History and Current Events
February 2018
Welcome to the History and Current Events newsletter. 
 
Each month you will read about new works of history and current events that have been added to the Lambton County Library's collection. 
 
Let us know what you think of this service so we can serve you better.
 
The Library also offers an alerting service to notify you when new materials on authors and topics of interest for you are added to the collection. You may set this service up with assistance from the library staff.
 
Upcoming Events:
 
Children's PD Day Free Movie
SING, 108 minutes, Rated G
2 PM Friday February 2, 2018
Upstairs in the Theatre Area
 
Children's Free Movie
BFG, 117 minutes, Rated PG
2 PM Saturday February 10, 2018
Upstairs in the Theatre Area
 
March Break Events
 
Happening In the Sarnia Library Theatre!
 
Saturday March 10 2 PM 
Monday March 12 7 PM Despicable Me 3 Rated G, Runtime: 90 min
Tuesday March 13 2 PM 
Thursday March 15 11 AM The Amazing Corbin's Magic Carnival
Friday March 16 Big Screen Gaming 2-5 PM
 Saturday March 17 Avengers Day
10 AM The Avengers, 
Length: 142 minutes, Rated: PG
2 PM Avengers: Age of Ultron, 
Length: 141 minutes, Rated: PG

Look for more events on the Lambton County Library Calendar: 
http://www.lclibrary.ca/index.php?option=com_wrapper&view=wrapper&Itemid=471
 
Recent Releases
Bad Blood : The End of Honour
by Peter Edwards

After enemies murdered his family and plundered his empire, a legendary Mafioso emerged from prison to a fateful dilemma: Rebuild or seek revenge? Montreal godfather Vito Rizzuto sat helpless in a Colorado penitentiary while learning that unidentified assassins had killed his eldest son, and likely heir, and then murdered his father. Subsequent deaths of Vito's loyal associates filled the news throughout his sentence. From their comfortable base in the Toronto area, the Calabrian 'Ndrangheta seemed the obvious culprits; but, as internationally bestselling crime writers Peter Edwards and Antonio Nicaso reveal in this compelling and far-reaching investigation, many unseen hands were at work. In 2012, Vito Rizzuto emerged from prison, a sixty-six-year-old man who could carefully reconstruct his crime family or damn the consequences and punish his betrayers. From the events leading to his imprisonment, through the bloodshed following his release, to his mysterious death in 2013 and more recent efforts to continue his family's dominance, Bad Blood is the final word in the story of a twenty-first-century criminal mastermind.
1917: Lenin, Wilson, and the Birth of the New World Disorder
by Arthur Herman

What it is: a dual biography of two different yet equally important world leaders -- Vladimir Lenin and Woodrow Wilson -- and how their actions at the outset of World War I had long-lasting geopolitical effects.  

Why you might like it: Historian Arthur Herman’s unusual pairing provides a fresh look at a pivotal moment in world history.

Further reading: Check out March 1917 by Will England for another study of this critical period, or try Herman’s Gandhi and Churchill for another dual biography of world leaders.
The Danger Within Us : America's Untested, Unregulated Medical Device Industry...
by Jeanne Lenzer

What it is: Journalist and former ER doctor Jeanne Lenzer goes behind the scenes of the medical device industry, a secretive world marked by cover-ups, regulatory failures, corruption, and corporate greed.

Why it’s significant: This is the first book to probe the underbelly of the industry that provides us with pacemakers, artificial hips, and other implants; additionally, medical interventions are a leading cause of death in the United States.

Further reading: If you like riveting, eye-opening investigative journalism into medical ethics, check out A Civil Action by Jonathan Harr and America’s Bitter Pill by Steven Brill. 
Basketball and Other Things : A Collection of Questions Asked, Answered, Illustrated
by Shea Serrano

The award-winning author of The Rap Year Book shares lighthearted coverage of a wide range of fan debates about basketball history, from Kobe Bryant's actual league dominance to what rules are not permitted in pickup games. 
Snacks : A Canadian Food History
by Janis Thiessen

Snacks is a history of Canadian snack foods, of the independent producers and workers who make them, and of the consumers who can't put them down. Janis Thiessen profiles several iconic Canadian snack food companies, including Old Dutch Potato Chips, Hawkins Cheezies, and chocolate maker Ganong. These companies have developed in distinctive ways, reflecting the unique stories of their founders and their intense connection to specific locations. These stories of salty or sweet confections also reveal a history that is at odds with popular notions of "junk food." Through extensive oral history and archival research, Thiessen uncovers the roots of our deep loyalties to different snack foods, what it means to be an independent snack food producer, and the often-quirky ways snacks have been created and marketed. Clearly written, extensively illustrated, and lavish with detail about some of Canadians' favorite snacks, this is a lively and entertaining look at food and labour history.
Focus on: Black History Month
The Problem of Slavery in the Age of Emancipation
by David Brion Davis

What it is: This final volume in historian David Brion Davis’ penetrating three-part chronicle of slavery and emancipation in the Western world covers topics ranging from the Haitian Revolution to U.S. efforts at colonizing freed people.   

Why you should read it: Published to critical acclaim, this magisterial history won the 2014 National Book Critics Circle Award for General Nonfiction and was shortlisted for the Cundill Prize for Historical Literature.
Gateway to Freedom: The Hidden History of the Underground Railroad
by Eric Foner

What it is: a Pulitzer Prize-winning historian's enthralling chronicle of the Underground Railroad, which helped slaves escape from bondage in the South and also protected free blacks in the North. 

What sets it apart: Author Eric Foner provides gripping accounts of death-defying journeys to freedom, including that of Winnie Patsy, who survived by hiding in a dark, unventilated crawl space with her daughter for five months in Virginia.
March. Book Three
by John Lewis, Andrew Aydin, and Nate Powell

What it is: U.S. Congressman and activist John Lewis’ stirring memoir of his experiences in the civil rights era from 1963-65, co-written with Andrew Aydin and artist Nate Powell. 

What sets it apart: A living icon who participated in key moments in the movement, John Lewis’ firsthand account -- beginning with the bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church -- is unflinchingly honest and deeply moving. 

Further reading: For more about the civil rights movement and its leaders, check out Taylor Branch’s At Canaan’s Edge.
My Brother's Keeper : African Canadians and the American Civil War
by Bryan Prince

The story of African Canadians who fled slavery in the United States but returned to enlist in the Union forces during the American Civil War. On New Year's Eve in 1862, blacks from across British North America joined in spirit with their American fellows in silent vigils to await the enactment of President Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation. The terms declared that slaves who were held in the districts that were in rebellion would be free and that blacks would now be allowed to enlist in the Union Army and participate in the civil war that had then raged for more than a year and a half. African Canadians who had fled from the United States had not forgotten their past and eagerly sought to do their part in securing rights and liberty for all. Leaving behind their freedom in Canada, many enlisted in the Union cause. Most served as soldiers or sailors while others became recruiters, surgeons, or regimental chaplains. Entire black communities were deeply affected by this war that profoundly and irrevocably changed North American history.
The stone thrower : a daughter's lessons, a father's life
by Jael Ealey Richardson

A daughter discovers herself while uncovering her father's legendary past in football. At the age of thirty, Jael Ealey Richardson travelled with her father - former CFL quarterback Chuck Ealey - for the first time to a small town in southern Ohio for his fortieth high school reunion. Knowing very little about her father's past, Richardson was searching for the story behind her father's move from the projects of Portsmouth, Ohio to Canada's professional football league in the early 1970s. At the railroad tracks where her father first learned to throw with stones, Jael begins an unexpected journey into her family's past. In this engaging father-daughter memoir, Richardson records some of her father's never-before told stories: his relationship with his absentee father, memories of his high school and college football victories - including a winning record that remains unbroken to this day - and his up-and-down relationship with the woman he would one day marry. As Richardson begins unravelling the story of her father's life, she begins to compare her own childhood growing up in Canada, with her father's US civil rights era upbringing. Along the way, she also discovers the real reason - despite his athletic accomplishments - her father was never drafted into the National Football League. The Stone Thrower is a moving story about race and destiny written by a daughter looking for answers about her own black history. Using insightful interviews, archival records and her personal reflections, Richardson's journey to learn about her father's past leads her to her own important discoveries about herself, and what it really means to be black in Canada.
Contact your librarian for more great books!
Lambton County Library
787 Broadway St.
Wyoming, Ontario N0N1T0
519-845-3324

www.lclibrary.ca