SCC Book Corner

The SCC Book Corner is a reading group dedicated to reading fiction and nonfiction works.

Archive for the tag “SCC Library”

Kick 2012 Off Right

New Year’s Resolution is a commitment that an individual makes to a project or the reforming of a habit, often a lifestyle change that is generally interpreted as advantageous.

The SCC Libraries have the right books to Kick 2012 Off Right.

Environmental

  • Powering the Dream: The History and Promise of Green Technology by Alex Madrigal TJ808.7 .U6 M33 2011

Health

  • Fit to Succeed: Make Health and Wellness Your Competitive Advantage by Steve Heussner RC969. H43 H38 2008
  • Healthy Employees, Healthy Business: Easy, Affordable Ways to Promote Workplace Wellness by Ilona Bray RC969. H43 B73 2009

Investments & Personal Finance

  • Hardy Money: Taking Gold to a Higher Investment Level by Shayne McGuire HG293. M.395 2010
  • Jim Cramer’s Getting Back to Even: Your Personal Economic Recovery Plan HG4910. C73 2009

 

 

What’s New?

Non-Fiction

The Band That Played On: The Extraordinary Story of the 8 Musicians Who Went Down with the Titanic by Steve Turner

G530. T6 T87 2011

Summary: April 15, 2012, will mark the 100th anniversary of the sinking of the Titanic, the world’s largest – and supposedly the safest – passenger ship of its time. You can be sure that the centennial will trigger a landslide of books on the subject. Less certain is how many will find anything new to say. But here is at least one – an early comer to the race – that has already succeeded on that count. The Band that Played On by Steve Turner is, surprisingly, the first book since the great ship went down to examine the lives of the eight musicians who were employed by the Titanic. The Christian Science Monitor, March 31, 2011 pNA

 I Belong to South Carolina: South Carolina Slave Narratives Edited by Susanna Ashton

E185.93 .S7 I2 2010

Summary: Clemson Univ. English professor Ashton and her associates have done readers of southern history and African American history a real service by compiling, editing, and making readily accessible the personal memories of seven individuals who lived at least a portion of their lives as slaves in South Carolina. The chronology ranges from the middle of the 18th century through Reconstruction and redemption. These accounts of the slave experience are collected memories, not a collective history.  CHOICE: Current Reviews for Academic Libraries, Nov 2010 v48 i3 p575(1)

From Marriage to the Market: The Transformation of Women’s Lives and Work by Susan Thistle

HD6095. T49 2006

Opportunities in Landscape Architecture, Botanical Gardens, and Arboreta Careers     by Blythe Camenson

SB469.384 .C35 2007

The Abusive Personality: Violence and Control in Intimate Relationships (2nd Edition)  by Donald C. Dutton

RC569.5 .F3 D87 2007

 Conjoined Twins in Black and White: The Lives of Millie-Christine McKoy & Daisey and Violet Hilton Edited by Linda Frost

QM691 .C66 2009

Bodies of Inscription: A Cultural History of the Modern Tattoo Community by Margo DeMello

GT2346. U6 D45 2000

How to Listen to Great Music: A Guide to Its History, Culture, and Heart by Robert Greenberg

MT6 .G76 2011

Fiction

Soul Enchilada by David Macinnis Gill

            PS3557 .I45 S68 2010

Summary: Eunice “Bug” Smoot is not having a good day. She’s about to be evicted from her apartment, she’s been fired from her pizza delivery job, and she doesn’t fit in anywhere because she’s half African American and half Tejana. Her only joy is her grandfather’s 1958 Cadillac Biarritz. Bug’s day gets worse when she finds out her grandfather sold his soul–and Bug’s–to finance the car. Her grandfather’s soul was missing upon his death, so now Bug has until Halloween to find her grandfather’s soul or she must give up her car and her soul. Voice of Youth Advocates, Oct 2010 v33 i4 p310(2)

 

The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox by Maggie O’Farrell

PR6065. F36 V36 2008

Summary: Family Secrets are hard to keep. Esme Lennox was only sixteen when her family committed her to the Cauldstone Hospital. No one acknowledged Esme existence, until the hospital called Iris Lockhart (grand-niece of Esme) sixty one year later. Iris is unfolding the family secrets and at the same time dealing with a stranger entering into her world. This book has a high level of conflicts (family conflicts and society conflicts). This book can create a list of discussion points for any book club. Maggie O’Farrell, author, grew up in Wales and Scotland. She now lives in Edinburgh.  Leverne McBeth, SCC Library Specialist

What’s New @ SCC Library

SCC Library (Central Campus) will post a monthly update of new materials to the library’s collection.

Non-Fiction Books

Islam: The Religion and the People by Bernard Lewis and Buntzie Ellis Churchill

BP161.3 .L482 2009

Life Without Oil: Why We must Shift to a New Energy Future by Steve Hallett and John Wright

HD9502.A2 H2425 2011

The Twenty-Four Hour Mind: The Role of Sleep and Dreaming in Our Emotional Lives  by Roseland D. Cartwright

RA786 .C37 2010

Summary: A sleepwalker killed his wife in their backyard. The Twenty-Four Hour Mind is based on research about bizarre sleep disorders. The book is written for a general reading audience.  The author (Rosalind D. Cartwright) is a Professor Emeritus of Rush University Medical Center’s Graduate College Neuroscience Division. She also founded the first Sleep Disorder Service and Research Center in the state of Illinois.

Heat Wave: The Life and Career of Ethel Waters by Donald Bogle

ML420. W24 B64 2011

Summary: Heat Wave highlights the seven decade career of Ethel Waters (blues and pop singer). Ethel began her music career in Black Vaudeville and reached new heights in the nightclubs of 1920s Harlem. The author (Donald Bogle) also explores Ethel’s personal issues (racism and religious conversions). The author teaches at New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts and at the University of Pennsylvania.

History in Blue: 160 Years of Women Police, Sheriffs, Detectives, and State Troopers by Allan T. Duffin

HV8023. D84 2010

Summary: America women began working in law enforcement in the 1840’s. History in Blue highlights the women who paved the way for current policewomen. This book contains photos of police matrons working with young offenders and simulated police uniforms. The author (Allan Duffin) is a former officer in the US Air Force and a historian.

Fiction Books

Mixing It by Rosemary Hayes

PR6058 .A947 M59 2007

Ship Breaker by Paolo Bacigalupi

PS3602. A3447 S55 2010

Summary: Ship Breaker is a Michael L. Printz Award for Excellence in Young Adult Literature. Ship Breaker is the author’s first science fiction novel for young adult readers. The Gulf Coast region is a beautiful tourist place for visitors but for Nailer, a teenage boy, the Gulf Coast region a hard place to live. Nailer is ship breaker. He collects copper wiring from grounded oil tankers for a living.

Kick 2011 Off Right

New Year’s Resolution is a commitment that an individual makes to a project or the reforming of a habit, often a lifestyle change that is generally interpreted as advantageous. 

The SCC Libraries have the right books to Kick 2011 Off Right.

Money 

  • The Little Book that Beats the Market by Joel Greenblatt HG6041. G724 2010

Love

  •  Black Women in Interracial Relationships: In Search of Love and Solace by Kellina Craig-Henderson HQ801.8 .C732 2011

Parenting

  • Fatherhood: Evolution and Human Paternal Behavior by Peter Gray and Kermyt Anderson GN281. G7 2010

Travel

  • The Age of Kali: Indian Travels & Encounters by William Dalrymple DS421. D25 2000

Self Help

  • IQ: A Smart History of a Failed Idea by Stephen Murdoch BF431. M825 2007
  • Blue Mountain: Turning Dreams into Reality by Susan Polis Schutz Z473. B628 S38 2004
  • Power: Why Some People Have it and Others Don’t by Jefferey Pfeffer HF5386. P5765 2010

Treat Yourself to a Horror Novel

These horror, mystery, and thriller novels are available at the SCC Libraries (Central, Cherokee, and Tyger River locations).

Title: Implant
Author: F. Paul Wilson
Summary: Gina has great respect for Dr. Lathram’s genuis and has known him for many years. Dr. Lathram has revolutionized surgery with an implant he’s invented that prevents scarring, but Gina notices that several of his patients have had deadly accidents.

Title: Cookie Cutter
Author: Sterling Anthony
Summary: Lt. Mary Cunningham of the Detroit police department is tracking a terrifying serial killer with a unique calling card that he leaves at the scence of his crime: a single Oreo cookie. Cunningham quickly reads into the subtext of this object: it is a racial term for a black person who acts like a white person. As she investigates the case, Cunningham initially does not suspect that the killer is politically motivated by the uncoming mayoral election in Detroit.

Other Titles:

“Meg” by Steve Alten

“Flowers in the Attic” by V.C. Andrews

“The Devils of D-Day” by Graham Masterton

“Demon in my View” by Amelia Atwater-Rhodes

“Daggerman” by Richard Francis

Next Book Discussion – September 20, 2010

Book Discussion:

Eat, Pray, Love

by Elizabeth Gilbert

 

Date: September 20, 2010

Time: 2:30 pm – 3:30 pm  

Location: Cuppa Cabeana (Central Campus)

 &

 Time: 7:30 pm – 8:30 pm  

Location: Book Chat (Online Book Discussion)

Book Chat –  http://www.meebo.com/room/sccbookcorner/

Discussion Questions:

  1. Gilbert writes that “the appreciation of pleasure can be the anchor of humanity,” making the argument that America is “an entertainment-seeking nation, not necessarily a pleasure-seeking one.” Is this a fair assessment?
  2. Gilbert hashes out internal debates in a notebook, a place where she can aruge with her inner demons and remind herself about the constancy of self-love. When an inner monologue become a literal conversation between a divided self, is this a sign of last resort or or self-reliance?
  3. Gender roles come up repeatedly in Eat, Pray, Love, be it macho Italian men eating cream puffs after a home team’s soccor loss, or a young Indian’s disdain for the marriage she will be expected to embark upon at age eighteen , or the Balinese healer’s sly approach to male impotence in a society where women are assumed responsible for their childlessness. How relevant is Gilbert’s gender?
  4. Do you think people are more open to new experiences when they travel? And why?

http://us.penguingroup.com/static/rguides/us/eat_pray_love.html

Celebrate Women’s History Month @ SCC Libraries

Check out the Women’s History display at the SCC Library (Central Campus). The following books are on display:

The Diana I Knew by Mary Robertson (call number: DA591 .A45 D5358 1998)

A History of the Wife by Marilyn Yalom (call number: HQ1206 .Y35 2002)

Beyond the Myth: The Story of Joan of Arc by Polly Schoyer Brooks (call number: DC103.5 .B76 1999)

Black History Month – Embrace the Present

Celebrate Black History Month @ the SCC Libraries…..

Non-Fiction Collection

The Billion Dollar BET: Robert Johnson and the

Inside Story of Black Entertainment Television

by Brett Pulley  HE8700.8 .P85 2004

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Ida: A Sword among Lions; Ida B. Wells and the

Campaign against Lynching

by Paula Giddings  E185.97 .W55 G53 2008

Journalist, Ida B. Wells, not always celebrated by

contemporaries because of her difficult personality,

crusaded against lynching, not least by revealing the

connection between racism and sexuality.

—————————————————————————

Come on, People!: on the Path from Victims to Victors

by Bill Cosby  E185.625 .C75 2007

—————————————————————————

Twice as Good: Condoleezza Rice and Her Path to

Power by Marcus Mabry  E840.8 .R48 M33 2007

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Letter to My Daughter

by Maya Angelou PS3551. N464 Z468 2008

Maya Angelou dedicated this book to the daughter she never had but sees all around her. This book reveals Maya Angelou’s path to living  a meaningful life. This book transcends genres and categories (guidebook, poetry, and memior).

Fiction Collection

A Mercy by Toni Morrison

This novel reveals what lies beneath the surface of slavery. This is a disturbing story of a mother who abandons her daughter in order to save her from a life of slavery.

Sci-Fiction Collection @ SCC

Check out our Sci-Fiction Books at any of SCC Library locations.

  • Ground Zero by Kevin Anderson PS3551. N37442 G76 1996
  • Butterfly by V.C. Andrews PS3551. N454 B888 1998
  • Criss Cross by Lynne Rae Perkins PS3556. E755 C75 2005
  • The Wilding by C. S. Friedman PS3556. R5184 W55 2004
  • The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins PS3553. O476 H86 2008
  • Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins PS3553. O476 C38 2009
  • Armageddon’s Children by Terry Brooks PS3552. R6596 A76 2007

These titles and more are located in our Popular Fiction collection.

Central Campus http://library.sccsc.edu/

Cherokee Campus http://library.sccsc.edu/cherokee/cherokeelib.htm

Tyger River Campus http://library.sccsc.edu/tygerriver/tygerriver.htm

Kick 2010 Off Right

New Year’s Resolution is a commitment that an

individual makes to a project or the reforming of

a habit, often a lifestyle change that is generally

interpreted as advantageous. 

The SCC Libraries have the right books to Kick 2010 Off Right.

  • 48 Days to the Work You Love by Dan Miller HF5382.7 .M552007

 

  • What Got You Here Won’t Get You There: How Successful People Become Even More Successful by Marshall Godsmith HF5386 .G5852 2007

 

  • You Majored in What?: Mapping Your Path from Chaos to Career by Katherine Brooks HF5385.75 U6 B755 2009

 

  • The End of Overeating: Taking Control of the Insatiable American Appetite by David Kessler QP141 .E467 2009

 

  • How to Remember Anything: The Proven Total Memory Retention System by Dean Vaughn BF385. V38 2007

 

  • Remember Everything You Read: The Evelyn Wood 7-day Speed Reading and Learning Program by Stanley Frank LB1050.54 .F7 1992

 

  • The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership: Follow Them and People will Follow You by John Maxwell HD57.7 .M3937 2007

 

  • Escape from Cubicle Nation: From Corporate Prisoner to Thriving Enterpreneur by Pamela Slim HB615. S62 2009

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