Tag Archives: News!

The National Book Award Longlist!

I happily admit to having a special soft spot in my heart for the Man Booker Prize for Fiction, but that shouldn’t detract from the other book awards out there–particularly because they offer so many great reading recommendations to us hungry readers looking for something new to try!

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As we discussed last year, the National Book Awards have (and continue to have) some identity issues.  They were originally imagined to be some kind of rival to the Academy Awards, before making the realization that, and I quote, “Book people are really not actors”.  And while the award committee are very much trying to reinvent the award into something to rival the Man Booker in terms of prestige and gravitas, there is still a fairly high reliance on celebrity and flashy parties, rather than on the books.

We, at the Free For All, however, are always All About the Books, so let’s focus on the best part of the National Book Awards, and get to the long-lists for Fiction, Non-Fiction, Poetry, and Young People’s Literature, which was announced last Friday.  A reminder: the National Book Award is only for books written in English and published by American publishers, so this list usually looks much different to other fiction award lists.  The short list will be announced on October 13,  and the Winners will be announced on November 16:

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FICTION:
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NON-FICTION:
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POETRY:
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YOUNG PEOPLE’S LITERATURE:

Breaking News: The Man Booker Shortlist

No.  I didn’t set an alert on my phone to let me know when this list was actually announced.  Only a really crazy book nerd would do that.  Oh…wait….

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But this morning, the good judges of the Man Book Prizes handed down their shortlist, showing which six books had been selected from their previously-compiled baker’s dozen of novels to compete for the ultimate prize, the Man Booker Prize for Fiction.  Each author whose book made the shortlist receives a prize of £2,500 and a specially bound edition of their book.  Take a look and see what you think, or come on down to the Library and meet these books for yourself!

3592939The Sellout (Published by Oneworld): Named by the New York Times and Wall Street Journal as one of the best books of 2015, American author Paul Beatty’s novel focuses on a young man growing up in the southern outskirts of Los Angeles with his single father, a controversial sociologist, and serving as the subject in a number of racially charged psychological studies.  When his father dies, leaving nothing of merit or financial use behind, our narrator, in a desperate bid to save his hometown, decides it is time to re-instate slavery, and attempts to segregate his local high school, a move than lands him before the Supreme Court, in a blisteringly dark, satirical tale that the Los Angeles Times called “among the most important and difficult American novels written in the 21st century . . . a bruising novel that readers will likely never forget.”

3719827Hot Milk (Published by Hamish Hamilton): British author Deborah Levy has been short-listed for the Man Booker previously for her novel Swimming Home, which focuses on issues of mental health and family interactions.  Her current work looks at the relationships between mothers and daughters, as Sofia, a young anthropologist, tries to come to terms with her mother, and the inexplicable illness from which she suffers.  Eager to abandon her own responsibilities for a bit, Sofia accompanies her mother to Spain to consult with a world-famous physician.  However, the longer they stay in Spain, the more suspicious Sofia grows of the doctors’ methods and her mother’s condition, leading her on an investigation into her mother’s symptoms and past to find the real answers to the symptoms that have weighed down both their lives, in a book that Publisher’s Weekly called “A singular read . . . Levy has crafted a great character in Sofia, and witnessing a pivotal moment in her life is a pleasure.”

51-zrxwkerl-_sx321_bo1204203200_ His Bloody Project (Published by Contraband): This book, unfortunately, will not be coming out in the US until November, but I’ve already got a standing order here at the Library, and I was fortunate enough to grab a copy of this during my recent adventuring, and can tell you, it’s most definitely a book to put on your calendar.  Scottish author Graeme Macrae Burnet’s novel is ostensibly a collection of documents he discovered while studying his family’s history–namely, a  brutal triple murder committed in a remote Scottish farming community in 1869 by one of Burnet’s (fictional) ancestors.  Five minutes with this book, however, and you’ll forget that this isn’t real testimony in a real trial in an actual historic record, and find yourself drawn into a story that seems at once so obvious and straightforward, and yet leaves you with so many questions and suspicions and doubts.  Very few people thought this book would make it to the short-list, but I’m really glad it did, because, as The Scotsman noted, it really is “one of the most convincing and engrossing novels of the year.”

3630536Eileen (Published by Jonathan Cape): Not only can we be excited about this book as  a Man Booker Short Listed novel, but we can also celebrated because author Ottessa Moshfegh is a Boston-born local author, as well (yay!).  Set in a coastal New England town in the early 1960’s, Moshfegh’s book focuses on Eileen, a woman trapped between her job at a local boy’s prison, and her home, where she cares for her alcoholic father, with nothing for herself but her dreams of escape and fantasies of larceny.  Things begin to change when Rebecca Saint John arrives as the new counselor at the prison.  Eileen’s devotion to Rebecca grows to be something absolute, and she is overjoyed to find that a mutual friendship is emerging between them.  But soon, Eileen’s loyalty to Rebecca leads her into complicity in a crime wildly outside the realms of her previous imaginings.   As the San Francisco Chronicle noted, “When the denouement comes, it’s as shocking as it is thrilling. Part of the pleasure of the book (besides the almost killing tension) is that Eileen is mordantly funny . . . a truly original character who is gloriously unlikable, dirty, startling — and as ferociously human as the novel that bears her name.”

51oh1ictzl-_sx329_bo1204203200_All That Man Is (Published by Jonathan Cape): This book will be released in the US on October 4, and will be on our shelves shortly thereafter.  Canadian author David Szalay’s has crafted a thoroughly unique and fascinating collection of stories here, linked through their overall purpose, rather than their characters or content.  He tells of nine men, all at various stages of their life,  each far from home, and each engaged in a quest to discover his purpose in life.  From their various locations across Europe, each man, individually may be isolated, but together, each of these stories tells us something powerful about what it means to be alive, to be human, and to exist at a certain age, creating a work that, as a whole, is immediate, searching, and constantly surprising.  Because each of these stories is a contained unit, Szalay is able to change local, characters and tone easily, making this a book the London Review of Books called “Cleverly conceived, authoritative, timely and (in a good way) crushing. . . . There is a cheerful and ghastly sordidness to everything…and every other page or so an irresistibly brilliant epithet or startlingly quotable phrase, lets nothing go to waste.”

61fahatw1vl-_sx328_bo1204203200_Do Not Say We Have Nothing (Published by Granta Books): Canadian author Madeleine Thien’s novel will be published in the US on October 11, so you won’t have too long a wait for this novel that deals on one level with families and memory, and on another with the history of modern China, and the ways in which large-scale events can shape the smallest aspects of our lives.  At the heart of the book are two young women, Marie and Ai-Ming, growing up in present-day Vancouver.  As their relationship grows, Marie tries to piece together the stories that have brought both women to this point in their lives.  Her quest reveals the history of her own father, a  mysterious but undeniably talented pianist, Ai-Ming’s father, a shy and brilliant composer, and a violin prodigy named Zhuli were forced to re-conceive of themselves and their artistic ambitions during the massive upheavals of Maos’s Cultural Revolution, the protests and Tienanmen Square, and how the choices they made led these two remarkable women to their current moment.  At once epic in its scope and deeply personal in its consequences, The Guardian  called this book “A moving and extraordinary evocation of the 20th-century tragedy of China, and deserves to cement Thien’s reputation as an important and compelling writer.”

So there you have it, dear readers: this year’s Man Book Prize Shortlist.  Place your bets, make your predictions and get reading! We’ll be announcing the winner of the Man Book Prize on October 25th!

Five Book Friday!

And once again, beloved patrons, we arrive at another Friday, and another round-up of some of the fascinating books that are frolicking on our shelves, eager to go along with you on a weekend adventure.

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And speaking of this weekend, don’t forget to stop by the International Festival this Sunday, September 11, from 12-6pm!  There will be plenty of entertainment, activities, arts, and, naturally, a smörgåsbord of food from Greece, Brazil, China, Poland, Portugal, to name only a few.  And lastly, don’t miss your chance to visit the Friends of the Library Booth, where you may just have a chance to meet the remarkable Lady Pole in person!  Free Parking & a Shuttle service will be available from Higgins Middle School or Northshore Mall parking lot (by East Boston Savings Bank).  Look for the Council on Aging Vans with International Festival Signs, and have a safe, wonderful, and delicious time!

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3757349The NixThis book has been gracing any number of “Best of 2016” lists, and getting rave reviews from critics, authors, and readers alike.  A Nix, in Norwegian folklore, often appears as a white horse, and steals away children.  In Nathan Hill’s debut novel, a ‘Nix’ is anything that is loved–and lost.  For Samuel Andresen-Anderson, college professor and would-be writer, that ‘Nix’ is his mother, who abandoned him when he was a child, and, in 2011, suddenly re-appears, the alleged perpetrator of an outlandish crime that is attracting national media attention.  Though his mother is being portrayed as a radical, amoral hippie, Samuel has always held a memory of a kind, young, and very, very ordinary woman–so which version of his mother is true?  To find out, he embarks on a journey into his family’s past, from the Chicago riots in 1968 to Norway, and the mythical Nix itself, resulting in a big, sprawling, and emotionally impactful book that earned a starred review from Kirkus, which called it a “sparkling, sweeping debut novel that takes in a large swath of recent American history and pop culture and turns them on their sides. . . .A grand entertainment, smart and well-paced, and a book that promises good work to come.”

3773362The Pigeon Tunnel: John Le Carré created the Cold War spy novel, raising espionage from the land of magazine tales and pulp novels and crafting a genre that is still selling millions of copies today.  This newest release is his first memoir, detailing a life that seems equally as interesting and surprising as any of his fiction.   Le Carré himself worked for British Intelligence during the Cold War, and, both in that capacity and in his literary work, has travelled to some of the most extreme places, and met with some of the most extraordinary people (and parrots), on earth (the parrot could perfectly mimic machine gun fire and sing the opening to Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony at will, in case you were wondering).  From Rwandan genocide museums to meetings with international heads of state, from preparing television adaptations to living in a bunker with a female German terrorist,  Le Carré’s incisive, insightful style brings each of these tales to life in a way that will make you think you, too, have acquired all the stamps he has in his passport.  Publisher’s Weekly agrees, saying, “Always insightful, frequently charming, and sometimes sobering, the memorable tales told by master storyteller le Carré about his life will surely delight both longtime fans and newcomers.”

3772824The FortunesPeter Ho Davies’ newest book re-imagines America’s history through the eyes of Chinese immigrants, a group of people who had an enormous and crucial impact on American culture and society, but whose story is so seldom considered in literature.  Intertwining the tale of four lives: a railroad baron who unwittingly launches the Chinese Labor Movement to a Chinese actress who is forbidden from kissing white men on public or on screen, to a hate-crime victim whose death mobilizes other immigrants, to a biracial writer who travels to China in the hopes of adopting a baby, this Davies spins stories that are heavily influenced by actual historic events, and deals with issues of identity and community, belonging and isolation, loss and hope in a way that is beautfully empathetic and relatable, not to mention surprisingly funny and genuinely touching.  Publisher’s Weekly also loved this book, giving it a starred review and cheering, “The book’s scope is impressive, but what’s even more staggering is the utter intimacy and honesty of each character’s introspection. More extraordinary still is the depth and the texture created by the juxtaposition of different eras, making for a story not just of any one person but of hundreds of years and tens of millions of people. Davies…has created a brilliant, absorbing masterpiece.”

3788996True Believer: Stalin’s Last American Spy: Noel Field was a British-born American who moved back to the US following his father’s death, and attended Harvard University.  He was hired by the U.S. State Department in the late 1920’s, and went to work for the League of Nations in 1936.  This was around the same time that he began working as an operative with the Soviet NKVD.  A devout Communist and staunch believer in the Soviet Union, Fields was arrested in 1949 by the Soviets, interrogated, tortured, and held for five years in solitary confinement.  Nevertheless, he remained devoted to the Communist cause until his death in 1970.  In this new biography, Kati Marton not only details Fields’ startling life, but also analyzes his beliefs, trying to understand what makes a person so loyal to a cause that has treated him with such inhumanity.  The result is a powerful and engaging book that is proving a hit with critics and readers alike.  Library Journal also notes that “Marton’s own parents were the only Western journalists to ever interview Field and his wife, Herta Field. . . . The conspiracy, subterfuge, and cataclysmic destruction of Field’s family and friends are all addressed in this well-researched book.”

3788978We Eat Our OwnIn 1980, an Italian horror film called Cannibal Holocaust, which tells the story of a documentary film team that traveled to the Amazon to find cannibalistic tribes, and was widely thought to be a ‘snuff film’ (a film where the murders or suicides portrayed are real), and which is still banned in many places.  Kea Wilson’s debut novel takes that film as inspiration to tell the story of a down-and-out actor who gratefully (and a little desperately) accepts a job for a film being made in South America.  But he never dreams of the very real dangers that lurk around the set, from the area’s dyng economy, drug traffikers and guerilla fighters to the jungle that surrounds the cast and crew.  Playing with concepts of time and identity and truth, Wilson’s book has been making quite a splash already, with Kirkus Reviews noting ” Wilson shows impressive command of a narrative that weaves back and forth and back again in both time and locale; much like the viewer of a pseudo-documentary horror movie (ever seen The Blair Witch Project?), you wonder throughout whether you should trust whatever it is you’re told—and jumping to the end won’t help at all. You shouldn’t anyway, because Wilson’s writing style is hypnotic, tightly wound, and harrowingly evocative of the story’s stifling, bug-heavy atmosphere. Even the sunniest skies of this ill-starred shoot are thick with menace and portent. Keep telling yourself, ‘It’s only a novel, it’s only a novel'”.

 

Until next week, beloved patrons–happy reading!

Books in the Headlines

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So, how many of you were at a midnight release party for Harry Potter and the Cursed Child?  The release of the printed script for the West End production is one of the biggest releases of the year…indeed, of the past few years….and calls to mind the release parties held around the world in honor of the release of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallowsas readers everywhere waiting for hours in line, in the dark, on the streets, desperate to find out if Harry Potter ultimately defeated his lifetime nemesis Lord Voldemort.

To be perfectly honest, I was a bit behind the curve when it came to Harry Potter….ahead of the curve?

CursedChild-HarvardBookStore-HPatHBS…Whatever.  The point is that I was a few years older than Harry, so I missed to opportunity to grow up with him, as so many did.  So I never attended a release day party for the young wizard.  Besides, I had already spent years holding my own one-person release parties for the books I was beside myself with excitement to read before it became cool.  I pestered bookstore and library staffs to hand me the books calmly and quietly before I held my breath and turned blue.  I sat on the floor in the middle of book stores and libraries until I found out just what happened.  And, more than once, I cried at a random stranger when I got to the end (to that end…my apologies to That Man In The Blue Blazer).

And while I realize that telling these stories makes me sound old and cranky, the truth is, that I am thrilled to see the way that Harry Potter changed the act of reading.  J.K. Rowling’s books didn’t just defined a micro-generation of readers, and didn’t just shape the reading lives of people around the world.  Her books also made reading a public, and a cooperative event (see the sign from the Harvard Bookstore above, which hosted one of the largest parties in our area).  And as Harry Potter helped to reshape the publishing industry and, specifically, the teen reading markets, those fans diversified, finding new series to love, and spread the love of reading even farther.

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We also have social media to thank for this phenomenon.  Harry Potter and Facebook both emerged within the same period of time, making it infinitely easier for readers to organize, to discuss, and to support each other.  And ever since then, the internet has supported readers of other genres, series, and topics, as well.

Which is why I found it infinitely entertaining to read today that, even while the book world was reeling with the joy of a new Harry Potter book to read, and savoring all the details of the script of The Cursed Child, a reliving all that has made the series so great, the internet was simultaneously exploding with another book-related furor.

On Thursday, Elon Musk–designer of the Tesla car, darling of the tech world, and that guy who wants to set up a habitation on Mars–told Bloomberg about a book that had made a big difference to him: a book called Twelve Against the Gods by William Bolitho, saying “It’s really quite good.”  And, with those few words, the price of Bolitho’s 1929 book, which is only available secondhand, skyrocketed from $4.99 to $99.99 on A**** (you know what that site’s called).  Abebooks sold out of its 13 copies in under a day.

downloadBolitho himself was born William Bolitho Ryall in South Africa in 1890, and served in the First World War, experiencing firsthand some of the true horror that mankind can inflict.  He was buried alive during a mine explosion at the Battle of the Somme, and was the only man rescued alive.  Though he was initially assumed dead, as well, it turned out that he had been knocked unconscious, and suffered a broken neck, among other injuries.  He spent a year recovering in hospital, and though he was able to walk, he never fully regained his health.  Following the war, he worked as a journalist for the Manchester Guardian, covering the Versailles Peace Convention, as well as the attempted Communist uprisings in Germany.  He was friends with Noel Coward and Ernest Hemingway, both of whom wrote charming tributes to him,  He would go on to write a book called The Cancer of Empire (1925) and Italy Under Mussolini (1926), in which he detailed Mussolini’s public abuses of power.  In 1929, Bolitho published Twelve Against the Godswhich provides biographical sketches of twelve people who Bolitho felt used their adventuring spirit to achieve greatness.  Though each people endured hardships and danger, Bolitho celebrated their lives because they didn’t let those challenges deter them from their goals.

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And you know what also brings Harry Potter and William Bolitho together, apart from their sudden popularity on the internet, and their focus on heroes who refuse to let adversity keep them from success?

…Both their books are available at the Library.  For free.

So why not come in and check them both out, and see what all the fuss is about?  I can guarantee you that there are plenty of fellow readers just waiting to share the joy of reading with you!

Make a joyful noise…

Have you met our pianos?

If you’ve walked down Main Street in the past few weeks, you might have noticed that there are two pianos, one right by our front door, and one hanging out on the sidewalk across the street.  There are also pianos hanging out at East End Veteran’s Memorial Park on Walnut Street, and inside the Northshore Mall.
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Each piano has been painted by contributing artists Jessica Andersen, Desiree Ferreras, Deana Jacome, and Jeffrey Rezende with vibrant colors and patterns that really make them stand out–our piano is black and green with bright red and yellow flowers that stands out beautifully against the red brick of the Library.

But why have these pianos come to Peabody?  They are here for you.  Thanks to a generous donation from the city’s Community Development Block Grant  and from the Peabody Cultural Council, as well as donations from Peabody Access Telecommunications, the Library and Rousselot, these pianos have arrives as part of a public project called “Play Us a Tune”, that is intended to bring music to the streets (and malls) of Peabody.  As you’ll notice on each piano, there is a sticker printed in English, Spanish, and Portuguese that encourages you to play–whatever comes to your mind, or to your fingertips.  You can learn more from the clip below:

So far, the project has been an enormous success.  Though the pianos were only supposed to be here until May, their stay has been extended thanks to really high public appeal.  We have professional students who come every afternoon around 4pm to practice most days, and patrons who are just learning, trying out their skills on these free and colorful instruments.

And speaking as someone in the Library, it’s a sheer joy to hear your tunes, and watch the happiness it brings to people’s faces to hear this piano music floating down Main Street.  So why not come down and meet our piano, or any of the other pianos in Peabody, soon?  They’ll be here for the rest of the month, and can’t wait to make your acquaintance!

And, finally, to whoever is playing ragtime tunes outside the Library on Thursday evenings–I love you.

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For the love of all that is good and fictional…

Why do you read fiction?

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It’s a legitimate question, and one that really has no right answer.  Some people turn to fiction for the adventure, some to connect with people in a way they can’t in real life, some to escape real life.  Some read to learn, some read just because they love words and the way those words come together to form a whole book.

Frankly, it’s not really important.  If reading fiction makes you happy, you should read it.  No matter what genre, topic, or theme.

My stance on this was reinforced the other day when I read a blog post by Swiss-Anglo philosopher Alain de Botton, writing for Penguin’s UK website.  The post, titled “Alain de Botton on why romantic novels can make us unlucky in love“, frankly, set my teeth on edge.

Alain-de-Botton-001Alain de Botton begins by stating we should read fiction because it “it lends us more lives than we have been given”, which is a sentiment I think is really quite lovely.  He holds that fiction essentially allows us to live through the lives of others, and learn from their mistakes and decisions, all of which is just fine.  However, that is, apparently, where our amicable acquaintance ends.  Because, de Botton then goes on to state,

Unfortunately, there are too many bad novels out there – by which one means, novels that do not give us a correct map of love…The narrative arts of the Romantic novel have unwittingly constructed a devilish template of expectations of what relationships are supposed to be like – in the light of which our own love lives often look grievously and deeply unsatisfying. We break up or feel ourselves cursed in significant part because we are exposed to the wrong works of literature.

I honestly can’t begin to tell you how sick I am of other people telling me–or any reader, for that matter–that reading romance novels is bad, or “wrong” for them.  As long as romance novels have been popular, there have been people (particularly men, but I’ll leave that be for the moment) banging on about how romance novels will inherently make women unhappy and unfulfilled, because they provide false expectations of reality.

I read a great deal of fantasy and science fiction novels, in addition to romance.  I have never heard anyone voice concern that I may be harmed by these books.  No one seems worried that I will come to believe that animals can talk, or that I can time travel, or that I can shoot flames from my finger tips.  Yet, over and over again, I hear that I am in real danger of thinking romance novels are real.

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Let me be really clear about something: Romance readers are, demographically speaking, college aged women with careers.  They know very, very well that romance novels are fiction.

Now that we have established that fact, let’s also think about the purpose that romance novels do serve.  They are escapes.  They exist in a world where one doesn’t have to dust, or clean the toilet; where people can excel at interesting jobs; where soul mates are a real, tangible thing.  They are guaranteed happy endings.  And, as I’ve noted before, they explicitly affirm the heroine’s (and, thus, the reader’s) right to self-affirmation and individual happiness.  They teach us that we, as readers and as heroines, are capable of growing, of trusting ourselves, of respecting and loving ourselves.  Love is a reward for a journey of self-discovery.  The rest of it is frosting.  Delicious, sweet, decadent frosting.  With glitter.

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Like this lovely cupcake.

Yet, according to Alain de Botton, “The Romantic novel is deeply unhelpful. We have learned to judge ourselves by the hopes and expectations fostered by a misleading medium. By its standards, our own relationships are almost all damaged and unsatisfactory. No wonder separation or divorce so often appear to be inevitable.”

By this same rationality, the current state of our environment can be attributed to too many science fiction readers believing that we will soon be moving to a moon colony.  Or that our foreign policy is the result of too many thriller readers believing that the Constitution is really a secret code handed down by the Freemasons.  Yet no one assumes that readers of science fiction or thrillers are that stupid or shallow.  Why, then, is it in anyway fair to think that romance readers have such a tenuous grip on reality?

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Romance Readers

I’m not sure if Alain de Botton hasn’t read many romances in his life, or doesn’t quite get them.  And that is fine.   As a very proud Library Person, I can say that he has every right to read, and to enjoy, whatever he likes.  If he would rather read more realistic stories about “real life”–whatever that actually is, that is terrific, and does not reflect on him as a worthy or intelligent person at all.   What I don’t, and will never, accept, is his assumptions about other romance readers.  We, too, have a right to read whatever we want, whenever we want.  And no one has the right to call that wrong, or tell us that “we merely need to change our reading matter”.

Screen-shot-2012-05-30-at-3_20_46-PMAs long as there have been romance novels, there have been people telling women that there is something wrong with the books, and with them, as well, for wanting to read about a world where their voices and their thoughts and their persons are fundamentally valued and important.   That’s not dangerous for anyone, and it certainly shouldn’t be considered unrealistic.

But until we stop judging genres–and their readers, we are not doing justice to the fiction we read, or the empathy that our fiction seeks to instill in us.

So, as we kick off National Library Week, we just wanted to take a minute to reiterate that you and your reading choices are always welcome here, no matter what anyone says.

Everyday is World Poetry Day!

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Yesterday, March 21, was World Poetry Day, an event sponsored by theUnited Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), with the aim of recognizing “the unique ability of poetry to capture the creative spirit of the human mind.”  According to Irina Bokova, Director-General of UNESCO, “By giving form and words to that which has none – such as the unfathomable beauty that surrounds us, the immense suffering and misery of the world – poetry contributes to the expansion of our common humanity, helping to increase its strength, solidarity and self-awareness.”

happy-world-poetry-dayWe here at the Free For All are big fans of poetry, and helping patrons everywhere to overcome their metrophobia and embrace all the beauty and wonder that poetry both captures and inspires.  So, in honor of our growing love of poetry, and also, because we missed the Official World Poetry Day (Arthur Dent couldn’t get the hang of Thursdays…I’ve never been able to get the hang of Mondays), we still wanted to take a moment to share some bookish poetry with you today, and encourage you, as ever, to broaden your reading horizons with a little bit of verse today.

As our dear friends at Reading Rainbow have pointed out, poetry is not only a “high art” form that is accessible to a select few–it very often is our first introduction to language.  Sing the ABC’s.  Hum “Twinkle Twinkle Little Star”.  You’ll see what I mean.  We’ve also pointed out that reading poetry can help with stress by regulating your heart and your breathing, so it’s a delightful way to unwind no matter where you are.

So here are a few poems to make your day a little brighter, and, hopefully, a little easier.  Enjoy!

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Notes on the Art of Poetry
by Dylan Thomas

I could never have dreamt that there were such goings-on
in the world between the covers of books,
such sandstorms and ice blasts of words,,,
such staggering peace, such enormous laughter,
such and so many blinding bright lights,, ,
splashing all over the pages
in a million bits and pieces
all of which were words, words, words,
and each of which were alive forever
in its own delight and glory and oddity and light.
(From The Poems of Dylan Thomas, New Directions, 2003)
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There is no Frigate like a Book (1286)
By Emily Dickinson

There is no Frigate like a Book
To take us Lands away
Nor any Coursers like a Page
Of prancing Poetry.
This Traverse may the poorest take
Without oppress of Toll;
How frugal is the Chariot
That bears the Human Soul!

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Where My Books Go
By William Butler Yeats

All the words that I utter,
And all the words that I write,
Must spread out their wings untiring,
And never rest in their flight,
Till they come where your sad, sad heart is,
And sing to you in the night,
Beyond where the waters are moving,
Storm-darken’d or starry bright.
(From the Oxford Book of English Verse, 1919)