Saturday, February 24, 2024
Week Seven Prompt Response
Science Fiction Annotation: Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
Title: Fahrenheit 451
Genre: Science Fiction
Publication Date: 1953
Number of Pages: 158
Geographical Setting: America, Midwest
Time Period: After 1990
Plot Summary: In a dystopian future in which books are outlawed, Guy Montag is a fireman. His job is to burn any books that are found. He does his job without asking a question, until one fateful day. When the fireman come the occupants of the house are usually gone, having been removed by the police. This night the house with the books had an occupant: a woman who chose to be burned with her books. This event is the catalyst for a change in Montag. His whole world begins to unravel once he seeks the information that is within books.
Subject Headings: Totalitarianism - Fiction
Book burning - Fiction
Censorship - Fiction
Science Fiction Appeals
Story Line: "Story is central in [Science Fiction]. The works in this genre contain an almost overwhelming richness of concepts as well as difficult questions that unfold on multiple planes" (Wyatt & Saricks, 2019, p. 121).
The story of this book is the thing that really gripped me into reading it. The story of a man who was forced to burn books coming to understand the importance of them is a compelling narrative. The story is also a big metaphor for censorship. It works on both a literal and metaphorical level.
Frame: "The otherness of time, place, or reality is crucial to the attraction of Science Fiction" (Wyatt & Saricks, 2019, p. 122)
The time period is almost immediately alien to us. The fireman burning books is the one aspect that has aged well in this sense. The majority of the other futuristic/alien technologies that are presented just exist. The opening of a door with a hand print, room sized televisions, tailored content, mindless content, in-ear radios, etc. These were accurate predictions of the future, so they lessen the feeling of otherness from the setting.
Characterization: "Although attention is paid to characterizations at the more literary end of the genre, generally the issues, story, and frame are given greater attention than the creation of dimensional, fully realized characters" (Wyatt & Saricks, 2019, p. 124)
The characters of this book are flat and archetypical. The story more focuses on its obvious messaging rather than fleshing out any of the characters. There are hints to more depth, like the suicide scene at the beginning of the book, that do not amount to anything. That scene more or less served the purpose of showing the hopelessness of society and the lack of autonomy in this totalitarian state.
Three Terms to Describe this Book:
Thought Provoking
Prescient
Timeless
Science Fiction Read-Alikes
Mockingbird by Walter Tevis
A story that is set in a future in which reading is forbidden and robots have control over humans. The story follows two humans who teach themselves how to read.
Common Appeal: Similar themes around censorship and a general disdain for the new technology of the era. Both are dystopian/science fiction novels.
1984 by George Orwell
A story that is a cautionary tale of when the government is given to much power. The story deals with totalitarianism, thought control, and mass surveillance.
Common Appeal: They are both cautionary tales that are meant to warn the public. They are both dystopian/science fiction novels.
The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood
A story about a dystopian, fascist America now know as Gilead. It is set in the near future after the patriarchal, totalitarian uprising overthrew the United States Government.
Common Appeal: This is a cautionary tale meant to show what can happen if a fascist government took power. They are both dystopian/science fiction novels.
Non Fiction Read-Alikes
README.txt by Chelsea Manning
A memoir about her experience leaking documents that showed the American public the truth of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Common Appeal: This book deals with the government control of the population through the media and control of information. That is a major theme within Fahrenheit 451.
How Fascism Works by Jason Stanley
A nonfiction book explaining how fascism works and the tactics that are employed to gain power.
Common Appeal: This book shows how a fascist, totalitarian government could come to be. This is a more realistic look at the themes of fascism presented in the novel.
Nothing to Envy by Barbara Demick
A book that follows six different people who escaped from North Korea. It offers us a look into one of the most oppressive societies that exists today.
Common Appeal: This book shows the lived experiences of people who lived under a totalitarian regime.
References
Wyatt, N., & Saricks, J. G. (2019). The readers' advisory guide to genre fiction (3rd ed.). ALA Editions.Friday, February 16, 2024
Week Six Prompt Response
Thursday, February 8, 2024
Week 5 Prompt Response
They both feel sort of reliable, the blog more than the Amazon review. I think that for personal use an Amazon review might be helpful, but for a library it is hard to justify a purchase decision with that. The blog, on the other hand, is good. The author took time to explain more of the plot and had more of a critique to their review than the Amazon review. I would personally not buy this book for my library. The main reason is because of the lack of professional reviews and the fact that it is, most-likely, self-published. The library that I currently work for has a strict rule against self-published materials, so if this book is, it would not be able to be purchased for that reason alone.
The other document contains some reviews of Angela's Ashes, by Frank McCourt, an incredibly popular memoir. These reviews are all from professional publications, feel free to find more on your own. I just nabbed a few from the Book Review Digest database for you. How do these reviews make you feel about the possibility of adding Angela's Ashes to your collection?
These reviews would give good justification towards purchasing this book. They all speak highly of the book and speak of how good of a story teller the author is. They are all from credible review sources and the book is most likely traditionally published. I would be inclined to purchase a few copies to see if they circulated well and then purchase more if it did.
Do you think it's fair that one type of book is reviewed to death and other types of books get little to no coverage? How does this affect a library's collection? And how do you feel about review sources that won't print negative content? Do you think that's appropriate? If you buy for your library, how often do you use reviews to make your decisions? If not, how do you feel about reviews for personal reading, and what are some of your favorite review sources?
I personally do not think that it is fair that one type of book gets reviewed professionally over another. In the age of the e-reader books that would not have ever been traditionally published are becoming immensely popular and then being picked up by publishers. The most recent example I can think of is Freida McFadden. Her work started off as self-published and now all of her books are extremely popular. I have never seen one of her books last more than an hour on the shelves. By having to justify purchases by things like professional reviews or traditional publishing you are harming the collection. The invention of the e-reader has changed the landscape of both publishing and libraries. We need to find new ways to justify purchases so that the collection can reflect the interests and needs of patrons.
I am ambivalent on the fact that some reviewers do not publish negative content. I personally do not like it, but I understand where the idea is coming from. They do not want to disparage an author who worked hard on their novel. I would personally never use a review site that does not publish negative reviews. Criticism, especially the kind that is negative, is very important. It is important for the author to receive honest feedback for the work that they put out into the world. It is also important so that people can make informed decisions about their purchases.
I do not buy for my library, so for personal purchases I mostly go by word-of-mouth and things that catch my eye. I do not often look at reviews as the deciding factor on whether or not I purchase a book. If I do I might look at GoodReads or whatever review comes up when I Google the book. The vast majority of the time when I buy a book, or check something out from my library, it is based on vibes or coworker recommendations. Of the two items that I have currently checked out one is off of a coworker’s display and the other is a collection of manga that one of my favorite animes was based on.
Kirkus Review: This is How You Lose the Time War
Two agents who help wage war throughout time, to ensure their futures come to fruition, begin exchanging letters.
Red and Blue are on different sides of a war that is being raged through all points in time. Red is from a technologically advanced future, she herself is part machine. While Blue is from a more nature based future where people are one with each other. They begin exchanging letters when Blue leaves a letter taunting Red at the sight of her loss. The book is structured chapter by chapter focusing on the letters that they send to one another. The letters they send are hardly ever though words on paper they are told through the flow of lava, the bark of a tree, tea-leaves, and the entrails of an animal. The book is written in an almost poetic style. The letters are never simple correspondence, they have layers that can be interpreted any number of ways. Red and Blue feel like they are from completely different universes, but have more similarities than we can first see. The book is the blossoming of their correspondence and an example of what can happen when enemies begin to talk to one another.
A beautiful, poetic science fiction novella that shows that soldiers on opposite sides of a war have more in common than what first meets the eye.
ISBN: 9781534431003
Publisher: Saga Press
Categories: Science Fiction, Fantasy, Time Travel
Page Count: 208
Publishing Date: July 16, 2019
Week 15 Prompt Response
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An important thing that libraries can do to, hopefully, increase circulation is to market the collection. I think that the three best ways t...