McPherson College Miller Library

This library blog will keep you up-to-date on what's happening in Miller Library.

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Location: McPherson, Kansas, United States

Thursday, March 29, 2007

More Books

Here are a couple more faculty responses to the books you couldn't live without.
Ocie Kilgus writes:
Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck
This is an overwhelmingly heart-wrenching story of friendship, hope, and loneliness about those individuals who are often overlooked in our society. This book makes me want to be a kinder person.

Pedagogy of the Oppressed by Paulo Freire
I love the analysis of social oppression and the tone and urgency of this call-to-arms book.

The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood
I read this dystopian novel as an undergraduate. At that time I was amazed at Atwood’s assertions regarding the direction in which she thought women’s rights were headed. Now in 2007, it’s not amazing anymore; it’s just scary to think that some of the situations that she described are unfolding before our eyes.

Babbit by Sinclair Lewis
I love his funny and sarcastic dry wit about our society’s ambitions, narrow outlook, questionable intelligence, and lack of culture. Not recommended for the staunch believer in the supremacy of U.S. culture!

Big Beverage by William T. Campbell
I analyzed this book for my dissertation, and I was so happy that I could examine a Lewis-like novel. Campbell pokes fun at the men behind the Coca-Cola industry and its good-old-boy network of running a business. It’s a hoot!

Jeanne Smith shares "most of these books were formataive ones for me in some way":
The Bible (New Revised Standard)
Norton Victorian Literature textbook (especially the poetry)
Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck
The Early Christians After the Death of the Apostles by Eberhard Arnold
Storyteller's Beads by Jane Kurtz (This is a children's book, but it is written so beautifully)
My Experiments with Truth by Mohandas Gandhi
Mother Teresa by Navin Chawla
Dr. Schweitzer of Lambarene by Norman Cousins
Writing to Learn by Donald Murray
Green Mansions by William Henry Hudson

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Audio Books

Looking for a book on tape or CD to listen to over Spring Break?
Check out our Rotating Books collection and our catalog. Also, with a Kansas Library Card (available at Miller), you can download audio books and tapes onto your computers or MP3 players. See Susan for more info.

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Delicious

Miller Library now has a list of Internet sites we recommend to you, posted on del.icio.us. This social networking site lists our bookmarks to help with your research or ready reference questions. Find it at http://del.icio.us/millerlibrarymc . If you're already a del.icio.us user, feel free to add us to your network.

Tuesday, March 06, 2007

Women's History Month

In honor of Women's History Month, Britannica's Spotlight, "300 Women Who Changed the World," focuses on 300 women whose actions and ideas influenced history. Extensive biographies provide users the opportunity to examine in depth the lives of these women, the times they lived in and how they influenced their world.
Access Britannica Online through the Miller Library online resources page. Remember, Britannica is your library-endorsed alternative to Wikipedia.

Monday, March 05, 2007

Books Not to be Without

Thanks to several faculty, and one student, for responding with their list of books they wouldn't want to live without.
Several gave caveats--this is my list today, I could add more, I usually don't respond to such hyperbole--so, simply read, enjoy.
And if I get more lists, I'll share them as well. --Susan

Joe Dickhudt
My all-time favorites:
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn
To Kill a Mockingbird


Richard Dove
The New Webster Handy College Dictionary is my most frequently open book, so it asked that I choose it. The title also probably gives you a clue as to why I agreed with the book to choose it.

Rich Trembley
I would like to cast my vote for Stephen King's Dark Tower series. After I was done with one book, I couldn't wait to get into the next one, and with release dates often months away, it was grueling!!!! I was really disappointed when the story actually ended in the seventh book. Possibly his finest work.

Bruce Clary
Song of Myself, Walt Whitman. The book most responsible for my becoming an English major and, subsequently, a teacher of American literature.
The Manuscript Books of Emily Dickinson. It’s a head rush to read ED’s poems in her own hand and in the same order in which she hand bound them.
Moby-Dick, Hermann Melville. I just pulled this off my shelf yesterday morning and reread the chapters “The Whiteness of the Whale” and “Ambergris.” Amazing.
The Four Gospels. Besides being the one of the touchstones of Western art and culture, when read in order of composition, they offer the fascinating history of the development of the early church’s Christology.
The Idiot, Fyodor Dostoevsky. Prince Myshkin, the epileptic “holy fool,” remains for me the most vivid portrayal of all that is involved in being a follower of Jesus.
Wise Blood, Flannery O’Connor. Hazel Motes, the Christ-haunted protagonist, is a comic, backwoods, Georgia redneck version of Myshkin.
The House of Mirth, Edith Wharton. Lily Bart finishes in a dead-heat with Isabella Archer for the Greatest Female Character Created by an American Writer award.
Dubliners, James Joyce. The greatest single volume of short fiction that I can think of.
East of Eden. I read every John Steinbeck novel when I was in high school. Grapes of Wrath is a better novel, but this riff on the Cain and Abel story was the one that most fascinated me then and now.
Winesburg, Ohio, Sherwood Anderson. This collection brought Chekhov’s compassion for his characters to the American short story.

Gary Entz
Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy
This book inspired me to read Tolstoy’s War and Peace, although I still like the book Anna Karenina better.
Johnny Got His Gun, by Dalton Trumbo
This is one of the most moving anti-war novels ever written.
Common Sense, by Thomas Paine
This is the book that convinced me to major in U.S. history.
Desert Solitaire, by Edward Abbey
This book is one of the strongest condemnations ever written of modern consumer society and how it is destroying our environment.
Letters from a Stoic, by Seneca
Even after 2000 years, Seneca gives common sense advice.

Rod Gieselman
The Berkshire Hathaway Annual Report (any year). Warren Buffett could be a modern day Samuel Clemens if he chose to write rather than make billions.”

Kim Stanley
Little Dorrit, Charles Dickens. What would life be without the Circumlocution Office, whose job is to see that It Doesn't Get Done?
Middlemarch, George Eliot. Still the absolute truth about being a woman.
Candide, Voltaire. Reminds you of how terrible and how wonderful people are.
The Collected Poems of W.B. Yeats. Even when you don't understand Yeats, reading his poems out loud makes you feel that it's worthwhile to be human.
The Stuffed Owl: An Anthology of Bad Verse, D.B. Wyndham Lewis and Charles Lee.
I read it over and over. Even the index is priceless. OK, especially the index.

Luke Chennell
I’ve worn out two copies of H.L. Mencken’s A Mencken Chrestomathy – it always serves to maintain my faith in skepticism.

Thursday, March 01, 2007

World Book Day


March 1 is World Book Day, celebrated primarily in the United Kingdom. In England, readers were asked, what are the 10 books you couldn't live without? Their answer:

1) Pride and Prejudice Jane Austin

2) Lord of the Rings JRR Tolkein

3) Jane Eyre Charlotte Bronte

4) Harry Potter books JK Rowling

5) To Kill a Mockingbird Harper Lee

6) The Bible

7) Wuthering Heights Emily Bronte

8) (tie) 1984 George Orwell and His Dark Materials Philip Pullman

10) Great Expectation Charles Dickens
What are the books you couldn't live without? Send us your answers, and we'll post on our blog.