Tuesday, May 17, 2011

New James Patterson Coming!

The perfect life
A successful lawyer and loving mother, Nina Bloom would do anything to protect the life she's built in New York—including lying to everyone, even her daughter, about her past. But when an innocent man is framed for murder, she knows that she can't let him pay for the real killer's crimes.
The perfect lie
Nina's secret life began 18 years ago. She had looks to die for, a handsome police-officer husband, and a carefree life in Key West. When she learned she was pregnant with their first child, her happiness was almost overwhelming. But Nina's world is shattered when she unearths a terrible secret that causes her to run for her life and change her identity.
The perfect way to die
Now, years later, Nina risks everything she's earned to return to Florida and confront the murderous evil she fled. In a story of wrenching suspense, James Patterson gives us his most head-spinning, action-filled story yet—a Hitchcock-like blend of unquenchable drama and pleasure.

Available  June 28th

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Local History: Nellie MacMillan Writes Home, 1914

            On December 18, 1914, Nellie MacMillan wrote home.
            Mrs. McMillan had been born Helen Artie Tarleton Belles in the year 1856 in Indianapolis, Indiana to Dr. Joshua Tarleton Belles and his wife, Julia Reid Belles. Her mother died when Nellie was almost five after delivering four more children, all stillborn. Dr. Belles and his daughter then moved to Spencer, Indiana where Nellie lived until she was sent to the Henrietta Colgan School in Indianapolis to learn fine manners and social graces.
            While there, she met John Bayless “Jack” Hill, the son of a prominent Indianapolis family. They bonded over a shared love of music and artistic sensibilities and on June 30, 1874 the pair married in Spencer. Jack died five months later.
            At loose ends, the young widow persuaded her father to send her to Europe to study voice. He agreed and Nellie, who is said to have had a beautiful contralto voice, went to Europe where she studied and performed in France, Italy, and England. It was in Paris where she met Maurice Crawford MacMillian; whose father Daniel had co-founded MacMillan Publishing in 1843. The couple married in 1884. Although Maurice MacMillan has been described as “retiring” and “distant,” he was an amateur musician and he sang a duet with his bride at their wedding reception. Nellie and Maurice MacMillan went on to produce three sons; Daniel, Arthur, and Harold. Her son Harold would later remark that it was one of the great regrets of his life that he never heard his mother sing, as she had curiously “lost her voice” after the birth of her first child.
            Nellie MacMillan would sometimes return home to visit Spencer, once bringing her husband Maurice, but just before Christmas, 1914, she down in her home at Birch Grove House in West Sussex, England and wrote a letter to Mrs. Ella Belles of Indianapolis who forwarded it to the Owen Leader for publication.  England had declared war on Germany in August of that year and the United States for more than two year away from entering the fray when Mrs. MacMillan wrote:
“I hope you are all well and will have a pleasant Christmas together. This will be a sad time for everyone here for there is not a family that has not lost relations or friends in this war. Dan and Harold are in the New Army but will not go out until spring. Arthur has always had a weak heart and they will not take him. He is very unhappy not to be in training with his brothers. Never has anything been finer than the ardour of all the young men, of all classes. If only England had listened to Lord Robert’s warnings, she would not be in such an unprecedented state. However the nation is rising splendidly to meet the demands of it and complete harmony and unity exists. All classes are brought together in a wonderful way. There are no such things now as party politics and differences in religion, of class: all are Britons; even the poorest is willing to give the best he has and the whole Empire has given its best and much of it. This is no ordinary war but a war to crush out forever the idea that “Might is Right” and the idea that all nations great and small, would do better under the Iron Rule of Prussia with her “Kultur” rammed down the throats of all of us, and every man and every boy, every penny in the Empire will be given before this is allowed. I only wish I had 20 sons to give to such a cause.
“We have had a very wet winter. In France it is very wet too, and life in the trenches is very hard but there are no complaints and never were soldiers more cheerful and unselfish.”
            The Lord Roberts Nellie MacMillan was referencing in her letter was Lord Frederick Roberts, born in India in 1832, the son of a British General. After being educated at Eton, Sandhurst, and the Addiscombe Military Academy, he first saw combat as a mercenary for the East India Company during the Indian Rebellion of 1857, or, as it is known in India, The First War of Independence. He then transferred to the British Army where he took part in the Abyssinian Campaigns against the Emperor of Ethiopia, Tewadros II. He then served in the Afghan War of 1878, and was appointed commander of Kabul and Kandahar after the prior commander, Pierre Louis Napoleon Cavagnari, was killed by mutinous Afghan soldiers. After his rousing success in Afghanistan, Roberts was sent to South Africa to take part in the Second Anglo-Boer War. This living tattoo of Empire returned to England in 1902 where he founded the “Pilgrim’s Society” made up of influential politicians, businessmen, diplomats and writers with a goal to “promote good-will, good-fellowship, and everlasting peace between the United States and Great Britain,” and; to this day, under the patronage of Queen Elizabeth II, hosts dinners to welcome each new U.S. Ambassador to Britain to their ranks. He also became, in 1905, the head of National Service League which lobbied for compulsory military training for every British male between the ages of 18 and 30 and which called for universal conscription in preparation for a “Great European War.”
            Nellie’s son Harold was wounded at the Battle of Loos in September, 1915, and then “lightly wounded” at Ypres salient on July 19, 1916. Then in September, 1916, at the Battle of the Somme, he was seriously wounded when he was shot through the left thigh and pelvis. Crawling into a trench, McMillan lay there for three days, intermittently reading from a pocket edition of the Greek tragedian Aeschylus’s play, Prometheus Bound, a work McMillan found to be, “not inappropriate to my position.” He was rescued by a Company Sergeant but his wounds became badly infected and he believed that it was only the actions of his mother, who did an end-run around military protocol to get him additional medical treatment, that his life was saved.
            “I owe everything to my mother,” Harold MacMillan stated.
            His wife, the Lady Dorothy Evelyn Cavendish, daughter of the Duke and Duchess of Devonshire, seemed to have a differing opinion. Dorothy and Harold were married in 1920 and went to live at Birch House with Maurice and Nellie. It was there Dorothy’s children saw her sticking pins into a wax Voodoo doll of Nellie.
            Over 700,000 British soldiers sacrificed their lives in World War I. Out of the 26 freshmen in MacMillan’s class at Balliol College, Oxford, only two of them survived the war. Harold MacMillan was awarded the British War Medal and the Allied Victory Medal and the aftermath of his wounds would plague him for the rest of his life. After the War, McMillan went into politics and publishing, becoming an outspoken critic of appeasement and joining Winston Churchill’s War Cabinet. In 1957 he was appointed Prime Minister of Great Britain after the resignation of Anthony Eden. He served in this capacity until 1963, a year which saw both the Vassall and Profumo scandals. When asked what his biggest challenge as a states man had been, MacMillan replied, “Events, my dear boy. Events.”
            Harold MacMillan made a “sentimental journey” to Spencer in 1956. He attended services at the Methodist Church where his mother once sang and laid a wreath on the grave of his maternal grandfather, Joshua Belles, at Riverside Cemetery. After a barbeque feast at McCormick’s Creek State Park, local residents presented the future Prime Minister with a jar of Paw-Paws, the “Indiana Banana.” Harold MacMillan would make three more trips to Spencer, twice accompanied by his grandson, Alexander, who came back on his own as the Earl of Stockton in 1994 but that’s the last we’ve seen of the MacMillans since.
            Nelly MacMillan died in 1937 at the age of 84 and is buried in Sussex. Four years before her death she became instrumental in the publication of Margaret Mitchell’s only book, Gone With the Wind. Nellie had plucked the novel from a slush pile in her husband’s home office and, after reading it, insisted that MacMillan Publishers buy all the international rights to it.
            On Thursday, May 5, 2011, Claude Stanley Choules, the last living combat veteran of World War I, died at the age of 110 in a nursing home in Western Australia. Mr. Choules was born in Great Britain in 1901. At the age of 14 he joined the Royal Navy and in 1918 he witnessed the surrender of the German High Seas Fleet from the deck of the HMS Revenge. Mr. Choules later settled in Australia, transferring to the Royal Australian Navy, where he served during World War II.  Later in life he became an outspoken pacifist, refusing to participate in annual commemoration parades and boycotting Australia’s Anzac Day.
            The last American Doughboy, Frank Buckles, died earlier in 2011 on February 27th in West Virginia. He was also 110 years old. He had lied about his age so he could join the fight at 16. He was sent to Europe where he drove an ambulance on the Western Front. After the War, in 1941, while working as a steamship company as a purser in the Philippines, he was captured by Japanese troops and held prisoner for more than three years.   
            The only person in the world left who served in WWII is Florence Beatrice Patterson Green of King’s Lynn, Norfolk, England. Miss Patterson joined the Women’s Royal Air Force in September, 1918 when she was 17. Her service is usually described as that of “waitress” though her official title was Officer’s Mess Steward. Ms. Patterson-Green turned 110 on February 19th, 2011. We wish her Godspeed.
~ Laura Wilkerson
   Genealogy Department, OCPL

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

National Library Week


April 10-16th is National Library Week.  Yesterday (Tuesday, April 12th) was actually Library Worker Appreciation Day, however we here at OCPL are celebrating today, Wednesday.  Each year at this time we enjoy lunch/dinner.  This year, we added the fun of the library's new Nintendo Wii.  So far I've seen great fun had by employees playing such games as Family Feud, and various events in the Wii Sports and Sports Resort including boxing, archery, bowling, table tennis, canoeing, and now they are cycling.  Action photos are difficult to capture with my phone, so please forgive the blur.  (just the fastest way to get them posted)

The Wii system is our newest addition to the library and will be used for a variety of programming.  We are planning teen and family events in the near future.  Should be really fun! 

We also picked up a few more games that will be available for check out soon for all three systems.  Checking out games has proven very popular, and as we are just getting started, there are usually not very many in.  Games tend to get checked out as soon as they come in, which is great!  Please keep checking back to see if your favorite title is in.  Requests welcome. 

~Jennifer

Monday, April 4, 2011

A Short Tip About Spam Email

Last week the world's largest "permissions-based" email marketing company, Epsilon, was hacked into and names and email addresses were stolen.

What does this mean to you?
First of all you should understand what "permissions-based" means. Epsilon is a company that collects names and email addresses that you the customer have given certain companies permission to use. Some of these companies include: US Bank, Capital One, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, Best Buy, Kroger, TiVo, and Walgreen’s. Epsilon represents as many as 2,500 different businesses. If you are a customer of any of these companies and you provided them with your email, then you you might be affected. 


Now what harm can this do to you?
Hackers will not be able to directly harm you with this information that they have stolen. What they can do is get to you cleverly with your email address. They can send you a carefully crafted email targeted just for you to try to get more personal information from you. This is called "phishing". You could receive several emails that appear to come from the company where they stole your email address to begin with. For instance; lets say that I am a customer of Best Buy and I have willingly given them my email for a warranty on something I bought from them. A hacker then sends me an email that might not be marked as spam and looks like it really is from Best Buy. In this email they inform me that my account needs updating. They might ask me to log in and provide my Social Security number or even my debit/credit card information. Once I do this, they have me. I have given them information that they can use to charge things to my account or to steal my identity. 
"Phishing" emails can also get you to unknowingly install a harmful virus onto your computer that can send out any personal information on your computer. They can also install what is called a "key logger" which can record everything you type on your computer, including credit card numbers, etc. 


What you need to know.
A legitimate company will never ask you to provide personal information through an email. Chances are the company already has any information they need from you. If they need to know something they will contact you in a safer way. Never open an email that looks suspicious. Be cautious and skeptical. Do not reply to the email. Never send any personal information through an email to someone you are not one hundred percent sure about. 


Be sure to stop by the library for more information about spam email and how to recognize and avoid it. One of the best ways to stop this is to educate everyone about it. Even if that is one person at a time. 


Brad - OCPL

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Standard Hero Behavior

When I picked up this book, the front flap made me laugh out loud.  A good sign.  The first paragraph:  "SHB. Standard Hero Behavior.  According to Quayle's Guide to Adventures for the Unadventurous, SHB involves things like sucking man-eating-spider venom from your own butt and fighting a horde of marauders with your own severed arm after said marauders have cut it off."


Mason Quayle is a bard living in a town whose heroes have long since fled. No heroes = no adventurous tales and nothing for a bard to write about. So when the opportunity arises for Mason to go on a real-life quest--a chance to be a hero himself--he takes it. Following in the footsteps of his long-vanished hero father, Mason and his best friend, Cowel, set out on a journey full of misadventure and run-ins with an unusual cast of characters, among them, a retired hero-cum-shoe-salesman, a somnambulist sword fighter, a swarm of unfriendly (and deadly) pixies, a wholesome young witch, and a werewolf hit man. They also stumble upon the answers to the questions that have haunted Mason for the past 10 years: Where is his father? Why didn't he return to his family? Was he really a hero?  (From the publisher's website.)

While this book has humor, and adventure, it also has heart.  It was nominated for the 2010-2011 Young Hoosier Book Award in the Middle Grade categoryThe author, John David Anderson, lives in Indiana, which is a fun fact that has nothing to do with anything really.   Sometimes we think of authors as all living in New York or somewhere, which is just not the case, but I digress.

My son (11) and I read this one together, and we both really enjoyed it.  Our would-be-heroes, Mason and Cowel are great characters, both with their own strengths and weaknesses.  For example, Cowel has an entertaining habit of sneezing fits when the threat of danger is even suspected.  Mason is slightly braver, and committed to helping his village, while looking for clues as to what happened to his father.  Their borrowed horse, Steed, is the least spirited horse an adventurer ever had, until they discover the secret of really making him move.  I will add that some of the language may not agree with younger children and their parents.

One of my favorite things about this book is that the story opens with a description of a bird sitting on a signpost, and comparison between the bird and the nearby bard, and ends with an altered look at the same bird and bard.  This simple device allows the reader to see the changes Mason's adventures have brought about. 

Over all, I would recommend this book for mainly boys in the 5-8th grade range, although I think it would be enjoyable to anyone who enjoys a good story.  My favorite chapter title:  The Queen Bee, the Rusty Nail, and the Narcoleptic Somnantilist.

~Jennifer

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Shared Reads: The Girls of Murder City: Fame, Lust, and the Beautiful Killers Who Inspired Chicago

The Girls of Murder City: Fame, Lust, and the Beautiful Killers Who Inspired Chicago by Douglas Perry (Viking, 2010) is a book that is really more than the sum of its parts. Ostensibly about accused murderesses Beulah Annan and Belva Gaertner, the raw material that would later be transformed into the characters Roxie Hart and Velma Kelly, and the reporter who was inspired by them, Maurine Watkins. In actuality the book captures a glittering moment in 1924 when six women’s life hung in the balance as they awaited trail in the Cook County Jail and a dozen Chicago newspapers, staffed for the first time with ambitious, modern, female reporters, competed fiercely for stories, doing whatever it took to secure a scoop and a coveted byline on the front page.
            Beulah Annan, 24, was the star, considered the “prettiest woman ever charged with murder in Chicago,” garnered loads of ink after killing her paramour in her family apartment. After she shot her man she put the jazz age record, Hula Lou, on the phonograph and then telephoned her husband at work. Belva Gaertner, 40, the “most stylish” woman in the Cook County Jail, was a former vaudeville performer who had already made headlines during a scandalous divorce from her wealthy industrialist husband, William Gaertner. She was accused of shooting and killing her married paramour after a drunken evening out and about.
            Illinois had been fairly notorious for its reluctance to convict women, no matter how weighted in favor of conviction the evidence might seem, but there were ominous signs on the horizon. While Belva Gaertner and Beulah Annan waited in jail. Two of their comrades, Katherine Malm, a gangster girl who acted as lookout in a fatal robbery, was convicted and sentenced to life, and Sabella Nitti, an immigrant woman who was convicted of conspiring with her illicit lover to murder her husband and sentenced to hang. Rounding out this cast of characters was Elizabeth Unkafer, held for the shooting death of her boyfriend, Lela Foster, who had shot and killed her husband. We also find the gorgeous, unstable, twenty-three year old Wanda Stopa, daughter of a respectable, Polish working-class family, the first “girl lawyer” to work in the State’s attorney’s office, shooting through the story like a comet. Wanda, who fancied herself a Bohemian, shot and killed an elderly workman who interfered with her attempt to kill the wife of her older, married, advertising executive boyfriend. Wanda then led police on a manhunt accompanied by screaming headlines before she took her own life at a Detroit hotel.
            Covering these trials was Maurine Watkins, beautiful in her own right, who came to Chicago by way of Radcliffe, Butler, Transylvania U and Crawfordsville, Indiana and walked right into the office of the city editor of the Chicago Tribune and talked herself into a job. Maurine joined a sisterhood of sorts with Genevieve Forbes of the Daily Tribune, Ione Quinby of the Evening Post and Sonia Lee of the American, all of whom specialized, for a time, in writing about female criminality.      
            For a while it was the Roaring Twenties personified with booze and flappers and a new freedom that women were determined to experience and Perry does a fine job in capturing that staccato tenor of the times.
            In sensational trials, both Belva Gaertner and Beulah Annan were found not guilty by their respective all-male juries but contrary to popular perception they did not go on to star in vaudeville either separately or as a team. Belva Gaertner remarried her wealthy ex-husband, who had remained smitten by his ex-wife and who bankrolled her defense, and then divorced him again. Beulah divorced her faithful husband after the baby she claimed to be carrying during her trial never materialized and married and divorced a boxer, her third husband, who beat her. She divorced the boxer and shortly thereafter she died of tuberculosis at the age of twenty-seven. She is buried in the Cumberland Presbyterian Church in Utica, Daviess County, Kentucky.
            Maurine Watkins did not stay long in Chicago, or work long as a reporter. The fad for glamorizing female murderers came to a screeching halt with a crime that both fascinated and repulsed Chicago and gripped the imagination of the entire Nation – the murder of little Bobby Franks, son of retired millionaire industrialist Jacob Franks, by two individuals, Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb. Leopold and Loeb were the teenage sons of equally wealthy Chicago families. Intellectually precocious, they fancied themselves Nietzschen Supermen determined to prove themselves beyond the pale of mere mortals by committing what they presumed would be the perfect crime. They were caught after Leopold’s distinctive eyeglasses were found at the scene of the murder and other evidence quickly fell into place. Richard Loeb’s father, a lawyer and Vice President at Sears & Roebuck, hired famed attorney Clarence Darrow to defend the pair. Against all odds Darrow saved the two from hanging and secured sentences of life in prison instead. Dickie Loeb met the letter of that punishment in 1936 after he was slashed 50 times in the shower with a straight razor by fellow prisoner James E. Day and died. Day claimed self-defense and was never charged with the killing of Loeb while Nathan Leopold was paroled to Puerto Rico where he died in 1971.     
            With Leopold and Loeb stepping into the spotlight murder in Chicago didn’t seem nearly as lighthearted as before and the female reporters who specialized in crimes committed by women were reassigned or walked away. It didn’t help that with Beulah Annan and Belva Gaertner acquitted, Sabella Nitta and Kitty Malm in State Prison, and Wanda Stopa dead at her own hand, the only women left at the Cook County Jail were old and ethnic which didn’t hold the same allure as Jazz Babies on a Bender. After covering the Leopold and Loeb trial, Maurine Watkins was reassigned to write movie reviews.
During her time at Radcliffe she had taken a playwriting course from George Pierce Baker at Harvard. By the end of 1924 Professor Baker had moved on to the newly established Department of Drama at Yale and Watkins was percolating an idea for a play based on her experiences as a reporter. That play was Chicago and it became a smash hit.
Maurine Watkins was never able to replicate the stage success of Chicago. Soon she was off to Hollywood where she dabbled in screenplays and short stories before moving to Jacksonville, Florida and committing herself to Christian endeavors and raising scholarships for students wishing to pursue studies in the Greek language or the Bible. She died of lung cancer in 1969 at the age of seventy-three. Deeply disappointed in both the 1927 silent version of Chicago starring Phyllis Haver, and the 1942 Ginger Rogers vehicle, Roxie Hart, Watkins refused to license her play as a musical in her lifetime but in 1975 her estate sold the rights to Bob Fosse who turned it into a smash hit on Broadway starring Gwen Verdon as Roxie Hart and Chita Rivera as Velma Kelly. It ran for 936 performances plus a tour. Twenty years later it was revived to equally great acclaim and in 2002 a movie version of Chicago starring Catherine Zeta Jones as Velma and Renee Zellweger as Roxie won six of its twelve Oscar nominations.
Douglas Perry has written an engaging romp of a book with serious undertones touching on criminals and the culture of celebrity. Mr. Perry does include some photographs in his book but he has a mildly annoying habit of describing particular photos in great details and then not including those photos in the book. I also would have liked for him to have shown more thorough follow-through on all the women mentioned in the book but overall I found The Girls of Murder City to be a fast and enjoyable read that I wouldn’t hesitate to recommend to anyone interested in the era.
 - Laura Wilkerson

Friday, February 11, 2011

Not-So-Random Picture Books I Love

First, in honor of the birthday of one of our favorite authors, Mo Willems I will share a couple of my favorites that he has written.  I should say, written and illustrated.  Mo's simple illustrations are amazing at showing emotion, yet give kids hope that they too could draw them.  Especially in the Pigeon and Elephant and Piggie books

Speaking of the Pigeon, we'll start with him.  There are several books featuring this character.  My favorite happens to be The Pigeon Finds a Hot Dog.  In this book we get a further glimpse into the Pigeon's character with his discovery of a hot dog, and the introduction of his nemesis the Ducky.  Though he is irritated, to say the least, by the Ducky, he does end up sharing the hot dog. (I hope that doesn't ruin the book for anyone.)  The pigeon is so much like many kids I've met, at once adorable and a bit annoying.  Very amusing and highly enjoyable, like the rest of Mr. Willems' books.

Elephant (or Gerald) and Piggie are the main characters in a series of early readers written and illustrated by Mo Willems as mentioned above.  They are laugh out loud funny, and kids of all ages love them.   Great for reading aloud, as long as your audience can see the illustrations, as they are as integral to the story as the words.  My favorite (so far) is Can I Play Too? which introduces us to another friend for Elephant and Piggie.  A snake.  Basically, the two friends are playing catch with a ball, and Snake wants to play too, but how can he, snakes have no arms?  Hilarity ensues as they try to include their new friend.  So. Funny.  Really.  If you are unfamiliar with these books, you really must experience to appreciate them.  What are you waiting for?  Get to the library and check out some of these books!

Naked Mole Rat Gets Dressed and Leonardo the Terrible Monster are another two of my favorite books by Mr. Willems, but there are more (I didn't even mention the Knuffle Bunnies or Edwina).  His books have heart, humor, great characters and great stories.  Not to mention dealing with day to day dilemmas that we all face. 



On to other books.

Today is also the birthday of author Jane Yolen.  Jane is the author of many, many (over 300) books.  These are but a few of her picture books. Many people are familiar with the "How Do Dinosaurs ____?" series, and award winners such as Owl Moon, however these are not the ones I want to share today.

Yolen's writing is always poetic and wonderful.  Some rhyme, some do not.

Come to the Fairies' Ball is a beautiful, beautiful book, wonderfully illustrated by  Gary Lippincott.  An enchanting, rhyming tale of the invitation, preparations and fun of a ball held by the King and Queen of the Fairies, with a Cinderella story in the midst.  The lyrical words and amazing illustrations make this one of my favorite picture books.  It is whimsical and magical.   I cannot put into the proper words how beautiful this book is.    



Jane's love of poetry is beautifully shown in My Uncle Emily, a story based on true events in the life of Emily Dickinson told through the eyes of her young nephew Gilbert (Gib) who was six at the time.  This touching story so captures this young boy's love of his Aunt, and provides a window into the family of one of America's most famous poets.  Wonderful story.  I wanted more, so I read the "What is true about this story" on the last page in which she includes the full poem used in the story entitled "Tell all the Truth" and tells more about the family.  This book was charmingly illustrated by Nancy Carpenter. 


One of the most moving picture books I have read is also written by Jane Yolen.  All Those Secrets of the World is an account of Jane's father going off (and coming home again) to war which took place when she was four years old.  (she was six when he returned)  I almost can't talk about this one, it moved me so.  The story begins with Jane's detailed recollections of the her father's leaving, the big ship, the ice cream Grandma bought her and her cousin Michael, "chocolate with jimmies", the hugs, and butterfly kisses.  The next day the children play in the water of the bay (which they were not supposed to do), and it is there that Michael shares one of the secrets of the world that help little Janie to understand better her father's absence, which she then shares with him upon his return.  Again, beautifully written by a master storyteller, and beautifully illustrated by Leslie Baker.

Whew!  I think that's enough for one day.  : )

~Jennifer