Friday, January 30, 2015

Week Three Prompt:

1. I am looking for a book by Laurell K. Hamilton. I just read the third book in the Anita Blake series and I can’t figure out which one comes next!

The fourth book in the Anita Blake: Vampire Hunter series by Laurell K. Hamilton is The Lunatic Cafe. 

2. What have I read recently? Well, I just finished this great book by Barbara Kingsolver, Prodigal Summer. I really liked the way it was written, you know, the way she used language. I wouldn't mind something a bit faster paced though.

Yellow Emporer's Cure and The Miniaturist by Kunal Basu have a descriptive, lush, and lyrical writing style while also having a faster pace to their plot.  


3. I like reading books set in different countries. I just read one set in China, could you help me find one set in Japan? No, not modern – historical. I like it when the author describes it so much it feels like I was there!


For historical fiction set in Japan with rich details, I found the following list for you:
  1.)  The Thousand Autumns of Jacob De Zoet David Mitchell--In Dejima in Nagasaki Harbor, 1799, the Japanese Empire's single port and only window on the world, a resourceful young clerk, Jacob de Zoet, has five years to earn a sufficient fortune to win the hand of his wealthy fianćee back in Holland. But Jacob's intentions are eclipsed after a chance encounter with the daughter of a samurai doctor.

   2.) The Teahouse Fire by Ellis Avery--The fates of two women--one American, one Japanese--become entwined in this sweeping novel of 19th century Japan on the cusp of radical change and westernization. The Japanese tea ceremony, steeped in ritual, is at the heart of this story of an American girl, adopted by Kyoto's most important tea master and raised as attendant and surrogate younger sister to his privileged daughter Yukako. Pasts shrouded in secrets and mysterious traditions rocked by modernization make The teahouse fire a compelling and provocative story, lush in details and epic in scope.

   3.) The Ginger Tree by Oswald Wynd--A young Scottish woman, in 1903, travels to Peking to marry a British military attache. She becomes a scandal to the British community by having an affair with Count Kuriha, a Japanese soldier. She is shunned by her own people, and not really accepted by the Japanese either. We are given the account of a hard, lonely, but fascinating life in an alien culture. Description by: Joe Sedey.


4. I read this great mystery by Elizabeth George called Well-Schooled in Murder and I loved it. Then my dentist said that if I liked mysteries I would probably like John Sandford, but boy was he creepy I couldn't finish it! Do you have any suggestions?


Dorothy L. Sayers is a very similar writer to Elizabeth George in that her series sleuth Lord Peter Wimsey is both sophisticated and aristocratic.  Sayers also uses rich language in her mystery writing.  Strong Poison is a good place to start with this series.  

Deborah Crombie is also a mystery writer that has a has a similar writing style as George and also sets her stories in England. Her male and female investigator team's whose professional and personal lives become entangled throughout their cases.  You can start with her award-winning Dreaming of the Bones, a later book in the series. If you prefer to start at the beginning, A Share in Death introduces the reader to the investigation team at the beginning of their partnership.

5. My husband has really gotten into zombies lately. He’s already read The Walking Dead and World War Z, is there anything else you can recommend?


Feed by Mira Grant is the first book in the Newsflesh trilogy--In the year 2014, a new virus emerges, taking over bodies and minds with one, unstoppable command, FEED, and, now, 20 years later, two reporters will stop at nothing to expose the dark conspiracy behind the infected.

The Rising by Brian Keene is fast-paced, plot driven and richly detailed--The dead are returning to life as intelligent zombies. Trapped by the undead, escape seems impossible for Jim Thurmond. But Jim's young son is alive and in dire peril hundreds of miles away. Despite overwhelming odds, Jim vows to find him-- or die trying.

Dead Sea by Brian Keene--As zombies, driven by the need to kill and feed off human flesh, terrorize the streets, a small group of survivors finds a safe haven in an old Coast Guard ship out at sea where their isolation soon becomes their downfall. 

My own Book Search Tools:

I don't really have a standard way to find books.  I tend to find my reading materials in a variety of ways.  I'm a bit of a Pinterest addict, and through all of the different boards and people that I follow, there is always a huge variety of recommendations.  I am an avid reader of Entertainment Weekly and really enjoy their upcoming recommendations lists.  From time to time, Buzzfeed will have great lists.  I'm also a big "browser".  I love walking through Barnes and Noble, and taking notes of books that catch my attention.  Currently, I work in my library's Circulation Department and I'm constantly finding titles to read and take home with me (at least one or two a week...it's becoming a problem...)  I'm trying to use GoodReads, but I can't seem to get into it.  Interestingly enough, before this assignment, I had never realized that my library has NoveList.  

2 comments:

  1. We had similar findings for the assignment as we both used NoveList. There are so many different options in helping patrons find books they might enjoy. I think it is an awesome resource. I do wonder if your patrons realize that they have access to it?

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  2. I think one of the most difficult things about being a librarian is handling dozens of books a day that you would love to sit and investigate more intimately. But, alas, time requires otherwise. This is what I primarily use Goodreads for right now. A listing of things that I want to look at when the time constraints aren't so tight.

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