Browse Our Collections

We hear that you all miss being able to browse our shelves! To help everyone to scan through the last year’s acquisitions, click on our links below.  These links will be updated and refreshed as we learn more about what you would like to browse and through the seasons, and the links are dynamic and will show new titles as they are added to our collections.

Each link will take you to the CLAMS catalog and list the selections that are new to our shelves within the last year (2020). We’ve done the search for you, so each link will bring you to a selection of titles similar to browsing our new sections in our buildings.


Browse Adult Collections

Click on a link below to open the catalog and browse these collections.

Books


Movies, TV and Music


Browse Children’s Collections

Click on a link below to open the catalog and browse these collections.

Books



Browse Teen Collections

Click on a link below to open the catalog and browse these collections.

Hoopla Graphic Novel Review: ‘DC: The New Frontier’ by Darwyn Cooke

A blog entry from Josh, who is part of our circulation department.

Ever since Darwyn Cooke burst onto the scene in the early 1990s as a storyboard artist on ‘Batman: The Animated Series,’ he’s been been lauded for the unique blend of elegance and dynamo that he achieved in his artwork. What folks rarely seemed to mention, though, was how good of a writer he also was. It took Cooke making the seemingly backward career move from TV to comics (think: scion to serf) to finally right that wrong.

Essentially a re-telling of the Justice League’s formation, ‘DC: The New Frontier’ also covers 1950s race politics, the Red Scare and a dinosaur-populated monster island, blending it all into one epic, awe-inspiring superstory. Where most comics today tend to try to deconstruct the medium, Cooke seems more interested in re-constructing many of the ‘silver age’ elements that had been discarded over the years — space age science, pulp heroics, sweeping romance and an overall sense of wonder. Costume clad heroes both familiar and obscure pop up throughout. Some only appear briefly, in 10-20 page solo stories. Others weave in and out of the main mystery in an almost Altman-esque manner, finally converging en masse at the end of the book for a ‘We Are The World’-of-superfriends battle to save the planet. A few of the standout story lines are the Martian Manhunter’s arrival on Earth and his awkward assimilation of its culture, Hal Jordan’s transformation into the Green Lantern, and the Challengers of the Unknown’s beginning and (spoiler alert!) end.

Oh, and then there’s the art.

Ignore the word bubbles, and the book feels like a collection of long-lost pre-production art to some never-made superhero extravaganza from the glory days of the Hollywood studio system. Cooke’s biggest artistic influence is clearly Bruce Timm (the mastermind behind the aforementioned ‘Batman’ cartoon), but also evident in his work are the stylistic touches of Jack Kirby, Gil Kane and Carmine Infantino. In ‘DC: The New Frontier’, Cooke uses bits of all these classic cartoonists’ styles, blended with a bit of streamline moderne design and googie architecture, to perfectly capture the ‘anything is possible’ essence of the post-WWII United States. It’s gorgeous.

The ‘Deluxe Edition’ eBook format that DC has re-released the series in only adds to one’s appreciation of the art. Instead of the awkward-looking printing that sometimes ruins the enlargement of comic book pages, the simple grace of Cooke’s lines is actually enhanced by the digital blow up.

CLAMS cardholders can read DC: The New Frontier free on Hoopla!

The Hidden Gem that is Google Arts and Culture

(Where Meg K. takes you on virtual tour of one of her favorite sites!)

Stuck at home and looking for something to do?  Why not get lost in the endless content on the Google Arts and Culture page?   

No matter what you’re interested in, there is a rabbit hole for you to be sucked into.  Maybe you want to tour the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, or the Louvre in Paris.  You can even zoom into artworks and see the texture of each brush stroke if you want. Maybe you’re more interested in learning about who invented the emoji or the toilet?  Or maybe the history of space exploration is more your cup of tea? In any of these cases, and about a million others, Google’s Arts and Culture project has you covered.    

 I happen to like street art, so I got lost in this section highlighting street art around the world: Street Art.  If you want to jump right to some highlights, here are 9 amazing murals in New York City:  NYC Street Art.

The  Street View  section allows you to explore famous sites and landmarks, so we can all go for a virtual walk without getting off the couch.  Where would you like to start? Amsterdam? Mumbai?  You can also take guided tours in Street View, both of places and of movements.  For example, here’s a guided tour through the history of surfing from the Australian National Surfing Museum: Surf’s Up

There really is an overwhelming amount of content there, all organized and curated incredibly well.  You can search for people, historical events, places, cultural and artistic movements, or just by a color you’re interested in.  Go ahead, see what comes up! I’m confident if you give it a 30 second look, you’ll find yourself, 3 hours later, creating your own choreography with a little help from a massive archive of body movements and some machine learning.  (You can find that here if you don’t want to wait: Strike a Pose

Here it is one more time – the last link you’ll need to click today: Google Arts and Culture!