Thursday, September 30, 2010

Miss Amanda's New Favorite Books!




If you are looking for some interesting new books to read, allow me to put my two cents in and review a few of the titles that I have recently finished!


Zombie by Joyce Carol Oates

I think that Joyce Carol Oates is one of the few living female authors that I can rank alongside Stephen King as being gifted with the rare ability to glean insight into the darkest aspects of the human psyche. Very disturbing, yet somehow absorbing, Zombie is a major accomplishment.
Oates has managed to write a demented, chilling novel told from the first-person perspective of a serial killer who desires to create the perfectly obedient human slave (a zombie) by kidnapping, torturing, and lobotomizing his victims. This book gave me nightmares, yet was like a train wreck—I could not look away until I reached the end.
Oates is a very gifted writer, and I have been a longtime fan, but out of all her novels and short stories, Zombie rattled me the most. It is impressive, but be forewarned, it is not for the faint of heart.

I Know This Much Is True by Wally Lamb

Lamb is most famous for his novel She’s Come Undone, which impressed audiences and critics both because of the poignancy of the narrative—in the voice of an obese young woman who has been traumatized and abused.
I Know This Much Is True is Lamb’s second novel, and the narrative is similarly jarring and absorbing, due mainly to the fact that the narrator is difficult to like, yet you find yourself greatly sympathizing with him.
Unlike Oates’ Zombie, where you feel no compassion whatsoever for the narrator and hope in fact that he meets a terrible end, Lamb’s narrative voice, while annoying and at times obnoxious and selfish, does seem familiar and human at least.
The main focus of the story is on identical twin brothers, one severely schizophrenic, and one ‘‘sane.’’ We hear the narrative voice of the ‘‘sane’’ brother throughout this novel, telling the story of what happened to his brother, taking us from the present back to their childhood, and even further back to stories of their mother and grandfather, somehow tying everything together as he tries to come to terms with what has happened to both his brother, and himself.
This is a very lengthy but worthwhile book, and you may find yourself nodding at some of the observations of a troubled family dynamic.
More next time!!!!

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Two Hearts in a Melting Pot


Two Hearts in a Melting Pot
We are excited to announce that Paul Kolesar’s book “Two Hearts in a Melting Pot” is being sold at the Carnegie Library of Homestead; hardbacks are being sold for $5.00 and soft backs for $3.00. A Homestead native and former St. John’s Cathedral parish member, Paul Kolesar dedicated his life to art and writing. Over the years he won many awards for his works, both literary and artistic. We would like to thank his wife Florence and her sisters Elaine Gerasi and Jean Repine for their generous donation of his novel “Two hearts in a Melting Pot.”


Summary of book
“Two Hearts in a Melting Pot is the story of John Chelovick and his wife, Annah, immigrants from the mountain region of Austria-Hungary who come to the United States in search of freedom and a better life. The dream of America that has motivated and sustained them however comes into conflict with the realities of life in their new homeland, including ethnic inequality. Paul Kolesar commented in the Library Journal: ‘notably, it is a drama of struggle and pain of laughter and triumph; the heroic exploits of an early steelworker who deserves a high place on any roster America’s builders who turned this country into a powerful nation…From its rich cultural treasure every ethnic group made a sizeable contribution to American culture just as Annah and John who migrated to America made to the small world of Two Hearts in a Melting Pot’” (From Contemporary Authors Volume 105.)

Monday, September 20, 2010

Carnegie Library of Homestead Silver Sneakers Health Fair and Flue Shot Clinic

The Annual CLoH/SilverSneakers® Health Fair & Flue Shots
Friday, October 15th 2010
10:00am-2:00 pm
CLoh Shuffleboard Room

The Carnegie Library of Homestead and SilverSneakers® will be holding the Annual Health Fair. Health Screenings and Flu Shots will be administered from 10am-2pm in the Shuffleboard Room of the Library. Screenings include cholesterol, blood pressure, bone density, visual acuity, body fat, pulse oximetry, and more! SilverSneakers® members receive flu shots for free! Non SilverSneakers members can receive flu shots for $ 30, and pneumonia shots for $50.
Stop in the Athletic Club Office before October 15th
or call ahead (412-462-3444 ext. 225) to sign up for a flu shot time.

Volunteer Bartenders Needed!


Want to help the library, have fun, socialize and hear some great music?
Well, we need help! This Wednesday and Saturday night we need some people to help us bartend at the Dark Star Orchestra concert and National Concert. All of the proceeds benefit the Carnegie Library of Homestead! Email Emily if you can help out!
Check out the Music Hall website for more information.

Friday, September 17, 2010

Historical Fiction Must Reads!


Do you like historical fiction? Need a new book to curl up with when the weather gets colder? Then take a look at some of these titles!



Girl With a Pearl Earring by Tracy Chevalier
The Mists of Avalon by Marion Zimmer Bradley
The Thorn Birds by Colleen McCullough
The Red Tent by Anita Diamant
Dragonfly in Amber by Diana Gabaldon
The English Patient by Michael Ondaatje
Possession by A.S. Byatt

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Toddler Storytime!


We are staring up the next round of storytimes!
Come every Wednesday at 11:30am to hear stories and create something special!
This is also a great time to socialize with other parents and caregivers!



Toddler Storytime
Wednesdays at 11:30am
Children 2-4 years old