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On Sunday, Tony Hillerman, the writer who brought the southwest and the Navajo Indian nation to life for many readers, died at the age of 83.   I began reading his books many moons ago, and when I visited that part of Arizona and New Mexico a couple of years ago, I felt like I was stepping into one of his books.  The light, the mountains, the vast empty spaces - all there - just as he had described them.  The only things missing were Jim Chee and Lt. Joe Leaphorn, his enduring characters in many of his books.  If you haven't read one of his books, or if you've missed one or two of his books along the way, you're in for a treat, from his first book The Blessing Way, published in 1970 to his last, The Shape Shifter, published in 2006.  Thank you, Mr. Hillerman. 

Tony Hillerman
Tony Hillerman

Regular readers of the New York Times may have read this week's article "From the Streets to the Libraries" which described why so many public libraries are buying "street lit."   The article's writer seemed surprised by how widely libraries have been embracing street lit, sometimes also called "urban fiction."   The books and other library materials that public libraries buy should reflect community interests.  Here in Philadelphia, we know that street lit is "hot." So we buy lots.  Just as we buy all kinds of other books, which is what you should expect in a city the size of Philadelphia. 

Authors like Donald Goines and Iceberg Slim started the trend back in the 1960's and 70's.  A number of authors today, such as Philadelphia's Teri Woods, began publishing their own books and still do, although a number of larger publishing companies began picking up these authors after they saw how successful they were.  Street lit can get a conversation going, with some people concerned about the street language and depictions of violence, drugs and sex. Omar Tyree, an author who has been part of the Free Library's author series, has recently said that he is not going to write any more street lit books.  Street lit titles are so popular though with many readers because they feel "real" to their readers. 

What do you think?   Here are links to books the Free Library owns of several of the authors mentioned in the NYT article:

Donald Goines

Iceberg Slim

Omar Tyree

Teri Woods.   Click here ( Street Lit panel ) to listen to a podcast of the December 2007 panel discussion on street lit which included  Teri Woods, Shannon Holmes, and Solomon Jones. 

Upcoming:  Sister Souljah is speaking at Parkway Central on December 20 at 2:00 about her forthcoming book Midnight:  A Gangster Love Story. 

Tags: Reviews, Street Lit

Teri Woods
Teri Woods

As you may have noticed, we have a presidential election quickly approaching. With less than two weeks until you cast your ballot, it’s crunch time. It’s easy to get overwhelmed by the sheer volume of media coverage that has been surrounding this election—that’s why the Library has compiled a resource guide for everything election-related. You can also let sites such as RealClearPolitics.com and Politico.com do the dirty work for you—they cull the best political commentary from various sources and present it to readers on their respective sites. Happy voting!

The nominees for the National Book Awards were announced on Wednesday morning, and we were excited to see two of the authors from our fall series on the list! Marilynne Robinson’s Home was nominated in the Fiction category, and Annette Gordon-Reed’s The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family was named under Nonfiction. The formal award ceremony for the 59th National Book Awards will take place on November 19 in New York City, so visit your local branch now to check out a nominated book and see how it stacks up (no pun intended).

Fiction
Aleksandar Hemon – The Lazarus Project
Rachel Kushner – Telex from Cuba
Peter Matthiessen – Shadow Country
Marilynne Robinson – Home
Salvatore Scibona – The End

Nonfiction
Drew Gilpion Faust – This Republic of Suffering: Death and the American Civil War
Annette Gordon-Reed – The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family
Jane Mayer – The Dark Side: The Inside Story of How the War on Terror Turned into a War on American Ideals
Jim Sheeler – Final Salute: A Story of Unfinished Lives
Joan Wickersham – The Suicide Index: Putting My Father’s Death in Order

Poetry
Frank Bidart – Watching the Spring Festival
Mark Doty – Fire to Fire: New and Collected Poems
Reginald Gibbons – Creatures of a Day
Richard Howard – Without Saying
Patricia Smith – Blood Dazzler

Young People’s Literature
Laurie Halse Anderson – Chains
Kathi Appelt – The Underneath
Judy Blundell – What I saw and How I Lied
E. Lockhart – The Disresputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks
Tim Tharp – The Spectacular Now
 

The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family
The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family
Home
Home

Congratulations to the Please Touch Museum, which is currently celebrating its move to a gloriously restored Memorial Hall in Philadelphia's Fairmount Park.  One of my favorite exhibits focuses on the 1876 Centennial Exhibition and features a number of photos from the Free Library's Print and Pictures Collection that help bring to life the model diorama created in 1889 that is nestled in Memorial Hall's lower level .  If you're intrigued by those wonderful Centennial photos at the Please Touch Museum, you can see even more of the Free Library's Centennial Exhibition digital collection by clicking on:  http://libwww.freelibrary.org/cencol/  

Not to be missed is "touring" many of the buildings through the Library's photographs just by clicking on the interactive map. These many images of the Centennial Exhibition, Memorial Hall and Fairmount Park - captured more than 130 years ago and vividly on display both at the Please Touch and digitally at the Free Library - are terrific reminders of Philadelphia's rich history. 

(And to learn more about the Please Touch Museum, go to:  http://www.pleasetouchmuseum.org/

 

 

 

Tags: Exhibitions

Memorial Hall
Memorial Hall