Book Review: My Salinger Year

My Salinger Year by Joanna Rakoff. Reviewed by Louise Hilton. 

Joanna Rakoff’s nonfiction debut chronicles her year spent as the assistant to the head of a literary agency in Manhattan in the late 1990s. The agency’s most important client? J. D. Salinger, hence the title. A bright and eager twentysomething, the bookish Rakoff is thrilled at landing a job at the prestigious Agency, as the never-named company is referred to throughout the book. Imagine her surprise when she arrives in the dimly lit office to find a dusty old Selectric typewriter and a stack of tapes waiting for her to listen to on a Dictaphone (remember those? I didn’t think so.) This, in 1996. The office is so old-fashioned that by the end of Rakoff’s time with the agency, her boss’s one concession to the encroaching digital age is the addition of a sole computer for the entire office to share.

Far from what she’d thought would be the glamorous world of publishing, Rakoff spends her days transcribing her boss’s dictated letters and sorting through the Agency’s most important client’s fan mail. When she started working there, Rakoff had yet to read any of Salinger’s work so she’s at first surprised by the dozens of letters that arrive each week for him. Once she reads the heartfelt messages from frustrated teenagers à la Holden Caulfield to aging veterans like Salinger himself, she realizes the profound effect novels such as The Catcher in the Rye and Franny and Zooey had on his readers. She decides to write personalized replies to some – utterly ignoring Agency protocol of sending form letters to fans – which leads to interesting consequences.

Rakoff also touches on the post-graduate ennui she and some of her friends experienced and details her life outside of work, living in Brooklyn – before it was cool – with a tiresome man. Luckily she finally realizes what a nightmare their relationship is (jealous “writer” boyfriend with socialist leanings and an absurdly healthy ego, need I say more?) and strikes out on her own.

A highlight of the book is when Rakoff settles in to read all of Salinger’s novels one lonely weekend. She captures perfectly the transformative experience of reading Salinger for the first time, discovering that his novels are not just for angst-filled teenagers like his beloved Holden: “Salinger was not cutesy. His work was not nostalgic. These were not fairy tales about child geniuses traipsing the streets of Old New York. Salinger was nothing like I’d thought. Nothing. Salinger was brutal. Brutal and funny and precise. I loved him. I loved it all.”

Far from a gimmicky tell-all about her brush with literary fame – although her retelling of the phone calls she received from the famously reclusive Salinger and their one meeting in the flesh are exciting to read about – My Salinger Year is a lovely ode to books, reading, and New York. It’s also an engrossing read about a young woman finding her way in the world and at a mere 249 pages, I found it woefully short. This is by far my top pick of 2014.

*An abridged version of this review first appeared in The Advocate (Baton Rouge, La.) on 1/25/15.

Book Review: And the Dark Sacred Night

And the Dark Sacred Night by Julia Glass. Reviewed by Louise Hilton.

Kit Noonan is going through a midlife crisis.  An academic who’s been out of work for two years, he is floundering, haunted by his lifelong wish to uncover the identity of his biological father, a secret his mother and stepfather Jasper kept from him.  Kit’s wife, out of patience with his sad sack ways, encourages him to revisit his childhood home in search of answers.  The narrative alternates between Kit’s trip back to the gruff but lovable Jasper’s house and flashbacks to his mother’s youth and his own childhood.

If you read Glass’s debut, the National Book Award winner Three Junes, you’ll likely remember Lucinda, Fenno, and Malachy, all of whom play important roles in this novel as well. Glass is a master at portraying different truths of the human condition, in this case, our ineffable need to know where we come from and to feel a connection to our past.  Her characters’ back stories combine seamlessly to lead Kit – and the reader – on his journey of discovery.  I highly recommend this beautifully written, touching novel about family, regret, memory, and, above all, love. The title tells it all: taken from the lyrics “the bright blessed day, the dark sacred night” of Louis Armstrong’s “What a Wonderful World”, it reminds us how magical the world really is.

Tech Toy Box Schedule

The Tech Toy Box is back for the holidays! Meet us at the concierge desk right when you walk in the Main Library at Goodwood, across from the Circulation Desk on the first floor. We’ll be there to answer any questions about our digital services and especially about how to get started with OverDrive. We’ll have devices such as an iPad, Kindle Fire, and Nook on hand so we can show you how to download books from our OverDrive collection. We’ll also be able to troubleshoot any problems you might be having with your own device. Join us every Monday through Thursday from 3-6 with additional evenings on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 7-8, as well as Saturdays from 3-5. Check the December Source for details. Hope to see you then!Tech Toy Box 2

OverDrive Digital Bookmobile Visit Today

The OverDrive Digital Bookmobile is in town! Readers of all ages can learn about and engage with digital collections until 4 p.m. today at the Main Library at Goodwood. Aboard the 74-foot-long traveling exhibit, five separate spaces showcase eBooks, audiobooks, a gadget gallery, a video lounge, and more.

Building on the tradition and admiration of the bookmobile, which for generations has engaged communities with library materials and services, the mission of the Digital Bookmobile is to help libraries across North America promote the digital services available to their communities.

Best-selling authors. New release titles. Classics and crowd-pleasers. The East Baton Rouge Parish School System’s Overdrive digital collection has it all. Introductory videos and interactive computer stations give visitors a chance to browse our library’s collection of eBooks, audiobooks, and more. This is a great opportunity for patrons to get hands-on experience with the latest gadgets, smartphones, tablets, media players, and other eReading devices.

To learn more, visit the Overdrive Digital Bookmobile site and EBRPL’s Digital Library.

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New Overdrive Titles to Download

Our eBook and audiobook collection is always growing. Here are some of the latest additions. We have fiction and nonfiction eBook and audiobook titles for all ages and streaming videos too! Check out the complete Overdrive catalog for more. Need help with Overdrive? Take a look at our Get Started with Overdrive Guide or call us at 231-3750.

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Book Review: Madam

Madam: A Novel of New Orleans by Cari Lynn and Kellie Martin. Reviewed by Louise Hilton. 

Madam is set in 1897 New Orleans and centered around Mary Deubler, a prostitute in Venus Alley, a seedy area of the city that would soon be formally incorporated as the official red-light district known as Storyville. Mary is a well-developed character, perhaps due in part to the fact that she is based on the real-life Josie Arlington, one of the future Storyville’s most infamous madams.

We follow her trajectory from her time as Mary, the impoverished streetwalker with dreams for a better life for herself and her family to her reemergence as Josie, the refined and glamorous doyenne of one of the city’s so-called “sporting establishments”. The authors certainly capture the raucous environment of the Big Easy, replete with salacious details of the seedy underworld scene, licentious politicians, and cameos from colorful notables including Louis Armstrong and “Jelly Roll” Morton.

Having grown up in Louisiana, I had a few quibbles with some of the setting details: jambalaya does not have beans in it as the authors mention in one scene; it’s a café au lait that they serve at Café du Monde, not a “coffee au laits”; and we call them crawfish down here, never crayfish. Shudder. Overall though, Madam is an entertaining read.

NB: This review first appeared in The Advocate (Baton Rouge, La.) on 10/19/14.

Read an eBook Day

Tomorrow is Read an eBook Day! Get ready for a celebration of eBooks on an international scale. On Thursday, September 18, library patrons and students will take part in the largest digital reading event to show appreciation and raise awareness for eBooks. Throughout the day, OverDrive will participate by giving away tablets and devices every hour through social media to readers who tell their eBook story on Facebook or Twitter with the hashtag #eBookDay. Readers can also comment directly on www.readanebookday.com. Did you know that since EBRPL first added eBooks to our catalog back in 2005, our patrons have downloaded over 725,000 ebooks? Check out an eBook and join the fun tomorrow! Don’t forget to tag us #ebrpl and #eBookDay to show us what you’re reading.

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Library Closed for Independence Day

Happy Independence Day! All branches of the East Baton Rouge Parish Library will be closed on Friday, July 4, in observance of the national holiday. We will resume normal hours of operation on Saturday, July 5. Have a safe holiday weekend!

Here are a few titles on the American Revolution to get you in the spirit of 1776 (click on the book covers for more info):

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Learning Lab

Come to the new Main Library to learn about some of our most popular databases. All summer long, we’ll be meeting on different days of the week in the Computer Lab on the 2nd floor to show you OverDrive (ebooks, audiobooks, and videos galore), Treehouse (web design, coding, and app creation), and Gale Courses (free online classes).

Here’s the schedule for the rest of the summer:

Open OverDrive Mondays: June 16, 23, 30, July 7, 14, 21, 28 from 2-4

Treehouse Tuesdays: June 24, July 1, 15, 22, 29 from 2-4

Open Gale Courses Thursdays: June 19, 26, July 3, 10, 17, 24, 31

Call 231-3750 for details. No registration required; just show up and we’ll demo these databases for you!