Seldovia Public Library

Phone: 234-7662 or 234-7856
Email: seldovia.library@gmail.com
Director: Shirly Giles

Hours:
Tuesday: 2-4:30 & 7-9
Thursday: 3:30-5:30 & 7-9
Saturday: 12:30 - 4:30

Address:
260 Seldovia St.
PO Drawer H
Seldovia, AK 99663

Saturday, September 29, 2007

9/29: New at the library this week

DVDs: Books:
  • Capitol offense / Mike Doogan— A beautiful young woman is found strangled in the office of an Alaskan state senator. Standing over her dead body is gifted young legislator Matthew Hope. Before this unfortunate event, he was the most promising native Alaskan politician in the state. Now he's facing serious time, and he's not talking to anyone. In desperation, a mysterious, wealthy patron hires Nik Kane, disgraced ex-cop, to investigate the crime. What Kane discovers is a political culture corrupted by the influence of oil and big money. At the core is a secret so great that Kane may have to pay for it with something more precious than his soul.
  • Robert Ludlum's the Bourne betrayal / Eric Lustbader — Jason Bourne takes a mission to rescue his only friend in the CIA, Martin Lindros, who disappeared in Africa while tracking shipments of yellowcake uranium. Once safely back in America, Lindros persuades Bourne to help track the money trail of terrorists buying the nuclear material in Odessa. But once there, Bourne is hampered by confusing flashbacks of unfamiliar places and events and he wonders: Is someone brainwashing him in order to throw him off the trail? Worse, is the man he saved in Africa really Martin Lindros? (read a sample chapter)
  • Arthur & George / Julian Barnes — As boys, George, the son of a Midlands vicar, and Arthur, living in shabby genteel Edinburgh, find themselves in a vast and complex world at the heart of the British Empire. Years later—one struggling with his identity in a world hostile to his ancestry, the other creating the world's most famous detective while in love with a woman who is not his wife–their fates become inextricably connected. (Man Booker Prize finalist; read a sample chapter)
  • Sea change / Robert B. Parker — When a woman's partially decomposed body washes ashore in Paradise, Massachusetts, police chief Jesse Stone is forced into a case far more difficult than it initially appears. Identifying the woman is just the first step in what proves to be an emotionally charged investigation. Florence Horvath was an attractive, recently divorced heiress from Florida; she also had a penchant for steamy sex and was an enthusiastic participant in a video depicting the same. Somehow the combination of her past and present got her killed, but no one is talking-not the crew of the Lady Jane, the Fort Lauderdale yacht moored in Paradise Harbor; not her very blond, very tan twin sisters, Corliss and Claudia; and not her curiously affectless parents, living out a sterile retirement in a Miami high rise. (Jesse Stone Series, #5)
  • Blackou t / John J. Nance — Minutes after a Boeing 747 rises majestically into a Hong Kong sunset, a flash splits the darkening sky. The pilot - suddenly blinded and doubled over in pain - fumbles in the dark in a frantic effort to gain control as the huge jet shudders through its descent. Kat Bronsky, FBI agent and terrorism specialist, is assigned the hunt for a Challenger-class business jet seen nearby just before the incident. The case poses countless questions: Was the flash a pilot error, a missile attack, or a malfunction? Or was it some new kind of weapon? And why are several government agencies interested in what Kat uncovers? (read a sample chapter)
  • I like you / Sandol Stoddard Warburg — A tiny book that expresses the true meaning of friendship. (Age Range: 8 to 12)
  • A wrongful death / Kate Wilhelm — The peace and quiet of Barbara's retreat on the Oregon coast is shattered when a terrified young boy calls to her as she walks along a deserted beach. Frantically he leads her to a cabin deep in the woods where his mother lies senseless and battered—clearly left for dead. Barbara runs for help, but by the time she returns with the police and medics both mother and son are gone. The puzzle only deepens when, back in the city, Barbara learns that the boy she met is the grandson of a wealthy and prominent family . . . and that they have accused her of aiding and abetting his disappearance. (Barbara Holloway Series, #10; read a sample chapter)
  • The girl with braided hair / Margaret Coel — In 1973, Liz Plenty Horses was accused of betraying the militant American Indian Movement, known as AIM, to the FBI after the death of one of their members. She went into hiding with her baby daughter, never to be seen again. Now, a skeleton with a bullet hole in the back of the skull has been discovered at the bottom of a ravine on the Wind River Reservation. The body was that of a woman who was murdered sometime in 1973. With the police reluctant to investigate, Arapaho attorney Vicky Holden and Father John O'Malley must unravel the truth-even if it incites the malice of a long-dormant killer.

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Friday, September 28, 2007

Sept. 26 Library Board meeting report

A quorum of members did not attend the scheduled library board meeting on Wednesday, Sept. 26 but the four attending members, Shirly Giles, Leny Buchman, Ila Dillon, and Savannah Lewis did hold an informal workshop discussion on several library matters.

Included in the discussions were:

  • need to recruit new board members to replace one or two (not clear at present) members who no longer reside in the community;
  • review of collection weeding practices and objectives;
  • increased outreach to students in the light of reductions to the school library;
  • development of a policy for reduction of priviledges for accounts with large numbers of missing or substantially-overdue items;
  • security and bandwidth usage considerations in proposed addition of wireless internet service;
  • review of documentation required as we move towards online publication of a searchable collection catalog.

No actions on these items were taken due to lack of a quorum.

The group agreed that setting a regular standing meeting schedule for the last Wednesday of each quarter would provide board members better opportunity for planning ahead. Because of the Christmas holidays, however, the next meeting was tentatively scheduled for Jan. 2, 2008, at 4 pm in the library. All board meetings and workshops are open to attendance by the public although public participation may be limited at the discretion of the meeting chair.

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Saturday, September 15, 2007

9/15: New at the library this week

Books:
  • Bone v. 6: Old man's cave / Jeff Smith — As war spreads through the valley, the Bone cousins join Gran'ma Ben and Lucius at Old Man's Cave to make a stand against the rat creatures. But not everything goes as planned. By the end of the book, Phoney Bone is strapped to a stone altar and about to be sacrificed; Thorn is lying lifeless nearby; and the rumblings of an earthquake suggest that the Lord of the Locusts is about to be released. Fone and Smiley Bone must do something drastic to save their friends. (Librarian's note: volumes 3, 4 & 5 are on order, so if you are afraid of spoilers, you may want to wait till they arrive.)
  • Vampire Island / Adele Griffin — Life isn’t easy for vegetarian vampires trying to blend in with regular people in a new city. The Livingstone kids are fruit bat hybrids who have left Old World dangers, and immortality, behind for a “normal” life in New York City. But normal doesn’t necessarily mean easy, especially with lingering vampire traits complicating things. (Age Range: 8 to 11)
  • The quickie / James Patterson; Michael Ledwidge — Lauren Stillwell is not your average damsel in distress. When the NYPD cop discovers her husband leaving a hotel with another woman, she decides to beat him at his own game. But her revenge goes dangerously awry, and she finds her world spiraling into a hell that becomes more terrifying by the hour. (read a sample chapter)
  • New England white / Stephen L. Carter — returns to the New England university town of Elm Harbor, where a murder begins to crack the veneer that has hidden the racial complications of the town’s past, the secrets of a prominent family, and the most hidden bastions of African-American political influence. At the center: Lemaster Carlyle, the university president, and his wife, Julia Carlyle, a deputy dean at the divinity school—African Americans living in "the heart of whiteness." Lemaster is an old friend of the president of the United States. Julia was the murdered man’s lover years ago. The meeting point of these connections forms the core of a mystery that deepens even as Julia closes in on the politically earth-shattering motive behind the murder. (read a sample chapter)
  • The secret / Rhonda Byrne — Fragments of a Great Secret have been found in the oral traditions, in literature, in religions and philosophies throughout the centuries. For the first time, all the pieces of The Secret come together in an incredible revelation that will be life-transforming for all who experience it.
  • Chocolate indulgences / Linda Collister — Chocolate lovers will be in heaven with this irresitible collection of recipes, from Truffles to Tarts and from Cookies and Cheesecakes.
  • A ship made of paper / Scott Spencer — Daniel Emerson lives with Kate Ellis and is like a father to her daughter, Ruby. But he cannot control his desire for Iris Davenport, the African-American woman whose son is Ruby's best friend. During a freak October blizzard, Daniel is stranded at Iris's house and they begin a sexual liaison that eventually imperils all their relationships, Daniel's profession, their children's well-being, their own race- blindness, and their view of themselves as essentially good people. (read a sample chapter)
  • Quiet strength : the principles, practices & priorities of a winning life / Tony Dungy; Nathan Whitaker — When Tony Dungy led the Indianapolis Colts to victory in Super Bowl XLI—and made history as the first African American coach to win the big game—millions of people, amazed by the success of his quiet, authoritative leadership style, wondered: how does he get it done? (read a sample chapter)

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Friday, September 14, 2007

Library board meeting Sept. 26

The Seldovia Public Library Board of Directors will hold a regular meeting on Wednesday, Sept. 26 at 4 pm at the library. Library board meetings are open to the public, although public participation is at the discretion of the meeting chair.

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9/14: New at the library this week

DVDs: Videos: Books:
  • Island of the lost : shipwrecked at the edge of the world / Joan Druett — In the winter of 1864, five seamen aboard the schooner Grafton wreck on the remote and icy Auckland Island, 285 miles south of New Zealand. An isolated speck in the Southern Ocean, it is a godforsaken place, with winds howling at sixty miles an hour, rain three hundred days a year, and an almost impenetrable coastal forest.
  • Out stealing horses / Per Petterson — Trond's friend Jon often appeared at his doorstep with an adventure in mind for the two of them. But this morning was different. What began as a joy ride on "borrowed" horses ends with Jon falling into a strange trance of grief. Trond soon learns what befell Jon earlier that day—an incident that marks the beginning of a series of vital losses for both boys. Set in the easternmost region of Norway, Out Stealing Horses begins with an ending. Sixty-seven-year-old Trond has settled into a rustic cabin in an isolated area to live the rest of his life with a quiet deliberation. A meeting with his only neighbor, however, forces him to reflect on that fateful summer.
  • Agatha Raisin and the haunted house / M. C. Beaton — Just back from an extended stay in London, Agatha Raisin finds herself greeted by torrential rains and an old, familiar feeling of boredom. When her handsome new neighbor, Paul Chatterton, shows up on her doorstep, she tries her best to ignore his obvious charms, but his sparkling black eyes and the promise of adventure soon lure her into another investigation. (Agatha Raisin Series, #14; read a sample chapter)
  • The perfect paragon / M. C. Beaton — After being nearly killed by both a hired hit man and her former secretary, Agatha Raisin could use some low-key cases. So when Robert Smedley walks through the door, determined to prove that his wife is cheating, Raisin Investigations immediately offers to help. Trouble is, Agatha hates divorce cases--especially when the client is as pompous as Smedley--but she has a business to run and she's not about to turn away a paying customer. (Agatha Raisin Series, #16; read a sample chapter)
  • Agatha Raisin and the day the floods came / M. C. Beaton — Crankier than ever, Agatha Raisin wants to forget that her husband left her to enter a monastery-a turn of affairs more humiliating than when she caught him with a mistress. She feels abandoned, fat, frumpy, and absolutely furious. What are her options? She takes an island vacation and joins a Pilates class. But what finally lifts her spirits is finding a corpse. (Agatha Raisin Series, #12)
  • Hasty death / Marion Chesney — Eager to join the working classes, Lady Rose Summer has abandoned the comforts of her parents' home to become self-supporting. But life as a working woman isn't quite what Rose had imagined--long hours as a typist and nights spent in a dreary women's hostel are not very empowering when you're poor, cold, and tired. Luckily for Rose, her drudgery comes to a merciful end when she learns of the untimely death of an acquaintance. (Edwardian Mystery Series, #2)
  • Aunt Dimity and the deep blue sea / Nancy Atherton — A series of death threats sends Lori Shepard to a remote island off the Scottish coast and to a fabulous castle restored by an eccentric friend of her husband's. But she finds herself drawn into an elaborate whodunit that may involve smuggling—or worse. Why has a human skull washed up on the beach? Is a desolate island really the best place to hide from a murderer? (Aunt Dimity Series, #11)
  • Aunt Dimity and the next of kin / Nancy Atherton — Feeling a touch world-weary, Lori Shepherd decides to become a volunteer at the Radcliffe Infirmary, where she can spread a little good cheer. There she meets Elizabeth Beacham, a kind, retired legal secretary with no family, except a brother who has mysteriously disappeared. But after only a few visits, Miss Beacham suddenly passes away, leaving Lori to tie up the loose ends of her late friend's life. Lori soon discovers that hidden among Miss Beacham's belongings are clues that Lori believes her friend left for her to discover. (Aunt Dimity Series, #10)
  • Death of a celebrity / M. C. Beaton — Access to Lochdubh is along a single, twisting, one-track road, but even its isolation can't keep Crystal French of Strathbane Television from dragging her crew and cameras into town. There to do a new show focusing on village life, Crystal quickly earns the outrage of the local folks when she rakes up old scandals and intimate secrets - tactics that promptly get her high ratings. Soon, even the local astrology column is hinting that Crystal had better watch her step. And no one, least of all Constable Hamish Macbeth, is surprised when she is killed. (Hamish MacBeth Series, #18; read a sample chapter)
  • Death of a dustman / M. C. Beaton — Lochdubh's dustman, Fergus Macleod, a sour little man given to domestic violence and drinking, gets by with a one-day work week collecting the village's trash. But when Mrs. Freda Fleming, wrath of the Strathbane Council, decides to make an environmental example out of Lochdubh, Fergus is promoted (at double his usual salary) to man the new and elaborate recycling center. Now a bullying tyrant with a neat uniform and a new truck, he issues harsh fines and enforces petty rules-until he is found dead, stuffed into a recycling bin. (Hamish MacBeth Series, #17; read an exerpt)
  • Death of a poison pen / M. C. Beaton — Minor writer John Heppel has a problem - he's by all accounts a consummate bore. When he's found dead in his cottage, there are plenty of suspects. But surely boredom shouldn't be cause for murder, or so thinks local bobby and sleuth Hamish Macbeth, whose investigation of Heppel's soap opera script uncovers much more than melodrama. (Hamish MacBeth Series, #20; read a sample chapter)
  • Death of a village / M. C. Beaton — During the eerie half-light of a far north summer night, a crime spree - from scams to burglary - strikes the Highlands. Suddenly Hamish Macbeth, never an ambitious man, has more police work than he desires. (Hamish MacBeth Series, #19; read a sample chapter)
  • The traveler / John Twelve Hawks — Maya is hiding in plain sight in London. The twenty-six-year-old has abandoned the dangerous obligations pressed upon her by her father, and chosen instead to live a normal life. But Maya comes from a long line of people who call themselves Harlequins—a fierce group of warriors willing to sacrifice their lives to protect a select few known as Travelers. (Fourth Realm Series, #1; read an exerpt)
  • The dark river / John Twelve Hawks — Siblings Gabriel and Michael Corrigan now know that they are Travelers, part of an ancient lineage of prophets, but the realization has effected them differently. Gabriel sees it as a calling fraught with responsibility; Michael grabs it as an opportunity, defecting to the enemy. (Fourth Realm Series, #2; read an exerpt)
  • Barefoot / Elin Hilderbrand — It's summer on Nantucket, and as the season begins, three women arrive at the local airport, observed by Josh, a local boy, home from college. Burdened with small children, unwieldy straw hats, and some obvious emotional issues, the women--two sisters and one friend--make their way to the sisters' tiny cottage, inherited from an aunt. They're all trying to escape from something: Melanie, after seven failed in-vitro attempts, discovered her husband's infidelity and then her own pregnancy; Brenda embarked on a passionate affair with an older student that got her fired from her prestigious job as a professor in New York; and her sister Vickie, mother to two small boys, has been diagnosed with cancer. Soon Josh is part of the chaotic household, acting as babysitter, confidant, and, eventually, something more, while the women confront their pasts and map out their futures. (read a sample chapter)
  • A cup of Tey (The daughter of time; Bratt Farrar; Miss Pym disposes) / Josephine Tey

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Saturday, September 01, 2007

Library bake sale Saturday, Oct. 6

The library will be holding a bake sale to benefit our collection on Saturday, Oct. 6 in conjunction with the monthly crafters' bazaar. Can you bake and donate something to help out our efforts? If so, please contact Shirly Giles or Leny Buchman. If not, come to the sale and purchase some of Seldovia's famous yummy baked goods and help us fund more books and other circulating items for our collection.

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9/1: New at the library this week

Videos: Books:
  • Rituals of the season / Margaret Maron — Judge Deborah Knott has a severe case of anxiety in the final days before her late December nuptials to Deputy Sheriff Dwight Bryant. Her calendar is booked solid with receptions and parties, last-minute details, and family obligations. There is absolutely no way she can fit a homicide case into her schedule. (Deborah Knott Series, #11; read a sample chapter)
  • Dancing with the virgins / Stephen Booth — In a remote region of northern England where a prehistoric ring of stones, the Nine Virgins, harbors a dark legend, the limbs of a murdered cyclist, Jenny Weston, are arranged to parody a woman dancing. Is a maniac on the loose? Detectives Ben Cooper and Diane Fry search for the killer. (read a sample chapter)
  • A heartbreaking work of staggering genius / Dave Eggers — Dave Eggers' memoir of bringing up his younger brother after his parent's death. (Pulitzer finalist; read a sample chapter)
  • Three cups of tea : one man's mission to fight terrorism and build nations-- one school at a time / Greg Mortenson — Anyone who despairs of the individual's power to change lives has to read the story of Greg Mortenson, a homeless mountaineer who, following a 1993 climb of Pakistan's treacherous K2, was inspired by a chance encounter with impoverished mountain villagers and promised to build them a school. Over the next decade he built fifty-five schools—especially for girls—that offer a balanced education in one of the most isolated and dangerous regions on earth.
  • Stalin's ghost / Martin Cruz Smith — Investigator Arkady Renko, the pariah of the Moscow prosecutor's office, has been assigned the thankless job of investigating a new phenomenon: late-night subway riders report seeing the ghost of Joseph Stalin on the platform of the Chistye Prudy Metro station. The illusion seems part political hocus-pocus and also part wishful thinking, for among many Russians Stalin is again popular; the bloody dictator can boast a two-to-one approval rating. Decidedly better than that of Renko, whose lover, Eva, has left him for Detective Nikolai Isakov, a charismatic veteran of the civil war in Chechnya, a hero of the far right and, Renko suspects, a killer for hire. The cases entwine, and Renko's quests become a personal inquiry fueled by jealousy. (Arkady Renko Series, #6; read a sample chapter)
  • Bones to ashes / Kathy Reichs — Temperance Brennan, like her creator Kathy Reichs, is a brilliant, sexy forensic anthropologist called on to solve the toughest cases. But for Tempe, the discovery of a young girl's skeleton in Acadia, Canada, is more than just another assignment. Évangéline, Tempe's childhood best friend, was also from Acadia. Named for the character in the Longfellow poem, Évangéline was the most exotic person in Tempe's eight-year-old world. When Évangéline disappeared, Tempe was warned not to search for her, that the girl was "dangerous." Thirty years later, flooded with memories, Tempe cannot help wondering if this skeleton could be the friend she lost so many years ago. And what is the meaning of the strange skeletal lesions found on the bones of the young girl? (Temperance Brennan Series, #10; read an exerpt)
  • Secrets of fat-free cooking : over 150 fat-free and low-fat recipes from breakfast to dinner--appetizers to desserts / Sandra L. Woodruff — A very different kind of cookbook, Secrets of Fat-Free Cooking is designed to help readers create low-fat and no-fat dishes that are easy to make, taste delicious, and are also high in nutrition. Woodruff guides readers through the basics of nutrition and provides dozens of helpful tips that will insure great results with every dish. 16 color photos. 30 line drawings.
  • Pot pies : comfort food under cover / Diane Phillips — All of us grew up with pot pies--homemade if we were lucky, otherwise store-bought. Either way, we all remember breaking through that flaky, buttery crust to get at the steaming, creamy chicken or beef or vegetables inside. Pot pies are, in fact, the ultimate comfort food, conjuring up images of Mom in the kitchen and a milk-and-cookies kind of world. Now, at the turn of the century, Diane Phillips brings pot pies back into our lives. And like us, they've grown up, developed a sophistication and a range of tastes and styles. But at the same time, they remain just as comforting, soothing, and satisfying as the ones we remember with so much affection. (read an exerpt)
  • Soup, a way of life / Barbara Kafka — In this stunningly rich and wide-ranging book, Barbara Kafka gives the food we love perhaps best in the world a new vitality. Though the subject is so familiar to us all, her approach is totally original. In a wonderfully diverse collection of nearly 300 recipes from all over the world -- some traditional, some newly minted, many so simple they require no cooking at all, each of them very much a part of our spiritual and emotional lives -- she offers up a lifetime worth of pleasure: (read an exerpt)
  • Low fat : practical cookery / Stephen Knowlden — There are over 175 recipes in this beautifully designed, easy-to-use book, which is well-illustrated with step-by-step photography to guide you through the preparation. Full of useful cooks 'tips and recipe variations, the book provides the ultimate in choice for a collection of delicious meals that are easy to prepare but satisfy the most demanding of appetites. The dishes include bright new suggestions using the freshest and most wholesome of ingredients, while other recipes are innovative re-workings of traditional dishes.
  • The Culinary Arts Institute cookbook / Culinary Arts Institute

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