Monday, February 29, 2016

Storm Front by Jim Butcher


Answer truthfully, when you see the word wizard what image comes up in your mind?

For me it's a majestic being in a light blue cloak carrying a magical staff with a book levitating in front of him, who can twirl up a tornado with the sound of a few words. Sounds grand, doesn't it? See, most people conjure up the same image, more or less, so when I started reading The Dreseden Files it changed my perspective completely.


Harry Dresden is a powerful wizard, a wizard so renowned he himself has been requested by the White Council (a court with the same power as the Australian High Court except for, well, wizards) to represent all wizards in numerous formal events. However instead of living a life of celebrity as you would assume, he lives in an old, musty basement, struggling to pay the rent with the money he earns from his few cases as a public wizard (the wizard version of Sherlock Holmes).


We are introduced to the main character in this first book of the Dresden Files, Storm Front. In general the plot is about the cases he undertakes, from small things such as finding a missing ring to solving murder cases. Mixed into this are complications from breaking one of the laws of magic written by the White Council to the quarrels he has with the leader of the vampires.


Without revealing too much of the book, Dresden is hired to find a missing husband but in fact stumbles upon a complicated set-up involving murders, black magic and a mob boss.


Overall, Jim Butcher's series The Dresden Files is an interesting and captivating idea. I recommend this book to young adult readers who like the fantasy and mystery genres. If you want to try a new book or are already a fan of the Sherlock Holmes mystery novels then you would enjoy this series.



Review by Siven

Monday, February 22, 2016

Do You Dystopia?

Stories not about your happy place.


Dystopian fiction. It’s not a new phenomenon (1984, Z for Zachariah, The Giver) but it certainly seems to be having a resurgence. As a genre it’s a little bit like a virus, an appropriate comparison because so many dystopian storylines feature one. As we all know a virus replicates and spreads, which is pretty much what has happened within the genre since The Hunger Games was published in 2008.

So it's a really popular genre, but how do you identify a dystopian novel? It is probably set in one of many possible futures or deals with the end of civilisation as we know it. It may point to the possible results of a disturbing world-trend - dangerous reality television, worsening climate change, extreme plastic surgery, Belieberism. 

While it may make you anxious about the way humanity is headed it may also fill you with hope for it - the hope that people will work together to find solutions to these problems before it’s too late. Here’s to getting it right before we are forced to go all Sci-Fi on each other and set off to find another planet we can call home.

Below are some reviews of dystopian fiction that we've recently read. If these books fuel your dystopian fire, check out our reading lists Speculative Fiction and Dystopia for more like this!






Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel
Reviewed by Mrs Paterson

I really can’t say anything about this story without giving too much away, so I’ll just say: this is one of those unstoppable pandemic dystopias, where everyone dies from some unrelenting virus and no one can stop the dying and soon there are just a handful of people who haven’t died or are not dying. And some of them perform Shakespeare for the dwindling, non-existent masses because "survival is insufficient". The story moves back and forth through time, weaving together seemingly disparate people and things: the lives of survivors, the histories of the departed, a mysterious comic strip and a bizarre cult. But that’s really all I can say.

So if I can’t give you even a shred of coherent storyline, why should you read it? Because ultimately this is a story about hope and beauty and human resilience in the face of extreme none-of-those things. And it is about the power of memory, and the importance of remembering. I loved this story. And i highly recommend that you read it. Just don’t do what I did, and start getting pneumonia while you’re reading about fevers, coughing, and dying. Not good...

Themes ticked: global pandemic, post-apocalyptic, decline in the fabric of society, set immediately after the catastrophe, survivors as the main characters




The Day of the Triffids by John Wyndham
Reviewed by Mrs Klein

Bill Masen is disappointed when he misses out on the greatest light show ever because he is in hospital recovering from an eye operation. What he doesn’t know is that everyone who has seen the light show is blinded. When he removes his bandages the next day, he also finds that the Triffids, plants that can walk, have escaped their compound. Everyone had forgotten about the Triffids “because they were novelties”. What they had also overlooked was that “the whorl topping a Triffid’s stem could lash out as a slender stinging weapon ten feet long, capable of discharging enough poison to kill a man if it struck squarely on his unprotected skin.”
So there you have it – a world of blind people at the mercy of rampaging carnivorous plants – the stuff of nightmares! I still can’t see a strange plant without being reminded of this book.


Themes ticked: catastrophic event, rampaging carnivorous plants, decline in the fabric of society, set during the catastrophe



Clade by James Bradley
Reviewed by Ms Herlinger

Set in the near future, with global warming worsening with each year that passes, Clade is a loose collection of episodes in the life of a family - set against a background of a world in peril. Beginning with power cuts, bird die-offs, progressing to tropical cyclones in England, refugees from flooded lands, a global pandemic,  technology to replace lost worlds and lost people, it could be depressing, but it’s not. It’s just a fascinating glimpse into a possible future world – if we don’t act now.

Themes ticked: environmental disaster, global pandemic, decline in the fabric of society, set during the catastrophe







The Maze Runner by James Dashner
Reviewed by Ms Agnostopoulos
Thomas wakes up in dark box that is slowly moving upwards. He has no memory of how he got there or who he is. All he knows is his name. When the box gets to the top Thomas enters The Glade, a field surrounded on all sides by a mile high wall. The Glade is populated by other teenage boys who have also had their memories stripped. Some have been there for 2 years, with a new boy arriving once a month. The box also brings some supplies, but the boys have to work to survive. They tend crops, raise animals and keep the place in order, but their main objective is to escape the maze that is outside the stone walls.

Within the maze are monsters called Grievers who mostly come out at night - mostly. Each night the doors to the maze close. Overnight the walls of the maze change, and each day ‘runners’ explore the maze and return to map out the changes. After two years they have still not found an exit. A couple of days after Thomas arrives the box brings someone else to The Glade - a girl in a coma. In her fist is a note that reads ‘She is the last one ever’. Thomas gets flashes of his memory back and soon realises that her arrival signals the end for The Glade. It is time to finally solve The Maze and find out why they were put there in the first place.

Themes ticked: catastrophic event, decline in the fabric of society, set during the catastrophe



Sunday, February 21, 2016

Your Ultimate Reading List! Part 2


Another five books, this time from Mrs Klein.

1. The Sword and the Scimitar by David Ball
Tags: siblings, slave markets, sultans, knights, sieges
2. Two Brothers by Ben Elton
Tags: brothers, Nazis, Jewish, Berlin, WWII
3. The Pillars of the Earth by Ken Follett
Tags: ambition, brothers, builders, cathedrals, Henry I
4. The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver
Tags: Belgian Congo, jungle, missionaries, families, tragedy
5. Shantaram by Gregory David Roberts
Tags: Bombay, beggars, gangsters, slums, underworld 

If you want to find out any more about these titles, come and ask!


Thursday, February 18, 2016

Welcome to the Zettabyte Era

2016 has been declared "The Year Of The Zettabyte" based on the fact that by the close of the year annual global IP traffic will pass the zettabyte threshold - it will reach about 1.3 ZB, actually.

But what is a zettabyte? A zettabyte is ten to the 21st power, which can be written as a one followed by twenty-one zeros: 


1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000

So, what does that mean in terms of data?

Perhaps the infographic by Cisco below, taken from this 2011 article explains it better than words can:



Streaming the entire Netflix catalog 3,177 times. Wow!

So one thing is clear: a zettabyte represents a lot of data usage, and even more amazingly, this usage is predicted to double by 2019.

So why am I telling you this? The rise of the zettabyte reminds us that with such a huge amount of Internet traffic comes the challenge to turn unstructured data into meaningful information. It is imperative that citizens of the world be able to recognise and select credible material, master effective research skills, and know how to cite sources. These skills will help you after you leave school, long after the zettabyte becomes the yottabyte, and beyond

Here are some helpful guides on the Library pages:
Citation Tools

Or drop by the library and speak to a real, live Librarian. We may be still trying to get our heads around the zettabyte, but we can help in the here and now!


Have you met Alice?




Alice is a stapler. Alice enjoys her job - stapling.  It's a simple life, but that's ok. Because that's what Alice was made to do.

Alice is the latest in a long line of staplers that have worked in the Arthur Holt Library. Over the years these walls have bore witness to countless multitudes arriving one after another - standard models from Officeworks, heavy-duty workers from Bunnings, lime-green toys from Smiggle. Nameless, mechanical helpers who gallantly gave their all to keep your stuff in order. Some couldn't handle the pressure, their springs giving up on the due day of that huge Year 10 Commerce assessment. Some were constantly jamming and had to endure multiple and often painful staple extractions. Some just quietly and without fanfare disappeared.


But now there is Alice. Things will be a little different. Alice will help us tally how many staplers we go through in a year. Like tropical cyclones, Alice's name denotes she is our first stapler for the year 2016. Successive staplers, should they be called upon, will alphabetically follow in her footsteps, so to speak.


We really, really hope to have Alice stick around all year. Please make her feel welcome (insert a round of applause here). 

Tuesday, February 9, 2016

And now, The Library Review.


So apparently, the Library used to have its very own magazine! These periodicals contained book reviews, reports on activities within the Library, poetry contributions, and advice on the Dewey Decimal System - a new "thing" for the Library in 1965! Sounds very much like what we now post on Instagram, Twitter and this very blog!



Hopefully you follow us on Instagram because over the next few weeks articles from this November 1965 edition, as well as others, will be hitting your screens. Times have certainly changed in the past fifty years - but as you'll see, some things have stayed the same!

Sunday, February 7, 2016

February 14 is Library Lovers Day!


Love is in the air! The Arthur Holt Library is celebrating Library Lovers Day by offering staff and students a blind date with a book! Visit us this week to choose something from our pile of specially wrapped books.

Go on, take a chance! Imagine not needing to worry about outward appearances - no famous authors, no catchy titles, no intriguing blurbs, no attention-grabbing cover designs. It's just you and the story, and the thrill that this really could be the one...