- A Visual History of Soldiers and Armies around the World
- A Visual History of Ships and Navigation
- A Visual History of the World’s Enduring Mysteries
- A Visual History of the Great Civilizations
Monday, October 26, 2020
A Visual History of Soldiers and Armies around the World
Thursday, October 22, 2020
My Hero Academia, Vol. 1
Horikoshi, Kohei. My Hero Academia, Vol. 1. 2015. 192p. ISBN 9781421582696. Available in the graphic novels section of the library.
The world has changed. A few decades ago, one individual suddenly manifested a superpower. Then more and more people acquired them. Now, roughly 80% of folks have a superpower. First appearing around age 4, individuals learn to control and exploit their superpowers. Some become famous heroes, fighting those who use their superpowers for evil. Some became wealthy and known throughout the world. To service these heroes, infrastructure grew. Now would be heroes strive to enter Hero Academy, the best superhero high school.
Izuku Midoriya's dream has always been to attend Hero Academy. He follows all of the superheroes religiously, knows their quirks and their strengths. Unfortunately, unlike his childhood friend, Izuku never developed a quirk, and remains one of the 20% of the people who have no superpowers. That makes it very hard to attend superhero school. And with middle school almost over, it looks like Izuku's dream will end before it even begins.
When a villain threatens the bully that once was his childhood friend, however, Izuku does not hesitate and he charges it, even when those with superpowers were too afraid to do so. Saved by All Might, the greatest superhero, Izuku soon learns that All Might is in fact looking for a worthy successor and has found one in Izuku. Over the course of the summer, Izuku will train hard and bulk up so he can inherit the mightiest power of them all ...
The story continues in My Hero Academia, Vol. 2.
Wednesday, October 21, 2020
Kindred
Butler, Octavia. Kindred. 2004 (first published 1979). 287p. ISBN 9780807083697. Available at FIC BUT on the library shelves.
Tuesday, October 13, 2020
The 57 Bus: A True Story of Two Teenagers and the Crime That Changed Their Lives

The two of them might have never met. But one day, both of them found themselves on the 57, a bus that travels almost the whole length of Oakland. Sasha takes this bus as part of a two bus-ride daily trip to school. Richard is riding it with friends. Sasha is already asleep on the long bus ride in the late afternoon on November 4, 2013, when Richard notices what looks like a guy wearing a skirt. Goaded by his friends, Richard lights Sasha's skirt on fire, thinking Sasha will wake up and put it out. Instead, the skirt ignites, and Sasha's legs are engulfed in flames.
Richard leaves the bus but is quickly arrested, and during his interrogation without a parent or a lawyer present he mentions he is homophobic. While Sasha recuperates in the hospital and undergoes several painful skin grafts, Richard is charged with two hate crimes and is tried as an adult.
A true story, this intersection of two lives that became tied through reckless behavior demonstrates the impact that one person can have in another person's life.
Tuesday, October 6, 2020
The History of the Air Forces around the World
Ever since the Wright brothers successfully flew their contraption in the air for the first time in 1903, airplanes have been part of armed forces throughout the world. But airplanes were not the first airships to be used by the military. Balloons were used at the end of the 1700s during the French Revolution and in Napoleon's campaigns to perform reconnaissance missions, a role reprised during the civil war. Large lighter than air airships build by Count Zeppelin provided civilian transport, and these were then used during World War I to drop bombs on England.
The airplane changed all of that. Mobile and agile, airplanes became offensive weapons in their own right, capable of delivering heavy weapons on foreign targets. European countries assembled large air forces. The interwar saw improvements on engine and guns, and the deployment of aircraft carriers. During World War II large bombers dropped massive payloads on targets, and two atomic bombs on Japan. Jet engines replaced propellers, and planes continued to grow in sophistication, at the same time as remote controlled drones changed how air forces operate and the kind of intelligence that can be gathered.
Most military organizations now possess some aircraft, and air forces continue to be a vital component of a strong military capability. Fans of military history will appreciate the information provided in this book and will enjoy seeing air power develop over the centuries.
Monday, October 5, 2020
Fresh Ink: An Anthology

The number of books written by authors who do not hail from a White Anglo-Saxon American heritage has increased over the last twenty years, but it remains low enough that many teens of diverse backgrounds still cannot find stories that showcase people like them as other than stereotypical sidekicks. Fresh Ink stands as a concerted effort to increase the number of stories available, not only for these readers but for everyone. Twelve stories of all types are told, with the common theme of having the main character as someone not often portrayed in young adult literature.
In Eraser Tattoo, Shay and Dante have loved each other since they were five and in the same class together. Shay is now moving away from Brooklyn to North Carolina, and Dante's world is collapsing. In Meet Cute, Two girls meet at the Denver Science Fiction and Fantasy Convention. Nic is cosplaying a gender-flipped Sulu from Star Trek, while Tamia is dressed as an African-American version of Agent Scully. Both are attracted to each other, but neither wants to volunteer that they are queer. Don't Pass Me By features a Native-American boy who attends school off the reservation, and has trouble recognizing himself in the White culture that surrounds him. In Be Cool for Once, the main character is Muslim, and she confesses her love to a boy at a concert.
Tags is a one-act play that discuss how four boys died. In Why I Learned to Cook, a Persian-American girl is wondering about how to introduce her girlfriend to her grandmother. A Stranger at the Bochinche tells a science fiction story about a stolen book and the people who want to retrieve it. A young artist in A Boy's Duty has left the farm life and hopes to join the Navy and fight Nazis, and finds refuge in a big city cafe. Racial slurs undermine the college experience of an Asian-American girl in One Voice. Paladin/Samurai is an illustrated short story about boys involved in a roleplaying game and the girl next door. Tommy just came out as a boy to his swim team, and find himself in the boy's locker room for the first time in Catch, Pull, Drive. Finally, in Super Human, X, a superhero, has decided to destroy the world unless someone can talk him out of it.
Each of these stories feature a message that is most often well executed about race and belonging. Fans of paths less traveled will appreciate the range of emotions and stories featured and will connect all of them to the humanity that we all share.
Thursday, October 1, 2020
The Truth about PCP

First developed in the first decades of the 20th century as an intravenous anesthetic designed to numb patients during surgeries, phencyclidine had such bad side effects that it was soon discontinued. Patients had reported severe hallucinatory and disorientating symptoms. Phencyclidine was then used on animals, with similar results. The drug was quickly finding itself out of markets when the youth counterculture adopted it in the 1960s. Easier and cheaper to manufacture than LSD, phencyclidine experienced a resurgence in tablet form known as the PeaCe Pill, soon abbreviated to PCP.
Never as popular as some of the other illegal drugs, PCP nevertheless still found a niche among people wanting to score a cheap high in the 1970s. Replaced by crack cocaine in the 1980s, PCP abuse diminished greatly until it went through a resurgence in the 2000s, when street gangs and organized crime began to manufacture and distribute it throughout the United States.
The same symptoms that banned PCP from the anesthetic market in the 1950s and 1960s continue to affect users, who can experience hallucinatory episodes, with possible seizures, organ failures, coma, severe psychotic breaks, and even extreme violence and death. Some PCP users do not feel pain and lose access to some of their more advanced processing skills, and therefore can perceived themselves as being superhuman. Dangers remain, however, and one can easily lose everything through a bad trip.
Perfect for a research project or to learn more about this drug, The Truth about PCP not only presents the history of the drug, but also discusses its social and health effects, as well as what treatment can be done to recover from PCP.