Category Archives: Our Collections

Staff Pick: Boys Will Be Boys

libblog-BookReview4Pearlman, J. (2008). Boys will be boys: The glory days and party nights of the Dallas Cowboys dynasty. New York: HarperCollins.

Any Football fan will remember the dominance the early 1990’s Dallas Cowboys Team had in the National Football League.  I remember seeing the games and enjoying my favorite team beat teams like the New York Giants and Philadelphia Eagles.  It was no surprise that the book Boys will be Boys by Jeff Pearlman about the Cowboys caught my attention.

Surprisingly some of the key players for the Cowboy’s Dynasty Team are living in shacks and working assembling line jobs to make ends meet.  Players like Michael Irvin, Emmitt Smith and Troy Aikman are financially stable.  These three superstars have endorsement deals and work as football analyst for FOX, ESPN, and the N.F.L Network.  Other players were able to save money and make wise financial investments.

This book gives the reader an inside look at how fortunes were made and lost in the National Football League.   If you are a football fan and especially a Dallas Cowboys fan, you must take the time to read this Book.  (Click here to check for availability)

Contributed by Jesus Resendez, Library Specialist at the Mid-Valley Campus.

Heart Health Month Display

This February is Heart Health Month.  Celebrate by getting a recipe or information from one of our many books.

Magazines/Journals
Stroke
Circulation Research
Books
Your heart : an owner’s guide
Platillos Latinos, sabrosos y saludables = Delicious heart-healthy Latino recipes
Bypass: a healthy heart without surgery
Women and Heart Disease: What You Can Do to Stop the Number One Killer of American Women

And if you are near the Tech Campus Library, check out this display:

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Contributed by Sara Martinez from the Pecan Campus Library and Sheila McGee from the Tech Campus Library.

Staff Pick: Batos, Bolillos, Pochos, and Pelados

libblog-BookReview2Richardson, Chad. Batos, Bolillos, Pochos, and Pelados: Class and Culture on the South Texas Border. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1999.

This easy-to-read and interesting book offers an excellent introduction to life in the Rio Grande Valley.  Using touching personal stories and statistical data gathered from numerous interviews and surveys; the author paints a detailed picture of society in Deep South Texas.  Topics such as the experiences of migrant workers, life in the colonias, Winter Texans, the history of Anglo-Hispanic relations in the Valley, and much more are covered.   Whether you’re a newcomer to the Valley (like me) or you’re a life-long Valley native I think you’ll find this to be an enjoyable and valuable read, that will enhance your understanding of this unique region.

Click here to check availability.

Contributed by Joshua Wallace, Reference Librarian at the Pecan Campus

Books at the Movies

Check out these books that have been made into movies very recently.

On PBS’s Masterpiece Theater you can watch Jane Austen’s Emma, Northanger Abbey, and Persuasion this Spring.  They will also be showing a suspenseful adaptation of The Thirty-Nine Steps, previously adapted by Alfred Hitchcock as well as a new adaptation of The Diary of Anne Frank in April.

At the movies you can watch the literary hero Sherlock Holmes, and rent Amelia partly based on S. Butler’s East to the Dawn: the life of Amelia Earhart as well as the epicurean hit Julie and Julia taken from such books as Julie Powell’s Julie and Julia as well as Julia Child’s My Life in France.

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Contributed by Esther Garcia, Library Specialist at the Pecan Campus

Memory, choice, isolation, and suffering to be found in The Giver

From The Giver “He knew there was no quick comfort for emotions like those.”

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The Giver brings to light the question: Are the trials and tribulations of life worth deeper knowledge of beauty and happiness?

Fans of authoritarian utopian society novels like 1984 and Brave New World will enjoy this different take on societal control and imprisonment. Citizens of the society within The Giver have given up knowledge of love, family, music, and even color so that they no longer have to experience war, jealousy, guilt, and fear. Even death’s place in society is replaced by a much more palatable perception of the event. The authoritarian imprisonment within The Giver takes a softer approach to societal control and the apparent contentment of its citizens, truly allows one to ponder the worth of freedom versus safety.

The Giver is an easy read. Written for a younger audience, the text is not too long or too literally complex. At the same time the novel is not shallow and provides the kind of thought provocation that one would expect from the best of philosophical text.

An excellent read for anyone without a lot of time, but a thirst for perspective.

To check availability click here: (http://lib.southtexascollege.edu/uhtbin/cgisirsi.exe/x/)/0/5?searchdata1=0395645662)

Contributed by Arnold Becho, Librarian at MidValley Campus.