I was working on a display for our Adult Reading Challenge the other day, and I came across a poetry collection called Life of the Party by Olivia Gatwood. The cover immediately caught my attention. You can probably see why. The smear of paint covering a woman’s face immediately draws you in, calling to mind notions of erasure and dehumanization perhaps. As something of a true crime aficionado, I was also intrigued by Gatwood’s exploration of the controversial topic. The true crime genre is ripe for discussion, moral or otherwise. The author’s note details a period of her life when she experienced insomnia because of a specific fear that she would become a victim herself, the subject of a true crime story. She interrogates the intentions or agenda of the genre, questioning why certain stories are told instead of others. The complex relationship a lot of women have with true crime, as avid viewers and readers, is briefly yet powerfully illuminated. The poems in the collection continue that theme. Concise stanzas of powerful imagery and analogy, revealing formative experiences in her childhood that have had an impact on who Gatwood is today. I wanted to write about poetry for this blog entry because I believe it’s an efficient way to absorb a lot of meaning from a small amount of text. So, if you find yourself a busy library worker like myself, you can pick up and put down a poetry collection whenever you have a free moment. Finishing a poem feels like a small amount of closure each time, and closure is nothing to scoff at. Here are some of the other exciting collections I’ve come across in our catalogue. To be honest, I am in the process of reading several of them. I have assembled a salad — if you will — of different poetic ingredients, and I am grazing to my heart’s content. Here’s hoping there’s one that strikes your fancy. Like a juicy heirloom tomato in the summer.
Continue readingTag Archives: adult non-fiction
Making Moving Marvelously Easy

I’m hoping to be moving to a new place at the end of July, along with many, many others. It will only be my second time moving out on my own, and I’m very excited about having my own space, my own kitchen, my own bathroom, and a place that stays as clean as I left it—my cat’s shenanigans notwithstanding—and will be decorated according to my preferences!
Honestly, I may be most excited about listening to music and other media without headphones (which I use out of courtesy for my housemates and also to prevent them from making fun of me for blasting K-pop at all hours of the day. …Oooh, I just realized it’ll finally make sense to get a record player!)
Still, the actual move is looking to be a hectic affair—but luckily I’ve been mostly packed for a few months now and just have to physically shift everything over to my new place, unpack, organize, figure out which of my furniture makes sense to keep and what should be sold…
Ok, so that’s a lot of stuff to manage, and if you’re feeling a tad bit overwhelmed like I am (or someone else in your life is moving and stressed about it) check out these books, guaranteed to make the moving process, and everything related to it, marvelously easy! (Or at least, easier.)
Continue readingGreetings from Alaska. Sort of.
As this blog post goes live, I’m on a cruise ship navigating the waters of the Alaskan coast and enjoying what I’m hoping is a relaxing vacation and not two weeks of seasickness. I’ve never been on a cruise before, so who knows? Given where I’m at, I decided to make this post about Alaska. I’d put up a travel guide, but our Alaskan travel guides are pretty old; the internet exists, is far more up-to-date, and you have access to it if you’re reading this post, so it feels pretty pointless. Although I will have to pay for internet on the cruise, so I suppose there is value in packing a physical travel guide if you’re actually on a trip. They don’t leave much to talk about, though, so that photo on the left acts as a link to the Alaskan travel guides we’ve got.
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