What’s hot this month in our non-fiction collection you wonder? We have books galore dealing with: food waste worldwide, girls and women in the media, how radical environmentalists are perceived in America, and Superfreakonomics. Also in our selection, books about the New Zealand health system, the biography of the daughter of a serial killer, and behind the scene of the current financial crisis.And if you want to know what it’s like to be held hostage in the Columbian jungle or the history of pearls, check out this month’s Popular Non Fiction Recent Picks.
Posted by Magalie on 11.02.2010 at 3:22 pm// Tagged: Recent picks //
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There is still time (well two days, really!) to enter our Waitangi Day competition: a quiz that will test your knowledge of this major event in New Zealand history. If you know how to search the internet, you will be able to find the correct answers and be in to win really nice prizes.
It is not so much the stories of a building as the story of the one hundred years old company that make Fletchers a fascinating book. This is available for borrowing along with other New Zealand publications such as The invention of New Zealand: art & national identity, 1930-1970. Our selection also includes books about Len Lye and kinetic art, New Zealand cooking, New Zealand Public Health system, and Wellington newest suburbs. And if you are interested in the history of families from the South Island of New Zealand, check out this month’s New Zealand Recent Picks.
Posted by Magalie on 04.02.2010 at 2:16 pm// Tagged: Recent picks , New Zealand //
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Following the lead of our sister-blog the Teen Blog, here is the top ten list of most wanted fiction books (both on the shelf & on order) at Wellington City Libraries:
Do fruits make your kids smile but veges make them yawn? You can trick them into eating the green stuff with a collection of delicious smoothies created by Victoria Boutenko. If you are into a more potent drink yourself, you will like Living with wine by Samantha Nestor, as well as the Basic basics wine handbook. Our selection this month also includes recipe books for sweets, Asian dumplings, chicken & poultry, vegetarian cooking, and wacky cupcakes. And if you want to re-discover Kiwi fare and explore French and Italian cooking, check out this month’s Cooking Recent Picks.
Posted by Magalie on 03.02.2010 at 1:13 pm// Tagged: Recent picks , cooking //
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Nau mai, haere mai. Please join with us in celebrating te Rā o Waitangi : Waitangi Day – a day of bicultural fun for the whole whānau.
Where & when : Saturday 6 February, Waitangi Park, 11 am-4.30 pm
After a powhiri at 11.00 am, Wellington City Libraries will be supported by storyteller, Moira Wairama, with these storytimes :
11.30 am Maui and the sun
12.30 pm Bilingual weta
1.30 pm. Ngake and Whataitai (taniwha)
In between, at 12 noon, 1 pm, 2 pm, we will be providing an opportunity for children & parents to make badges relating to each storytelling session.
Come also to see our range of books on the Treaty, and enter your name for a random prize draw of books.
You can also test your knowledge of historical events which triggered the signing of Te Tiriti/The Treaty by completing our simple quiz – and go in the draw to win a book prize.
Posted by wclstaff on 02.02.2010 at 4:13 pm// Tagged: Events , Maori, storytimes //
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Fans of the writer Marina Lewycka, author of A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian, winner of the 2005 Bollinger Everyman Wodehouse Prize for comic writing, will be thrilled to know she will be speaking on Monday 22nd February 2010 at the City Gallery, Civic Square, Wellington. She will discuss her work which includes Two Caravans published in 2007 and her latest novel, We are all made of Glue published in 2009. This event starts at 6.00pm; tickets are $15 ($12 for Book Council Members) and are available for purchase from the information desk at Wellington Central Library.
Sources: Contemporary Writers, British Council, The Guardian UK.
Posted by linda on 02.02.2010 at 3:51 pm// Tagged: General , fiction news //
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Our DVD selection for February has just come out! Amongst others, our picks are: Young Victoria (although young Albert isn’t too bad either…), Sunshine Cleaning (could be called ‘Murder scene cleaning for Dummies’), Tyson (which shows the other side of the infamous ear-biting boxer), and Seraphine (the French female equivalent of Van Gogh, give or take a little). Other movies available are Inglorious Basterds (a glorious re-writing of WWII) and District 9 (you might not like prawns so much after watching this movie), and if you want to know what other movies are on the shelves, check out this month’s DVD Recent Picks.
Posted by Magalie on 02.02.2010 at 1:27 pm// Tagged: Recent picks , DVDs //
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