5 08 2009

The Bay Area is a goldmine of for computer buffs interested in corporate history and biography.

The entertaining Apple Confidential: The real story of Apple Computer by Owen Linzmayer, is only one of the corporate histories of Apple Computer available at the library. Steve Jobs’ autobiography, iWoz, offers a more recent insider’s view. Jobs also appears in Price’s fascinating account of the development (sometimes recounted too technically) of computer animation in The Pixar touch.

Intel is well-covered in Yu’s Creating the digital future, CEO Andrew Grove’s autobiography Swimming Across and Andrew Grove by Tedlow. Offering a rival interpretation in Man behind the microchip: Robert Noyce and the invention of Silicon Valley Berlin argues that Intel cofounder Robert Noyce’s should be credited with the company’s spectacular rise.

In High noon: The inside story of Scott McNealy and the rise of Sun Microsystems, author Karen Southwick delivers an in-depth portrait of the computer network company and its CEO (Bill Gates arch-rival) Scott McNealy, ironically pursuing its corporate future with Microsoft-like tactics.

A vibrant and engaging history of Silicon Valley is recounted by Bronson in Nudist on the Late Shift: And other true tales of Silicon Valley. The achievements of individuals is the focus of Kshatriy’s Silicon Valley greats: Indians who made a difference to technology and the world.

If you prefer a more iconoclastic look at the industry, try Newman’s Net Loss: Internet prophets, private profits and the costs to the community. Similarly, in his now-dated but still thought-provoking Silicon Snake Oil, Clifford Stoll underlines the high cost people pay for buying into the mythology that technology must constantly be upgraded to newer, better, faster.

Make your choice and let the chips fall where they may.





Join the Summer game @ the library

28 06 2009

It is a celebration of Bay Area authors , experiences, and life .These works make Bay Area a unique place where authors with the power of pen bring beauty, joy, and liberation. The choices are infinite…

“I Loved You So Much

I loved you

So much

That when

You left

It took

A lot

To keep me

Alive.”

ABSOLUTE TRUST in the GOODNESS of the EARTH     

The new poems by ALICE WALKER

From Alice Walker’s poetry to memoir of Frances Mayes are all works: that are considered as literally works around the Bay.

In UNDER THE TUSCAN SUN, France Mayes in a poetic language describes her decision leaving San Francisco and finding a different world in Tuscan, Italy. “I’ve learned here that simplicity is liberating. Simca’s philosophy applies totally to this kitchen, where we no longer measure, but just cook. As all cooks know, ingredients of the moment are the best guides. Much of what we do is too simple to be called a recipe-it’s just the way to do it.”
Books around the Bay seems to be a simple theme for the summer reading game at the library .The theme is wide open to all different titles that were created here or the writers lived here part or all of her career , or the story starts ,ends, or take place in San Francisco. Two above titles are sample of the list. Both are non fiction …however if you like to read fiction, just search the catalog for San Francisco (calif.) fiction! Or stop by the information desk so we can share the other Bay Area authors that wrote fiction about other places in the world. The example for that would Isabel Allende, and Khaled Hosseini. Just join the game!
 




Suggestions for Summer Reads on NPR

22 07 2008

National Public Radio’s Summer Books 2008 is a great source for ideas on what to read and, certainly, some suggested books will be Timeless Reads. Check it out!





Fremont is Reading

7 07 2008

TIMELESS READS

At the Fremont Library

The 2nd annual Adult Summer Reading Game here in Fremont is starting its third week and off to a terrific start with 87 entries.

The weekly winners, their book title and comments are as follows:

• Dawn N., reading The Secret Hour. “Book 1 of The Midnighters- Better if you are a teen!”

• Sitalakshmi R., reading The Diary of Anne Frank. “Very touching and moving. A Must Read!”

• Sarah K., reading A Year of Living Biblically. “Simultaneously hilarious and profound. A.J. Jacobs, a secular Jew, spends a year following the Bible’s commandments, literally.”

All four libraries in Fremont, including our Centerville, Irvington and Niles branches invite you to come in and play our adult summer reading game. Good luck and happy reading.





“Timeless Reads” Program at Newark Library

3 07 2008

Newark Library has awarded two awards already to participants in the “Timeless Reads” Adult Summer Game.   Congratulations to Sandra, who is a fan of Agatha Christie mysteries, and to Laura, who is a fan of Daphne Du Maurier.  They both won gift certificates to be used at Starbucks. 

Suggested books are displayed next to the Circulation Desk, though any book you think is worth a second read can qualify for the adult summer reading game.  The game is open to any patrons aged 18 or older. 

Come on down to the Newark Library at 6300 Civic Terrace Avenue, Newark, CA.  We’ll be glad to assist you in locating some good books for the summer, and with any other information needs you might have.





Adult Summer Reading Game 2008

16 06 2008

 

 

 

 “sum·mer”

 

1. The usually warmest season of the year, occurring between spring and autumn and constituting June, July, and August in the Northern Hermisphere, or , as calculated astronomically, extending from the summer solstice tot he autumnal equinox. 2. A period of fruition, fulfillment, happiness, or beauty.

 

According to the dictionary summer means: a period of fulfillment, happiness and beauty. Therefore, as I invite you to our Adult Summer Reading Game @ Alameda County Library, I would like to introduce you to some of my favorite Timeless Reads for summer reading.

 

These books bring me joy, understanding, and happiness. The characters not only travel to new places, meeting new people, or facing new situations but they arrive home with a richer understanding of love and the human struggle for happiness,

 

 Razor\'s edge

 

 Razor’s Edge is a novel by W. Somerset Maugham written in 1944. This book, popular with readers, centers on a soul-searching World War I veteran (Larry), who finds he cannot settle back into the world of the upper class. He delays his planned marriage and career, and travels abroad to seek the meaning of life.

 

Larry moves to Paris and immerses himself in study and the bohemian life.  After two years Isabel visits and Larry asks her to join his life of traveling and searching though with little money.  She can not accept that and returns to Chicago and marries a millionaire.

 

Larry leaves for India and eventually returns to Paris.  From evening till down in a Parisian cafe, he discusses India and all the events with Maugham (the narrator). The book signaled a beginning of Pop culture in the West as it embraced Eastern culture.  The book was twice adapted into film.

 

The Library has this title in three different formats: print, ebook and DVD.

 

Zahir

Another book that I recommend is The Zahir by the Brazilian writer Paulo Coelho. It was published in 2005.  This novel, like his previous book, The Alchemist is about pilgrimage, loss and love.

 

The book has been translated into 44 languages.  This description of the book is from the author’s website (www.paulocoelho.com) is as follows:

 

“The narrator of The Zahir is a bestselling novelist who lives in Paris and enjoys all the privileges money and celebrity bring.  His wife of ten years, Esther, is a war correspondent who has disappeared along with a friend, Mikhail, who may or may not be her lover.

 

Was Esther kidnapped, murdered, or did she simply escape a marriage that life her unfulfilled? The narrator doesn’t have any answers, but he has plenty of questions of his own. Then one day Mikhail finds the narrator and promises to reunite him with his wife. In his attempt to recapture a lost love, the narrator discovers something unexpected about himself.”

Through the narrator’s journey from Paris to Kazakhstan, Coelho explores various meansing of love and life.

 

The Library has this novel in four languages, English, Farsi, Punjabi and Spanish. Other novels by this author are in Korean, Vietnamese and Chinese.

 

eat pray love

The third book that I have enjoyed reading recently is Eat, pray, love: one woman’s search for everything across Italy, India and Indonesia by Elizabeth Gilbert.  The book has been on the national bestseller list for the last two years.

 

The book traces the author’s decision to quit her job and travel the world for a year after suffering a midlife crisis and divorce. Her journey took her to three places in her quest to explore her own nature and learn the art of spiritual balance.

 

“Sitting in an outdoor cafe in Rome, Gilbert’s friend declares that every city–and every person–has a word. Rome’s is “sex”, the Vatican’s “power”; Gilbert declares New York’s to be “achieve”, but only later stumbles upon her own word, antevasin, Sanskrit for “one who lives at the border.”  What is your word?  Is it possible to choose a world that retains its truth for a lifetime?”

If you would like to read the book in your book club, there is a study guide on the author’s website: http://www.elizabethgilbert.com/

 

The Library has this title in print, CD Book and electronic book.

 

One final note: I hope you will have a beautiful and happy summer, and as you play the reading game, if you stumble upon some good books, recommend the books to others right her. Click on the “Reader’s Choice” link at the top of this web page!

 

Lili Khalili

Reference Services Union City Branch    

 





Coming Soon!

1 04 2008

We are gearing up for Summer 2008 Reading! This year “Timeless Reads” will be featured–you know, books that you can read again and again. Not “classic” in the usual way, but a book that can pull you back because it was so good the first time. What is your timeless book?

Summer 2008 Adult Summer Reading begins June 15!