Tuesday, February 11, 2014

This Week's Staff Favorites: Volume 47



The Pianist by Wladyslaw Szpilman
This is the story of Wladyslaw Szpilman, a Polish-Jewish pianist who, through luck and divine intervention, survived the German occupation of Poland. The book begins by describing a very memorable scene: Wladyslaw playing Chopin’s Nocturne in C#Minor live on the radio. His piece is interrupted halfway through by German shelling. And so begins his journey of survival. Slowly he and his family are forced into Jewish ghettos and eventually are made to board a train to Treblinka, a Jewish concentration camp. However, just before Szpilman gets on the train, he is recognized by one of the officers, separated from his family, and pulled out of line--an act that saved his life. He would find later that his parents and siblings did not survive their time in the camp. Wladyslaw seeks help from various friends who all give him temporary shelter, but soon he has nowhere else to go. He finds himself living in abandoned buildings and eating whatever food he can find. One day he discovers a piano and cannot resist playing Chopin. A German military officer discovers him but instead of turning him in, he brings him food and clothing--another act that would save his life. When Szpilman is finally able to come out of hiding after the war, he discovers that the German military officer who helped him has been captured and is in a prisoner of war camp. However, Wladyslaw had never asked his name and was not able to find him until it was too late. The book ends with Szpilman resuming his live radio rendition of Chopin’s Nocturne in C#Minor. This story is incredibly sad, but one worth reading. And it’s available in SWAN.

-Donna D., Reference


The Soldier’s Wife by Margaret Leroy
When Vivienne de la Mare’s husband is sent away to fight in the English army during World War II, she has no idea just how much her life will change. Vivienne struggles to take care of her two daughters and mother-in-law as the island of Guernsey, part of the Channel Islands, becomes occupied by German soldiers. When a couple of the soldiers move in to the house next door to hers, she finds herself falling for one of them, a German named Gunther. It becomes obvious that Vivienne has not been happy in her marriage for a long time, and Gunther seems to make her feel things that she hasn’t in a while. However, trying to keep her relationship with him a secret on a small island is something Vivienne finds difficult to do. In the end, she must decide whether this man is worth all of the risks and shame that come along with an affair with the enemy.

Although I don’t often read historical fiction, this one was very hard for me to put down. I felt many different emotions throughout the entire book, and it helped me to see what life may have been like in a different part of the world during World War II. I highly recommend the book to anyone who enjoys a good love story with some historical details thrown in. It is available through SWAN.

- Lynn, Reference


Wool by Hugh Howey
Any fan of dystopian fiction needs to read Wool, the start of a fantastic science fiction series by Hugh Howey.  Wool was originally self-published as a series of 5 e-novellas in 2011.  The setting depicted in the novel is familiar to many readers; it resembles our current society, though because the environment has become uninhabitable and the air toxic, humans live in a silo, built hundreds of feet into the ground.   Everything to sustain life takes place in the silo, from hydroponic farms, to the IT center.  One day, the silo's sheriff, Holston, expresses the one sentiment that is punishable by 'cleaning'- he wishes to go outside. 'Cleaners' are sent out of the silo, in a suit constructed as best as IT can configure to withstand the noxious environment as long as possible (which isn't very long), to clean the sensors on the outside of the silo, and then make their way into the unknown. Holston's replacement as sheriff is an unlikely candidate, Juliette, from 'down deep.'  Juliette has no interest in being sheriff, but she does wonder what would cause Holston, a seemingly sane man, to want out of the silo. Juliette's investigation results in sinister realizations about the silo, its history, and the uninhabitable outside.  I can see why this series did so well that it was able to make the leap from self-e-publishing to print.  Though dystopian fiction is a flooded genre at this point, this series is fresh and intriguing with many well-developed characters.  Wool is followed by two more books, Shift and Dust, and is available through SWAN.

-Jen, Youth Services

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