Some recent new books are fascinating for the brevity of their one-letter titles. F, a novel by Daniel Kehlmann, published August 2014, was reviewed by James Wood in the New Yorker. He writes that F can seem a conventional tale of family woes, shaped around the life stories of the three failed Friedland brothers, […]
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Can’t Live With ‘Em, Can’t Live Without ‘Em
In Roz Chast’s Can’t We Talk About Something More Pleasant?, she illustrates and narrates her parents’ latter years. In doing so, Roz describes her lifelong challenging relationship with her disciplinarian mother, with whom she rarely felt affection, and her father, who had grown accustomed to her mother’s demanding ways. So many of us, while dealing […]
Continue readingHealthy Resolutions? Check this out!
It’s January, a time when many of us take a look at how we might make some healthy changes in our lives. Consumer Health Complete is available 24/7 from home with your library card! Check out popular magazines like Shape and Men’s Fitness, search videos and animation, learn more about medications and natural alternatives and […]
Continue readingSuspenseful gothic thrills
When a vulnerable young woman wakes up in the locked room of an insane asylum, with no memory of how she got there, the only thing she knows for sure is that she is Georgina Ferrars who lives in London with her uncle. And that is the one thing, it seems, that is quite impossible. […]
Continue readingParting Gifts
The time has come, my three loyal readers. This will be Cinephile Femme’s final blog post here at Mesa County Libraries. In honor of this bittersweet occasion, I have compiled 10 of my very favorite closing lines in cinema history. They aren’t necessarily the most famous (see: “Louie, I think this is the beginning of […]
Continue readingOne Book 2015 Selection
We’re pleased to announce that our One Book, One Mesa County 2015 selection is Can’t We Talk About Something More Pleasant? by famed author, illustrator and New Yorker cartoonist Roz Chast. In this illustrated memoir, Chast tackles both a personal and universal experience—caring for aging and dying parents—with yes, wit and humor, but also with […]
Continue readingLoss of a Legend
On November 19th we lost Mike Nichols, a filmmaker whose body of work displays stunning range, disquieting frankness, and a startling peak in to humanity (or lack thereof). Seamlessly transitioning from theater to film, Nichols spent the last 50 years creating bona fide classics, and carving out a place for himself as one of cinema’s greatest directors. […]
Continue readingComeback Keaton
An aging actor, once famous for his role in a beloved super-hero franchise, is now attempting an artistic comeback in a work of meaning and substance. This is the plot of Birdman (in theaters), but also of its star, Michael Keaton, who was once Batman (get it?), but hasn’t had many hits in the last […]
Continue readingIt was 20 years ago today…
On October 14th, 1994, Quentin Tarantino‘s groundbreaking, Pulp Fiction, came blasting on to movie screens. 20 years later (and, even after endless copycats), it remains a subversive, jolting, and sublimely entertaining piece of work. Fiction, with its seamless dialogue, quintessential soundtrack, nonlinear storytelling, and humanized criminals, enraptured audiences and critics alike, cementing Tarantino as both the most inspired and […]
Continue readingReal Gone Girl
What are you thinking? How are you feeling? What have we done to each other? And, so begins Gone Girl (in theaters now), David Fincher‘s film adaptation of Gillian Flynn‘s phenomenally successful novel (it spent a staggering 91 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list). Thanks to Flynn’s faithful screenplay and Fincher’s moody direction, the movie […]
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