From the Stacks: July 13, 2007
Utne Reader's library is abuzz with a steady flow of 1,500
magazines, newsletters, journals, weeklies, zines, and other lively
dispatches from the cultural front that are rarely found at big-box
bookstores, newsstands, or even online. So we share the highlights
(and occasional lowlights) of what's landing in our library each
week in 'From the Stacks.' Check in every Friday for the latest
edition.
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A
tenacious library marshal shows off some serious action-film moves
to track down a rare book thief in Jason Shiga's new graphic novel
Bookhunter, published by Sparkplug Comic
Books. The unswerving Special Agent Bay does not work alone; he
relies on forensic experts, a heavily armed SWAT team, and a very
agile Bookmobile to retrieve the book in question -- a valuable
19th-century English bible. After analyzing the masterful forgery
left in the stolen book's place, he enlists the help of the
American Library Association's 'top profiler,' who pegs the thief
as a 'a caucasian bookbinder, age 32-40... She is shy, intelligent
and may have a lisp or word repetition stutter. She was a childhood
bedwetter.' I won't ruin the ending, but as a librarian I must note
that Bookhunter's many hilarious action sequences include
card catalogues, reshelving carts, exit gates, and some
on-top-of-the-stacks running. Shiga also illustrates my deepest,
darkest library fear: that of being squeezed between two rows of
compact shelving. -- Danielle Maestretti
In DESIGNER/builder social justice issues are
at the forefront of discussions on urban environments. For the
July/August issue, Sam Smith of the web magazine
Progressive
Review critiques the burgeoning smart growth movement in
'Not Too Smart Growth.' Smith argues that smart growth too often
tries to impose a new model on an area, unrealistically expecting
people to move or adapt instead of improving their current
surroundings. While lamenting the past sins of urban planning,
including the ways in which communities are undervalued, he
emphatically asserts that 'next to economists, no group has been so
consistently wrong and harmful to the human spirit as urban
planners.' -- Julie Dolan
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