We have great news for movie lovers and film buffs. Blu-Rays are now available at the Pratt Central Library! Branch users can put holds on blu-rays and have them delivered to your library of choice. Watch your favorite movie classics and latest releases in high definition in the comfort of your home.
Here a few films that we are planing on watching soon. Check out all of the Blu-Ray discs available here.
I’ve loved Jennifer Weiner since I bought her debut novel Good in Bed when it first came out. I mention this because when I say that this is her best novel, I know what I’m talking about. I love Jo so much. I saw her life unfold and I feel like it really could’ve been mine if I had been born in a different time and so I’m so happy and grateful that I was born when I was. And I love Bethie. The lives they both led were painful at times but so authentic. I feel so fortunate to live in a time when women have choices. I adored this book so much. I know we’ve been waiting a long time for it, but it was so worth it.
This book sucks you back into Medieval Russia, enmeshes you in the fairy tale and makes it so you don’t want to put it down, and even when I do it takes a while to stop thinking in a Russian accent. Excellent book.
Alyssa Cole has done it again with her newest Reluctant Royals novel! Fans of Cole’s first two books in the series won’t be disappointed with this one. Nya is a shy woman, emotionally abused by her father, and has been following the lifestyle of Prince Johan, the tabloids’ favorite bad-boy. Johan, the stepson of the king, has a fragile heart of gold, afraid to care for anything after the sudden death of his mother, and has been secretly watching the young timid Nya. When the two accidentally share a moment on the plane back to Thesolo, feelings start becoming reality!
This is an insightful recall of her life growing up with her mom and dad. It is personal and full of emotion and purpose to show the side of Ali that was personal and private.
Drama City by George Pelecanos is excellent if you like gritty, city books. The story and action are truly realistic and it is hard not to feel that the lives of certain people in the city are destined. It takes place in Washington, D.C., and is a story of the struggle people have pulling themselves out of the life they have led in the past. Good read.
Incredibly interesting read, a bit scarier than I had anticipated, not the best read for right before bed. The development of the main character is quite fascinating, you’re obviously rooting for him to save the world, but at the same time you (and the first-person author) are constantly unsure if you even like him.
This was a fun summer read, a soft-core thriller, with a heroine who combines being a mother and housewife with being a CIA agent. It starts with what you first think is a terrorist act, but as the book progresses you realize it is something entirely different. Entertaining and easy to read.
An interesting read on relationships and how different styles of communication can impact the health and strength of that relationship. It’s especially helpful for making sure you express love and gratefulness to your partner in a way that they will truly understand and value.
Baltimore is a city of neighborhoods, but did you ever think how those neighborhoods were formed? It’s easy to look at the conditions of blighted areas around the city and blame the current residents.
In Not in My Neighborhood you will learn that there were real and law-based, enforced practices that not only segregated the city of Baltimore but destroyed homes, development and created the very crime, blight and other issues that plague us all today. Red lining, criminal and deceptive real-estate practices and forced compliance are all in this book. You will never look at Baltimore and the people that live here the same again.
Framed around an investigation of a hit-and-run, this is a gripping story about what it means to come home. Lalami subtly illustrates what it means to be American today.
When 1993 teenager Mira catches her dad with his male lover, it marks the beginning of her family’s unraveling as she struggles first with her parents’ secrets, then her father’s contraction of HIV.
The writing evokes lovely imagery, especially surrounding astronomy and the New York City setting, while laying Mira’s conflicted emotions bare and sugar-free. The tone shifts halfway through as Mira’s family issues evolve with her perspective. The free-verse narrative style makes for a relatively fast, but not light, read.
Love this book. Such an inspiring autobiography of how to choose a life of faith over a life of fear. Also an excellent Insider’s view on how to make improvements in the justice system in this country.