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decaf Jess

★★★★★

Jesus and John Wayne: How White Evangelicals Corrupted a Faith and Fractured a Nation by Kristin Kobes Du Mez

out June 23, 2020
ISBN: 9781631495731

Instead of venerating a first century Palestinian who said things like "Blessed are the meek/merciful/peacemakers," American evangelicalism has adopted as its ideal the swaggering, aggressive, thrice-married John Wayne, the author argues.

At the center of the author's argument is the idea that American evangelicalism has become indelibly tainted by a machismo toxic masculinity that is harmful to women and men alike and has distorted the Gospel to fit its narrative of strongman (white) dominance. Dominance, aggression, and violence are considered something holy and God-given rather than sinful temptations to be wrestled with, allowing fertile ground for other sins to thrive, such as abuse, hubris, and corruption. The book eloquently argues this point by walking through a history of these strongmen and the way they have channeled or manipulated well-meaning believers into providing them outsized resources to enrich themselves and their friends and grab power for themselves.

It reads easily and quickly and is clearly well researched and sourced. Recommended for readers who want to get a better understanding of why the religious right rallies around its favorite issues but seems much less interested in the issues that Black churches and progressive Christians are interested in like racial justice, de-escalation of war, or alleviating poverty. Also recommended for people from evangelical backgrounds (positive or negative) who are trying to understand the differences between cultural evangelicalism and the actual teachings of Jesus Christ.

arc received from the publisher for review
★★★★★

Those Who Hunger by Owen Banner

out June 13, 2020
Kindle: $5.99

Overall, an engaging and fresh take on vampire fiction recommended for fans of monster horror.

With a book like this that doesn't rely on familiar tropes, it is difficult to describe the plot in a way that doesn't detract from the experience of discovering things via reading. In sum: vampirism, in this case, is a recessive disease in which the vampire has a "hunger" for blood and violence and is stronger, faster, and more long-lived than a typical person. And they are still persons -- husbands, wives, mothers, fathers, sons, daughters -- who must struggle against this nature to live a good life. To control their baser instincts, they cloister away in different insular people groups -- including the Amish.

The protagonist, Haddie, is a respectable young Amish woman in her late teens who lives in one such community, where a small handful of citizens harbor dark urges they keep at bay through a regimented lifestyle of hard work, religious rites, and avoiding temptation. When a young adult is baptized into the community, they learn about this reality and which of their neighbors struggle with this other nature, but their neighbors treat them the same as everyone else. However, when a series of brutal vampire-style murders begins, that peace frays.

What I know about the Amish could fit on a single fortune cookie paper, so I can't attest to whether or not the author fairly portrays what an Amish community would look like when faced with a series of gruesome vampire attacks, or how an Amish community would behave when it knows that many of its upright citizens struggle with an urge to kill and chase their dinner with a shot of deer blood. But I did identify well with Haddie, the main character, and her parents and siblings, and especially found the dynamic between her parents interesting.

The mystery was intriguing, and I found myself wanting to know more about the world that was built inside this story, and wanting to know more about the side characters. I read it in a single day in two sittings.

There were a few issues I had with the plot, but I'm not sure they could have been tied up without making the book even longer. (It's already pretty long -- I'm a speed reader and it took me about six hours.) For one, a few fascinating characters are introduced, then sort of disappear after a while. Also, the resolution to the murders sort of pops up suddenly and is quickly sorted out.

However, the lore of this world is well explained, and the characters are well-rounded and developed, especially for a novel with so many of them.

Overall, I really enjoyed reading this, and would happily read another.

arc received from the publisher for review


★★★★

The Easy Baked Donut Cookbook by Sara Mellas
out June 2, 2020
ISBN: 9781647390327
Paperback: $12.99 / Kindle: $0.99 / Free on Kindle Unlimited

Who doesn't love donuts?

I appreciated the way that this book made making donuts seem like the easiest thing in the world. I'm not sure why I thought it was such a difficult process -- probably the extensive contraption they use to make them at Krispy Kreme.

I good pick for folks doing a lot of baking these days.

One star docked for the fact that the beignet recipe was literally just crescent roll dough with powdered sugar on it. Otherwise, lots of great ideas here. (Plus, it looks pretty on a bookshelf, right?)


★★★★★

Dairy Free Meal Prep by Silvana Nardone
out June 2, 2020
ISBN: 978-1647392598
Paperback: $14.99 / Kindle: $6.99 / Free on Kindle Unlimited

A cute and handy cookbook to have around, regardless of your dairy situation. It's lovely to look at, well organized, and one of my favorites I've seen in a while.

There is a lot going on in here. Sweet, savory, breakfast, lunch, or dinner, meals with dairy-free cheese that you could substitute for real cheese, meals with no cheesy components, recipes for dairy-free cheese products.

I had a hard time picking out just one recipe to try, so I'll be doing a few!

Highly recommended for both the lactose intolerant and the cheesiest of Wisconsinites.


★★★★★

The Budget-Friendly Vegan Cookbook: Healthy Meals for a Plant-Based Diet by Ally Lazare
out June 2, 2020
ISBN: 9781646119172
Paperback: $14.39/ Kindle: $6.99 / Free on Kindle Unlimited 

Vegan diets can be prohibitively expensive or pretty unappetizing, but the ideas here are savory, creamy, and full of ingredients I have heard of and can procure easily! No small feat for a vegan cookbook. 

I am looking forward to trying some of these, for sure.


These cookbooks were received free to review. If I didn't like them, you wouldn't be hearing about them.



I'd love to offer more intensive online storytimes during these closures but I'm hesitant to encourage little ones to spend a lot of time on the phone/tablet/computer. It is not developmentally positive. How can we limit screentime for little ones while doing storytime?

I've found a good middle ground by posting short 5-8 minute videos of me reading 2-3 books from my house. These are posted with a suggested DIY Storytime for the caregiver and child to do together, featuring links to 3 free e-books via BookFlix and songs and activities they can do together. I'm posting the story videos on Facebook for 4 weeks at a time in the interests of fair use boundaries.

I've thrown together a handful so far, and please feel free to use them and share them freely and please make your own with the resources your community offers. 

★★★★★

Sugar Detox in 10 Days: 100+ Recipes to Help Eliminate Sugar Cravings by Pam Rocca
out May 5, 2020
ISBN: 9781646117529
Paperback: $15.29 / Kindle: $6.99

I let this book sit for a while before looking at it because I thought it was going to be some punitive kale-based diet, and the last thing I wanted to do in the middle of a pandemic was punish myself. However, the sun is out today, I'm feeling good, and I figured it was time to look at it.

It is actually a helpful cookbook of tasty-looking sugar-free recipes designed to help you cut down on processed sugars. I skipped the intro (does anyone read the beginning of cookbooks or are all authors just shouting into the void there?) and went straight to the recipes and I am not disappointed!

I already have most of these ingredients, and it looks awesome. It has earned a spot on my bookshelf.

Highly recommended for folks who like food but wish they ate less sugary garbage.


★★★★★

One-Pot Vegan Cookbook: 125 Recipes for Your Dutch Oven, Sheet Pan, Electric Pressure Cooker, and More by Gunjan Dudani
out May 19, 2020
ISBN: 978-1646116560
Paperback: $15.29 / Kindle: $6.99 / Free on Kindle Unlimited

This vegan cookbook seems like it was written by a real human with a family and a job.

I read a lot of vegan cookbooks. I'm not vegan, but I try to cook with less meat than I used to. Often in vegan cookbooks, recipes call for bizarre, expensive ingredients you have to special order online, and the food tends to be unfilling and unsatisfying and the sort of thing you suffer through as penance while the rest of your family eats a box of mac and cheese.

Not so, here! These recipes seem flavorful and savory, the kind of thing a family will happily sit down to eat together. I plan on trying some of these soon, and will add it to my personal collection.


★★★★★

Simple Superfood Soups by Pamela Ellgen
out April 28, 2020
ISBN: 978-1646114702
Paperback: $8.98/ Kindle: $0.99 

I appreciate when a cookbook teaches me some things!

Excellent information for creating broths and savory soups, and the kind of recipes that are easily tweaked to fit what you have in the kitchen. I'm sure to get a lot of mileage out of this one.

These cookbooks were received free from Rockridge Press to review. If I didn't like them, you wouldn't be hearing about them.
★★★★★

Hashimoto's Diet for the Newly Diagnosed: A 21-Day Elimination Diet Meal Plan and Cookbook by Daphne Olivier

out May 26, 2020
ISBN: 978-1646117505
Paperback: $16.99 / Kindle: $9.99 / Free on Kindle Unlimited

I have Hashimoto's Disease, and I can attest that your body experiences a lot of capricious highs and lows. (Well, not really highs -- more like normals and lows.) Your diet can affect this, and when I eat a lot of junk, I feel like absolute garbage -- exhaustion, brain fog, body aches, depression, anxious thoughts.

This book is good for those newly diagnosed who are trying to figure out which foods make them feel like garbage the most so that you can avoid them. It has easy recipes with ingredients you can find at the store, and a helpful guide to when to make them and when to eat them. Elimination diets can seem intense. It's a huge list of items you can't eat, and it can feel like the only thing you're allowed to eat that won't make you feel bad is blueberries and cauliflower.

These guides make it more manageable, less intimidating, and the fact that the author is a real medical professional helps.

Hang in there, Hashimoto's folks. Once you figure out your triggers, you can cut down on them. (I still eat a bit of breads/tortillas, dairy products, the occasional fast food. Learn how much you can handle.)

arc received from the publisher for review

★★★★★

Easy Thyroid Diet Plan: A 28-Day Meal Plan and 75 Recipes for Symptom Relief by Emily Kyle

ISBN: 978-1646116652
Paperback: $12.49 / Kindle: $9.99 / Free on Kindle Unlimited

I LOVE THIS COOKBOOK.

I have Hashimoto's Disease and I basically feel like crap anytime I eat something that tastes good, so I am very excited to try these out. They look like real food and it's written by a dietitian so you know it's legit. Stew, meatballs, jerky, crackers... yes please.

Thank you, world.

arc received from the publisher for review


I'd love to offer more intensive online storytimes during these closures but I'm hesitant to encourage little ones to spend a lot of time on the phone/tablet/computer. It is not developmentally positive. How can we limit screentime for little ones while doing storytime?

I've found a good middle ground by posting short 5-8 minute videos of me reading 2-3 books from my house. These are posted with a suggested DIY Storytime for the caregiver and child to do together, featuring links to 3 free e-books via BookFlix and songs and activities they can do together. I'm posting the story videos on Facebook for 4 weeks at a time in the interests of fair use boundaries.

I've thrown together a handful so far, and please feel free to use them and share them freely and please make your own with the resources your community offers. 




COVID-19 has closed libraries, and it looks like we won't be doing much programming for a while when we reopen. Whether you are using a program like Beanstack or just social media to facilitate your library's online presence, here is a growing list of ideas for ways to keep exploration going.

Language Challenges

Create mini-challenges for learning how to say things in different languages. A simple idea is to encourage kids to learn how to count to ten in another language, or learn how to introduce themselves. 

Rocket Languages has some cool resources for learning to count to ten.

Experiencing New Music from Around the World

Smithsonian Folkways has tons of music online, and offers some full videos or 30 second previews of different styles of music. Here's a list of options we're putting our Beanstack page:

Listen to 30 seconds of traditional Indian music featuring the sitar.
India's Great Shamim Ahmed: Three Ragas

Listen to 30 seconds of traditional music from the country Turkey.
Songs and Dances of Turkey

Check out this group of musicians from Ghana. They are truck drivers who play music using truck parts to draw interest to the importance of truck drivers. How creative!
Por Por: Honk Horn Music of Ghana

Listen to 30 seconds of traditional American bluegrass music featuring the banjo.
Bluegrass Breakdown

Check out this video of son jarocho music from Veracruz in Mexico.
José Gutiérrez and Los Hermanos Ochoa

Listen to 30 seconds of this music group from Western Samoa.
Lau lupe Youth Group from Saleufi, Apia

Encourage engagement with the outdoors.

Many of us live our whole lives unaware of what species of birds or trees are around us. Look up local guides to the birds and trees in your area and encourage patrons to journey outside and see which ones they can identify.

Here's one such example for the Chicago area.

Other ideas:

The Smithsonian Institute has this landing page of tons of kids/teen activities.

BedtimeMath.org has a daily math word problem with difficulty settings from toddler to high school.
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