Our Favorite Books, 2019 Edition, on The Point

This morning on The Point with Mindy Todd on WCAI we talked about a few of our favorite books that were published in 2019. We had a special NPR guest star join us this morning, Petra Mayer, editor at NPR Books! What a treat! Jill Erickson, reference librarian at FPL and Vicky Titcomb of Titcomb Books were also in the studio talking about their favorite books of the year. Miss the show? You can listen online!  And if you have a favorite book that was published in 2019 leave us a comment and we’ll add it to our list.

Mindy’s Pick

Fall and Rise: the story of 9/11 by Mitchell Zuckoff

Petra’s Picks

Gideon the Ninth by Tamsyn Muir
Gods of Shade and Shadow by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
One Day: the extraordinary story of an ordinary 24 hours in America by Gene Weingarten
Any Old Diamonds by KJ Charles
Mudlark: in search of London’s past along the River Thames by Lara Maiklem
Midnight in Chernobyl: the untold story of the world’s greatest nuclear disaster by Adam Higginbotham

Vicky’s Picks

Nickel Boys by Colson Whitehead 
Exhalation by Ted Chiang
The Book Woman of Troublesome Creek by Kim Michele Richardson
The Salt Path by Raynor Winn
This land is their land : the Wampanoag Indians, Plymouth Colony, and the troubled history of Thanksgiving by David J. Silverman
The pioneers : the heroic story of the settlers who brought the American ideal west by David McCullough
Shouting at the Rain by Lynda Mullaly Hunt
The Line Tender by Kate Allen

Jill’s Picks

Bibliostyle: how we live at home with books by Nina Freudenberger
Say Say Say by Lila Savage
The Binding by Bridget Collins
Born to be Posthumous: the eccentric life and mysterious genius of Edward Gorey by Mark Dery
Figuring by Maria Popova
Spring by Ali Smith
River by Elisha Cooper
Small in the City by Sydney Smith

Listener Picks

Charlotte Bronte Before Jane Eyre by Glynnis Fawkes

Plays on The Point

Today on The Point with Mindy Todd, Jill Erickson and Nelson Ritschel, humanities professor at Massachusetts Maritime Academy, talked about plays to read by yourself or to read aloud with your Thanksgiving company! If you missed the show, you can always listen online. Thanks to those of you that called in, and you can always add your choices to this list by leaving us a comment. I highly recommend your reading two great articles about the joy of reading plays. One is by Dan Kois, where he talks of the deep and unique pleasure of reading plays, and the other is an article by Dwight Garner, “Submitting to a Play’s Spell, Without the Stage.”

Nelson’s Picks

Twelfth Night by William Shakespeare
Pygmalion by George Bernard Shaw
The Little Foxes by Lillian Hellman
Long Day’s Journey Into Night by Eugene O’Neill

Not enough time for:
A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry
The Price by Arthur Miller

Jill’s Picks

The Gabriels: election year in the life of one family by Richard Nelson
Red by John Logan
Gertrude Stein Gertrude Stein Gertrude Stein by Marty Martin
The Clean House and other plays by Sarah Ruhl
100 Essays I Don’t Have Time To Write: on umbrellas and sword fights, parades and dogs, fire alarms, children, and theater by Sarah Ruhl
The Flick by Annie Baker

Not enough time for:
The White Card by Clauria Rankine
Betrayal by Harold Pinter

Listener Picks

Shirley Valentine by Willy Russell
The Zoo Story by Edward Albee

Books Into Film, The Point with Mindy Todd

Books Into Film was our theme this morning as Kellie Porter, Jill Erickson, and Mindy Todd talked about which they loved more the book or the film. Below is our list of titles. We pre-recorded this show, and thus could not take calls. But if you have books and films you would like to add to our list, just leave a comment below, and we’ll add them to our list! You can list to the show here

 

Kellie’s Picks

Emma by Jane Austen (Clueless)
 
The Fantastic Mr. Fox by Roald Dahl, with illustrations by Donald Chaffin
 
The Big Short by Michael Lewis
 
 
Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi
 
The Shining by Stephen King

 

Jill’s Picks

Literature Into Film: theory and practical approaches by Linda Costanzo Cahir

Mary Poppins by P. L. Travers and illustrated by Mary Shepard. There was a terrific article titled “Becoming Mary Poppins” about the making of the Disney version of Mary Poppins and P.L. Travers written by Caitlin Flanagan in 2005 for The New Yorker. Well worth a read.

The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett and illustrated by Tasha Tudor

The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt

Adaptations: from short story to big screen by Stephanie Harrison, which includes the short story from which the film Bringing Up Baby originated.

Blog regarding the film and story The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, first posted in 2011!  Original story written by F. Scott Fitzgerald.

“The Birds” by Daphne du Maurier, included in her collection Echoes from the Macabre: selected stories.

My Brilliant Career by Miles Franklin

For more literary films try taking a look at The Literary Filmography: 6,200 Adaptations of Books, Short Stories and Other Nondramatic Works by Leonard Mustazza.

 

 

Detectives on The Point: Part Two!

Nelson Ritschel, Author and Professor in the Humanities Department at Mass Maritime Academy, rejoined Mindy Todd and Jill Erickson this morning for part two of detective fiction on The Point. If you missed the first discussion on detectives, you can listen to that here.

You will no doubt be disappointed, as I was, that there is not one library in CLAMS that has copies of the Frank Cullen and Donald McNeilly murder mysteries set in the theatre world of Boston which were so well described by Nelson! UPDATE … Falmouth Public Library now owns a copy of Murder at the Tremont Theatre!

Thanks to all of you who called, emailed, and tweeted your suggestions!

 

Nelson’s Picks

Murder at the Tremont Theatre: the first Porridge Sisters Mystery by Frank Cullen and Donald McNeilly

Murder at the Old Howard: the second Porridge Sisters Mystery by Frank Cullen and Donald McNeilly

Murder at the Orpheum Theatre: the third Porridge Sisters Mystery by Frank Cullen and Donald McNeilly

Murder at the Gordon’s Olympia: the fourth Porridge Sisters Mystery by Frank Cullen and Donald McNeilly

To see what Boston used to look like take a look at Lost Boston by Jane Holtz Kay, where she juxtaposes the new and the old. You might also enjoy Lost Boston by Anthony M. Sammarco.

The Thin Man by Dashiell Hammett

The Return of the Thin Man by Dashiell Hammett

In a House of Lies by Ian Rankin

The Beat Goes On by Ian Rankin

The Maltese Falcon by Dashiell Hammett

Lost Stories by Dashiell Hammett

Nightmare Town by Dashiell Hammett

The Big Sleep & Farewell, My Lovely by Raymond Chandler

Raymond Chandler: Collected Stories by Raymond Chandler

(And I just read this: “Dorothy Parker wrote that Hammett’s detective was so hard-boiled ‘you could roll him on the White House lawn.'”

 

Jill’s Picks

Dark Nantucket Noon by Jane Langton. The series stars detective & former Harvard professor Homer Kelly.

The Late Monsieur Gallet by Georges Simenon. Detective Chief Inspector Maigret is the detective and he loves eating and smoking. The complete list of the new translations can be found at Penguin Random House.

December Heat by Luiz Alfredo Garcia-Roza. Inspector Espinosa is the detective, and he lives in Rio de Janeiro. Originally published in Portuguese.

Whose Body? by Dorothy L. Sayers introduced Lord Peter Wimsey, aristocratic sleuth. I am particularly fond of  Gaudy Night which features Harriet Vane.

A Presumption of Death by Jill Paton Walsh & Dorothy L. Sayers. Walsh finished a Lord Peter Wimsey left unfinished for 60 years by Dorothy Sayers, and is continuing to write new mysteries starring Lord Peter, Harriet Vane and other Sayers characters.

What Would Maisie Do? by Jacqueline Winspear.

Girl Sleuth: Nancy Drew and the Women Who Created Her by Melanie Rehak. And to answer Mindy’s question about what color Nancy Drew’s hair was: “The blond, blue-eyed teenager, affectionately called ‘Curly Locks’ by her father, was an all-around knockout, ‘the kind of girl who is capable of accomplishing a great many things in a comparatively short length of time.” Although in the introduction the author writes of Nancy’s “trademark red-gold hair.” (We may have to reread the original versions of the books!)

Devil in a Blue Dress by Walter Mosley. Easy Rawlins is a Louisiana-born detective living in L.A. There are 14 novels in the series.

Sleuths, Sidekicks and Stooges by Joseph Green and Jim Finch. This is an astonishing annotated bibliography of detectives, their assistants and their rivals in crime, mystery, and adventure fiction, 1795 – 1995.

 

LISTENER SUGGESTIONS

The Beekeeper’s Apprentice by Laurie R. King, the first Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes mystery.

Danny Beckett series by Tyler Dilts.

Dog On It by Spencer Quinn, the first in the Chet & Bernie series.

And from one twitter listener: “Hmm. In no particular order, John Cardinal, Easy Rawlins, Sherlock Holmes, Lew Griffin, Harry Bosch, Smilla Jaspersen, Cass Neary, Bruce Medway, Philip Marlowe, and Coffin Ed and Gravedigger.”

A listener sent an email after the show yesterday in which she highly recommends the British Library Crime Classics (which we do too) and suggests the blog “In Search of the Classic Mystery Novel.”

 The Shape of Water by Andrea Camilleri, the first in the Inspector Salavo Montalbano series, set in the fictional Sicilian town of Vigata.

Death at La Fenice by Donna Leon, the first in the Police Commissario Guido Brunetti, set in Venice.

 

 

Short Stories on The Point with Mindy Todd

 

I had such a fun time talking about short stories on The Point this morning with Mindy Todd and Vicky Titcomb of Titcomb’s Books, and many thanks to all of the listener suggestions! We did not have time to get to all of the books we had brought, so you have some bonus titles on our list today. And if you want to listen to short stories, don’t miss the wonderful weekly public radio broadcast  SELECTED SHORTS, where great actors read great fiction in front of a live audience. You can listen on WCAI on Saturday nights at 9:00 PM or online or on CD.

Vicky shared a great quote on short stories with us today:

“A short story is a love affair, a novel is a marriage. A short story is a photograph; a novel is a film.” 
― Lorrie Moore

 

Vicky’s Picks

Tenth of December by George Saunders

Binocular Vision by Edith Pearlman

Calypso by David Sedaris

Cowboys are My Weakness by Pam Houston

Best American Short Stories of the Century edited by John Updike and Katrina Kenison

Not Enough Time For:

Florida by Lauren Groff
Fox 8 by George Saunders
The Short Stories of Ernest Hemingway by Ernest Hemingway
The Story Prize: 15 Years of Great short Fiction
Orange World by Karen Russell

 

Jill’s Picks

The Best American Short Stories 2018 edited by Roxane Gay

You Know You want This: “Cat Person” and Other Stories by Kristen Roupenian

One Dozen and One Short Stories by Gladys Taber

Peter Taylor: Complete Stories by Peter Taylor, Ann Beattie, editor

Varieties of Disturbance: stories by Lydia Davis

The Art of the Short Story by Dana Gioia and R. S. Gwynn

Short Story Index, which covers 1950 to the present!

Not Enough Time For:

Self-Help by Lorrie Moore
Archangel by Andrea Barrett
Get In Trouble: stories by Kelly Link

The Stories of Ray Bradbury by Ray Bradbury

Ghost Stories: classic tales of horror and suspense edited by Lisa Morton and Leslie S. Klinger

The O. Henry Prize Stories: the best short stories of the year, 2018

 

Listener Picks

The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories by Angela Carter (particularly “The Tiger’s Bride”

Lives of the Poets: six stories and a novella by E. L. Doctorow

Runaway: stories by Alice Munro

Fourteen Spoons Eight Stories by Syrel Dawson

The Anarchists’ Convention by John Sayles

Nine Stories by J. D. Salinger (Particularly “The Laughing Man”)

Selected Stories by William Trevor

Uncommon Type: some stories by Tom Hanks

There’s Something I Want You To Do: stories by Charles Baxter

Complete Stories, 1864 – 1874 by Henry James

Just had a listener stop by the reference desk, and he recommends “Eisenheim the Illusionist” by Steven Millhauser from his book We Others: New and Selected Stories

 

Women’s History Month on The Point

This morning on WCAI’s monthly book show Jill was joined by librarian Kellie Porter and filling in for Mindy Todd was Kathryn Eident. Our topic was women’s history, and we had more books than we could possibly mention! You’ll find some “no time for” titles below, as well as all of the titles that we did mention. We covered the waterfront from picture books to deep dives into history, stopping for some poetry and novels along the way.

Kellie’s Picks

Rad American Women A to Z; Rad Women Worldwide by Kate Schatz; illustrated by Miriam Klein Stahl

Circe by Madeline Miller

The Breadwinner series by Deborah Ellis

Women and Power by Mary Beard

Mary Wears What She Wants by Keith Negley

Not Time For

Men Explain Things to Me by Rebecca Solnit

Women Warriors by Pamela Toler

The Woman’s Hour: the great fight to win the vote by Elaine Weiss

The Power by Naomi Alderman

Elena Ferrante Neapolitan novels (My Brilliant Friend, etc)

We Should all be Feminists by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

Hedy Lamarr’s Double Life by Laurie Wallmark ; illustrated by Katy Wu

Jill’s Picks

The Dream of a Common Language: Poems 1974-1977 by Adrienne Rich. The poem I read was “Power”.

A Lady Has the Floor: Belva Lockwood Speaks Out for Women’s Rights by Kate Hannigan, illustrated by Alison Jay

The Second Shelf: a quarterly of are books & words by women
You can find lists of the titles mentioned in The Second Shelf both here and here. You can also find an interview with A. N. Devers, who created both the bookstore and the quarterly here.

Virgil Thomson by Virgil Thomson includes mentions of Mary Butts, Gertrude Stein, and Carrie, Ettie, and Florine Stettheimer.

Figuring by Maria Popova

The Unwomanly Face of War: an oral history of women in World War II by Svetlana Alexievich

The Little Book of Feminist Saints by Julia Pierpont, illustrated by Manjit Thapp

Bad Girls Throughout History: 100 remarkable women who changed the world by Ann Shen

Dead Feminists: historic heroines in living color by Chandler O’Leary & Jessica Spring

Not Enough Time For:

Women Warriors: an unexpected history by Pamela D. Toler

Poems from the Women’s Movement edited by Honor Moore

The Women Who Came in the Mayflower by Annie Russell Marble

Radioactive: Marie & Pierre Curie a tale of Love & Fallout by Lauren Redniss

Women Who Read Are Dangerous by Stefan Bollmann

Dressing Barbie: a celebration of the clothes that made America’s favorite doll, and the incredible woman behind them by Carol Spencer

Spring After Spring: how Rachel Carson inspired the environmental movement by Stephanie Roth Sisson

A Computer Called Katherine written by Suzanne Slade and illustrated by Veronica Miller Jamison

Listener Picks

Lady From Savannah: the life of Juliette Low by Daisy Gordon Lawrence

The Only Woman in the Room by Marie Benedict

The Radium Girls by Kate Moore



Irish Literature on The Point with Mindy Todd

This morning we decided to get an early start on St. Patrick’s Day by discussing books by Irish writers. It was our pleasure to welcome Nelson Ritschel to the book show this morning. Nelson is a Professor in the Department of Humanities at Massachusetts Maritime Academy. Below are our lists of books, although it was a case of too many books, not enough time! We could easily do another show on Irish writers, with a completely different reading list. Many thanks to all the listeners who called or emailed their suggestions to the show. If you want to add a title to the list, send us a comment!

If you missed the show you can always listen to the show at 7:00 PM the day of the broadcast, or online, anytime.

Nelson’s Picks

The Collected Poems of W. B. Yeats
Dubliners by James Joyce
Ulysses by James Joyce
John Bull’s Other Island by George Bernard Shaw
The Playboy of the Western World by J. M. Synge
Charming Billy by Alice McDermott
The Aran Islands by J. M. Synge

Jill’s Picks

New Irish Poets: representative selections from the work of 37 contemporaries edited by Devin A. Garrity (Poem read was “Diamond Cut Diamond” by Ewart Milne
Milkman by Anna Burns
Spill simmer falter wither by Sara Baume
Conversations with Friends by Sally Rooney Her new novel Normal People will be out in April. There were two articles about her books in THE NEW YORKER. “A New Kind of Adultery Novel” and “Sally Rooney Gets In Your Head” … both well worth reading.
Star of the Sea by Joseph O’Connor (Also recommended by a listener.)

Listener Picks

The Trick of the Ga Bolga by Patrick McGinley
Tiernan’s Wake by Richard T. Rook
The Star of the Sea by Joseph O’Connor
The Ginger Man by J. P. Donleavy
A Singular Country by J. P. Donleavy
Sebastian Barry
The Country Girls Trilogy by Edna O’Brien
A Pagan Place by Edna O’Brien
Colum McCann

Books About Fish & Fishing on The Point with Mindy Todd

This morning we had the great pleasure of having Dennis Minsky back in the studio to talk about books. Our topic was books about fish and fishing. Our apologies that the show could not be live this month, due to my schedule, but please leave us a comment with any fish book you love that you would like us to add to the list. If you missed the show, you can listen online via WCAI!

Mindy’s Pick

I’ve Never Met an Idiot on the River: reflections of family, photography, and fly-fishing by Henry Winkler

Dennis’s Picks

Fishing Around Nantucket by J. Clinton Andrews

The Hungry Ocean: a swordboat captain’s journey by Linda Greenlaw

Four Fish: the future of the last wild food by Paul Greenberg

The Run by John Hay

The Most Important Fish in the Sea: menhaden and America by H. Bruce Franklin

The Provincetown Seafood Cookbook by Howard Mitcham

American Seafood: heritage, culture & cookery from sea to shining sea by Barton Seaver

Consider the Eel by Richard Schweid

The Founding Fish by John McPhee

Jill’s Picks

“The Fish” by Mary Oliver in New and Selected Poems by Mary Oliver

The Cat in the Hat by Dr. Seuss

The Shining Tides by Win Brooks

A River Runs Through It and Other Stories by Norman Maclean

The Compleat Angler or The Contemplative Man’s Recreation by Izaak Walton and Charles Cotton

My Moby Dick by William Humphrey

A Jerk on One End: reflections of a mediocre fisherman by Robert Hughes

Blues by John Hersey

Listener Picks

Even though we weren’t live for the fishing show, we got lots of books suggestions after the show! Here’s the list …

The Finest Kind : the fishermen of Gloucester by Kim Bartlett

Vermont River by WD Wetherell

Cod: a biography of the fish that changed the world by Mark Kurlansky

Beautiful Swimmers : watermen, crabs, and the Chesapeake Bay by William Warner

The River Why by David James Duncan

The Longest Silence: a life in fishing by Thomas McGuane

Reading the Water: adventures in surf fishing on Martha’s Vineyard by Bob Post

Men’s Lives: the surfman and baymen of the South Fork by Peter Matthiessen

This Year I Will … Resolutions for the New Year

On The Point with Mindy Todd this morning we discussed books that might inspire you to set a few resolutions for the New Year, or make you decide that there was no need to make a resolution. As Virginia Woolf wrote in her diary on Friday, January 2nd, 1931: “Then — well the chief resolution is the most important — not to make resolutions. Sometimes to read, sometimes not to read. To go out yes — but stay at home instead of being asked. As for clothes, I think to buy good ones.” Vicky Titcomb, of Titcomb’s Bookshop joined us for this show. The show was pre-recorded, so if you would like to share any of your favorite books on New Year’s Resolutions, please leave a comment and we will add it to the list!

Vicky’s Picks

The Gift From the Sea by Anne Morrow Lindbergh

Make Your Bed: little things that can change your life … and maybe the world by Admiral William H. McRaven

George Washington’s Rules of Civility and Decent Behavior

Forks Over Knives — the cookbook: over 300 recipes for plant-based eating all through the year by Del Sroufe

Gmorning, gnight!: little pep talks for you and me by Lin-Manuel Miranda; illustrations by Johnny Sun

Wherever You Go, There You Are: mindfulness meditation in everyday life by Jon Kabat-Zinn

Little Book of Mindfulness: 10 minutes a day to less stress, more peace by Dr. Patrizia Collard

TBC30: 6 steps to a stronger, healthier you by Michael Wood

The Yoga Deck by Olivia H. Miller

1,000 Books to Read Before You Die: a life-changing list by James Mustich

What Good Should I Do This Day?: a journal inspired by Benjamin Franklin

Jill’s Picks

The Diary of Virginia Woolf, Volume Four, 1931 – 1935. Letter from Friday, January 2nd, 1931.

How to Be a Better Person by Kate Hanley

Almost Everything: Notes on Hope by Anne Lamont, particularly chapter eleven, “Food.”

Food & Life by Joël Robuchon and Dr. Nadia Volf

Letters of Wallace Stevens selected and edited by Holly Stevens. See journal entry for December 31, 1900.

The Anthologist by Nicholson Baker

The Year of Reading Dangerously: how fifty great books (and two not-so-great ones) saved my life by Andy Miller

A Calendar of Wisdom: daily thoughts to nourish the soul Written and selected from the world’s sacred texts by Leo Tolstoy

This Year I Will: how to finally change a habit, keep a resolution, or make a dream come true by M. J. Ryan

Selected Letters of Dylan Thomas, edited and with commentary by Constantine Fitzgibbon.  See the letter of 25 December 1933.

Listener Picks (We weren’t live, but we still have some listener suggestions!)

You Are a Bad Ass: how to stop doubting your greatness and start living an awesome life by Jen Sincero

BONUS!

Self-Help Dewey Numbers  To Use When In Your Public Library …

Aging and Longevity 155.6719
Anger 152.47
Anxiety 152.46
Assertiveness 158
Codependency 155.9
Empathy 152.41
Emotions 152.4
Fear 152.46
Forgiveness 155.92; 179.9
Grief 155.937
Habit Breaking 158.1
Left and Right Handedness 152.335
Meditation 158.12
Memory 153.12
Perfectionism 158.1
Rejection 158.2
Relationships 158.24
Relaxation Exercises 155.9042, 158.12
Self-Acceptance 158
Self-Esteem 158.1
Self-Help Techniques 155.264
Self-Hypnosis 154.7
Stress Management 155.9042
Time Management 158.1
Worry 158.1