Are Your Antiques and Collectibles Worth Something?

by Daria Phair, Librarian

The Fine Arts and Music Department has a large collection of books on the history, manufacturers, marks, and approximate values of various antiques and collectibles – artwork, ceramics, furniture, glassware, jewelry, silverware, toys, and many others.  Below are a few examples of titles that may help identify items in your collection.  If a book is reference, the Fine Arts staff is eager to look up whatever information you seek.  Ebooks on antiques and collectibles can also be checked out by going to Hoopla at https://www.prattlibrary.org/books-and-more.  

Kovels’ Antiques & Collectibles Price Guide 2021
by Ralph M. Kovel
Book

Miller’s Antiques Handbook & Price Guide 2020-2021 
by Judith Miller
Book
Warman’s Fiesta; Identification and Price Guide
by Glen Victorey
Book

Lehner’s Encyclopedia of U.S. Marks on Pottery, Porcelain & Clay
by Lois Lehner
Book
Glass Signatures, Trademarks, and Trade Names From the Seventeenth to the Twentieth Century
by Anne Geffken Pullin
Book
Mauzy’s Depression Glass; A Photographic Reference and Price Guide
by Barbara Mauzy & Jim Mauzy
Book
Answers to Questions About Old Jewelry:  Covers 1840-1950
by C. Jeanenne Bell
Book
Collecting Art Plastic Jewelry; Identification and Price Guide
by Leigh Leshner
Book
Encyclopedia of American Silver Manufacturers by Dorothy T. Rainwater
Book
Little Book of Mexican Silver Trade and Hallmarks
by Bille Hougart
Book
200 Years of Dolls; Identification and Price Guide
by Dawn Herlocher
Book
Collecting Costume Jewelry 303:  The Flip Side; Exploring Costume Jewelry From the Back:  Identification and Value Guide
by Julia C. Carroll
Book

Spotlight on World Autism Awareness Day

In honor of World Autism Awareness Day, we wanted to spotlight a few books featuring characters that are on the Autism spectrum. From fiction and romance to nonfiction and thriller, we hope that you can not only learn from, but enjoy these novels.

Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine
by Gail Honeyman
eBook
The Rosie Result
by Graeme Simsion
eBook
The Bride Test
by Helen Hoang
eBook
The Suicide House
by Charlie Donlea
Book
The Curious Incident Of The Dog In The Night-Time
by Mark Haddon
eBook
The Girl With The DragonTattoo
by Stieg Larsson
eBook
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close
by Jonathan Safran Foer
eBook
In A Different Key
by John Donvan and Caren Zucker
eBook
Look Me In The Eye
by John Elder Robison
eBook
The Kiss Quotient
by Helen Hoag
eBook
Daniel Isn’t Talking
by Marti Leimbach
Book
The Reason I Jump
by Naoki Higashida and Ka Yoshida
eBook

Women Make Film: Celebrating Great Female Filmmakers

by Tom Warner, Best & Next Department

Women Make Film: A New Road Movie Through Cinema
Film

“This is a film school of sorts, in which all the teachers are women. An academy of Venus.” – Women Make Film writer/director Mark Cousins.

Though more and more women are making movies today, the film industry has long been a boy’s club practicing sexism by omission. This year may mark the first time in Academy Award history that two women – Chloe Zhao (Nomadland) and Emerald Fennell (Promising Young Woman) – are up for best director. But they represent only the sixth and seventh women ever nominated for the prize in the academy’s 92-year history. Kathryn Bigelow remains the lone woman to have won a best director Oscar, for 2008’s The Hurt Locker. Now, just in time for our March celebration of Women’s History Month, comes a binge-worthy exploration of cinema history as seen through the lens of some of the world’s greatest directors – all of them women – that you can watch for free on Kanopy using your library card.

Women Make Film: A New Road Movie Through Cinema, which premiered at the 2018 Venice Film Festival, is the latest critically-acclaimed documentary series from writer-director Mark Cousins, the respected film scholar who previously gave us the epic The Story of Film: An Odyssey (also available on Kanopy). Over the course of 14 one-hour episodes, Cousins delivers an alternative history of cinema that exposes us to over 700 film clips from 183 female directors. (No wonder the impressively edited film was 20 years in the making.) Using only women filmmakers as examples and organized like a curriculum with a visual textbook of 40 “chapters,” Cousins’ presents a “film school of sorts” that introduces viewers to various themes and techniques of cinema from around the world as seen through the “female gaze.” Each episode stands alone and can either be viewed in order or sampled randomly. The emphasis is on inspiring viewers to explore previously unknown films and directors, regardless of how they watch.

The series is narrated by a number of well-known actresses, including Cousins’ long-time collaborator Tilda Swinton (who also served as executive producer on the series), Jane Fonda, Debra Winger, Thandie Newton, Kerry Fox, Adjoa Andoh and Sharmila Tagore. And it features analysis from such noted film scholars as Cari Beauchamp, Claire Johntson and Lynda Miles.

The Toronto International Film Festival observed that “Women Make Film overturns our understanding of cinematic history” by forcing “a deeper reckoning for the professional barriers against women” while championing “the global breadth of female filmmakers who overcame those obstacles.” 

But perhaps Tilda Swinton sums up the importance of the series best when she advises viewers: “Feel free to be angry because some of these great films have been overlooked. But feel free to be delighted at the medium of film, and at the women on whose shoulders we stand.”

More Kanopy movies about women:

Interested in learning more about women in film? Mary Mandy’s Filming Desire: A Journey Through Women In Cinema (2000) makes a good companion piece to Mark Cousins’ series. And Kanopy has hundreds more outstanding films about women’s issues, including 137 from the world’s leading distributor of independent films by and about women, Women Make Movies

New and Notable in YA Fiction

Teens, take a look at what’s new at the Pratt Library in Young Adult Fiction. From first love stories, to paranormal adventures, You just might find your new favorite book. Happy reading!

A Taste for Love
by Jennifer Yen
eBook
The Initial Insult
by Mindy McGinnis
eBook

If I Tell You The Truth
by Jasmin Kaur
eBook
Skyhunter
by Marie Lu
eBook
Roman and Jewel
by Dana L. Davis
eBook
Get A Clue
by Tiffany Schmidt
eBook
Empowered Black Girl
by M.J. Fievre
eBook
City Of Villains
by Estelle Laure
eBook
Circle of Shadows
by Evelyn Skye
eBook
The Color Of Lies
by C.J. Lyons
eBook
What Big Teeth
by Rose Szabo
eBook
Yesterday Is History
by KosoKo Jackson
eBook

Celebrate Maryland Day with a Good Book

by Lisa Greenhouse, Librarian

Working from home has given me a chance to break open some Maryland history titles on my bookshelf. The Pulitzer Prize-winning Beautiful Swimmers: Watermen, Crabs and the Chesapeake Bay  by William W. Warner was first published by Little, Brown & Co. in 1976.  Warner was a biologist with the Smithsonian Institution when he wrote about the interdependent biological and cultural ecosystems of the Chesapeake watershed. The reader learns about the life cycle of the blue crab — which is way more fascinating than one might expect — as well as the lives and folkways of the watermen, who depend on it for a living. 

Beautiful Swimmers: Watermen, Crabs and the Chesapeake Bay
by William W. Warner
Book

As a participant observer, Warner set out before dawn on the boats of skilled watermen to watch and help as they emptied crab pots, scraped the grassy shoals for peelers, dredged for sooks, netted crabs on trot lines, and captured herring and menhaden in pound nets. Warner developed lasting relationships with these men.  He wrote with sensitivity and a deep respect for their intimate knowledge of the Bay, knowledge which often accorded with that of the scientists who studied the Chesapeake.  

The book was written at a time when ecological awareness was beginning to reveal how imperiled the Chesapeake was but before the lifestyles of those dependent on it had become anachronistic.  It was a time when there was still a skipjack fleet that dredged oysters under sail in the winter and when many watermen’s wives were still working in the packing houses, though some had begun to leave for jobs in chain retail.  

Full of careful observation, humor, lore, and history, today’s reader will come away with an appreciation of a local way of life that was once vibrant but now hangs on by the thinnest blade of eelgrass.

Challenging Slavery in the Chesapeake
by Stephen T. Whitman
Book

Challenging Slavery in the Chesapeake: Black and White Resistance to Human Bondage, 1775-1865 (2007, Maryland Historical Society) by T. Stephen Whitman looks at a different aspect of regional history.  The Mid-Atlantic states had varying relationships to slavery and resistance.  For example, while the Pennsylvania line and freedom didn’t seem far off for slaves from Delaware and Maryland, Virginia’s remoteness from that line played a role in the choice of rebellion over flight.  In Maryland and Delaware, self-purchase agreements and manumissions after a term of slavery were more common. 

Whitman covers the Revolutionary War and the War of 1812, when many slaves fled behind British lines and others fought for the Americans, hoping to be rewarded with freedom.  Abolitionists, Quakers, the black Methodist church, freedom petitions, slave rebellions, the Underground Railroad, and colonization are all discussed at length.  Whitman’s book closes with the period leading up to the Civil War, when the Fugitive Slave Law helped to radicalize the north, and ends with that conflict. 

That the Genius of Universal Emancipation, an important early abolitionist newspaper, was published out of Baltimore and that its co-editor William Lloyd Garrison spent time in a Baltimore jail are among the interesting locally-tinged facts presented by Whitman.  Anti-slavery activists, from Maryland or operating there, such as Daniel Coker, Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman, and Jarena Lee are covered. Both of these books are held by the Enoch Pratt Free Library Maryland Department.