sm62]</strong><br />
This Ryan's story.  He calls himself a true "GI Joe Schmoe," and he describes his journey to and through Iraq and back home in personal with an eye for rich detail that made me laugh out loud a few times and quietly weep many times.  In the end, his one soldiers tale has changed my understanding of what it means to go to war.  I highly recommend it, but will warn that I am biased by having never been in the armed forces.  My other big caveat, perhaps this is a book that guys will enjoy more than women, I haven't compared my impression with anyone else's.<br />
<strong>-Jamey Clarke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/await.jpg"><img alt="await.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/await-thumb.jpg" width="78" height="120" /></a> <strong>Chaon, Dan. <u>Await Your Reply</u></strong><br />
The reader follows three different stories about people who live lives of deceit.  There is a boy who fakes his death so he can start life anew with his "real" father, a girl who runs away with her high school history teacher who may or may not be who he says he is, and a brother who becomes obsessed with locating his long lost schizophrenic brother.  I found each story to be equally interesting, and then about half way through the novel, I realized all the stories were going to connect. When they did, my mind was somewhat blown.<br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/mariette.jpg"><img alt="mariette.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/mariette-thumb.jpg" width="78" height="120" /></a> <strong>Hansen, Ron. <u>Mariette in Ecstasy</u></strong><br />
My kind English department Secret Santa gave me this short novel about a novitiate to a convent in upstate New York in 1906.  Mariette experiences God's presence so directly and so intensely that she begins to bleed from her palms and feet.  Some treat her as a saint, and others treat her as a charlatan.  As a reader I was never quite sure what to believe. Was she crazy? Was she confusing sexual longing for religious fervor? Was she genuinely touched by God's hand?  The story moves swiftly, and in certain ways these questions are resolved. In other ways the questions still are with me after I finished the book, but I choose to believe that the ambiguity is intentional on the part of the author. The writing is beautiful and the characters are memorable.<br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/ravens.jpg"><img alt="ravens.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/ravens-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="107" /></a> <strong>Green, George Dawes. <u>Ravens</u></strong><br />
A dysfunctional Southern family wins millions and millions of dollars in the Georgia State Lottery. A psychotic bully and his partner in crime (who I will admit comes across to my reading mind as both psychotic and sympathetic) scheme to extort half of the winnings from the family.  Mayhem, comedy, chaos, and philosophical musings ensue.<br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/rough%20country.jpg"><img alt="rough%20country.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/rough%20country-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Sandford, John. <u>Rough Country</u></strong><br />
Okay. You either read the kind of books they sell by the checkout line at the supermarket or you don't. If you do, then this is a really good one.  A charming, bass fishing, indie-rock-loving police detective named Virgil is reluctantly pulled from vacation to investigate the murder of an advertising executive at an all female love farm in the Minnesota North Woods. Suspects include a Sapphic country singer, a sewage company entrepreneur, and a randy lifeguard.<br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/dome.jpg"><img alt="dome.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/dome-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>King, Stephen. <u>Under The Dome</u> [on order]</strong><br />
I read this 1000+ page novel in two and a half days.  The pages turn themselves.  A small town in Maine is trapped under an invisible dome.  Half the story involves attempts to fight the supernatural forces that have caused the dome to appear, and the other half involves attempts to fight the dark forces of human nature that manifest during disaster.  This is pure Stephen King fantasy, but it also read to me as a riff on life in post-9/11, post-Katrina America. That said, it's more of a ripping yarn than anything else, but it did stay with me, and it did get me thinking.  The entire story is compelling, but I thought to myself that if the author didn't provide a good explanation for the appearance of the dome, I was going to be disappointed. Thankfully, when the explanation came, I was completely surprised and completely satisfied.<br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/childrens.jpg"><img alt="childrens.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/childrens-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="120" /></a> <strong>Byatt, A.S. <u>The Children's Book</u></strong><br />
I've read this 600+ page novel for two and a half weeks, and I am still barely half way through with it. This is a slow read, at least for me, but as I tell my students, slow isn't always bad.  The book follows the fortunes of a family in England during the late 1800s. An author of children's fantasy stories agrees to allow a talented orphan boy to come live with her family.  At varying points in the novel, the story follows the orphan, the author, the author's children, the orphan's sister, and a handful of other characters.  We travel through history with references to the trial of Oscar Wilde, the Dreyfus Affair, and other significant events of the times.  The narrative is occasionally interrupted by the actual fantasy stories created by the fictional author.  The novel is getting me to think about how no one in any family tells the story of their upbringing in the same way. It makes me think about how personal history affects world history and how world history affects personal history.  It has me considering how fiction grows out of reality, and it speaks to how impossible it is to hide the parts of family life that we might want to keep hidden.  It's a slow read because it asks me to savor every page.  <br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/city.jpg"><img alt="city.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/city-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Benioff, David. <u>City of Thieves</u>.[F Benioff]</strong><br />
A page turning grandfather's story about surviving WWII in Russia.<br />
<strong>-Darcy Iams</strong></p>

<p><em><strong>Comment:</strong> I also really enjoyed reading <u>City of Thieves</u>. The book is about a young boy's adventure during the siege of Leningrad during WWII. That said, I did not expect the humorous touches. Don't get me wrong - there are plenty of grim events described by the main character, Lev. But when Lev and Kolya are sent on an impossible mission, their interaction brings touches of humor to the situation.<br />
<strong>-Deb</strong></em></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/spark.jpg"><img alt="spark.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/spark-thumb.jpg" width="77" height="120" /></a> <strong>Ratey, John. <u>Spark: The Revolutionary New Science of Exercise and the Brain</u>. [612.7 R18]</strong><br />
I used to kvetch about mandatory K-12 PE and the way that undesirable sports activities inevitably eroded my hard-earned GPA.  A klutz in comparison to my Varsity-letter decorated classmates, I was the girl who lobbed tennis balls over the court walls, not because I was deliberately evading P.E.--that would've entailed way too much hand-eye coordination on my part--but because of simple misfires.  Yet, I grudgingly admit that over the years, I began loving physical exertion, especially when I was allowed to elect my own exercise regimen, whether it was cartwheeling across a balance beam, striking the "Warrior Dancer" asana in yoga, or mastering Shotokan karate kata.  I also discovered early that I had a talent for long-distance running and relished the easy fluid meditation of running through the streets of Manoa and Makiki and St. Louis Heights in the early morning hours. Ironically, I, the high school klutz, discovered my inner athlete in college and graduate school.  My earlier struggles with coordination, as if by magic, ceased, and I found that that a steady daily diet of running, swimming, dance, and yoga provided a welcome respite from daily stress and academic pressures; if anything, I felt more grounded and sharper, simply by making time to exercise.  Turns out that my alma mater's staunch conviction, echoing the Greek classical principle of "sound mind, sound body," was absolutely founded in truth: research that's borne out by John Ratey's excellent book.</p>

<p>Ratey's <u>Spark: The Revolutionary New Science of Exercise and the Brain </u>is the most fascinating and inspiring text I've perused in a long spell: a must-read for educators and anyone who's interested in optimizing their holistic health and cognitive resources, decreasing stress, and staving off mental, as well as overall physical degeneration (that's everyone, right?).  An associate clinical professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, Ratey examines the myriad benefits that exercise has on cognition, summarized here. <br />
Exercise:<br />
1. Strengthens the cardiovascular system, creating less strain on the body's and brain's blood vessels.  It helps neurogenesis, as well as counteracts vascular damage.<br />
2. Regulates fuel. Insulin levels drop with aging, creating waste products in cells that damage blood vessels, which then increase stroke risk.  Exercise helps the body's efficiency.<br />
3. Reduces obesity.<br />
4. Elevates stress threshold: while some cortisol, a neurotransmitter released during stress, is good, chronic overload is deleterious and triggers cell death.<br />
5. Lifts mood. Neurotransmitters, neurotrophins, and connectivity shore up the hippocampus against atrophy associated with depression and anxiety.  Elevated mood also reduces one's chances of developing dementia.<br />
6. Boosts immune system by rallying immune systems antibodies and T cells.  Lack of activity poses the greatest risk factor for cancer.<br />
7. Fortifies bones, reducing osteoporosis risk.<br />
8. Boosts motivation by counteracting the natural decline of dopamine.<br />
9. Fosters neuroplasticity.  Building a strong brain guards agains neurodegenerative disease.  Moving the body also elevates the supply of neurotrophic factors necessary for neuroplasticity and neurogenesis, as well.  Furthermore, aerobic exercise further strengthens connections between brain cells, creating more synapses, causing stem cell division, and forming more functional neurons in the hippocampus.<br />
10. If combined with cognitive challenge, helps to build neural networks.  In moderation, the stress created by aerobic physical exertion, followed by mental/intellectual stimulation, is beneficial.  Hence, one could reasonably expect students' classroom performance and mental acuity to increase, if P.E. was a regular part of their daily school curriculum; it'd be particularly optimal if P.E. was scheduled first thing in the morning.</p>

<p>I strongly recommend Ratey's book.  Provocative, it may well transform the way you teach, view exercise and overall health, and change your--and others'--lives.<br />
<strong>-Lara Cowell</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/starbucked.jpg"><img alt="starbucked.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/starbucked-thumb.jpg" width="77" height="120" /></a> <strong>Clark,Taylor. <u>Starbucked: A Double Tall Tale of Caffeine, Commerce, and Culture</u></strong><br />
Long ago, in a verdant valley not so far away, dwelt a small coffeehouse located in a small suburban strip mall.  Though its daily brew was admittedly acrid, Coffee Manoa nevertheless created a haven.  Kathy, the owner/head barista, knew everyone by name, greeting customers with warm aloha, and the locale was perpetually blessed by double rainbows arcing above the tangle of aerial cables, the then-KC Drive Inn, and the slick, inky, oil-slicked concrete expanse of the Manoa Marketplace parking lot. There, eccentric poets, artists, professors, poor students, up-and-coming folk musicians, counter-culture holdovers, and caffeine junkies alike held court, recited Proust, debated philosophical issues, played endless games of chess, and lingered at the outdoor tables for hours, long after the last orts of scone had been fed to the ravenous doves and the espresso drained to the lees, without fear of expulsion from Eden.    And then, one day, Starbucks moved in on the corner of East Manoa and Huapala, a site haunted by businesses past: Bank of America, and before that, Manoa Chop Suey.  Coffee Manoa shuttered its windows, and the neighborhood was never quite the same after that... </p>

<p>Despite its decidedly mixed critical reviews, I found Taylor Clark's <u>Starbucked: A Double Tall Tale of Caffeine, Commerce, and Culture </u>an addictive, fun, and fast read.  Clark chronicles the rise of legendary corporate giant Starbucks: how it built its expansive, international empire of clean, well-lighted coffeehouses and became those popular, yet simultaneously despised purveyors of tasteful music, pandering to high-maintenance no-dairy, double-venti caramel frappucino drinkers.  He also documents the social history of coffee and America's consumption of the glorious bean, as well as ponders the ethical quagmire surrounding the economics of coffee (if you buy Fair Trade, can you drink your morning brew, sans guilt?)  Clark also offers some provocative tidbits: contrary to popular conspiracy notions that Starbucks single-handedly deals death-blows to small, mom-and-pop cafes like Coffee Manoa, the caffeine mogul's ubiquitous presence actually increases sales at competitor coffeehouses, something you might've already surmised, taking a gander at the brisk action happening at the Manoa branch of Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf, just a stone's throw from the aforementioned Starbucks.  So grab a cuppa joe, and start reading.<br />
<strong>-Lara Cowell</strong></p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/2009/10/fall_2009_faculty_and_staff_pi.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/MT/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=10/entry_id=5834" title="Fall 2009 faculty and staff picks" />
    <id>tag:iws.punahou.edu,2009:/punablogs/interesting_things//10.5834</id>
    
    <published>2009-10-09T18:48:51Z</published>
    <updated>2009-10-15T01:52:39Z</updated>
    
    <summary>I was drawing a blank when I was trying to think of my own book choices for this entry. Then I had a request from a teacher for recommendations for free-choice reading for her students with the theme of identity...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Debra Peterson</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Books" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/">
        <![CDATA[<p>I was drawing a blank when I was trying to think of my own book choices for this entry. Then I had a request from a teacher for recommendations for free-choice reading for her students with the theme of identity or "who am I". That request combined with the fact that I just read a riveting book (<u>The Bite of the Mango</u>) reminded me of the following biographies of individuals that have been shaped by their experiences in war-torn countries. The subject is grim but they all show the resilience and courage shown by individuals facing difficult situations.</p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/kamara_bite.jpg"><img alt="kamara_bite.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/kamara_bite-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="120" /></a> <strong>Kamara, Mariatu with Susan McClelland. <u>The Bite of the Mango</u>. 2008. [B K123]</strong><br />
Mariatu is 12 and living in Sierra Leone when her village is attacked by heavily armed rebel soldiers. She is kidnapped and tortured and then child soldiers are ordered to cut off both her hands before leaving her. Be forewarned - I read this book in one sitting. For a fiction book from the point of view of a boy soldier, read <strong>Uzodinma Iweala's <u>Beasts of No Nation</u>. [Fic Iweala]</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/ung_first.jpg"><img alt="ung_first.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/ung_first-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="119" /></a> <strong>Ung, Loung. <u>First They Killed My Father: A Daughter of Cambodia Remembers</u>. 2000. [959.6 Un3]</strong><br />
Loung was the child of a high-ranking government official in Phnom Penh. When she was five, her family fled Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge army in April of 1975. They moved from village to village hiding their former life of privilege. Loung's story of survival still haunts me long after I read the book.</p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/bok_escape.jpg"><img alt="bok_escape.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/bok_escape-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="114" /></a> <strong>Bok, Francis.<u> Escape From Slavery: The True Story of My Ten Years in Captivity - and My Journey to Freedom in America</u>. 2003. [305.5 B63]</strong><br />
Seven-year-old Francis was captured by Arab raiders in southern Sudan. For ten years, he lived as a slave until he finally escaped after two other aborted escape attempts. He persevered through prison and refugee camps until finally being granted passage to America. <strong><u>What is the What</u> by Dave Eggers</strong> is a novel that tells a similar story of a refugee from the Sudanese Civil War. <strong>[F Eggers]</strong></p>

<p>Read on for recommendations from other faculty and staff - hopefully not all grim!<br />
<strong>-Deb Peterson</strong></p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/larsson_girl.jpg"><img alt="larsson_girl.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/larsson_girl-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="117" /></a> <strong>Larsson, Stieg. <u>The Girl Who Played With Fire</u>. 2009. </strong><br />
This is the second in a three part series and the sequel to <u>The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo</u>. Now deceased, the author was an editor at a prestigious Swedish magazine, and he writes about the world of crime and reportage in urban Sweden. This grim but compelling fictional story follows the murder of two reporters who were about to publish an expose involving corrupt policemen and the modern day sex slave trade.  The title character is the same socially crippled and brilliant detective he featured in his first book. This is a good mystery with overtones of social commentary, lots of violence, and a couple of visits to Ikea. Seriously.<br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/crawford_shop.jpg"><img alt="crawford_shop.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/crawford_shop-thumb.jpg" width="78" height="120" /></a> <strong>Crawford, Matthew. <u>Shop Class As Soulcraft: An Inquiry Into the Value of Work.</u> 2009. [331 C85]</strong><br />
I first saw this reviewed as a "contemporary companion piece to <u>Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance</u>" and that's a good, if reductive, description. Written by a motorcycle mechanic with a PhD in philosophy from University of Chicago, the book asks why American culture puts more value on so-called "white-collar" jobs than on jobs where people actually make things with their hands. The book is about what knowledge is, and Crawford argues that people who make are as knowledgeable as people who manage and plan, but that it's a different kind of knowledge. I thought this was a good book for teachers even though it's written for a general audience. <br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/strout_olive.jpg"><img alt="strout_olive.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/strout_olive-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Strout, Elizabeth. <u>Olive Kitteridge</u>. 2008. [F Strout]</strong> <br />
This Pulitzer Prize winning story collection offers a series of stories about characters in a small town in Maine. Olive Kitteridge appears in each story, at times as the main character, and at times as one whose involvement is brief but pivotal. The book snuck up on me. By the end I'd realized I'd read a novel disguised as a story collection.<br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/lehane_shutter.jpg"><img alt="lehane_shutter.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/lehane_shutter-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="119" /></a> <strong>Lehane, Dennis. <u>Shutter Island</u>. 2003. [on order]</strong><br />
A scary story about missing women and crazy sherrifs in a delapidated insane asylum. This would be a great Halloween read.<br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/krakauer_where.jpg"><img alt="krakauer_where.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/krakauer_where-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Krakauer, Jon. <u>Where Men Win Glory</u>. 2009. [B T462]</strong><br />
The author of <u>Under the Banner of Heaven</u>, <u>Into the Wild</u>, <u>Into Thin Air</u>, and other books has produced another great read. This book profiles Pat Tillman the Arizona Cardinal defensive back who enlisted in the army and was killed by friendly fire in Afghanistan. A chilling, moving, well-researched story ensues.<br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/tropper_this.jpg"><img alt="tropper_this.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/tropper_this-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="120" /></a> <strong>Tropper, Jonathan. <u>This Is Where I Leave You</u>. 2009</strong><br />
Wow. This book was absolutely hilarious. It's raunchy and irreverent, but oddly moving at the same time. I'll say no more. If the above description appeals, just read it without knowing the plot, and if raunchy irreverence is not your thing, that's completely understandable. In that case read Olive Kitteridge!<br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/hampl_florist.jpg"><img alt="hampl_florist.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/hampl_florist-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Hampl, Patricia. <u>The Florist's Daughter</u>. 2007. On order</strong><br />
An elegantly written memoir about her father (mostly), capturing  the midwestern ethos of St. Paul, Minnesota.  It is terse and poetic.  One short scene comes to mind.  Standing before his workbench, as if in meditation,  he stares for one long moment at the colorful mix of cut flowers, arrayed like pick-up sticks.   Hampl says, "he held the belief, amounting to religious faith, that there is an underlying something--a law, rule, an innate recognition of rightness--that exists within matter itself and is understood as elegance.  It is not something we make but something to we reveal--or even acquiesce to when it is revealed to us."  Then in a flash he puts together an impeccably beautiful bouquet, which is also one way to write poetry.<br />
<strong>-Joe Tsujimoto</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/alexie_flight.jpg"><img alt="alexie_flight.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/alexie_flight-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="116" /></a> <strong>Alexie, Sherman. <u>Flight</u>. 2007. [F Alexie]</strong><br />
A troubled Native American teenager is kicked out of one foster home after another and is on the verge of going berserk. What happens to him next is powerful and moving.<br />
<strong>-Susan Clark</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/preston_wild.jpg"><img alt="preston_wild.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/preston_wild-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Preston, Richard. <u>Wild Trees: A Story of Passion and Daring</u>. 2007. [634.9 P92]</strong><br />
This nonfiction book reads almost like a novel, giving a suspenseful and entertaining account of scientists and adventurers who climb giant redwood trees in California.<br />
<strong>-Susan Clark</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/bunce_curse.jpg"><img alt="bunce_curse.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/bunce_curse-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="118" /></a> <strong>Bunce, Elizabeth. <u>A Curse Dark As Gold</u>. 2008. [F Bunce]</strong><br />
Winner of the American Library Association's William C. Morris Debut Award, Elizabeth Bunce's A Curse Dark As Gold is a suspenseful retelling of the Rumplestiltskin fairy tale, set in the late 1700s at the dawning of the Industrial Revolution.  The story opens with a funeral: plucky and headstrong Charlotte Miller, along with her younger sister Rosellen, have been orphaned.  The two daughters are the lone survivors of the Miller clan, the family that runs "Stirwaters", the mill of Shearing Village.  Their family enterprise is plagued by financial troubles, as well as an evil curse which has destroyed generations of male Miller heirs.  In the face of calamity, however, Charlotte not only assumes the mantle of Stirwaters' miller but also the burden of breaking the black magic, once and for all.  A heady brew of fantasy, historical fiction, romance, intrigue, and superstition, this novel delights.<br />
<strong>-Lara Cowell</strong></p>

<p><br />
<a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/yang_american.jpg"><img alt="yang_american.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/yang_american-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="118" /></a> <strong>Yang, Gene. <u>American Born Chinese</u>. 2006. [F Yang]</strong><br />
Although I'm not normally a big fan of graphic novels, I was enthralled with Gene Yang's amazing graphic novel, American Born Chinese, a finalist for the National Book Award-Young People's Literature category and winner of the 2007 Michael L. Printz Award. The book encompasses three different narrative threads, all deftly woven together at the novel's conclusion: the story of the likeable Jin Wang, a Taiwanese immigrant struggling with issues of cultural identity, teenage angst, and girl problems; a mythic strand about the fabled Monkey King of Chinese legend, who, fueled by desire to earn the reverence due to a deity, seeks transcendence from his simian roots; and a surreal third strand about an all-American boy, Danny, who is haunted by a visiting relative, Cousin Chin-Kee, an Asian-stereotype incarnate.  Suitable for young adults, this novel has style, substance, and heart, as well as an uplifting message about self-acceptance.<br />
<strong>-Lara Cowell</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/kindl_owl.jpg"><img alt="kindl_owl.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/kindl_owl-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Kindl, Patrice. <u>Owl in Love</u>. 1993 [F Kindl]</strong><br />
Owl Tycho is a wereowl - girl by day, owl by night - who falls in love with her science teacher.  This novel is touching, funny, and imaginative, and was an ALA Best Book for Young Adults.<br />
<strong>-David Del Rocco</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/kent_kimchi.jpg"><img alt="kent_kimchi.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/kent_kimchi-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Kent, Rose. <u>Kimchi and Calamari</u>. 2007. [BLC - Kent, Rose]</strong><br />
A heartwarming story aimed at grades 6-8.  14-year-old Joseph Calderaro was adopted into an Italian-American family as a baby but is originally from Korea and knows nothing about his Korean heritage.  But one day he needs to write a genealogy report for school.  This would be great for middle school students or parents, especially those who have adopted children from other cultures.<br />
<strong>-David Del Rocco</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/rodriguez_kabul.jpg"><img alt="rodriguez_kabul.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/rodriguez_kabul-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="116" /></a> <strong>Rodriguez, Debbie. <u>Kabul Beauty School</u>. 2007. [305.4 R61]</strong><br />
Debbie Rodriguez  set up a beauty school in Kabul for the women of Afganistan who have very limited ways to make their own money and have independence.  The book is easy to read and captivating.  Debbie shares the lives of the courageous women of Kabul and helps us have hope for their future.<br />
<strong>-Kathleen Thomas</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/lee_fortune.jpg"><img alt="lee_fortune.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/lee_fortune-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="119" /></a> <strong>Lee, Jennifer 8. <u>The Fortune Cookie Chronicles</u>. 2008. [on order]</strong><br />
This book is perfect light entertainment for economy itineraries involving several connecting flights. Jennifer 8. Lee is a New York times reporter who traces the influence of the Chinese restaurant industry in America to disparate elements ranging from Powerball winners to cheap intra-city bus service. The origins and outlook for soy sauce packet producers, Chinese take-out cartons, and fortune cookie manufacturers are detailed. I didn't know what I didn't know about Chinese food in America. An excellent read-and-pass-on book choice for holiday travellers.<br />
<strong>-Malia Ogoshi</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/mcdougall_born.jpg"><img alt="mcdougall_born.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/mcdougall_born-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="120" /></a> <strong>McDougall, Christopher. <u>Born to Run</u>. 2009. [796.4 M14]</strong><br />
This book is about how the author seeks to overcome his injuries and find his "inner" runner. Along the way he meets some members of the Tarahumara Indians of Mexico, a mysterious lone runner called Caballo Blanco and many ultrarunners of various sexes and sizes. I found this book inspiring and well as informative and I am ready to get a pair of Nike Frees and go run 10 miles just for the sheer pleasure of running. Highly recommended to all runners and those thinking about becoming runners. <br />
<strong>-Melanie Killam</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/wall_glass.jpg"><img alt="wall_glass.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/wall_glass-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Walls, Jeannette. <u>The Glass Castle</u>.  2005. [362.82 W15]</strong><br />
A fascinating memoir about a family whose slightly anti-establishment parents keep the group on the move in what seems, at times, like a state of deliberate homelessness.  A remarkable look at the resiliency of children in the face of strange and often difficult circumstances.  This book really made me think about my definition of a family and appropriate parenting parameters because, although the author's experience was worlds away from mine, it wasn't necessarily negative and on some levels, it seemed almost liberating.<br />
<strong>-Chandra Peters </strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/hogan_spiral.jpg"><img alt="hogan_spiral.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/hogan_spiral-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Hogan, Erin. <u>Spiral Jetta</u>.  2008. [On order]</strong><br />
Erin was a classmate of mine here at Punahou.  I remember her from the Speech and Debate team (she was hilarious!).  She writes about her trip across the country, in search of "land art."  She obviously knows much more about art than I could hope to, so she kind of lost me when she started deeply discussing art at points, but her fish-out-of-water approach to the whole experience of traveling from her urban comfort zone in Chicago to the Wild West was fun and readable.  I learned about some cool land art that I'd never known existed, even though I've visited some of the same parts of the West that she talked about.<br />
<strong>-Chandra Peters</strong></p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Summer is here again!?</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/2009/05/summer_is_here_again.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/MT/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=10/entry_id=5468" title="Summer is here again!?" />
    <id>tag:iws.punahou.edu,2009:/punablogs/interesting_things//10.5468</id>
    
    <published>2009-05-27T17:31:22Z</published>
    <updated>2009-05-29T19:01:00Z</updated>
    
    <summary> Collins, Suzanne. Hunger Games. [F Collins] I normally limit my own suggestions to adult fiction for this blog but I have to break the mold this time and suggest a Young Adult fiction title. Good YA fiction also makes...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Debra Peterson</name>
        
    </author>
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/">
        <![CDATA[<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/collins_hunger.jpg"><img alt="collins_hunger.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/collins_hunger-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="120" /></a> <strong>Collins, Suzanne. Hunger Games. [F Collins]</strong></p>

<p>I normally limit my own suggestions to adult fiction for this blog but I have to break the mold this time and suggest a Young Adult fiction title. Good YA fiction also makes great reads for adults. I recently finished reading <strong><u>Hunger Games </u>by Suzanne Collins </strong>and could not put it down. Imagine a combination of <strong><u>The Lottery </u>by Shirley Jackson</strong>, <strong><u>The Giver </u>by Lois Lowry, </strong> and <strong><u>Survivor</u></strong> reality series and you will have a taste of <u>Hunger Games</u>. Katniss lives in a future North America where the rulers of Panem have organized a competition between the twelve districts. Everyone between the ages of 12 and 18 must be entered in a lottery and each district draws two names, a boy and a girl, to be entered into a televised competition where the winner is declared after a battle to the death. Katniss impulsively volunteers after her younger sister's name is drawn. Grim topic but gripping. It's the first part of a promised trilogy so I'm anxiously awaiting number two.</p>

<p>Read on for recommendations from others.</p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/paul_east.jpg"><img alt="paul_east.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/paul_east-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Paul, Caroline. <u>East Wind, Rain</u>. 2006. [HC F Paul]</strong>. <br />
I enjoyed this suspenseful novel based on the true story of a Japanese pilot who crash-landed on Niihau after bombing Pearl Harbor. The isolated residents of Niihau, not knowing that Pearl Harbor was attacked, react in different ways to the pilot. Events unfold unpredictably.<br />
<strong>-Susan Clark</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/kundera_immortality.jpg"><img alt="kundera_immortality.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/kundera_immortality-thumb.jpg" width="78" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Kundera, Milan. <u>Immortality</u></strong>.<br />
This is one of those novels which expands the boundaries of fiction.  Kundera puts past, present and future in a blender, adds real and fictional characters (including himself, Goethe and Hemingway - who converse in heaven) and produces - believe it or not - a very readable novel.  Some of it was over my head, but I couldn't put it down, save for the times I'd pause in amazement at Kundera's cleverness and inventiveness.<br />
<strong>-Jay Seidenstein</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/rushdie_enchantress.jpg"><img alt="rushdie_enchantress.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/rushdie_enchantress-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Rusdie, Salman. <u>Enchantress of Florence</u>. [F Rushie]</strong><br />
Gorgeous writing style allows you to enjoy each sidetrack of this winding narrative as the unknown storyteller in 16th century India tells a tale of adventure from far-off Florence.  Well-crafted as a tale within a tale, the pieces come together by the end to form a delightful story.<br />
A pleasure to read and enjoy, I look forward to discovering more from this author this summer.<br />
<strong>-Tiffany Coke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/atwood_blind.jpg"><img alt="atwood_blind.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/atwood_blind-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Atwood, Margaret. <u>Blind Assassin</u>. [F Atwood]</strong><br />
Another complex plot with a story within a story, Atwood's tale is set closer to our own time and in our own country but the story within pushes farther out into fantasy and even science fiction.  The story begins with one surviving sister trying to understand the suicide of her sibling through her posthumously published novel.  Constant flashbacks flesh out the family relationships as the imaginative tale of a blind assassin weaves in and out of the novel throughout.<br />
It's easy to become completely immersed in this book and to rush through, trying to find out how it ends, however the beauty of the writing makes taking it slow worthwhile.<br />
<strong>-Tiffany Coke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/cox_spirit.jpg"><img alt="cox_spirit.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/cox_spirit-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="104" /></a>  <strong>Cox, Beverly and Martin Jacobs. <u>Spirit of the Harvest:  North American Indian Cooking</u>. [BLC 641.59 C83]</strong><br />
This award-winning cookbook celebrates Native American food and is conveniently divided into regions, such as the Southeast and the Pacific Northwest.  The recipes are not overly complex and the photography is stunning.  This book won both the James Beard Foundation Award and the Julia Child Cookbook Award.<br />
<strong>-David Del Rocco</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/bauer_am.jpg"><img alt="bauer_am.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/bauer_am-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a>  <strong><u>Am I Blue?: Coming Out From the Silence</u>. Edited by Marion Dane Bauer.  [F Am] </strong>Sixteen well-known young adult authors each contribute a short story about a teen who is gay or a teen with a gay parent.  The stories are very varied; some are poignant, some are funny, all of them are quite good.  The title story, Bruce Coville's "Am I Blue," is a very interesting fantasy.  Share this one with your students.  Winner of an ALA (American Libraries association) award for literature.<br />
<strong>-David Del Rocco</strong></p>

<p>Three nonfiction books I enjoyed:<br />
<a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/ariely_predictably.jpg"><img alt="ariely_predictably.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/ariely_predictably-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Ariely, Dan. <u>Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces that Shape Our Decisions.</u> [153.8 Ar4]</strong><br />
<a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/thaler_nudge.jpg"><img alt="thaler_nudge.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/thaler_nudge-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="120" /></a> <strong>Thaler, Richard A. and Sunstein, Cass R. <u>Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth, and Happiness</u>.</strong><br />
<a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/gladwell_outliers.jpg"><img alt="gladwell_outliers.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/gladwell_outliers-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="120" /></a> <strong>Gladwell, Malcolm. <u>Outliers: The Story of Success</u>. [302 G450]</strong></p>

<p>There's a collection of short stories set in India that I also liked:</p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/mueenuddin_in.jpg"><img alt="mueenuddin_in.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/mueenuddin_in-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Mueenuddin, Daniyal. <u>In Other Rooms, Other Wonders</u></strong>.</p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/child_gone.jpg"><img alt="child_gone.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/child_gone-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="120" /></a> <strong>Child, Lee. <u>Gone Tomorrow</u></strong>.<br />
Child has a new Reacher book out: <u>Gone Tomorrow</u>. It's up to his<br />
usual page-turning standard.<br />
<strong>-Bruce Schauble</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/schaeffer_portofino.jpg"><img alt="schaeffer_portofino.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/schaeffer_portofino-thumb.jpg" width="69" height="120" /></a> <strong>Shaeffer, Frank. <u>Portofino</u></strong>. <br />
Last night (well, early early this morning: 1 a.m.)  I finished "Portofino" by Frank Schaefer.  Told from the point of view of a young boy, it's a novel about a family of Presbyterian missionaries who vacation in Italy each year.  The boy, Calvin, narrates his experiences that are honest, funny, poignant and heartbreaking.  It's a frank look at the realities of fallible humans trying to live the perfect life of the Elect.<br />
<strong>-Chandra Peters</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/weir_six.jpg"><img alt="weir_six.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/weir_six-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Weir, Alison. <u>The Six Wives of Henry VIII</u> [942.05 W43]</strong><br />
I'm not quite done with it yet, but I am thoroughly enjoying <u>The Six Wives of Henry VIII </u>by Alison Weir. It's non-fiction and a page-turner.<br />
<strong>-Leela Bilmes Goldstein</strong><br />
<a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/french_in.jpg"><img alt="french_in.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/french_in-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="105" /></a> <strong>French, Tana. <u>In the Woods</u></strong>. <br />
This mystery is set in Ireland and begins with a prologue describing a horrific and unsolved crime which left a young boy clinging to a tree and bleeding. The story jumps ahead thirty years and the boy is now a police detective faced with a similar crime in those same woods. The book stays in the present and focuses on the new murder, but the older, unsolved atrocity never leaves the mind of the detective or the reader. The story is a bit grisly and does not necessarily make one feel good at the end, but I enjoyed it as a psychological thriller that begins as a mystery and ends as more of a character study of a damaged but worthwhile adult. The book kind of reminded me of an Irish version of <u>Mystic River</u>, and if you enjoyed that novel, I imagine you'd enjoy this one.<br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/larsson_girl.jpg"><img alt="larsson_girl.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/larsson_girl-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="119" /></a> <strong>Larsson, Steig. <u>The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo</u></strong>.<br />
Apparently this novel was a huge publishing sensation in Sweden and was the first book of a trilogy. The author died in the past year of a heart attack, sadly, and this book was translated into English and published in this country where it became a best-seller. I heard about it in Entertainment Weekly where Stephen King recommended it as one of the best books of the year. For some (including me) that will be a tantalizing recommendation, and for others that will probably keep them away. Fair enough. This book isn't for everyone, but I enjoyed it a lot. It begins by introducing a journalist who has just gotten himself into some professional trouble. Through plot twists and story machinations, he meets a private detective with tattoos and Asperger's syndrome. Together they are put on the trail of a forty year old murder that happened on a Swedish island where, at the time of the crime, a bridge was collapsed and only a finite group of people could have been suspects. At this point in my summary you are probably either interested or not. If so, I warn you that the book is kind of intense in its depiction of sexual violence, but in my opinion the overall tone of the story unquestionably condemns the violence it describes.<br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/pelecanos_way.jpg"><img alt="pelecanos_way.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/pelecanos_way-thumb.jpg" width="77" height="120" /></a> <strong>Pelecanos, George.<u>The Way Home</u>.</strong><br />
Pelecanos, one of the main writers of the television show "The Wire," knows his way around the crime genre. Unlike some of his other novels, this book is less a mystery than a character-based novel about the affects of crime on a family. In the first part of the story, a teenager rebels against his family and finds himself sentenced to juvenile detention. The story then shows a bit what that experience is like for the character, and then in the last half of the book the person we met as a teenager is grown up and making an attempt to rebuild both his life and his relationship with his father. Just when you think this is an emotional and well-written story about a father and son, a crime does indeed occur late in the novel, and the book wanders back toward the mystery genre in a compelling and page-turning way.<br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/asher_thirteen.jpg"><img alt="asher_thirteen.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/asher_thirteen-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="120" /></a> <strong>Asher, Jay. <u>Thirteen Reasons Why</u>. [F Asher]</strong><br />
My sister and I were shopping for a book for my thirteen year old niece and the well-informed bookseller recommended this one. Apparently it is a big hit in the world of "Young Adult Fiction." In the first chapter of the story, a high school boy finds a box of cassette tapes on his doorstep, and when he listens to the first one he realizes that they have been sent to him by a girl in his class who recently killed herself. He is informed that the tapes will explain why she committed suicide, and he becomes convinced that in some way he is complicit in her death. I read this book on a flight from San Francisco to Honolulu and hardly looked up once from the page. It is compelling. By the time I finished it, however, it made me feel a bit uneasy; I am made slightly uncomfortable by the author's implication that suicide is a logical reaction to teenage mistreatment as I view it more as the tragic result of chronic depression. The fact that I wanted to argue with the author, however, probably means that it is a thought-provoking book. If you liked a book like "The Perks of Being A Wallflower" then you would probably like this one. I don't know if my niece has read this yet, and in a way I kind of don't want her to because I have a certain tendency to view the world with rose colored glasses, and I don't want her to read about the sadness that overcomes some teenagers. My niece's favorite book, however, is "The Lovely Bones," so I think she'd like this one. If you are drawn to the sad teenager genre, this story will probably appeal.<br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/radish_elegant.jpg"><img alt="radish_elegant.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/radish_elegant-thumb.jpg" width="75" height="120" /></a> <strong>Radish, Kris. <u>The Elegant Gathering of White Snows</u>.</strong><br />
A fun beach read for every female who ever wanted to take a walk and find herself.<br />
A great escape for the plane ride to your summer adventure.<br />
<strong>-Gail Peiterson</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/murphy_full.jpg"><img alt="murphy_full.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/murphy_full-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Murphy, Dervla. <u>Full Tilt: Ireland to India with a Bicycle</u>.</strong><br />
Written in 1963, you get a glimpse of what Pakistan and Afghanistan were like "back in the day" through her journal as she suffered through extreme cold in the Himalayas and extreme heat in the desert - all with a very pragmatic, plucky spirit and descriptive admiration of the natural beauty of these areas. There's a wonderful chapter on the Swat Valley which makes me wonder what Murphy is thinking about all that is going on there now. <br />
<strong>-Marian Lyman-Mercereau</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/chernow_hamilton.jpg"><img alt="chernow_hamilton.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/chernow_hamilton-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Chernow, Ron. <u>Alexander Hamilton</u></strong>.<br />
biography/history<br />
<strong>-Shryl Matias</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/klee_diaries.jpg"><img alt="klee_diaries.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/klee_diaries-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="111" /></a> <strong>Klee, Paul. <u>Diaries of Paul Klee, 1898-1918</u></strong>.<br />
art/philosphy/autobiography<br />
<strong>-Shryl Matias</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/seidel_ooga%20booga.jpg"><img alt="seidel_ooga%20booga.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/seidel_ooga%20booga-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="120" /></a> <strong>Seidel, Frederick. <u>Ooga Booga</u>.</strong><br />
poetry<br />
<strong>-Shryl Matias</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/harrison_in.jpg"><img alt="harrison_in.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/harrison_in-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="120" /></a> <strong>Harrison, Jim. <u>In Search of Small Gods</u></strong><br />
poetry<br />
<strong>-Shryl Matias</strong></p>

<p><br />
</p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>What can I read over Winter Break???</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/2008/12/what_can_i_read_over_winter_br.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/MT/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=10/entry_id=4937" title="What can I read over Winter Break???" />
    <id>tag:iws.punahou.edu,2008:/punablogs/interesting_things//10.4937</id>
    
    <published>2008-12-08T19:01:08Z</published>
    <updated>2008-12-18T23:12:40Z</updated>
    
    <summary>As I started gathering my thoughts about the books that I have read and enjoyed lately, I found myself not only coming up with books that I have &quot;read&quot; in the literal sense but also audio books that I have...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Debra Peterson</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Books" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/">
        <![CDATA[<p>As I started gathering my thoughts about the books that I have read and enjoyed lately, I found myself not only coming up with books that I have "read" in the literal sense but also audio books that I have listened to in the past months.</p>

<p>Preparation for the Honolulu Marathon (and just keeping in shape) demands a lot of time spent in solo running. Though I sometimes listen to music, I have discovered that I enjoy taking advantage of the the time and listening to audio books. Here are some of my favorites!</p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/lottery.jpg"><img alt="lottery.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/lottery-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Wood, Patricia. <u>Lottery</u> [F Wood]</strong><br />
Having learned essential life skills from his dedicated grandmother that have helped him overcome his low IQ, Perry finds himself without a caregiver at the age of thirty-one and wins a fortune by playing the lottery, a lucrative windfall that brings him more family than he has ever wanted.</p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/book%20thief.jpg"><img alt="book%20thief.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/book%20thief-thumb.jpg" width="77" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Zusak, Marcus. <u>Book Thief</u>. [F Zusak]</strong><br />
Living with a foster family in Germany during World War II, a young girl struggles to survive her day-to-day trials through stealing anything she can get her hands on, but when she discovers the beauty of literature, she realizes that she has been blessed with a gift that must be shared with others, including the Jewish man hiding in the basement. </p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/thirteenth%20tale.jpg"><img alt="thirteenth%20tale.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/thirteenth%20tale-thumb.jpg" width="75" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Setterfield, Diane. <u>Thirteenth Tale</u>. [F Setterfield]</strong><br />
When her health begins failing, the mysterious author Vida Winter decides to let Margaret Lea, a biographer, write the truth about her life, but Margaret needs to verify the facts since Vida has a history of telling outlandish tales.</p>

<p> <a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/john%20adams.jpg"><img alt="john%20adams.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/john%20adams-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="117" /></a>  <strong>McCullough, David. <u>John Adams</u>. [B Ad12m]</strong><br />
Chronicles the life of America's second president, including his youth, his career as a Massachusetts farmer and lawyer, his marriage to Abigail, his rivalry with Thomas Jefferson, and his influence on the birth of the United States.</p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/oscar%20wao.jpg"><img alt="oscar%20wao.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/oscar%20wao-thumb.jpg" width="78" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Diaz, Junot. <u>Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao.</u> [F Diaz]</strong><br />
Living with an Old World mother and rebellious sister, an urban New Jersey misfit dreams of becoming the next J.R.R. Tolkien and believes that a longstanding family curse is thwarting his efforts to find love and happiness.</p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/interpreter.jpg"><img alt="interpreter.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/interpreter-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Lahiri, Jhumpa. <u>Interpreter of Maladies</u>. [F Lahiri]</strong><br />
A debut collection of short fiction blends elements of Indian traditions with the complexities of American culture in such tales as "A Temporary Matter," in which a young Indian-American couple confronts their grief over the loss of a child, while their Boston neighborhood copes with a nightly blackout.</p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/historian.jpg"><img alt="historian.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/historian-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Kostova, Elizabeth. <u>The Historian</u>. [F Kostova]</strong><br />
Discovering a medieval book and a cache of letters, a motherless American girl becomes the latest in a series of historians, including her late father, who investigate the possible surviving legacy of Vlad the Impaler. I picked this one to read because it is the book that James Kakos chose for his READ poster. (Thanks, James!)</p>

<p>Not enough time to read and do the 60 minutes of exercise that is recommended each day? Try combining the activities by "reading" on the run.</p>

<p><em><strong>Here are recommendations by others. Enjoy your break and read or listen to a great book!</strong></em></p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p> <a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/unaccustomed%20earth.jpg"><img alt="unaccustomed%20earth.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/unaccustomed%20earth-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="119" /></a>  <strong>Lahiri, Jhumpa. <u>Unaccustomed Earth</u>. [F Lahiri]</strong><br />
I have finished a very good book called "Unaccustomed Earth" by Jhumpa Lahiri, author of "The Namesake" and "Interpreter of Maladies." "Earth" is nowhere as good as Interpreter of Maladies but it's still good. The book is a series of unrelated short stories, all dealing with that difficult subject of making cultural negotiations between the old and the new. Characters are caught up in the Americanization process but at the same time, they suffer from guilt in abandoning their traditions. Especially spotlighted are the roles of Indian women who seem willing and eager to assert their independence, especially from male domination, but who must strive to shake off assumptions that Americans hold about them. All in all, this isn't a must read a second time book but it's pretty good.<br />
<strong>-Carol Lee</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/water.jpg"><img alt="water.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/water-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Gruen, Sara. <u>Water for Elephants</u>. [F Gruen]</strong><br />
I just finished Sarah Gruen's Water for Elephants and it was an enjoyable read for several reasons: Her character Jacob Jankowski is very likable; he may be tentative in acting upon his convictions but his heart is in the right place. And the woman he falls in love with, a circus performer by the name of Marlena, is caught up in a marriage without returns for her, especially since her husband is a "paranoid schizophrenic" with erratic mood swings that leave her walking on eggshells. How it all plays out at the end is refreshing; there is happiness for a change, rather than the gloom and doom of so many realistic fiction. But what I most appreciate about this novel is the setting of the big-top circus era. Gruen has certainly done her<br />
research, some of it entertaining, others shocking. Did you know, for instance, that Thomas Edison, in his efforts to devaluate the upcoming research of George Westinghouse, publicly electrocuted stray dogs and cats to prove his point? Edison has just fallen a notch in my book of "Greats." Gruen's weaving of the past and present, and her efforts to navigate between the two by focusing on Jankowski's former big-top circus life and his current issues with growing old lack fluid transmigration, but in the end, I am left satisfied with a happy read. <br />
<strong>-Carol Lee</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/sawtelle.jpg"><img alt="sawtelle.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/sawtelle-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="119" /></a>  <strong>Wroblewski, David. <u>The Story of Edgar Sawtelle.</u> [F Wroblewski]</strong><br />
I'm currently reading The Story of Edgar Sawtelle and I am loving it.  the author is David Wroblewski and I'm too early into the book to give you a blurb.<br />
-Carol Lee</p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/hunting.jpg"><img alt="hunting.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/hunting-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="116" /></a>  <strong>Galvada, Anna. <u>Hunting and Gathering</u>. [on order]</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/hedgehog.jpg"><img alt="hedgehog.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/hedgehog-thumb.jpg" width="77" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Barbery, Muriel. <u>The Elegance of the Hedgehog.</u> [on order]</strong></p>

<p>2 French books that are finally translated in English: "Hunting and Gathering" by Anna Gavalda, and "the elegance of the Hedgehog" by Muriel Barbery. Beautifully written, both have been pure pleasure to my heart and soul.<br />
<strong>-Marie-Christine Jude</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/house.jpg"><img alt="house.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/house-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Davenport, Kiana.  <u>House of Many Gods</u>. [HC F Davenport]</strong> <br />
Very engaging novel about Ana, a Hawaiian girl abandoned by her mother, and Nicolai, a Russian boy whose father dies in Stalin's gulag. Eventually their paths cross in this page-turner.<br />
<strong>-Susan Clark</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/st%20lucys.jpg"><img alt="st%20lucys.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/st%20lucys-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="119" /></a>  <strong>Russell, Karen. <u>St. Lucy's Home For Girls Raised by Wolves.</u> [F Russell]</strong> <br />
Highly imaginative, unusual, and funny short stories. For something different, read this book!<br />
<strong>-Susan Clark</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/other.jpg"><img alt="other.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/other-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="115" /></a>  <strong>Guterson, David. <u>The Other</u>. [F Guterson]</strong><br />
Boyhood friends take two different paths: Neil becomes a teacher and family man, John William becomes a hermit in the wilderness. Thought-provoking reading.<br />
<strong>-Susan Clark</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/food.jpg"><img alt="food.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/food-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="90" /></a>  <strong>Laudan, Rachel. <u>The Food of Paradise: Exploring Hawai'i's Culinary Heritage</u> [HC 641.5 L36]</strong><br />
Ever wonder where loco moco came from originally?    Or about any of the other local dishes so popular in Hawai'i?  This book has all the answers and some terrific recipes as well.  If you're a fan of the local food culture, you'll find this very entertaining and enlightening; just don't read it on an empty stomach because it will surely make you hungry.<br />
<strong>-David Del Rocco</strong> </p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/hula.jpg"><img alt="hula.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/hula-thumb.jpg" width="115" height="115" /></a>  <strong>Berinobis, Sheri 'Iolani Floyd. <u>The Spirit of Hula: Photos and Stories From Around the World</u>. [HC 793.3 B45]</strong><br />
This book is full of beautiful photos and short stories showing how hula has spread far and wide throughout the world.  There is a section on halau hula in Hawai'i, on the mainland in places as diverse as Colorado and Illinois, as well as an international section featuring halau from Europe, Mexico, and Japan.<br />
<strong>-David Del Rocco</strong></p>

<p><strong>Tsujimoto, Joe. <u>Morningside Heights: New York Stories</u>. [F Tsujimoto]</strong><br />
Our friend and colleague has written a thought-provoking and entertaining collection of tales about ... well... being Joe Tsujimoto (or some elegantly crafted facsimile). The author takes the reader on a trip from childhood to adulthood, from Manhattan to Honolulu, from student of the streets to teacher of the elite. An early story in the collection begins with this observation: "Sometimes it's hard to say with any conviction that, like a dream or wish or reverie, something actually happened..."(p17) Morningside Heights reads to me like the<br />
reverie that insists that something happened indeed. <br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/out%20of%20the%20pastl.jpg"><img alt="out%20of%20the%20pastl.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/out%20of%20the%20pastl-thumb.jpg" width="78" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Miller, Neil. <u>Out of the Past: Gay and Lesbian History from 1869 to the Present</u>. </strong><br />
This comprehensive and readable history of gay and lesbian culture begins with the proposition that such history is hard to define because the terms "gay" and "lesbian" are almost certainly<br />
modern inventions, and even to this day, there is debate about whether those words point to a collection of people, a series of behaviors, an affliction to be eradicated, or something else. The author uses his introduction to outline his understanding that from the beginning of human existence there have been people who have been attracted to others of the same sex, and in the first third of the book he reports on the way the perception and classification of such people has changed over time. According to Miller, from 1869 to the present, the modern definition of "gay and lesbian" has evolved to described a specific set of people with a specific history, and the rest of the book reports that history in a way that includes North America, Europe, and Asia. I thought I knew a lot of this stuff, but I was surprised by something in every chapter. I didn't know, for example, that Oscar Wilde travelled from Europe to have brunch with Walt Whitman one morning in Philadelphia. This is a long tome, but I found that it reads like a<br />
fabulous novel.<br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/watchmen.jpg"><img alt="watchmen.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/watchmen-thumb.jpg" width="78" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Moore, Alan. <u>Watchmen</u>. [on order]</strong><br />
I've heard about this comic book ever since it was published in the mid-80's, and though my taste in comics runs more to the snooty graphic-novel memoirs of neurotic adults than to the<br />
pulpy genre-tales of costumed crusaders, I'd been interested in reading this ever since TIME magazine called it one of the essential books of the 20th century. So I checked it out, and it's pretty cool. The story begins with the proposition that all of those costumed super-heroes<br />
really did exist in the 30's, 40's and 50's, and by the 80's they are mostly washed-up, spent, and full of regret. A serial killer begins to kill off these retired heroes, and a tormented masked-man named Rorshach takes it upon himself to figure out what's going on. Add to that a nuclear-enhanced crime fighter named Dr. Manhattan who has been exploited by the CIA and a couple of good love stories, and you'll get the idea of whether or not you'd like this. If it sounds appealing, I can almost guarantee that you'll enjoy it. For what it is, it's unbelievably good, and I can see why people say it reinvented the super-hero comic. I don't know if it's one of the best books of the 20th century, but I do know that I never could have created a book like Watchmen. A movie comes out in May, and it is almost surely doomed to fail. (But who knows?)<br />
-<strong>Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/hour.jpg"><img alt="hour.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/hour-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Lamb, Wally. <u>The Hour I First Believed</u>. </strong><br />
I recently read this book, and kind of liked it, so I thought I'd put it on my list because fans of the author might really enjoy it. I can't say, though, that I fully recommend it. I had never read a book by Wally Lamb but kind of always meant to. Then I heard that this one was about an English teacher and his wife who taught at Columbine High during the massacre, and I became interested in how the author would turn that horrible event into fiction. As harrowing as it is to enter into even a fictional re-creation of a high school shooting, I thought the Columbine section<br />
of the book was the most rewarding to read. Lamb does a good job of using that event to explore the life of a suburban school in the late '90s. His characters are believable, and he got me thinking about why bad things happen to good people (and to bad people). The last five<br />
hundred or so pages of this long book are dedicated to the way the main characters rebuild their lives after the shooting. There is infidelity, accidental death, prison, and pastry baking. I found it all a bit overwhelming and maudlin by the end. It kind of seemed like a soap opera that used a tragic moment from recent history to fuel its plot. I also think he could have thrown in some humor in some places. I mean, I know it's not a funny subject, but every story needs some comic relief. All in all I think it's a good book to read if you know you like Wally Lamb, and if you know you don't necessarily trust the reading taste of a guy who just recommended <u>Watchmen</u>.<br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/owl.jpg"><img alt="owl.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/owl-thumb.jpg" width="78" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Klosterman, Chuck. <u>Downtown Owl</u>. [ordered]</strong><br />
Oh how I love this book. I wolfed down the first three quarters in one seven-hour couch session, went to bed, then finished the rest of it before I got out from under the covers. Klosterman is best known as a music and pop-culture critic, and this is his first novel. He sets the story in a tiny North Dakota town called "Owl" in 1983 and '84. The first pages alert the reader that a fierce blizzard is coming in February, and then he goes back six months and tells you what happened to various townspeople in the days leading up to that storm. The story focuses on three characters. Mitch is a seventeen year old quarter-back who really wants to be normal but can't figure out how. Julia is a 23 year old social studies teacher who just moved from Milwaukee and can't believe how popular she's suddenly become now that she's one of the few young, single women in a tiny town full of bison farmers. Horace is a widower in his seventies with a lot of regret and insight. The chapters alternate among these three voices. The book is compelling, hilarious, sad, and full of references to early '80's metal bands. The cover flap describes it as a cross between "The Last Picture Show" and "Friday Night Lights." That's not a<br />
bad description, but I'd say it's more like a hybrid between "Twin Peaks," "Dazed and Confused" and "Little House on the Prairie."<br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><br />
 </p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Just in Time for Summer Reading</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/2008/06/just_in_time_for_summer_readin.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/MT/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=10/entry_id=4233" title="Just in Time for Summer Reading" />
    <id>tag:iws.punahou.edu,2008:/punablogs/interesting_things//10.4233</id>
    
    <published>2008-06-03T23:30:47Z</published>
    <updated>2008-06-06T00:24:39Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Thanks to everybody who took time out of their busy schedules to send book recommendations. I&apos;m anxious for shorter hours for Summer School to allow extra time to catch up on reading. Right now, I am reading Ken Follett&apos;s Pillars...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Debra Peterson</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Books" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/">
        <![CDATA[<p>Thanks to everybody who took time out of their busy schedules to send book recommendations. I'm anxious for shorter hours for Summer School to allow extra time to catch up on reading. Right now, I am reading <strong>Ken Follett's </strong><u><strong>Pillars of the Earth </strong></u>(see Tim Dyke's comments below). It is really hard to put it down to do anything else. My television hasn't been on much since I started reading it. </p>

<p>I have been reading other people's suggestions and would like to add my recommendations for the following:<br />
<strong>Hirsi Ali, Ayaan. <u>Infidel</u>.<br />
Dallas, Sandra. <u>Tallgrass</u>.<br />
Weisman, Alan. <u>The World Without Us</u>.</strong>  (I listened to the audio version)</p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/holthe_when.jpg"><img alt="holthe_when.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/holthe_when-thumb.jpg" width="78" height="120" /></a><br />
Another one that I enjoyed was suggested to me by Carol Lee but it must not have been submitted to the blog so I'll pass on her recommendation for Tess Uriza Holthe's, <u><strong>When the Elephants Dance.</strong></u> [F Holthe] This is about the Philippines under Japanese occupation during WWII. It centers around one family and what is happening to them just prior to the Americans retaking the Philippines. There are also long stories of the past as the family members hide out during air raids, etc. Very good! </p>

<p>So much for what I've been reading, here are the other recommendations.</p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/michaelis_schulz.jpg"><img alt="michaelis_schulz.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/michaelis_schulz-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="119" /></a>  <strong>Michaelis, David. <u>Schulz and Peanuts</u>. </strong><br />
This biography of the creator of Charlie Brown and Snoopy asserts that Charles Schulz used his comic strip about children to exorcise his own personal demons and to paint a decidedly melancholy picture of America in the last half of the 20th Century.  The author argues convincingly that Schulz was an essential American artist whose work will stand the test of time.  The book is full of Peanuts cartoons which are used throughout to illustrate points and to provide evidence for certain biographical claims.<br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/follett_pillars.jpg"><img alt="follett_pillars.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/follett_pillars-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Follett, Ken. <u>The Pillars of the Earth </u> F Follett</strong><br />
This weighty tome transports readers into 12th century England where squires fight to impress Kings, monks fight to attain power, laborers fight to build cathedrals, and unmarried mothers fight to prove they are not witches.  There's blood, sex, and history in every chapter which makes the 1000+ pages turn quickly.<br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/layden_last.jpg"><img alt="layden_last.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/layden_last-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Layden, Joe. <u>The Last Great Fight</u>.</strong> <br />
Perhaps you grew up in the 1960s, '70s or '80s and witnessed great heavyweight prize fighters like Liston, Patterson, Ali, Frazier, Foreman and Holmes.  Perhaps you have noticed that not only are such fighters absent from contemporary boxing but that the sport itself seems to have withered.  The author of this book makes the case that the sport died the day Mike Tyson's career imploded, and he argues that the implosion began when Buster Douglas whipped Tyson in Japan in 1990.  The narrative alternates from Tyson to Douglas chapter by chapter, and the story told is both narrowly focused and widely defined.<br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/perlstein_nixonland.jpg"><img alt="perlstein_nixonland.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/perlstein_nixonland-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="118" /></a>  <strong>Perlstein, Rick. <u>Nixonland</u>.</strong> <br />
This book covers American political history from 1964-1974.  The author argues that the divisions existing today in our politics trace back to racial, economic, and cultural themes that were established during Nixon's rise and fall.  The book reads like a novel, and it provides a provocative lens through which to view the upcoming presidential election.<br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/child_running.jpg"><img alt="child_running.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/child_running-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a>  <a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/child_die.jpg"><img alt="child_die.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/child_die-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a>  <a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/child_killing.jpg"><img alt="child_killing.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/child_killing-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="120" /></a><br />
<strong>Child, Lee. <u>Running Blind</u>;  <u>Die Trying</u>; <u>Killing Floor</u></strong>.  <br />
Bruce Schauble told me about this author, and I simultaneously want to thank him and curse him for the recommendation.  Each story follows Jack Reacher, a lone gunman with a heart of gold, as he solves conspiracies, shoots bad guys, and respects the women he beds. I feel about these books exactly how I feel about potato chips.  I forget they exist until I crave them, at which point I gorge on too many in rapid succession and feel bad about myself until the next craving hits. <br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/safina_eye.jpg"><img alt="safina_eye.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/safina_eye-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="119" /></a>  <strong>Safina, Carl. <u>Eye of the Albatross: Visions of Hope and Survival </u></strong>(Henry Holt, 2002)  <br />
Engaging journalistic account of the natural history of Laysan albatrosses, monk seals, sea turtles, sharks, and other wildlife in the northwestern Hawaiian islands.<br />
<strong>-Susan Clark</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/schumm_deep.jpg"><img alt="schumm_deep.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/schumm_deep-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="119" /></a>  <strong>Schumm, Bruce A. <u>Deep Down Things: The Breathtaking Beauty of Particle Physics</u>. 539.7 Sch8</strong> <br />
A physics light reading published by Johns Hopkins. <br />
<strong>-Hanno Adams</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/hemmings_descendants.jpg"><img alt="hemmings_descendants.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/hemmings_descendants-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Hemmings, Kaui Hart. <u>The Descendants</u>. HC F Hemmings</strong><br />
Kaui went to Punahou, and the characters are distinctly punahou-esque. Kaui graduated in 94 I believe.  The book takes place on Oahu, Big Island and Kauai. The story involves complex family relationships, written in a fathers' point of view. Fairly quick reading.<br />
<strong>-Catherine Vaughan</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/barry_dave.jpg"><img alt="barry_dave.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/barry_dave-thumb.jpg" width="76" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Barry, Dave. <u>Barry Does Japan</u></strong>.<br />
If you've ever visited Japan, or ever wanted to visit, you need to read Dave Barry's take on it.  A laugh-out-loud book which really nails all the things that outsiders discover when they visit Japan.<br />
<strong>-David Del Rocco</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/leguin_left.jpg"><img alt="leguin_left.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/leguin_left-thumb.jpg" width="72" height="120" /></a>  <strong>LeGuin, Ursula. <u>The Left Hand of Darkness</u>.</strong>  <br />
Imagine a world where everyone is the same gender; neither male nor female but a "potential" who can become male or female when necessary.  This imaginative groundbreaking novel won both the Nebula and the Hugo Awards in 1969.<br />
<strong>-David Del Rocco</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/abujaber_crescent.jpg"><img alt="abujaber_crescent.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/abujaber_crescent-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="119" /></a>  <strong>Abu-Jaber, Diana. <u>Crescent</u>. F Abu-Jaber</strong><br />
An attractive, talented, but jaded and lovelorn chef finds amour at first sight with a dark, handsome, Iraqi linguist with a mysterious past, and they live happily ever after.  With echoes of Proust, Shakespeare, and Esquivel, <u>Crescent</u> makes for excellent summer reading: perfect beach fare with its sensuous lyricism and romance, yet just enough political, cultural, and literary substance to counterbalance any guilty pleasure.<br />
<strong>-Lara Cowell</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/nazario_enrique.jpg"><img alt="nazario_enrique.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/nazario_enrique-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Nazario, Sonia. <u>Enrique's Journey</u>. 305.23 N23</strong><br />
This non-fiction book by Pulitzer Prize winner, Sonia Nazario, tells the riveting story of Enrique, a Honduran teenager, who risks his life in order to reunite with his mother in the United States. His experience mirrors the perilous journeys of many illegal migrants, drawn to the United States by the prospect of the American Dream as well as the desire to reclaim the love of lost, idealized parents.  The book made me reflect on the heart-wrenching sacrifices and trade-offs that parents make in the name of the greater good, and the way that their economic choices to ensure a higher standard of living for their families, also ironically disintegrate family stability and further unravel the societal fabric of their home countries. <br />
<strong>-Lara Cowell</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/akbar_come.jpg"><img alt="akbar_come.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/akbar_come-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a><br />
<strong>Akbar, Said Hyder and Susan Burton. <u>Come Back to Afghanistan: A California Teenager's Story</u>. 958.1 Ak2.</strong>  <br />
Akbar, the child of Afghan immigrants, writes a thoughtful, compelling, humorous memoir of his time spent in post-Taliban Afghanistan. He has a particularly interesting vantage point, as his father was advisor to Afghan president, Harmid Karzai, and later became governor of Kunar, a volatile province. The political and the personal beautifully weave together in this riveting, highly readable tale of chaos and change.<br />
<strong>-Lara Cowell</strong></p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Spring Break Reads (2008 picks)</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/2008/03/spring_break_reads_2008_picks.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/MT/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=10/entry_id=3747" title="Spring Break Reads (2008 picks)" />
    <id>tag:iws.punahou.edu,2008:/punablogs/interesting_things//10.3747</id>
    
    <published>2008-03-06T16:47:41Z</published>
    <updated>2008-03-13T01:09:50Z</updated>
    
    <summary>With Spring Break just around the corner, I asked the Punahou &apos;ohana for books that they would recommend to others. I have had a lot of great suggestions, so set aside some time to delve into another world while you...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Debra Peterson</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Books" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/">
        <![CDATA[<p>With Spring Break just around the corner, I asked the Punahou 'ohana for books that they would recommend to others. I have had a lot of great suggestions, so set aside some time to delve into another world while you are on a plane, at the beach, or curled up on your couch.</p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/infidel.jpg"><img alt="infidel.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/infidel-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Hirsi Ali, Ayaan. <u>Infidel</u>. 2007. [B H613]</strong><br />
I'd like to recommend the book, "Infidel", to those "Kite Runner" enthusiasts. Although the book is non-fiction, Ms. Ali's account reads like a novel. The brutal murder of Theo Van Gogh, a Dutch film maker, by a fundamental Muslim serves as the backdrop of her story. She traces her journey from her childhood in war-torn Somalia and her upbringing by a strict grandmother and mother. Her father is an absentee parent because he is a leader in a rebel faction trying to overthrow the dictatorship in Somalia. Because of his status, the family is forced to flee to Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia, then to Kenya. She recounts her struggle with Islam and her questions which go unanswered. She describes in detail the circumcision/excisions of herself, her sister, and brother and challenges the effects of the practice on her and other Muslim women. She is torn by the guilt and fear of displeasing Allah and her questions. When she is forced into an arranged marriage to a Canadian Muslim, she flees to the Netherlands on her way to Canada to meet her groom. She obtains asylum in the Netherlands and is confused by the freedom and acceptance of these Dutch infidels and the  distrust and bondage of her Muslim friends. She finds employment in various entry-level jobs and some part-time work as a translator. She then goes to school and, eventually, receives a degree in political science. Her outspoken views of the injustice of Islam for women gains national attention and she is elected to the Dutch parliament. She is constantly threatened by terrorist elements but it is when she agrees to make a film, "Submission, Part 1", about injustice to women in the Islamic tradition that results in the death of her friend, the film maker, Theo Van Gogh. Despite the bleak prospects of a future in hiding and on the run, she ends the book with her gratitude and love for her family and an expression of hope for greater tolerance and understanding without being "Pollyann-ish". <br />
<strong>-Yukio Hamada</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/tallgrass.jpg"><img alt="tallgrass.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/tallgrass-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong> Dallas, Sandra. <u>Tallgrass</u>. 2007. [F Dallas] </strong> <br />
Seen through the eyes of a 13-year-old girl, living on a farm in southern Colorado during WWII, a Japanese detention camp is opened up adjacent to her family's farm, and filled with Japanese Americans from California. Murder mystery involved also. Very good!<br />
<strong>-Barbara Jamille</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/three%20cups%20of%20tea.jpg"><img alt="three%20cups%20of%20tea.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/three%20cups%20of%20tea-thumb.jpg" width="77" height="120" /></a> <strong>Mortenson, Greg and David Oliver Relin.<u>Three Cups of Tea:  One Man's Mission to Fight Terrorism and build Nations - One School at a Time</u>. 2006. [On order].</strong><br />
a must read<br />
<strong>-Jerry Devlin</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/isaac%27s%20storm.jpg"><img alt="isaac%27s%20storm.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/isaac%27s%20storm-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="114" /></a> <strong>Larson, Erik and Isaac Monroe Cline. <u>Isacc's Storm: A Man, a Time, And the Deadliest Hurricane in History</u>. 1999. [976.4 L32]</strong><br />
worthy<br />
<strong>-Jerry Devlin</strong><br />
(Provides an account of the hurricane which struck Galveston, Texas, in 1900 and killed ten thousand people.) Deb</p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/world%20without%20us.jpg"><img alt="world%20without%20us.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/world%20without%20us-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Weisman, Alan. <u>The World Without Us</u>. 2007. [304.2 W43]</strong> <br />
<em>From Publishers Weekly Starred Review.</em> If a virulent virus (or even the Rapture) depopulated Earth overnight, how long before all trace of humankind vanished? That's the provocative, and occasionally puckish, question posed by Weisman (An Echo in My Blood) in this imaginative hybrid of solid science reporting and morbid speculation. Days after our disappearance, pumps keeping Manhattan's subways dry would fail, tunnels would flood, soil under streets would sluice away and the foundations of towering skyscrapers built to last for centuries would start to crumble. At the other end of the chronological spectrum, anything made of bronze might survive in recognizable form for millions of yearsalong with one billion pounds of degraded but almost indestructible plastics manufactured since the mid-20th century. Meanwhile, land freed from mankind's environmentally poisonous footprint would quickly reconstitute itself, as in Chernobyl, where animal life has returned after 1986's deadly radiation leak, and in the demilitarized zone between North and South Korea, a refuge since 1953 for the almost-extinct goral mountain goat and Amur leopard. From a patch of primeval forest in Poland to monumental underground villages in Turkey, Weisman's enthralling tour of the world of tomorrow explores what little will remain of ancient times while anticipating, often poetically, what a planet without us would be like. <br />
<strong>-David Cox</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/gruen_water.jpg"><img alt="gruen_water.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/gruen_water-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Gruen, Sara. <u><u>Water for Elephants</u></u>. 2006. [F Gruen]</strong> <em>See also entry under Summer Picks</em>.</p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/appeal.jpg"><img alt="appeal.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/appeal-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Grisham, John. <u>The Appeal</u>. 2008. [On order]</strong></p>

<p>Probably have these but <u>Water for Elephants</u>,  <u>The Wonder Years</u>, <u>The Appeal.</u>All easy reads.<br />
<strong>-Darcy Iams</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/monkey%20wrench%20gang.jpg"><img alt="monkey%20wrench%20gang.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/monkey%20wrench%20gang-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Abbey, Edward. <u>Monkey Wrench Gang</u>. 1992. [F Abbey]</strong><br />
Great spring break read light exciting and fun...ecoterroists in the American Southwest.<br />
<strong>-Emery Mitchem</strong></p>

<p> <a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/all%20the%20pretty%20horses.jpg"><img alt="all%20the%20pretty%20horses.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/all%20the%20pretty%20horses-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="117" /></a> <strong>McCarthy, Cormac. <u>All the Pretty Horses</u>.1992. [F McCarthy]</strong><br />
Mother sells the  ranch leaving 16 year old John Grady Cole with very limited options in his hopes of maintaining the cowboy lifesyle.  So he crosses the Mexican border in search of work at a hacienda.<br />
<strong>-Emery Mitchem</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/world%20without%20end.jpg"><img alt="world%20without%20end.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/world%20without%20end-thumb.jpg" width="78" height="120" /></a> <strong>Follett, Ken. World Without End. 2007. [F Follett]</strong><br />
This is sequel to <u>Pillars of the Earth</u>, but it is not necessary to have read Pillars before WWE.<br />
<strong>-Glenn Beachy</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/truth%20and%20beauty.jpg"><img alt="truth%20and%20beauty.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/truth%20and%20beauty-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="112" /></a> <strong>Patchett, Ann. <u>Truth and Beauty</u>. 2004. [On order]</strong><br />
"Ann Patchett and Lucy Grealy met in college in 1981, and, after enrolling in the Iowa Writers' Workshop, began a platonic friendship that would be as defining to both of their lives as their work was. In her critically acclaimed and hugely successful memoir, Autobiography of a Face, Lucy Grealy wrote about losing part of her jaw to childhood cancer, the years of chemotherapy and radiation, and then the endless reconstructive surgeries. In Truth & Beauty, the story isn't Lucy's life or Ann's life, but the parts of their lives they shared. This is a portrait that spans twenty years, from the long, cold winters of the Midwest, to surgical wards in Scotland, to book parties in New York." <em>(From book jacket)</em></p>

<p>I loved its passion, honesty, and clarity. <br />
<strong>-Shyrl Matias</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/highest%20tide.jpg"><img alt="highest%20tide.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/highest%20tide-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Lynch, Jim.  <u>The Highest Tide</u>.  2005. [On order]</strong><br />
A fascinating and beautifully written story about a teenage boy finding bizarre creatures in Puget Sound and the following events that change his life.<br />
<strong>-David Del Rocco</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/two%20truths%20and%20a%20lie.jpg"><img alt="two%20truths%20and%20a%20lie.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/two%20truths%20and%20a%20lie-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="120" /></a> <strong>Kittle, Katrina.  <u>Two Truths and a Lie</u>.  2001</strong><br />
A suspenseful story featuring a woman who is a compulsive liar, and how her life is spinning out of control as she tries to solve the mystery of a close friend's death.<br />
<strong>-David Del Rocco</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/lost%20city%20radio.jpg"><img alt="lost%20city%20radio.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/lost%20city%20radio-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Alarcon, Daniel. <u>Lost City Radio.</u> 2007.[On order]</strong><br />
Mesmerizing tale of identity, loss and survival amid the turmoil of revolution. Norma is the host of a radio show, "Lost City Radio," dedicated to the people who have vanished in the wake of a violent insurgency in an unnamed Latin American country. Ten years ago, her husband, a botanist, disappeared after venturing into the jungle to collect plant specimens. A young boy from that same area appears suddenly in Norma's life and things begin to unpeel. The writing is wonderful and the storytelling cinematically vivid.<br />
<strong>-Carlyn Tani</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/team%20of%20rivals.jpg"><img alt="team%20of%20rivals.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/team%20of%20rivals-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="118" /></a> <strong>Kearns-Goodwin, Doris. <u>Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln.</u> 2005. [B L63go]</strong><br />
Wonderfully told, well-researched story of Lincoln's political ascendancy and how he assembled a cabinet of former rivals that helped hold together and advance a fractured  Republican party. The book offers anecdotes that illuminate Lincoln's character - his integrity, compassion and formidable determination - along with passages that give depth and context to the political and military maneuverings. We all know the ending, but it was a memorable, exciting read nonetheless.  <br />
<strong>-Carlyn Tani</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/another%20roadside%20attraction.jpg"><img alt="another%20roadside%20attraction.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/another%20roadside%20attraction-thumb.jpg" width="75" height="120" /></a> <strong>Robbins, Tom. <u>Another Roadside Attraction.</u> 1990. [On order]</strong> <br />
I really love to plug Tom Robbins books to anyone and everyone.  My favorite is his first: "Another Roadside Attraction." You may have already read his stuff, but he's such an amazing thinker, really stretches your brain with his style of writing and his use of metaphor. <br />
Crazy stories and unique writing.<br />
<strong>-Lucas Morgan</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/rest%20is%20noise.jpg"><img alt="rest%20is%20noise.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/rest%20is%20noise-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Ross, Alex. <u>The Rest is Noise: Listening to the Twentieth Century</u>. 2007. [780.9 R31]</strong><br />
Ross is the classical music critic for the New Yorker Magazine, and in this book he tells the story of the 20th Century through the lens of classical music.  He makes the point that unlike abstract art, theater of the absurd, post-modern literature, and other experimental art forms of the last century, 20th century classical music never really reaches an audience. He argues, though, that this music is everywhere in our lives; it's in film scores, commercial music, rock and roll, jazz, and even hip-hop in some ways. Mainly this book is just another interesting way to look at the nexus of music and history. He's a good writer who knows a lot about music, and the book reads like a novel. (Though an admittedly dense novel). It's also made me want to track down a bunch of music that everyone else has probably heard about, but that I never had until I read this.<br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/changed%20man.jpg"><img alt="changed%20man.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/changed%20man-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="118" /></a> <strong>Prose, Francine. <u>A Changed Man</u>. 2005. [F Prose]</strong><br />
In this 2005 novel, a neo-Nazi skin head walks into the headquarters of an international human  ights organization and says he wants to change his life. He wants to renounce his violent and hateful past and work for positive social change.  The book asks how much humans can really change, and it asks people where their limits are when it comes to trust and compassion. This is a comic novel with a lot of suspense that really makes you think. It also raises thorny questions about the morality of people who work to save others on distant shores without doing enough to care for those in their neighborhoods and living rooms.<br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/abstinence%20teacher.jpg"><img alt="abstinence%20teacher.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/abstinence%20teacher-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Perrotta, Tom. <u>The Abstinence Teacher</u>. 2007.</strong><br />
In this book by the author of <u>Election</u> and <u>Little Children</u>, a female science teacher gets in trouble when she says something positive to her high school students about masturbation.  In response, the school hires an abstinence teacher and the weird and awkward connections that form between this new male teacher and the female science teacher fill the plot of this book with social satire and thought provoking comedy.  As was true for <u>Election</u> and <u>Little Children</u>, this book will make a good, funny, dark movie.<br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/golden%20compass.jpg"><img alt="golden%20compass.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/golden%20compass-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="119" /></a>  <a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/subtle%20knife.jpg"><img alt="subtle%20knife.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/subtle%20knife-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="107" /></a>  <a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/amber%20spyglass.jpg"><img alt="amber%20spyglass.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/amber%20spyglass-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="116" /></a><br />
<strong><u>The Golden Compass</u></strong>, <strong><u>The Subtle Knife</u></strong>, <u><strong>The Amber Spyglass </strong></u>(referred to as the "His Dark Materials" trilogy) by <strong>Philip Pullman</strong>.  I don't usually read fantasy novels, but I became interested in these when Michele Wie (sp?) told me the <u>Golden Compass</u> was her favorite book. I just got curious, you know?  Now I've read all three, and they are definitely fun to read.  It's hard to explain the plot, but the main character is a girl named Lyra, and the three books involve her efforts to help children retain their souls in the face of nefarious organizations that want to rip away these animate souls and replace them with more traditional notions. When the movie came out there was some discussion as to whether or not these books were anti-Christian or anti-Catholic.  I think readers should judge that for themselves, but I found the books more thought provoking than spirit crushing.  The movie of <u>The Golden Compass </u>in my opinion pales in comparison to the books.<br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/brief%20wondrous%20life%20of%20oscar%20wao.jpg"><img alt="brief%20wondrous%20life%20of%20oscar%20wao.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/brief%20wondrous%20life%20of%20oscar%20wao-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Diaz, Junot. <u>The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao</u>. 2007</strong><br />
When I first read this, I referred to it as "A Dominican Republic Catcher In The Rye."  That really doesn't do it justice, but to say more is to give away all the weird and wonderful places that it goes (geographically and emotionally).  It's a story about a sweet fat kid trying to make sense of a messed up world. And it's a lot better than I'm describing.<br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/stand.jpg"><img alt="stand.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/stand-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="117" /></a> <strong>King, Stephen. <u>The Stand.</u> 1990. [F King]</strong><br />
I finally read this long long book about the end of the world and I am a huge fan of it now.  In the first third of the book, a bunch of people become aware that everyone on earth is dying of a plague except them.  In the second third, these survivors realize that they are on one side or another in a battle between good and evil. In the last third, the battle ensues, climaxes, and resolves. <br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><strong>Comment:</strong><br />
I agree with Tim about Stephen King's "The Stand."  Even if you're not a Stephen King fan, it's an amazing book with a fascinating premise and absolutely great characters.  His best work.<br />
<strong>-David Del Rocco</strong></p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Summer Picks</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/2007/10/summer_picks.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/MT/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=10/entry_id=3233" title="Summer Picks" />
    <id>tag:iws.punahou.edu,2007:/punablogs/interesting_things//10.3233</id>
    
    <published>2007-10-11T00:03:20Z</published>
    <updated>2007-10-13T01:53:49Z</updated>
    
    <summary>As we begin a new school year, I asked faculty and staff for their favorite summer reads. Two of my favorites this summer were Memory Keeper&apos;s Daughter by Kim Edwards and Water for Elephants by Sarah Gruen. Very different from...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Debra Peterson</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Books" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/">
        <![CDATA[<p>As we begin a new school year, I asked faculty and staff for their favorite summer reads. Two of my favorites this summer were <strong><u>Memory Keeper's Daughter </u>by Kim Edwards </strong>and <strong><u>Water for Elephants</u> by Sarah Gruen</strong>. Very different from each other, they were both difficult to put down. </p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/edwards_memory.jpg"><img alt="edwards_memory.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/edwards_memory-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Edwards, Kim. <u>Memory Keeper's Daughter</u>. 2005. [F Edwards]</strong><br />
<u>Memory Keeper's Daughter </u>looks at how one decision changed everything for Dr. David Henry and his family. Forced to deliver his own twins during a snowstorm, he can tell immediately that his daughter has Down's Syndrome and asks his nurse to take her to an institution to be raised. He tells his wife that the baby girl has died.</p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/gruen_water.jpg"><img alt="gruen_water.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/gruen_water-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Gruen, Sara. <u>Water for Elephants</u>. 2006. [F Gruen]</strong><br />
<u>Water for Elephants </u>moves between Jacob Jankowski's time with the circus during the 30s and his current situation in a care home at the age of 93. </p>

<p>For other recommendations, read on!<br />
</p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/barry_later.jpg"><img alt="barry_later.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/barry_later-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="113" /></a> <strong>Barry, Rebecca. <u>Later, At the Bar</u> 2007</strong><br />
In the spirit of Winesburg, Ohio, this is a set of interlocking short stories set in the towns and spaces between the lakes of central New York. Quietly stated and with gentle humor, they capture the beauty and wildness of the people lost among the dairy farms and wineries--you can feel the wind moving through the hills and smell the dampness in the road after it rains. A quick read, but the stories linger with you.</p>

<p>(Full disclosure--I know Becky from high school, but this is an unsolicited recommendation.)<br />
<strong>-Mike Lippert</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/wouk_don%27t.jpg"><img alt="wouk_don%27t.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/wouk_don%27t-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="118" /></a> <strong>Wouk, Herman. <u>Don"t stop the Carnival.</u> 1992.</strong><br />
<strong>-Mark Flynn</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/obama_dreams.jpg"><img alt="obama_dreams.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/obama_dreams-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Obama, Barrack. <u>Dreams From My Father</u>. 1996 [305.8 Ob1]</strong><br />
<u>Dreams From My Father </u>by Barrack Obama is probably the best book on race in America that I've ever read (and that includes Malcolm X's autobiography).  And he writes beautifully - I found myself stopping to re-read sections not for what he says but to admire how well he says it.     <br />
<strong>-Jay Seidenstein</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/frazier_thirteen.jpg"><img alt="frazier_thirteen.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/frazier_thirteen-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="120" /></a> <strong>Frazier, Charles. <u>Thirteen Moons</u>. 2006.</strong><br />
I have a couple. I am reading <u>Thirteen Moons </u>by Charles Frazier...the author of <u>Cold Mountain.</u> It is an enjoyable, lyrical read about a boy who is sent into the Indian nation as a bond servant and the life he makes for himself there.</p>

<p><strong>Coelho, Paulo. <u>Veronika Decides to Die</u><br />
Coelho, Paulo. <u>The Devil and Miss Prym</u><br />
Coelho, Paulo. <u>By the River Piedra</u></strong><br />
I read three books by Paulo Coelho this summer. <u>Veronika Decides to Die</u>, <u>The Devil and Miss Prym</u>, and <u>By the River Piedra </u>I sat down and wept. Paulo Coelho is such a thoughtful storyteller that these books are a pleasure to  read and worthy of some thought. They deal with temptation, redemption, and forgivness. Good choices when you want something thoughtful to read but do not have time for more lengthy books.<br />
<strong>-Donna Hayes</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/kolbert_field.jpg"><img alt="kolbert_field.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/kolbert_field-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Kolbert, Elizabeth. <u>Field Notes from a Catastrophe: Man, Nature, and Climate Change.</u>  2006. [363.7 K83]</strong><br />
I recommend this readable and interesting book about global warming. The author, who writes for the New Yorker, traveled to places around the world that are being affected by climate change. She talked with scientists and others and learned that the gradual process of global warming could become rapid and catastrophic change.<br />
<strong>-Susan Clark</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/dick_man.jpg"><img alt="dick_man.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/dick_man-thumb.jpg" width="77" height="120" /></a> <strong>Dick, Philip. <u>The Man in the High Castle</u>. 1992</strong><br />
Set in 1960s San Francisco after the Axis Powers have won WWII...<br />
Excellent!<br />
<strong>-Dave Reiter</strong></p>

<p>My all time favorites are the <strong>Aubrey-Maturin series by Patrick Obrian</strong>.  Although it is a twenty book series it is impossible to stop reading.  Only recommended for Summer reading as you will ignore all of your classes to immerse yourself in the books.  All twenty are easily read in a Summer.  After book four or five they get shorter and form one long story.  I seldom reread books but I've read every book in  the series at least  three times.  The story is set in the early 19th century with Capt Jack Aubrey of the royal Navy and his surgeon (secret agent) best friend Steven Maturin thwarting Napolean at every turn around the globe.  More a buddy book than a war story it contains some of the best dialogue ever written and the second book is a naval story disguised as  a Jayne Austin novel.  <br />
<strong>-Jack Belli</strong><br />
(Note: Cooke Library has <strong><u>Letter of Marque </u></strong>and <strong><u>Wine-Dark Sea</u></strong>, both [F O'Brian]. Deb Peterson)</p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/green_looking.jpg"><img alt="green_looking.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/green_looking-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="120" /></a> <strong>Green, John. <u>Looking for Alaska</u>. 2005. [F Green]</strong><br />
I just finished reading "Looking for Alaska", a 2005 Printz Award YA novel by John Green. I really, really enjoyed it, both as a teacher of young people and as an aspiring writer myself! I would highly recommend it to my colleagues.<br />
<strong>-Douglas Kiang</strong></p>

<p>Note: I just started this book and I'm hoping to have some time to finish it this weekend. This is one that young adults will identify with.<br />
<strong>-Deb Peterson</strong></p>

<p><strong>Lee Childs </strong>has 11 novels featuring a character named Jack Reacher. To<br />
learn more about this character, you can log onto <br />
http://www.leechild.com/.</p>

<p>If a person wants to read them in the order they were published:<br />
#1 <u>Killing Floor</u>; #2 <u>Die Trying</u>; #3 <u>Tripwire</u>; #4 <u>Running Blind </u>(US title)/<u>The Visitor </u>(UK title); #5 <u>Echo Burning</u>; #6 <u>Without Fail</u>; #7<br />
<u>Persuader</u>; #8 <u>The Enemy </u>(the prequel, this takes place before the events<br />
of <u>Killing Floor</u>); #9 <u>One Shot</u>; #10 <u>The Hard Way</u>; #11 <u>Bad Luck and Trouble.</u><br />
<strong>-Lee Young-Kingsbury</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/jones_known.jpg"><img alt="jones_known.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/jones_known-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="119" /></a> <strong>Jones, Edward P. <u>Known World</u>. 2003. [F Jones]</strong><br />
I just finished the <u>Known World </u>by Edward P. Jones and I loved it.  Set in antebellum Virginia, Jones centers his story around the black experience of freed slaves who became slave <br />
owners themselves.  The voice is almost reportorial; yet it is eloquent, brutally honest, without maudlin sentimentality or effusiveness. Neither white nor black is made out to be the bad guys--rather, Jones shows the characters and their lives as they were back then. He makes no judgments but leaves the reader to decide for herself that yes, slavery as an institution is one of the most heinous manmade setups in history.  I loved this book also for the strong female characters and their resilience to persevere, working within their limited support systems <br />
and their low status as females to do the very best they can for their loved ones.  The men seem to be more entrapped by their own inability to rise above the dictates of the land at the time.  I recommend this book highly. <br />
<strong>-Carol Lee</strong></p>

<p><strong><em>Mahalo to everyone who recommended books. Keep reading (and recommending)</em>!</strong></p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Summer - Ready, Set, Read</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/2007/05/summer_ready_set_read.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/MT/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=10/entry_id=2474" title="Summer - Ready, Set, Read" />
    <id>tag:iws.punahou.edu,2007:/punablogs/interesting_things//10.2474</id>
    
    <published>2007-05-24T19:05:08Z</published>
    <updated>2010-02-25T00:01:26Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Summer is just around the corner. In Hawaii this may mean beaches, long airplane rides, or simply more time to read. I asked the faculty and staff for suggestions of books that they enjoyed reading and would recommend to others....</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Debra Peterson</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Books" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/">
        <![CDATA[<p>Summer is just around the corner. In Hawaii this may mean beaches, long airplane rides, or simply more time to read. I asked the faculty and staff for suggestions of books that they enjoyed reading and would recommend to others. The recent responses are listed here. For other suggestions, visit my earlier entries.</p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/lee_gesture.jpg"><img alt="lee_gesture.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/lee_gesture-thumb.jpg" width="78" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Lee, Chang-rae. <u>A Gesture Life.</u> 1999. [F Lee]</strong><br />
Chang-rae Lee will be spending some time on campus next year so I picked up <u>A Gesture Life </u>to see what his books were like and I loved it. In the book, Franklin Hata is a Japanese man of Korean birth living in suburban New York. The dual stories are of Franklin's relationship with his teenage daughter and flashbacks to his love for a Korean comfort woman.<br />
<strong>-Deb Peterson</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/nazario_enriques.jpg"><img alt="nazario_enriques.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/nazario_enriques-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Nazario, Sonia. <u>Enrique's Journey</u>. 2006. [305.23 N23]</strong><br />
Regardless of where a person stands on the issue of illegal immigration, <u>Enrique's Journey </u>puts a face and a name to some of the people who choose to come to the United States illegally. The author describes the experiences of Central American children who travel miles riding the railcars at great risk of personal injury, robbery, and rape in an attempt to find their mothers who left them behind. The author actually rode the rails herself to more fully understand what these children go through to get to mothers or fathers living in the United States.<br />
<strong>-Deb Peterson</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/connor_kepler.jpg"><img alt="connor_kepler.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/connor_kepler-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="119" /></a>  <strong>Connor, James. <u>Kepler's Witch: an Astronomer's Discovery of Cosmic Order amid Religious War, Political Intrigue, and the Heresy Trial of his Mother.</u> Harper San Francisco, 2004.[B K44co]</strong>  <br />
Johannes Kepler was a brilliant mathematician who figured out that the orbits of the planets are ellipses, not circles. He made his remarkable discoveries over a lifetime of great personal difficulties, including religious persecution, the death of his first wife and a number of his children, and the trial of his mother as a witch. Sounds depressing, but this is an enjoyable biography and an interesting glimpse of 1600's Europe.<br />
<strong>-Susan Clark</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/kite_runner.jpg"><img alt="kite_runner.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/kite_runner-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="106" /></a>  <strong>Hosseini, Khaled. <u>The Kite Runner</u> 2003. [F Hosseini]</strong><br />
A wonderful book about the politics of Afghanistan during the last days of monarchy, and just before the Russians invade the country. Perhaps even more powerful is the unique relationship between an Afghan boy and his Hazara servant. A must read page turner you won't be able to put down!<br />
<strong>-Adam Reid</strong><br />
<em>Note: See other comments for this book in the Spring Break Reads.</em></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/didion_year.jpg"><img alt="didion_year.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/didion_year-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Didion, Joan. <u>The Year of Magical Thinking</u> 2005. [B D563]</strong><br />
This book captivated me with  Joan Didion's  deep expression  describing the loss of her <br />
husband.   It is beautifully written and very soulful.<br />
<strong>-Kathleen Thomas </strong> <br />
<em>Note: See earlier comments in Summer Reading Suggestions.</em></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/Ilibagiza_left.jpg"><img alt="Ilibagiza_left.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/Ilibagiza_left-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Ilibagiza, Immaculee. <u>Left to Tell</u>. 2006. [On order]</strong>  <br />
<u>Left to Tell </u>is the story of a young woman's experience during the Rwandan Holocaust.  I needed to read this book to understand what happened during this tragic time.  The fact that Immaculee's faith in God strengthens through this horrible situation is inspiring.  <br />
<strong>-Kathleen Thomas</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/walls_glass.jpg"><img alt="walls_glass.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/walls_glass-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a> <strong>Walls, Jeanette. <u>The Glass Castle</u>. 2005. [On order]</strong>  <br />
<u>The Glass Castle</u> reveals the life of children living in poverty in the United States.  It also is an amazing story about the strength of children.  The Walls children survive their very difficult situation and develop into strong individuals.<br />
<strong>-Kathleen Thomas</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/pollan_botany.jpg"><img alt="pollan_botany.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/pollan_botany-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="119" /></a>  <strong>Pollen, Michael. <u>The Botany of Desire</u>. 2001. [306.4 P76]</strong><br />
I recommend "The Botany of Desire" by Michael Pollen.  It's a book about 4 human desires and how they shaped the evolution of plants; then how the plants, in turn, shaped the social evolution of us humans.  Apples, tulips, pot and potatoes = sweetness, beauty, intoxication and power.<br />
<strong>-Mike Bassford</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/bryson_im.jpg"><img alt="bryson_im.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/bryson_im-thumb.jpg" width="70" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Bryson, Bill. <u>I'm a Stranger Here Myself</u>. 1999.</strong> <br />
"I'm a stranger here myself"  by Bill Bryson is hilarious.  <br />
-Hanno Adams</p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/russell_sparrow.jpg"><img alt="russell_sparrow.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/russell_sparrow-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="114" /></a>  <strong>Russell, Mary Doria. <u>The Sparrow.</u>1997. [F Russell]</strong><br />
I love THE SPARROW, by Mary Doria Russell.  It's a bit of a hybrid, futuristic humanitic story about Jesuit who find alien life on another planet.  I know, you're already onboard!  But it is one the most moving pieces I have ever read about the search for God.<br />
<strong>-Christopher Obenchain</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/albom_for.jpg"><img alt="albom_for.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/albom_for-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="117" /></a>  <strong>Albom, Mitch. <u>for one more day</u>. 2006.</strong><br />
     Mitch Albom (the auther of "Tuesdays with Morrie") wrote another great book called "for one more day" (all lower case letters). If you're into lighter reading, this is a great book.  I'm going to plagiarize the back of the book now:<br />
    "If you had the chance, just one chance, to go back and fix what you did wrong in life, would you take it?  And if you did, would you be big enough to stand it?  Mitch Albom, in this new book, once again demonstrates why he is one of my favorite writers: a fearless explorer of the wishful and magical, he is also a devout believer in the power of love."</p>

<p>"Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows" comes out in July...I'm pretty sure it will be a popular one, too :)<br />
<strong>-Lee Young-Kingsbury</strong></p>

<p>Reread all of the Harry Potters before the new one comes out in July <br />
then read the new one in July.<br />
<strong>-Jack  Belli</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/obama_audacity.jpg"><img alt="obama_audacity.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/obama_audacity-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Obama, Barak. <u>The Audacity of Hope</u>. 2006. [PUN 973 Ob1]</strong><br />
I have been reading Barak Obama's  "The Audacity of Hope"  and am two-thirds done.  It is cogent, intelligent, and gracefully written - a lesson in civics, integrity, and common sense - highly critical of either/or, absolutist thinking, reifying instead inclusiveness, argument, and compromise.  A truly worthy read.<br />
<strong>-Joe Tsujimoto</strong><br />
<em>Note: I listened to <u>The Audacity of Hope </u>on Cooke Library's sound version (CDs) and enjoyed it also. Barrack Obama narrates it himself which adds to the experience. I love listening to audio books as I walk. [PUN 973 Ob1 SC112] </em><strong>-Deb Peterson</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/kooser_delights.jpg"><img alt="kooser_delights.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/kooser_delights-thumb.jpg" width="73" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Kooser, Ted. <u>Delights & Shadows</u>. 2004. [811 K833]</strong><br />
Winner of the Pulitzer Prize, "Delights & Shadows," by the former U.S. Poet Laureate, Ted Kooser, is a delight to read.  Many poems are especially appealing, perhaps, to people getting on in their years (like our faculty).  His poems, as Kooser defines poetry, are "A record of discovery," of pleasure, so much allied to beauty.  Highly conscious of inclusiveness, Kooser, as local poet Joe Stanton says, "would fix or remove things that create obstacles for his reader."  Sometimes accused of being too simple, he is simply quiet, his art subtle.  "After Years" is one of  my favorites: </p>

<p>Today from a distance, I saw you<br />
walking away, and without a sound<br />
the glittering face of a glacier<br />
slid into the sea.  An ancient oak<br />
fell in the Cumberlands, holding only<br />
a handful of leaves, and an old woman<br />
scattering corn to her chickens looked up<br />
for an instant.  At the other side<br />
of the galaxy, a star thirty-five times<br />
the size of our own sun exploded<br />
and vanished, leaving a small green spot<br />
on the astronomer's retina<br />
as he stood in the great open dome<br />
of my heart with no one to tell.<br />
<strong>-Joe Tsujimoto</strong></p>

<p><br />
<a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/sheffield_love.jpg"><img alt="sheffield_love.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/sheffield_love-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Sheffield, Rob. <u>Love is a Mix Tape</u>. 2007. [On order]</strong><br />
i just read an amazing book that i thought you all might enjoy. it's one of those rare books that is really a quick read but it lasts with you and is simultaneously light and of substance. like lan wong's meyer lemon panacotta.  the book is called "love is a mix tape" by Rob Sheffield who, in my opinion, has been Rolling Stone Magazine's funniest and smartest writer for about ten years now. This is his first book. It's just so good. He tells the sad, beautiful story of the life and death of his wife using the mix tapes they made for each other as the structure of the book. It's a great read, funny, sad, and full of music.<br />
<strong>-Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p><br />
</p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Christmas Wish List - Item 1 - Time to read!</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/2006/12/christmas_wish_list_item_1_tim.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/MT/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=10/entry_id=1734" title="Christmas Wish List - Item 1 - Time to read!" />
    <id>tag:iws.punahou.edu,2006:/punablogs/interesting_things//10.1734</id>
    
    <published>2006-12-04T23:11:52Z</published>
    <updated>2006-12-12T22:01:10Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Looking forward to some time to read a great book over Christmas Break? The following are recommended by the Punahou &apos;Ohana. Note: If the book is part of the Punahou collection, the call number follows the title of the book....</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Debra Peterson</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Books" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/">
        <![CDATA[<p>Looking forward to some time to read a great book over Christmas Break? The following are recommended by the Punahou 'Ohana. <strong>Note:</strong> If the book is part of the Punahou collection, the call number follows the title of the book.</p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/russo_straight.jpg"><img alt="russo_straight.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/russo_straight-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="115" /></a>  <strong>Russo, Richard. <u>Straight Man</u>. 1997. [F Russo]</strong><br />
<u>Straight Man </u>is a hilarious book for any educator, especially for us here at the university-like Punahou campus. The author also wrote <u>Empire Falls</u>.<br />
-<strong><em>Kris Schwengel</em></strong></p>

<p><strong>Sigall, Bob. <u>The Companies We Keep</u>. 2004. [HC 338.7 Si2]</strong><br />
A great resourceful book filled with local, kama'aina facts of Hawaii businesses, schools, etc. It was written by my friend Bob who teaches at HPU as well.<br />
-<strong><em>Michele Ferguson</em></strong></p>

<p><strong>Bently, E. C. <u>Trent's Last Case</u>. [On order]</strong><br />
A classic murder mystery meant for mystery buffs of all sorts. It opens like this:<br />
     Between what matters and what seems to matter, how should the world we know judge wisely?<br />
     When the scheming, indomitable brain of Sigsbee Manderson was scattered by a shot from an unknown hand, that world lost nothing worth a single tear; it gained something memorable in a harsh reminder of the vanity of such wealth as this man had piled up - without making one loyal friend to mourn him, without doing an act that could help his memory to the least honour. But when the news of his end came, it seemed to those living in the great vortices of business as if the earth too shuddered under a blow.<br />
-<strong><em>Joe Tsujimoto</em></strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/buford_heat.jpg"><img alt="buford_heat.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/buford_heat-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="118" />  </a><strong>Buford, Bill. <u>Heat (An Amateur's Adventures as Kitchen Slave, Line Cook, Past-Maker, and <br />
     Apprentice to a Dante-Quoting Butcher in Tuscany)</u>. 2006. [On order]</strong><br />
Or what it means to be a professional chef, for Buford devotes himself whole-heartedly to becoming one, "back stage," in an irreverent world predominated by men. Further, as Anthony Bourdain (author of Kitchen Confidential) say, Buford "has captured the True Magnificence of Mario Batali - in all his Falstaffian glory - and the mad, driven brilliance [of chef] Marco Pierre White." Humor, insight into a frenetic sub-culture, and food, food, food - oh, the food. -In a way <u>Heat</u> is the flip side to Frances Mayes' <u>Under the Tuscan Sun</u>, which I also recommend.<br />
<strong>-<em>Joe Tsujimoto</em></strong></p>

<p><img alt="robinson_gilead.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/robinson_gilead.jpg" width="80" height="120" />  <strong>Robinson, Marilynne. <u>Gilead</u>. 2004. [F Robinson]</strong><br />
I highly recommend this book.<br />
<strong>-<em>Lisa Stewart</em></strong><br />
NOTE: See earlier comments on Gilead in the earlier posting "Too Good To Miss!</p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/egan_worst.jpg"><img alt="egan_worst.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/egan_worst-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Egan, Timothy. <u>The Worst Hard Time</u>. 2006. [338.1 Eg1]</strong><br />
I also recommend The Worst Hard Time about the dust bowl survivors.<br />
<strong>-<em>Lisa Stewart</em></strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/eggers_what.jpg"><img alt="eggers_what.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/eggers_what-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="112" /></a>  <strong>Eggers, Dave.<u> What is the What</u>. 2006. [on order]</strong><br />
I'm in the middle (not even) of Dave Eggers's new novel "What Is The What." I've just read a hundred pages but it's really amazing.<br />
<strong>-<em>Tim Dyke</em></strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/preston_gatsbys.jpg"><img alt="preston_gatsbys.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/preston_gatsbys-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="119" /></a>  <strong>Preston, Caroline. <u>Gatsby's Girl</u>.[on order]</strong><br />
<a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/roiphe_imperfect.jpg"><img alt="roiphe_imperfect.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/roiphe_imperfect-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Roiphe, Anne. <u>An Imperfect Lens</u>.[on order]</strong><br />
Here are a couple of recommendations for those interested in historical fiction with a touch of romance!<br />
<strong>-<em>Bobbie Wong</em></strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/burke_axemakers.jpg"><img alt="burke_axemakers.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/burke_axemakers-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="119" /></a>  <strong>Burke, James. <u>The Axemaker's Gift</u>.1995. [306.4 B91]</strong><br />
History of technology and society.<br />
<strong>-<em>Eric Eads</em></strong></p>

<p><br />
<a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/kidd_mermaid.jpg"><img alt="kidd_mermaid.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/kidd_mermaid-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a>  <strong>Kid, Sue Monk. <u>The Mermaid Chair</u>. 2005. [F Kidd]</strong><br />
<a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/martel_life.jpg"><img alt="martel_life.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/martel_life-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="110" /></a>  <strong>Martel, Yann. <u>Life of Pi</u>.</strong><br />
My picks would be <u>The Mermaid Chair</u> and <u>The Life of Pi</u>. Happy Reading!<br />
<strong>-<em>Lenore Peterson</em></strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/mccourt_teacher.jpg"><img alt="mccourt_teacher.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/mccourt_teacher-thumb.jpg" width="80" height="118" /></a>  <strong>McCourt, Frank. <u>Teacher Man</u>. 2005. [B M135t]</strong><br />
I enjoyed this memoir about teaching English in New York City public high schools. Always self-deprecating and funny, McCourt describes how he fumbled through years of teaching before he finally felt comfortable in the classroom.<br />
<strong>-<em>Susan Clark</em></strong></p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Too good to miss! Books recommended by faculty and staff. October 2006</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/2006/10/too_good_to_miss_books_recomme_1.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/MT/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=10/entry_id=1539" title="Too good to miss! Books recommended by faculty and staff. October 2006" />
    <id>tag:iws.punahou.edu,2006:/punablogs/interesting_things//10.1539</id>
    
    <published>2006-10-03T22:14:40Z</published>
    <updated>2007-04-24T22:11:01Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Thanks for all the suggestions that were emailed to me. If this is your first time reading the blog, you may want to go back to earlier posts for more suggestions of great books. Enjoy!...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Debra Peterson</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Books" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/">
        <![CDATA[<p>Thanks for all the suggestions that were emailed to me. If this is your first time reading the blog, you may want to go back to earlier posts for more suggestions of great books. Enjoy!</p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/roth_everyman.jpg"><img alt="roth_everyman.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/roth_everyman-thumb.jpg" width="79" height="120" /></a><br />
<strong>Roth, Philip. <u>Everyman</u>. 2006 [F Roth]</strong><br />
The Pulitzer Prize winning author of American Pastoral, Goodbye Columbus, and Portnoy's Complaint writes about "one man's lifelong confrontation with mortality. From his first glimpse of death during his childhood through his vigorous, seemingly invincible prime, Roth's hero is a man bewildered not only by his own decline but by the unimaginable deaths of his contemporaries and those he has loved."  - An incisive,  thoughtful and moving account of our inevitable end, especially for those in the midst of physical dissolution in our declining years.  The perfect blend of literary and philosophical truth.<br />
<strong>-Joe Tsujimoto</strong></p>

<p><strong>Taylor, Edmund. <u>The Fall of the Dynasties: The Collapse of the Old Order, 1905-1922</u>. 1963</strong><br />
This was first recommended to me by the late "Kie" Brown (Jr. School social studies teacher of the encyclopedic mind), when I asked him what history book I might enjoy reading.  Taylor's book chronicles the almost simultaneous fall of the Romanov, Hapsburg, and Ottoman empires.  The style, if I recall, is equally matched to the sweep of history and the pugnacity of culture.  It can be purchased at alibris.com for under $5.00, where I recently got my copy, after more than twenty years (and immediately loaned to Terry Woody).<br />
<strong>-Joe Tsujimoto</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/markham_west.jpg"><img alt="markham_west.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/markham_west-thumb.jpg" width="78" height="120" /></a><br />
<strong>Markham, Beryl. <u>West with the Night</u>. 1983. [B M34]</strong><br />
A beautifully written autobiography by an extraordinary woman who was raised in East Africa as horse trainer and became a transatlantic pilot.  One of the finest prose writers I have come across.<br />
	Africa is of an ancient age and the blood of many of her peoples is as<br />
	venerable and as chaste as truth.  What upstart race, sprung from some<br />
	recent, callow century to arm itself with steel and boastfulness, can match<br />
	In purity the blood of a single Masai Murani whose heritage may have <br />
	stemmed not far from Eden?  It is not the weed that is corrupt; roots of<br />
	the weed sucked first life from the genesis of the earth and hold the essence<br />
	of it still.  Always the weed returns; the cultured plants retreat before it.<br />
	Racial purity, true aristocracy, devolve not from edict, nor from rote, but<br />
	from the preservation of kinship with the elemental forces and purposes<br />
	of life whose understanding is not farther beyond the mind of the native<br />
	shepherd than beyond the cultured fumblings of a mortarboard intelligence.<br />
<strong>-Joe Tsujimoto</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/merwin_rain.jpg"><img alt="merwin_rain.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/merwin_rain-thumb.jpg" width="78" height="120" /></a><br />
<strong>Merwin, W.S. <u>The Rain in the Trees: Poems by W. S. Merwin</u>. 1989. [811 M553r]</strong><br />
Norman Hindley and I bought copies when the book first came out, and as Hindley said then, which holds true now, "He [Merwin] breaks your heart at every turn."  His  poems are elusive, almost fleeting, suggestive of dreams, but are not dreams, but whisperings of loss, and lovely, especially his love poems, like his opening poem "Late Spring":</p>

<p>	Coming into the high room again after years<br />
	after oceans and shadows of hills and the sounds of lies<br />
	after losses and feet on stairs</p>

<p>	after looking and mistakes and forgetting<br />
	turning there thinking to find<br />
	no one except those I knew<br />
	finally I saw you<br />
	sitting in white<br />
	already waiting</p>

<p>	you of whom I had heard<br />
	with my own ears since the beginning<br />
	for whom more than once<br />
	I had opened the door<br />
	believing you were not far<br />
<strong>-Joe Tsujimoto</strong></p>

<p><a href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/coelho_alchemist.jpg"><img alt="coelho_alchemist.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/coelho_alchemist-thumb.jpg" width="71" height="120" /></a><br />
<strong>Coelho, Paulo. <u>The Alchemist</u>. </strong><br />
A simple yet profound tale of a spiritual journey. A good read.<br />
<strong>-Eileen McCool</strong></p>

<p><strong>Smith, Alexander McCall.</strong> <br />
I recommend the #1 Ladies' Detective Agency series of books about a woman detective in Africa. Entertaining and short.  I am on #6. <br />
<strong>-Darcy Iams</strong></p>

<p><img alt="mccarthy_road.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/imag/mccarthy_road.jpg" width="73" height="120" /><br />
<strong>McCarthy, Cormac. <u>The Road</u>.</strong><br />
I just finished reading Cormac McCarthy's new book, "The Road" this past weekend. I can honestly say it was one of the best reading experiences I've had in a long time.  It's a page turner, but it's not necessarily an easy read because the world he creates is mighty bleak, and I had to take breaks to collect my thoughts and wipe away tears at certain points. That said, the book ends in a way that is hopeful and uplifting.  The story follows an unnamed man and his boy who are survivors of a vaguely described, world-ending apocalypse.  Starvation is now the norm in the world, and gangs of lawless cannibals abound.  There is really no where to go and no reason to live, but this man is compelled by his deep love for his son to keep moving down the road. Like I said, the premise is dark, but McCarthy is such a great writer that the book becomes a platform for philosophical musings about what makes life worth living. In my opinion, this book is one of McCarthy's best and one of the best novels I've ever read.<br />
<strong>- Tim Dyke</strong></p>

<p>I read "The Road" last week.  As Tim says, it's a page turner - in the world of ash, the definitive wasteland sometime after a nuclear holocaust, where the cow is extinct and no bird sings, where (to paraphrase McComac) father and son, one to each other, are the world entire.<br />
<strong>-Joe Tsujimoto</strong></p>

<p><strong>Note: </strong>McCarthy wins the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction for <u>The Road</u>. See story at MSNBC <a href="http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/18139055 ">http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/18139055 </a><br />
Deb Peterson</p>

<p><img alt="friedman_world.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/image/friedman_world.jpg" width="80" height="120" /><br />
<strong>Friedman, Thomas L. <u>The World is Flat</u>. [303.4 F91]</strong><br />
This is a very interesting book, even though I didn't agree with all his politics, it really made me think and I think all parents of high school students and college students should read this book and encourage their students to read it as well. He really talks about the future and how we should be preparing ourselves to be successful in the years to come.<br />
<strong>- Melanie Killam</strong></p>

<p>**I read the world is flat too. Like Melanie said, even if one does not identify with everything - it rings true. <br />
Similar in some ways, but much more sinister is "Confessions of an Economic Hitman" by John Perkins.<br />
<strong>-Jim Herbert</strong></p>

<p><img alt="robinson_gilead.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/robinson_gilead.jpg" width="80" height="120" /><br />
<strong>Robinson, Marilynne. <u>Gilead.</u> [F Robinson]</strong><br />
Captivating, beautifully written, stays with you for a long time. An elderly father writes to his young son.<br />
<strong>- Kathleen Thomas</strong></p>

<p><img alt="nafisi_reading.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/nafisi_reading.jpg" width="80" height="106" /><br />
<strong>Nafisi, Azar. <u>Reading Lolita in Tehran</u>. [B N13]</strong><br />
This book captures how life changed, especially for women when the Shah of Iran was overrun. It tells the story of women trying to keep hope and literature alive under life threatening circumstances.<br />
<strong>- Kathleen Thomas</strong></p>

<p><img alt="hosseini_kite.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/hosseini_kite.jpg" width="73" height="120" /><br />
<strong>Hosseini, Khaled. <u>Kite Runner</u>. [F Hosseini]</strong><br />
I'm sure this has been recommended already. This book will capture you and will break your heart. I feel it is worth reading because it tells the story of so many in the Middle East.<br />
<strong>- Kathleen Thomas</strong></p>

<p>**<em>See earlier comments about Kite Runner in the earlier post, Spring Break Reads</em></p>

<p><img alt="cox_swimming.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/cox_swimming.jpg" width="80" height="118" /><br />
<strong>Cox, Lynne. <u>Swimming to Antarctica</u>. 2004. [797.2 C832]</strong><br />
This memoir is an inspiring story of an athlete pursuing her dreams. The suspense builds as the author progresses from "easier" swims like the English Channel, to amazing swims in the freezing water of the Bering Strait and Antarctica.<br />
<strong>- Susan Clark</strong></p>

<p><img alt="rhodes_john.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/rhodes_john.jpg" width="80" height="119" /><br />
<strong>Rhodes, Richard. <u>John James Audubon: The Making of an American</u>. 2004. [B Au2r]</strong><br />
The person who steals the show in this biography is Audubon's remarkable wife Lucy. When Audubon traveled for long periods in the 1820s and 30s, sending little of no money, Lucy supported herself and their sons by teaching. The unvarnished letters included in the book paint a fascinating portrait of a marriage.<br />
<strong>- Susan Clark</strong></p>

<p><img alt="schuyler_painting.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/schuyler_painting.jpg" width="77" height="120" /><br />
<strong>Schuyler, Nina. <u>The Painting</u>. 2004</strong><br />
I read a great book this summer called The Painting by Nina Schuyler - 2004. This is a story that takes place in the 1870's of Tokyo and Paris. One of the main characters is a potter in Tokyo and his wife is the painter (of the title) - their lives connect to the lives of some people in Paris during the Franco-Prussia war. Well written with a strong visual sense. <br />
<strong>- Bob McWilliams</strong></p>

<p><br />
</p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Summer Reading Suggestions -- Deb Peterson and others</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/2006/04/summer_reading_suggestions_deb_1.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/MT/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=10/entry_id=472" title="Summer Reading Suggestions -- Deb Peterson and others" />
    <id>tag:iws.punahou.edu,2006:/punablogs/interesting_things//10.472</id>
    
    <published>2006-04-27T22:19:27Z</published>
    <updated>2006-10-04T01:41:37Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Looking for a good book to read? Try these that were recommended by fellow Punahou faculty and staff. Happy reading!...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Debra Peterson</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Books" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/">
        <![CDATA[<p>Looking for a good book to read? Try these that were recommended by fellow Punahou faculty and staff. Happy reading!</p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p><img alt="didion_year.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/images/didion_year.jpg" width="80" height="120" /><strong><u>The Year of Magical Thinking</u> by Joan Didion </strong><br />
I loved Joan Didion's "The Year of Magical Thinking," which details how <br />
she struggled through the sudden death of husband  John Gregory Dunne. <br />
The storytelling and writing are magnificent. <strong>-- <em>Carlyn Tani</em></strong></p>

<p><img alt="zafon_shadow.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/images/zafon_shadow.jpg" width="76" height="120" /> <strong><u>The Shadow of the Wind </u>by Carlos Zafon</strong><br />
I am not very savvy on blogs but I have recently read The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Zafon.  It might already be in your fiction list.  Story about a young boy who finds a book in the library of lost books.  The story follows the life of the author and the young boy.  A mystery and love story. <strong>--<em>Darcy Iams</em></strong></p>

<p><img alt="seierstad_bookseller.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/images/seierstad_bookseller.jpg" width="80" height="112" /><strong>Seierstad, Asne. <u>The Bookseller of Kabul</u></strong>. [958.1 Se4] <br />
A Norwegian journalist lives with a family in Afghanistan and looks at their lives after the Taliban. She examines the practices of arranged marriages and family dynamics of a Muslim man and his family living in post-Taliban Kabul, Afghanistan. <strong>-<em>Deb Peterson</em></strong></p>

<p><img alt="iweala_beasts.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/images/iweala_beasts.jpg" width="80" height="118" /><br />
<strong>Iweala, Uzodinma. <u>Beasts of No Nation</u>. 2005 [F Iweala]</strong><br />
A West African student is recruited by a unit of guerrilla fighters after the brutal murder of his father by militants. The subject matter was disturbing but the author did a great job with the voice and perspective of the narrator. <br />
<strong>- Deb Peterson   </strong></p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>My Account tab on the Library Catalog --Deb Peterson</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/2006/04/my_account_tab_on_the_library_1.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/MT/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=10/entry_id=469" title="My Account tab on the Library Catalog --Deb Peterson" />
    <id>tag:iws.punahou.edu,2006:/punablogs/interesting_things//10.469</id>
    
    <published>2006-04-26T21:51:23Z</published>
    <updated>2006-10-04T01:46:10Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Have you ever wondered what the My Account tab is on our online library catalog? Read on to know how to check what items you have out, how to renew materials and check the status on books that you have...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Debra Peterson</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Tips" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/">
        <![CDATA[<p><strong>Have you ever wondered what the My Account tab is on our online library catalog? </strong><br />
Read on to know how to check what items you have out, how to renew materials and check the status on books that you have placed on hold.</p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p><img alt="my_account.gif" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/image/my_account.gif" width="480" height="468" /></p>

<p><strong>If you click on the tab, it asks for your Borrower barcode # and your PIN #. </strong></p>

<p><img alt="login_resized.gif" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/image/login_resized.gif" width="485" height="351" /></p>

<p><strong>Your <strong><em>Borrower barcode # is the first seven digits of your Punahou ID </em></strong>and your <strong><em>PIN # should be the last 4 digits of your home phone number</em></strong>. If this doesn’t work, please contact one of the campus libraries for assistance.</strong></p>

<p><strong>Once you are in “My Account”, the first screen you will see is your account overview.</strong></p>

<p><img alt="account_overview_resize.gif" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/image/account_overview_resize.gif" width="480" height="348" /></p>

<p><strong>From this screen you can see how many items you have checked out, any books that are being held for you, and any fines or other charges. For a more detailed account you can click on any of these links for more information.</strong></p>

<p><strong>Items Out:</strong></p>

<p><img alt="items_out_resized.gif" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/image/items_out_resized.gif" width="485" height="351" /></p>

<p><strong>This screen will list all books you currently have out. One nice feature is the <strong><em>ability to renew books one time from home.</em></strong> Just click the box beside those you want to renew (or the box in the black bar to renew all the books) and click renew. You may get a message that books are being held for another borrower and that you can’t renew these items.</p>

<p>You can also check the status of any book that you might have placed a hold on with the <strong><em>Holds tab </em></strong>or check on any fines that have accumulated on your account. The last tab, <strong><em>Profiles</em></strong> will let you see the information on your account with an opportunity to change your PIN#.</strong></p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Spring Break Reads  -- Deb Peterson</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/2006/03/spring_break_reads.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://iws.punahou.edu/MT/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=10/entry_id=321" title="Spring Break Reads  -- Deb Peterson" />
    <id>tag:iws.punahou.edu,2006:/punablogs/interesting_things//10.321</id>
    
    <published>2006-03-09T01:12:45Z</published>
    <updated>2006-04-19T20:20:41Z</updated>
    
    <summary>What are some good books to read over Spring Break? I heard this question in the cafeteria and was reminded of the wonderful list that the Academy English Department compiled last spring. I was lucky enough to get a copy...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Debra Peterson</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Books" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/">
        <![CDATA[<p><strong>What are some good books to read over Spring Break?</strong><br />
I heard this question in the cafeteria and was reminded of the wonderful list that the Academy English Department compiled last spring. I was lucky enough to get a copy of the list of their favorite books and much of my summer reading was taken from this list. I especially liked the diversity of genres and tastes represented on the list. The list included books that I may not have picked up on my own.</p>

<p>As I was thinking of ways to share book recommendations amongst the adult Punahou 'ohana, I was reading some library blogs and decided to delve in with one devoted to "He mea hoihoi - Interesting Things." The first post will be devoted to books to read over Spring Break. Please add your own recommendations by adding comments to this post. Please do not give away any endings and do add an annotation about the book and why you enjoyed reading it.</p>

<p>See something you would like to read? See if it is available in <a href="http://webpac.punahou.edu/ipac20/ipac.jsp?profile=cke#focus">Cooke Library </a>or the <a href="http://www.librarieshawaii.org/services/">Hawaii State Public Library</a>.</p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p><img alt="kite_runner.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/images/kite_runner.jpg" width="80" height="106" /> <strong><u>Kite Runner </u>by Khaled Hosseini</strong><br />
One of my favorites recently is <u>Kite Runner</u> by Khaled Hosseini. Amir and Hassan are young boys in Afghanistan. Amir is from a privileged family and his best friend, Hassan, is the son of servants. The book begins with the two boys participating in the traditional kite running contest in Kabul. What happens that day will haunt both boys and change their friendship.<br />
    <br />
**"Thanks for including me in this. I just recently finished reading "Kiterunner" and I found it to be riveting. I couldn't put the book down. It gave me some insight into Afghani life from the monarchy to the Talibani periods. Powerful and thought-provoking. Thanks for the chance to comment." - Yukio Hamada</p>

<p>**There is recent news out of Pakistan about the practice of kite running being banned. Check out this article: <a href="http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=worldNews&storyID=2006-03-13T085154Z_01_ISL90769_RTRUKOC_0_UK-PAKISTAN-KITES.xml&archived=False">More than 1,000 detained over Pakistan kite ban</a>. To read more articles, simply go to Google News and put "kite running" into the search box. - Deb Peterson  </p>

<p><img alt="pretty_bird.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/images/pretty_bird.jpg" width="79" height="120" /> <strong><u>Pretty Birds </u>by Scott Simon</strong><br />
In war-torn Sarajevo, Irena's family is brutalized as they are forced to flee to the Muslim section of the city at the outbreak of hostilities. Irena is a star basketball player on her school team and her life changes dramatically in the course of a few hours as she leaves her friends behind her as she flees. Irena is recruited to become a sniper and her life becomes a struggle to merely stay alive. <u>Pretty Birds</u> is a novel written by Scott Simon, a NPR reporter.</p>

<p><img alt="fortunes_rocks.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/images/fortunes_rocks.jpg" width="78" height="120" /> <strong><u>Fortune's Rocks </u>by Anita Shreve</strong><br />
<u>Fortune's Rocks </u>by Anita Shreve tells the story of fifteen-year-old Olympia who meets a friend of her father while on vacation with her family. Olympia and John Haskell, a married man three times her age fall in love despite the turn of the century censure of their love. The book also talks of labor movements concerning mill-town workers.</p>

<p><img alt="peace.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/images/peace.jpg" width="80" height="117" /> <strong><u>Peace Like a River </u>by Leif Enger</strong><br />
<u>Peace Like a River</u> by Leif Enger is a wonderful story told through Reuben Land, an eleven year old with asthma. His father is raising three sons alone in 1960s Minnesota. After Reuben's older brother, Davy, is charged with murder and runs away, the father,Jeremiah, searches for him to keep the family together. There is something about this novel that haunts you long after you finish reading.</p>

<p>Those are some of my picks. Please feel free to "comment" on any of these choices and add your favorites to the list. If you would like to be notified when the blog is updated, let me know. IT assures me that it is easy to do.</p>

<p><img alt="larson_devil.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/larson_devil.jpg" width="79" height="120" /> <strong><u>Devil in the White City </u>by Erik Larson </strong>(recommended by Shryl Matias)<br />
Hi Deb,<br />
Thanks so much for doing this. Here's a "blurb" for a book that I found fascinating, DEVIL IN THE WHITE CITY:<br />
Bringing Chicago circa 1893 to vivid life, Erik Larson's spellbinding bestseller intertwines the true tale of two men--the brilliant architect behind the legendary 1893 World's Fair, striving to secure America's place in the world; and the cunning serial killer who used the fair to lure his victims to their death. Combining meticulous research with nail-biting storytelling, Erik Larson has crafted a narrative with all the wonder of newly discovered history and the thrills of the best fiction.<br />
"As absorbing a piece of popular history as one will ever hope to find." --San Francisco Chronicle</p>

<p><img alt="professor.jpg" src="http://iws.punahou.edu/punablogs/interesting_things/images/professor.jpg" width="79" height="120" /><strong><u>THE PROFESSOR AND THE MADMAN</u>, by Simon Winchester.  </strong><br />
     Read this about 3 years ago, and it comes to mind whenever I want to recommend an absorbing non-fiction work.  Winchester tells the story of the  Oxford Unabridged Dictionary, from initial  idea through its creation, and one doesn't need to be an English teacher or a librarian to enjoy this book.   I never realized the enormity of that undertaking, and I certainly had no idea how long it took once the project got underway - Winchester explains all this, and he sprinkles fascinating facts about the Dictionary as he does.  But what elevates this book is the story he tells about the leading contributor to the project - an American, by the way. <br />
     I mostly read non-fiction and loved it; Deb mostly reads fiction, and she loved it too.<br />
                   -Jay Seidenstein</p>]]>
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