Welcome to Topsham Tales, the official blog of Topsham Public Library. Join the staff of Topsham for news, reviews and discussion.

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Happy Leap Year! Patron Picks!

Legend states that on Leap Day women have the ‘privilege’ of proposing to men. In this spirit of role-reversal, for one month, we would like you, the patrons, to recommend books to us!

All you have to do is pick up a Patron Picks bookmark from the display and the book of your choice on our shelves. Bring them up to the front desk and we’ll  put them on display for you!

Saturday, February 25, 2012

Job Seekers Support and Information Group

Looking for work? Need a little help? Goodwill Workforce Solutions, in partnership with the Topsham Public Library, is offering a 6 week Job Seekers Support and Information Group.

This group will take place here at the library on Thursday afternoons, from 4pm-5:30pm.  The 6 week group, starting March 1st and running through April 5th, will cover topics such as dealing with job loss, personalizing your job search, using assessments to guide your job search as well as advice on writing resumes and cover letters. You can also brush up on your interviewing skills and get networking!

Call the library on  (207) 725-1727 or email me at emma@topshamlibrary.org to reserve your spot.

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Staff Picks!

Need a book recommendation? Check out our staff picks here at the library.  There's a display of them behind the new book display!

Friday, February 10, 2012

The New York Times Bestseller List February 5 and 12, 2012

February 5: fiction and nonfiction.

 February 12: fiction and nonfiction.

The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides

Pulitzer Prize winner Eugenides once again delivers a novel that is rich, engrossing and filled with enough literary references to please even the most dedicated book-lover. The novel follows Madeline Hanna, Leonard Bankhead and Mitchell Grammaticus as they navigate through their final year of Brown and the year following their graduation. Madeline, an English-major whose thesis gives us the title of the novel, meets Leonard, a brilliant and enigmatic student,  in a Semiotics class and the two begin a relationship, one that is marred by Leonard’s diagnosis of bipolar disorder. Mitchell, a theology major, holds on to the hope that he is the one destined for Madeline. 
Eugenides has denied reports that the novel is based on real life events, but it’s hard not to see Eugenides in Grammaticus, while much has been said of Bankhead’s similarity to David Wallace Foster, who was in a relationship with Mary Karr, the memoirist, in the early nineties.  That said, I found these links enhanced my enjoyment of the novel.

The Marriage Plot has already garnered praise from many places including the New York Times, Publisher’s Weekly, Kirkus Review and Library Journal. Eugenides’ exploration of love and well-drawn characters make it the kind of book you find yourself thinking about long after you have read it. 

Emma

Friday, February 3, 2012

Julie

I just finished reading The Body Finder by Kimberly Dirting. As if being a teenager is not hard enough, try balancing schoolwork, homecoming dances, crushes on best friends and finding a serial killer! Violet manages to do just that while still keeping the secret that she can find dead bodies and their killers with a sixth sense! Enjoyable and little scary, too!