Blog Posts by Ultra Violet
Ultra Violet is an artist, but not the one who hung out with Warhol at the Factory. She is also the only library staff member who was a Shakespearean research scholar and a member of the Meat Cutters' Union in the same year.

The revenge of the radioactive lady
06/19/11
A seventy year old woman moves to Tallahassee to seek revenge on the doctor who exposed her to radiation in an experiment decades before. Unfortunately revenge is a dish best served cold only if the object of the revenge is aware of it. The doctor is sinking into dementia and the old woman has to try and get him to remember what he did. As she insinuates herself into his family to find an opportunity for murder, she unwittingly becomes a part of their dysfunctional antics. Hilarious and well-written.
Tags: dark comedy, dysfunctional families, Florida
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The price of escape
06/16/11
A German Jew escapes the Nazis to go to stay with his cousin in Guatemala. A deep psychological study that is as relevant to a contemporary situation of feeling isolated and powerless. A sensitive, and quietly powerful book.
Tags: Central America, German Jews
Plato and a platypus walk into a bar-- : understanding philosophy through jokes
06/08/11
This little gem of a book could be read cover to cover or you could just open to any random page during a free minute. Brief history of modern thought interspersed with jokes, anecdotes and cartoons. This would make a great conversation starter at one of your more intellectual cocktail parties.
Tags: humor, Non-Fiction, philosophy
The year we left home
06/07/11
Audrey and Randy come from hearty Iowa farm stock, and they are living out the American dream in their suburban house with four children. They find strength in their stoic Norwegian, Lutheran traditions. But it's the late 1970s and the lives of their children will take some very unexpected turns. Their eldest daughter, Anita, is the consummate girly cheerleader who wants nothing more than to get married and stay home with her children. Her husband is on the fast track to success as a banker and her future seems all planned out. It doesn't take long for Anita to find the joys of motherhood leave her cold, and her husband's drinking habit becomes problematic. After a DUI, Anita takes more control of her life and finds a new side of herself as a realtor. Second oldest, Ryan, has continual trouble with the women in his life, and is unfulfilled in his job as a computer programmer. Ryan finds an uneasy friendship with his burnout, Vietnam vet cousin, Chip. Even though Chip tends to cause Ryan trouble, he is also a voice of reason that grounds Ryan in reality. Blake is the next child in line. Blake finds a career in construction and a good life with a wife and kids. The youngest child, Torrie, had been the one with the most promise. She was a beautiful and impetuous young woman who excelled in school. On the way back from a funeral, Torrie is involved in an accident that shatters her dreams, but opens the door to a new world.
Jean Thompson creates characters that are breathtakingly real. There isn't a page of this book that doesn't ring true. It covers issues as diverse, controversial and relevant as alcoholism, Vietnam veterans, Native Americans, farm subsidies, motherhood, and women's roles. It is political and intimate at the same time. Every family in America has dealt with some of these issues in one way or another. This is definitely not a light summer read, but a perfect choice for a book club or for someone who is looking for a contemporary family saga that is painful at times, but hopeful in a way that never gets sentimental.
The book of Harold : the illegitimate son of God
06/06/11
Any book with a possum on the cover is alright by me. A suburban computer technician has a vision and claims to be the second coming of Christ. A dark comedy by an intelligent author of insight and wit.
Tags: dark humor, religion, satire
The fates will find their way
06/02/11
When 16-year old, Nora, goes missing on Halloween it permanently changes the lives of her sister and the boys of the neighborhood. As these teens grow into adulthood and have families of their own, they are still haunted by the disappearance of the girl. Unanswered questions, emptiness and a feeling of what might have been pervades this bittersweet novel. Hannah Pittard currently teaches fiction writing at DePaul University, Chicago.
The summer son
05/31/11
Intense story of an adult son confronting his long-estranged father to unearth the secrets of his family's dysfunction. Craig Lancaster won the 2010 High Plains Book Award for his first book and 2009 Honor Book for 600 Hours of Edward. He writes with a strong, realistic flavor of the West.
Tags: Fathers and sons, Montana
Player one : what is to become of us : a novel in five hours
05/29/11
A real-time five hour story of the intersecting lives of diverse people who all happen to be in the same airport during a worldwide disaster. The characters start out as archetypes but as they face the tragedy, their true selves are brought to the surface. A startling and complex novel on a par with Albert Camus.
Tags: Canadian, existentialism
The hottest dishes of the Tartar cuisine
05/25/11
Family saga set in Soviet Russia, filled with eccentric characters. Humorous and biting at the same time, this is a book that will delight clever cynics. It was nominated for the 2010 German Book Prize.
Tags: family, Russia, women's relationships


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