Set sail for murder

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Ray Bradbury

I read this poem today and the 1974 introduction to Ray Bradbury's Dandelion Wine, a novel that is close to autobiographical. It looks like an interesting novel that I am just getting into. I like this poem as it is a celebration of his home town of Waukegan, Illinois. I like to read about other people's childhoods. He makes an interesting statement about how everythingis beautiful to a child, at least the child he was. Beautiful to a poet, at least.



Byzantium, I come not from,


But from another time and place

Whose race was simple, tried and true;

As boy

I dropped me forth in Illinois.

A name with neither love nor grace

Was Waukegan, there I came from

And not, good friends, Byzantium.

And yet in looking back I see

From topmost part of farthest tree

A land as bright, beloved and blue

As any Yeats found to be true.

So we grew up with mythic dead

To spoon upon midwestern bread

And spread old gods’ bright marmalade

To slake in peanut-butter shade,

Pretending there beneath our sky

That it was Aphrodite’s thigh…

While by the porch-rail calm and bold

His words pure wisdom, stare pure gold

My grandfather, a myth indeed,

Did all of Plato supersede

While Grandmama in rockingchair

Sewed up the raveled sleeve of care

Crocheted cool snowflakes rare and bright

To winter us on summer night.

And uncles, gathered with their smokes

Emitted wisdoms masked as jokes,

And aunts as wise as Delphic maids

Dispensed prophetic lemonades

To boys knelt there as acolytes

To Grecian porch on summer nights;

Then went to bed, there to repent

The evils of the innocent;

The gnat-sins sizzling in their ears

Said, through the nights and through the years

Not Illinois nor Waukegan

But blither sky and blither sun.

Though mediocre all our Fates

And Mayor not as bright as Yeats

Yet still we knew ourselves. The sun?

Byzantium.

Byzantium.



Friday, August 17, 2012

Book Discussions

At the Tipp City Library we have two book discussion groups. For the Booklovers we read a variety of books, from literary, non-fiction, to memoirs. Sometimes I will even throw in a romance, a light read, or a mystery. I have tried to eliminate reading an author more than twice, but it happens a few times. The goal of Booklovers is to introduce new types of books to our patrons to read. Many times the books on hold  will be picked up and read by the patrons who do not want to participate in the discussion. I like to see that. For Booklovers our next read is Ape House by Sara Gruen. She also wrote Water for Elephants which turned out to be very popular and was even made into a movie. Ape House is a novel about the bonobo apes that communicate with sign language and have special computer skills to show what they wish to have such as pears or special blankets for their "nests". Join our discussion on Agust 27, Monday night at 7 pm, the fourth Monday of the month.
      The Tipp City Library hosts a Mystery Lovers Book Discussion on the second Monday of the month. The next discussion will be Monday, September 10th at 7 p.m. The group will be discussing a Susan C. Shea Dani O'Rourker mystery: Murder in the Abstract. This a debut novel, with hopes for more demand for the series. Books are available at the front desk to pick up. Both of these groups are open to the public at any time, so feel free to join the discussion.
        For the Mystery Lovers group the fall selction is October 8: The Victoria Vanishes by Christopher Fowler; November 12: Body Line by Cynthia Harrod-Eagles; and December 10: The Confession by Charles Todd.
        The Booklovers group also have their schedule set for the fall. September 24: Every Secret Thing by Ann Tatlock; October 22: In the Garden of Beasts: Love, Terror, and an American Family in Hitler's Berlin; November 26: Where Lilacs Still Bloom by Jane Kirkpatrick. Booklovers does not meet in December.

Friday, August 3, 2012

Book Discussion 2012

Just trying to keep the Booklovers Book Discussion list up to date:

So far this year we have read:

January: The Big Burn by Timothy Egan

February: State of Wonder by Ann Patchett

March: Lost in Shangri-La by Mitchell Zuckoff

April: Zeitoun by Dave Eggers

May: The First Wife by Paula McLain

June: A Moveable Feast by Ernest Hemingway

July: Catherine the Great by Robert K. Massie

coming up
August: The Ape House by Sara Gruen

September: Every Secret Thing by Ann Tatlock

October: In the Garden of Beasts by Erik Larson

Espionage Fiction

While this book is still fresh on my mind I'd like to make a note that this was not one of my favorite books by Alan Furst. Maybe because it was too short, or because the drama or suspense was not up to his usual standard. Everything just seemed a little too easy. Granted it was a quick read, something I like in the summer, but I have grown to expect more from Alan Furst, one of my favorite authors. Compared to the Sebastian Faulks novel, Charlotte Gray, it seemed to be missing a lot. The story is about a film star, Fredric Stahl, who comes to Paris in 1938 to make a movie. He is Vienna born as Franz Stalka, now living in Hollywood. Thinking he will enjoy Paris again, he finds he is drawn into a spy ring and isn't too sure he likes the consequences. As he finds himself being followed, he realizes the danger he is in, along with his friends. I have to go back an reread some of my favorites that he wrote, Dark Star comes to mind. Try this other review from another source. NPR rates in on this thriller.

Booklovers Book Discussion

Our next book for discussion at the Tipp City Public Library is Ape House by Sara Gruen. This is a very scientific book of fiction. Sara Gruen wanted to meet the bonobos and to communictae with the apes. She had to pass a thorough program to be admitted to the lab. In the story, Isabel Duncan is a scientist in the lab, helping to teach the apes sign language and use of a computer with symbols for items the apes want. When there is an attack on the lab, she doesn't know who to trust in getting the apes back. A fascinating look at these unique apes and the communication skills they have mastered. Discussion of this book will be Monday, August 27 at 7 pm. Books are available at the desk for discussion. Discussion questions can be located by clicking onto the title of the book in this blog.

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Signs of Life: a Memoir

Signs of Life is the story of a widow who has lost her young husband to a terrible accident. Natalie Taylor's book about her year of grieving the loss of her husband when she was twenty four has captivated me. I especially like her description of the students in her English Class. Because Gatsby is so special to me, I liked hearing her voice when she is speaking about her students discussing the book. Knowing she is pregnant now without a husband, her students are more compassionate to her. It is interesting to her what her students are saying. Each step of this new life is detailed with amazing clarity. She manages to capture the reader's attention without overwhelming sentimentality. She is grasping at her new life with amazing courage, but the grieving process is always there. She has trouble at first coping with her new young son, but you know in the end it is the joy of this new life that is bringing her to her next step in this journey of life.

Monday, June 18, 2012

It has been so long since I have posted anything. I was beginning to think I couldn't read anymore, but I think it is stress related. The Classics Book Discusson group at the Tipp City Library will not be meeting anymore. There doesn't seem to be an interest, or the timing isn't good. I read Catch 22 by Joseph Heller, then Passage to India by E.M Forster. Both books were difficult to get through, but were worth the effort. Just last night I was recommending to my daughter that if she is looking for a good book to read, check out books that were made into movies. The books are  better, and usually hold up to time. Just to get back into the swing of finishing a book in a few days I checked out one of my favorite author, Cynthia Harrod-Eagles, and she didn't let me down. Body Line was an intriquing mystery, with the good characterization and suspense that I look forward to. Just finishing that book made me breathe a sign of relief. I can still read. Even if some evenings I am just too tired and all I want to do is sleep. Happy summer reading. Check out Dead Days of Summer by Carolyn Hart. It's a fast read, with glimpses of summer on the eastern coastline of the States. It is a Death on Demand mystery, with Bookstore owner, Annie Darling doing most of the sleuthing with help from her friends, This time her husband, Max is being framed for a murder and she will stop at nothing to get him off. Risking her own life, she investigates a young female's murder, knowing that her Max is innocent. An easy read.

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Eowyn Ivey's debut novel is on our "staff picks" list. Julie Smith just finished it and wanted to recommend it to the other staff members. She said that it is beautifully written. The story takes place in the 1900's in Alaska. It depicts the harsh reality of homesteading in the Alaskan wilderness. The story is based on a fairy tale so there is a magical quality to the story. Eowyn Ivey gives credit to several books in the acknowlegements for the influence on her writing, "The Snow Child as retold by Freya Littledale and illustrated by Barbara Lavallee; Russian Lacquer; Legends and Fairy Tales by Lucy Maxym, in particular the story of 'Snegurochka'; amd 'Little Daughter of the Snow' from Arthur Ransome's Old Peter's Tales." I have heard more than one person recommend this book so I am putting it on my To Be Read pile. Check our catalog to request a copy.

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

The Importance of Kafka

This week the Classics Book Discussions is going to take under consideration, "Metamorphosis" by Franz Kafka. Born in Czechoslovakia, he studied German, finally finding his voice in writing at the age of 32. This short story is the tale of a traveling salesman who discovered upon waking, he has morphed into a giant cockroach. He is unable to speak and communicate with his family; they all assume he cannot understand them either. At first they have sympathy for him and his plight, but as the story progresses, they take a considerate amount of their frustration out on him, to the point of attacking and starving him to death. It was not the nightmare that I expected, but just the natural human tendency to take care of themselves at any cost and to blame all of their troubles on him. We are the reader, sympathetic to his arrangement, being locked in his room, with food thrown onto newspapers. Before long all the belongings in the household are being tossed into his room to make room for boarders the family is forced to take in to make ends meet. Since he had been the major breadwinner in the family, soon everyone is working and exhausted, and too busy to really care for him. Kafka is remembered for his addition to the literature of the world as someone who changed literature, having a great influence on the literature of his time. He died at the age of 41 probably of  tuberculosis. Here is a quote of his that shows him to be a sensitive man, in his 20’s:

"We are as forlorn as children lost in the wood. When you stand in front of me and look at me, what do you know of the grief's that are in me and what do I know of yours. And if I were to cast myself down before you and tell you, what more would you know about me that you know about Hell when someone tells you it is hot and dreadful? For that reason alone we human beings ought to stand before one another as reverently, as reflectively, as lovingly, as we would before the entrance to Hell."Franz Kafka written at 20 years of age-

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Reading for the Month

This month is National Poetry Month, and I am going to read more poetry. I'm lucky I work in the library beacause I can browse the shelves and find interesting poetry books, and books about poetry. I have the "Complete Works" by Shaklespeare at home right now and I am going through the sonnets. I need to read commentaries about his sonnets, the first ones seem to address Queen Elizabeth, who died without having children. Sonnet I "From fairest creatures we desire increase, That thereby beauty's rose might never die." I am also reading right now a memoir, "Signs of Life: Finding the Best in Yourself During the Worst Life Has to Offer a Memoir" by Natalie Taylor. Mrs. Taylor lost her husband ina terrible accident during her fourth month of pregnancy. She isn't afraid to share her most intimate thoughts, her fears and her feelings about the future. She teaches English in Royal Oak, Michigan.
     I like to read books that deal with the weather, or time of year when I am reading them. One book I have at home is "The Crossing Places" by Elly Griffiths. The library owns a book in the series, "The House at Sea's End ". I thought I'd start the first in the series, but it starts in the raw of winter and I think I'll save it for next winter if it snows maybe. Another winter book I am saving is, "An English Murder" by Cyril Hare. I have read the first 30 pages and it promises to be a good read for a cozy, wrapped up in quilts in front of the fireplace kind of day. Cyril Hare was born in 1900, and his books are a treat.
    I think I'll share a appropriate poem for the season:



I wandered lonely as a cloud

That floats on high o'er vales and hills,

When all at once I saw a crowd,

A host, of golden daffodils;

Beside the lake, beneath the trees,

Fluttering and dancing in the breeze.



Continuous as the stars that shine

And twinkle on the milky way,

They stretched in never-ending line

Along the margin of a bay:

Ten thousand saw I at a glance,

Tossing their heads in sprightly dance.



The waves beside them danced; but they

Out-did the sparkling waves in glee:

A poet could not but be gay,

In such a jocund company:

I gazed--and gazed--but little thought

What wealth the show to me had brought:



For oft, when on my couch I lie

In vacant or in pensive mood,

They flash upon that inward eye

Which is the bliss of solitude;

And then my heart with pleasure fills,

And dances with the daffodils.

William Wordsworth

Friday, March 23, 2012

Rachael Herron

I read Rachael Herron's new book, Life in Stitches: Knitting My Way Through Love, Loss, and Laughter, 20 Pieces this past winterThis book is a memoir of her life as a knitter, but more importantly, it's about her life of finding herself and her work.She received her MFA in writing from Mills College, but she is more than a romance author. She has been knitting since she was five years old, and it is truly her passion. I found out from the book she supports herself with her job as a emergency dispatch operator. She has been keeping a blog since 2003. And she writes romantic fiction built around Cypress Hollow Yarn with knitting as the theme. Each book of the series features a new character. The books in the series are:
1. How to Knit a Love Song: a Cypress Hollow Yarn novel
2. How to Knit a Heart Back Home: a Cypress Hollow Yarn novel 
3.Wishes and Stitches: a Cypress Hollow Yarn novel. I enjoyed meeting Rachael in her book, and left feeling as if I had found a friend. She lives in Washington state and she is in love with Venice. The link to her blog yarnagogo is in the title of this blog.

     I have been knitting more than ever, but since my sock knitting class at the library is winding down this week, I am turning back to quilting. I want to add classes on hand-piecing for the summer. It's light weight, portable, and busy work if you are traveling. That is where I am going next in my future focus at the library.
     But first I have to think about National Poetry month, and I am trying to have a series of things going on. Susan Hoke will be teaching on Friday afternoons during April, using the book, Poetry Matters: Writing a Poem From the Inside Out by Ralph Fletcher. Those classes will be 4-5 pm on Fridays in April. Then during the week of April 23 we will be celebrating with "A Poem in Your Pocket." Poems can be picked up off the bulliten board for your own personal pleasure. Then on April 26th, A Poem in Your Pocket Day, I will be handing out poems in town. On Friday, after Susan's class, we will be hosting a Poetry Reading. Bring your poetry or your favorites and share them with a group of like-minded people. I think I'll share some of the Mayor of New York City's poetry found on NYC Poem in Your Pocket Day.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Lost in Shangri-la by Mitchell Zuckoff

Lost in Shangri-La: A True Story of Survival, Adventure, and the Most Incredible Rescue Mission of World War II  by Mitchell Zuckoff gets mixed reviews, but for me it held my interest. I was impressed by the courage of the rescuers and by the rescue plan itself, something that hadn't been tired in that type of terrain. The Booklovers Book Discussion group will be talking about this book on Monday, March 26th at 2pm and at 7 pm. You may pick up a copy at the front deak of the Tipp City Public Library if you want to join the discussion. It's an easy read, capturing your imagination immediately , and if you like historical events you will find it fascinating. The author, Mitchell Zuckoff has been awarded for his writing for the Boston-Globe. Now a professor at Boston University College of Communication, Mr. Zuckoff lives in Boston with his wife and two children. Originally I had heard the author was from Cincinnati, but maybe that was earlier in his career.

Agatha Christie Queen of Crime Sweepstakes

Acorn is hosting a Queen of Crime Sweepstakes. Win a trip to London. Follow the link in my title and enter by April 30, 2012. I have loved Agatha Christie since I was thirteen and saw the movie, And Then There Were None, followed by reading the book, Ten Little Indians, released in 1965 in the US by that name. Yes, I was thirteen in 1965, but like an elephant I can remember a lot from that time. I was a Girl Scout, I lived in Beavercreek, Ohio, and I loved to read. Ten Little Indians takes place on Indian Island. Ten people are given a written invitation to join the host for a weekend, then one by one, the guests are murdered. The movie version has the guests on a mountain that they can only access by a ski lift. I can still see someone trying to cut the cable. Try it for good escapism. So much for cozy mystery.

Monday, March 12, 2012

The Available Man by Hilma Wolitzer

.I just finished this book last night. I was taken with the characters, a widower, his two step children, his mother-in-law and all the other characters in the book. It is a slow paced novel, but the humor definitely connected with me. Edward Schuyler has been grieving the death of his wife for over three years. He is a sixty-four year old teacher, married for over 20 years to a wonderful woman that he had felt so lucky to find after 15 years of bachelorhood. His children wanted him to date, so they had set up an ad in the newspaper. Edward's dating adventures after all these year are sad and funny, and real. After reading this book I'm sure you will want to look for some of her others, I certainly did. She has written: Hearts; Summer Reading; and The Doctor's Daughter to name a few. Here is her biography from Barnes and Nobel. Her writing reminded me of Elinor Lipman who writes domestic fiction also. Lucky for us more of Elinor Lipman's books can be found at the Tipp City Public Library. Try The Pursuit of Alice Thrift for a fun novel.

Monday, February 27, 2012

Accelerated Degree host Blog Award

I have been nominated for the distinction of Most Fascinating Blog of 2012 in the category of Librarian Blog.
Here is the letter I received.
Hi there,



It's finally here - voting starts today! The voting will continue to March 6 at 11:59 P.M (EST). The site with the most votes will win the grand prize, a $200 restaurant gift card as well as permission to display the prestigious "Winner" emblem on their website!
  • All blogs listed on the ballot are randomized every time the poll is accessed to ensure the fairness and integrity of the results.
  • All votes are 100% anonymous and secure through the use of a 128 bit SSL connection.
  • The ballot contains a list of 100 nominees which have been chosen by our editorial staff and were selected from a pool of over 2,300 submissions.
  • Click here to view the voting page. Share this link in a blog post and on your facebook/twitter to maximize your votes.
    Good luck and thank you for your participation!
    Matthew Pelletier
    Director of Public Relations

Saturday, February 25, 2012

The Healing by Jonathan Odell



This powerful novel begins in the 1933 when a woman's dead body and her small child, Violet, who was around seven years old show up at Gran Gran's home. A white man brought them to Gran Gran, an older woman who was once the healer on the slave plantation, and who knew the mysteries of root magic and birthing. Gran Gran is unsure what to do with this mute child who is traumatized by the death and disappearance of her mother. Gran Gran begins to dose her with sleeping remedies, and slowly the girl is not shaking, and twitching, and is beginning to be drawn to Gran Gran, following her around in the small home. The child finds clay masks hanging in a back room, and seems confused. Gran Gran explains about the clay masks that she had made many years ago to remember that people who once lived on the slave plantation with her. She relates her story to Violet, of how she had been brought up in the master's mansion when the master's daughter dies of fever. She is dressed up in the dead daughter's dresses on Sunday to soothe the master's wife who is dealing with her grief. When the master suddenly brings home an expensive slave woman, Polly Shine, to heal the sick slaves, Polly decides that she needs to help this young girl, called Granada, remember her people and teach her how to heal them. The book is full of slave stories that go back generations, and it is Polly who helps the people remember that the master doesn't own their freedom, and they must remember that it is God who created the world, not the master. This powerful mystery that Granada is just learning about, heals Granada herself and gives her the vision that had been lost to her. And it is these stories that are also used to heal Violet, who remembers her own story. This is an excellent story that could begin a dialog about race and personal power.

Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close

I read this book over the winter, but I didn't know there was a movie coming out. Often I read the book and listen to the audio book. The audio version had various narrators to give voice to the mother, the child and the grandmother. The questions that kept coming up in my mind, the parts that didn't make sense, many of them were resolved at the end of the book. The boy, Oskar Schell, has lost his father during the attack on the Twin Towers in New York City on 9/11/2001. He lives with his mother, and his grandmother lives in an apartment across the street. he is very close to his grandmother, in fact he would stay with her when he was younger and his parents were at work. Now he is about nine, can go home by himself, but still he will call his grandmother and ask if she is okay. He is not coping with the death of his father very well. He is tormented by the phone calls that his father made to the apartment during the attack, but he cannot bring himself to talk to his mother about those calls. His father kept saying, please pick up, we may be going to the roof to be rescued, but he never said goodbye, or I love you, and this is something that Oskar wants to keep to himself. He is going through his father's things and finds a vase, with a key inside. He decides that this key must be important, he must find the lock it belongs to, and thus the story begins; he is meeting many people in New York City as he tries to solve the mystery his father has left for him. There are flashbacks into the grandmother's life, her childhood in Germany, the death of her family in the bombing during the war. Little by little we find out the deep secrets of her marriage, her husband, and why Oskar's father was raised by his mother alone. The story has twists that make it interesting, things the child doesn't know, but his mother does, and his grandmother cannot tell him. Those little revelations make up the book, and how all of us have to deal with grief in our own way and find our own answers. I look forward to the movie, but I know beforehand that some characters were mixed together, and that in itself makes it seem weird. My first reading of anything by Jonathan Safran Foer, a young writer.

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

World Book Night

ZeitounThe Tipp City Library supports World Book Night, April 23, 2012. I will be handing out books to new readers to encourage reading. I have chosen the title from a list of free books. I am going to chose a place to hand books out so that I can reach people who don't normally come to the library. In addition to World Book Night, April 23 is Tipp City Library's Big Read Book Discussion night at 7 pm. The Big Read for Dayton this year is Zeitoun by Dave Eggers, a true story of a Muslim man caught up in the drama of Katrina. This also coincides with the anniversary of the Flood in Dayton. Some Big Read events will be on the Dayton flood. The Miami Conservancy has on online display of pictures of the flood in the area. I was surprised to note that when they had to build the dams in Dayton, two town were moved, Fairfield and Osborne, thus Fairborn was created. Allan W. Eckert's book, A Time of Terror: The Great Dayton Flood, 1965 tells first-hand accounts of that time.
Pauline Persing has been teaching art to young people for many years. She has provided at display at the library for the month of February. She posted information about the art and the techniques she is teaching on her blog. http://www.paulinepersing.blogspot.com/ Click on to see the display at the library.
I have been nominated for the 2012 Most Fascinating Blog of the year under the category Librarian Blogger for my post on the Classics Book Discussion on The Great Gatsby. Maybe my love of the novel came through on my blog. It has been a wonderful year reading the classics and discussiong them with library patrons. We have announced the books for the next four months:

For March 5th at 7 pm and March 15th at 1 pm: Middlemarch by George Eliot, 1871
For April 2nd at 7 pm and April 12th ar 1 pm: The Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka, 1915
For May 7th at 7 pm and May 10 at 1 pm: Catch 22 by Joseph Heller, 1961
For June 4th at 7 pm and June 14 at 1 pm: A Passage to India by E. M Forster, 1924
I hope to draw more people in by offering the discussion at two different times.
Let me know what you think about reading these books. and vote for my blog.

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Announcing Poetry Appreciation Class for April 2012

Interested in poetry? Want to learn more? Tipp City Library is hosting a poetry class on Fridays in April of 2012 from 4-5 pm. Hosted by Susan Hoke, teacher and poetry writer; she will be using the book Poetry matters : writing a poem from the inside out / Ralph Fletcher. This is a very basic book. She will be introducing terms and styles of poetry. Registration is requested, drop-ins will be acceptable. We will order the books for the participants and make them available for check out. The title of the 5 week class, running from April 6th through May 4th is "April is the Coolest Month for Poetry." Once you have some of the basics down more help on poetry can be found in Stephen Fry's book, The Ode Less Travelled: Unlocking the Poet Within. Funny thing happened to me last night. I was searching through the magazine donation box, and a man reading poetry in the rocking chair by the window asked me to recommend a poem. The first that came to mind was, "When Your Father Dies" by Diana Der-Hovanessian.  This was shared by my brother when my father died, and I love it. Of course I couldn't put my hand on it that moment. He had a big book of poems and wanted me to recommmend a poem in the book, so I found a poem by W. H. Auden , " In Memory of W. B. Yeats." It was a beautiful moment, a man sharing his love of poetry with me on the day Susan had offered to teach an appreciation of poetry class. Check out this website about Ohio Writers: http://www.wiredforbooks.org/

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

AncestryPlus

Just checking out some of the databases that the OPLIN libraries provide for the libraries in the state of Ohio and I just noticed that they added Ancestry, in-library version.  At the library on Feb 25 I am going to present a demonstration of AncestryPlus. It will be a computer hands-on computer class so sign-up is limited. Log in is available in the library only. Check it out, you never know what you will find.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Humor for the New Year

I have been reading so many humorous books that I have lost track. My first was "If It Was Easy, They'd Call the Whole Damn Thing a Honeymoon" by Jenna McCarthy. This was my introduction to Jenna McCarthy,  She is an author who writes for magazines. On the Self magazine website I found a listing of articles that she wrote on how to keep your relationship sexy. Her book was all about the "men are from Mars" take, how annoying he can be, and she gathered lots of quotes from women with titles that said,"at least I'm not married to him." I loved reading all the little stories of their relationship and how she adapts to his style, and how patience he is with her idiosyncrasies, especially since she is writing about their relationship. And I can understand that many of the stories were probably exaggerated but, there had to be some tiny element of truth. I found the book hillarious.