New York Times Bestsellers: April 14, 2024

New York Times Bestsellers Combined Print & eBook

April 14, 2024

Checkout New York Times Bestsellers through the library!

There are currently three catalogs available to Southeast Steuben County Library patrons, that you can access to search for and request New York Times Bestsellers, and other popular books and materials.

All you need is a library card and password!

Note: If you need assistance to set up initial access to the catalogs, call the Reference Desk at: 607-936-3713 x502 and the staff member on duty will be happy to assist you.

THE CATALOGS:

Catalog 1: StarCat

StarCat is the catalog of physical materials including print books, DVDs, audiobooks on CD etc. StarCat is available to all patrons of all public libraries in the Southern Tier Library System*

Starcat is found online at: https://starcat.stls.org/

Catalog 2: The Digital Catalog

The Digital Catalog (and its companion app Libby) offers all Southern Tier Library System member library patrons access to eBooks, eAudiobooks & digital magazines via a lending model known in Library-ese as “one copy/one user;” that library speak means that eBooks & eAudiobooks found in The Digital Catalog/Libby are like print books found on library shelves, only one patron can check out a copy of a title at a time.

Exception: Magazines found in the digital catalog are available via a different lending model known as simultaneous access. And that fancy library speak means that magazines are available for all patrons to check out at the same time, i.e. if you and all your family and friends wish to read the latest digital edition of Newsweek, all those people could check out the magazine and read it at the same time.

The Digital Catalog/Libby Formats: eBooks can be accessed on mobile devices (AKA smartphone or tablet), computers and eReaders; eAudiobooks can be listen to on mobile devices and computers; and magazines can be accessed on mobile devices and computers.

The Digital Catalog is found online at: https://stls.overdrive.com/

Catalog 3: Hoopla

The Hoopla Digital Catalog (and its companion app, also called Hoopla) offers Southeast Steuben County Library patrons access to a second digital catalog with an on-demand lending model. In library speak, this lending model, like The Digital Catalog/Libby’s magazine lending model, is known as “simultaneous access.” The difference is, the Hoopla catalog offers access to more formats: eBooks, eAudiobooks, eComics, digital albums, TV shows & movies – and all items, in all those formats, are available  for patrons to checkout immediately.

Hoopla Formats: All Hoopla content can be accessed on a computer or mobile device, and TV shows and movies can be accessed on computers, mobile devices, smart TVs and media streaming players, i.e. Roku or  Apple TV.

The Hoopla Catalog is found online at: https://www.hoopladigital.com/

*The Southern Tier Library System includes the public libraries in Steuben, Chemung, Yates, Schuyler & Allegheny counties.

Suggested Viewing: April 2024

Hi everyone, here are our “baker’s” ten streaming recommendations for April 2024.

The next Suggested Viewing post will be out the first Saturday in May 2024.

April 3, 2204

Ripley, Limited Series (2024) (Netflix)

 

Sight Unseen, Season One (2024) (CW)

 

Star Trek Discovery, Season Five (2024) 

 

April 5, 2024

Mary & George (2024) (Starz) 

 

Sugar (2024) (Apple TV+) 

 

April 11, 2024 

Fallout (2024) (Amazon Prime) 

 

April 12, 2024 

Franklin (2024) (Apple TV+) 

 

Good Times, Season One (2024) (Netflix) 

 

April 14, 2024

The Sympathizer (2024) (Max)

 

April 17, 2024

Our Living World (2024) (Netflix)

April 30, 2024 

The Veil (2024) (Hulu/FX) 

 

 

Hoopla Recommended Stream Of The Month*

Mayfair Witches, Season One (2023)  

Mayfair Witches, Season One Trailer  

 

Research Links (in other words, articles featuring video reviews for April 2024; in case anyone would like more streaming recommendations!)

https://www.indiewire.com/gallery/april-2024-tv-preview-new-shows-watch

What to Watch (behind paywall – NY Times https://www.nytimes.com/spotlight/what-to-watch)

https://www.seattletimes.com/entertainment/tv/what-to-stream-in-april-2024-fallout-ripley-under-the-bridge

https://www.tomsguide.com/entertainment/streaming/what-to-watch-in-april-2024-15-new-movies-and-shows-coming-to-netflix-prime-video-and-more

*You can stream TV shows & movies from Hoopla online, or via the Hoopla app for free – all you need is a library card to get started!

Suggested Listening: April 5, 2024

Hi everyone, welcome to our Suggested Listening posting for this week!

Suggested Listening postings are published on Fridays; and our next Suggested Listening posting will be out on Friday, April 12, 2024.

And here are the 10 recommended songs of the week!

Do You Feel Like We Do by Peter Frampton

From The Album: Frampton Comes Alive! (1976)

Going Home (Theme From Local Hero) by Mark Knopfler & Mark Knopfler’s Guitar Heroes

From The Album: Mark Knopfler & Mark Knopfler’s Guitar Heroes (2024)

Just Won’t Burn by Susan Tedeschi

From The Album: Just Won’t Burn (1998)

Long Nights (The Feeling They Call The Blues) by B. B. King

From The Album: King Of The Blues (1960)

Money That’s What I Want by Buddy Guy

From The Album: A Man And The Blues (1968)

Nobody’s Fool by Joanne Shaw Taylor

From The Album: The Blues Album (2021)

Raunchy by Duane Eddy

From The Album: Twangin’ the Golden Hits (1965)

Real Man by Bonnie Raitt

From The Album: Nick Of Time (1989)

Snowy Wood by John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers (with Mick Taylor on guitar)

From The Album: Crusade (1968)

Super-Natural by John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers (with Peter Green on Guitar)

From The Album: A Hard Road (1967)

Hoopla Recommend Album of the Week

Local Hero (The Original Soundtrack) by Mark Knopfler

Local Hero

And from the album the song:

 Freeway Flyer

Have a great weekend,

Linda Reimer, SSCL

Online Catalog Links:

StarCat

The catalog of physical materials, i.e. print books, DVDs, audiobooks on CD, etc.

The Digital Catalog, web version of Libby

The catalog of e-books, downloadable audiobooks and a handful of streaming videos.

The Libby App

Libby

Libby is the companion app to the Digital Catalog and may be found in the Apple & Google app.

Hoopla

A catalog of instant check out items, including eBooks, downloadable audiobooks, comic books, TV shows and movies for patrons of the Southeast Steuben County Library.

Tech Talk is a Southeast Steuben County Library blog.

Weekly Suggested Reading Five: April 3, 2024

Hi everyone, with this posting we will be switching to a slightly different format, in that I will suggest five books to read each week, instead of ten.

Our weekly Suggested Reading Five posts, combined with the recent addition of our monthly New Books Coming Your Way posts, should offer plenty of suggested reading recommendations for everyone.  

However, if you’re in need of even more reading recommendations than you find on the Tech & Book Talk blog, please feel free to stop by the Circulation Desk or Reference Desk at the library and staff will be happy to assist you in finding even more books to read!  We’ll even be happy to print off author readings lists for you, to help you keep track of which books you have, or haven’t, read by your favorite authors! 

Alternatively, you can send me an email with your book-related questions. My email address is: reimerl@stls.org 

Have a great day, 

Linda Reimer, SSCL  

Weekly Suggested Reading Five postings are published on Wednesdays.

And the next Suggested Reading posting will be published on Wednesday, April 10, 2024.

The Cemetery Of Untold Stories: A Novel by Julia Alvarez 

Alvarez (Afterlife, 2020) brings the magic again in this nesting box of a novel. Writer Alma, Alvarez’s stand-in for a touch of autobiographical fiction, and her sisters Refuge, Consolation, and Pity, the English versions Alma often invokes for Amparo, Consuelo, and Piedad, have inherited property in the Dominican Republic. The sisters are not happy with Alma’s decision to make over one of the parcels in the eponymous cemetery. She and her sculptor friend, Brava, haul boxes of her unfinished manuscripts there, and she buries the pages that won’t burn, hoping to finally be free of them. As Alma and Brava transform the cemetery plot with statues and install a gate that opens only when a story is told, the surrounding neighborhood watches and wonders. Alma hires one of the neighbors to be the cemetery’s caretaker, and the restless ghosts/statues tell sensitive Filomena their stories. These tales surround and crisscross each other as Filomena and her family; Alma’s father, Dr. Manuel Cruz; and Bienvenida Inocencia, the discarded first wife of the brutal dictator Trujillo, are linked in surprising ways, most especially in a humanity that transcends pathos and passion. May Alvarez continue to excavate stories for many years to come!  

HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: The best-selling Alvarez has a committed readership, and word of this inventive novel will also attract new followers. – Booklist Review  

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Erasure by Percival Everett 

Percival Everett’s blistering satire about race and publishing, now adapted for the screen as the Academy Award-winning AMERICAN FICTION, directed by Cord Jefferson and starring Jeffrey Wright 

Thelonious “Monk” Ellison’s writing career has bottomed out: his latest manuscript has been rejected by seventeen publishers, which stings all the more because his previous novels have been “critically acclaimed.” He seethes on the sidelines of the literary establishment as he watches the meteoric success of We’s Lives in Da Ghetto, a first novel by a woman who once visited “some relatives in Harlem for a couple of days.” Meanwhile, Monk struggles with real family tragedies—his aged mother is fast succumbing to Alzheimer’s, and he still grapples with the reverberations of his father’s suicide seven years before. 

In his rage and despair, Monk dashes off a novel meant to be an indictment of Juanita Mae Jenkins’s bestseller. He doesn’t intend for My Pafology to be published, let alone taken seriously, but it is—under the pseudonym Stagg R. Leigh—and soon it becomes the Next Big Thing. How Monk deals with the personal and professional fallout galvanizes this audacious, hysterical, and quietly devastating novel. 

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The Morningside: A Novel by Téa Obreht 

Silvia, a tall, worried, intrepid 11-year-old, and her wiry, pragmatic, reticent mother, climate refugees, finally reach waterlogged Island City and the Morningside, a luxury apartment building that, like everything on this near-future Earth, has seen better days. The superintendent is Silvia’s Aunt Ena, who tells heart-stopping stories of the lost old country and the family Silvia knows nothing about, since her intractable mother insists on keeping their past secret. Silvia soon becomes obsessed with Bezi Duras, the mysterious woman who lives in the penthouse with her enormous dogs, convinced that she is a Vila, “a spirit of the mountain” with epic powers. As in her previous richly imagined and profoundly insightful novels, Tiger’s Wife (2011) and Inland (2019), Obreht writes at the crossroads of myth and history, but here with a twist as she envisions a catastrophic tomorrow in which rampaging forces of nature and human atrocities intensify in impact and scope. Silvia’s narration is a marvel of evolving perception under duress as she navigates the “world beneath the world” and a “cosmos of dangers.” With fairy-tale eeriness, a man with a staggering backstory running a pirate radio station, Silvia’s mother’s treacherous work as a salvage diver in the city’s flooded towers and, finally, her harrowing revelations, this is a bewitchingly atmospheric, psychologically lush, and deeply knowing tale of ancient sorrows and coalescing crises, courage and fortitude. – Booklist Review  

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Table For Two: Stories by Amor Towles 

In his first collection, Towles sequel-izes his debut novel, Rules of Civility (2011), with a 200-page novella and adds six short fictions involving unlikely encounters and unexpected outcomes. Set in the late 1930s, the novella, Eve in Hollywood, extends the story of Evelyn Ross, nervy sidekick of Rules protagonist Katey Kontent. On a train from New York to Los Angeles, the flinty, facially scarred blond, impulsively rejecting a return to her home in Indiana, strikes up a friendship with widowed former homicide cop Charlie Granger. They meet months later in L.A. when Eve’s cutely met new friend, starlet Olivia de Havilland, is blackmailed over surreptitiously taken nude photos. In classic noir fashion, an untrustworthy man of significant girth is at the heart of the plot. The book’s other lively pairings include a used bookseller and a young would-be writer who finds his calling forging signatures of famous authors for him (Paul Auster plays a key role); a newly committed concertgoer and an older patron who drives him to distraction by secretly recording the music; and two travelers stranded at the airport who share a cab ride to a hotel, where one of them transforms from a harmless nice guy into a raging alcoholic and the other attempts to drag him away from the bar on desperately phoned orders from the man’s wife. Towles has fun leaping ahead with his narratives. In a cruel twist of fate, a peasant in late-czarist Russia pays a price for daring to profit from holding people’s places on excessively long food lines in Moscow. Towles sometimes lays on the philosophical wisdom and historical knowledge a bit, but the novella and all the stories are treated to his understated (and occasionally mischievous) irony. A sneakily entertaining assortment of tales. – Kirkus Review 

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The Truth About The Devlins by Lisa Scottoline  

The ne’er-do-well son of a successful Irish American family gets dragged into criminal complications that suggest the rest of the Devlins aren’t exactly the upstanding citizens they appear. The first 35 years in the life of Thomas “TJ” Devlin have been one disappointment after another to his parents, lawyers who founded a prosperous insurance and reinsurance firm, and his more successful siblings, John and Gabby. A longtime alcoholic who’s been unemployable ever since he did time for an incident involving his ex-girlfriend Carrie’s then 2-year-old daughter, TJ is nominally an investigator for Devlin & Devlin, but everyone knows the post is a sinecure. Things change dramatically when golden-boy John tells TJ that he just killed Neil Lemaire, an accountant for D&D client Runstan Electronics. Their speedy return to the murder scene reveals no corpse, so the brothers breathe easier–until Lemaire turns up shot to death in his car. John’s way of avoiding anything that might jeopardize his status as heir apparent to D&D is to throw TJ under the bus, blaming him for everything John himself has done and adding that you can’t trust anything his brother has said since he’s fallen off the wagon. TJ, who’s maintained his sobriety a day at a time for nearly two years, feels outraged, but neither the police investigating the murder nor his nearest and dearest care about his feelings. Forget the forgettable mystery, whose solution will leave you shrugging instead of gasping, and focus on the circular firing squad of the Devlins, and you’ll have a much better time than TJ. As an adjunct member says, “You’re not a family, you’re a force.” Exactly, though not in the way you’d expect. – Kirkus Review  

Happy reading!

Linda

Have questions or want to request a book?

Feel free to call the library! Our telephone number is 607-936-3713.

Note: Book summaries are from the respective publishers unless otherwise specified.

Information on the three library catalogs

Digital Catalog: https://stls.overdrive.com/

The Digital Catalog, is an online catalog containing eBooks, eAudiobooks, and digital magazines. You can use your library card and checkout/download content to a PC; you can also use the companion app, Libby, to access titles on your mobile devices; so you can enjoy eBooks and eAudiobooks on the go!

All card holders of all Southern Tier Library System member libraries can check out items from the Digital Catalog.

Hoopla Catalog: https://www.hoopladigital.com/

The Hoopla Catalog features instant checkouts of eBooks, eAudiobooks, comic books, albums, movies and TV shows. Patron check out limit is 10 items per month.

Hoopla is a Southeast Steuben County Library service available to all Southeast Steuben County Library card holders.

The Hoopla App is available for Android or Apple mobile devices, PCs, Macs*, smart TVs & media streaming players.

StarCat: The catalog of physical/traditional library materials: https://starcat.stls.org

Card holders of all Southern Tier Library System member libraries can access StarCat to search for and request materials available at libraries through out the Southern Tier Library System.

*You must have an active Internet connection to access Hoopla content on a Mac.

Tech Talk is a Southeast Steuben County Library blog.

New Books Coming Your Way: April 2024

This blog post includes all the new titles that have been ordered by the library in April 2024.

Some of these titles have arrived and can be requested through StarCat; other titles are not yet published and/or are not yet ready to circulate (and thus are not yet found in StarCat). 

So, if you see a book you’d love to read, but don’t find it listed in StarCat, send me an email and let me know which title you’d like to read; and I will place it on hold for you, when it is ready to circulate. 

My email address is: reimerl@stls.org 

And here is the list the list of New Books Coming Your Way for this month! 

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New Books is a monthly post, usually published the first weekday of each month; and occasionally published the second day of the month, as is the case this month! 

The next New Books Coming Your Was post will be out on May 1, 2024.