While his sad death is taking over the media a bit too much, I do admire this librarian’s ingenuity to honor Micheal Jackson.
No, you will not catch me in a repeat perforamance.
July 2, 2009
While his sad death is taking over the media a bit too much, I do admire this librarian’s ingenuity to honor Micheal Jackson.
No, you will not catch me in a repeat perforamance.
July 2, 2009

Amazon's new Kindle DX. which can hold 3,500 books
The new Kindle DX, Amazon Inc’s electronic reading device will be released on five American campuses during the Fall of 2009, when students will substitute their textbooks for the Kindle’s new, larger screen that will allow users to highlight, take notes, and scour school libraries.
The Kindle DX will feature a 9.7-inch screen, compared to the 6-inch screen on the original Kindle as well as a built-in QWERTY keyboard for note taking. The handheld reader will let customers read magazines, newspapers, and textbooks complete with images and graphics. Users also can read PDF files on the Kindle DX–a selling point for faculty members whose courses regularly assign class readings on PDF files.
Officials at colleges and universities that will use the new Kindle device will track how the Kindle DX affects learning.
“Is this the watershed device of electronic text readers we’ve been waiting for?” asked Marty Ringle, chief technology officer at Reed College in Portland, Ore., which will give Kindles to students in three courses next fall. “Or is it a just another evolutionary step on the way to that revolutionary device? We’ll see if it’s a viable alternative to print media. “The Kindle DX holds enormous potential to influence the way students learn,” said Barbara R. Snyder, president of Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, another Kindle DX pilot school. “We look forward to seeing how the device affects the participation of both students and faculty in the educational experience.”Participating universities are Case Western, Reed College , Pace University, Arizona State University, and the University of Virginia’s Darden School of Business as the first campuses to distribute Kindle DX to students in August when they return for the fall semester.
The Kindle DX–which retails at $489–can store 3,500 books, 2,000 more than its predecessor. There are more than 275,000 electronic books available in Amazon’s Kindle library. Readers also will be able to access international newspapers and magazines and more than 1,500 blogs.
Textbook industry experts said Kindle’s book library would have to grow before educators recommended it over traditional options.
Users can buy books in the Kindle library for as little as $10 apiece, and newspaper subscriptions on Kindle are significantly cheaper. Widespread use of the Kindle DX as a replacement for traditional textbooks could save the average student hundreds, perhaps thousands, of dollars every year. A 2005 Government Accountability Office report showed that the average student at a four-year college spent $900 per year on textbooks. Reported on May 6th, 2009 As found on http://www.eschoolnews.com/news/top-news/index.cfm?i=58654 cited from Dennis Carter’s articleJuly 2, 2009
Like many people, I try to read for pleasure during the summer months. As professional hazard, I am addicted to books and read and basically how literacy has become a lifelong learning tool. Through the many books which pass through my hands, I have travelled to many places and eras in history via my imagination. As a result, I tend to borrow books from either the local library, or the library in which I am working it at that point in my life. Could you imagine what my house would look like it I actually purchased the many books I read? My home would be a real life version of Sarah Stewart’s The Library! Yikes!
As I am enjoying Julie and Julia, I find myself scanning my personal book shelf….which is located in my kitchen. While I purchase very few books for my
own personal ownership, I do succumb to purchasing cookbooks. Many wonderful Christmas gifts sit on these shelves calling to me when my busy schedule permits. A number of my students have kindly given me book shoppe gift cards at Christmas time. The purchase resulting from these gift cards are normally cook books. So many great books have travelled with me over the years, during my many moves motivates by employment and marriage. While I cannot claim to be on par with Martha Stewart, Bonnie Stern, James Barber, Julia Child’s, nor Julie Powell, I do find enjoyment in the kitchen when creating a dish. So many great books which have enhanced our Christmas celebrations. The Joy of Cooking’s Christmas Cookie book can fall open on the counter to the gingerbread recipe. (I swear by this recipe… always successful!). The lemon curd bar recipe provides a lovely light zing option to the popular chocolate flavorings of the season.
My stay in the state of Vermont has brought a profound appreciation for the quality of King Arthur Flour company’s flour as well as its award winning cookbooks. I proudly own the King Arthur Flour Baker’s Companion (2003), The King Arthur Flour Cookie Companion (2004) and the King Arthur Flour Whole Grain Baking (2006). This company has been around since1790 and produces a both a find quality of flour as well as trustworthy cookbook.
And most importantly, one cookbook on my shelf hold a position of reverence. Another flour company (with yet another medieval theme) sponsored cookbook The Robin Hood Flour Cook book. While I can remember my mother cooking from this book, I am honored to possess my Grandmother Rivier’s copy of this very book. In Canada, it was a popular manual to cooking for many home makers in the the 50s through to the 70s. So many recipes, which are not fashionable by today’s nutritional standards, it is an artifact of my childhood. Many pages are gritty under my fingers as I feel flour, egg yolk stains and other stray kitchen counter ingredients. All bring back memories of my childhood, booking with my Grandmother, recipes which taught me how to measure properly, how to not over beat an egg, how to cook.

M.F. K. Fisher
As food commentary novels, M.F.K. Fisher’s The Art of Eating, How to cook a wolf and Gastronomical Me document Fisher’s food experiences in France. Much like Child’s, Fisher was an American living in Paris. Fisher’s writings depict food as not only a personal taste but as a social and emotional force within life. These volumes exist on my shelf as that they transport me to another time and place, where food is viewed a not a means to sustain life, but as an enhancement of one’ s life experiences.
My eyes also stop scanning my cookbook shelf at the Rose Levy Beranbaum series: The Cake Bible (1993), The Pie and Pastry Bible ( 1998) and more recently , the award winning Bread Bible (2003). Ms. Beranbaum’s first book, The Cake Bible makes for an interesting read. While it is a cook book, it came about as part of her Master’s Degree in Home Economics —- wrote her master’s thesis on the effects of sifting on the quality of yellow cake.. As a kitchen chemist extraordinaire , the author includes lengthy discussions on ingredients and equipment and concludes with a special section on the chemistry of cake baking. I will confess that my autographed copy of The Pie and Pastry Bible comes off the shelf as a confirmation that , yes, indeed, I can make the need pastry to fashion my Christmas tourtiere pies. ( Or ‘torture pies’, as my non French Canadian husband calls them). Pastry making is a skill which has eluded me.
In this regard, I can relate to Julie Powell, author of Julie and Julia . Her desire to create is great, a motivation to connect to the cookbook author by recreating their recipes. The journey in which to learn is never perfect, though is a learning process neither the less. Culinary failures are still positive learning experiences about cooking as well as herself. Cooking has always given me a comfort of place. .. of being in my kitchen, of creating, sometimes successfully, other times not. Much like Julie Powell, I have learned much about myself though the journey of cooking in my kitchen. And my cook book shelf is a testament to this journey.
July 2, 2009