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#METOO: Shout, Speak and Women are Some Kind of Magic

18 May

We are at a time when it is easy to feel alone, especially for those that have been through an ordeal such as sexual abuse, it is even harder to handle alone. Healing can come in different ways, and poetry seems to be fitting because what better way to repair one’s soul than to take in information in bits like poetry or verse. Authors like Laurie Halse Anderson and Amanda Lovelace are known not to shy away from this challenging subject. They work hard to give voice to those that have been silenced through abuse.

Shout and Speak
by Laurie Halse Anderson
shout
Laurie Halse Anderson is the author of  Speak, her most famous book, which was also adapted into a movie starring Kristen Stewart. Speak was published in 1999. It brought to light what we see today in the #metoo movement, the perspective and growth of a victim into a survivor of sexual assault. This theme is carried out in her memoir in verse, Shout. The book Shout explains where her idea for Speak came from, which was her own experience of sexual assault at 13 years old by an older classmate. Although this book has a heavy undertone, revolving around this theme are lighter moments. These books are recommended for those High School aged and older. Anderson has always been a vocal advocate of survivors of sexual assault and the teaching of consent.

Women Are Some Kind Of Magic Series
by Amanda Lovelace
the mermaid's voice returns in this one
NJ author, Amanda Lovelace, published her first book before earning her bachelor’s degree.  Lovelace expresses her life of loss, resilience, and hope in her three-part series named “Women are Some Kind of Magic.” Through the series, she uses the women in her life and her experiences to express problems personal to her. Each book revolves around a different theme. In The Princess Saves Herself in this One, she speaks to the subject of resilience. In The Witch Doesn’t Burn in this One, she speaks of survival. In her last book, The Mermaids Voice Returns in this One, she goes between the themes of escapism and healing.  Stay tuned for our upcoming Wednesday’s blog when another of our library’s staff talks more about The Princess Saves Herself in this One.

Written by:
Elbie Love
YA Library Associate

Writing a Fictional Future: The End of October

15 May

 

end of october

image from eBCCLS

Pandemic worst case scenario: An individual, infected with a highly transmittable and potentially fatal disease at a densely populated location. Say an airport. Or say a sports event like a football game. Or something worse, because of the international composition of the crowds, who have the potential to carry that illness back when they return to their countries of origin, like the hadjj, in Mecca, where Muslim pilgrims converge to worship in a sort of controlled chaos that brings together some three million humans. That’s exactly what happens in Lawrence Wright’s new thriller, The End of October.

 

Okay, so if that’s just too much for you to handle, even fictionally, given the state of the world right now, stop reading this review, and don’t even consider reading the book. If you care to be amazed by the prescient nature of the novel written before we had even heard of the city of Wuhan, and to get a crash course in the science underlying concepts that have rewritten life as we know it, get this book.

For the record, a NPR interview with Wright says he began writing the book in 2017, and submitted his final version at the end of 2019.

Lawrence Wright has done his homework and shares a lot of the background as he writes about an epidemiologist, Henry Parsons, who gets caught up in investigating a new influenza-like disease that comes out of nowhere and threatens to wipe out civilization. Henry, for his part, just wants to contain the epic problem and get back to his family.

So you will learn about various types of influenza, the history of vaccinations, some medical breakthroughs. All good stuff. But the chilliest and horror-like similarities to our current crisis pop up in droves: ventilator shortages, the vice president appointed as the point person for the pandemic, economic closures wrecking havoc on the lives of millions of people. Every time I heard the phrase “nobody could have seen this coming” on the news I think of this book and the research that led to it and give credit to Wright for seeing writing on the wall, and connecting the dots. 

Which is not to say that all the parts align precisely and you should keep turning the pages to find out how this all plays out in real life. There are significant differences such as who are the fictional baddies. 

Be prepared to keep turning pages quickly. And remember, and keep telling yourself, this book is fiction.

This title is available on eBCCLS.  You can see all of our great eBook options on our website here.

Written by:
Victoria Turk
Reference Librarian

Friday Writing Prompt
Research a topic of interest and write about a fictional version of it.  This could be about a pandemic like Wright’s, but it could also be on a topic like Artificial Intelligence and how it will effect our future.  No one says the future has to be bleak though, maybe your vision of the future could be more idealistic, think Star Trek.  Use your research as a jumping off point and then think of the type of characters who you want to feature in your story.  Are they everyday people who are being impacted by what is occurring or are they a scientist or politician instrumental in making decisions that will shape the direction of society?  Does the main conflict come from what is occurring or does this event simply form a backdrop for a romance or mystery?

If you are interested in writing your own personal story about your experience during the pandemic you can learn more about our history project here.

Written by
Aimee Harris
Head of Reference