Beyond The Brief History of the Dead

Thank you to everyone who participated in Our Community Reads! We will wrap up the blog with another interesting way to explore The Brief History of the Dead by Kevin Brockmeier: a reading map. Created by Laura Foutch (a newly minted librarian and addition to our Library staff) it pulls together related books, movies and websites, tracing the themes that make the book such a fascinating read. Click below and take your exploration of the book even further!

Readingmap

Movies and the Afterlife

Last night, for the final Our Community Reads program, Gary Christenson gave an entertaining presentation on the portrayal of the afterlife in film. Highlighting themes such as the desire for eternal life, justice and redemption, Gary referenced many different movies, and they are listed in alphabetical order below. Please note that if the movie is available in our library system I’ve added a link to the catalog. For other titles, please contact the Reference Desk for help obtaining them from other libraries.

lovely bonesAlways
Defending Your Life
Dragonfly
Field of Dreams
Ghost
Goodbye Charlie (1964 with Tony Curtis, Walter Matthau and Debbie Reynolds)
Hereafter
Heaven Can Wait
It’s a Wonderful Life
The Lovely Bones
hereafterMade in Heaven (1987 with Timothy Hutton)
Meet Joe Black
Michael
Rapture
The Sixth Sense
The Tree of Life
What Dreams May Come

Also mentioned:

dragonflyAfter Life
Patch Adams
Nasso Lar (also titled Astral City)
The Natural
Monty Python’s The Meaning of Life

A Few of Kevin Brockmeier’s Favorite Things

On Tuesday evening we had a terrific time listening to author Kevin Brockmeier talk about his book The Brief History of the Dead, as well as writing, music, movies, art and much more!

One thing we learned is that Kevin keeps extensive lists of his favorite items and, as requested by the audience, we now have copies of them available. Please stop by the Reader Services Desk or you can view/print below.

KB’s 50 Favorite Books

KB’s 50 Favorite Movies

KB’s 50 Favorite Music Albums

KB’s 50 Favorite Quotes

KB’s 50 Favorite Children’s Books

Thank you to everyone who attended the Our Community Reads author event! There wasn’t nearly enough time for all the topics we could have discussed, so feel free to keep going using our Online Book Discussion page.

Tonight: Author Kevin Brockmeier!

kevinbrockmeier130Tonight at 7:00pm please join us for an evening with Kevin Brockmeier.

The author will read from The Brief History of the Dead and answer questions about his book.  Brockmeier is an award-winning novelist and short story writer who has been called one of “America’s best practitioners of fabulist fiction.” He has received Arkansas’ top literary prizes (the Porter Fund Award for Literary Excellence and the Worthen Prize), and has been recognized nationally with numerous awards, including three O. Henry prizes, for his masterful use of figurative language in stories that combine reality and fantasy.

The author visit is sponsored by the St. Charles Public Library Foundation.

Online Discussion Now Open!

Q  A  b-w (2)During the next few weeks we are offering the opportunity to discuss The Brief History of the Dead online. Questions will be posted every few days (Question 1 is up now). In addition, feel free to ask questions as comments on this post. They can be about the book, or specific questions for author Kevin Brockmeier that we’ll try to ask when he’s here next week.

4/4 – Question 2 is now up and ready for comments!

4/7 – Question 3 has been posted

4/11 – Question 4

 

 

 

Envisioning The Brief History of the Dead

One of the fun outcomes of the Our Community Reads selection (The Brief History of the Dead) is the varied way people have responded to it – particularly in a visual medium.  We noticed this off the bat with the striking cover designed for the book. This in turn led us to offer a “Book Cover Re-Design Contest” and the entries were all notably different.

The full-size images can be seen in the lobby of the Library during April; the winner will be announced on April 9th at the evening event with author Kevin Brockmeier.

infinityloopI also had an interesting conversation with a patron after she finished reading the book.  She commented that she kept thinking of an infinity loop being drawn tighter and tighter as the story progressed.

DoodleAnd then last week a coworker handed me a small doodle of footsteps going towards an ice-filled landscape that the book inspired her to create (full disclosure: she had to explain to me that the loop is not the St. Louis arch but a Mobius strip that is partly underground).

I also felt like the descriptions in the book created a lot of visual images that lingered in my imagination, including birds trapped helplessly against an invisible shrinking enclosure and somewhat (to my mind) psychedelic rolling snowballs.

Did you feel the book provoked any strong imagery?  Feel free to share in the comments! You should also plan to join us on April 4 as David Stark from the the Art Institute of Chicago presents an exploration of how artists have interpreted death and the afterlife in diverse and stunning ways.

 

If Life Gives You An Opportunity to Apply for a Job in Antarctica . . .

Sarah MeyerSo imagine you’re looking for a job in your chosen field and instead of finding something local you see an opening for a job at the South Pole. What would you do? If you’re 29-year-old Sarah Meyer you say, “I figured if life gives you an opportunity to apply for a job in Antarctica, you take it!”

Sarah grew up in Arlington, Texas, and has her doctorate in physical therapy from University of Texas Medical Branch. For the past four years she worked as a physical therapist at an inpatient rehabilitation facility with specialization in brain injury and strokes. But after a whirlwind process of applying, she recently found herself on a flight to Antarctica, arriving “on the ice” February 13 where she is part of a three-person team at the McMurdo Medical Clinic at McMurdo Station.

Choosing to work as part of the “winter-over” staff in Antarctica is a serious commitment. Sarah and I started trading emails recently and as she put it, “The station was closed (last plane in and out) on March 9 and will open again (next plane to arrive) in either August or October. It’s undecided at this point secondary to government funding.”

Sarah Meyer Ivan BusSarah is part of a winter population of 142 people at the station. In addition to her work duties, she is volunteering at the the station library. And, she has graciously accepted our offer to read The Brief History of the Dead along with us and give us her perspective on the book–particularly from her vantage point of living and working in Antarctica!

Sarah is also willing to answer questions, so if you have questions about life at the South Pole, especially as portrayed in the book, put them in the comments below and I will pass them along to Sarah. As she has time between her responsibilities, she will send back answers that I will post on the blog!

In the meantime, if you want to see where Sarah is writing from, check out this link she sent to a live webcam of McMurdo Station. “The red and white building on the Arrival Heights Camera is the Medical Hospital. The sun is getting lower and lower, so the camera will be less helpful once the sun sets and does not return to our horizon for several months.” You can also read another person’s account of arriving at McMurdo Station.

Death & the Afterlife in Film

For decades, various filmmakers have produced movies tackling the big questions about death, dying and the afterlife. Film is a particularly good medium to explore what the afterlife might look like. Below are some of the movies we’ve come up with that make for interesting watching, as well as links to some thought-provoking lists.

Please also join us on Tuesday, April 16, as Gary Christenson presents “How the Afterlife Has Been Depicted in Cinema,” at 7:00 p.m. in Huntley Meeting Room.

And chime in with your film suggestions in the comments!

DeathTakesaHolidayDeath Takes a Holiday  In this 1934 film, Death takes the form of a prince who visits a family of wealthy socialites in order to experience all of the pleasures and pains that go with a flesh-and-blood existence. Perhaps a bit slow by today’s standards, but still enjoyable.

After Life  This Japanese film has a documentary style and an unusual premise: After you die you go to a sort of way station where you must select the one memory from life you want to keep forever and relinquish everything else.

Matter of Life and Death (also sometimes titled “Stairway to Heaven”)  David Niven stars as Peter Carter, the fighter pilot who should have died, but his “conductor” failed to escort him to the afterlife in a timely manner. As a result, Carter has time to fall in love and with that change in destiny decides he should get a second chance at life. A long, sometimes surreal film–try the opening sequence and you’ll know whether it’s for you.


(Note: the entire film is available online)

Defending Your LifeDefending Your Life  A comic look at the afterlife, starting with a visit to Judgment City where, if you can’t make your case for moving on, you are sent back to earth to try again.

The Daily Grail–Top 10 Afterlife Movies

A.V. Club–Between Heaven & Hell: 12 Films Featuring Unusual Afterlives

Filmspotting Podcast–Top 5 Existential Movies

Sports at the End of the Earth

As we lead up to our discussion of The Brief History of the Dead in April, we’re sharing articles and news of related interest.

In my last post I alluded to the many important scientific and research programs that are continually happening in Antarctica–but quite a few sporting events take place there, too.

IceMarathonLocationRunners who have tried everything else might want to tackle the Antarctic Ice Marathon in November. Set on Union Glacier, it is located a mere 650 miles from the South Pole and boasts “breathtaking views” (perhaps literally?) as well as “breezy” conditions known as katabatic winds. Katabatic winds can rush down elevated slopes at hurricane speeds! Brrrrr.

katabatic winds

Katabatic winds

Sound too easy? You could participate in the “Four Deserts” race, recognized as the world’s leading endurance footrace series. The Four Deserts races take place in the Atacama Desert in Chile, the Gobi Desert in China, the Sahara in Africa, and in Antarctica. Antarctica is considered to be a desert because the extreme cold freezes water vapor out of the air, and annual snowfall on the polar plateau is equivalent to less than 5 cm of rain. There are no liquid lakes or rivers: it is the driest continent on earth.

antarctica

Participants in the Four Deserts race in Antarctica.

Sports are a big part of life for the people living and working in Antarctica as well, with residents participating in everything from dodgeball to rugby to “local inventions such as human-sled-tractor-pulls,” according to an ESPN article.

And although the “sports” connection is tenuous, Antarctica was also just showcased as the backdrop for the 2013 Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Edition.

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In April, the St. Charles Public Library and Elgin Community College are cosponsoring a variety of events for “Our Community Reads.” Members of the community are encouraged to read the book, The Brief History of the Dead by Kevin Brockmeier and join in the conversation.

Field Trip to Antarctica

As we lead up to our discussion of The Brief History of the Dead in April, we’re sharing articles and news of related interest.

One of the fascinating aspects of The Brief History of the Dead is the glimpse it provides into living as a researcher in Antarctica. There are many interesting books on the discovery and development of the South Pole, and we’ll have a list of titles to share in April, but for now I’ll just note that author Kevin Brockmeier has mentioned The Worst Journey in the World by Cherry-Garrard Apsley as one that provided a lot of insight.

I also recently discovered that The Field Museum sent a team of researchers to Antarctica in November, 2012 and they posted videos, photos and blogs of their experiences that people might find of interest.

By the way, if you’ve ever dreamed of visiting Antarctica as I have, take a look at some of the introductory materials provided by Lonely Planet travel guides.

On an entirely different note, but still in keeping with the theme of Our Community Reads, the Field Museum has an interesting exhibition until June, called Images of the Afterlife.

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In April, the St. Charles Public Library and Elgin Community College are cosponsoring a variety of events for “Our Community Reads.” Members of the community are encouraged to read the book, The Brief History of the Dead by Kevin Brockmeier and join in the conversation.