Read the Recipe! Snoop & E-40 Write a Cookbook?!

Posted on Wednesday, December 20, 2023 by Jason Delpire

Goon with the Spoon book cover I’ll be honest, I wasn’t going to write another cookbook review. I’ve been feeling like there were few new books that really interested me and the older titles everyone already knows about.  But, as I was shelving New Books, this caught my eye: “Goon With the Spoon.” I have looked at Snoop’s other cookbook, “From Crook to Cook” (it was also surprisingly well done), but when I saw E-40 was also involved, I was sold; I listened to E-40’s “In A Major Way” a BUNCH when it came out.

From Crook to Cook book cover

First of all, this is NOT a book for everyday eating. In the name of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, please do not eat like this every day. But, if you are throwing a party or, say, watching a football game, (You know, watching a good team, like the Packers. 😂) then, this is an excellent selection of rich, flavorful items with enough variety for nearly every taste. And, the recipes are legit — not many shortcuts like you tend to find in most pop culture cookbooks. Not to be left out: a wide variety of drinks for adults. Oh, and the photos!! Bold, deep, meaty colors with minimal gimmicks. Each photo highlights the dish and lends legitimacy to the book; paging through you don’t see it as a cookbook by two legendary rappers — you see this as a handbook to throw a great food party. Seriously, these are some of the best food pics I can remember seeing. (Ok, maybe not in the same class as the books by Michelin-starred chefs, but that’s just different.)

Mount Westmore Album CoverQuick plug for the Mount Westmore release, too. I listened to it while writing this. It’s like a Westside Connection album, but with a couple extra legends. (Read: if this was released in ‘98, it would be AMAZING. Now, it’s like when that one uncle gets to talking a bit too much about when they were young.)

Some of the best looking recipes from “Goon With the Spoon” include:
Cornbread Rice, pg 159; Flamin’ Hot Cheetos Mac ’n’ Cheese Bites, pg 62 (The cook in me recoils in horror, but the cheese addict in me says to get over it.); and Kickin’ Lickin’ Collard Greens, pg 153 (This one features what may be my favorite photo in the book!).

The Gift of Information: Newspapers!

Posted on Monday, December 18, 2023 by Sew Happy

This holiday season, do you want to play the best party game ever with friends and family? Or perhaps, as if giving them a gift, show them a wonderful aspect of our online library that they may not know about? Teach them how to read major publications such as the Washington Post or the Wall Street Journal for free. Just sit down with their library cards and laptops or tablets and show them all the awesome things this post will teach you how to do.

Yes, first you need to learn how to do this yourself. So grab your own library library card, a cup of tea and let’s get to exploring DBRL’s online resources.

New York Times Recent & US Major Dailies

I want you to go to www.dbrl.org, our website. Notice the green menu bar that runs across the page. Tap on Research & Learn, find the Topics column and finally tap onto Articles & Newspapers.

Continue your search by clicking on New York Times Recent & US Major Dailies. Log in with your library card and PIN (your birthdate in MMDDYYYY format). A search page comes up. Just above the search field are publication types; if you are searching for a topic and don’t care which newspaper it is in, find Newspapers under all source types, then fill in the search field and hit enter. All articles from all newspapers will come up in the result list. You click on an article title to get a summary and then on the Full Text – PDF button to read the article.

If you only want to read one newspaper, look at the top of the search page for a link to publications. Type the newspaper you want to read on the publications search page and hit enter. From the result list look for the one that has full text coverage through to the present.

Clicking on this will bring up the published articles from the current issue; you can also select to view an earlier issue. To the right of any article are options for emailing or saving or citing it as well as related articles and additional search terms you may want to explore.

This particular resource gives you access to 10 different databases and only one of those contains newspapers, which are the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, Los Angeles Times and Chicago Tribune. These are text-based articles only unless you are looking at the historical records of digitized newspapers. If you find yourself looking at scholarly journals and dissertations, check your filters to be sure only newspapers is selected.

Other Resources in the Topic Guide

The Kansas City Star Collection and the St. Louis Post-Dispatch Collection have current newspaper articles in text form or you can view the entire paper just as if you held it in front of you. It’s a bit difficult, in my opinion, to read on your phone, although the image interface does allow you to zoom in and out. I use my computer screen so I’m reading the paper as if it was a paper copy with the ads, the images and the adjoining articles, and I feel the experience is more interesting.

Newsbank brings us local papers such as the Columbia Daily Tribune, Boone County Journal and Fulton Sun, as well as The Kansas City Star and St. Louis Post-Dispatch collections. Again, you miss the pictures and the ads and it is not the same experience as holding the paper in your hands. No comics or crosswords! The community aspect of reading a newspaper online isn’t there, either, but accessing the local papers via these resources will keep you up with local news.

By the way, the Columbia Missourian is not mentioned in the previous resource because it has made its archives open and you can search there at any time. I learned that from a journalism student.

That is a quick introduction to just a few of our resource databases. Others provide you with articles from newspapers: Academic Search Elite brings you results from full-text journal articles for most academic areas for the teen and adult researcher; Explora provides our younger patrons with articles and facts for research papers, class projects, or homework from the world’s leading magazines and reference books.

More About Topic Guides and Resources

It is fairly easy to move between our list of topic guides and the list of resources. Just use the green boxes that are visible on any of the pages in this section of the website. But what is the difference between the two categories?

Our resources are databases for which we have paid licensing fees so you have to have an active library card and live in our service area. It is a long list! Learn history, languages, arts, how to repair a car, what stocks are worth, read newspapers and books (both adult and children!), have a book read out loud to you, prepare for your driver’s exam, prepare to get a job, a GED, a will… the opportunities go on and on. Some of them, like Ancestry, have to be used in the library because of licensing requirements. Some of them, like Chilton Automotive Repair, is more convenient to use in the library as we have larger paper for printing out schematics, although you can use them at home or on the road. Each item on this page is a separate resource.

Our topic guides are a mix of free resources and resources that require a library card. And while I’ve covered the first one, Articles & Newspapers, I highly encourage you to look at others. These have been curated to ensure the information is appropriate. The links are checked regularly to ensure they are still active. Explore such topics as Arts, Hobbies and Recreation, Cars and Driving, Government and Genealogy and much more.

We would love for you to stop by any of our branches if you would like some help using these resources. Additionally, the Columbia Public Library offers Device Advice twice a week, Tuesdays and Fridays, from 2-3:30 p.m.

Remember when I mentioned at the start of this post that this could be the best party game ever? It’s fun to explore; I personally have shown people how to use these resources many times and I love the pleasure and empowerment people experience as they realize what is available to them with the click of a few buttons — and their library cards, of course. I’ve opened my phone at the dining table, the grocery store and even at an estate sale to show people how to use their online resources. I hope that with this article I’ve encouraged you, too, to use your public library to your best and full advantage.

TBR (To Be Read) in 2024

Posted on Friday, December 15, 2023 by Michael M

With the year coming to a close, it is often considered a time for reflection and resolutions, looking back at the year’s events, and what we’re going to do over the course of the next year. In library- and book-land, the end of the year often means lots of retrospectives about the best books published that year, what people read and love, how many books they read, etc. I do read a lot of books (since working in libraries especially, I average between 150-200 books a year), but there are always more! So, given how many books I own, have out from the library, or have heard good things about, what am I prioritizing as we move into 2024?

Cover of "Legendborn" by Tracy DeonnTracy Deonn exploded onto the scene in 2020 with her debut novel “Legendborn.” Meant for a young adult audience (although don’t let that stop you), we follow Bree, a young Black woman as she discovers the secret behind her mother’s death. On her first day at UNC Chapel Hill’s early college program, Bree witnesses something she shouldn’t have, and when magic fails to wipe her mind, she sets off on a journey to discover more about her own magic. This novel mixes the African diaspora with Arthurian legend, while examining race, gender and intergenerational trauma.

I’ve owned a copy of this for a few years now, and it pushes so many of my buttons: King Arthur and his knights, with magic, set in the modern day, from the perspective of someone who isn’t a white male. Everyone I’ve heard talk about this book, either on social media or just within my friend group absolutely loves it, and they all immediately picked up the sequel when it came out. As of the writing of this post, the third book has been announced for 2025, with a planned fourth book down the line, meaning there will be lots to look forward to! Continue reading “TBR (To Be Read) in 2024”

January First Thursday Book Discussion: The Dinner List

Posted on Wednesday, December 13, 2023 by MaggieM

If you could have dinner with any five people, living or dead, who would you pick?

In Rebecca Serle’s novel, “The Dinner List,” the protagonist finds herself at dinner with the five people from a list she penned years earlier, including the deceased Audrey Hepburn.

The Dinner List by Rebecca Serle book coverI have to admit, that I was skeptical in the opening chapter of the book. Partly because the dinner list concept seems a little played out. It’s not a new concept or a particularly mind-bending idea, so I doubted if Serle was going to advance the discussion in a novel direction.

But I finished the book with my mind stretched in pleasant ways.

If you’ve never given this dinner list concept any thought before, and even if you have, I would encourage you to do so. Who would you invite? Why those people?

Read the book.

Return to your previous ruminations.

And bring your thoughts to the next First Thursday Book Discussion, on January 4, 2024.

Author Rebecca Serle will also appear live as part of the DBRL Online Author Series on Wednesday, January 10 at 7 p.m. Visit the author series site to register.

New DVD List: December 2023

Posted on Monday, December 11, 2023 by Decimal Diver

Here is a new DVD list highlighting various titles recently added to the library’s collection.

” – Website / Reviews 
Written and directed by Christopher Nolan, this dramatic film thrusts audiences into the mind of physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer, whose landmark work on the Manhattan Project created the first atomic bomb.

” – MiniseriesWebsite / Reviews
The TV series continues based on Elmore Leonard’s book “City Primeval.” Fifteen years after Raylan Givens left the hollers of Kentucky, chance encounter on a desolate Florida highway sends him to Detroit.

” – Website / Reviews
A Ken Burns documentary telling the story of an improbable, shaggy beast that has found itself at the center of many of the country’s most mythic and heartbreaking tales.

” – Website / Reviews
Based on the graphic novel of the same name, this comedy-drama focuses on a California filmmaker who contemplates his romantic future when his girlfriend moves to New York for an internship.

” – Website / Reviews
This dramatic mystery film based on the Agatha Christie book “Hallowe’en Party” is set in eerie, post-World War II Venice on All Hallows’ Eve featuring the return of the celebrated sleuth, Hercule Poirot.

Continue reading “New DVD List: December 2023”

Literary Links: Time Travel

Posted on Sunday, December 10, 2023 by Katherine

The concept of time travel opens a whole world of possibilities and complexities. If you could change the past, would you change a key moment in history or maybe just in your own life? What might the consequences be? Time travel in fiction ranges from fun, almost frivolous adventures, to stories that raise serious questions about the potential disasters that could await even the most careful time travelers.

Here are some books that explore different kinds of time travel. Some try to answer big questions, and others just have fun with it.

To say nothing of the dog by Connie Willis book coverI had to start off this list with an older title and a personal favorite of mine: “To Say Nothing of the Dog” by Connie Willis. It combines many elements I love: time travel, romance and historical fiction, all with a dash of zaniness. Continue reading “Literary Links: Time Travel”

Helping Kids Understand Dementia

Posted on Friday, December 8, 2023 by Ida

I first heard of Alzheimer’s disease at age thirteen, when my father’s uncle moved in with my grandmother, next door to us. We quickly realized why he could no longer live alone. His diminishing memory meant he needed someone to remind him how to dress for the weather and when it was time to brush his teeth. If my grandmother needed to run errands, someone from my household would stay with her brother to keep him safe.

Many kids have relationships with grandparents or other adults who are experiencing some form of dementia. It can be a confusing situation for a child, wondering why the grownup they love can’t do the same things anymore or why they ask the same questions over and over. As with so many of life’s struggles, books can help. Continue reading “Helping Kids Understand Dementia”

Q&A With Kennon Sheldon, Author of “Freely Determined”

Posted on Wednesday, December 6, 2023 by Decimal Diver

Kennon Sheldon and the cover of his book: Freely Determined

Kennon Sheldon is a Columbia, MO author whose latest book is “Freely Determined: What the New Psychology of the Self Teaches Us About How to Live.” In the book he argues the case for free will from a psychological perspective, and also draws on research into motivation and goal setting as a guide to how we might use our freedom wisely. Sheldon is professor of psychology at the University of Missouri. One of the founding researchers of positive psychology, he researches in the areas of well-being, motivation, self-determination theory, personality and positive psychology. He was kind enough to take the time to be interviewed via email.

Continue reading “Q&A With Kennon Sheldon, Author of “Freely Determined””

Nonfiction Roundup: December 2023

Posted on Monday, December 4, 2023 by Liz

Below I’m highlighting some of the last nonfiction books coming out this year in December. All of the mentioned titles are available to put on hold in our catalog and will also be made available via the library’s Overdrive website on the day of publication in eBook and downloadable audiobook format (as available). For a more extensive list of new nonfiction books coming out this month, check our online catalog.

Top Picks

The Lost Tomb by Douglas Preston book coverThe Lost Tomb: And Other Real-Life Stories of Bones, Burials, and Murder” by Douglas Preston (Dec 5)
What’s it like to be the first to enter an Egyptian burial chamber that’s been sealed for thousands of years? Where might a blocked doorway or newly excavated corridor lead? And what might this stupendous tomb reveal about the most powerful pharaoh in Egyptian history? From the jungles of Honduras to macabre archaeological sites in the American Southwest, Douglas Preston’s journalistic explorations have taken him across the globe. He broke the story of an extraordinary mass grave of animals killed by the asteroid impact that caused the extinction of the dinosaurs, he explored what lay hidden in the booby-trapped Money Pit on Oak Island, and he roamed the haunted hills of Italy in search of the Monster of Florence. When he hasn’t been co-authoring bestselling thrillers featuring FBI Agent Pendergast, Preston has been writing about some of the world’s strangest and most dramatic mysteries. “The Lost Tomb” brings together an astonishing and compelling collection of true stories about buried treasure, enigmatic murders, lost tombs, bizarre crimes, and other fascinating tales of the past and present. Continue reading “Nonfiction Roundup: December 2023”

Leftovers? No Problem!

Posted on Friday, December 1, 2023 by Sew Happy

Holiday meals are supposed to leave foods in the refrigerator for other meals. Plentiful leftovers. In my family, it’s for grazing when you come back to the same meal later to have a bit more of something and another slice of pie. The next day is often sandwiches and sides and the third day is soup with anything else left being stuffed into freezer bags and stored until it gets freezer burned and is guiltily tossed.

Unfortunately, this is frequently the experience of my daily meals as well. I’m trying to do better. How about you? Would you like to come on an exploration of our collection to find some new favorite ways to serve those leftovers? Continue reading “Leftovers? No Problem!”