Tulsa Book Review - April 2016

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Tulsa

EVENT GUIDE

Inside

Book Review TULSABOOKREVIEW.COM

Interfaith Holocaust Commemoration Featuring Sigmund Tobias Page 8 of Event Guide insert

BOOK

Strange Haven: A Jewish Childhood in Wartime Shanghai Page 4

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INSIDE

APRIL 2017


reader to question their understanding of history and fact, presenting alternative possibilities in a way that is both engaging and entertaining. James Rollins fans will not be disappointed in this latest Sigma Force adventure.

Category

Mystery, Thriller & Suspense SNAP IT for additional book summaries.

THE MARRIAGE LIE By Kimberly Belle MIRA, $15.99, 352 pages Reviewed by Christina Boswell Check this out! In The Marriage Lie, Iris thinks she has the perfect life. She has an amazing house and a wonderful husband who she is trying to start a family with. Then her whole world is shattered when she finds out her husband died in an airplane crash--on an airplane heading in the opposite direction he told her he was going. As Iris tries to tell the truth from the lies, she finds out her husband was hiding a lot more than just where he was going. She also discovers there might be a price to pay if she digs too deep. This was a great book. It was suspenseful and different than most books about lying husbands. It keeps you guessing about what’s really going on until the end. Even what Iris chooses to do at the end comes as a surprise. It was a fast-paced read that was hard to put down, and in fact, I didn’t until I’d read every page.

WITHOUT MERCY: A BODY FARM NOVEL By Jefferson Bass William Morrow, $26.99, 352 pages Reviewed by Philip Zozzaro Check this out!

DEAD AND BREAKFAST: A MERRY GHOST INN MYSTERY By Kate Kingsbury Crooked Lane Books, $25.99, 288 pages Reviewed by Randy-Lynne Wach Check this out!

Dr. Bill Brockton has seen plenty in his career as a forensic anthropologist. His work has lead to killers of all types. A call to a crime scene in Cooke County, TN brings a murder unique in its brutality. A decomposing body is found tied up, a possible victim of torture. The victim is indistinguishable from the remains and no ID is available. Brockton, working with his longtime assistant, Miranda, uncovers possible hate crime characteristics in unwrapping a horrific method of murder. Brockton finds himself getting an education in the perverse world of hate groups, from the KKK to militia groups. Yet he can’t completely prove motive. He also has to contend with his assistant’s impending departure for a job with the FBI, a possible flirtation with his secretary, and a reappearance by a dreaded serial killer. Brockton is facing more insurmountable hurdles as time goes on. Which will kill him first? Without Mercy is a page-crackling corker of a novel. The plot is fast moving, fun, and thrilling. The science inherent in Brockton’s job is never too far over the reader’s head, which keeps the book interesting from beginning to end. A great read from a great series!!

After an ugly divorce, Melanie accepts her recently widowed grandmother’s offer to go into business together. Together they buy an old, supposedly haunted house to start up a bed and breakfast. While her grandma, Liza, enthusiastically embraces the idea of the laughing ghost—naming their B&B the Merry Ghost Inn—Melanie refuses to believe. But she definitely thinks something creepy is going on when Liza uncovers a real skeleton in a closet. The grand opening of the Merry Ghost Inn is put on indefinite hold while the police investigate. Since the small town force seems unwilling to make an old case a priority, the women decide to speed things up and take matters into their own hands. After all, reading mystery novels pretty well makes you an expert, right? This book is a fun, quick read. There were a few areas where my inner editor wanted to come out—a couple of key conversations where Melanie and Liza seem to have switched positions by the end or side-plots that seem unnecessary. Overall, however, if you enjoy a cozy mystery with a tiny taste of the paranormal, and you don’t really want to analyze the storyline, this could be an engaging afternoon read.

TWO DAYS GONE By Randall Silvis Sourcebooks Landmark, $15.99, 400 pages Reviewed by Rosi Hollinbeck Check this out!

BURIED IN THE COUNTRY: A CORNISH MYSTERY By Carola Dunn Minotaur Books, $25.99, 336 pages Reviewed by Tamara Benson Check this out!

Thomas Huston had taken the professorial publish-or-perish mantra to a new level with writing best-seller mystery books. During some research, he interviews and becomes friends with state police trooper Ryan DeMarco. DeMarco has a sad and shocking story of his own. When Huston’s entire family is found brutally slaughtered and Huston disappears, the case comes to DeMarco. Although it seems everyone in town has already tried and convicted Huston, DeMarco just can’t quite believe Huston committed this horrible crime and, consequently, is willing to keep his mind open and look for alternative suspects. The search for suspects, hampered by Huston’s disappearance and presumption of guilt, has a twisted path, but DeMarco perseveres, uncovering red herrings aplenty. Author Randall Silvis has created a terrific thriller a la Dennis LaHane and Michael Koryta. Told from two points of view — those of Huston and DeMarco — this terrific story will hook readers into the fascinating mystery and keep them turning pages. The writing is crisp and the characters are fully developed and complex. For fans of the mystery/thriller genre, this author will be a tremendous addition. Let’s hope he has more books like this in the chute. THE SEVENTH PLAGUE: A SIGMA FORCE NOVEL By James Rollins William Morrow, $27.99, 448 pages Reviewed by Tarina Speidel Check this out! When an archaeologist reappears in the African desert, two years after disappearing and having undergone a process of self-mummification, Sigma Force is asked to help solve a puzzle stretching across the globe and history. Were the biblical plagues of ancient Egypt real? Sigma must race against the clock, and an old enemy, to find a cure before allegorical history becomes a modern day epidemic. I always look forward to new books in the Sigma Force series. The Seventh Plague sees many of the Sigma Force characters in their element as they work to stop the latest threat facing the world. Full of puzzles, suspense, and action, James Rollins seamlessly weaves history and fiction into a non-stop, page-turning story. Meticulously researched, Rollins drives the

The incomparable Eleanor Trewynn returns in the fourth installment of the Cornish Mysteries written by Carola Dunn. In Buried in the Country, she is called back into duty to be a calming force between two future leaders of anti-colonial factions in Rhodesia at a secret meeting in a beautiful hotel in Tintagel. Also at the meeting is her niece, Detective Sargent Megan Pencarrow, who is looking into a missing person report concerning a local solicitor and friend of her aunt as well as providing security for the events. Both storylines converge nicely as Pencarrow involves one of the young leaders in a search and rescue for the solicitor and a local artist who have been kidnapped by a murderous duo: a search which culminates in a very exciting and descriptive car chase. Dunn’s Cornish Mysteries are reminiscent of classic English country house murder mysteries. Her writing evokes images of Agatha Christie’s Miss Marple, and in my head Eleanor looks exactly like Margaret Rutherford. While this novel did tend to be a bit long-winded in sections, it was a lovely book to enjoy curled up on your sofa with your favorite cup of tea. I look forward to following Eleanor Trewynn on further investigations in Cornwall. BRAZEN: A VALENTINO MYSTERY By Loren D. Estleman Forge Books, $25.99, 208 pages Reviewed by Glenn Dallas Check this out! Valentino’s life is all about film. Whether it’s his work as an archivist for UCLA or his passion for restoring an old movie house to its former glory in his off-time, the movies are part of the fabric of his life. Unfortunately, his investigations have brought him into contact with the police on a few occasions, and when he stumbles upon the body of his friend, fading starlet Beata Limerick, he finds himself the prime suspect. Can Valentino clear his name--and more importantly, will he uncover who killed his friend and staged her death to resemble that of Marilyn Monroe? Brazen is the latest in Estleman’s film-fueled series of mysteries, and it’s easily the most accessible one for crime buffs. See BRAZEN, cont’d on page 15

Tulsa Book Review • April 2017 • 2


Tulsa

Book Review

IN THIS ISSUE Mystery, Thriller & Suspense..........................2

Tulsa City-County Library 400 Civic Center Tulsa, Oklahoma 74103 Ph. (918) 549-7323 EDITOR IN CHIEF Ross Rojek Ross@1776productions.com EDITOR/COORDINATOR Jackie Hill Tulsa City-County Library GRAPHIC DESIGN/LAYOUT Heidi Komlofske-Rojek Judy Webb COPY EDITORS Heidi Komlofske-Rojek Danielle McManus EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS Christopher Hayden WEBSITE TulsaBookReview.com

History........................................................4-5 Book Sale........................................................5 Tweens...........................................................6 Teens...........................................................6-7 Meet Author Laurie Halse Anderson...............7

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Cosmonautics Day and Children’s Day/ Book Day

Science & Nature.............................................8

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Cooking, Food & Wine....................................9

Fifth Street and Denver Avenue 918.549.7323

Bestsellers Coming Soon.................................9 Science Fiction & Fantasy........................10-11

Nonfiction.............................................. 12, 13 Youth Nonfiction New & Coming Soon.........13 Kids’ Books................................................... 14

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to the

Biographies & Memoirs..................................4

Fiction..........................................................11

The Tulsa Book Review is published monthly by City Book Review. The opinions expressed in these pages are those of the individual writers and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Tulsa Book Review or City Book Review advertisers. All images are copyrighted by their respective copyright holders.

from

Historical Fiction.......................................... 14 Youth Fiction Coming Soon..........................15 Celebrate National Library Week..................16

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Help connect your child to the world of learning through books, stories and libraries! Experience Russian culture and learn about space exploration through stories and activities.

• FEATURING Storytime From Space in the Children’s Garden Hands-on space activities with the Tulsa Children’s Museum Stargazing through daytime telescopes Russian puppet shows presented by the Tulsa Sister City partnership with Zelenograd, Russia

For additional Children’s Day/ Book Day events scheduled at Tulsa City-County Library locations, check the April Event Guide insert in this issue of the Tulsa Book Review.


Category

Category

Biographies & Memoirs

History SNAP IT for additional book summaries.

TOKYO: A BIOGRAPHY: DISASTERS, DESTRUCTION AND RENEWAL: THE STORY OF AN INDOMITABLE CITY By Stephen Mansfield Tuttle Publishing, $15.95, 208 pages Reviewed by Glenn Dallas Check this out!

SNAP IT for additional book summaries.

STRANGE HAVEN: A JEWISH CHILDHOOD IN WARTIME SHANGHAI By Sigmund Tobias University of Illinois Press, 162 pages Reviewed by Cassie Nodine, director of Holocaust education, Jewish Federation of Tulsa Check this out! When Dr. Sigmund Tobias returned to Shanghai, China, in 1988 as a visiting professor at the Shanghai Institute of Education, his past came flooding back. Originally raised in Berlin, Germany, Tobias’ family fled their home as refugees after November 8, 1938. This date came to be known as Kristallnacht and marks the escalation of violence against Jews as the German government incited the population to terrorize the country’s Jewish communities and vandalize their homes, businesses and synagogues. Most refugees could not acquire visas to enter the United States or other European countries, but visas were unnecessary to enter Hongkew, an area in Shanghai, China, ruled by the Japanese. The Tobias family, along with 17,000 other European Jews, found a haven from the Holocaust halfway across the world. In this memoir, Tobias chronicles the journey of a refugee family leaving the only life they had ever known to live in a wholly unfamiliar place, which became the center of an active community that continued to exist until well into the 1950s. Arriving at the age of 6, he gives us an innocent and honest account of life inside the Shanghai ghetto: disease, hunger, lack of clothing, limited access to medicine. Yet Tobias acknowledges this story of Jewish refugees in Shanghai as an uplifting one of rescue and survival. Along with the anxiety and hardship, there is also comfort and friendship. This memoir introduces us to an often-forgotten aspect of the Holocaust, but is an enduring reminder of the resilient refugee experience throughout history. SEARCHING FOR JOHN HUGHES: OR EVERYTHING I THOUGHT I NEEDED TO KNOW ABOUT LIFE I LEARNED FROM WATCHING ‘80S MOVIES By Jason Diamond William Morrow Paperbacks, $15.99, 304 pages Reviewed by Ryder Miller Check this out! Searching for John Hughes from new New Yorker Jason Diamond tells a fascinating story about youth, idol worship, and growing up. Diamond relays his personal story of a childhood in Chicago and of moving to New York City, where he matured as a critic and aspiring literary artist. Early on he became obsessed with the movies of John Hughes (Pretty in Pink, Ferris Beuller’s Day Off, The Breakfast Club, Home Alone) and struggled to write a biography of the famous filmmaker. He in the meantime lived an interesting life in New York, where he was transformed by his journey to become a writer. In New York he finds success and recreates himself. He also tells a fascinating first-person story about the fanship he developed with the auteur John Hughes when he intellectually explored his oeuvre for relevance and a more meaningful life. During this gestation, he comes to terms with the power and influence that the cinema and literature have over us. In some sense, he has gotten his literary degree from the city, with there even being the biographical book he has written that he no longer likes. Diamond does find an enlightenment of sorts, which he shares. He has also found friends, love, and work in The Big Apple, but the book is not about them. Maybe sadly for some readers, he has learned not to take the literary life too seriously.

It’s easy to forget that cities are living, breathing creatures, constantly growing and evolving as buildings rise and fall, technologies advance, and populations shift. Tokyo has experienced more ups and downs than most cities, so it’s only appropriate that a metropolis so steeped in change should get a proper history, journeying from its earliest days to its current eclectic form. Tokyo: A Biography is a curious way to look at a city, traveling from its shogunate infancy through the growing pains of a fiery adolescence and onto its later years as it strives to find itself and build an identity, both hampered by the choices of the past and influenced by the ever-changing circumstances of the present. Tokyo, like a phoenix, has burnt to the ground and resurrected itself, becoming part of the very fabric of the Japanese culture. Mansfield does an impressive job of loading the reader with details but never delving too deep into any one period. Tokyo’s history could easily fill a volume twice this size, but Mansfield makes it feel complete, exploring not only how the city changed and grew, but why, and how it responded to various crises and obstacles. Tokyo: A Biography brings the city to life. See THEORY, cont’d on page 5

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Tulsa Book Review • April 2017 • 4


Book Reviews

History

THEORY OF THE NOVEL By Guido Mazzoni Harvard University Press, $39.95, 408 pages Reviewed by Owen Hamill Check this out! Described broadly, Theory of the Novel explores how “between the mid-sixteenth century and the beginning of the nineteenth, a genre long considered an unpretentious form of entertainment — the novel — became the primary art practiced in the West, the art that portrays the extensive totality of life.” Writing for fellow scholars, Mr. Mazzoni (translated from the original Italian by Zakiya Hanafi) assumes — even demands — extensive background knowledge, delving as he does into the minute details of a long list of great European novels and the intellectual debates surrounding them. That’s not to say there aren’t any joys to be had for the lay reader, just that they’re few and far between. The reader’s familiarity with and interest in writers such as George Eliot and Tolstoy and concepts like Aesthetic Platonism may well determine their interest in the book. But still, the lay reader will be left with an overview of the novel’s evolving philosophy, understanding how novelists came to see that “a prince who sees his province being invaded experiences the same pain as a farmer who sees his cow being stolen” and how their novels “[explored] these passions as if they were both of the utmost importance.”

Barrow to tell. Stamps are seemingly a safer investment than art or property for when economic times are bad and the tiny, faded scrap of paper has drawn several owners--some eccentric, one famously criminal, all wealthy--who either hid or exhibited their unique acquisition. In 1878, the one-cent magenta came into the hands of the aristocratic Philippe von Ferrary, dowdy in dress but invariably sporting a yachting cap. He bought stamps ravenously, divulging a sentiment undoubtedly expressed by other owners: “I would sooner buy one hundred forgeries than miss that variety I could not find elsewhere.” Similarly extravagant, Arthur Hinds, according to legend, saw a possible duplicate and treacherously burned it. When he visited Buckingham Palace, he showed the stamp to King George V, a dedicated collector, and boasted of the superiority of his own collection. Irwin Weinberg, a rags-to-riches industrialist who relished exhibiting no less than P.T. Barnum did, formed a partnership with seven colleagues to purchase the stamp. When ready to sell, he found the ideal buyer in no less a character than John du Pont, who died in prison in 2010, found guilty of murdering a wrestler. Most recently, Stuart Weitzman, who made his fortune designing high-fashion shoes, purchased the stamp in 2014. This exhilarating book of revealing details of rare stamps and their collectors comes to an end, though for sure the story will continue. THE 60S: THE STORY OF A DECADE By The New Yorker Magazine, Henry Finder (editor), David Remnick (introduction) Random House, $35.00, 720 pages Reviewed by Lynn Elizabeth Marlowe Check this out!

THE WORLD REMADE: AMERICA IN WORLD WAR I By G.J. Meyer Bantam, $30.00, 688 pages Reviewed by Philip Zozzaro Check this out! World War I was a global conflagration that would endure for four-and-a-half bloody years. The United States would have no initial involvement, and recently-elected President Woodrow Wilson would tout this in his re-election campaign in 1916. Propaganda by the US would convince the public that US involvement was right and just. The advice given Wilson by the influential Colonel House would steer Wilson toward war. The United States was evolving during the war years, in ways both positive (populism) and negative (racism). This would serve as background to the US joining the war in 1917.The British Naval Blockade and German U-boat warfare would lead to American casualties, despite warnings from Germany. The Expeditionary Forces would not see action until later in the year, but their involvement was key in turning the tide of the war. The Armistice signed in 1918 would signal the end of hostilities, but the real battles had just begun. G.J. Meyer has written a keen observation about a historic and troubling period. This opus spans the war years, reflecting the US’s emergence as a global power while the other countries fought a war of attrition. Wilson is painted first as a complicated man who could be a sharp politician, then as a sick, indecisive man looking for validation. This book is well written, sharp, and has bearing on our present and future involvement in wars. A+ THE WARS OF THE ROOSEVELTS: THE RUTHLESS RISE OF AMERICA’S GREATEST POLITICAL FAMILY By William J. Mann Harper, $35.00, 624 pages Reviewed by Philip Zozzaro Check this out!

The 60s: The Story of a Decade is a compilation of New Yorker magazine articles, poems, and fiction pieces. It is a special compilation, chosen carefully, to highlight the most important pieces of the 60s. For example, Truman Capote’s In Cold Blood is in the compilation, as well as Calvin Trillin’s piece on integration in universities. The compilation even includes a short story by Isaac Bashevis Singer. Topics include the Vietnam War and civil rights but also topics as diverse as Nigerian independence and a movie review for 2001: A Space Odyssey. This reader, a history lecturer, was overwhelmed by the sheer number of pieces in the volume. There is much to choose from and so much history to explore. See THE 60s, cont’d on page 15

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The Roosevelt clan was a storied and legendary extended family filled with ambition, intelligence, and power. The Wars of the Roosevelts begins at the end with Eleanor examining the roots and intricacies of the clan. Theodore Roosevelt aspired to be a leader, and he would succeed in combat and politics. He would be advised by his sister Bye but would need to avoid near disaster by distancing himself from ne’er-do-well Elliott, hampered by drinking and womanizing. Elliott was the father of future First Lady Eleanor, who would battle most of her life between her cousins’ rivalry and her mother’s second-guessing. Teddy Roosevelt would obtain the Presidency and would let Progressive views guide his leadership, but he would be eclipsed by distant relation Franklin, who would reign for twelve years in office. The ties between Oyster Bay and Hyde Park would be ripped asunder by petty jealousies and insults, both real and perceived. Yet both families would leave their marks on the history of the US. The Wars of the Roosevelts is an emotional journey, engaging the reader in tales of success and woe on both sides. The men and women of the illustrious family are not perfect, but they are interesting, if not occasionally fascinating. The good, bad, and ugly are written for all to see, and the history is intriguing in every aspect. Do not miss!

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THE ONE-CENT MAGENTA: INSIDE THE QUEST TO OWN THE MOST VALUABLE STAMP IN THE WORLD By James Barron Algonquin Books, $23.95, 224 pages Reviewed by Jane Manaster Check this out! In 1856, British Guiana, now independent Guyana, printed their one-cent stamp with barely visible errors. While the fact was inconsequential to most of us then and now, for a handful of philately fanatics the error has meant a fortune, a passion, and a rollicking good tale for James Tulsa Book Review • April 2017 • 5


Category

Tweens SNAP IT for additional book summaries.

Etta, having acclimated to the life of a traveler, faces down every danger and challenge with grit and tenacity. She also meets someone who will change her heart, her confidence, and open her eyes to emotions she’s repressed her whole life. Some may be disappointed in the lack of swoonworthy moments between Etta and Nicholas, but it was interesting to get more backstory on Sophia and to see the supposedly-dead Julian resurface. Wayfarer does, also, introduce us to many new faces, some of them sure to become memorable favorites. Danger escalates as Ironwood’s men close in and a new enemy presents itself in the “Shadows.” Once again, Bracken gives us a historical adventure with an expansive scope and rich detail, which sometimes slows the pace of the story, but overall will leave readers in awe. The duology wraps in a climactic end that will leave readers breathlessly satisfied. WAIT FOR ME By Caroline Leech HarperTeen, $17.99, 384 pages Reviewed by Sarah Guller Check this out!

SCAR ISLAND By Dan Gemeinhart Scholastic Press, $16.99, 256 pages Reviewed by Rosi Hollinbeck Check this out! Jonathan Grisby has been sent to Slabhenge, a reform school for boys. It used to be an insane asylum and is on an island in some very rough seas. Run by by the Admiral and a crew of nefarious men, it might seem that the inmates have taken over the asylum. When a crazy accident kills all the adults, the boys are on their own. They are prepared to send a rescue message with the mail boat that comes every day when a few decide it might be interesting to just be on their own for awhile, so they trick the mail boat driver and form their own little society. That’s when things get interesting. Author Dan Gemeinhart takes a helping of Shutter Island and mixes it with a bit of Treasure Island and a huge dollop of Lord of the Flies to create a contemporary middle-grade novel that will capture its intended audience and keep them turning pages until the surprising and exciting climax. This is a terrific book, and middle-grade boys — those boys that are so hard to get to read a book — especially will love it.

Category

Teens SNAP IT for additional book summaries.

DREAMLAND BURNING By Jennifer Latham Little, Brown and Company, $, 371 pages Reviewed by Helen Patterson, Customer Care specialist, Tulsa City-County Library Check this out! Though living almost 100 years apart, Rowan Chase and Will Tillman are connected by a dead man. At the start of a blistering Tulsa summer, Rowan discovers a skeleton unearthed on her family’s property. Armed with the dead man’s wallet and frustrated by police disinterest, Rowan enlists her best friend James to help her discover the identity of the murdered man. Meanwhile, in 1921, Will finds his ingrained racism challenged as the escalating hostility white Tulsans feel toward the prosperous black community of Greenwood culminates in the Tulsa Race Riot. Will must decide how far he will go to protect his new friends, Joseph and Ruby, and other innocent lives. The culmination of years of research, Jennifer Latham’s second novel is richer than her first, dealing masterfully with the complex intersections of class, race and gender as her protagonists struggle with injustice in others and in themselves. Alternating between the two narrators, Latham builds tension and keeps readers speculating about the identity of the skeleton until the end. The novel is written for young adults, but it will appeal to adults as well: the brutal realities of racism, past and present, touch all lives. Highly recommended.

Wait For Me presents the beautiful tale of a forbidden romance set during the World War II era. When English Lorna finds out her father has hired a German prisoner to work on their farm, she’s full of hatred and disgust for the enemy living on her land. With her own two brothers fighting in the war, how could her father even think to welcome this repulsive boy of German blood and a half-burned face into their farm? Slowly, however, Lorna begins to see past his burns and nationality and finds herself viewing him as just another human, one who shows her more kindness and care than her own kind. She finds herself asking questions about his family, learning that he is just as scared and affected by the terrible war as her own kin, and at last seeing him as a friend--but when the community soon finds out about this secret relationship, Lorna learns that her feelings could land her, and her love, in big trouble. She faces the challenge of showing everyone that Paul is not the monster they think a German would be, a task especially difficult as she navigates the hardships of the war itself. Caroline Leech’s intricate novel is such a sweet tale, slightly mirroring the cherished story of Romeo and Juliet. Full of surprise, adversity, and love, Wait For Me is the ideal read for anyone who can appreciate a sweet story line. Perfect for a rainy afternoon, a relaxing evening, or a calm read by the fireplace, the novel offers an engaging plot and lovable characters. Readers will sympathize with Lorna as they go through her emotions, from betrayal to anger to woeful regret as she learns how to accept herself and the boy and how to eventually stand for what is right. Important themes of family and societal expectations weave themselves throughout Wait For Me, which can unhesitatingly be recommended with full confidence. It now sits proudly on my nightstand, a beloved novel that I’m sure to open again soon. THE SECRET OF A HEART NOTE By Stacey Lee Katherine Tegen Books, $17.99, 384 pages Reviewed by Amy Shane Check this out! Mimosa grew up knowing that anger smells exactly like burnt tires and heartache smells like blueberries, making her and her mother the only aromatuers who can mix up the perfect love elixir. Yet Mim dreams of having a regular life and falling in love, but aromatuers are forbidden to fall in love. However, fate has its own plan, and when Mim accidentally gives someone an elixir meant for another, a series of events unfold. This throws her into the path of the cute soccer player Court, leaving Mim with the difficult task of preventing her own heart from falling in love. Delightfully charming and unique, The Secret of a Heart Note explores the lengths some will go for love. From the inner world of high school mean girls, lost love, and jealousy, this book explores the deeper side of love and all its many challenges. With her unique and original storyline, Stacey Lee takes readers on a beautiful journey. With her delicate way of exploring the world of first crushes, love, and the complicated relationships of teenagers and parents, Stacey Lee captures the essence of a coming-to-age contemporary read while wrapping it all up with a little bit of magic. STILL LIFE WITH TORNADO By A.S. King Dutton Books for Young Readers, $17.99, 304 pages Reviewed by John Murray Check this out! A sixteen-year-old girl has an existential crisis that finds her confronting her younger and older selves in a surreal YA novel. Still Life with Tornado at first seems to be about Sarah as she grapples with being a teenager, school and friend troubles, and a desire to find her place in the world. In a surreal twist, Sarah encounters and begins discussing life with a 10-year-old, 23-yearold, and 40-year-old version of herself. As the story progresses, layers are pulled back. In addition to the mystery of her school troubles, Sarah is forced to relive the past and discover why her absent brother left and the truth of her parent’s relationship. As with most of King’s stellar YA novels, Still Life with Tornado fools you as a reader. At first blush, the story seems to revolve around typical teenage angst. Slowly, however, you are pulled deeper, and eventually the true is-

WAYFARER (PASSENGER) By Alexandra Bracken Disney-Hyperion, $17.99, 544 pages Reviewed by Becky Vosburg Check this out! In Alexandra Bracken’s Wayfarer, the story picks shortly after Passenger ends. Etta and Nicholas have been separated by centuries. The astrolabe that will save the world from Ironwood’s schemes has gone missing, and as passages collapse and timelines change, the need to get it back intensifies See STILL LIFE, cont’d on page 7 before all of history is irreparably damaged. Tulsa Book Review • April 2017 • 6


Book Reviews

Teens

STILL LIFE, cont’d from page 7 sues come to light: the price of secrets, the strain of toxic relationships, and ultimately how power is abused and how the abused cope. Still Life with Tornado will stick with you long after you close the book. Don’t let the YA label fool you, this is a book everyone should read. POISON’S KISS By Breeana Shields Random House Books for Young Readers, $17.99, 304 pages Reviewed by Briana Wagner Check this out! Poison’s Kiss by Breanna Shields draws on Indian mythology to build a fantasy world where kisses can be deadly. Marinda has always struggled with her role as a visha kanya, a “poison maiden” who can murder with the lightest brush of her lips, yet she comforts herself with the knowledge she is doing the will of the Raja and purging the kingdom of its enemies. So when Marinda is instructed to a kiss a boy she believed was good, a boy she could imagine herself falling in love with, she begins to question everything about her role as a royal assassin. Poison’s Kiss weaves romance, danger, and intrigue into a rich yet nail-biting tale. Steady pacing keeps the story moving forward, and Marinda digs into her past to find out how she can salvage her future. Even as dark secrets come out, Marinda focuses on her love for her younger brother and her budding romance to remember what she is fighting for. This book has everything to keep fantasy fans turning page after page.

Meet

Author Laurie Halse Anderson Winner of the Tulsa Library Trust’s 2017 Anne V. Zarrow Award for Young Readers’ Literature

HOLDING UP THE UNIVERSE By Jennifer Niven Knopf Books for Young Readers, $17.99, 400 pages Reviewed by Holly Scudero Check this out! https://tccl.bibliocommons.com/item/ show/3459419063 Once upon a time, Libby Strout was severely obese, depressed, and completely isolated from society. She’s come a long way in the past few years, and now she’s ready to reenter public life for her last few years of high school with a new sense of confidence, ready to make a new life for herself. But when a mean-spirited game gets her mixed up with Jack Masselin--the cool kid, full of swagger, but hiding his own secret--she ultimately discovers an unexpected ally. As the two endure group counseling and community service projects, they discover they’re more alike than different, and the connection they form changes both of their lives. Author Jennifer Niven is bound to find some new fans while pleasing current fans with Holding Up the Universe, a teen novel that explores some deep topics. While readers may not be able to identify with Libby or Jack in a direct manner--after all, being morbidly obese isn’t common, and most readers will never have heard of face-blindness before)-they will certainly be able to see themselves in some of the high school situations the two find themselves in. The book alternates between the perspectives of both characters, giving readers a good sense of their histories, their current struggles, and what their futures may hold. Fantastic read.

Friday, May 5 7 p.m.

COMICS CONFIDENTIAL: THIRTEEN GRAPHIC NOVELISTS TALK STORY, CRAFT AND LIFE OUTSIDE THE BOX By Leonard S. Marcus, editor Candlewick Press, $24.99, 192 pages Reviewed by Glenn Dallas Check this out! https://tccl.bibliocommons.com/item/ show/3505151063

Hardesty Regional Library Connor’s Cove 8316 E. 93rd St. 918.549.7323

One of the most curious things about art is that you can know everything about a particular artist -- their background, their inspirations, their influences -- and yet, you can never quite grasp what makes them an artist. Art is elusive, and that’s part of its magic. Comics and graphic novels are an artistic medium all their own, and Comics Confidential offers major creative voices in the genre the opportunity to share their stories, to tell us about their art and about what drew them to comics. This is one of the first books I’ve read that sincerely treats the medium as an art form, and to read about these award-winning writers and creators helps cement the legitimacy of the genre as a whole. And Marcus is an apt conduit for the subjects, asking the right questions to get them going, and then stepping back, only occasionally interjecting to coax something more from the interviewee. And since each artist has drawn a short comic to accompany the interview, the reader gets creative insights about a brand-new work from behind the curtain. Comics Confidential is insightful, but it’s designed to whet your appetite, not sate it. You’ll want more. And that’s a good thing.

Tulsa Book Review • April 2017 • 7

Laurie Halse Anderson is the author of more than 18 books of fiction and nonfiction for “children of all ages” that address life’s challenges with honesty, humor and sensitivity. Anderson will receive the 2017 Zarrow award and then speak about her life and works, answer questions from the audience and sign books. Copies of her books will be available for purchasing. After the presentation, Anderson will present awards to winners of Tulsa City-County Library’s 2017 Young People’s Creative Writing Contest.


Citizen Science provides an intriguing history of the process, exploring weather data collected by the likes of Thomas Jefferson and Louis and Clark. This is science writ large in all the best ways, allowing PhDs and interested laymen the chance to accomplish scientific feats like never before. And this book is both the tribute and guidebook to get you started.

Category

Science & Nature SNAP IT for additional book summaries.

WHY TIME FLIES: A MOSTLY SCIENTIFIC INVESTIGATION By Alan Burdick Simon & Schuster, $28.00, 320 pages Reviewed by Aron Row Check this out! Time flies when events are happy--but bring on trouble and sadness, then time dawdles and becomes endless. Notice how time drags for youth but accelerates for the more mature. Time is an intangible entity that can be viewed from the past, the present, and the future. The past resides in memories, the now immediately transitions into the past, and the future relies on imagination. In this absorbing account of the elusive quality of time, New Yorker staff writer Alan Burdick seeks to understand how time is perceived by different individuals and how the brain intakes stimuli to translate perceptions into our varying clocks. Beginning with a history of how time is measured at the planetary, global, and atomic levels, the story continues with a survey of the philosophers’ view of external changes. Past and current scientific studies exploring the vagaries of our inner time pieces are delightfully detailed. Some investigators seclude themselves in blackened caves to avoid all external stimuli that might influence their time clock; others use more technological gear trying to probe the brain and find its neuronal dials. You may be familiar with prediction, but read the book to discover the essence of postdiction. THE WOOD FOR THE TREES: ONE MAN’S LONG VIEW OF NATURE By Richard Fortey Knopf, $28.95, 320 pages Reviewed by Jane Manaster Check this out! Set the scene in four acres of English woodland standing amid the Chiltern Hills of Oxfordshire. Take one long-time and nowretired curator from London’s Natural History Museum and place him in said woodland. Richard Fortey draws together the history and nature of the tract and the surrounding countryside in his new chronicle, The Wood for the Trees. He dates settlement of the land back to the Iron Age and sees that in the parameters of nature “every species will have its own biography, its special requirements and its curious secrets.” Month by month the scene changes, first in April as spring begins to color the sleeping woods and fields, on through the colors of summer and fall until winter takes over. There is so much to see and enjoy in every chapter and Fortey, with not only professional knowledge but also a delightful humor, transports readers through his share of the renowned Chiltern Hundreds, each section of the land once allotted to provide for a hundred families reaching down to the River Thames. Besides the small items he collects for a new handmade cabinet, on windy autumn nights he almost hears the ghost from the haunted cottage nearby and feels the squirrels raining bark upon him as they scrabble for the sap underneath. The book is a series of wondrous small-scale experiences. But it is too generous for a single reading; it’s better to savor month-by-month, allowing the pleasure to stretch and become more memorable.

CATTAIL MOONSHINE & MILKWEED MEDICINE: THE CURIOUS STORIES OF 43 AMAZING NORTH AMERICAN NATIVE PLANTS By Tammi Hartung, Panayoti Kelaidis (foreword) Storey Publishing, $19.95, 256 pages Reviewed by Gretchen Wagner Check this out! This is a beautiful book full of wisdom and lore. Every land is gifted with useful native plants, and North America is no exception; for thousands of years, people have been using these plants for food, medicine, clothing, shelter, and many other things. This book spotlights 43 of these wonderful plants and gives their traditional and modern uses. There are many that will be familiar, but others will surprise you; and even some that are familiar probably have uses you wouldn’t have guessed! Cattails, for example, are completely edible, can be used for making furniture or as a fire-starter, as a stuffing and a sealant, and even for water filtration. Yucca has long, strong fibers that can be made into clothing or rope and flowers that are also edible. Some plants you may want to add to your garden, like amaranth or passionflower, or California Bay, which is a natural pest repellent as well as a savory seasoning. Beautiful photographs accompany sections introducing each plant’s utility, and every plant included has many uses. Written with enthusiasm and love, this book will open your eyes to the wonder of the plants that surround you every day. CANNIBALISM: A PERFECTLY NATURAL HISTORY By Bill Schutt Algonquin Books, $26.95, 352 pages Reviewed by Glenn Dallas Check this out! It’s one of the last true taboos in civilized culture: cannibalism. From the Donner Party and Alive! to Jeffrey Dahmer and Hannibal Lecter, it conjures thoughts both lurid and compelling. It seems so unnatural. But, as it turns out, at least for some creatures, it’s more natural than you might expect. Cannibalism examines the concept in many forms, covering both human and animal examples, delineating between acts of cannibalism for survival, in funeral rights, and other scenarios. Schutt takes us up and down human history, pondering whether Neanderthals engaged in the act, whether man-eaters in the Caribbean were real or hearsay, and even into the scientific debate regarding the origins and transmission of mad cow disease. See CANNIBALISM, cont’d on page 13

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CITIZEN SCIENCE: HOW ORDINARY PEOPLE ARE CHANGING THE FACE OF DISCOVERY By Caren Cooper The Overlook Press, $28.95, 320 pages Reviewed by Glenn Dallas Check this out! It has been said many times that small groups of dedicated people are the only ones who make a difference. But in the Internet age, we’re finding ways to mobilize greater and greater numbers of people to accomplish amazing things. We’ve seen crowdfunding, online protests, and other organized movements, but there’s another revolution stirring that involves the people: citizen science. Plowing through available information and adding the human touch to data analysis formerly left to computers, opening up their computers to increase processing power, and other acts of scientific cooperation are just a few examples offered in Citizen Science, a chronicle of the growing trend of group observation and analysis assisting traditional scientists in their work. Heck, there are citizen science projects that have mapped the tides and even outperformed the Hubble Space Telescope. Tulsa Book Review • April 2017 • 8

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APRIL 2017

A FREE MONTHLY GUIDE TO YOUR COMMUNITY LIBRARY, ITS PROGRAMS AND SERVICES

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and how to figure out the best time and way to file for it. She also will help you create and explore your MySSA account. Light refreshments will be served. For adults.

BIXBY LIBRARY

BROKEN ARROW LIBRARY

Art on the Spot April 1-29 • Find your spot at the library! Design a circle, leave it with us, and we will hang it in the library as our April project celebrating National Library Week. For all ages.

Open Book Discussion Tuesday, April 4 • 6:30-7:45 p.m. Read "The Marriage Plot" by Jeffrey Eugenides and join us for an engaging discussion. Copies of the book are available for checkout at the library or for download at www.tulsalibrary.org. For adults.

Movie Saturday, April 1 • 2-4 p.m. Watch the animated movie "Zootopia" (rated PG) while enjoying free popcorn. For all ages. Meet Four Local Best-Selling Romance Authors Saturday, April 8 • 2-3:30 p.m. Meet authors Jaci Burton, Rhenna Morgan, Dena Garson and Lauren Smith, and learn about writing, publishing and more. Books will be available for purchasing. Light refreshments will be provided. For adults. PAWS for Reading for Adults Saturday, April 15 • 10 a.m.-noon Registered therapy dogs are excellent listeners. Adults are invited to read for 20 minutes to a furry, four-pawed friend. Registration is required. Call 918-549-7323 to register. Bixby Adult Book Discussion Wednesday, April 26 • 2-3 p.m. Read the novel "Half Broke Horses" by Jeanette Walls and then join us for a lively discussion. Copies of the book are available for checkout at the library. Light refreshments will be served. My Retirement @ the Library Saturday, April 29 • 10-11:30 a.m. Suzanne Porske, author of "Achieve Financial Success" and president of Phoenix Financial Group, LLC, will explain how Social Security works

L I B R A R Y CLOSINGS

BROKEN ARROW LIBRARY/SOUTH Great Decisions: Current Events Discussion Group Wednesdays, April 5, 19 • noon-3 p.m. Join us for a lively conversation as we discuss "U.S. Foreign Policy and Petroleum" on April 5 and “Latin America’s Political Pendulum” on April 19. For adults. Tai Chi: A Six-Week Series April 10, 13, 17, 20, 24, 27 10:30-11:30 a.m. • Learn ways to improve balance and flexibility through Tai Chi, a series of slow, continuous movements and controlled breathing. This series is designed for people of all levels of health and activity. For adults. Sponsored by the Oklahoma Healthy Aging Initiative. Get a Job (Now) Thursday, April 13 • 6:30-7:30 p.m. Join us for an introduction to library job resources, featuring Job Now With Optimal Résumé. For adults.

BROOKSIDE LIBRARY Book Discussion: "Fahrenheit 451" by Ray Bradbury Monday, April 10 • 1:30-2:30 p.m. Come and discuss this classic with us! For adults.

Skiatook Library will be closed April 10-15 for improvements. All Tulsa City-County Library locations will be closed Sunday, April 16 for Easter.

CENTRAL LIBRARY Books Sandwiched In Mondays, April 3, 10 • 12:10-12:50 p.m. Location: Aaronson Auditorium Mary Anne Harris, minister, writer and historian, will review "Kind of Kin" by Rilla Askew on April 3. Attorney Catherine Gatchell will review "Notorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg" by Irin Karman and Shana Knizhnik on April 10. Sponsored by the Friends of the Tulsa City-County Libraries. For adults. Brown-Bag Lunch and Learn With Tulsa Master Gardeners Tuesdays, April 4, 11, 18, 25 12:10-12:50 p.m. Location: Pocahontas Greadington Learning and Creativity Center Bring your lunch and Join Tulsa Master Gardeners for a series of workshops and lectures. Seating is limited. Register online or call 918-549-7323. For adults. Sponsored by OSU Extension. Show Me How Workshop: Research House and Building Histories Wednesdays, April 5, 12 • 4-6 p.m. Location: Computer Lab, third floor Learn how to use online resources to research the history of houses and buildings in Tulsa. Registration is required. Call 918549-7423 or visit http://guides. tulsalibrary.org/localhistory to register. For adults and teens.

COLLINSVILLE LIBRARY All Thumbs Knitters Wednesdays, April 5, 12, 19, 26 12:30-2:30 p.m. • All levels of knitting expertise are welcome to join us for this fun and instructional afternoon. For adults. Collinsville Book Discussion Tuesday, April 11 • noon-1 p.m. Read "Hidden Figures" by Margot Lee Shetterly and then join this fun group of

readers for a lively discussion. Copies of the book are available at the library's circulation desk. For adults. Patchworkers: Quilting Tuesday, April 11 • 6:30-9 p.m. Join us for an evening of quilting and friendly conversation. For adults.

GLENPOOL LIBRARY Chicks Knit and Lit Fridays, April 7, 14, 21, 28 • 1-3 p.m. Knit, crochet, weave or do whatever fiber craft makes your fingers happy! We'll also talk about whatever good book or movie we've read or seen. For adults. Bucket Gardening 101 Saturday, April 8 • 2-3 p.m. Join us for a workshop on getting the greenest out of gardening in small containers. Attendees will receive a bucket to get started and info on what to do with it. Supplies are limited! Registration is required. Register online or call 918-549-7535. Family Movie Night Thursday, April 13 • 6-7:45 p.m. Join us for a fun outside-in evening with Disney Pixar's "Inside Out." Bring your pillows, blankets and camping chairs. We'll serve popcorn and indoor s'mores. For all ages.

HARDESTY REGIONAL LIBRARY Simple Steps for Starting Your Business: Start-Up Basics Thursday, April 6 • 6:30-8:30 p.m. Location: Oak Room • Want to start a business? Get the help you need with SCORE experts. Learn the essentials of business start-ups, get action steps for your business and receive one-toone mentoring. SCORE is a nonprofit association of volunteer business experts. Registration is required. Go to www.tulsa.score.org to register. For adults. Hearing loop available. Switch hearing aid to T-coil.


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DIY Event: Da Vinci Mirror Writing Saturday, April 15 • 10-11 a.m. Location: Ash Room Celebrate the 565th birthday of Leonardo Da Vinci, born April 15, 1452. Experiment with mirror writing and explore other skills the great polymath mastered! Register online. For adults. International Tabletop Game Day Saturday, April 29 • 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Location: Frossard Auditorium We will have board and card games on hand, or bring your own. For all ages.

HELMERICH LIBRARY Monday Night Movie Monday, April 3 • 6-7:30 p.m. Join us for a showing of "Beauty and the Beast" (1991, rated G). We will provide popcorn and soda. For all ages.

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Celebrate Earth Day: Create a Terrarium Saturday, April 22 • 11 a.m.-noon Add a little green to your indoor space. Terrariums are perfect for small spaces, offices and areas with low light. We will have all the supplies you need to create a small world in a bottle, jar or vase or whatever you would like to use. You may bring a glass planter or decorative items if you like. For adults and teens. Class size is limited. Register online.

JENKS LIBRARY Jenks Library Book Discussion Group Thursday, April 20 • 1:30-2:30 p.m. Join this friendly group for a lively discussion of great books. Call 918-5497323 for more information. For adults.

KENDALL-WHITTIER LIBRARY

Annual Book Sale: Preview Night Thursday, April 20 • 5-8 p.m. This preview night is for Friends of the Helmerich Library members only. Membership may be obtained at the door for a $5 donation. The book sale features thousands of gently used books and media.

Plant Swap/Plant a Seed Saturday, April 29 • 1-3 p.m. Bring your plants from home and exchange with a friend from the library. For adults.

Annual Book Sale Friday, April 21 • 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday, April 22 • 10 a.m.-5 p.m. The Friends of the Helmerich Library's annual book sale features thousands of gently used books and media. Get quality and quantity at great prices while supporting the library.

Confident Parenting Series: Learning@Home With CAP Thursday, April 27 • 6:30-7:15 p.m. Location: Lecture Room Learn more about CAP Tulsa's free Learning@Home program, while enjoying an evening of crafts and activities for you and your little ones. CAP Tulsa's Learning@Home program builds on the skills parents have through regular visits at home while focusing on developing a child’s brain through play, music, reading and other activities. Sponsored by the Tulsa Library Trust. For parents and children ages 5 and younger.

Mainly Mysteries: American Authors Tuesday, April 25 • 6-7:15 p.m. We will discuss Nevada Barr's "Burn" and Craig Johnson's "The Cold Dish." Light snacks are provided. For adults. Books People Are Talking About Wednesday, April 26 • 12:15-1:15 p.m. Join us for a special author visit from Tulsa poet Mark Johnson, winner of the 2016 Pablo Neruda Prize for Poetry, part of the annual Nimrod Literary Awards. Johnson will discuss the craft of poetry and his awardwinning work. We also will highlight poetry collections from Oklahoma poets Leanne Howe and Benjamin Myers to celebrate National Poetry Month. Light refreshments are provided by the Friends of the Helmerich Library. For adults.

HERMAN AND KATE KAISER LIBRARY Book Discussion Tuesday, April 18 • 2-3 p.m. Read "My Mrs. Brown" by William D. Norwich and then join us for this lively discussion. For adults.

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your nutrition, and simple, fun ways to introduce movement and exercise into everyday routines. Presented by the Oklahoma Healthy Aging Initiative. Registration is required. Call 918-549-7323 to register.

SCHUSTERMAN-BENSON LIBRARY Mystery Reader Roundtable Thursday, April 6 • 2-4 p.m. Come for coffee and find out what other mystery lovers are reading. For adults. Zentangle: An Artistic Outlet for Everyone Thursday, April 20 • 6-7 p.m. Get your creative juices flowing! Zentangle is a new way to doodle and a fun way to relieve stress. A certified Zentangle instructor will guide us through some Zentangle creations that anyone can do. Materials are provided. For all ages.

SKIATOOK LIBRARY Osage Language Class Thursdays, April 6, 13, 20, 27 • 6-7 p.m. Presented by the Osage Nation Language Department. For all ages.

teens & tweens BIXBY LIBRARY Recyclable Art Tuesday, April 4 • 4-5 p.m. Make a magazine collage, poem, or even try your hand at CD scratch art. For ages 10-18.

Bixby Teen Manga/Anime Club Tuesday, April 18 • 6-7 p.m. Discuss your favorite manga characters and books while making a craft. For ages 10-18.

BROKEN ARROW LIBRARY BATAB: Broken Arrow Teen Action Board Thursday, April 13 • 4:30-5:30 p.m. Join us as we partake in community projects. Each attendee will receive one hour of community service. Read or Die Anime Club Saturday, April 15 • noon-2 p.m. Watch anime, talk manga and eat snacks. Come in cosplay or as you are! For ages 12-18.

BROKEN ARROW LIBRARY/SOUTH BA Sidewalk Astronomers: Comets Thursday, April 6 • 6:30-7:30 p.m. Draw elliptical, hyperbolic and parabolic orbits of comets. Construct the path of Comet ISON that came through September 2013 to March 2014. For ages 5-18. In the Middle Book Club Monday, April 10 • 6:30-7:30 p.m. Join us for snacks and great conversation about "Ghostopolis" by Doug TenNapel, a retelling of the "Wizard of Oz" in graphic novel form where Toto is a skeleton horse. For ages 9-12.

BROOKSIDE LIBRARY Bachelor's Buttons and Sunflowers April 10-21 • Drop in and plant bachelor's button and sunflower seeds to take home and grow. For ages 10-18.

MAXWELL PARK LIBRARY Art @ the Library: Paper Quilling Mondays, April 10, 17, 24 11 a.m.-1 p.m. • Create 3-D paper art to be framed. No prior art knowledge required. It is highly recommended for attendees to come to all three classes. Registration is required. Seating is limited. Call 918-549-7323 to register. Supplies and directions will be provided. For adults.

OWASSO LIBRARY Eat Better, Move More Mondays, April 3, 10, 17, 24 11 a.m.-noon • This nine-week class for older adults and/or caregivers focuses on improving nutrition and introducing movement and exercise. Instructors will share ways to improve

www.TulsaLibrary.org

Need individualized instruction on a library product or service? Whether you need to learn how to download eBooks or improve your job skills, we are here to help. Book-A-Librarian appointments are available on a first-come, first-served basis and generally last 30-60 minutes. Registration is required. Contact your neighborhood library to reserve your time or call 918-549-7323 for more details.


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CENTRAL LIBRARY Coding for Teens: "Star Wars" Edition Monday, April 10 • 4-5 p.m. Location: Digital Literacy Lab Join us for an introduction to coding using Javascript as we learn how to code with a "Star Wars" game. Class size is limited. Register online. Digital Art for Teens: Design Your Own Manga Thursday, April 13 • 4-5:30 p.m. Location: Digital Literacy Lab Learn how to create your own manga! Register online. Intro to Screen Printing for Teens Thursday, April 20 • 4-6 p.m. Location: Maker Space Bring a blank light-colored shirt and learn how to screen print. For ages 12-18. Class size is limited. Call 918-549-7323 to register. Coding for Tweens: Minecraft Edition Thursday, April 20 • 4-5 p.m. Location: Digital Literacy Lab Join us as we learn how to code with a Minecraft game. Class size is limited. Register online. For ages 9-12. Coding for Teens: Minecraft Edition Monday, April 24 • 4-5 p.m. Location: Digital Literacy Lab Join us as we learn how to code with a Minecraft game. Class size is limited. Register online. For ages 13-18.

COLLINSVILLE LIBRARY Gear Up for Prom! Thursday, April 6 • 6-7:30 p.m. Get hair, nail and makeup tips from professionals, and learn prom etiquette. For high schoolers. Sukikyo! Anime Club Wednesday, April 12 • 3:30-5 p.m. Learn to make inverted glass anime candle holders. For teens.

HARDESTY REGIONAL LIBRARY Prom Prep for Teens Saturday, April 1 • 1-4 p.m. Location: Frossard Auditorium Wanting to find the perfect hairdo for prom, or figure out how to create a flawless smokey or cat-eye look? Hosted by Clary Sage College, this program will teach you how to make your hair, makeup and nails look like they were professionally done for prom! Registration is required. Sign up online or at the ASK Desk on the second floor of Hardesty. Minecraft Gaming for Teens Thursday, April 6 • 6-8 p.m. Location: Computer Lab Put your imagination to the test building your own world in the popular game Minecraft.

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Hardesty Anime/Manga Club Saturday, April 8 • 1-2:30 p.m. Discuss your favorite manga characters and books while making a craft. For ages 12-18.

other, and then decorate them with words and images. For ages 5-18. Register online or call 918-549-7323.

Hardesty Spilled Ink: Teen Creative Writing Club Thursday, April 20 • 6-7 p.m. Location: Oak Room Develop your craft through writing exercises. Share your own writings with the group, or just come to socialize and get to know other writers. All methods of storytelling are welcome.

Owasso Manga Club Friday, April 14 • 4-5 p.m. Enjoy talking about manga and anime, and participate in a fun hands-on activity. For ages 10-18.

HELMERICH LIBRARY Teen Tread: Bicycle Safety With City Cycles Tuesday, April 11 • 4:30-6 p.m. City Cycles bicycling enthusiast Jake Drevs will share bicycle safety tips about getting stacked, involuntary dismounts along with gravity checks, to name a few. For ages 10-adult.

HERMAN AND KATE KAISER LIBRARY Celebrate Earth Day: Create a Terrarium Saturday, April 22 • 11 a.m.-noon Add a little green to your indoor space. Terrariums are perfect for small spaces, offices and areas with low light. We will have all the supplies you need to create a small world in a bottle, jar or vase or whatever you would like to use. You may bring a glass planter or decorative items if you like. For adults and teens. Class size is limited. Register online.

JUDY Z. KISHNER LIBRARY Teen Lounge Thursdays, April 6, 13, 20, 27 • 3-5 p.m. Join us for arts, crafts and games. For ages 10-18.

MAXWELL PARK LIBRARY My First Résumé for Teens Friday, April 7 • 4:30-6 p.m. Are you looking for your first summer job this year? Join us for this fun, informative class on library resources for job seekers, and receive tips on how to build your first résumé. Bringing a completed résumé to class is not required, but encouraged to receive more in-depth assistance. Register online or call 918-549-7323. The Poetry of Me Friday, April 21 • 4:30-6 p.m. April is National Poetry Month, and what better way to celebrate poetry than to see it in ourselves. Celebrate National Poetry Month with some crafty creativity. We'll make shadowy silhouettes of each

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PRATT LIBRARY Beading for Fun Wednesday, April 5 • 4-5 p.m. Join Cheryl Foster and learn how to make extraordinary necklaces using a variety of beads and other materials. For ages 9-12. Register online or call 918-549-7638.

SCHUSTERMAN-BENSON LIBRARY The Craft Connection Thursday, April 27 • 6-7 p.m. Come and make crafts with your friends! For ages 10-18.

ZARROW REGIONAL LIBRARY Teen Life Hacks: Money Basics Saturday, April 15 • 2-3 p.m. Learn basic budgeting and money management skills. For ages 10-18. Minecraft Night Thursday, April 27 • 6-7 p.m. Location: Computer Lab Put your imagination to the test building your own world in the popular game Minecraft! For ages 10-18.

computers, devices &

digital services CENTRAL LIBRARY Digitize It! Monday-Friday, April 3-28 (excluding Wednesdays) • 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Need instruction on using digitization tools in the Digital Literacy Lab? We are here to help! You can digitize VHS, photographs, vinyl records, tapes and more. Appointments are available on a first-come, firstserved basis and generally last 30 to 60 minutes. Call 918-549-7474 to reserve your time. For adults. Digital Literacy Lab Orientation Tuesday, April 11 • noon-1 p.m. Thursday, April 27 • 6-7 p.m. Location: Digital Literacy Lab Want to learn more about the

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American Electric Power Foundation Digital Literacy Lab? Come and see what we’re about! Orientation is required before independent use of the lab. Class size is limited. Register online. For ages 12 and older. Intro to 3-D Printing Wednesday, April 12 • 6-7 p.m. Location: Maker Space This orientation will cover the equipment, along with software use. Attending this event will qualify you to use the equipment along with general Maker Space access. Seating is limited. For all ages. Digital Literacy: Encryption Basics Friday, April 14 • noon-1 p.m. Location: Digital Literacy Lab Join Luke Crouch, software engineer at Mozilla, and learn about keeping information private, how public-private key encryption works, asymmetric encryption and encryption best practices for beginners. Class size is limited. Register online. For adults. iMovie for Beginners Tuesday, April 18 • 4:30-6 p.m. Location: Digital Literacy Lab Learn the basics of iMovie and make your own videos using photos, video clips and music. Class size is limited. Register online. For adults. Intro to Laser Engraving Wednesday, April 19 • 6-7 p.m. Location: Maker Space This orientation will cover the equipment, along with software used. Attending this event will qualify you to use the equipment along with general Maker Space access. Seating is limited. For all ages. Digital Art for Adults Tuesday, April 25 • 2-3 p.m. Location: Digital Literacy Lab Check out our digital art tools. We will make pixel GIFs using an online application and try out drawing tablets. Class size is limited. Register online. Intro to CNC Milling Wednesday, April 26 • 6-7 p.m. Location: Maker Space This orientation will cover the equipment, along with software used. Attending this event will qualify you to use the equipment along with general Maker Space access. Seating is limited. For all ages.

HARDESTY REGIONAL LIBRARY MS Publisher 101 Tuesday, April 4 • 6-8 p.m. Location: Computer Lab This class shows how to create fun and colorful signs and fliers. For adults.

TULSA CITY-COUNTY LIBRARY EVENT GUIDE

APRIL 2017


c o m p u t e r s , (Hardesty Regional Library continued)

3-D Printer Demo Wednesday, April 5 • 7-8 p.m. Saturday, April 22 • 10:30-11:30 a.m. See what 3-D printing is all about with a demonstration of the Ultimaker2 3-D printer. For all ages. Children must be accompanied by an adult. MS Excel 1 Tuesday, April 11 • 6-8 p.m. Location: Computer Lab This class shows how to create formulas, use automatic fill and change basic formatting. Register online or call 918-549-7323. For adults. MS Excel 2 Tuesday, April 18 • 6-8 p.m. Location: Computer Lab This class shows how to create and edit formulas, and apply functions and advanced formatting to your spreadsheets and workbooks. For adults. MS Excel 3 Tuesday, April 25 • 6-8 p.m. Location: Computer Lab This class shows how to create charts, apply conditional formatting and control the appearance of printed spreadsheets. For adults.

RUDISILL REGIONAL LIBRARY Really Basic Computer Class Wednesday, April 5 • 9-10 a.m. This class is designed for new computer users who have little or no previous experience using computers, Windows, a mouse or the Internet, and little or no knowledge of basic computer terms. For adults. Register online or call 918-549-7645. Introduction to MS Word 2007 Wednesday, April 12 • 9-10 a.m. This class shows how to use toolbars and menus, set margins, apply spell check, and preview, save and print documents. For adults. Register online or call 918-549-7645. Internet @ the Library Wednesday, April 19 • 9:30-11 a.m This class is designed for people with little or no experience using the Internet. You will learn to navigate the World Wide Web and use the library's catalog system and online resources. For adults. Register online or call 918-549-7645. Email 101 Wednesday, April 26 • 9:30-11 a.m. This class teaches you how to set up a free account and use it to send and receive email. For adults. Register online or call 918-549-7645.

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ZARROW REGIONAL LIBRARY Intro to 3-D Printing Saturday, April 8 • 2-3 p.m. Tuesday, April 18 • 1:30-2:30 p.m. Get an overview of our 3-D printer equipment and software, along with a general safety overview. For all ages. Really Basic Computer Class Wednesday, April 26 • 1:30-2:30 p.m. Location: Computer Lab This class is designed for new computer users who have little or no previous experience using computers, Windows, a mouse or the Internet, and little or no knowledge of basic computer terms. For all ages.

children BIXBY LIBRARY My First Storytime Mondays, April 3, 10, 17, 24 10:10-10:30 a.m. • For newborns to 2-year-olds and their caregivers. Preschool Storytime Mondays, April 3, 10, 17, 24 11-11:30 a.m. • For ages 3-5. Celebrity Family Storytime! Tuesday, April 11 • 7-8 p.m. Celebrate National Library Week by joining Channel 2 news anchor Karen Larsen, and Tulsa City-County Library's Chief Executive Officer Kim Johnson and Chief Operating Officer Monique Sendze for a fabulous storytime! Each child will receive a free book. For ages 3-12. PAWS for Reading Thursday, April 13 • 6-7:30 p.m. Registered therapy dogs are excellent listeners. Kids are invited to read their favorite books to a furry, four-pawed friend. Each reader will receive a free book provided by the Tulsa Library Trust. For independent readers in kindergarten through fifth grade. Registration is required. Call 918-549-7323 to register. Elephant Toothpaste Thursday, April 20 • 4-5 p.m. Physical and chemical reactions get foamy with this elephant-sized, exothermic chemical reaction. Watching the elephant toothpaste expand and foam is a class favorite! For ages 5-10. Presented by the Tulsa Children's Museum Discovery Lab.

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Earth Day Celebration Saturday, April 22 • 10:30 a.m.-noon April 22 is Earth Day. Join us as we use recyclables to create art projects and things you can use at home. For ages 5-12.

listeners. Kids ages 5-12 are invited to read their favorite books to a furry, four-pawed friend. Each reader will receive a free book provided by the Tulsa Library Trust. Registration is required. Call 918-549-7323 to register.

BROKEN ARROW LIBRARY

BA Sidewalk Astronomers: Comets Thursday, April 6 • 6:30-7:30 p.m. Draw elliptical, hyperbolic and parabolic orbits of comets. Construct the path of Comet ISON that came through September 2013 to March 2014. For ages 5-18.

Preschool Storytime With Miss Hannah Mondays, April 3, 10, 17, 24 10:30-11 a.m. • For ages 3-5. My First Storytime Tuesdays, April 4, 11, 18, 25 10:30-11 a.m. • For newborns to 2-year-olds and their caregivers. Stay and Play Storytime Thursdays, April 6, 13, 20, 27 10:30-11 a.m. • For young children, playing is learning! Enjoy storytime and then stay after for games, toys and activities that foster critical early literacy skills. For ages 5 and younger. Evening Family Storytime Thursday, April 6 • 7-7:30 p.m. Join us for songs, movement activities and stories. For ages 7 and younger. Elephant Toothpaste Monday, April 10 • 4:30-5:30 p.m. Physical and chemical reactions get foamy with this elephant-sized, exothermic chemical reaction. Watching the elephant toothpaste expand and foam is a class favorite! For ages 5-10. Presented by the Tulsa Children's Museum Discovery Lab. PAWS for Reading Wednesday, April 12 • 4-5 p.m. Registered therapy dogs are excellent listeners. Kids ages 5-12 are invited to read their favorite books to a furry, four-pawed friend. Each reader will receive a free book provided by the Tulsa Library Trust. Registration is required. Call 918-549-7323 to register.

BROKEN ARROW LIBRARY/SOUTH Preschool Storytime Tuesdays, April 4, 11, 18, 25 10:30-11 a.m. • For ages 3-5. Stay and Play Tuesdays, April 4, 11, 18, 25 11-11:30 a.m. • For preschoolers, playing is learning! After our regularly scheduled storytime, join us for games, toys and activities that foster critical early literacy skills. For ages 3-5. My First Storytime Wednesdays, April 5, 12, 19, 26 10:30-11 a.m. • For newborns to 2-year-olds and their caregivers. PAWS for Reading Wednesday, April 5 • 4:30-5:30 p.m. Registered therapy dogs are excellent

Evening Storytime Tuesday, April 18 • 6-6:30 p.m. Join us for a family storytime featuring songs, rhymes and fun literacy-building activities. Animal Adventure Friday, April 21 • 10:30-11:30 a.m. Take an imaginary trek through the jungle, pretending to be explorers on a grand animal adventure. Afterward, reflect on your trip with a short story and cool down with butterfly breathing. For ages 10 and younger. Presented by the Tulsa Children's Museum Discovery Lab.

BROOKSIDE LIBRARY Preschool Storytime Wednesdays, April 5, 12, 19, 26 10:15-10:45 a.m. • For ages 3-5. My First Storytime Wednesdays, April 5, 12, 19, 26 11-11:20 a.m. • For newborns to 2-year-olds and their caregivers. Canister Rockets Wednesday, April 5 • 3:30-4:15 p.m. A chemical reaction creates an explosive good time! Sir Isaac Newton’s Third Law of Motion is demonstrated with a fun experiment each student gets to conduct in this exciting program. For fourth- through sixthgraders. Presented by the Tulsa Children's Museum Discovery Lab. PAWS for Reading Friday, April 21 • 3:30-4:30 p.m. Registered therapy dogs are excellent listeners. Kids ages 5-12 are invited to read their favorite books to a furry, four-pawed friend. Each reader will receive a free book provided by the Tulsa Library Trust. Friday Movie Time: "The BFG" Friday, April 28 • 3:30-5 p.m. Munch on popcorn while you watch this charming story, which features a young girl and a giant who is a Big Friendly Giant and nothing like the other inhabitants of Giant Country. For ages 5-12.

Children's Day/Book Day events are marked with this symbol.


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CENTRAL LIBRARY Family Storytime Mondays, April 3, 10, 17, 24 • 6:30-7 p.m. Location: Mary K. Chapman Children’s Storytime Room Enjoy stories, songs and rhymes with friends and family. For all ages. Family Fun Storytime Tuesdays, April 4, 11, 18, 25 10:30-11 a.m. • Location: Mary K. Chapman Children’s Storytime Room Enjoy storytime and then stay after for games, toys and activities that foster critical early literacy skills. For ages 5 and younger. Toddlers, Trikes & Tales Wednesdays, April 5, 19 • 10:30-11 a.m. Location: Tandy Foundation Children’s Garden • This storytime is perfect for toddlers who like their stories while on the move. Enjoy songs and stories along with games and activities. For ages 3 and younger. Hands On! Thursdays, April 6, 13, 20, 27 10:30-11 a.m. • Location: Mary K. Chapman Children’s Storytime Room Busy hands, busy brain! Preschoolage children learn through hands-on activities. We will explore, experiment and create. Be ready to get messy! Games in the Garden Thursdays, April 6, 13, 20, 27 3:30-4:30 p.m. • Location: Tandy Foundation Children’s Garden Join us for some outdoor fun and games! Weather permitting. For ages 5-12. First Friday With Gilcrease Friday, April 7 • 4:30-5:30 p.m. Location: Mary K. Chapman Children’s Storytime Room • Begin your First Friday Art Crawl at Central Library. Gilcrease staff will help us explore artists featured at the museum while your young artist creates a masterpiece of his or her own. For ages 5-10. PAWS for Reading Saturday, April 8 • 1-2 p.m. Location: Mary K. Chapman Children’s Storytime Room • Registered therapy dogs are excellent listeners. Kids ages 5-12 are invited to read their favorite books to a furry, four-pawed friend. Each reader will receive a free book provided by the Tulsa Library Trust. Babies, Bubbles & Books Wednesdays, April 12, 26 • 10:30-11 a.m. Location: Tandy Foundation Children’s Garden • Enjoy stories, rhymes and songs with your little one in this garden storytime. For newborns to 2-year-olds and their caregivers. From Russia to the Stars Saturday, April 15 • 2-4 p.m. Celebrate Cosmonautics Day and Children's Day/ Book Day to help connect your child to the world of learning

through books, stories and libraries! Experience Russian culture and learn about space exploration through stories and activities. Children of all ages and backgrounds will enjoy a Storytime From Space in the Children's Garden, hands-on space activities with the Tulsa Children's Museum, star-gazing through daytime telescopes and Russian puppet shows from Tulsa's Sister Cities partnership with Zelenograd, Russia. Sponsored by the Tulsa Library Trust and Tulsa Global Alliance. For all ages. STEAM Workshop Monday, April 24 • 2-3 p.m. Location: Mary K. Chapman Children’s Storytime Room Enjoy STEAM (science, technology, engineering, art, mathematics) activities for kids ages 5-12. Class size is limited. Register online.

CHARLES PAGE LIBRARY Preschool Storytime With Ms. Alice Tuesdays, April 4, 11, 18, 25 10:30-11:30 a.m. • For ages 3-5. Stay and Play Tuesdays, April 4, 11, 18, 25 11-11:30 a.m. • For preschoolers, playing is learning! After our regular scheduled storytime, stay for games, toys and activities that foster creative early literacy skills. For ages 3-5. Stay and Play: Spring Egg Roll Games Tuesday, April 11 • 10:30-11:30 a.m. After storytime, we will play games outside on the lawn and enjoy the spring weather. For ages 3-5. Sound Science Wednesday, April 19 • 10-11 a.m. Create an instrument out of recycled materials to demonstrate how sound is created, while learning about how waves and vibrations affect how we hear the world. Presented by the Tulsa Children's Museum Discovery Lab. For ages 5-12.

COLLINSVILLE LIBRARY Stories From the Rocking Chair Tuesdays, April 4, 11, 18, 25 10:30-11 a.m. • For ages 2-5. PAWS for Reading Monday, April 17 • 3:30-4:30 p.m. Registered therapy dogs are excellent listeners. Kids ages 5-12 are invited to read their favorite books to a furry, four-pawed friend. Each reader will receive a free book provided by the Tulsa Library Trust. Registration is required. Call 918-549-7528 to register. Mother Goose: Celebrate Collinsville Library's 100th Birthday Thursday, April 27 • 9-10 a.m. Thursday, April 27 • 1-2 p.m. Mother Goose and Father Goose have been among our most popular guest performers over the years.

c o n t i n u e d Join them for this fun and interactive take on traditional nursery rhymes. Be ready to laugh! For ages 3-5.

GLENPOOL LIBRARY Ms. Tori's Musical Storytime Wednesdays, April 5, 12, 19, 26 10:30-11:30 a.m. • Join Ms. Tori and her guitar for stories, songs and rhymes. Stay after storytime for games, toys and activities that foster critical early literacy skills. For ages 5 and younger. LEGO Club Thursday, April 27 • 4-5 p.m. Bring your creativity; we'll supply the LEGOS. For ages 5-11.

HARDESTY REGIONAL LIBRARY My First Storytime With Ms. Julia Mondays, April 3, 10, 17, 24 Tuesdays, April 4, 11, 18, 25 10-10:20 a.m. • For newborns to 2-year-olds and their caregivers. Toddler Time Tuesdays, April 4, 11, 18, 25 11-11:20 a.m. Wednesdays, April 5, 12, 19, 26 10-10:20 a.m. Enjoy stories, action rhymes, fun flannels, music, bubbles and meeting other toddlers in the neighborhood. For ages 2-3 and their caregivers. Mr. Paul's Preschool Storytime Wednesdays, April 5, 12, 19, 26 11-11:30 a.m. • Sing songs and enjoy stories. For ages 3-5. Mr. Paul's Family Storytime Thursdays, April 6, 13, 20, 27 • 6:30-7 p.m. Sing songs and enjoy stories. For all ages. Houses and Homes for Fairies and Gnomes Thursday, April 20 • 4-5 p.m. Celebrate Earth Day by constructing a tiny house fit for a fairy or perfect for a gnome. You can put your crafty creation in your garden or flowerpot at home. Register online or call 918-549-7323. For ages 7-12.

HELMERICH LIBRARY Stay and Play Storytime With Mr. Adam Tuesdays, April 4, 11 • 10:30-11:30 a.m. Enjoy storytime and stay after for toys and activities that foster critical early literacy skills. For infants to kindergartners and their caregivers.

HERMAN AND KATE KAISER LIBRARY Preschool Storytime Tuesdays, April 4, 11, 18, 25 10:30-11:30 a.m. • For ages 3-5. My First Storytime Thursdays, April 6, 13, 27 10:30-11:30 a.m. • For newborns to 2-year-olds and their caregivers.

Bounce'n Beethovens: Presented by Midtown School of Performing Arts Friday, April 7 • 10:30-11:30 a.m. Children explore music through movement and instruments as they play with egg shakers, bells, rhythm sticks, drums and maracas in this fun, interactive program for parents and kids. Register online or call 918-5497542. For ages 5 and younger. PAWS for Reading Wednesdays, April 12, 26 • 3:30-5 p.m. Registered therapy dogs are excellent listeners. Kids ages 5-12 are invited to read their favorite books to a furry, four-pawed friend. Each reader will receive a free book provided by the Tulsa Library Trust. Register online or call 918-549-7542.

JENKS LIBRARY PAWS for Reading Tuesday, April 4 • 4-5 p.m. Registered therapy dogs are excellent listeners. Kids ages 5-12 are invited to read their favorite books to a furry, four-pawed friend. Each reader will receive a free book provided by the Tulsa Library Trust. Registration is required. Call 918-549-7323 to register. My First Storytime Wednesdays, April 5, 12, 19, 26 10-10:15 a.m. • For newborns to 2-year-olds and their caregivers. Preschool Storytime Wednesdays, April 5, 12, 19, 26 10:30-11 a.m. • For ages 3-5. Stay and Play Storytime Wednesdays, April 5, 12, 19, 26 11-11:30 a.m. • Enjoy storytime and then stay after for games, toys and activities that foster critical early literacy skills. For ages 5 and younger.

JUDY Z. KISHNER LIBRARY Family Storytime: Swinging Through the Jungle Thursdays, April 6, 13, 20, 27 11:30 a.m.-noon • Hang out with your favorite jungle animals for a swinging time with stories and activities. For ages 3-5 and their families. Terrific Tuesday Tuesday, April 25 • 6-7 p.m. Join us for Munsch, Robert, that is ... and a marvelous mud-tastic time! For ages 5-12.

KENDALL-WHITTIER LIBRARY Bilingual Storytime/Cuentos Bilingües Tuesdays, April 4, 11, 18, 25 10-10:45 a.m. • Enjoy stories, songs and activities in English and Spanish./ Cuentos, canciones y actividades en inglés y español.

TULSA CITY-COUNTY LIBRARY EVENT GUIDE

APRIL 2017


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MARTIN REGIONAL LIBRARY Bilingual Flamenco Storytime Saturday, April 1 • 2-2:30 p.m. Enjoy flamenco dance and creative movement at this fun storytime. English and Spanish speakers are welcome! For ages 1-5 and their caregivers. LEGO Lab Mondays, April 3, 10, 17, 24 3:30-4:30 p.m. • Learn new building ideas, partner with other children during team-building challenges and explore free building. Leave your LEGOS at home and come play with ours! For ages 6-12.

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Bilingual Storytime/Cuentos Bilingües Tuesdays, April 4, 11, 18, 25 11-11:30 a.m. • Enjoy stories, songs and activities in English and Spanish. / Cuentos, canciones y actividades en inglés y español.

development, speech and hearing, nutrition, movement and music. Class size is limited. Registration is required and is for all five weeks of the series. To register, please see a children's librarian or call 918-549-7595.

1-2-3 Play With Me: A Parent/Child Workshop Wednesday, April 5 • 10-11:15 a.m. Location: Lecture Room Playing is learning! Join us for a fiveweek series for parents and children ages 1-3. Each program offers opportunities for children to play with developmentally appropriate toys in a play group atmosphere. Early childhood specialists will visit with parents on the topics of child

Elephant Toothpaste Thursday, April 13 • 4-5 p.m. Location: Lecture Room Physical and chemical reactions get foamy with this elephant-sized, exothermic chemical reaction. Watching the elephant toothpaste expand and foam is a kid favorite! For ages 6-9. Class size is limited to the first 50 participants. Presented by the Tulsa Children's Museum Discovery Lab.

tulsa city-county library locations 24 Bixby Library

20 E. Breckenridge, 74008 • 918-549-7323 M, W, F, 10-6; T, Th, 12-8; Sat., 10-5 18 Broken Arrow Library 300 W. Broadway, 74012 • 918-549-7323 M-Th, 10-8; Fri., 10-6; Sat., 10-5 22 Broken Arrow Library/South 3600 S. Chestnut, 74011 • 918-549-7323 M-Th, 10-8; Fri.-Sat., 10-5 16 Brookside Library 1207 E. 45th Place, 74105 • 918-549-7323 M-Th, 10-8; Fri., 10-6; Sat., 10-5 9 Central Library 400 Civic Center, 74103 • 918-549-7323 M-Th, 9-9; Fri., 9-6; Sat., 9-5; Sun., 1-5 8 Charles Page Library 551 E. Fourth St., Sand Springs, 74063 918-549-7521 • M, W, F, 10-6; T, Th, 10-8; Sat., 10-5 2 Collinsville Library 1223 Main, 74021 • 918-549-7528 M, W, F, 10-6; T, Th, 12-8; Sat., 10-5 23 Glenpool Library 730 E. 141st St., 74033 • 918-549-7535 M, W, F, 10-6; T, Th, 12-8; Sat., 10-5 21 Hardesty Regional Library and Genealogy Center 8316 E. 93rd St., 74133 • 918-549-7323 M-Th, 9-9; Fri., 9-6; Sat., 9-5; Sun., 1-5 20 Helmerich Library 5131 E. 91st St., 74137 • 918-549-7323 M-Th, 10-8; Fri.-Sat., 10-5 17 Herman and Kate Kaiser Library 5202 S. Hudson Ave., Suite B, 74135 918-549-7542 • M-Th, 10-8; Fri., 10-6; Sat., 10-5 19 Jenks Library 523 W. B St., 74037 • 918-549-7323 M, W, F, 10-6; T, Th, 10-8; Sat., 10-5 3 Judy Z. Kishner Library 10150 N. Cincinnati Ave. E., Sperry 74073 • 918-549-7577 M, W, F, 10-6; T, Th, 12-8; Sat., 10-5

10 Kendall-Whittier Library

21 S. Lewis, 74104 • 918-549-7584 Mon.-Fri., 10-6; Sat., 10-5 14 Martin Regional Library and Hispanic Resource Center 2601 S. Garnett Road, 74129 • 918-549-7323 M-Th, 9-9; Fri., 9-6; Sat., 9-5; Sun., 1-5 7 Maxwell Park Library 1313 N. Canton, 74115 • 918-549-7323 M, T, W, Th, F, 10-6; Sat., 10-5 13 Nathan Hale Library 6038 E. 23rd St., 74114 • 918-549-7323 M, T, W, Th, F, 10-6; Sat., 10-5 4 Owasso Library 103 W. Broadway, 74055 • 918-549-7323 M-Th, 10-8; Fri., 10-6; Sat., 10-5 11 Pratt Library 3219 S. 113th W. Ave., Sand Springs, 74063 • 918-549-7638 M, W, F, 10-6; T, Th, 10-8; Sat., 10-5 6 Rudisill Regional Library and African-American Resource Center 1520 N. Hartford, 74106 • 918-549-7645 M-Th, 9-9; Fri.-Sat., 9-5; Sun., 1-5 12 Schusterman-Benson Library 3333 E. 32nd Place, 74135 918-549-7323 • M-Th, 10-8; Fri.-Sat., 10-5 1 Skiatook Library Closed April 10-15 for improvements 316 E. Rogers, 74070 • 918-549-7676 M, W, F, 10-6; T, Th, 12-8; Sat., 10-5 5 Suburban Acres Library 4606 N. Garrison, 74126 • 918-549-7323 M, T, W, Th, F, 10-6; Sat., 10-5 15 Zarrow Regional Library and American Indian Resource Center 2224 W. 51st St., 74107 • 918-549-7323 M-Th, 9-9; Fri.-Sat., 9-5; Sun., 1-5

www.TulsaLibrary.org

Earth Day Fun @ the Library Saturday, April 22 10-11 a.m. • For ages 1-6 2-3 p.m. • For ages 7-12 Celebrate Earth Day with Miss Brynnon from Salvaged Nuggets. Enjoy a story and fun craft that utilizes common household items. Learn how to make the earth more beautiful by recycling! Each class is limited to the first 20 children. Arbor Day Crafts @ the Library Friday, April 28 10-11 a.m. • For ages 1-6 4-5 p.m. • For ages 7-12 How is paper made? What crafts can you make with it? Join us as we celebrate Arbor Day with Miss Brynnon


c h i l d r e n from Salvaged Nuggets. Participants will enjoy a short storytime followed by fun paper crafts. Each class is limited to the first 20 children.

MAXWELL PARK LIBRARY Storytime Tuesdays, April 4, 11, 18, 25 • 3-3:30 p.m. Join us for fun stories and activities. For ages 12 and younger. Preschool Storytime Wednesdays, April 5, 12, 19, 26 10:30-11 a.m. • Join us for fun stories and activities. For ages 5 and younger. The Poetry of Me Friday, April 21 • 4:30-6 p.m. April is National Poetry Month, and what better way to celebrate poetry than to see it in ourselves. Celebrate National Poetry Month with some crafty creativity. We'll make shadowy silhouettes of each other, and then decorate them with words and images. For ages 5-18. Register online or call 918-549-7323.

NATHAN HALE LIBRARY Mrs. Cindy's Storytime Thursdays, April 6, 13, 20, 27 10:30-11:10 a.m. • Join us for reading adventures, music and fun. For ages 5 and younger. PAWS for Reading Saturday, April 8 • 2-3 p.m. Registered therapy dogs are excellent listeners. Kids ages 5-12 are invited to read their favorite books to a furry, four-pawed friend. Each reader will receive a free book provided by the Tulsa Library Trust.

OWASSO LIBRARY Elephant Toothpaste Monday, April 3 • 4-5 p.m. Physical and chemical reactions get foamy with this elephant-sized, exothermic chemical reaction. Watching the elephant toothpaste expand and foam is a class favorite! For ages 5-9. Presented by the Tulsa Children's Museum Discovery Lab. My First Storytime Tuesdays, April 4, 11, 18, 25 Wednesdays, April 5, 12, 19, 26 10-10:30 a.m. • For newborns to 2-year-olds and their caregivers. Preschool Storytime Tuesdays, April 4, 11, 18, 25 Wednesdays, April 5, 12, 19, 26 10:30-11 a.m. • For ages 3-5. Stay and Play Tuesdays, April 4, 11, 18, 25 Wednesdays, April 5, 12, 19, 26 11-11:30 a.m. • After our regularly scheduled storytime, join us for

games, toys and activities that foster critical early literacy skills. For ages 5 and younger. Bounce'n Beethovens Friday, April 21 • 10-10:45 a.m. Friday, April 21 • 11-11:45 a.m. Thursday, April 27 • 6:30-7:15 p.m. Join Katherine Battenberg from the Midtown School of Performing Arts for a high-energy parent/child music class that introduces children to a variety of musical instruments and styles. For ages 5 and younger. Class size is limited; registration is required. Register online or by calling 918-549-7323. PAWS for Reading Wednesday, April 26 • 4-5 p.m. Registered therapy dogs are excellent listeners. Kids ages 5-12 are invited to read their favorite books to a furry, four-pawed friend. Each reader will receive a free book provided by the Tulsa Library Trust. Class size is limited; registration is required. Register online or by calling 918-549-7323. Touch-a-Truck Saturday, April 29 • 10 a.m.-noon Bring the entire family to explore big trucks and vehicles at this free outdoor event. Enjoy sitting in the driver's seat, honking the horn of your favorite truck and interacting with community helpers like police officers, firefighters and construction workers. Snack on refreshments from local food vendors, listen to live music and make fun memories together at the Owasso Library Touch-a-Truck!

PRATT LIBRARY Miss Connie's Storytime Thursdays, April 6, 13, 20, 27 10:30-11:30 a.m. • Talk, sing, read, write and play with Miss Connie and your storytime friends! For ages 5 and younger. Sound Science Tuesday, April 11 • 4-5 p.m. Children create an instrument out of recycled materials to demonstrate how sound is created while learning about how waves and vibrations affect how we hear the world around us. For ages 5-12. Presented by the Tulsa Children's Museum Discovery Lab.

RUDISILL REGIONAL LIBRARY Storytime Saturdays, April 1, 8, 15, 22, 29 10-10:30 a.m. • For preschoolers and elementary school-aged children. Preschool Storytime Tuesdays, April 4, 11, 18, 25 Wednesdays, April 5, 12, 19, 26 10-10:30 a.m. • For ages 3-5.

c o n t i n u e d Busy Bodies Wednesday, April 19 • 10-10:30 a.m. Preschoolers will learn the basics of anatomy by exploring through movement and play. They will exercise their muscles, listen to their hearts with stethoscopes, test their lung capacity and more. Presented by the Tulsa Children's Museum Discovery Lab. LEGO Club Thursday, April 20 • 3:30-4:30 p.m. Do you like to play with LEGOS? Bring you creativity and we will supply the LEGOS. For all ages.

SCHUSTERMANBENSON LIBRARY Bilingual Storytime/Cuentos Bilingües Tuesdays, April 4, 11, 18, 25 10:30-11 a.m. • Enjoy stories, songs and activities in English and Spanish./ Cuentos, canciones y actividades en inglés y español. Stay and Play Tuesdays, April 4, 11, 18, 25 11-11:30 a.m. • For preschoolers, playing is learning! After our regularly scheduled storytime, join us for games, toys and activities that foster critical early literacy skills. For ages 3-5. My First Storytime Wednesdays, April 5, 12, 19, 26 10-10:20 a.m. or 10:30-10:50 a.m. For newborns to 2-year-olds and their caregivers.

and more. For ages 4-7. Presented by the Tulsa Children's Museum Discovery Lab.

SKIATOOK LIBRARY Preschool Storytime Wednesdays, April 5, 12, 19, 26 11-11:30 a.m. • For ages 5 and younger. Stay and Play Wednesdays, April 5, 12, 19, 26 11:30 a.m.-noon • After our regularly scheduled storytime, join us for games, toys and activities that foster critical early literacy skills. For ages 5 and younger.

ZARROW REGIONAL LIBRARY Stay and Play Storytime Wednesdays, April 5, 12, 19, 26 10:30-11:30 a.m. • Enjoy storytime and then stay after for games, toys and activities that foster critical early literacy skills. For ages 5 and younger. PAWS for Reading Saturday, April 22 • 2-3 p.m. Registered therapy dogs are excellent listeners. Kids ages 5-12 are invited to read their favorite books to a furry, four-pawed friend. Each reader will receive a free book provided by the Tulsa Library Trust. LEGO Club Tuesday, April 25 • 6-7 p.m. We provide the LEGOS, you provide the imagination. All LEGOS must stay in the library. All ages are welcome.

Stay and Play Wednesdays, April 5, 12, 19, 26 10:30-11:30 a.m. • After our regularly scheduled storytime, join us for games, toys and activities that foster critical early literacy skills. For newborns to 2-year-olds and their caregivers. PAWS for Reading Monday, April 10 • 3:30-4:30 p.m. Registered therapy dogs are excellent listeners. Kids ages 5-12 are invited to read their favorite books to a furry, four-pawed friend. Each reader will receive a free book provided by the Tulsa Library Trust. Registration is required. Please see a staff member to schedule a reading time for your child. Trash Bots: Create Robots With Recycled Materials Thursday, April 13 • 4-5 p.m. Connect a simple circuit and see recycled materials transform into wiggly, jiggly robots! Children will make their robots come to life and have robot races. For ages 5-12. Seating is limited to 28. Busy Bodies Tuesday, April 18 • 4-5 p.m. Children will learn the basics of anatomy through movement and play. Kids exercise their muscles, listen to their hearts with stethoscopes, test their lung capacity

NOW OPEN at Central Library Mon.-Thur., 7 a.m.-9 p.m. Fri. & Sat., 7 a.m.-8 p.m. Sun., 7 a.m.-5 p.m.

TO SEARCH FOR EVENTS, SCAN THIS CODE USING YOUR MOBILE DEVICE AND QR SCANNER APP.

Free and Open to the Public If you are hearing-impaired and need a qualified interpreter, please call the library 48 hours in advance of the program. The Tulsa Book Review and Tulsa City-County Library Event Guide are printed on partially recycled paper.

The Tulsa City-County Library Event Guide is produced by the Public Relations Office of the Tulsa City-County Library. For questions or concerns, call 918-549-7389.


The Tulsa Council for Holocaust Education and the Tulsa City-County Library present

20th Annual Yom Hashoah: An Interfaith Holocaust Commemoration

S T R A N G E H A V E N FLEEING THE HOLOCAUST TO SHANGHAI FE ATUR IN G

Dr. Sigmund Tobias

Thursday, April 20 • 7 p.m. Congregation B’nai Emunah 1719 S. Owasso Ave. (Parking limited at B’nai Emunah*)

In 1938, 6-year-old Sigmund Tobias and his family fled from their home in Berlin, Germany, to Japanese-ruled Hongkew, one of the poorest parts of Shanghai, China. There they lived as refugees along with 17,000 other European Jews for more than 10 years. Tobias will recount his family’s journey as refugees. Tulsa City-County Library will provide a mobile library at the commemoration. Please bring your library card to check out books and other resources. The Holocaust Commemoration is sponsored by the Tulsa Council for Holocaust Education, a committee of the Jewish Federation of Tulsa, and the Tulsa City-County Library, in cooperation with dozens of local interfaith and community organizations. For more information, call the Jewish Federation of Tulsa at 918-495-1100. (*Arrive early to ensure parking availability. Carpooling is encouraged.)

FI LM SHO WING

Shanghai Ghetto

Sunday, April 2 • 2 p.m. Circle Cinema • 10 S. Lewis

Narrated by Martin Landau and featuring Sigmund Tobias, this powerful documentary features interviews of survivors and historians, rare letters, stock footage, still photos and footage shot in modern Shanghai where most of the Jewish Ghetto remains unchanged. Call 918-585-3504 or visit www.circlecinema.com for ticket information.

THE TULSA COUNCIL FOR HOLOCAUST EDUCATION


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TWISTED: THE COOKBOOK By Team Twisted Ryland Peters & Small, $15.95, 64 pages Reviewed by George Erdosh Check this out! Here we have a collection of thirty highly unusual, original recipes in a small hardcover cookbook, Twisted, selected from the online food channel of the same name. Although supposedly easy recipes, they are not. The Team Twisted uses three designations of difficulty: “Eyes Closed,” “Painless,” and “Sweating a Bit.” Even recipes of the easiest designation will take you an hour or longer kitchen time, and if you are successful, the results are spectacular. But the instructions are not easy to follow; some are ambiguous, and with the writers’ frequent use of slang and twisted humor, the ambiguities are exacerbated. Since this is a British book, ingredient units are given both in metric and American (an inconvenience for us), but some ingredients will be tough to find in our markets (Leicester cheese, brioche burger buns, and so on). The ingredient quantities are also ambiguous in some cases (e.g. twelve sausages but no size given). Though some instruction steps may be uncertain, the beautiful professional photo illustrations accompanying each recipe will help. Yet these are for more advanced cooks. From the familiar (Philly cheesesteak, potato nachos) to the really twisted (Guinness beer can chicken), you will find a recipe collection to challenge your kitchen skills. The index is brief but nicely crossreferenced. THE RECIPE HACKER CONFIDENTIAL By Diana Keuilian BenBella Books, $19.95, 255 pages Reviewed by George Erdosh Check this out! This unusual cookbook, The Recipe Hacker Confidential, emphasizes healthy cooking and eating, but it seems author Diana Keuilian’s primary goal is your weight loss, as this is what she keeps repeating often. The cookbook is a departure from conventional cooking, as Keuilian’s first premise is a complete overhauling of your kitchen: discard all foods containing gluten, grains, dairy, soy, and refined sugar. Needless to say, your food expenses will increase a lot. But unlike other health-oriented cookbooks, here you may retain ingredients others would shun, like bacon, chorizo, and pepperoni, to mention a few. This is a nicely produced cookbook with pretty professional food photos illustrating many of the huge number of recipes. The author gives preparation and cooking times. For many recipes this is reasonable, but for equally as many they are far too short, as chopping, dicing, and mincing are not included and neither are various separate preparations called for and given elsewhere. Some ingredients will be hard to find (Zevia Cola) but most are readily available. Recipe instruction steps are good and easy to follow, but for many recipes you’ll be in the kitchen for a while. Quick Tips with recipes are useful. The index is very good. THE COMPLETE MEDITERRANEAN COOKBOOK: 500 VIBRANT, KITCHEN-TESTED RECIPES FOR LIVING AND EATING WELL EVERY DAY By The Editors at America’s Test Kitchen, editor America’s Test Kitchen, $29.95, 440 pages Reviewed by Annie Peters Check this out! America’s Test Kitchen has created the definitive guide to Mediterranean cooking. Although brimming with amazing recipes, this cookbook has so much more. This book opens with a concise overview of the Mediterranean diet and meal planning. The authors proceed to five-hundred mouth-watering recipes that require mostly easily obtained ingredients and cover every aspect of the meal: small plates, soups, salads, rices and grains, pasta and couscous, beans, vegetables, seafood, poultry and meat, eggs, breads, and fruits and sweets. Many of the recipes are vegetarian and are clearly marked as such, as are quickly prepared recipes. Almost more significantly, the text is simply packed with additional information. The See MEDITERRANEAN, cont’d on page 13 Tulsa Book Review • April 2017 • 9


The nature of Inglis, his character, and the relation of his shamanic tradition vis-a-vis the five gods allow complex interaction. L.M. Bujold is a master wordsmith, and there is sensory immediacy, mystery, and room for readers to exercise their imaginations. By all means, if you have not already done so, buy the earlier book when you purchase this one.

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Science Fiction & Fantasy SNAP IT for additional book summaries.

THE GATES OF HELL By Michael Livingston Tor Books, $27.99, 384 pages Reviewed by Heather Clawson Check this out! Augustus Caesar is determined to expand Rome to the ends of the world, and Selene—daughter of Cleopatra and Mark Antony—has sworn to stop him. With the death of her parents and her siblings feeding her vengeance, Selene and her husband, Juba, plot to destroy not just the Emperor himself but the entire Roman Empire as well—all by using the power of the Shards. But the five black stones—said to be the remnants of the throne of God—contain a terrible power that drains the life of those who use them. And as their plans proceed, Selene and Juba must decide whether vengeance is worth the price of their immortal souls. Livingston tells his tale with skill, weaving the threads of the separate storylines together in a cohesive manner that’s easy to follow. You have to wait until about halfway through the story for the appearance of any notable magic, and the change in motivations toward the end of the book might seem a tad forced, but overall The Gates of Hell is an intriguing ride, steeped in historical fact and laced with a magic spark for that little extra kick. THE CTHULHU CASEBOOKS: SHERLOCK HOLMES AND THE SHADWELL SHADOWS By James Lovegrove $19.99, 448 pages Reviewed by Glenn Dallas A long-lost inheritance brings to light a curious confession by Dr. John Watson: the stories of Sherlock Holmes we know and love were a smokescreen, a subterfuge protecting darker secrets and greater evils. But now, the truth is coming to light as Holmes and Watson do battle with unknowable evils lurking in the heart of London, the kind that threatens not just their lives, but their very souls. The first in a three-part series reimagining the classic canon of Holmes with a Lovecraftian edge, Sherlock Holmes and the Shadwell Shadows rewrites the early days of Holmes and Watson, from their fateful meeting all the way to an early encounter with one of the Great Detective’s most diabolical foes. Lovegrove does an outstanding job of evoking Doyle’s style and mixing in healthy dollops of the macabre and fantastic that define the Cthulhu Mythos. I suspect horror fans will get more out of this than your average Sherlockian, but as a fan of both worlds, I thought Lovegrove melded them nicely, and this read went by much faster than expected. Sherlock Holmes and the Shadwell Shadows sets a pretty high bar. I look forward to seeing Lovegrove meet it with future installments. PENRIC AND THE SHAMAN By Lois McMaster Bujold Subterranean Press, $25.00, 216 pages Reviewed by David Lloyd Sutton Check this out! Once again Bujold immerses us in her world of the five gods. We begin in the distressed point of view of Inglis, whose history we discover throughout, as he interacts with humans, a demon, ghosts, enchanted beasts, and a god. Inglis bears an ensorcelled blade to which he must pay his blood regularly. Nigh unto death, he’s rescued by rurals with scant grace, then confronted with a legal pursuer, Senior Locator Oswyl, who is accompanied by Penric, whom we met in Penric’s Demon. That young man and his demon have effectively partnered, though their relationship requires accommodation by both. He now addresses her as Desdemona, despite or perhaps because of the multiple layers of her identity. Penric is now a Divine and a Sorcerer, his education and experience granting him more surety and fine status, even while his world is still evolving and gaining depth.

PATHFINDER TALES: REAPER’S EYE By Richard A. Knaak Tor Books, $14.99, 368 pages Reviewed by Holly Scudero Check this out! Shiera Tristane is a Pathfinder who is determined to prove herself to the rest of the community, and she believes a mysterious fragment of parchment is the key to a big find. So when a mysterious benefactor offers to finance a quest for her, a quest that just may cross the path of her own find, Shiera accepts, hiring ex-crusader Daryus Gaunt for assistance. Gaunt is in hiding after defecting, although his motives were pure, and his new quest might cause him to cross paths with those who are seeking him. Add to the mix a strange weasel who happens to be the former familiar of a dangerous witch determined to unleash evil power in the Worldwound, and this adventure might be more than anyone bargained for. This adventure in the Pathfinder Tales series is all kinds of fun, and it certainly doesn’t require any previous knowledge of the RPG world in order to enjoy. This story is a bit slow to take off, but readers will quickly find themselves fascinated with Gaunt’s backstory, the mysterious temple that Shiera seeks, and the witch and his determination to cheat his former master and gain unholy power. Reaper’s Eye is a fun fantasy adventure that readers won’t be able to put down. MARKED IN FLESH: A NOVEL OF THE OTHERS By Anne Bishop Roc, $27.00, 416 pages Reviewed by J. Aislynn d’Merricksson Check this out! Fourth and most recent in Bishop’s The Others series, Marked in Flesh continues to follow Meg Corbyn, cassandra sangue for the Lakeside Courtyard. She and the other females of the human pack have discovered more to aid the other people caring for the rescued blood prophets. Part of this is the realization that if drawing keeps Hope, a cassandra sangue living with the Sweetwater pack, from needing to draw blood to reveal prophecy, then perhaps there are other ways best suited to different girls. One big thing that seems to help is the use of oracle cards, and Meg is working with a deck composed of cards from several different oracle decks in the hopes of finding an ideal deck for the blood prophets to use. The HFL are turning ever more lethal. An audacious plan is launched to “get rid of the terra indigene.” Across Thaisia, enclaves of Wolves are being slaughtered. The humans think they’ve won. Little do they know, humanity is now being watched and judged by terra indigene old as time itself. They are Namid’s teeth and claws, and they are angry. Meg and the human pack at the Lakeside Courtyard may be all that speaks to mercy for the humans living on Thaisia. Meg continues to be a frail yet strong young woman, who is a beloved confusion for the Lakeside Courtyard. We get to see more of Hope and of Joe and Jackson’s territories. The Intuit communities around Thaisia still work with, and honor, the terra indigene, knowing that it is only by their sufferance that humans are allowed on this continent at all. As things heat up even more for Meg and the others, I still cannot help but see the parallels between the HFL and Trump’s America. Rampant hatred and blatant dismissal of fact are a growing infection. Things finally come to a head on Thaisia. The festering boil is lanced by the teeth and claws of Namid, draining out the infection. An open, raw wound is left behind, one that must be watched and carefully tended lest the infection returns. As always, this series had solid writing. I’m so invested in this book family, and now I must wait for the next one!!! Many threads were tied off in this novel, and I’m eager to see where the next book will go. Highly recommended. INVISIBLE PLANETS: CONTEMPORARY CHINESE SCIENCE FICTION IN TRANSLATION By Ken Liu Tor Books, $24.99, 384 pages Reviewed by Glenn Dallas Check this out! College graduates-turned-soldiers are recruited to kill genetically modified rats. A woman finds salvation and freedom thanks to a curious ruse. Unfamiliar planets and cultures dazzle a young listener. Different classes are separated by a transforming city. Gods come to Earth in the form of aliens seeking retirement and care. Invisible Planets presents a sampling of top efforts from Chinese authors, many available to American readers for the first time. And it’s an eye-opening collection to be sure. Honestly, the more fantasy-tinged stories outshine the sci-fi, drawing from the rich history and mythology of China to create some wonderful tales about dragon-horses and ghost cities. Although the science fiction stories offer fascinating glimpses into the present and future of another culture -- including some very poignant social commentary, a hallmark of strong, serious science fiction -- they don’t deliver the same pop and engagement as the more fantastic tales do. Concluding with a few nonfiction pieces about the influence and role of science fiction in China -- pieces that might’ve made more impact at the start of the collection -- this is a marvelous introduction to a brand new world of sci-fi for many readers. See DRACULA, cont’d on page 11

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THE WINTER IN ANNA: A NOVEL By Reed Karaim W. W. Norton & Company, $25.95, 256 pages Reviewed by Margo Orlando Littell Check this out!

Cont’d from page 10 DRACULA VS. HITLER By Patrick Sheane Duncan Inkshares, $25.99, 500 pages Reviewed by Glenn Dallas Check this out! Abraham Van Helsing is used to horrors, but this is something altogether new. Hitler’s forces are running rampant in Romania, and the local resistance is struggling. To turn the tide, they must do something drastic. So Van Helsing unleashes Dracula on the world once more, offering him his fill of Romania’s enemies in exchange for helping them liberate the country. Will one monster help them topple another, or will Van Helsing regret this Hail Mary play? Dracula Vs. Hitler sounds like a b-movie, but Patrick Sheane Duncan takes the idea and treats it with respect, putting readers on the ground with farmers and business owners defending their homeland. This feels like a proper historical fiction novel with a curious dash of the supernatural woven in, weaving in Bram Stoker’s classic tale and putting a unique spin on the story all at once. Like many versus projects -- Freddy vs. Jason, King Kong vs. Godzilla -- the versus doesn’t come into play until very late in the book, and even then it’s a tad underwhelming. But the rest of the novel more than makes up for it with solid characterization and engaging storytelling. A NIGHT WITHOUT STARS: A NOVEL OF THE COMMONWEALTH By Peter F. Hamilton Del Rey, $32.00, 720 pages Reviewed by Michael Shulman Check this out! Peter F. Hamilton’s A Night Without Stars is the final book in the author’s Chronicle of the Fallers duology set in the Commonwealth universe. The events of the second book take place right after Abyss Beyond Dreams. In his second novel, the author continues his saga. There is an area of space at the end of the Milky Way galaxy called The Void, and inside the Void are many different planets with different forms of alien life inhabiting them. One such planet is called Bienvenido, which has been catapulted out of the Void and into normal space. Bienvenido is home to two races, the human race as well as the alien race called The Fallers. The Fallers can take human form and can infiltrate virtually every layer of society, which would ultimately lead to the destruction of the human race. As a result, the humans must constantly fight for their survival and ensure that they are not wiped out. As is the case with Hamilton’s novels, A Night Without Stars is chock full of suspense and intrigue. There is lots and lots of action that leaves you breathless. Likewise, there are many wonderful characters who are extremely well-developed and nuanced, and it’s very easy to both empathize with as well as loathe them. Peter Hamilton’s language is superb, and his words flow nicely throughout the book. In addition to science fiction, there are also elements of espionage, and the plot line is highly reminiscent of the Cold War era. I found A Night Without Stars to be quite enjoyable. Because it is a direct sequel to Abyss Without Dreams, you must read the first book and are encouraged to read the previous books in the Commonwealth Universe in order to understand what goes on in A Night Without Stars.

Category

Fiction SNAP IT for additional book summaries.

WHATEVER HAPPENED TO INTERRACIAL LOVE?: STORIES (ART OF THE STORY) By Kathleen Collins Ecco, $15.99, 192 pages Reviewed by Lane Pybas Check this out! Whatever Happened to Interracial Love? is a posthumous collection of short stories by the groundbreaking filmmaker and screenwriter Kathleen Collins. Many of the stories read like sketches or outlines for play or movie scripts and, as such, feature striking imagery and several alternating points of view. The stories portray a wide cast of mostly black women (and men) doing their best to navigate the politics of race and dating during the 1960s. The characters’ experiences of prejudice stand in stark contrast to the melting-pot rhetoric of the day, which insists on racial color blindness. Collins manages to reveal the folly of this rhetoric while also rendering her characters as full human beings whose race is incidental to the rich lives they lead. In Collins’s skillful hands, black women fall in and out of love, study French, canvas for black voter rights in the South, enjoy reading and being alone, and experience great joys and bitter losses. These vivid portraits make for a fascinating look into the little-known but important lives of black female intellectuals.

“There are lives that end badly,” says our narrator, Eric, at the beginning of Winter. That we know from the first paragraph on the first page that a woman named Anna commits suicide only heightens the heartbreak and poignancy of this quiet story. Eric, a successful newspaper editor, married and the father of a daughter, has never forgotten Anna, a single mother he worked with when he was twenty years old, at a small-town newspaper in Shannon, North Dakota. Their friendship was intense but temporary; it was always inevitable that Eric would move on to bigger places, bigger things. The impact Anna has on Eric’s life isn’t immediately apparent. In some ways, only after she dies can Eric fully understand what she meant to him. The gruesomeness of Anna’s suicide shadows the entire book, and her pain and desperation take on new depths as we come to learn the terrible details of her life. Still, the story is ultimately Eric’s, as he finally sees clearly his own misperceptions. Structured as a middle-aged man’s pensive reminiscing about youth and youthful mistakes, Winter wisely veers toward unexpectedly dark and uneasy strands of regret. THE HEARTS OF MEN: A NOVEL By Nickolas Butler Ecco, $26.99, 400 pages Reviewed by Margo Orlando Littell Check this out! Nelson Doughty is a determined Boy Scout and a proudly earnest bugler, which puts him on a clear-cut path to becoming an Eagle Scout and excelling as a Boy Scout leader. At thirteen, however, he is punished for his earnestness by the other boys at the Camp Chippewa Boy Scout camp, becoming the target of cruel bullying. Only one boy, the more popular Jonathan Quick, finds the moral courage to help him--and the “help” he gives is strained and paltry. Still, Nelson holds onto it, and their strange, unbalanced friendship--forged at the camp--continues throughout their lives. As the men grow older, marry, have children, divorce, make mistakes, and attain surprising professional heights, Camp Chippewa remains a place outside of time. When the longtime camp Scoutmaster dies, Nelson takes his place, reigning over the kinds of boys--and men--he knows all too well. A blunt, often unsettling examination of male friendship, as well as a damning overview of the kind of mistakes men make in pursuit of sex and power, Hearts shuns any shred of cloying nostalgia and leaves readers with the realization that no place is sacred. Childhood can be cruel, adulthood crueler. And only the very finest moral codes stay true when held to the light. SELECTION DAY: A NOVEL By Aravind Adiga Scribner, $26.00, 304 pages Reviewed by Tammy McCartney Check this out! Mohan Kumar, slum dweller and chutney salesman, is raising the best and second best cricket players in India, possibly the world. First, his eldest, Radha, and then his youngest, Manju, will be chosen to play cricket for India on their respective Selection Days. Mohan has a contract with Lord Subramanya, the god of cricket, so the boys can’t fail. The man strictly monitors his sons’ physical development and cricket training with weekly inspections of their bodies and mandatory practices. Each boy is forbidden to shave, learn to drive, or think about women. Mohan has planned for every contingency, except for his sons’ free will. Needless to say, Mohan soon learns that his plans are not his sons’. Having no knowledge of cricket, I was worried that Selection Day would be a difficult read since the sport is central to the plot. While I did find the descriptions of the games incomprehensible, Adiga’s superlative talent with character development made cricket a side note to the fraught family relationships and uniquely complex characters. Talent scout, coach, financial backer, father, friend, girlfriend, and players have contradictory feelings for the game and for one another, making Selection Day a fascinating study of motivation, love, self-sacrifice, and personal growth. THE EASTERN SHORE By Ward Just Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, $25.00, 208 pages Reviewed by Margo Orlando Littell Check this out! Ned Ayres has one true life passion: the newspaper business. A newspaper career isn’t the expected path in 1950s rural Indiana, and in the small town of Herman, Ayres is a black sheep. Still, he doggedly pursues his ambition, moving from his hometown paper to bigger and better publications in Chicago and, ultimately, Washington, DC. Though he falls in love along the way, no woman can compete with the whirl and intrigue of the newspaper, and Ayres is more or less at peace with being alone. That’s not to say his life is without regret. A sensational story from early in his career has haunted him throughout his life, See EASTERN, cont’d on page 15

Tulsa Book Review • April 2017 • 11


Category

Nonfiction SNAP IT for additional book summaries.

BOOKS FOR LIVING By Will Schwalbe Knopf, $25.95, 288 pages Reviewed by Aron Row Check this out! Nature has its own lethal armory in the form of plagues exploding into epidemics that spread over global areas as pandemics. In this very short introduction to diseases that have ravaged populations, University of Virginia History Professor Christian McMillen chronicles the background of seven feared infections, starting with the historic Plague and continuing on to the dreaded Smallpox, Cholera, Malaria, Tuberculosis, Influenza, and finally HIV/AIDS. Some of these outbreaks are periodic such as the flu, while others like malaria and HIV persist over time. With the advance of medical science some diseases have come under control with vaccines, medications, sanitation, and education. This short but comprehensive study of pandemics reviews the economic, social, and political factors that operate when the disease strikes and the precautions adopted to limit contagion and reccurrence. Poverty, dense populations, cultural beliefs, and increased mobility of the population enable the human vector to transmit the infective organism. The history of past and present pandemics is impressively described, and the author cautions that this history should serve as a lesson for possible future incidents that may arise, especially as crowding and mobility increase. The reader might reflect on the Zika and Ebola viruses and the unpredictable mutagenic strains of the influenza bug along with other potential threats. START RIGHT WHERE YOU ARE: HOW LITTLE CHANGES CAN MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE FOR OVERWHELMED PROCRASTINATORS, FRUSTRATED OVERACHIEVERS AND RECOVERING PERFECTIONISTS By Sam Bennett New World Library, $15.95, 256 pages Reviewed by Randy-Lynne Wach Check this out! The idea is simple: if you want to achieve any goal in life, you need to take that first step. Much like the leap of faith in <em>Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade<em/>, that first small but seemingly impossible step clears the way to achieve great things. In this little book, Sam Bennett gives many suggestions of small action steps to help readers realize their dreams. Readers can identify and change attitudes that have been holding them back, identify their goals, address setbacks, accept success, and establish a support group to keep going. As self-help books go, this one is about as useful as any other—that is, you’ll likely get out of it whatever you’re willing to put in. Bennett’s style is a bit New Age-y for my taste; her poem/prayers and Net imagery are rather off-putting. There is also a great deal of self-promotion. Looking past those irritations, there are many valuable ideas for readers to consider. Even the suggestions that I disagree with provoked thought and discussion and as such are valuable toward determining immediate action. If you’re looking to make a change and willing to put in the work, this can provide a starting point. WONDER WOMEN: 25 INNOVATORS, INVENTORS AND TRAILBLAZERS WHO CHANGED HISTORY By Sam Maggs Quirk Books, $16.99, 240 pages Reviewed by Aron Row Check this out! Sam Maggs revives the amazing accounts of female contributions over the ages to the fields of science, medicine, invention, adventure, and even the nefarious arena of espionage. Females throughout time have been suffocated and subjugated in a “man’s world” and denied entry into disciplines outside of the maternal home. Yet despite these cultural proscriptions, women from ancient times to the present have followed their passions and become trailblazers in fields controlled by men. Peppered with “groovy” expressions and “cool” comments that will connect with pre-teens and high-schoolers, the accounts of these incredible personages are awesome. Read about the avid mathematician Ada Lovelace and the resolute nuclear physicist Lise Meitner; then become familiar with Jacqueline Felice de Almania, an Italian physician from the 1300s, and read an interview with a

former CIA operative. Continue to recent times and view Mary Sherman Morgan, an American rocket scientist. Gawk at movie star Hedy Lamar in her role as an innovator in war weaponry. Continue on to read about female record-breaking mountaineers, botanists, and early aviators. Embracing incredible women from all ages, of various races, and from different continents, the accounts of these extraordinary figures are spellbinding and inspirational, a lovely gift for young lady dreamers. ABSOLUTELY ON MUSIC: CONVERSATIONS By Haruki Murakami, Seiji Ozawa, Jay Rubin Knopf, $27.95, 352 pages Reviewed by Kevin Winter Check this out! One is a famous Japanese author whose books constantly get translated into English. The other is a famous conductor of symphonies around the world, including American ones. They are friends, and like all friends they like to talk about their common interests in music, and this time the conversations are recorded and transcribed for posterity. This book is a collection of those conversations over a period of many years. While not a true question-and-answer session, instead it is a free flow of two people talking about music, its impact, and individual pieces. There are breaks when Mr. Ozawa puts on a piece of music and then the two talk about it. It is as if we are a fly on the wall and we get to listen in to these two. This is the type of book for lovers and connoisseurs of music, especially classical music. Mr. Ozawa brings his decades of conducting and teaching to the forefront, while Mr. Murakami brings his passion. Together, we get a look into this friendship as well. This is a perfect gift for someone who enjoys classical music. THANKS FOR THE MONEY: HOW TO USE MY LIFE STORY TO BECOME THE BEST JOEL MCHALE YOU CAN BE By Joel McHale G.P. Putnam’s Sons, $27.00, 320 pages Reviewed by Glenn Dallas Check this out! Joel McHale is not so much an actor/host as more of a sarcasm-spewing mandroid that remains oddly likable even as he tears down everything around him with witty barbs and razorsharp timing. So, naturally, his autobiography is more than just a chronicle of his many, many, MANY achievements...It’s also a self-help guide to mold yourself into a reasonably successful Joel McHale facsimile. Thanks for the Money is compulsively readable, demanding your attention at every turn, and it’s great fun all the way through. McHale is almost Dave Barry-like with his use of footnotes, and the many tangents and digressions (including cameos from his wife as she corrects his memory) are hilarious. And, of course, every page practically drips with the world-class snark that made E! Network worry that he would piss off those Kardashian kash kows. And yet, amid all the humor and hyperbole, you really do get the sense that he’s immensely grateful for the opportunities he’s had and the life he’s found, in both family and career. Thanks for the Money is the best of both worlds. THE TRUMP SURVIVAL GUIDE: EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT LIVING THROUGH WHAT YOU HOPED WOULD NEVER HAPPEN By Gene Stone Dey Street Books, $9.99, 208 pages Reviewed by Glenn Dallas Check this out! Okay, first things first. This is not an attack on Trump, those in his cabinet, or those who voted for him. This contains neither doom nor gloom, and it’s certainly not some liberal wankfest bemoaning the end of the republic. This is a look at ten important topics in modern politics -from civil rights and energy to national security and LGBTQ issues -- and a brief history lesson in each, including how previous presidents handled them, from introducing legislation to ignoring them entirely. Then, Obama’s record and legacy regarding each topic is summarized -his successes and failings alike -- before the question of how President Trump might handle each subject is tackled, based entirely on what he said during the campaign or in the early days after the election. The Trump Survival Guide is measured, fair, and dare I say, optimistic about what’s to come, refusing to give in to sentiment or bias toward either party. But it also offers dozens of good ideas, references to seek out, and worthy causes to donate your time and energy toward supporting. It reminds us that democracy is nothing something we have, it is something we participate in. THE GREAT MISTAKE: HOW WE WRECKED PUBLIC UNIVERSITIES AND HOW WE CAN FIX THEM By Christopher Newfield John Hopkins University Press, $32.95, 440 pages Reviewed by Jane Manaster Check this out! Few dispute that public colleges are failing to provide the promised education, but the cause is questioned. Author Christopher Newfield contradicts the widespread conventional belief that private sector practices are responsible. In a diatribe that shifts between anger and regret and is generally challenging but always heartfelt, he outlines alternatives. Privatization, Newfield conSee GREAT MISTAKE, cont’d on page 13

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Book Reviews

Nonfiction

tends in The Great Mistake, is one of the principal culprits for the rise in tuition without the anticipated improvement in a quality public college experience. He treads the downward path toward failure rather than answer why this is happening, though he certainly offers incontestable reasons. The world has changed: mass education is obsolete, better replaced with an interdisciplinary approach. “We need research learning, it needs it to be individualized, we need it to be free of debt and political restraints, and we need it on an enormous scale.” Newfield is trying out his ideas on himself and deserves a high grade for doing so. But the book’s impetus is diminished by its length. Too many of us suffer from a short attention span, part of the changed world and its excessive demands on time. Nor can he realistically expect parents and students to absorb all he says in a book directed at educators, education administrators, and those businesses considering donating their two cents to improvement.

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TO TULSA CITY-COUNTY LIBRARY Search the library’s catalog at www.TulsaLibrary.org to reserve your copies now.

Get Lit Rising: Words Ignite. Claim Your Poem. Claim Your Life by Diane Luby Lane

THE BEST OF BOTH WORLDS: HOW MOTHERS CAN FIND FULL-TIME SATISFACTION IN PART-TIME WORK By Beth Brykman Prometheus Books, $17.00, 280 pages Reviewed by Randy-Lynne Wach Check this out! One of the major issues in the so-called “Mommy Wars” is the question of work: working moms vs. stay-at-home moms. This book proposes that part-time work can provide an ideal balance for most mothers: a chance for adult interaction and financial contribution without taking too much time away from the family. The experiences of one hundred women from around the country combine to illustrate each topic—exploring the advantages of part-time work, how to shift down to part-time from full-time work, reentering work after staying home for a while, starting your own business, arranging daycare, etc. The greatest strength of the book is the thorough research and real-world examples. As I read, I couldn’t help but compare my own experience with the others, considering possibilities that I might not have before. Just as there is no one right way to parent, there is no one right way to work. Different situations call for different solutions, and what works now may not be the best a year or two down the road. If you think that part-time work might be a good solution for you, this book gives plenty of tips on how to make it happen and inspiration to get you going. GETTING TO “YES AND”: THE ART OF BUSINESS IMPROV By Bob Kulhan, Chuck Crisafulli Stanford Business Books, $29.95, 280 pages Reviewed by Randy-Lynne Wach Check this out! I’m the first to admit I don’t do well at thinking and responding quickly, but I greatly admire people who can—especially when they can be witty at the same time. And, sure, I love to watch Whose Line is It, Anyway?, so maybe I came into this book with the sort of misconceptions that the author wanted to dispel about the idea of improv in business. And I may still be a little bit disappointed that the book was not just full of improv games to play in some sort of team-building activity. However, after dispelling my preconceptions, the author does deliver what was promised: a solid system for using principles of improv to achieve your best performance in business. Nothing in here is particularly groundbreaking: don’t put down others’ ideas, approach your work with energy, keep your skills and knowledge ready so you can access them as the need arrives, etc. Improv is simply the framework used to present fairly common information. Perhaps it’s just that I was expecting something more playful, but I found the presentation to be rather text-dense and dry. However, the information is solid, so this book is as useful as the effort that you’re willing to put into it. MEDITERRANEAN, cont’d from page 9 notes dispersed through the book contain valuable information for those wishing to ensure a good outcome and learn more about the intricacies of choosing ingredients and cooking techniques. The large, glossy pictures of the finished product typically found in cookbooks are traded for smaller pictures of the end product and important preparation details. Furthermore, nutritional information for all recipes is contained in an easily read chart at the end of the book. For those looking for the one book they need to master Mediterranean cooking, this is it. CANNIBALISM, cont’d from page 8 Schutt mixes science and history with equal deftness, never indulging in gore for the sake of shock value. His scholarly approach, bolstered by his own investigations and interviews -- the Donner Party excursion is a particular highlight -- all make for an endlessly fascinating read. Of course, reading this book in public will raise some eyebrows. If you care about that sort of thing.

Tulsa Book Review • April 2017 • 13

Get to know the Get Lit Players – a group of teens who use poetry to take on the world – with this common-core aligned book that sheds light on teen issues through their own poetry and slam poetry performances. Get Lit Rising brings to life the true story of 19 teen poets (the Get Lit Players) who are inspiring thousands of teens across the country through their awardwinning performances of classic and spokenword poems. This book takes readers inside the private lives of these teen poets as they try to transform the lives of inner-city teens in some of the toughest life circumstances.

One Last Word: Wisdom From the Harlem Renaissance by Nikki Grimes

In this collection of poetry, Nikki Grimes looks afresh at the poets of the Harlem Renaissance – including voices like Langston Hughes, Georgia Douglas Johnson, and many more writers of importance and resonance from this era – by combining their work with her own original poetry.

Bravo! Poems About Amazing Hispanics by Margarita Engle

Bold, graphic portraits and beautiful poems present famous and lesser-known Latinos from varied backgrounds who have faced life’s challenges in creative ways.

Undefeated: Jim Thorpe and the Carlisle Indian School Football Team by Steve Sheinkin

When superstar athlete Jim Thorpe and football legend Pop Warner met in 1904 at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School in Pennsylvania, they forged one of the winningest teams in American football history. Called “the team that invented football,” they took on the best opponents of their day, defeating much more privileged schools such as Harvard and the Army in a series of breathtakingly close calls, genius plays and bone-crushing hard work. But this is not just an underdog story. It’s an unflinching look at the persecution of Native Americans and its intersection with the beginning of one of the most beloved and exploitative pastimes in America, expertly told by nonfiction powerhouse Steve Sheinkin.

Becoming Bach by Thomas Leonard For Johann Sebastian there was always music. His family had been musicians, or bachs as they were called in Germany, for 200 years. He always wanted to be a bach. As he grew, he saw patterns in everything. Patterns he would turn into melodies and song, eventually growing into one of the most important and celebrated musical composers of all time. This is the story of Johann Sebastian Bach.


BEAR’S HOUSE OF BOOKS By Poppy Bishop, Alison Edgson (illustrator) Tiger Tales, $16.99, 32 pages Reviewed by Rosi Hollinbeck Check this out!

Category

Kids’ Books SNAP IT for additional book summaries.

WHEN THE SKY BREAKS: HURRICANES, TORNADOES AND THE WORST WEATHER IN THE WORLD By Simon Winchester Viking Books for Young Readers, $22.99, 96 pages Reviewed by Rosi Hollinbeck Check this out! Most middle-grade readers are old enough to remember hearing about the terrible damage Hurricane Sandy caused just a few years ago. Many have probably heard of Hurricane Katrina as well. Every year these youngsters see reports of tornadoes, typhoons, and other great storms. Has it always been this way? What causes these awful events? These are the kinds of questions kids are curious about, and this is a book that will help to quell that curiosity. Author Simon Winchester was a scientist before he became a journalist and writer, and that shows nicely in his approach to the subject. It’s clear he has a good understanding of the subject of violent weather and brings both scientific knowledge and historical perspective to the subject of storms. He then ties all of this together into a story the weather tells about the larger issue of climate change. Winchester’s writing style is that of a storyteller. He uses creative writing techniques, making it fun for readers while they are learning, and learn they will. The text is supported with spectacular photographs of storms and storm damage and of illustrations for stories of times past, as well as charts and maps to support the science. TRICKED (FAIRY TALE REFORM SCHOOL) By Jen Calonita Sourcebooks Jabberwocky, $15.99, 272 pages Reviewed by Rebecca Williams Check this out! Gilly is back at home after earning her release from Fairy Tale Reform School, but she feels listless and out of place. She’s attending a trade school to follow in her father’s footsteps as a shoe cobbler, but she can’t seem to muster any enthusiasm for her career path. When her sister gets into trouble and is taken to FTRS, Gilly knows she needs to help get Anna out, especially with Rumpelstiltskin now in charge! She and fellow FTRS graduate Jax, the Royal brother to Rapunzel, end up back where they started, but with Mr. Stiltskin calling the shots, it seems that the school is making more villains than heroes. This third installment of FTRS brings back many favorite fairy tales and gives them a fresh twist for a new generation of readers. Gilly is relatable, as she struggles with life choices and choosing to be who she wants to be or what her parents expect – that’s a trick all on its own. Like many fairy tales and fables, the moral comes through clear without being preachy, and readers will enjoy the various cast of characters – pirate, royal, peasant, mermaid, and more – making this a treat to read. LET’S CLAP, JUMP, SING & SHOUT; DANCE, SPIN & TURN IT OUT!: GAMES, SONGS AND STORIES FROM AN AFRICAN AMERICAN CHILDHOOD By Patricia C. McKissack, Brian Pinkney (illustrator) Schwartz & Wade, $24.99, 184 pages Reviewed by Rosi Hollinbeck Check this out!

Four young friends living in the big woods — a fox, a mouse, a hedgehog, and a rabbit — have a tradition of reading a storybook together every single night at bedtime. It’s always the same storybook, and they love it though it’s worn and scuffed. It is the only book they have, and they have had it since they were very young. One morning Mouse has a great idea. Maybe they should get another book. But none of the friends has any idea where to get a book. They don’t think they can dig one up nor do they think they fall from the sky, so they pack some lunch and set out searching the woods. Wonder of wonders, they find a lovely red book. They immediately sit down and read it. They love this new book but discover it belongs to Bear. They know they must return it. Author Poppy Bishop has written a perfectly charming book about friendship and sharing that will delight youngsters and those who read to them. The illustrations by Alison Edgson are absolutely enchanting and full of marvelous details that will fascinate the little ones. This is sure to be a huge favorite. ANIMALS BY THE NUMBERS: A BOOK OF INFOGRAPHICS By Steve Jenkins HMH Books for Young Readers, $17.99, 48 pages Reviewed by Rosi Hollinbeck Check this out! If kids ruled the world, there would be even more books about animals, and this book would quickly become one of the favorites. It is just chock full of fascinating facts about the animal world that will have kids leaping through the pages to get to the next batch of fun facts. A brightly colored pie chart shows the estimated 1,397,250 animal species and that over 70% are insects. If one could weigh them, all the termites would weigh double what all people on Earth weigh. All insects put together would weigh 30,000 pounds for each person on Earth. What is the biggest? What is the smallest? What is the fastest? What can jump the farthest? How much do different animals sleep each day? How long do different animals live? How fast do their hearts beat? What has the longest horns or the longest tongues? All these questions and many more are answered with clever, colorful graphics, short, pithy text blocks, and fun illustrations. Librarians will have trouble keeping this one on the shelves, and parents and teachers will be grateful for the hours it will fill for curious little ones. This is a real winner. A BIKE LIKE SERGIO’S By Maribeth Boelts Candlewick Press, $15.99, 40 pages Reviewed by Julia McMichael Who wouldn’t want a bike like Sergio’s? Especially if you didn’t even own a bike. Ruben wants a bike badly, and his birthday is coming up, but there are no guarantees that his parents will have the money to buy him a bike. Unexpectedly, Ruben receives a windfall that is the answer to his prayers. It is the wrong thing to keep the money, but Ruben will get to buy his cherished bike. Ultimately, Ruben learns an important lesson about ill-gotten gains. When he has a loss, he begins to understand that ill-gotten gains have a cost. The author does not create a completely happy nor pat ending to this story, so it has believability. Maribeth Boelts has written over twenty children’s books. The illustrator, Noah Z. Jones, strikes just the right note of nerdy-looking characters for this book. His own website deserves a look for more wonderful drawings. This is just the right book for the moral lesson that goodness is its own reward.

Category

Historical Fiction

Most adults today can remember chanting metrical rhymes while jumping rope or playing hand-clapping games as well as using them in circle games. In school or in church, there were songs and hymns to learn. We learned superstitions, proverbs, parables, folk tales, Bible verses, and so much more. But this is a book that focuses on these with a base in the African-American community. Some of the songs were inspired by stories of the Underground Railroad, others are gospel songs and spirituals. But this isn’t simply a collection of these various pieces. They are supported with terrific historical research and short essays about the different songs and poems and how they have evolved through the years. Some of these short essays are highly personal to the author. All are written in accessible, reader-friendly, and lively language. Author Patricia C. McKissack has put together a remarkable compendium of AfricanAmerican childhood staples and added a section on performance pieces youngsters would have recited. There is also good back-matter supporting the work and a comprehensive index. Illustrator Brian Pinkney has added life to all of this with charming, subtly-colored drawings. This is perfect for classrooms and families.

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THE FLAME BEARER By Bernard Cornwell Harper, $27.99, 304 pages Reviewed by Alex Telander Check this out! The Flame Bearer is the tenth installment of the Saxon Tales from bestselling historical-fiction master, Bernard Cornwell. Is it the final tale in the series? No one knows except Mr. Cornwell himself, and I suppose in a year or so readers will find out. But this volume may be the most important of the series, even over King Alfred’s reign and death, as our fearless and now aged hero, Uhtred, returns to his beloved Bebbanburg. See FLAME, cont’d on page 15

Tulsa Book Review • April 2017 • 14


FLAME, cont’d from page 14 Uhtred is not a young warrior anymore and may not be able to perform some of the feats he used to, but he is still perhaps the smartest and most cunning man in all of the lands that King Alfred one day hoped to unite as a single England. For now, the land remains divided, with Sigtryggr, a Viking, ruling in Northumbria, and the Saxon Queen Aethelflaed ruling from Mercia. However, they are at a truce; so for the first time in many a year, Uhtred has some free time, and he knows just what he wishes to do. Bringing together his people and those who will fight for him, he heads to Bebbanburg, his home, the land of his father, and the land that rightfully belongs to him, even though he hasn’t set foot on it since he was a child. But this is a Bernard Cornwell novel after all, so nothing will ever go as planned. This is also the Middle Ages, meaning there are many out there wishing to take lands and make them their own. Such is the way of things, and, as Uhtred likes to keep reminding us in Old English, “Wyrd bi_ ful aræd,” or “Fate is inexorable.”

YOUTH FICTION COMING SOON

TO TULSA CITY-COUNTY LIBRARY Search the library’s catalog at www.TulsaLibrary.org to reserve your copies now.

Stink and the Attack of the Slime Mold by Megan McDonald

A GENTLEMAN IN MOSCOW: A NOVEL By Amor Towles Viking, $27.00, 480 pages Reviewed by Margo Orlando Littell Check this out! Count Alexander Ilyich Rostov is sentenced to house arrest in 1922, shortly after the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia ended the rule of the Tsar and eventually brought about the Soviet Union. It could have been worse: he was to be held for the rest of his days under arrest in the grand Metropol Hotel (and it could have been much worse, as many aristocrats were summarily executed in the early days after the revolution). But Count Rostov makes the most of his new reality, and as an aristocrat with a finely tuned palate, eventually finds work in the famous restaurant of the Metropol. Fate intervenes over the years, and, later in his life, a six-year-old girl is suddenly thrust into his care, and his values and priorities change once again. Towles is a master at conjuring a wholly realized time and place. In Rules of Civility, his first book, it was late-1930s Manhattan; here, early- to mid-twentieth-century Russia. He sweeps readers up not only in the era but also in the specific life of the Metropol Hotel, and one could spend hours simply wandering along its halls and hidden corners with the Count and his friends. Towles engages his readers effortlessly for four-hundred-and-sixty-plus pages. Gentleman is an undeniable winner. BRAZEN, cont’d from page 2 Although it’s just as steeped in movie trivia and history as the other Valentino novels, the Hollywood-blonde murder angle makes it feel like a more mainstream mystery. Estleman puts the spotlight on the tragedies that have beset blondes in Hollywood over the decades, creating a backdrop of superstition that plays nicely with the shadow of Hollywood’s dark side. Brazen is a departure from the norm for Valentino fans but an interesting twist for new readers. EASTERN, cont’d from page 11 forcing him to weigh questions of privacy, censorship, and basic human decency--questions that aren’t always welcome among the writers, editors, and publishers who make up his world. Readers looking for an insider’s view of the newspaper business or a story about snagging the story won’t find it in The Eastern Shore. Instead, Just provides a large-picture summary of one man’s quest for happiness and fulfillment. What readers will take away is the unsettling idea that some things can’t be gotten over, that some choices can’t be re-made, and that a path set upon as a young man may, in the end, be a one-way road. THE 60s, cont’d from page 5 There is some great journalism included, as well as literary art that highlights the feelings and concerns of the era. A reader can enjoy a section at a time and come back to it later, as each individual piece can be read separately. I found it at times thought-provoking, upsetting, or enlightening, but always interesting. MARVELLOUS THIEVES: SECRET AUTHORS OF THE ARABIAN NIGHTS By Paulo Lemos Horta Harvard University Press, $29.95, 384 pages Reviewed by Glenn Dallas Check this out! In all of literature, there is no collection more elusive or evocative than The Arabian Nights. It encompasses a thousand and one nights of storytelling, and yet there is no definitive version of the collection, no touchstone by which all others can be measured. Each translation has its own flavor, its own feeling, its own motivation, and its own legacy. And Marvellous Thieves puts them all under the same microscope. Paulo Lemos Horta sets a phenomenal task for himself: studying the authors who translated the Arabian Nights (or stole the work of other translators) and encapsulating how each shaped their version of the tales. He hunts down lost sources for those 1,001 stories, ponders how the changes made to each suited the authors’ preconceived notions, and laments how clever female characters were so often downgraded or ignored entirely in several collections, robbing many of the stories of the strong characterization that made them such satisfying reads. This is literary history come alive, and Horta makes each edition of the tales feel like an important footstep in a narrative legacy stretching back centuries. Some of those translators may have been marvelous thieves, but Horta shows how we all shared in their riches. Tulsa Book Review • April 2017 • 15

Glip! Glop! Gloop! What looks like dog vomit, smells like a corpse flower and stars in one of the scariest movies Stink Moody has ever seen? Is it the Blob? The Glob? Son of Glob? No, it’s … slime mold! Stink may be a super science geek, but even Dr. Stinkelstein is feeling freaked out about having a slime mold living and growing in his very own room.

Thea Stilton 7: A Song for the Thea Sisters by Thea Stilton

Great news for the Mouseford Academy students! Top Direction, one of the most popular bands for teenagers, is going to perform on Whale Island, and they have decided that the opening act will be chosen among the best bands Mouseford Academy has to offer! Students have two weeks to write a song, and then Top Direction will pick the winner. The Thea Sisters have to win, but someone is trying to sabotage their performance.

Join the Resistance by Ben Acker

Mattis Banz knows that he’s meant to be a hero of the galaxy like the legendary Luke Skywalker, and when General Leia Organa’s Resistance recruits him to join its efforts against the evil First Order, he finally has a chance to fulfill his destiny.

Pony Swim by Judy Katschke

Busily preparing for an annual pony swim event, the Dunlaps learn that a famous travel writer will be attending who could attract valuable tourism to Misty Inn and their island home.

Animal Crackers by Scott Christian Sava It was supposed to an exciting, yet normal trip to the circus. Dangerous stunts, flying acrobats and even the clowns Uncle Doug hated so much – Owen is itching to see all of it. But when his little sister Zoe, a self-proclaimed animal whisperer, accuses the ringmaster of mistreating the circus animals, the last thing Owen has time to do is to watch the show! With the help of some magical animal crackers that can transform him into a bear, a hippo or even a hamster, Owen sets out to rescue his kidnapped uncle and sister from the hands of the scheming ringmaster and his circus lackeys.

April Fools’, Mr. Todd!

by Megan McDonald • Plotting an

ultimate prank on her teacher for April Fools’ Day, Judy Moody begins to worry that her teacher and classmates have forgotten that the first of April is also her birthday.

The Trouble With Friends

by Claudia Mills • Nora Alpers, fourthgrade scientist, tackles her most difficult subject yet, making friends with someone with whom you have nothing in common.


Libraries are a resource for people of all ages to find what they need to transform their lives. In countless communities across our nation, children, students and adults turn to libraries to learn, grow and achieve their dreams. Visit your neighborhood library today and discover all the wonderful ways libraries transform.

BRING BACK THE BOOKS

(and music, movies and ‌) In honor of National Library Week, Tulsa City-County Library is forgiving all overdue fines during the entire month of April. So, bring back all overdue books, CDs, DVDs and other library materials in April, and have your overdue fines forgiven.* *Excludes replacement fees for damaged or lost materials.


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