A Little Help with Holiday Cooking

Cook up something tasty this holiday season! Whether you are a beginner in the kitchen or consider yourself to be a master chef, the Pratt Library has a cookbook for everyone. Check out one of these books at Sidewalk Service or download on Hoopla or Overdrive. You might just find your new favorite dessert recipe!

Big Love Cooking
by Joey Campanaro
Book

BBQ&A
by Myron Mixon
eBook
Brown Sugar Kitchen
by Tanya Holland
eBook
Crossroads
by Tal Ronnen
Book
Magnolia Table
by Joanna Gaines
eBook
Instant Pot Soups
by Alexis Mercel
eBook
The Great Big Pumpkin Cookbook
by Michalczyk Maggie eBook
Pie Academy
by Ken Haedrich
eBook

Beautiful Boards
by Meagan Brown
eBook
The Friendly Vegan Cookbook by Michelle Cehn & Toni Okamoto
Book
Vegan Holiday Cookbook
by Katie Culpin
Book
Baking With Less Sugar
by Joanne Change
Book
Dinnertime
by Ree Drummond
eBook
Carla Hall’s Soul Food
by Carla Hall and Genevieve Ko
eBook|Audiobook

Check out What’s New at the Pratt!

Looking to give a new book a try? We have you covered! Here’s a look at the newest items available from the Enoch Pratt Free Library. Don’t forget you can reserve books, DVDs, and more with Sidewalk Service and download e-materials with Overdrive and Hoopla.

Watchmen
by Regina King
Video
Doctor Who
by Russell T. Davies
Video

The Searcher
by Tana French
Book
A Time For Mercy
by John Grisham
Book
A Promised Land
by Barack Obama
Book
Invisible Girl
by Lisa Jewell
Book
The Greatest Secret
by Rhonda Byre
Book
The Midnight Library
by Matt Haig and Carey Mulligan
Audiobook
Ten Lessons For A Post-Pandemic World
by Fareed Zakaria
eBook
Magic Lessons
by Alice Hoffman
eBook
Memorial
by Bryan Washington eBook

Story Books In American Sign Language for Children

by Jamillah Abdul-Saboor, Print and Design Studio

Recently I did a blog on Learning More About the Deaf Community through the Library, which was more geared to the adult community. But the Pratt Library also has a robust selection of signed children’s books. Here are some of my favorites.

Grandma Bendy
by Izy Penguin
Video

Snow
by Carol Thompson
Video
Elmer and the Big Bird
by David McKee
Video
The Cloud
by Hannah Cumming
Video
Ruby’s Sleepover
by Kathryn White and Miriam Latimer
Video
Igor The Bird Who Couldn’t Sing
by Satoshi Kitamura and Peter Cook
Video
The Dog Detectives Lost in London
by Dawn Lumsden and Monika Suska
Video
Shrinking Sam
by Miriam Latimer
Video
The Jelly That Wouldn’t Wobble
by Angela Mitchell and Sarah Horne
Video

For more stories and other literature go to our Maryland Deaf Culture Digital Library overdrive.

Books to Honor Heroes this Veterans Day

Happy Veterans Day! Thank you to all those who served and are continuing to serve our country. Today, the Pratt wanted to spotlight books either written by veterans or highlighting their courage and sacrifice.

No Easy Day
by Mark Owen with
Kevin Maurer
eBook
Fearless
by Eric Blehm
eBook
Red Platoon
by Clinton Romesha eBook
Redeployment
by Phil Klay
eBook
Thank You for Your Service by David Finkel
eBook
Into The Fire
by Dakota Meyer
eBook

The Pacific
by Hugh Ambrose
eBook
American Sniper
by Chris Kyle
eBook
Thank You For My Service by Mat Best
eBook
Resilience
by Eric Greitens
eBook
Shooting Ghosts
by Thomas J. Brennan USMC (Ret.)
and Finbarr O’Reilly
eBook
Scholars of Mayhem
by Daniel C. Guiet and Timoth K. Smith
eBook

Agatha Raisin, Nosey Cozies in the Cotswolds

by Tom Warner (Best & Next Department)

Agatha Raisin

Emmy-nominated actress Ashley Jensen stars as the titular snarky publicist-turned-amateur detective in what Acorn TV calls a “quintessentially British village mystery” series based on the bestselling books by M.C. Beaton, and the pilot episode movie and all three seasons of Agatha Raisin are now available to download or stream through Hoopla using your library card. Author M.C. Beaton (the pseudonym of Marion Chesney Gibbons) died in January 2020, so it seems fitting to take a look back at the adventures of her most popular fictional sleuth in the picturesque Cotswolds village of Carsely during these glorious summer days.

Now “Quintessentially British village mystery” means that this is your textbook “Cozy Mystery,” a subgenre of crime fiction in which sex and violence occur offstage, the detective is an amateur sleuth, and the crime and detection take place in a small, socially intimate community. Agatha Raisin is guilty as charged on all these counts, but while M.C. Beaton’s mystery book “cozies” strike me as forgettable, cookie-cutter trifles, the television adaptations of her creations breath new life into timeworn cozy conventions. (Beaton’s other long-running mystery series, featuring Scottish constable Hamish Macbeth, was also turned into a BBC television series, starring Robert Carlyle, in 1995.)  That’s due both to the screenwriters who adapted Ms. Beaton’s original stories (Stuart Harcourt, Chris Murray, Chris Neil and Julia Gilbert) as well as the impeccable ensemble cast, whose ranks include not only Ashley Jensen (whose previous credits include Extras, Catastrophe, Ugly Betty and Love, Lies & Records), but: Mathew Horne (Gavin  & Stacey) as Agatha’s flamboyant personal assistant Roy Silver; Matt McCooey as easy-going DC Bill Wong;  Jason Barnett as Agatha’s bumbling nemesis DCI Wilkes; Jamie Glover as Agatha’s handsome neighbor and love-interest James Lacey;  Jason Merrells as womanizing aristocrat Sir Charles Fraith; Rhashan Stone as village vicar Jez Bloxby (a reimagining of Alf Bloxby in the books, here played by a black actor);  Lucy Liemen as the vicar’s wife Sarah Bloxby; Katy Wix as Agatha’s housekeeper and sleuthing pal Gemma Simpson  (called Doris Simpson in the novels) ; and Jodi Tyack as Toni Gilmour, who takes over from Gemma as Agatha’s housekeeper-sleuthing assistant in Season 3.

The 2014 pilot episode of Agatha Raisin was an adaptation of the first book in M.C. Beaton’s series, Agatha Raisin and the Quiche of Death (1992). Having just retired from a high-powered career in London, Agatha decides to settle down in Carsely after hearing about a quiche competition. Used to the competitive business world of the big city, she of course cheats – buying a spinach quiche from a famous London quiche shop and entering it as her own. But when the judge dies from poisoning after tasting her quiche, Agatha sets out to find the poisoner and clear her own name; in the process, she decides she likes her newfound job of sleuthing.

Agatha’s character in the TV series is notably different from her depiction in the novels, and that’s a testament to Ashley Jensen’s innate charm and comic timing. Jensen’s Agatha is more complex than Beaton’s print version, with the actress adding a depth and vulnerability to the character. And while she’s from Birmingham in Beaton’s books, here she is from Scotland because, well, there’s no explaining away Jensen’s native Scottish accent. Other characters from the novels and some of the relationships between them are also notably different (Alf and Sarah are a much older white couple in the novels) in the TV series, as the actors enrich these characters with their own unique personalities, especially DCI Wilkes. Wilkes is not black in the books, but after seeing Jason Barnett’s charming portrayal it’s hard to imagine anyone else playing him.And then, of course, there’s the real star of the series: its setting. Like Doc Martin and Downtown Abbey, it’s the beautiful landscape that is just as important as the characters moving through it. Carsely may be a fictional town, but it is set in and filmed around the Cotswolds; this rural area of rolling hills, grassy meadows, thatched medieval houses, churches and stately homes built of local yellow limestone covers six counties in south central England and is considered the “honey-tinged heart of England.” And it’s just the kind of place a well-heeled (and Agatha is always well-heeled, no matter how inappropriately!) London publicist would retire to, though it takes some time for the brash big city outlier and the snooty, conservative villagers to get used to one another. And that’s part of the fun!

Agatha Raisin
DVD

Murder, mayhem and mystery may abound around Carsely, but it’s always light-hearted and is never as dark or as bountiful as in the equally quaint neighboring villages of Oxfordshire, home to all those Midsomer Murders. If streaming is not your cup of tea, you can also check out Seasons 1 and 2 of Agatha Raisin on DVD and pick up them up via Sidewalk Service or Books-by-Mail

And if (like me) you fall in love with Ashley Jensen, be sure to check out the savvy Scot in her series Love, Lies & Records, which is also available to download or stream on Hoopla or check out in DVD format from Pratt.

Watch the Agatha Raisin trailer (Acorn Media).

Watch the Love, Lies & Records trailer (Acorn TV).