Tag Archives: books

See and Listen to the World with Hoopla!: My Favorite International Choices Available on Hoopla

27 May

Hopefully our Hoboken Public Library Resident Cardholders have already been enjoying movies, TV shows, music, and audiobooks from Hoopla, but if you haven’t yet checked it out, do so today!  I listed a few of my highlights for Hoopla’s debut already.  For this post I thought I’d look at some of the great international selections you can check out from Hoopla.  Of course you can find hit American movies like The Big Lebowski or listen to artists like Jay-Z, Delta Rae and of course Hoboken’s own Sinatra, but I’m also having lots of fun enjoying a plethora of International choices available from Hoopla.  In the honor of the eight free checkouts per month you can have from Hoopla, here are eight international choices I have enjoyed.

Farewell My Queen

farewell-my-queen

Image via Hoopla

The French period drama, Les Adieux à la Reine (Farewell My Queen), is set just before and after the fall of the Bastille at the Palace of Versailles.  It is based on the best-selling novel by Chantal Thomas (the print book is available from HPL).  Léa Seydoux stars as Sidonie, one of Marie Antoinette’s servants whose main task is to read novels, fashion magazines, and other publications to her monarch.  Sidonie is clearly in love with the Queen, but Marie Antoinette though giving her special favors and confidences at times also seems cold and aloof at others.  Definitely borrow Farewell My Queen if you are a Francophile or a fan of Sofia Coppola’s Marie Antoinette for another distinctive depiction of the Queen, masterfully acted by Diane Kruger.

Mood Indigo (L’Écume des Jours)

mood-indigo

Image via Hoopla

The Surreal Tragic Romance, Mood Indigo is a French movie based on Boris Vian’s 1947 novel Froth on the Daydream.  It stars Romain Duris and Audrey Tautou, who I have been a fan of since another quirky French film, AmelieMood Indigo includes a resident mouse played by a man in a mouse suit, a piano that when played creates cocktails themed to the music, and other unique visuals.  Mood Indigo was co-written and directed by Michel Gondry, who was also responsible for the eccentric American film, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind and several of Bjork’s music videos.  Fans of Gondry’s work should be captivated by Mood Indigo.

Jack and The Cuckoo Clock Heart

jack-and-the-cuckoo-clock-heart

Image via Hoopla

Jack and The Cuckoo Clock Heart is based on the book La Mécanique du Cœur by Mathias Malzieu and concept album by his band Dionysos.  The music for the movie is also provided by Dionysos and it proves a cooler sound track than many similar animated movies.  The version available from Hoopla has been dubbed in English, but is set in Scotland, France, and Spain.  What I enjoyed about the movie is though it is darkly whimsical and could be described as Steampunk, it does both in a decidedly unique French way so is different from American Steampunk and spooky playful American animations like those of Tim Burton.  The story’s beautiful, but sad ending could provide an opportunity to discuss with older children about grieving and loss.  You can also borrow the CD La Mécanique Du Coeur by Dionysos from Hoopla.

Nocturna

nocturna

Image via Hoopla

If you and the kids in your life enjoyed Monsters, Inc., you should also find this Spanish/French coproduction a delight.  Although it was originally animated in Spanish, the English dubbing synchronization is excellent.  Nocturna tells the story of a young orphan named Tim who is afraid of the dark and only can sleep through the night because of his special star.  One evening his star disappears and when he goes looking for her he encounters the cat shepherd, who introduces him to the world of Nocturna where whimsical humanoid creatures orchestrate everything at night from the tangles children get in their hair to the banging of the window panes.  The traditional style drawn animation has a muted color palate of mostly browns and golds and a unique visual style.

L’Ame Immortelle

jenseit-der-schatten

Image via Hoopla

I mentioned in my last Hoopla related post about being excited to download Austrian Darkwave act, L’Ame Immortelle’s latest album.  Like their earlier recordings, I enjoyed it very much and listened to about a dozen times during the seven days I had it checked out.  Their music features a juxtaposition of electronic music with gritty male vocals with more atmospheric cabaret or almost operaesque female vocals. This seems a fitting style for their many songs of love and longing sung in German and English.  You can borrow several of the recordings on Hoopla; I especially like Jenseits der Schatten featuring the amazing track “Tiefster Winter”, which is for me one of those songs I enjoy listening to over and over again.

Ruby Gloom

ruby-gloom

Image via Hoopla

Fans of Tim Burton, Roman Dirge’s Lenore graphic novels, and Invader Zim, will find charm in Ruby Gloom, a Canadian Animated show.  Ruby Gloom looks like a gothic Raggedy Anne and always stays positive despite living in a gloomy old mansion with her black cat and a raven named Poe.  This whimsically spooky show isn’t too scary for kids, but will be especially appealing to tweens.  I fell in love with Ruby Gloom when I found a clip online so was thrilled to find all three seasons available on Hoopla.

Birthday Massacre

birthday-massacre

Image via Hoopla

For those who want a bit more whimsical darkness from our Northern neighbor this time in musical form, listening to Canadian band Birthday Massacre is a must.  One of my favorite bands they have a goth/emo look, but to me a wider appeal beyond either of those genres.  Their music has a distinctive electronic sound and exclusively use violet tinted imagery with reoccurring motifs like rabbits on their artwork (the founding members met getting fine art degrees) gives them a dark fairy tale like feel.  You can listen to a variety of their albums from Hoopla including their first Nothing and Nowhere and latest Superstition. So check them out; I hope you love them as much as I do.

Norwegian Wood

norwegian-wood

Image via Hoopla

If you are a fan of Anime (Japanese Animation), which is often geared to an adult audience, Hoopla has a variety of movies and TV shows to choose from.  But besides anime, there are several Japanese cinematic gems to check out with Hoopla.  Norwegian Wood (Noruwei No Mori) is based on Haruki Murakami’s classic coming of age tale about a teenager, Toru Watanabe, who leaves his hometown to go to school in Tokyo after his best friend, Kizuki, commits suicide.  He becomes involved in a love triangle with Kizuki’s girlfriend as well as an alluring fellow student Midori.  The student protests of the 1960s add an interesting historical backdrop for this romantic tale.  Murakami is one of the most popular Japanese author’s worldwide so his works are definitely worth checking out and several are available from Hoopla as audiobooks including the short story collection Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman, whose title story includes characters from Norwegian WoodNorwegian Wood the book is available in print from BCCLS libraries; this and the other movies I have mentioned are also available from BCCLS on DVD.

-Written by Aimee Harris, Head of Reference

Turn, Turn, Turn: Reading About Pete Seeger’s Times

28 Jan

Yesterday, we lost a true legend although I doubt that he thought of himself as such.  For those of us who came of age in the fifties and sixties, it is impossible to remember the world without Pete Seeger’s music.  Whenever there was a hootenanny, a song fest, a music festival replete with banjoes plinking and guitars strumming, there was Pete Seeger.  In fact, without Pete Seeger and his original group, the Weavers, folk music as an integral part of twentieth century culture might never have come to be.

Image via Wikipedia

Pete Seeger, however, was much more than a singer: he was a storyteller, first and foremost; an environmentalist; a political activist; an advocate for the rights of all men.  Moreover, he did not just stand for his principles; he went to jail for them and was blacklisted from performing because of his political associations.

I could make a long list of the hundreds of songs that Seeger recorded in his lifetime.  I could make an even longer list of the “covers” that were recorded of his songs by Judy Collins, Buffy St. Marie, Arlo Guthrie, Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, and nearly every folk-connected musician of the time period.

However, I think it is more important to portray the multi-dimensional man through books about him and his causes.  As you look at this list of books, somewhere in your mind, you will hear the plink-plink of a banjo, the strum of a guitar, and that familiar rusty voice singing We Shall Overcome.  It will become an earworm, but one worth “listening” to as it evolves into a catalog of Seeger favorites.

Hudson River Journey: Images from Lake Tear in the Clouds to New York Harbor, photos by Hardie Truesdale and text by Joanne Michaels.  Foreword by Pete Seeger.

hudson-river-journey

Walking the Hudson: from the Battery to bear Mountain: the First Guide to Walking the First 56 Miles of the Hudson River Trail, by Cy Adler.

walking-the-hudson

In the 1970s, the Hudson River was a chemical disaster.  Fish and animals could not live in the river.  The environment surrounding the river was being destroyed by pollution and chemical dumping.  Seeger led the movement to clean up the river and make it available to people in New York as a recreational center, again.  In 2002, he was honored for his work as an Environmental Hero.  These books show you the reclaimed river and what Seeger worked so hard to save.

We Shall Overcome: The History of the Civil Rights Movement, by Reggie Finlayson.

we-shall-overcome

Freedom Song: Young Voices and the Struggle for Civil Rights, by Mary C. Turck.

freedom-song

February is Black History Month, and it is particularly relevant that we remember the place that music held in the marches and demonstrations to the Civil Rights movement.  Frequently, the songs sung were revived gospel and spiritual music that had a place in African American history.  Always, at the front of the Civil Rights demonstrations were singers like Harry Belafonte, Joan Baez, Odetta, and Peter, Paul and Mary.  These were the songs played and sung from the bridge in Selma, to the Reflecting Pool in front of the Washington Monument, to Washington Square in New York.  The songs carried the message: we shall all be free.

Pete Seeger’s Storytelling Book, by Pete Seeger.

storytelling-book

A gem of a book for any beginning or proficient storyteller.  Not only does Seeger share his favorite tales and practiced storytelling techniques, he also ends the book with a wonderful chapter of story beginnings with no ends.  The purpose of the chapter is to give young or new tellers a jumping off point to create their own stories.  As Seeger reminds you, people don’t come to hear a story; they come to hear the storyteller.  The important part of telling a tale is what the storyteller brings to the performance.  This is a bible for new and developing storytellers which is becoming a lost art.

Some Friends to Feed: The Story of Stone Soup, by Pete Seeger and Paul Dubois Jacobs, with illustrations by Michael Hays.

some-friends-to-feed

You may have heard this story told by Marcia Brown or Heather Forrest (my personal favorite).  It is a famous old tale of two itinerant soldiers wandering through a German village trying to cadge a meal from the unfriendly villages.  When no one offers food, the soldiers use it as a lesson in sharing with your fellow man by making a broth out of stones and encouraging the villagers to share what they can for a community meal.

One Grain of Sand: A Lullaby, by Pete Seeger.

one-grain-of-sand

This is a quiet song to share with your child at bedtime.  You will subtly reinforce the message that we live in a fragile world, one that needs to be protected, and that all of the Earth’s inhabitants are connected as one great family.

Abiyoyo, by Pete Seeger.

abiyoyo

I have been shamelessly stealing this story from Mr. Seeger for years, and it is one of my favorite to tell.  Set in an African village, it involves a young banjo-playing boy and his magician father.  Together the two are regarded as village annoyances and driven from the village. (Here is a vocabulary word for everyone: ostracize.  The boy and his father are ostracized, which means they had to go live at the edge of the village).  However, when a mythological monster, Abiyoyo, comes to destroy the village, only the father and the boy have the secret to controlling him elevating them to heroes among the townspeople.  This is a bit scary for the youngest readers, but a memorable and fun sing along for the teller to share.

Foolish Frog, by Pete Seeger.

foolish-frog

Image via Amazon

Another tell-and-sing story as kids learn the story of the frog from “way down South in the yankety yank, a bullfrog jumped from bank to bank” and the repetitive verse sung as various farm animals.  Honestly, there isn’t much point to the story, but once you get the kids singing to tune, they’ll forget everything but the fun.  It helps if you have a banjo or a ukulele to plink along with the song.

Turn, Turn, Turn: Words from Ecclesiastes Circa 250 BCE, translated into English in 1607, illustrated by Wendy Anderson Halperin.

turn-turn-turn

Beyond the Biblical reading of “To everything there is a season, and a time for every purpose under heaven,” there is the sheer beauty and poetry of this Biblical passage.  Seeger set it to music and it has been sung by many artists, most notably Judy Collins and The Byrds in the 1960s.  The pictorial interpretation in this edition is very special, dividing each verse into a circle which forces the reader to “turn, turn, turn” the page to appreciate the illustrations.  Each circle is divided in half so that readers can compare and contrast the illustrations for, “A time to plant a time to sow, a time to laugh a time to weep, a time we may embrace, a time to refrain from embracing.”  Of course, as a message of the time, the final verse is, “A time to love a time to hate, a time of war a time of peace, oh Lord, I pray it’s not too late.”  The message continues to be relevant as the world never seems to learn the lesson of peace.

Pete Seeger: His Life in His Own Words, by Pete Seeger.

pete-seeger

This is not for children, but tells, from the pen of the man, about his early life, his political involvement, his years on the blacklist which led him to the world of children’s performance, his environmental causes, and his joyous gift of making and sharing music with the world.

Of Pete Seeger, I can only say that he lived his life long and well, he fought for his causes with courage and conviction, and he sang his songs for all the world to hear.  He will be remembered, and there’s little more that a man can ask of his life.  So long, Mr. Seeger.  It’s been good to know you.

Written by Lois Gross Rubin, Senior Children’s Librarian