Stay Calm and Read On! How to Balance Work and Life.

Balancing work, school, family life, and general concerns during the pandemic is a lot for so many people. To help, here’s look at a few books to help keep you calm and centered this fall.

52 Small Changes for the Mind
by Brett Blumenthal
eBook
A Walk in the Wood
by Dr. Joseph Parent and Nancy Parent
eBook
After the Rain
by Alexandra Elle
eBook
An Artful Path Mindfulness by Janet Slom
eBook
Anxiety Happens
by John P. Forsyth and George H. Eifert
eBook
Bigger Better Braver
by Nancy Pickard
eBook
Everyday Calming Rituals by Tania Ahsan
eBook
Stay Woke
by Justin Michael Williams
eBook
The Anxiety Getaway
by Craig April
eBook
The Mister Rogers Effect by Anita Knight Kuhnley
eBook
The Negativity Remedy
by Nicole J. Phillips
eBook
The Unapologetic Guide To Black Mental Health by Rheeda Walker
eBook

Spotlight on YA Fiction

by Sara Wecht, Librarian

Looking for your next book to read? You can’t go wrong with either or these Young Adult Books.

The Gentleman’s Guide to Vice and Virtue
by Mackenzi Lee
Book|Audiobook|Compact Disc

This book is told from the perspective of an Earl’s son, Henry Montague Jr. But he goes by Monty. He and his best friend, Percy, with whom he’s in love, are going on a grand tour of Europe: a last chance for them to enjoy their youth before taking on unwanted responsibilities. His sister, Felicity, accompanies them if only to be dropped off at a finishing school- not the kind of school she wanted to attend.

On the first leg of their trip, Monty ends up in the rooms of a Duke at Versailles. To get revenge for the Duke’s rudeness toward him, Monty steals something. This item is not a trinket, as Monty thought, but a powerful form of alchemy. The chase and adventure that follow challenge their relationships and change them forever. Percy isn’t going where Monty thought, and suffers from an incurable illness. Monty struggles with his sexuality alongside his PTSD and alcoholism. Felicity fights against female norms in her pursuit of scientific knowledge. 

This is a light fantasy novel against the backdrop of 18th century Europe. It has an epic plot with twists and turns along the way, and characters that you might not like at first, but grow to love.


One of Us Is Next
by Karen McManus
Book|eBook|Audiobook

This is a sort of sequel to McManus’ book One of Us Is Lying. This sequel takes place in the same community as the first book, with a lot of characters that were side characters in the first book. You still see the characters from the original, though. This is nice because you can still keep tabs on them. 

In the wake of Simon’s blog and death (in the original book), the community is still on edge. Several copycats have tried to perpetuate the same drama that Simon did, to no avail. That is until someone texts everyone about a game where you pick truth or dare. The dares are semi-extreme and the truths are secrets that shouldn’t have been known. It boils up until a boy dies. The main characters try to figure out who’s behind the texts while uncovering the mysteries around his death. 

This book was a thrill-ride. I was left in the dark for most of the book, which is saying something for me! I enjoyed this one better than One of Us Is Lying partly because I guessed the ending. The truth or dare aspect plus all of the tiny secrets uncovered, which turn out to be connected, make for a more fascinating story. McManus makes us question the trustworthiness of characters and the accuracy of the information they uncover. That being said, I found myself wanting to skip certain chapters because I didn’t care as much about that character. Still, the end was a jaw dropper for me- I was not expecting it at all. 

Pick up this book if you’re looking for a dark high school thriller that keeps you reading to the last page!

Scary Movies: See what’s screaming- er, streaming on Kanopy!

Halloween is right around the corner! Treat yourself to a night of thrills with the 31 Days of Horror on Kanopy. From spooky classics to to current chilling films, there’s plenty to choose from on Kanopy. Stream away, if you dare.

Looking for something not as scary to watch?You might want to check out the Halloween for Kids section on Hoopla. Happy Hallowstream!

What’s New at the Pratt

Looking for your next book to read? We can help! Take a look at a few of the latest books available at the Pratt Library. Reserve your copy through Sidewalk Service or download your eBook on Overdrive and Hoopla.

Saving Ruby King
by Catherine Adel West eBook|Audiobook|Book
Thank You for Voting
by Erin Geiger Smith
eBook
Hidden Valley Road
by Robert Kolker eBook|Audiobook|Book
Something to Talk About
by Meryl Wilser eBook|Audiobook|Book
Jack
by Marilynne Robinson eBook|Audiobook|Book
Homeland Elegies
by Ayad Akhtar
eBook

What Are You Going Through
by Sigrid Nunez
eBook|Book
Once I Was You
by Maria Hinojosa
eBook
The Evening and the Morning
by Ken Follet
Book
What We Do In The Shadows
Movie
Yellowstone
Movie
Killing Eve
DVD

Learn More about Maryland’s Smith Island

by Lisa Greenhouse, Librarian

An Island Out of Time
by Tom Horton
Book

In 1987, science writer Tom Horton quit his job with the Baltimore Sun and moved with his wife and children to Tylerton, one of three small towns on Smith Island in the Chesapeake, Maryland’s only inhabited Bay island.  Horton spent two years in Tylerton, working as an environmental educator with the Chesapeake Bay Foundation.  Horton’s book, An Island Out of Time: A Memoir of Smith Island in the Chesapeake (W.W. Norton & Co., 1996), is part memoir, part oral history, part ethnography, and part elegy. 

Tom Horton
Author

The book’s title is doubly suggestive.  It captures the sense that Smith Island is an island out of time, a time capsule where some 17th Century folkways and speech patterns persist.  Yet the book’s title also conveys a sense of impending loss.  With multiple environmental pressures bearing down on them — overfishing, climate change, pollution — Smith Islanders don’t have much time left.  They are almost out of time.  In 1994, the population of Tylerton was 90, a 41% decline from 1980.  Currently around 50 people live in Tylerton.  During Horton’s stay, the young people were leaving, going to college or taking jobs at the mainland prison, opting out of the waterman’s trade that had been handed down for centuries.

Horton sends tapes of Smith Island speech to a British linguist and determines that the speech patterns of the Islanders are very similar to those of nineteenth century Devon in southwestern England.  Some have claimed that the Island speech patterns are Elizabethan, but the linguist tells Horton that it is not really known how ordinary people spoke in Elizabethan times.  The nineteenth century Devon speech patterns were, however, at least three centuries old.

However far back the speech patterns and folkways of Smith Islanders can be traced, Horton paints a picture of an eccentric people.  Most Smith Islanders are highly religious, steeped in a traditional form of Methodism, which has much more in common with contemporary evangelicalism than with today’s Methodist Church.  At the same time, the conversation of Smith Islanders, both men and women, is peppered with bawdy sexual references, enough to make even a cosmopolitan mainlander blush (once their meaning is understood, that is).  One Smith Islander, for example, refers to her daughter as Boss Tippet (see page 106 for a translation).

Horton paints Smith Islanders as what he terms “Christian outlaws.”  They have lived off the bounty of the Island for so long that encounters with various environmental police forces have not always been amicable.  Who are the Game and Wildlife Police to tell them they can’t shoot or trap the waterfowl that they have been harvesting for centuries?  

Islanders still talk about an incident in which a young Smith Islander was shot and killed by a Virginia fisheries patrolman as if it occurred yesterday.  Horton is surprised when he finds out the shooting occurred around 1900.  In a part of Maryland where the sea and the land blend indistinctly, borders are not an easy concept to grasp, and the border between the grassy, shallow waters of Maryland and Virginia, abundant with blue crabs, was once fraught with conflict. 

The state regulatory apparatus impinged more and more on the traditional way of life of the Smith Islanders as the twentieth century wound down.  While soft crabs were the main source of income on Smith Island, wives of the Island watermen had for many years supplemented their incomes by picking hard crabs in their homes.  In the early 1990s, Maryland made it clear that it would no longer tolerate crab picking as a cottage industry and that if the picking was to continue, it would have to be in a modern facility with state of the art hygiene and food safety features.  

Next, Somerset County, approached the Islanders about installing a modern water treatment plant.  All of this regulation seemed unnecessary to the Islanders who had been drinking water directly from the well and picking crabmeat at home for many a year seemingly without problems.  The environmental regulation seemed unfair as well.  The Islanders saw themselves as a critical part of the Chesapeake ecology.  Their harvesting of nature’s bounty, whether it be hunting for waterfowl, fishing, crab scraping, or oyster dredging, seemed to them essential to the health of the ecosystem.  They couldn’t quite explain exactly how this was true.  Yet they seemed to accept it as an article of faith as true as the ones brought to the Island by Joshua Thomas, the Methodist preacher who converted the Chesapeake Bay islands in the early nineteenth century.

The Maryland Department has many books about Smith Island.  From Amazing Grace: Smith Island and the Chesapeake Watermen by Bernard Wolf (Macmillan, 1986) to Workboats of Smith Island by Paula J. Johnson (JHU Press, 1987), the Maryland Department’s Collection is a great way to learn about Smith Island before you take the ferry over.