Welcome to the end of another week, beloved patrons, and our first Five Book Friday post from November! The last of our 30-day months for the year (not that there are many left), November is the kick off of the holiday season, so brace yourself (and don’t go into a crafting store unless you must–I nearly drowned in tinsel). But there are plenty of holidays in November that fly under the radar, and deserve to be savored as well. Here are a few days worth observing this month:
November 6: National Nachos Day! So the story goes, a maître d’hôtel at a restaurant in Piedras Negras, Mexico named Ignacio “Nacho” Anaya invented the dish in 1943 when some American servicemen stationed in Eagle Creek, Texas, crossed the border for dinner. The restaurant had closed for the day, but Anaya took pity on the men and invented a dish with tortillas, cheese and salsa, calling it “Nacho’s especiales“. Word of the dish spread, and very soon entered into immortality.
Also November 6: Daylight Savings Time: Commemorate the First World War, which established daylight savings time in order to save on fuel to light munitions works and factories, as well as to give workers a few brief moments in the sun every day, and spend an extra hour in bed!
November 11: Veterans’ Day: Known in most countries as Remembrance Day (and formerly Armistice Day), this day commemorates the end of hostilities of the First World War, and a day to honor the fallen in that war and all subsequent wars. However, the United States had already designated Memorial Day in May as the day to commemorate the fallen, so we acknowledge living veterans this day, as well as the end of the Great War at 11am. The Library will be closed on November 11.
November 14: National Pickle Day: Did you know Americans eat approximately nine pounds of pickles a year? Or that America is named after a pickle merchant? Ok, Amerigo Vespucci started his career as a ship chandler, which means he sold supplies to outgoing ships, but his nickname was ‘the pickle merchant’. Nerd alert.
November 28: National French Toast Day: French Toast was neither invented in France, nor by a French person. The earliest reference we have to the dish is from the 4th century, where a Roman cookbook describes a dish called “Pan Dulcis”, which is essentially French Toast as we know it. Since then, it’s been used the world over to bring new, delicious life to day-old bread.
And now, on to the books!
The Comet Seekers: Critics have been waxing rhapsodical over Helen Sedgwick’s debut, which opens on the barren plains of an Antarctic research station. And it isn’t just because Sedgwick has created two indelible and beautiful characters in Róisín, an Irish scientist who treks around the world to study comets, and François, the base’s chef, who has left his hometown only twice in his life–it’s because she gives us not only their lives, but the lives that fill both characters’ past and future, and showing how they are all inextricably bound together. By moving through time to explore all that have made these two into what and who they are in their present, Sedgwick is able to tell a story that is as multifaceted, and as fascinating, as the comet that brings her characters initially together. Publisher’s Weekly agrees, calling the novel “A haunting and wonderfully ethereal debut novel about first loves, inescapable loss, and the search for one’s place in a complicated world . . . Uniquely structured and stylistically fascinating, the multilayered story comes full circle in a denouement that is both heartbreaking and satisfying.”
Smoke and Mirrors: Acclaimed mystery writer Elly Griffiths returns to post-World War II Britain, and her Magic Men series in this second adventure with D.I. Edgar Stephens and the magician Max Mephisto–who is currently starring in a production of Aladdin that has all of Brighton a-buzz. But Stephens is on the hunt for a killer who strangled two children in the woods, then abandoned alongside a trail of candy in a gruesome recreation of “Hansel and Gretel”. Does the answer to the case lie in the strange and disturbing plays that one of the children wrote? Or is the staging of the bodies a clue towards the theater? It lies with Stephens, and his erstwhile partner Max Mephisto, to find out the truth in this investigation, which Kirkus called “A dazzlingly tricky mystery, oddball characters, and an authentic feel for life in post-World War II England.”
Who knew ?