Thursday, May 17, 2012
Let's Go Be Revolutionaries!
Deb Olin Unferth's memoir, Revolution: the Year I Fell in Love and Went to Join the War, is the subject of the next Memoirs and Coffee book discussion this Tuesday, May 22, at 10:30 a.m. in the library. Ms. Unferth "went to join the war" after falling in love with a college co-ed described as idealistic, to say the least. The author changed faiths for him, and together they ventured off to Nicaragua to attempt to join the Sandanista Army in 1987. But the Sandanistas had little use for them, the couple was continually robbed as they moved around the country, and malnutrition began to set in. Love did not last. Neither did the author's fervor for "revolution jobs." Copies of the book are available in the library, and new members are invited to attend this book discussion.
Labels:
book group,
books,
library features,
Memoirs and Coffee
Thursday, May 3, 2012
Trillion Dollar Shoreline, Comes With Spare Tires
Why does Manhattan turn inward onto its glittering skyscrapers
and avenues of commerce when a gold coastline, a potentially magnificent waterfront, beckons
from all sides? Would its residents rush
to these shorelines, partaking of promenades, water sports, and river transportation systems if accessibility were vastly improved? New York essayist/author Phillip Lopate muses on these and many other thoughtfilled topics in his excellent 2004 publication, Waterfront: A Walk Around Manhattan. Waterfront will be discussed this Saturday, May 5th, by the Saturday Samplers book group meeting at Bernardsville Library.
In Waterfront: A Walk Around Manhattan, Phillip Lopate employs a personal and quite New York point of view while examining his very own turf and surf. The result is a vastly enjoyable, enlightening, and inspiring reading experience. You may even want to get up out of your chair and take a walk, perhaps not quite reaching all the forlorn, topographically dangerous spots the author trekked to in his attempt to walk around Manhattan. For as Lopate circumambulates his revered city, struggling many times to gain access to the shoreline, it becomes obvious that one of the city's greatest features - its waterfront - is also one of its least realized treasures.
Lopate begins his walkabout at the southern tip of Manhattan, working his way up the Hudson River waterfront from Battery Park. Advancing northward, his strolls along open walkways with clear vistas of the water eventually become treacherous hikes along footpaths in the Fort Washington Park vicinity near the George Washington Bridge. There he describes "one of the loveliest, most harmonious, and yet least-known spots on the Manhattan waterfront," but to get to it on foot necessitated "my usual bullheaded method of proceeding down the vine-scrabbled hill until the Henry Hudson Highway cut me off, then made a mad dash for it. Actually, the highway bifurcates with the park, so that you have to risk your life twice to get to the water's edge." After doing so, he was told that there is actually a footbridge nearby, but as New York irony would have it, there are only two footbridges, separated by three miles, crossing high-speed roads. Clearly the car supplants the foot; still, Lopate soldiered on through brambles, chainlink fences, and across high-voltage train tracks to reach northernmost Inwood Park by way of the riverfront.
The author's sojourns along the East River - not a river, but an estuary - provide him many opportunities for fascinating digressions about housing projects, maritime history, and immigrant life. Thoroughly versed in the history and literature of New York City, Lopate cites Hart Crane, Joseph Mitchell, and Herman Melville among other writers who felt the pull of the waterfront. Of course, murderers and despairing souls also felt that pull, and over the centuries the waterfront has given up many bodies. Medical advancements in the last century or so are visually apparent, too, as Lopate passes Roosevelt Island, home to the old Smallpox Hospital and the ruins of a lunatic asylum. Directly opposite Roosevelt Island, one of the city's foremost hospitals, New York Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center, now stretches itself out along the waterfront of the Upper East Side. Typhoid Mary, the Fulton Fish Market, Robert Moses, the city's bridges and islands, so many interesting items are touched on here.
But let us not overlook the city's utter lack of regard in places for its riverfront landscape, strewn as it is with automobile tires, clots of debris, and remnants of old industry. Falling economies, busted budgets, and political squabbles all have taken their toll. Lack of a cohesive and sustaining vision for the waterfront plays a part, too. Manhattan continues to transform itself, but we are left to wonder whether the city and its inhabitants will collectively recognize the potential bounty surrounding them at their watery borders.
In Waterfront: A Walk Around Manhattan, Phillip Lopate employs a personal and quite New York point of view while examining his very own turf and surf. The result is a vastly enjoyable, enlightening, and inspiring reading experience. You may even want to get up out of your chair and take a walk, perhaps not quite reaching all the forlorn, topographically dangerous spots the author trekked to in his attempt to walk around Manhattan. For as Lopate circumambulates his revered city, struggling many times to gain access to the shoreline, it becomes obvious that one of the city's greatest features - its waterfront - is also one of its least realized treasures.
Lopate begins his walkabout at the southern tip of Manhattan, working his way up the Hudson River waterfront from Battery Park. Advancing northward, his strolls along open walkways with clear vistas of the water eventually become treacherous hikes along footpaths in the Fort Washington Park vicinity near the George Washington Bridge. There he describes "one of the loveliest, most harmonious, and yet least-known spots on the Manhattan waterfront," but to get to it on foot necessitated "my usual bullheaded method of proceeding down the vine-scrabbled hill until the Henry Hudson Highway cut me off, then made a mad dash for it. Actually, the highway bifurcates with the park, so that you have to risk your life twice to get to the water's edge." After doing so, he was told that there is actually a footbridge nearby, but as New York irony would have it, there are only two footbridges, separated by three miles, crossing high-speed roads. Clearly the car supplants the foot; still, Lopate soldiered on through brambles, chainlink fences, and across high-voltage train tracks to reach northernmost Inwood Park by way of the riverfront.
The author's sojourns along the East River - not a river, but an estuary - provide him many opportunities for fascinating digressions about housing projects, maritime history, and immigrant life. Thoroughly versed in the history and literature of New York City, Lopate cites Hart Crane, Joseph Mitchell, and Herman Melville among other writers who felt the pull of the waterfront. Of course, murderers and despairing souls also felt that pull, and over the centuries the waterfront has given up many bodies. Medical advancements in the last century or so are visually apparent, too, as Lopate passes Roosevelt Island, home to the old Smallpox Hospital and the ruins of a lunatic asylum. Directly opposite Roosevelt Island, one of the city's foremost hospitals, New York Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center, now stretches itself out along the waterfront of the Upper East Side. Typhoid Mary, the Fulton Fish Market, Robert Moses, the city's bridges and islands, so many interesting items are touched on here.
But let us not overlook the city's utter lack of regard in places for its riverfront landscape, strewn as it is with automobile tires, clots of debris, and remnants of old industry. Falling economies, busted budgets, and political squabbles all have taken their toll. Lack of a cohesive and sustaining vision for the waterfront plays a part, too. Manhattan continues to transform itself, but we are left to wonder whether the city and its inhabitants will collectively recognize the potential bounty surrounding them at their watery borders.
~Review by Evelyn Fischel~
Labels:
authors,
books,
library features,
Saturday Samplers
Thursday, April 26, 2012
Poems for a Month or One Day
Labels:
displays,
library features,
National Poetry Month
Thursday, April 19, 2012
What Memory Serves
Bernardsville Library's book group, Memoirs and Coffee, will discuss Half a Life by Darin Strauss at its next meeting on Tuesday, April 24th, at 10:30 a.m. Memoirs and Coffee, led by Pat Kennedy-Grant, welcomes newcomers, who may obtain copies of the book at the circulation desk. The title of Half a Life refers in part to the author's realization that he had lived half a lifetime longer than the teenage bicyclist he accidentally killed with his car when he was also a teen. As The New York Times 2010 review notes, "At the center of this elegant, painful, stunningly honest memoir thrums a question fundamental to what it means to be human: What do we do with what we’ve been given?" For Strauss, those pain-filled memories and present-day consequences must be thoroughly examined in the manner in which he can best deliver, as a writer.
Labels:
books,
library features,
Memoirs and Coffee
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Cleopatra
Cleopatra: a Life, by Stacy Schiff, will be the subject of Saturday Samplers next book discussion to be held this Saturday, April 14th, at 3:30 p.m. Saturday Samplers is a Bernardsville Library book group which meets once a month in the library on a Saturday afternoon. For more information about the book group, link to the Saturday Samplers blog.
Stacy Schiff is an award-winning biographer who met with literary success early in her career. Born in 1961, Ms. Schiff attended Williams College. She subsequently worked for Simon & Schuster as a writer and editor until 1990, at which point she settled into steady work as an acclaimed biographer. Her first publication in 1994, the biography of aviator and author Antoine de Saint-Exupery, was selected as a Pulitzer Prize finalist, and her biography of Vera Nabokov won the Pulitzer Prize in 2000. A well-received biography of Benjamin Franklin preceded her latest publication, Cleopatra: a Life. Learn more about Stacy Schiff or Cleopatra: a Life on the author's Web site.
Labels:
authors,
books,
library features,
Saturday Samplers
Wednesday, April 4, 2012
Bernardsville Library Mobile App
Connect with us on the go!
Check your account, search the catalog, access library information, download e-books and much more, all from our new Mobile app. Simply go to our Web site and download the app right onto your Android, iPhone or iPad.
Starting April 9th, the first 500 Bernardsville Library cardholders to download the library’s mobile app and show it to us on their mobile devices will get a free Driinn Mobile Phone Holder at the library (one per person). Funding is provided by LibraryLinkNJ and the Friends of the Bernardsville Public Library.
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
Dr. Seuss's Naked Dames and Horses, Too!
During the final week of the library's Dr. Seuss display, I thought it would be interesting to "flesh out" our appreciation of this author a bit. We've learned that Dr. Seuss wrote and illustrated many books for children, but he also produced cartoons for adults which have been collected in Dr. Seuss Goes to War and The Tough Coughs as He Ploughs the Dough. Additionally, Theodor Seuss Geisel authored the humorous storybook You're Only Old Once! which was aimed at the aging adult audience.
Perhaps his most unexpected adult book is the strange story of The Seven Lady Godivas, one of his earliest publications. In this book Dr. Seuss concocted a highly imaginative legend to explain the origins of seven well-known proverbs. These are the proverbs having to do with horses and what he called horse truths, an example of which would be "Never change horses in the middle of the stream."
So here's where it gets strange: Dr. Seuss utilized the legend of Lady Godiva and her horse, but converted this individual into a family of seven Godiva sisters who must uncover these horse truths/proverbs. As he stated tongue in cheek in his foreword, "History has treated no name so shabbily as it has the name Godiva. Today Lady Godiva brings to mind a shameful picture-a big blond nude trotting around town on a horse.....There was not one; there were Seven Lady Godivas, and their nakedness actually was not a thing of shame." And so the seven stalwart sisters fulfill their Seussian destiny to discover horse sense (and true love, too!) all while unflinchingly wearing their birthday suits. Dr. Seuss must have had fun coming up with this one.
- Evelyn Fischel -
Sunday, March 11, 2012
Seriously, Dr. Seuss

Did you know that Dr. Seuss drew political cartoons during World War II?
From 1941-1943, Theodor Seuss Geisel composed over 400 wartime editorial cartoons for the New York journal PM. While he targeted Hitler, Mussolini, Stalin, and the Japanese, his cartoons also ridiculed any notions of appeasement or American isolationism. Dr. Seuss derided Charles Lindbergh and the America First movement and often used an ostrich as a stand-in for these isolationists. The University of California, San Diego, now owns the originals of his political cartoons, two of which are shown here courtesy of UCSD.
Approximately half of the editorial cartoons were selected for the 1999 publication, Dr. Seuss Goes to War, by Richard H. Minear. The book contains full page images of the cartoons arranged by the author based on topics such as "The Home Front" and "Winning the War." Minear also addresses the crass insensitivity shown to Asian-Americans, specifically Japanese-Americans, in several of these cartoons. By means of explanation rather than excuse, Minear elucidates the historical background and wartime context which drove Dr. Seuss's editorial commentary. You'll find a copy of Dr. Seuss Goes to War among the featured books in the current "Dr. Seuss!" display in our lobby.
-Evelyn Fischel
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authors,
books,
displays,
library features
Tuesday, March 6, 2012
Dr. Seuss!
During this month of March we are celebrating Dr. Seuss. His joyful, creative output is on full view in the lobby for all to enjoy. Entitled "Dr. Seuss!," this display combines many wonderful Seuss favorites along with lesser known books for adults and additional biographies. Audiobooks and film versions of his stories are also included.
Theodor Seuss Geisel was born on March 2, 1904, and this year marks the 75th anniversary of the publication of his first children's book, "And to Think that I Saw it on Mulberry Street." Dr. Seuss's beloved cast of characters can be found here - Horton, Yertle the Turtle, Gerald McBoing Boing, the Sneetches, and of course, the Grinch as well as the Cat in the Hat. Why let the kids have all the fun? Look for your favorite books from childhood and take a few home to read all over again. And while you're at it, both old and young are invited to draw their favorite Dr. Seuss characters on our easel. Every day we get new and wonderful sketches.
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authors,
books,
displays,
library features
Monday, February 27, 2012
Craftiness Pays Off
Labels:
knitting,
library features,
Saturday Crafters
Friday, February 17, 2012
Library Book Group Now Reading "Unbroken"
Laura Hillenbrand's 2010 bestseller, Unbroken: a World War II Story of Survival, Resilience and Redemption, will be discussed by Bernardsville Library's book group, Memoirs and Coffee, on Feb. 28th at 10:30 a.m. Army Air Force pilot Louis Zamperini is the subject of Unbroken which recounts his years of torment after his plane crashed into the Pacific Ocean during wartime. The author's webpage notes that "Ahead of Zamperini lay thousands of miles of open ocean, leaping sharks, a foundering raft, thirst and starvation, enemy aircraft, and, beyond, a trial even greater. Driven to the limits of endurance, Zamperini would answer desperation with ingenuity; suffering with hope, resolve,and humor; brutality with rebellion. His fate, whether triumph or tragedy, would be suspended on the fraying wire of his will." Copies of Unbroken are available at the circulation desk, and this group discussion will be open to the public.
Labels:
books,
library features,
Memoirs and Coffee
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
Black History Month Displays at Bernardsville Library
Black History Month at Bernardsville Library is being observed with book displays in both the Biography and Youth Services sections. A variety of picture books for young readers are showcased in the children's area along with a posterboard featuring one new fact a day about Black History Month. Come by and learn a thing or two while enjoying these great kids books.
Bernardsville Library's Biography section now offers a month-long display showcasing many interesting books on the lives of notable African Americans. Sojourner Truth, Paul Robeson, Langston Hughes, and Thurgood Marshall are all famous names in history, but how about the resilient Mr. Jimmy Winkfield, the last African American jockey to win the Kentucky Derby? He was the 17th child of sharecroppers, but fled to Europe to escape threats from the KKK after his derby win. Winkfield raced horses in Russia, riding the Tsar's horse, and later acquired property and status in France, only to be hounded out of that country by the Nazis. Black Maestro: the epic life of an American legend by Joe Drape recounts this man's amazing life.
Labels:
Black HIstory Month,
books,
displays,
library features
Monday, January 30, 2012
e-Books to iPad
Learn how to download books and music to iPad at Bernardsville Library's program on January 31st at 7 p.m. The procedure and apps you need will be demonstrated by Cranbury Public Library's Doug Baldwin, librarian and IT expert. Feel free to bring your iPad with you.
If you don't own an iPad, why not try out Bernardsville Public Library's iPad which may be borrowed with a Bernardsville Library card? For more information or to sign up for this program, call 908-766-0118 or go online @ http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/DX8SSJ6.
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
Library Book Group To Discuss The Memory Palace
Mira Bartok's memoir of family dysfunction and mental illness, The Memory Palace, will be discussed at the next meeting of Memoirs and Coffee on Tuesday, January 24th, at 10:30 a.m. The Memory Palace recounts the damaging effects her mother's schizophrenia had on both the author and her sister. At one point both sisters severed all contact with their mother because of her destructive behavior. Nonetheless, Mira Bartok found a need to reconnect with her mother when she herself was recovering from a debilitating accident. The book discussion will be led by Pat Kennedy-Grant who invites new members to join Memoirs and Coffee. Copies of The Memory Palace are available now at the circulation desk.
Labels:
book group,
books,
library features,
Memoirs and Coffee
Wednesday, January 11, 2012
Ready, Set, Knit/Crochet!
Before the first snowflakes fall, be sure to visit Bernardsville Library's "Knit Up A Storm This Winter" display featuring our knit and crochet books. You'll find lots of great ideas and patterns in these attractive books geared to creating the latest in handmade fashion, home decor and toys. Wander over to this display in our nonfiction section, borrow a book, and get started with your projects right now.
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