Read, Listen, Watch

Staff Picks and Suggestions

RILM adds to humanities offerings

RILM Abstracts of Music Literature from Ebscohost is the NU Libraries’ latest web resource in the humanities. Musicologists, ethnomusicologists, educators, psychologists, and anyone else interested in music research will enjoy using RILM to search for journal articles, dissertations, books, and much more on music topics. RILM makes a nice pairing with some of our new music streaming services like the Jazz Music Library and Database of Recorded American Music. Doing research on the flugelhorn? Listen to it in Jazz Music Library and learn more about it in RILM. Need recently published research on a DRAM recording of the music of Ruth Crawford Seeger? Find journal articles about her in RILM. Like our other abstract databases, RILM is connected to the library’s full text journal subscriptions, and to our interlibrary loan system, ILLiad, for ordering items not available in our print or online collections. RSS feeds and alerts are also available. Find RILM through the library’s “Articles” database list, or right-click (Mac:control-click) and bookmark this URL: http://0-search.ebscohost.com.ilsprod.lib.neu.edu/login.aspx?authtype=ip,uid&profile=ehost&defaultdb=rih

Bob McChesney and John Nichols on “Outfoxed”!

This past February, we had the honor of hosting media revolutionists, Bob McChesney and John Nichols as part of the Northeastern Libraries’ “Meet the Author” Series. The dynamic pair delivered an interesting discussion on the current crisis in journalism and their quest to promote a free press. Although they may have left a few Journalism students discouraged, I think that the overall message of this talk was positive. If nothing else, the co-authors of The Death and Life of American Journalism  empowered the audience to demand news in its most raw and honest form. In order to reach a full democracy in our country, it is necessary that we have access to unbiased, unfiltered, real news. A few days after this event, I coincidentally stumbled upon the documentary, Outfoxed. It agreed with McChesney’s and Nichols’ argument, favoring a free press and fair news. Specifically highlighting Fox News, the documentary illustrated how the information we receive, supposedly objective, is altered to foster certain views. Fox, catering to the Republican party, has gone so far as using scare tactics and propaganda to build support behind war efforts. Much to my delight, I was surprised when I saw both McChesney and Nichols appear on this very documentary! As they reiterated their message on Outfoxed, I felt that the Northeastern Library , through its “Meet the Author” series, had successfully joined their battle. For more information on Journalism/ McChesney & Nichols, visit: http://ajr.org/

Meet Dr. Lisa Sanders Wed. April 21

Please join us on April 21 at noon. Dr. Lisa Sanders will be speaking in 90 Snell Library. Dr. Lisa Sanders is the author of the very popular “Diagnosis” column with the New York Times. Her column inspired the hit Fox television drama “House MD” and Dr. Sanders now serves as Technical Advisor to the show. She was trained at Yale School of Medicine where she currently teaches. Dr. Sanders was recently named one of America`s Top 21 Women`s Doctors by LifeScript.com, the #1 website for women`s health. Before going to medical school Sanders was an Emmy award winning producer for CBS News. Her most recent book was Every Patient Tells a Story: Medical Mysteries and the Art of Diagnosis. Books and free DVDs of “House MD,” including the full series, will be raffled at the event. Sponsored by Northeastern University Libraries, the Humanities Center’s Artists and Practitioners in Residence Program, and the Northeastern Bookstore. Download the event flyer here.

Barbara Neely’s Blanche series

I recently read an article on The Root about the popularity of Kathleen Stockett’s The Help. While I haven’t read The Help yet, I found Hopkinson’s  article interesting in that she talks about how, while she enjoyed the book tremendously, she felt frustrated: “In the world of publishing and Hollywood, it helps to be talented, as Stockett clearly is. But it also helps to be white.” Hopkinson later writes
Let’s look at the criminally underrated and uncelebrated work of Barbara Neely. Her Blanche White series is absolutely brilliant, pitch-perfect and probes at the issues of race and class from the perspective of a murder-solving black maid with a biting wit. I remember discovering them years ago, and thinking Neely’s Blanche is like a feminist response to Walter Mosley’s hard-boiled detective character Easy Rawlins. They are the same, delicious, pulpy read, sly commentaries about class and society. There is not a false note in any of her books. This is a writer who knows the correct Ebonics syntax of the verb “to be.” I can’t recommend her series enough. Buy every single one. Each takes about a day to read. And each gives you the same made-for-book-club pleasure that The Help gives you.
I took her recommendation and have finished Blanche on the Lam and Blanche Among the Talented Tenth. The Library has all four of Barbara Neely’s books in our collection. They’re nice, slim volumes…short, but also rather dark–not cozy mysteries, but engaging and well-written ones. Reading it to me, it seemed like an older time–more like the 1950’s or 60’s–but Blanche mentions a Run-DMC tape at the beginning, and at the end an African American Miss America, and Joints Chief of Staff, which seem to place it in the 1980’s, though the first book was published in 1993. Blanche is a domestic worker, and I found her narrative an interesting exploration of class issues as well. Blanche on the Lam finds Blanche on the run after being jailed for a bad check in her hometown of Fairleigh, North Carolina. She starts working for a wealthy family and once the bodies start turning up, Blanche investigates to avoid becoming the prime suspect. In Blanche and the Talented Tenth, Blanche has moved and is living nearby in Roxbury. She heads to Amber Cove, Maine, to a posh black resort, where she still encounters prejudice, secrets, and crime. Visiting her website, it also looks like Barbara is a fellow Bostonian as well, and I highly recommend her series!