Post-Punk Pop Poetry Is Alive and Well on Hoopla!

by Tom Warner, Best & Next Department

When Bob Dylan won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2016, it cemented his legacy not only as a celebrated rock & roll lyricist but as a legitimate poet, period. Lauded for having created “new poetic expressions within the great American song tradition,” Dylan’s achievement no doubt inspired many other pop musicians who aspired to have their words taken just as seriously as their music. One of those bands is Fontaines D.C., who hail from across the pond in Ireland, “the land of poets and legends, of dreamers and rebels,” as author Nora Roberts famously described the Emerald Isle. “All of these have music woven through and around them. Tunes for dancing and for weeping, for battle or for love.”

Dubliners Fontaines D.C.

Roberts’ description aptly describes Fontaines D.C., so if post-punk pop from the land of poetry and legend appeals to you, you’re in luck because you can use your library card to stream or download (mobile device only) both of Fontaines D.C.’s albums to-date, Dogrel (2019) and A Hero’s Death (2020), through Hoopla!

Poets who know it: Fontaine D.C.’s “Vroom!”

Fontaines D.C. are a young post-punk band from Dublin (the D.C. is for Dublin City, a suffix the group added to their name when it turned out there was a band from Los Angeles also named The Fontaines) that formed in 2017 while the lads were attending music college at the British and Irish Modern Music Institute (BIMMI). Taking their name from a fictional character portrayed by Al Martino in the movie The Godfather (Vito Corleone’s godson, the Sinatra-styled singer “Johnny Fontaine”), the musicians – singer Grian Chatten, guitarists Carlos O’Connell and Conor Curley, bassist Conor Deegan III and drummer Tom Coll – first bonded over a shared love of poetry. In fact, they collectively released two collections of poetry – Vroom (inspired by American Beat poets) and Wingding (inspired by Irish poets) – before recording their critically acclaimed debut album, Dogrel in 2019.

“Dublin in the rain is mine, a pregnant city with a Catholic mind.” – Fontaines D.C., “Big”
Dogrel (2019)

The title of the band’s debut is a self-deprecating homage to “Doggerel,” the working-class “poetry of the people” popularized by so-called “bad” poets like William McGonagall and later by the playful light verse of Baltimore’s own Ogden Nash that made a virtue of the trivial. Dogrel was released to critical acclaim in April 2019: it was voted Album of the Year by record label Rough Trade and BBC Radio 6 Music, and was nominated for both the Mercury Prize and the Choice Music Prize. “Shouty post-punk bands are making a surprise comeback in 2019,” hailed The Irish Times, crediting “this brutal but articulate Irish bunch” with capturing “the feeling of living in Dublin as it balances historical weight with financial upheaval.” The opening rant “Big” sets the template for the band’s sound – equal parts Mark E. Smith and The Fall vitriol, pounding beats and driving Gang of Four guitars – with lyrics reflecting the group’s upbringing in Dublin’s historically working-class southwest neighborhood, “The Liberties”: “Dublin in the rain is mine, a pregnant city with a Catholic mind”. “Chequeless Reckless” and “Liberty Belle” continue the overcast mood, but sunny pop shines through to save the day on tunes like the Smiths-friendly “Television Screen” and the album’s best song, the breakthrough single “Boys In the Better Land,” a tour-de-force of melodic pop and verbal assault that even gives a shout-out to a famous Dubliner muse: “The radio is all about a runway model, with a face like sin and a heart like a James Joyce novel.” But be forewarned: singer Grian Chatte’s brogue is as thick and heavy as a bowl of split-pea soup and at times as hard to decipher as a James Joyce novel!Intrigued? Then give a listen to “Boys in the Better Land” (YouTube)

The band’s second studio album, A Hero’s Death, was written and recorded in the midst of extensive touring for their debut, and was only released last month – yet here it is on Hoopla already (hooray!). Despite titles such as “Sunny,” “Oh Such a Spring,” and “Love Is the Thing,” the mood is mostly brooding and reserved, as if the band didn’t want to be pigeon-holed by the blunt punk format of their initial offering. In fact, Grian Chatten went so far as to call the songs “a dismissal of expectations.” Thus, the quietly hypnotic “You Said” – sounding like a slow-tempo Smiths song, with Grian Chatten playing Morrissey to a beautiful, lilting guitar solo lifted from Johnny Marr’s playbook – gives way to “Living In America,” wherein Chatten channels the spirit of Ian Curtis in a Joy Division dirge. Clearly, this a sophomore effort that shows growth and maturity, trading the driving punk assault of their debut for what one critic called “a series of existential mantras set to broody post-punk anthems.” So feel free to dismiss your expectations but don’t dismiss Fontaines D.C. just yet; you may find yourself embracing some unpredictably exciting new sounds worth exploring.The debut single from the album is the titular “A Hero’s Death.” To watch the official video, starring Aiden Gillen (“Littlefinger” on HBO’s Game of Thrones), click here.

Chills and Thrills in the Lucky Day Collection

Trick or Treat. Give me something good to read!


The chill of the autumn is here and that means Halloween is right around the corner. Get in the mood to celebrate with mysteries and thrillers in Overdrive’s Lucky Day collection. Don’t forget, the Lucky Day collection offers many bestselling eBooks and eAudiobooks that are available to download with no holds and no renewals.

The Southern Book Club’s To Slaying Vampires
by Grady Hendrix and Bahni Turpin
Audiobook
Something She’s Not Telling Us
by Darcy Bell and Vivienne Leheny
Audiobook
Hit List
by Stuart Woods
eBook

The Third Rainbow Girl
by Emma Copley Eisenberg
eBook
One Minute Out
by Mark Greaney
eBook
Crooked River
by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child
Audiobook
The Family Upstairs
by Lisa Jewell
eBook
Twisted Twenty-Six
by Janet Evanoich
eBook
The Night Fire
by Michael Connelly and Titus Welliver
Audiobook
The Guardians
by John Grisham
eBook
The Shape of Night
by Tess Gerritsen
eBook
The Institute
by Stephen King
eBook
Redemption
by David Baldacci and Kyf Brewer
Audiobook
The Silent Patient
by Alex Michaelides and Jack Hawkins
Audiobook
Cop Town
by Karin Slaughter
eBook

The Spotlight on Nic Stone

by Sara Wecht, Librarian

Dear Martin
by Nic Stone
Book

Dear Martin was the 2019 selection for One Book Baltimore. Nic Stone recently came out with the sequel called Dear Justyce.

Dear Martin‘s main character is Justyce, a teenage boy who struggles to comprehend and cope with racism. 

Trying to help his ex-girlfriend, he gets thrown to the ground and handcuffed. Despite her and her parents’ testimonies, he remains handcuffed for hours. Even though he is released, he is traumatized by the event. He attempts to bring himself some peace by writing letters to the late Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

Kids at school discuss racism and this leads to debates similar to those happening currently in our own society. “That ONE black person did it, why can’t you?” “I’m colorblind. Skin color doesn’t matter.” 

One day, he aimlessly rides around with his best friend, Manny, when they get yelled at by someone in another car because of their music. They don’t listen and then they both suddenly get shot. The gentleman was an unidentifiable cop who did not announce himself as such and had no reason for his distress and actions. Justyce is injured but okay. Manny dies.

The politics and media are a nightmare for Justyce. His trauma envelopes him, even as he sporadically writes letters to Martin, asking what he would do. 

This book is about love, family, friendship, loss, trauma, and racism. Justyce dates a white girl who debates with racist classmates. His mom doesn’t approve. His best friend has other, white, friends who only see him as rich, not black. There’s a scene where the group of boys, Justyce, Manny, and Manny’s three white friends, dress up as stereotypes for Halloween. One of them dressed as a KKK member. This caused them a world of problems. A fight breaks out.

Throughout the book are small instances where race is a factor where people might not expect in real life. My takeaway is about the connection between racism and trauma. The two circle each other to the point that it cripples that person’s life. We see that somewhat with Justyce, but there’s hope for him at the end- he’s happy with his girlfriend and  he’s about to attend an Ivy League college. This is a subtle reflection of racism too- that he needs to “become white” in order to be happy- to get a girlfriend and go to a prestigious school. 

However, at the very end he becomes friends with the guy who was previously racist (but didn’t realize it) which implies that it is possible for people to change and for different races to get along after turmoil.  

This is a powerful book that’s about a topic that pervades our society today. This book may be fictional, but these experiences and emotions happen daily. Although this book may be difficult to read during certain parts, it’s one everyone should pick up.

Below are more books by Nic Stone that you may also be interested in including the sequel Dear Justyce.

Dear Justyce
by Nic Stone
eBook|Book|Audiobook
Clean
by Nic Stone
eBook|Book
Shuri
by Nic Stone
eBook|Book
Jackpot
by Nic Stone
Book
Odd One Out
by Nic Stone
Book

Books to Help Boost your Savings Account

Happy National Savings Day! Many might not know that it’s a holiday, but it makes cents (see, what we did there?) to celebrate by spotlighting personal finance books available on Hoopla. With Hoopla, you can download up to 12 ebooks, music, TV shows, and movies instantly. What are you waiting for? The guide to financial freedom can be downloaded in seconds. 

I Will Teach You To Be Rich by Ramit Sethi
eBook
Playing With FIRE
by Scott Rieckens
eBook
Big Money Thinks Small
by Joel Tillinghast eBook|Audiobook
Debt-Free Forever
by Gail Vaz-Oxlade
eBook
Dollarlogic
by Andy Martin
eBook
Don’t Retire Broke
by Rick Rodgers eBook|Audiobook
Happy Go Money
by Melissa Leong eBook|Audiobook
Millennial Money Makeover
by Conor Richardson eBook|Audiobook
Power Property Investing For Women
by Bindar Dosanjh
eBook
Real Money Answers For Every Women
by Patrice C. Washington eBook
Student Loan Solution
by David Carlson
eBook
The 21 Day Financial Fast by Michelle Singletary eBook
The 30 Day Money Cleanse by Ashley Feinstein Gerstley
eBook|Audiobook
Modern Couple’s Money Guide
by Lesley-Anne Scorgie eBook
Zero Down Your Debt
by Holly Porter Johnson and Greg Johnson
eBook

Learning More about the Deaf Community through the Library

by Jamillah Abdul-Saboor, Print and Design Studio

As an employee at the Pratt, I have had the pleasure of experiencing so many cultures from the steady flow of customers especially when I started in the position as an office assistant in the Circulation Department. I encountered customers from different ethnic backgrounds and learned a lot about different languages and behaviors. But I have always been intrigued about deaf customers that would come in for services because of how they are able to communicate with others who are hearing and are still able to get what is needed. Being in that department, I was able to learn some basics in ASL, including “library card,” “computers,” “hello,” and “thank you” so we could help deaf customers feel comfortable at the Pratt. To tell the truth it felt very good to bridge that gap in basic communication. 

https://www.facebook.com/theprattlibrary/videos/368261540989329/
Lauren Read, BST Librarian, Signs about the two eBooks titles
Deaf President Now! and Baltimore’s Deaf Heritage

Deaf President Now!
by John B. Christiansen and Sharon N. Barnartt
eBook

Baltimore’s Deaf Heritage
by Kathleen Brockway
eBook

Now that we are in COVID-19 pandemic,  I often wonder about our deaf customers who are always seen and not heard. In doing some research, I found the Pratt Library has a great catalog of resources to help expand knowledge about the deaf community.

Below are some titles from Maryland Deaf Culture Digital Library that you can check out today:

Four Days With Kenny Tedford
by Paul Smith
eBook
The Hidden Treasure of Black ASL
by Carolyn McCaskill and Ceil Lucas
eBook
The Imprisoned Guest
by Elisabeth Gitter
eBook
On The Beat of Truth
by Maxine Childress Brown
eBook

If you would like to know more about the hearing impaired life go to HLAA Hearing Loss Association of America.