Showing posts with label poetry reading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poetry reading. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Evening Thoughts

Statue of Niccolo Machiavelli. Supposedly Machiavelli used to like to put on his court robes at night before he sat down to read so he could be in his imagination with the great thinkers throughout history.


Evening Thoughts

Today has been very busy. I haven't really had a chance to write the reviews of two books which I have read, The Public Domain, and A. Lee Martinez, The Automatic Detective. I enjoyed reading both titles. I forgot to bring a pen on the train this morning. Maybe, I am making an excuse. I try to write a little bit on my blog every single day.

I tried to read the manga, Ruruoni Kenshin by Nobuhiru Watsuki a bit this morning, but found myself a little bored. It seemed a bit too formal in some ways to me. The little bits of history on the characters were interesting, but overall the story did not excite me that much.

When I read the history of Japan, I prefer to read about Japan before westerners came. This is just a personal bias. The setting in this manga is during the Meiji period. This means there are elements added like guns and other elements.

The volume I read was the Vizbig Edition, Volume 1, which compiles Volumes 1-3 into a single trade paperback volume. I think people who like more formal traditional manga will like this work. It combines sword fighting with romance and intrigue.

This morning I spent some time weeding the computer books. I am trying to thin out the collection of items that are not being used before more of the new books start coming in. We have to keep many of the older books because of the issue of legacy computing.

Underlying programs like c, perl, java and html remain the building blocks of newer programs like xhtml, c++, css, and other computer programs. Also many people still use older editions of windows, we still get requests for windows 95, 98, and XP. The same thing applies to things like unix and linux. Not everyone is hurriedly switching over to Vista or Ubuntu.

Books on the older programs are often no longer sold in the bookstores even though people are using them. They turn to the library because it is the only place where people can get the material. Not everyone wants to switch to a newer fancier system.

I spent several hours looking at computer books to see if we still need them. I also spent some time looking at some of the new books which just came in. I am going to wait and see what is coming in before I order more new books. I will probably also weed our current graphic novel and manga collection, both to reduce the number of books that are not circulating, and make the newer material look more visible. Very crowded, packed shelves make it hard to find new material. I like to have around 6 inches to one foot at the end of each shelve.

Tomorrow, I also have my poetry open microphone. We moved it down from four o'clock to five o'clock to have a chance for more adults to come. Hopefully, we'll also get a new microphone. I think, I will be ready for the program. I also usually pick out a variety of poetry books for people to look at which I bring down on a book truck. In addition, we will be serving light refreshments. I like to serve water and juice. I don't like serving soda, especially when little children are around, it makes them very jumpy.

I picked out a few books from the new books to look at. One is a manga, Tekkon Kinkreet Black and White All In One by Taiyo Matsumoto. There is a parental advisory on the cover for content. Also, there is a label which says now an animated film. Another book which looks interesting is Don't Make Me Think, A Common Sense Approach to Web Usability, 2nd Edition, by Steve Krug. The final book which I plan on reading is The Future of The Internet And How To Stop It by Jonathan Zittrain.

Once again, I am starting to pile up books to read. Oddly enough, I didn't really have any magazines to read today. I read the paper this morning with my coffee, but that is an almost ritual thing.

Thursday, May 8, 2008

Thoughts For Today

Hello, I finished reading a book called Goblin War by Jim C. Hines. I enjoyed reading it. It was a humorous fantasy about a goblin who has to survive human and elven raiders, and an army of orcs, trolls, wolves, goblins, and kobolds. I thought about reviewing it, but I haven't read the first two books in the series, Goblin Quest and Goblin Hero. This makes me think I should wait until we get these two books. None of the libraries in the system where I work have these two books. I am going to try and convince the young adult librarian to buy this series. After all, Goblin War was on the Locus Bestseller list and got excellent reviews. I think it would be an injustice to write a review of a series I haven't read completely.

I requested that our library buy Steampunk edited by Ann and Jeff Vandermeer. It is interesting seeing husband and wife writing teams. I don't know if this team will be as good as Henry Kuttner and C.L. Moore who wrote as a husband and wife team, but I know that their writing is already excellent. This book got a starred review in the Publishers Weekly April 21, 2008 issue.

Another book which I am suggesting for purchase is The Kingmakers How The Media Threatens Our Security and Democracy by Mike Gravel and David Eisenbach, Ph.D.. It received a starred review in the May 5, 2008 Publishers Weekly. The book is slated to be out June 1, 2008.

There is a rather interesting article on CNN on the Great Comic Books Scare of the 1950s. It mentions The Ten Cent Plague by David Hajdu.
http://www.cnn.com/2008/SHOWBIZ/books/05/08/comic.books/index.html

Today, it was a really nice day out. There was a light wind blowing around 70 degrees, not too sunny. I still ran a poetry open microphone today. Eight people showed up and several people read. I guess a few of them were there for the cookies, juice, and water. I read a few of my own poems. I brought some books down from upstairs by different poets, Maya Angelou, Calvin Trillin, Jack Kerouac, Rita Dove, Bei Dao and a few others. The cookies were all gone by the end of the program. One of the older gentlemen who comes to the library talked about trumpet playing for a little bit.

Tomorrow, I am going to the Westchester Library Association conference. It should be interesting. I have to be there by 8:00 a.m. My library is paying for it. I ordered the vegetarian lunch. They always have a hard time messing up vegetarian food. I don't like rubber chicken lunches you occassionally get at conferences. I hope I get to gab with a few different people in addition to the speakers. The train ride up will be interesting. Unfortunately, none of the items I have on hold came in for me to check out.

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Morning Thoughts, Poetry

I have been reading some more of Leviathan The History of Whaling In America. There is an interesting idea in this book. Apparently, the Spermaceti Trust, a group of manufacturers which attempted to set the price of Spermaceti candles made from sperm whales may have been the first energy cartel. Thus, we have the origins of the future energy cartels in American industry. I rather like this idea. Whale oil preceded petroleum and may have set many of the standards for the future industry.

Two more books came in for me today; The Big Switch Rewiring The World, From Edison To Google by Nicholas Carr and Untapped The Scramble for Africa's Oil by John Ghazvinian. You may have guessed by now that I am very interested in the issue of energy, especially renewable energy and clean technology.

We did an open mike today at the library. We had ten people total. Ten is a magic number for programming. Unlikely the two earlier poetry readings, however, everyone brought their own original poetry so it was a very unique experience.

I got the poetic urge on the subway home today. I tried something really simple. I think I might have to review my poetics:

Subway Platform

Icy wet rain
Cap, scarf, coat

Opening doors
Sit down fast

Shoulder bump
Watch the hands

Hands under paper
Wallet in coat

Stopped train
Read a book

Train moving
Watch for stop

People arguing
Time to go

I think I am going to have to get my poetry going a bit. I'll probably need a better lead off for next month. I'll try to write two more poems for the next session plus this one to create an opener for the next session.