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But wait…there’s more!

Dear reader, concerning books, is there any greater joy than finding out a sequel is coming out in one of your favorite series? I think not!

This recently happened to me with two of my favorite series. The first is the On Devonshire Shores series by Julie Klassen, book three is slated to be published in December of 2024! A small town by the sea, rambling old houses, romance, a hint of danger, and family drama, but it’s all wrapped up in a cozy shawl you curl up with in your favorite reading chair. Dear reader, if you have not acquired a reading chair, let me implore you to do so quickly! A short second to finding out a new volume is soon coming out in your favorite series, is knowing your favorite reading chair is waiting for you at home, along with a table for a cup of hot tea.

But I digress! Getting back to that family drama bit I mentioned, this is the main thread in book three of this series. You see, there is the mysterious eldest sister that is hinted at in books one and two, but finally in book three we learn how she is doing in the present time and get to hear more of her backstory in her own words, rather than through the lenses of her younger sisters.

The Seaside Homecoming by Julie Klassen

Disgraced eldest sister Claire Summers has been living in exile as companion to a stern great-aunt in Scotland. About to lose her place and longing to be reconciled with her estranged family, Claire sees an advertisement from someone looking for a “respectable female partner” in a Sidmouth boarding house. Is it a sign? She answers the ad, hoping she has not made another reckless mistake. When she meets the handsome, secretive proprietor, she wonders what he’s hiding and if he’s any more trustworthy than the nobleman who betrayed her years ago. Claire is drawn to him even though she fears he will reject her when he discovers her genteel façade hides a less-than-respectable past.

Meanwhile, the Summers family learns their great-aunt has died and Claire has disappeared without a word. The sisters rally together to find their lost sibling, but will their unexpected reunion heal old wounds and rekindle their bonds . . . or deepen the divide?

Return to the captivating Devonshire coast as the Summers sisters navigate romance, second chances, and the enduring strength of sisterhood in the face of adversity.

I started reading books in the regency romance genre last year, and haven’t looked back! It’s fascinating to read about all the different types of clothing – especially for women – as well as all of the societal standards and marital expectations. It really makes you think about all the modern conveniences we take for granted today.

Dear reader, this next series is something completely different, the Kamogawa Food Detectives series by Hisashi Kashiwai. Every once in a while I go down a rabbit hole of looking up a book on Amazon and at the bottom there’s a handy thing where Amazon shows you similar books that other customers bought, and before you know it I have several new, upcoming releases on hold at the library! Does anyone else do that and yet act surprised when they all come in at once? Please tell me it isn’t just me. No? Good!

Anyway, that’s how I found out about The Restaurant of Lost Recipes, the second in the Kamogawa Food Detectives series. The first book, The Kamogawa Food Detectives, is another you could shelve under the heartwarming category. People who have lost their way find the restaurant by providence – it’s poorly advertised on purpose, so only those who really need its services can find it – and have favorite meals recreated for them, bringing them back to a specific place and time, and by the time they finish the meal they have peace of mind and found closure, finding it easier to move on.

I distinctly remember the first time I had bibimbap, a Korean dish where bibim means mixing and bap means rice. I had just toured the Mitchell Park Domes in Milwaukee with friends in winter. Once at the restaurant I ordered a Lavender jasmine tea, thankful for the warmth, but was even more delighted when a steaming and sizzling stone bowl of bibimbap was set before me. Dear reader, those crispy rice bits at the bottom of the bowl, let me tell you! That was in 2017 and I still remember it fondly.

I also have fond memories of waking up and walking down the stairs to breakfast at my grandparent’s house. Grabbing my favorite mint green bowl and filling it with apple jacks, or coming back after a day of adventuring to find the whole house smelling of my grandma’s stew, the little kids table set up in the living room for my brother and I, where our uncle would sometimes join us and make us laugh so hard we could barely eat.

We all have strong memories attached to food. In the first book of the series, Chef Nagare and his daughter, Koishi, ask as much about the remembered dish as possible, even the specific place and time it was cooked in matters, as there are often regional differences with food. By reading this book – and the sequel! – you’ll learn so much about Japanese food, as well. It’s fascinating!

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Science Fiction: Something New and Something Old

I have always been a huge science fiction fan. I was practically raised on Star Trek The Original Series. I am still a huge Trekkie today. Surprisingly, in the past the only science fiction I tended to read were Star Trek or Stargate novels. I found I mostly gravitated towards books in the fantasy genre. In the last ten years my tastes have broadened to just about every genre written. Over the last year or so I chose to focus more on reading mainly Science Fiction novels. These are my top picks from my year of science fiction reading. I read a few new series and explored some good oldies as well!

The Finder Chronicles by Suzanne Palmer

If you enjoyed the TV show Firefly then you will totally love The Finder Chronicles! The Finder Chronicles follow space repo man Fergus Ferguson as he hunts down stolen or missing people or property. Fergus is an immensely likable character who seems to always end up in the worst kind of trouble. In each book he is tasked with finding something (or someone) and the stakes are usually quite high. The series is set in a future where Earth still exists but humans now travel the stars and interact with many other colorful alien races. The books are filled with plenty of action, intrigue, likable characters, and humor throughout. I am currently in the middle of reading Ghostdrift, the final installment, which was published in May. It has been one wild, hilarious ride and I will be sad to say goodbye to Fergus and his cat, Mr. Feefs.

As a side note, when reading a novel set in the future I ask myself if I would like to live in that future. I have to say yes to the Finder Universe. Though it is not perfect and Earth has gone through many rough patches, the future portrayed in The Finder Chronicles is one I could see myself enjoying. Sign me up for the beach planet!

To reserve individual books in the series click the links below! I highly suggest reading them in order.

Finder by Suzanne Palmer

Driving the Deep by Suzanne Palmer

The Scavenger Door by Suzanne Palmer

Ghostdrift by Suzanne Palmer

Continue reading “Science Fiction: Something New and Something Old”
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Soup O’Clock

The change in seasons this time of year is palpable. The angle and quality of sunlight has shifted lower, and the kids are back in school. It’s important to cultivate things to enjoy for every season, so while the light fades and the days shorten, I urge everyone to do what is right and just. It’s time to start thinking about what kind of soup to make, and to put those plans into action. Below, I picked out some cookbooks that feature recipes for some of my favorite soup and soup-adjacent dishes. The cookbooks I listed are a microscopic fraction of all the cookbooks we have on the shelf at Mead and throughout the Monarch system, if the ones I like to use aren’t appealing. Click each cookbook title to see the Monarch catalog listing. 

The soup: Chili Con Carne
The book: The Enchilada Queen (2016) by Sylvia Casares

This is not strictly a soup, per se, but a soup-adjacent dish that I make all the time. I am not here to have the “is a hotdog a sandwich” conversation applied to what qualifies as a soup, versus a stew, and so on. We’re progressive soup connoisseurs round these parts, and won’t be confined by any narrow definitions. Chili equals soup, I tell you, and this one is so delicious.

I love the recipes in this book because I love Tex-Mex cooking and I enjoy the borderline complexity of Sylvia’s recipes. Her Chili Con Carne is incredibly tasty over the enchiladas she is famous for, but I use it as a Tex-Mex shakshuka base for breakfast quite often. Pour a cup or two into a hot, oily pan, and crack some eggs on top, cover until set. Serve with crusty bread or crispy potatoes, precious. It might ruin all other breakfasts by comparison, that’s how tasty this chili is. 

The soup: Dal
The book: Indian for Everyone (2014) by Anupy Singla

This is a great cookbook for those who enjoy Indian cuisine, but might be intimidated by long ingredient lists and unfamiliar cooking techniques. Singla’s cookbook is the best guide I have come across for home cooks looking to expand their repertoire. Dal in particular is a great dish to have in one’s arsenal because it is delicious, inexpensive, and good for one’s health as dal tends to be lentil-based. It’s also on the lower end of the scale for degree of difficulty, and the ingredients are forgiving. I was thrilled to learn that Alex’s Corner Market, located at 723 Center Ave here in Sheboygan, carries an astounding array of Indian cooking staples, if anyone is looking for a particular variety of dal. A few years ago there was nowhere in town to purchase fresh curry leaves, let alone so many different lentils, and now we have access to this incredible resource. Totally dreamy. Lucky us. 

Singla also published an Indian slow cooker cookbook that is worth the time to track down. I had a copy but lent it to someone, and I forget who that was. If anyone knows who has my copy of this cookbook, please let them know I would like it back.

The soup: Gazpacho
The book: Snacks for Dinner (2022) by Lucas Volger

We might be at the tail end of gazpacho season here in the dregs of summer, but I think this is a recipe to keep handy for next time tomatoes are coming in. Gazpacho is a cold soup made primarily from tomatoes and other summer vegetables. This recipe stood out to me because it also calls for watermelon, resulting in the most refreshing and flavorful gazpacho I have ever tasted. Plus, with a title like Snacks for Dinner, who wouldn’t be moved to try out some of these fantastic recipes? I liked the book so much I bought my own copy to keep at home. 

The book: Cook’s Illustrated Revolutionary Recipes (2018)
The soup: Pasta e Fagioli

Soup is peasant food. If I were alive during feudal times I would for sure have been a peasant. This does not mean the food was bad, it meant the food was simple. Pasta e fagioli, or pasta and beans, depending on one’s mother tongue, checks all my peasant-hearted soup boxes. It is made of common ingredients, it comes together quickly, and it is so comforting and tasty. Plus, it gets finished with grated parmesan and a drizzle of olive oil. Please and thank you. I’ll crawl into a big bowl as soon as the snow starts flying, so hopefully not TOO too soon. 

Any Cook’s Illustrated, America’s Test Kitchen, or Cook’s Country cookbook is worth the time to peruse. This group of related publications has been cranking out top-tier cookbooks for decades now. I like the Revolutionary Recipes book because it is essentially a repository for the best recipes to appear in the magazine counterpart. The recipes might get slightly fiddly because they are highly researched and tested, but this means they are also quite foolproof. These cookbooks are wildly popular, so they will be available in most library collections for years and years. 

The soup: Ramen
The book: Let’s Make Ramen (2019) by Hugh Amano and Sarah Becan

This hand-illustrated guide to creating ramen at home is such a joy to read. The graphic-novel quality of the drawings paired with great ideas and recipes for various ramen elements demystified the hows and whys I had about ramen-making. While I am still a big fan of the $0.25 Maruchan packets and their reliable saltiness and versatility, it’s nice to have an idea of how to level up ramen into a dish I would be happy to serve company. Making ramen is a great way to explore ingredients commonly used in Japanese cooking, and how they might be incorporated into regular rotation in the kitchen and pantry. Any cookbook that broadens the possibilities of my home cooking is the kind of cookbook I want to use. 

The soup: Chicken Stock
The book: Make it Ahead (2014) by Ina Garten

Barefoot Contessa alert! Ina’s Food Network show is one of my all-time comfort shows. Her gorgeous house, kitchen, and garden in the Hamptons provide hours of idle daydream fodder, and her adorable husband Jeffrey is away for work all week. What bliss. Ina’s recipes tend to be of a classic variety, but updated for modern palettes and kitchens. Her process for making chicken stock always knocks me out. She puts a whole five pound chicken in the pot with all the aromatics and simmers it for a million years, resulting in gorgeous golden stock that turns gelatinous after straining and refrigeration. I usually prefer to save scraps for stock-making, or to make soup that creates the stock as the recipe is followed. Store bought is fine, too.

However, when I need to make a super clean and tasty stock, this is my go-to. This recipe appears in all of Ina’s cookbooks, of which there are like a dozen or more. The books are always beautifully produced, and tend to contain recipes that one will actually use again and again.  

What’s your favorite soup to eat? Or to cook? Do you have any deep indelible memories involving soup? I have several. One of my best memories ever is this time my friends and I were out all day one fall. We were still in high school. It was chilly and bright out. We went to my house and my mother had just finished making a big pot of chicken soup, and that bread you bake in a coffee can. The sun was streaming into the kitchen and everything smelled good. She fed us like we were all her daughters, and we were all sisters. That’s what it felt like then. I still know those women, and we still remember that day, and that soup. 

Still feeling unmoved by the idea of soup for din-din? No worries, we can hook you up with a cookbook suited to any particular taste, and we’ll have fun doing so, too. Consider using Mead’s Your Next Five Books service for additional recommendations. This service is not limited to cookbooks, in the event that one is more interested in a different variety of books. Every book its reader, as they say. Happy reading and a very happy soup season to all.

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Real Life and Real Action! Nonfiction Favorites!

I read a LOT. Most of what I read is fiction, but sometimes I get that craving for a good nonfiction novel. I have always been a complete history nerd so historical nonfiction is usually what I gravitate to. It really does not matter what period of history I am reading about, I enjoy the personal stories and struggles of people who really lived. In reading about a different time I feel I can transport myself to that era and see through the eyes of those who lived there. In a sense historical nonfiction is a type of time machine easily accessed and free with a library card! The following are some of my recent favorites!

Labyrinth of Ice by Buddy Levy

I have always been fascinated with any story about exploration or sailing ships, so this one captivated me. I had never heard of the Greely Expedition before, but the author had me feeling like I was along for the ride! (While being curled up with a blanket and lemonade…) The goal of Greely and crew was to be the first people to get to the North Pole. They had to deal with sub zero temperatures without any modern amenities. They had to defend against wild animals, days of total darkness, dwindling supplies, and a punishing icy environment. Each individual had to find the strength to stay sane and alive while going where no one had gone before. This book was one wild ride!

Recommended for fans of exploration, ships, survival, and adventure. *may contain cannibalism based on evidence discovered by rescuers*.

Click the title to request Labyrinth of Ice!

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Top 7 Titles from Disney’s Twisted Tales

I have always been a huge fan of Disney movies, so when I saw the first Twisted Tale book I had to pick it up! The series takes the original Disney stories that we are familiar with and puts a twist on the story to tell it in a different way or to explore other paths the tale could have taken. There are over sixteen books in the series at this time with at least four more scheduled in the next year. Each book is a stand alone. As the series is so long, I will highlight my TOP 7 standout books in the series. Let the countdown begin! I will count backwards 7 to 1 (#1 being my absolute favorite!).

(#7) Almost There by Farrah Rochon

Almost There is the 13th book of the series. The book is a twist on the Disney Princess and the Frog movie. The twist takes place towards the climax of the movie when The Shadow Man offers Tiana a deal. In the original story she does not take it…but what if she did? The Shadow Man makes Tiana an offer she can’t refuse. Give up Naveen and he will not only grant her the restaurant of her dreams, but he will also bring her father back to life! The catch? She can have no close contact with Naveen, not interfere with the Shadow Man’s plans, and she has to put a “harmless” drop of a potion in her gumbo. Will Tiana be able to keep the deal or will her feelings towards Naveen and her sense of right and wrong win out? The stakes are high and the book will leave you wondering just how Tiana can get out of this one.

Request Almost There in our catalogue!

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Posted in Adult, Audience, Staff Picks, Uncategorized

It’s for the birds

Dear reader, today I am going to talk to you about birds. I have been a huge bird nerd for years, and even started regularly watching a live bird cam while at work and enjoying conversation with other watchers in the cam’s chat feature. All on downtime of course! Wink wink.

When you think of migratory birds that come to Wisconsin in the spring and summer, what birds do you think of? The American robin? The red-winged blackbird? These are quintessential birds that herald the arrival of warmer weather! There is also the American goldfinch that, while it is a year-round resident of Wisconsin, the males turn from their yellow-brown coloring to a brilliant, unmistakable yellow that is easily spotted in trees and at bird feeders. Listen closely for their equally bright flight song as they fly around.

But have you thought of others? There’s the rose-breasted grosbeak, the yellow-rumped warbler, the eastern towhee, and the belted kingfisher, which all arrive roughly in late March and stay through September, or November in the case of the belted kingfisher. Have you heard of these birds before? Have you just read those names and thought to yourself, now what kind of bird is that? Well, dear reader, let me help you!

Birds of Wisconsin: The birding pro’s field guides by Marc Parnell

The Birding Pro’s Field Guide series introduces a number of innovative, never-before-seen features to the birding field guide scene. This highly accessible field guide gives the most complete description available for each species’ daily life and behavior, and each entry also includes a month-by-month birding forecast and a full page of highly identifiable color photographs. Perfect for novices and intermediates, but also serves as an invaluable reference for advanced birders. Featuring the 138 most common birds to Wisconsin.

Dear reader, you will see lots of books about birds with the phrase ‘field guide’ in the title or subtitle. These are books intended for use out in the woods, the neighborhood, or wherever else you happen to be and want to learn more about birds! Many of these field guides have sections describing a bird’s shape, call, behavior, habit, etc., that can help you narrow down exactly which bird you saw or heard. Sounds great doesn’t it? Many of these field guides are also pocket-sized, which works great for slipping into a purse or even a pants or jacket pocket.

But dear reader, you may be thinking, I have a bird feeder in my backyard and would like to learn more about the birds that visit it and the plants in my backyard. What about me?

Continue reading “It’s for the birds”
Posted in Adult, Fantasy, LGBTQI+, Teen & Young Adult, Uncategorized

Avatar the Last Airbender: A Look at the Chronicles of the Avatar Series

With the release a few months ago of the live action Avatar the Last Airbender on Netflix, I thought it would be fun to take a look at a book series that has been exploring the Avatar (not the blue people) universe. I have been an Avatar fan since I was a teenager. The show deals with a lot of heavy concepts for a kids show and is often dark at times.

The setting is in a world where each element has a nation based upon it. Those that live within the nation are tied to that particular element (if you are lucky enough to be born a bender and not a regular person.) The Four Nations are: The Fire Nation, The Water Tribe, The Earth Kingdom, and The Air Nomads. The Avatar is the one who ties them all together and is born with the ability to control (bend) all four elements. The job of the Avatar is to bring balance to the physical world and the spiritual world. The Avatar must be an intermediary who settles disputes and brings about a just deal between various parties. The Avatar is the key to keeping the peace. In addition to this role, the Avatar is reincarnated every time they die. An Avatar can access and talk to any of his or her past memories and incarnations. The job description is definitely a lot for one person to handle!

The show focuses on one incarnation of the Avatar: a boy named Aang. Through Aang we see the burdens of Avatarhood on a kid’s shoulders. He tried to run away from his responsibilities resulting in him being frozen in ice for 100 years. Waking up he finds the world completely changed. The Fire Nation has taken over most of the world and he is the only hope in saving it and restoring the peace.

If you have watched Avatar the Last Airbender you know Aang’s story. But what about his past lives? The Chronicles of the Avatar series explores the lives of the Avatars that have come before Aang. These books are Young Adult to Adult level reads and feature Kyoshi’s story and Yangchen’s story. Roku’s story is due to be released on July 23rd of this year. I am hoping for a Kuruk novel after Roku!

The Rise of Kyoshi by F. C. Yee

I was very excited when this book came out as I had found the glimpses of Kyoshi in the Avatar the Last Airbender series absolutely fascinating. She is imposing! She has cool makeup! She fights with metal fans and wears a cool outfit! She founded an entire island of warrior women! Of course I wanted to find out more about this interesting character. I did not expect Kyoshi to become my all time favorite Avatar. Though we see her in the show in her adult years as an imposing and wise Avatar, Kyoshi wasn’t always that way. I found her so easy to connect with as a character.

Kyoshi is an orphan. She had to fight for everything she has which is not much. Not only that, she is terrible at earth bending. She can’t seem to control the smallest of pebbles! Being an orphan, no one considers that she could possibly be the Avatar. The elders believe that the next Avatar will be a strong bender at birth. Kyoshi is abnormally tall, clumsy, and does not fit the beauty standards of those around her. She has to face her share of bullies. Thus Kyoshi ends up working as a servant girl in the mansion that belongs to a boy the elders believe is the real Avatar!

The Rise of Kyoshi follows our hero as she finds out who she really is. As Aang had his faithful companions, we get to meet Kyoshi’s gang of close friends. One stand out is Rangi, a fiery spark of a fire bender who is such a strong and loyal friend. The relationship between Kyoshi and Rangi was a pleasure to read. Being an orphan, Kyoshi deeply values the friendships and connections she makes. She feels that she is a guardian of sorts and will not let anything happen to those she cares about.

There is plenty of epic bending fights with bandits and other baddies the team comes across. The overarching villain is so well written. His motives are understandable from a power hungry twisted perspective. He is a very powerful and worthy opponent for Kyoshi.

There were points in this book I wanted to cry, cheer, and laugh with the characters. I really felt a connection with them and the author did really well exploring these relationships. Kyoshi is a LGBTQ Avatar, but I am not going to spoil who she has feelings for. I can say that the relationship was very well written and believable. The novel takes the reader on a journey as Kyoshi grows as a person and learns how to control the four elements and assume her role as the true Avatar. (Questions about where the fans and face paint came from are also answered.) This book ends making you want more! I read this book so fast as I could not put it down! Luckily there is a sequel. The second book in the series reviewed below resumes Kyoshi’s story.

Click this link to request the novel! The Rise of Kyoshi

Continue reading “Avatar the Last Airbender: A Look at the Chronicles of the Avatar Series”
Posted in Adult, Audience, Historical, Mystery, Staff Picks, Uncategorized

Adventures and Murder with Hercule Poirot

Before I moved to Sheboygan I had to commute to work. I had about a 40 minute drive at the time. I fought the boredom of the long drive by listening to audio books on CD. I had been getting into mysteries and knew that Agatha Christie was one of the big names in that genre. My journey began by picking up The Mysterious Affair at Styles (narrated by Hugh Fraser, who stars as Hastings in the Poirot TV show.) From that mystery I was hooked and needed more of the little Belgian detective and his excitable sidekick. After moving to Sheboygan a few years ago I switched from audiobook to paperback, the voices from the audio series still in my head for the various main characters. I finally came to the end of my journey with Hercule Poirot this past week with finishing the final book: Curtain. What a worthy ending to a great series and brilliant detective!

The Hercule Poirot Series by Agatha Christie

Agatha Christie started writing her Poirot series in 1916 and had the first novel published in 1920. While the series is of the mystery genre it is fascinating as it provides a window into the time period it was written in. The series kicks off with Captain Hastings coming home with a war injury. WWI and WWII are not the focus of the books, but the impact of the wars are clearly seen throughout the series. From a historical standpoint it is interesting to get a glimpse of how WWII was affecting the English people as they tried to continue with their daily lives. This is most clearly shown in the title Taken at the Flood in which Poirot casually waits in a bomb shelter during a raid and listens to a stranger discuss a suspicious death. The series continues into the 1960’s where they provide a glimpse into the changing times and culture of that era. As I enjoy historical fiction as well, I found this element to be just as engaging as they mysteries themselves.

The mysteries kept me guessing from beginning to end. If you are a fan of mysteries like myself, you probably find yourself trying to solve it before the detective by the end. As for this series, just when I thought I had the system figured out, there would be some huge twist that I certainly was not expecting. If you are a fan of twist endings the book I most recommend in this series is The Murder of Roger Ackroyd as I believe that book had the biggest twist of the lot.

As for the characters, after the first book it felt as if they were already friends I had known for ages. Captain Hastings is young. He has a hopeless romantic personality and always tries to see the bright side of life. He is Poirot’s best friend and sidekick in the early books. In the later books Poirot meets Ariadne Oliver, the author of a mystery fiction series. She is also a lot of fun and has a quirky personality. Due to her fame as a writer of mystery fiction in the series, she ends up getting caught up in real murder mysteries and often has to come seek out Poirot for help. Hercule Poirot is of course the main hero of the series. He is a short Belgian detective who is known for his impressive mustache. He believes that any mystery can be solved by “using the little grey cells”. A student of psychology and the study of human nature, Poirot uses this to figure out the connections and motives in cases. It is interesting to see how the human mind works from his point of view. He has a very analytical mind which often plays against Hastings’ more fantastic theories. Poirot is a very immaculate person with an obsession for symmetry. These quirks provide often needed humor and serve to make him a rather endearing character in addition to helping him notice anything suspiciously out of place while solving a crime.

I started trying to compile a list of favorite titles to share in this article. Going back over each book I realized that I loved almost all of them. Elephants Can Remember seemed perhaps the weakest of them as Poirot did not seem to be in it as much as I would have liked. However that title comes right at the end before Curtain. Curtain, being the last novel, finished the series with a bang! (No pun intended). I was very satisfied with the ending and felt Agatha Christie did right by her characters and the series to wrap it up in the way she did.

Now that I have finished the book series I have been binge watching the TV show Poirot staring David Suchet and Hugh Fraser. I find it to be just as good as the books! There have also been three new movies based on Poirot books (A Haunting in Venice VERY loosely based.). The movies star Kenneth Branagh. You can also listen to Agatha Christie’s Poirot series on audio. When I first started searching for audio, I found there are a few different voice narrators. I recommend finding the set narrated by Hugh Fraser. He does the best in doing the various voices and pulling the reader into the story. Of course, you can also find all the titles in book format at the library or through our online catalogue. Happy reading!

Continue reading “Adventures and Murder with Hercule Poirot”
Posted in Adult, New & Upcoming, Uncategorized

New! Simpl liftPlayer Music Player

Mead Public Library’s Experience Collection has a new item- the Simpl liftPlayer.

What is it?

The Simpl liftPlayer is an easy-to-use music player that was created for those with Alzheimer’s and dementia. All you have to do is lift the top lid of the player and music will begin to play. There is a large button under that lid to skip a song, and then simply close the lid to stop the music.

Thanks to a generous grant from Sheboygan County’s Aging and Disability Resource Center (ADRC), the Mead Public Library has 6 of these music players available for check out. Click here to see current availability.

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Posted in Adult, Fiction, Staff Picks, Teen & Young Adult, Uncategorized

Manga and cats, what could be better?

Dear reader, today I am returning to talk about a most epic of combinations. Manga and cats! Has there ever been a better combination? Perhaps coffee and cats surpasses it, but not by much in my opinion.

The first manga I’m going to talk about is Nights With a Cat by Kyuryu Z. When I tell you this is one of the funniest mangas I have ever read, I’m not exaggerating! I laugh out loud and smile the whole time I’m reading it. The way the author portrays Kyuruga, the cat, is so authentic and realistic for cat owners.

I also enjoy living vicariously through the main character, Fuuta, and his sister as they interact with a very affectionate Kyuruga. You see, dear reader, I live with a cat who is not very affectionate. Abraham (Abe for short) is a cat that wants affection on his terms, and usually for about a minute and then he’s done! However, because he is like that, it makes the moments when he jumps up on my bed and lays by me of his own volition that much more special.

Nights With a Cat by Kyuryu Z

When Fuuta comes home tired at night, all he wants to do is spend time with his sister’s cat, Kyuruga. So many of the mysterious habits and mannerisms of house cats―from the surprising array of shapes Kyuruga likes to twist into, to the bizarre challenge of getting a good photo of him, to his lightning-fast mood changes―are carefully reproduced in this relaxed and cute comedy about living with an adorable furball!

The next manga I’m going to talk about is a shonen manga, which, if you’ve read my previous blog post on manga, you will remember that this means this is a manga aimed primarily at a young male audience, typically characterized by action-filled plots.

There is indeed a ton of action in this manga in the form of, you guessed it, games! You didn’t see that coming at all, did you, dear reader? Luckily I’m here to inform you, no worries.

I grew up playing car games with my brother, but I was nowhere near as obsessed with games as the main character, Riko, is in this manga. I find her enthusiasm for them quite charming, though. The way she goes over the top in response to a win or bad draw is hilarious! I also appreciate the short chapters at the end of the longer ones that feature Riko from Musubi the cat’s perspective. I was basically born into a cat family so I’ve never experienced first-time cat ownership, but the way Riko fumbles through it, as well as constantly relates it to the gaming world, treating it like a leveling up scenario will really charm you!

Continue reading “Manga and cats, what could be better?”