Matthew Rascoff and Eric Johnson present interesting suggestions for encouraging students and universities to nurture life-long learning in their Chronicle of Higher Education article (Aug 28, 2016) entitled "Reimagining College as life-long learning" http://www.chronicle.com/article/Reimagining-College-as-a/237588
They reimagine college as a continuum that lasts from 18 until 120, that encourages individuals to return to learning and education again and again. If this is the case, then libraries and other cultural institutions are perfectly positioned to add to life-long learning. In fact, most cultural institutions offer classes, workshops, and plenty of opportunities to education oneself throughout a lifetime. So what's the big deal? The article is a reminder that education and learning don't end just because you get a degree or finish a course. There's plenty to continue to learn in a field, in a specialty, or in a hobby.
As librarians, archivists, and information professionals, we need to continue to educate ourselves, grapple with new topics and new skills, foster learning in others, and spark that desire "to know," or to answer all the "why" questions.
So today, while you are thinking about it, plan to reading a new book, watch an intriguing video, or begin to learn something new. That's what life-long learning is all about.
On to more books.......
Thursday, September 1, 2016
Friday, August 26, 2016
Other places to see my reviews
I write reviews for lots of organizations including
The Columbus (OH) Dispatch (no longer taking reviews as of 2018)
The Book Loft of German Village - and their Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/bookloftcolumbus
Ohioana Library Association
Audiofile Magazine (Audiobooks)
And several professional journals.
The Columbus (OH) Dispatch (no longer taking reviews as of 2018)
The Book Loft of German Village - and their Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/bookloftcolumbus
Ohioana Library Association
Audiofile Magazine (Audiobooks)
And several professional journals.
Tuesday, August 9, 2016
Learning about Politics and How it Works
The birth of the modern political campaign
The Triumph
of William McKinley: Why the Election of 1896 Still Matters by Karl Rove
This is the year for politics, judging candidates,
and deciding who will be the next president. Karl Rove’s newest book The Triumph of William McKinley was
released in paperback just in time for the Republican National Convention in
Cleveland Ohio. In this fascinating history, Rove describes how McKinley ran
the first modern political campaign using newspapers, social networking, and
public opinion. Wait a minute! McKinley campaigned for president in 1896, stomping
and barnstorming for votes at the Republican National Convention in Chicago,
then on to the White House. Today’s politicians still campaign using McKinley’s
techniques.
Read about this staunch Republican, an Ohio native,
a US Representative, Ohio Governor, and the last president to have served in
the Civil War. He was a master at working the political machine, at networking,
and currying favor across the state and later the country. McKinley stood for
protectionism, for keeping import tariffs high and buying American. As a
politician, he weathered the Depression of 1873 and the Panic of 1893, long
years of unemployment, failed banks, and failed businesses in the midst of
rising monopolies and industrialization. Sound familiar? McKinley faced many of
the economic problems we face today and he campaigned successfully throughout
it all.
You don’t have to be a Republican to read this
book. Rove’s book is fascinating no matter your political persuasion. Election
buffs will love the political wrangling, horse-trading, and maneuvering.
Historians will delight in the history of political, economic, and societal
issues of the United States from the end of the Civil War to the end of the
century. Readers will savor the details Karl Rove provides about this
Progressive Era politician who is still relevant in the 21st
century.
Shakespeare on the stage and off
In the spirit of Shakespeare, Mary Sharratt’s The Dark Lady’s Mask is an enchanting
fictionalized biography featuring Shakespeare and Amelia Lanier, a Renaissance
poet. In 1593, the life and fortunes of Amelia Bassano Lanier, the great female
Renaissance poet, intersects with Shakespeare's. They collaborate on his early
plays while traveling in Italy, she seeking her inheritance, Shakespeare, an
adventure. The enchanting work of historical fiction is full of poetry and
passion; Shakespeare’s passion for plays and Lanier’s for poetry. The sumptuous
language and descriptions will draw you into Lanier’s life and loves in
Elizabethan England.
Karen Harper’s Mistress
Shakespeare (NAL, 2010) is another
book about Shakespeare with a feminine twist. In 1583, Shakespeare marries
first Anne Whateley, whom he loves dearly and the very next day, Anne Hathaway
who is carrying his child. Whateley, a merchant’s daughter, moves to London to
escape her broken heart and run the family business. Of course, her life
intersects with Shakespeare and the theater and, their smoldering love affair
sparks passion and great poetry. Grab your book of Shakespeare Sonnets and read
along as Shakespeare and Whateley spout phrases and poems at one another.
Timeless and beautiful, the poetry is at the heart of this romance.
If you are in the mood for mystery, check out The Roaring Boy: A Nicholas Bracewell Mystery by Edward Marston. It features a play about a recent murder.
When an actor dies in the first scene, then another, the Roaring Boys are
forced to continuously rewrite their play and solve the mystery. Here,
playwrights who compose plays and edit on the fly, and imagine that Shakespeare
did the same until his plays were ‘perfect.’
These books provide wonderful descriptions of
London of the late 1500s, from cold rooms and warm clothes, to theater and
romance.
Tuesday, July 12, 2016
Coming of Age in a Small Town
Robin Yocum http://robinyocum.com/books/ spoke at Thurber House http://thurberhouse.org/index.html (Columbus, OH) on July
6th, 2016 to a crowd of 200 fans. The weather was gorgeous and the temps just perfect for an outside picnic and book talk. Yocum spoke of
his journalism career on the police desk at the Columbus (OH) Dispatch where he wrote about many local and state crimes. After a career in journalism, Yocum turned his hand to first true crime and then fiction.
Combine a coming of age book with a murder mystery, you get
Robin Yocum's newest mystery "A Brilliant Death." Set in Brilliant,Ohio, it's the story of Travis Baron's search for how is mother died fifteen
years earlier. Travis Baron and his friend Mitchell Malone seek out truth about her disappearance. Malone spins a tale of
their friendship, their investigation, and the sad truth behind the death.
Yocum is a wonderful
wordsmith bringing characters to life one descriptive word at a time.
Yocum's writing isn't over wordy but to the point, drawing the reader
into the investigation, into life in small town Brilliant which is full of
secrets just waiting to be uncovered. While Yocum says his current works feature teenagers who
search for answers to mysteries in their lives, he writes for adults.
Indeed,
his stories are gritty, full of violence and heartbreak, and the trials of
coming to age in dying towns in Ohio’s rust belt. A Brilliant Death is the perfect confluence of love, searching for
the truth, and uncovering the past. Once you read Yocum’s newest book, you’ll
wonder how you missed his earlier fiction, Favorite Sons and The Essay.
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