Every week, Miss Kathleen provides links to a variety of stories about libraries, authors, and books. If there’s something fun going on in your local library, leave us a comment!
Bookshelves can be so blah. After all, they all look the same. But not these bookshelves! Check out these amazing works of art, that can house your works of art!
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You’ve watched all the TED talks — now here’s your chance to give your own! TED is accepting one-minute audition videos until April 26, so have a go! Maybe talk about why libraries are so important?
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People who love Ayn Rand can find it hard to meet others who share their rational passions. But no more! Now there is a dating and networking website just for such devotees—The Atlasphere. I read The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged, but I can’t say I’m their target audience.
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Uh oh, looks like we might have another fictionalized non-fiction work out there. Greg Mortenson’s Three Cups of Tea is under fire for its inaccuracies by 60 Minutes and Jon Krakauer.
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If you thought those bookshelves were cool, how about a whole tank turned into bookshelves? Way cool, Argentina!
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Last week was the 95th birthday of a literary powerhouse — Beverly Cleary! You know you loved those Ramona books! The New York Times had a lovely appreciation.
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Here’s a great title to draw you in: “A Survey of Evil Children in Literature.” Why are evil kids so much more interesting than evil adults?
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Porn in the libraries: despite having software to block it, saucy images still creep through and can cause big headaches for public libraries. Read about LA’s struggles.
Don’t forget! We are still collecting photos of your own libraries! Email me the pictures of your personal library, or the library you use most (AtTheLibraries@gmail.com) and we’ll compile them as a special post soon. Yay libraries!
Don’t know if this counts as library news quite but recently a volunteer elementary school librarian for an underserved school (he’s MAKING their library, one book at a time) responded to budget cuts for the arts in his area by putting together a kickstarter program – to be a Visiting Poet for forty classroom visits. He was interviewed at Cynsations here.
posted by tanita on 4-23-2011 at 4:47 am
regarding Greg Mortenson:
Please go to: http://www.ikat.org to read many formal and informal statements released to address the allegations made by Jon Krakauer in his distorted report.
Also see:
http://etude.uoregon.edu/winter2008/relin/
Excerpt:
Question: Three Cups of Tea wasn’t a co-written book, but you share a byline with the main character, Greg Mortenson. How did that come about?
Relin: That’s been the only negative thing about this whole adventure for me. After I turned in the manuscript, I received a galley back from the publisher with two names on it. It was published that way over my objections.
http://www.cnn.com/2011/OPINION/04/21/lemmon.afghan.girls.mortenson/index.html
Excerpt:…
However you may feel about this controversy, it cannot be denied that Mortenson has been one of the most effective advocates for girls education — an issue that so often traffics in obscurity and penury. (A recent Time magazine article noted that 2 cents of every development dollar goes to girls — and that is an improvement over where it was in the last decade.) The media firestorm threatens to overshadow, or worse, discredit the heroines at the heart of his work building schools in Afghanistan. …
… In the wake of the allegations around “Three Cups of Tea” and the truth it contains, we must not forget about the girls. Investing in girls strengthens communities. Stronger communities make for a more stable world. And at a time in which upheaval has become the norm, this prosperity and security dividend is in the interest of everyone who fights each day for something better for their children.
Educating girls improves the world. And that is a fact.
http://coyoteblog.posterous.com/three-cups-of-tea-fallout
Excerpt…
That facts and recollections are in dispute regarding events described in Three Cups of Tea, that one person’s kidnapping is another person’s hosting of a foreigner, isn’t surprising to me at all. It’s not even alarming. I worked in Afghanistan for six months. In that region, reality is in flux. Many people will tell you what you want to hear. That approach has kept many Afghan and Pakestani individuals, families and villages alive – but can make evaluation and reporting a massive challenge. This village member says such-and-such happened yesterday. Another says it happened last year. Another says it never happened. A perpetual real-life Roshoman. Although, really, I can’t single Afghanistan out for this behavior – have you ever watched Judge Judy?
It’s been revealed that a school Mortenson’s organization funded is being used to house hay instead of educate children. Some schools may not have been built. Some are claimed by other donors. None of that is surprising – I knew of a school funded by the Afghan program I worked for that was housing the local village elders instead of holding classes. I knew of a local employment project that had paid everyone twice – once by our agency and once by a military PRT, for the same work. Not saying it’s right, not saying you shouldn’t be upset when you hear those things, but you should know that in developing countries with severe security problems, widespread corruption and profound poverty, this happens ALL THE TIME. Humanitarian professionals are told again and again: give local people control over development projects. And we do. And a result is that, sometimes, local people double dip, or don’t do what they were paid to do, or exploit others. How do you stop that? Are YOU ready to go on site visits in remote regions of Waziristan every three months? Are YOU ready to be called culturally-insensitive or overly-bureaucratic in your efforts to ensure quality in development projects in remote places?
http://www.rferl.org/content/embattled_three_cups_of_tea_author_finds_support_in_unlikely_places/9501706.html
Excerpt:
Well-known Pakistani author and journalist Ahmed Rashid has known Mortenson and his work for many years. Although he can’t vouch for 100 percent accuracy in Mortenson’s writings, he says there is no denying Mortenson’s “phenomenal” contribution to promoting education — especially for girls — in Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Rashid also credits Mortenson with bringing education and development to the forefront of the Afghan discussion in America, raising awareness of the issue among the general public, America’s policy makers and its armed forces.
“I find it very hard to believe all these charges,” Rashid adds. “I can well believe that there might be exaggeration on his part for some of the things that he claims to have done. But I think his mission has been absolutely extraordinary and that is what we should keep in mind.”
posted by ccsf on 4-24-2011 at 12:53 am
If you are the type of person who likes to move the furniture in their home around for a new look every season or perhaps you have sudden urges to redecorate, then choose a bookcase which is easy to move.
posted by balers on 8-3-2011 at 12:11 am