15 December 2010

Craft Fair Winning Books


Thank you to everyone who stopped by the library table last week at the Thoreau Center craft fair and voted with your donations to select new books for the collection. We are happy to announce that enough was raised to acquire two of the books. Congratulations to everyone who wanted one of these books to win, and commiserations to those of you who were rooting for the others. We will look into adding them to the collection in the future.

Also, we're letting you know that the last day the library will be open this year is next Monday, December 20. When we come back next year, however, look forward to extended hours as we change the times we are open to Tuesday through Friday from 11:00 am to 2:00pm.

And without further ado, the winners are...

In first place, Becoming Animal: An Earthly Cosmology by ecologist and anthropologist David Abram. From the publisher's description:

As the climate veers toward catastrophe, the innumerable losses cascading through the biosphere make vividly evident the need for a metamorphosis in our relation to the living land. For too long we’ve inured ourselves to the wild intelligence of our muscled flesh, taking our primary truths from technologies that hold the living world at a distance. This book subverts that distance, drawing readers ever deeper into their animal senses in order to explore, from within, the elemental kinship between the body and the breathing Earth.

The shapeshifting of ravens, the erotic nature of gravity, the eloquence of thunder, the pleasures of being edible: all have their place in Abram’s investigation. He shows that from the awakened perspective of the human animal, awareness (or mind) is not an exclusive possession of our species but a lucid quality of the biosphere itself—a quality in which we, along with the oaks and the spiders, steadily participate.

With the audacity of its vision and the luminosity of its prose, Becoming Animal sets a new benchmark for the human appraisal of our place in the whole.


And in a very close second place, Local Money: How to Make it Happen in Your Community by Peter North, geographer and founding member of Transition South Liverpool. From the publisher's description:

An inspiring yet practical new Transition Book, Local Money helps you understand what money is and what makes good and bad money, and reviews how people around the world and in the past have experimented with new forms of money that they create themselves.

The book draws on the track record of experimentation with local money to show those in the Transition movement and beyond what has been tried, what works, and what to avoid. Different models of alternative currencies are reviewed, from the Local Exchange Trading System (LETS) and TimeBanks, which work within communities, to paper currencies such as Berkshares, German regional currencies and Ithaca ‘hours’, which circulate between local businesses as an alternative to their losing trade to the national chain retailers.

How can local banks and bonds help us move our cities, communities and homes on to a more sustainable footing? The book suggests how groups can create future forms of local money that can deepen local resilience and support the development of more local production of the things we need, such as food and power.

Book Donations from NCIBA


Thank you to the Northern California Independent Booksellers Association (NCIBA) for its recent donations of books to the library's collection. The NCIBA is a trade organization dedicated to supporting, nurturing and promoting independent retail bookselling in California, and it is one of the tenant organizations here at the Thoreau Center. Check out their annual book catalog (pdf) for recommendations for the holidays and beyond.

Here is a list of what they donated:

Connett, P. H., James S. Beck, and H. S. Micklem. 2010. The case against fluoride: how hazardous waste ended up in our drinking water and the bad science and powerful politics that keep it there. White River Junction, Vt: Chelsea Green Pub.

Court, Jamie. 2010. The progressive's guide to raising hell: how to win grassroots campaigns, pass ballot box laws, and get the change we voted for. White River Junction, Vt: Chelsea Green Pub.

Dennett, Charlotte. 2010. The People v. Bush: one lawyer's campaign to bring the president to justice and the national grassroots movement she encounters along the way. White River Junction, Vt: Chelsea Green Pub.

Durré, Linnda. 2010. Surviving the toxic workplace: protect yourself against coworkers, bosses, and work environments that poison your day. New York: McGraw-Hill.

Fox, Steve, Paul Armentano, and Mason Tvert. 2009. Marijuana is safer: so why are we driving people to drink? White River Junction, VT: Chelsea Green Pub. Co.

Korten, David C. 2010. Agenda for a new economy: from phantom wealth to real wealth. San Francisco, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers.

Mateljan, George. 2007. The world's healthiest foods: essential guide for the healthiest way of eating. Seattle, Wash: George Mateljan Foundation.

Ott, Riki. 2008. Not one drop: betrayal and courage in the wake of the Exxon Valdez oil spill. White River Junction, VT: Chelsea Green Pub.

Petrini, Carlo. 2009. Terra Madre: forging a new global network of sustainable food communities. White River Junction, Vt: Chelsea Green Pub.

Reina, Dennis S., and Michelle L. Reina. 2010. Rebuilding trust in the workplace: seven steps to renew confidence, commitment, and energy. San Francisco, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers.

Sisson, Mark, and Jennifer Meier. 2010. The primal blueprint cookbook. Malibu, Calif: Primal Nutrition.

Schein, Edgar H. 2009. Helping: how to offer, give, and receive help. San Francisco: Berrett-Koehler Pub.

Schroder, Lisa, and Vince Ogletree. 2010. Adobe homes for all climates: simple, affordable, and earthquake-resistant natural building techniques. White River Junction, Vt: Chelsea Green Pub.

Turnbull, Wendy, and Elizabeth Collins Oman. 2010. Gems of gluten-free baking: breads and irresistible treats everyone can enjoy. North Vancouver, BC: Whitecap.

Voss, Jason Apollo. 2010. The intuitive investor: a radical guide for manifesting wealth. New York: SelectBooks.

22 November 2010

New Website, New Books



WELT


We have recently upgraded the software system that manages the library and revamped the library website to go along with it. The software is Koha, a free and open source package originally developed by Katipo Communications for the Horowhenua Library Trust in New Zealand. Development is now sponsored by an active community of libraries of all types and sizes, volunteers, and support companies from around the world. We hope it will enhance your library experience in a number of ways, including:

  • Improved search functionality: New options for searching the library collection's catalog and new ways to refine your results should help you find items of interest. Additonally, you can subscribe to search results as RSS feeds, which will allow you to see when a new item is added to the catalog in your area of interest. The catalog also now supports use of Zotero, the open source reference management sofware produced by the Center for History and New Media at George Mason University. If you aren't familiar with it, it is a very useful tool for managing your research materials and creating citations.
  • Tagging: In the spirit of Web 2.0, members can now attach their own descriptive keywords to items which will become a public part of that item's record. Why would you want to do this? Try a hard as we might I and other catalogers cannot anticipate every way to describe an item. This is your opportunity to help others by filling in the gaps. Or you can just tag those books you want to read later. Tags are public, but anonymous, and you can visit and edit your tagging history.
  • Online renewals: In addition to being able to put books on hold online, members can now renew books online rather than coming down to the library to do it. Now you don't have to worry about overdues. Simply log in to your account and take care of it there. Not a member? Simply fill out a membership form and bring it to the library. Forget your log in information? Just contact the library at libary@thoreau.org.

Like everything on the web these days, it is in permanent beta and will be in flux, so if something doesn't work or if you have any suggestions or questions, please feel free to contact me in the library or at libary@thoreau.org. And now if all of that hasn't piqued your interest, here are some of the new books we have added to the collection in recent months...



Michael K. Stone. (2009). Smart by nature: schooling for sustainability. Healdsburg, CA: Watershed Media.


A guide to ecologically aware education for the twenty-first century from the Center for Ecoliteracy in Berkeley, a leader for nearly two decades in school reform for sustainable living. Documenting a growing movement of educators, parents, and students changing K-12 education throughout the United States, it presents firsthand accounts of success stories in rethinking school food, greening campuses, and embedding learning in community from a variety of public, private, rural, and urban schools.

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Beth Kanter and Allison H. Fine. (2010). The networked nonprofit: connecting with social media to drive change. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.


Kanter and Fine detail tools and strategies to help nonprofits take advantage of the opportunities presented by new information and social media technologies. Filled with interviews and case studies from nonprofit managers who have found ways to use these tools effectively, it shows how to leverage the different kinds of connections enabled by these technologies to increase impact and how to navigate the transition from a top-down organizational structure to an open and networked approach that makes the most use of this new environment.

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David C. Korten. (2010). Agenda for a new economy: from phantom wealth to real wealth. Second edition, updated and expanded. San Francisco: Berrett-Koehler Publishers.


David Korten is president and founder of the People-Centered Development Forum, chair of the board of YES! magazine, founding board member of the Business Alliance for Local Living Economies, and through his work and writings has long been a leader in the resistance to corporate-led economic globalization. This edition updates his book originally written in response to the financial meltdown of 2008 to expand his agenda for an alternative to the values and institutions of the Wall Street economy at the heart of that crash: a New Economy based on ecological balance, equitable distribution of Earth’s resources, and democracy responsive to the needs and values of ordinary people.

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William Kamkwamba and Bryan Mealer. (2009). The boy who harnessed the wind: creating currents of electricity and hope. New York: William Morrow.


William Kamkwamba of Malawi was forced to drop out of school at age 14 when that country experienced its worst famine in fifty years and his family could no longer afford the $80 a year tuition. Determined to find a way to make life better for himself, his family, and his community, and inspired by an old science textbook he found in a nearby library, he built a windmill out of scrap metal, tractor parts, and blue-gum trees that produced the electricity that only two percent of Malawians could afford. William was able to return to school and has continued to help his village through the worldwide attention that his inspirational story has achieved.

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Nancy Knowlton. (2010). Citizens of the sea: wond rous creatures from the Census of Marine Life. Washington, D.C.: National Geographic Society.


This book was released near the conclusion of the Census of Marine Life, an unprecedented and comprehensive ten year international effort to assess the diversity, distribution, and abundance of marine life globally. 2,700 scientists from over 80 nations around the globe participated in 540 expeditions and countless hours of land-based research to identify more than 1,200 new marine species, with another 5,000 or more still awaiting formal description. Authored by Nancy Knowlton, Sant Chair for Marine Science at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History, Citizens of the Sea reveals some of this diversity through skilled underwater photography from National Geographic and Census researchers.

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Yellow Bird [John Rollin Ridge]. (1955). The life and adventures of Joaquin Murieta the celebrated California bandit. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.


Originally published in 1854, this book established the legend of Joaquin Murieta, the Gold Rush era Mexican bandit and folk hero who inspired numerous stories, the fictional character of Zorro, a movie, and the first Soviet rock opera. Persecuted by Americans and determined to seek revenge for their killing of his half-brother, Murieta organized an outlaw company number over 2,000 men who for two years menaced Californians with kidnappings, bank robberies, cattle thefts, and murders before he was killed by the California State Rangers. If he existed at all.

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Mark Sisson and Jennifer Meier. (2010). The primal blueprint cookbook. Malibu, CA: Primal Nutrition.


Learn to re-harmonize your diet with your evolutionary genetic mandate and adopt simple, sustainable lifestyle behaviors. Mark Sisson is the founder & publisher of MarksDailyApple.com, and is credited with spearheading the worldwide "Primal" health movement that challenges many well-accepted elements of conventional wisdom by adapting the nutritional cornerstones of hunter-gatherer fare for the culinary tastes and variety of the 21st century. Jennifer Meier is a graduate of the prestigious California Culinary Academy in San Francisco, and she researched and tested each of the recipes in the cookbook over a two-year development period.

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Oliver A. Houck. (2010). Taking back Eden: eight environmental cases that changed the world. Washington, DC: Island Press.


Using a set of case studies of environmental lawsuits brought in the U.S and seven other countries around the world beginning in the 1960s, this book describes a revolution at the nexus of law and ecology: ordinary citizens with lawyers using their standing as citizens in challenging corporate practices and government policies to change not just the way the environment is defended but the way that the public interest is recognized in law. Oliver Houck, environmental attorney, professor of law, and former General Counsel and Vice-President of the National Wildlife Federation, depicts the places protected, as well as the litigants who pursued the cases, their strategies, and the judges and other government officials who ruled on them.

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19 November 2010

Thoreau Center Brown Bag: Housing Rights in South Africa


Presenter: S’bu Zikode, founder of Abahlali baseMjondolo
Wednesday, November 24, 12:30PM to 1:30PM
Pacific Room at Tides

Join us for a discussion with S’bu Zikode, founder of Abahlali baseMjondolo, the South African shackdweller's movement.This movement began with a road blockade that grew quickly and now has tens of thousands of supporters from more than 30 settlements, making it the largest social movement led by the poor in post-apartheid South Africa. Abahlali baseMjondolo is at the forefront of emerging global struggles for the right to housing and to development rooted in justice and democracy.

Brown Bag events are free informal mid-day learning sessions hosted at Tides. Friends, neighbors and colleagues are welcome. Visitors, please sign in at the front desk.

15 November 2010

Thoreau Center Brown Bag: Greening the Main Post

Join us for a lively discussion about the many improvements planned for the Main Post, in the Presidio. Learn more about plans to improve parking while creating a more pedestrian-friendly park. Over the next few years, the Presidio Trust hopes to reopen the Presidio Theatre, provide more public programs and build a lodge for overnight guests and daily visitors to the park.

Wednesday, November 17, 12:30PM to 1:30PM


Pacific Room at Tides, Thoreau Center for Sustainability


Presenters: Tia Lombardi, Director of Public Affairs; Michael Boland, Chief of Planning, Projects and Programs; John Fa, Main Post Coordinator

Brown Bag events are free informal mid-day learning sessions hosted at Tides. Friends, neighbors and colleagues are welcome. Visitors, please sign in at the front desk.

10 November 2010

Book Recommendations from RSF Social Finance


For the second in our series in which we ask you, the tenant organizations, to recommend some books to your neighbors, we have a list provided by RSF Social Finance. We hope you enjoy learning about their work, and if your organization is interested in sharing a list of your own, please contact the library.





RSF Social Finance (RSF) is a pioneering non-profit financial services organization dedicated to transforming the way the world works with money. In partnership with a community of investors and donors, RSF provides capital to non-profit and for-profit social enterprises addressing key issues in the areas of Food & Agriculture, Education & the Arts, and Ecological Stewardship.

This selection of books is about money, its role in the economy, and in our lives. RSF Social Finance’s work stands at the intersection of money and spirit, and how money can best be used to support initiatives for healing culture and the environment such that it serves human aspirations. Money is not a singular thing, but rather comes alive in its three primary functions of purchase, loan, and gift. These transactions hold great potential for transformation. These books touch on many of these aspects, have served as inspiration for our work as a social finance organization, and hopefully will inspire others to transform how they think about money and their role as economic citizens.

Rudolf Steiner. (1933). World-economy: the formation of a science of world-economics : a series of 14 lectures, given at the Goetheanum, Dornach, Switzerland, from 24th July to 6th August. London: Rudolf Steiner Publ. Co.

John Bloom. (2009). The genius of money: essays and interviews reimagining the financial world. Great Barington, MA: SteinerBooks.

Siegfried E. Finser. (2006). Money can heal: evolving our consciousness and the story of RSF and innovations in social finance. Great Barrington, MA: SteinerBooks.

Woody Tasch. (2008). Inquiries into the nature of slow money: investing as if food, farms, and fertility mattered. White River Junction, VT: Chelsea Green Pub.

Lynne Twist and Teresa Barker. (2003). The soul of money: transforming your relationship with money and life. New York: Norton.

Jacob Meedleman. (1991). Money and the meaning of life. New York: Doubleday/Currency.

James Buchan. (1997). Frozen desire: the meaning of money. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

Lewis Hyde. (1983). The gift: imagination and the erotic life of property. New York: Random House.

Niall Ferguson. (2008). The ascent of money: a financial history of the world. New York: Penguin Press.

05 November 2010

San Francisco Film Society Fall Season - Cinema by the Bay


November 5–8, 2010
Roxie Theater, The Lab & Southern Exposure

The San Francisco Film Society's Cinema by the Bay festival celebrates the passion, innovation and diversity of Bay Area filmmaking, featuring new work produced in or about the San Francisco Bay Area that demonstrates the incredible depth and breadth of America’s film and media frontier.


The 2010 edition of Cinema by the Bay opens with Chris Brown’s darkly comic feature Fanny, Annie & Danny and presents dynamic films from leading Bay Area filmmakers throughout the weekend, including Jennifer Gilomen and Sally Rubin's Deep Down, a complex documentary that contrasts the devastating result of rampant energy consumption with the remote and picturesque backdrop of Appalachia. SF360 Presents Essential SF concludes the festival in celebration of Bay Area veteran visionaries and the launch of the newly designed SF360.org.


For tickets and full program information, visit sffs.org.

New Exhibtions Opening Reception: Mapping Memory and Doug Burgess


Wednesday, November 10
5:00PM to 7:00PM
Thoreau Center for Sustainability, San Francisco

In Mapping Memory artist Gurpran Rau mixes maps with layers of paint, de-emphasizing boundaries and their political meanings. Rau's paintings suggest that home is just a state of mind and that we all spring from the same source. In the Seed Gallery, photographer Doug Burgess displays his detailed images of Bay Area invasive plants. He combines his images with narratives, challenging our understanding of weeds and our complicity in their proliferation.

20 October 2010

Exhibtion Tours: Al-Mutanabbi Street Starts Here


Al-Mutanabbi Street Coalition founder, Beau Beausoleil, will be available to lead tours of the current Thoreau Center exhibition Al-Mutanabbi Street Starts Here on Friday, October 22 and Friday October 29 between noon and 2:00 pm. A tour will last approximately half an hour. If you are interested in joining a tour, please email Bruce DeMartini at bruce@thoreau.org.

14 October 2010

Thoreau Center Brown Bag - Social Media Discussion

In the news:


There are new developments in the world of social networking daily. Online social media has already changed the environment in which nonprofits, foundations, philanthropists, and social entrepreneurs operate in rapid, novel, and often unexpected ways. What does it all mean and where is it all going? This event is an opportunity to meet with other organizations and individuals working in the Thoreau Center for an informal lunchtime discussion about such issues. Learn about your neighbors' experiences with these new tools, share strategies and lessons learned, and hopefully have some of your questions answered.


Representatives from United Religions Initiative - @global_uri, and Tides - @TidesCommunity (and the library - @WholeEarthLib) have signed on to give brief presentations to get the discussion started, and if you have experiences, projects, etc. you would like to arrange to share, please contact John Bertland at library@thoreau.org. Otherwise just come with your ideas, thoughts, and questions and join in the discussion.

13 October 2010

Thoreau Center Exhibition Opening Reception:

Al-Mutanabbi Street Starts Here

Art and readings about the 2007 destruction of Al-Mutanabbi Street, Baghdad, Iraq

Thursday, October 14
5:00pm to 7:00pm
Thoreau Center for Sustainability, San Francisco

On March 5, 2007, a car bomb exploded on Al-Mutanabbi Street in Baghdad, Iraq, killing 30 people and wounding over 100 others. As the center of Baghdad’s bookselling, Al-Mutanabbi Street was the heart and soul of the city. In April 2007, San Francisco bookseller and poet, Beau Beausoleil, and Al-Mutanabbi printmaker, Grendl Lofkvist, formed the Al-Mutanabbi Street Coalition, asking letterpress printers to craft a visual response to this attack.

And they did. Over a hundred printmakers submitted their own broadsides depicting Al-Mutanabbi Street’s thriving haven for artistic freedom and a place of civil discourse.

Join us for an evening of art, wine and storytelling in support of the Al-Mutanabbi Street Coalition. The evening’s program will include an exhibition of artwork from many of the printmakers who created and donated their work to help support the progress of the Al-Mutanabbi Street Coalition. Also, three printmakers will read from their own writings in response to this 2007 incident. The readers include Deema Shehabi - Palestinian- American Poet - Co-Editor of the anthology, "Al-Mutanabbi Street Starts Here"; Esther Kamkar - Iranian -American Poet - Contributor to the anthology, "Al-Mutanabbi Street Starts Here" ; Bettina Pauly - A California Printer - A Letterpress Contributor to the "Al-Mutanabbi Street Broadside Project"

Brown Bag events are free informal mid-day learning sessions hosted at Tides. Friends, neighbors and colleagues are welcome. Visitors, please sign in at the front desk.

07 October 2010

Thoreau Center Film Screening: "The Killing Seasons"


Presented by Director John Antonelli
Friday, October 8
12:30 pm
Pacific Room at Tides

Can wildlife conservation efforts go too far? Two African stories. Two white families. Two vastly different approaches: one ruthless, one collaborative. Two perplexingly different outcomes.

Filmmaking partners John Antonelli and Will Parrinello will screen their 20 minute rough cut of The Killing Seasons. Shot on location in Zambia and Swaziland, the film began as short segments about Hammer Simwinga and Thuli Makama, two Goldman Environmental Prize winners. Now, midway in the production, Antonelli is shaping the story in the edit room and planning another trip to Africa. This informal feedback session will help inform the filmmakers on their progress and guide them as they move forward.

Antonelli's Sam Cooke: Crossing Over was broadcast on PBS American Masters, which was just nominated for an Emmy Award for Outstanding Nonfiction Series.

Parrinello's most recent film Mustang: Journey of Transformation had its world premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival and was broadcast on PBS.

For more information on the filmmakers, go to www.mvfg.com

Brown Bag events are free informal mid-day learning sessions hosted at Tides. Friends, neighbors and colleagues are welcome. Visitors, please sign in at the front desk.

06 October 2010

New book donations from IFG


Thank you to the International Forum on Globalization for their recent donation of numerous books to the library collection, including the following diverse selection of books by some of their board members, staff, and other associates. Also be sure to check out the recommended book list they put together this month, part of our new series looking at what books Thoreau Center organizations are reading and recommending.
  • Barlow, Maude. (2005). Too close for comfort: Canada's future within fortress North America. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart.
  • Mander, Jerry. (1978). Four arguments for the elimination of television. New York: Morrow.
  • Shiva, Vandana. (1997). The enclosure and recovery of the commons: biodiversity, indigenous knowledge, and intellectual property rights. New Delhi: Research Foundation for Science, Technology, and Ecology.
  • Barlow, Maude, and Tony Clarke. (1998). MAI: the Multilateral Agreement on Investment and the threat to American freedom. New York, N.Y.: Stoddart.
  • Korten, David C. (1995). When corporations rule the world. West Hartford, Conn: Kumarian Press.
  • Broad, Robin, and John Cavanagh. (2009). Development redefined: how the market met its match. International studies intensives. Boulder: Paradigm Publishers.
  • Goering, Peter, Helena Norberg-Hodge, and John Page. (1993). From the ground up: rethinking industrial agriculture. London: Zed Books in association with International Society for Ecology and Culture.
  • Mander, Jerry, and Edward Goldsmith. (1996). The case against the global economy: and for a turn toward the local. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books.
  • Daly, Herman E., John B. Cobb, and Clifford W. Cobb. (1989). For the common good: redirecting the economy toward community, the environment, and a sustainable future. Boston: Beacon Press.
  • Paik, Koohan, Jerry Mander, and Hannah J. Bernard. 2009.The SuperFerry chronicles: Hawaii's uprising against militarism, commercialism and the suppression of the earth. Kihei, Hawai'i: Koa Books.
  • Mander, Jerry. (1991). In the absence of the sacred: the failure of technology and the survival of the Indian nations. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books.
  • Barnet, Richard J., and John Cavanagh. (1994). Global dreams: imperial corporations and the new world order. New York: Simon & Schuster.
  • Hertsgaard, Mark. (1998). Earth odyssey: around the world in search of our environmental future. New York: Broadway Books.
  • Clarke, Tony. (2007). Inside the bottle: exposing the bottled water industry. Ottawa: Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives.

30 September 2010

Read-Out this Friday at Thoreau Center

Reminder: Banned Books Week Continues


There are still a few days left in Banned Books Week (September 25 - October 2), the annual celebration of your freedom to write and read what you want. That means that you still have time to write on our Banned Books Wall on the front of the library. Thank you to everybody who has contributed and be sure to check it out to find out what some of the Thoreau Center’s favorite banned or challenged books are.


And on Friday, be sure to stop by from noon to 2:00 pm for our first ever Read-Out: spend a few minutes at lunchtime reading aloud from banned or challenged books and listen to others do the same - it’s like an audiobook but without the iPod and no volume control, and a fun way to speak out against would-be censors. We will also be announcing the winners of the Banned Books Week essay contest we sponsored for our student neighbors just down the road at the Bay School, and hopefully (their class schedule permitting) one or more of them will stop by to read their essays. If you would like to reserve a time slot to do a short reading (5 minutes or so) please contact the library at library@thoreau.org. Otherwise, just stop by - we will have a selection of banned books on hand. Refreshments will be provided.


Not sure what has been banned or challenged? Here is the top ten list for 2009 as assembled by the American Library Association’s Office of Intellectual Freedom:


1. ttyl; ttfn; l8r, g8r
(series), by Lauren Myracle
Reasons: drugs, nudity, offensive language, sexually explicit, unsuited to age group
2. And Tango Makes Three
, by Peter Parnell and Justin Richardson
Reasons: homosexuality
3. The Perks of Being A Wallflower
, by Stephen Chbosky
Reasons: anti-family, drugs, homosexuality, offensive language, religious viewpoint, sexually explicit, suicide, unsuited to age group
4. To Kill A Mockingbird
, by Harper Lee
Reasons: offensive language, racism, unsuited to age group
5. Twilight
(series) by Stephenie Meyer
Reasons: religious viewpoint, sexually explicit, unsuited to age group
6. Catcher in the Rye
, by J.D. Salinger
Reasons: offensive language, sexually explicit, unsuited to age group
7. My Sister’s Keeper
, by Jodi Picoult
Reasons: homosexuality, offensive language, religious viewpoint, sexism, sexually explicit, unsuited to age group, violence
8. The Earth, My Butt, and Other Big, Round Things
, by Carolyn Mackler
Reasons: offensive language, sexually explicit, unsuited to age group
9. The Color Purple
, by Alice Walker
Reasons: offensive language, sexually explicit, unsuited to age group
10. The Chocolate War
, by Robert Cormier
Reasons: nudity, offensive language, sexually explicit, unsuited to age group


And some additional resources to check out:


· Amnesty International commemorates Banned Books Week by highlighting the plights of imprisoned and persecuted writers around the world: Banned Books Week 2010

· No. 1 banned author Lauren Myracle writes about her experiences in Wednesday’s Guardian: Building bridges with the book-banners

· The Office of Intellectual Freedom’s informative blog.

· And, of course, there is a Facebook page.

27 September 2010

Banned Books Week display


Our Banned Books Week display so far. Lots of room left.

Banned Books Week at Whole Earth Library


It is that time of year again - Banned Books Week! Held during the last week of September, this event celebrates one of the most basic human rights of any democratic society: the right of intellectual freedom. It is a reminder that ongoing efforts to restrict access to books and information continue to be a major problem for schools and libraries all over the country. Books are challenged for a wide variety of reasons, but the effect of a successful challenge is always to deprive people of the opportunity to learn, to read important literature, and to be exposed to new ideas and points of view different from their own. Opposed to such efforts to shield people from ideas or to shut down voices, intellectual freedom holds that the open and civil debate of a free society depends upon a well-informed citizenry with the freedom to read freely.

The Whole Earth Library will once again join libraries throughout the country in Banned Books Week which runs from September 25 until October 2. Look for the return of our interactive, appropriate technology Banned Books display on the outside of the library wall where everyone will be encouraged to write quotes from their favorite banned and challenged books or to just share their thoughts about intellectual freedom in other creative ways. In addition, due to popular demand, our second annual celebration expands this year in a few ways:

  • We are sponsoring an essay contest for our neighbors at The Bay School of San Francisco, a private coeducational college preparatory high school just down the street in the Presidio. Students will be asked to write on the subject of intellectual freedom and a sustainable future.The winner will be announced October 1.

  • On October 1, there will be a Read-Out! in the hallway in front of the library. That afternoon, from noon to 2:00 pm, come and read aloud a passage from a banned or challenged book. Or sing a banned song. Or act part of banned play. We can be flexible. Refreshments will be provided. If you would like to sign-up for a specific time slot in which to read, please email the library at library@thoreau.org

If you would like to learn more and discover what books have been banned or challenged in the United States, visit the American Library Association's lists of Frequently Challenged Books. 2008's most challenged book, And Tango Makes Three, is no longer at the top of the list for 2009, but you might be surprised by some of the books that have returned to the list. Regardless, you will find lots of inspirational reading ideas.

Banned Books Week is sponsored by the American Booksellers Association; American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression; the American Library Association; American Society of Journalists and Authors; Association of American Publishers; and the National Association of College Stores. It is endorsed by the Center for the Book in the Library of Congress.

22 September 2010

Presidio "Green" Grand Opening


Open House Celebrating the Public Health Service District -
San Francisco's First "Green" Neighborhood

Saturday, September 25
11 am to 4 pm

The Public Health Service District - site of the park's largest historic building - has been revitalized as a "green neighborhood where people live, work, and enjoy the outdoors. Be among the first to explore and enjoy this historic area long close to the public. Learn more about the Public Health Service District.

The Thoreau Center and the Whole Earth Library will be attending.

Open House Activities
  • Tour the historic former hospital, nurses' quarters, and surgeons' houses, and learn how they have been sustainably transformed into contemporary homes and workplaces.
  • San Francisco street food vendors and live music
  • EcoVillage showcasing sustainable ideas and non-profit organizations
  • Lobos Creek Scenic Overlook
  • Fun for kids provided by the Presidio Community YMCA
  • Open House at Arion Press
For more information and directions visit: http://www.presidio.gov/calendar/ggopresidio.htm

03 September 2010

Thoreau Center Film Screening: The Wall



Friday, September 10
12:30 pm to 2:00 pm
Pacific Room at Tides, Thoreau Center for Sustainability SF
Presented by Lou Ramirez

Join us for a premiere screening of the San Francisco Film Festival's The Wall, directed by Ricardo A. Martinez.

In 2006, the U.S. Congress passed The Secure Fence Act calling for the construction of 700 miles of fence along the U.S./Mexico border. Filmed over two years, The Wall documents the impact of constructing this border fence along the Southwest. From policy makers to citizens of border towns, the debate elevates as residents respond to having a fence built in their backyard. Nobody could have imagined how many problems the fence would create, from an excess of dead bodies to an increase in smuggling costs.


The San Francisco Latino Film Festival runs September 16 through September 28, 2010. Check local listings for screenings and the Cine+Mas website for more information: www.sflatinofilmfestival.com.

Brown Bag events are free informal mid-day learning sessions hosted at Tides. Friends, neighbors and colleagues are welcome. Visitors, please sign in at the front desk.

30 August 2010

New Books - August


Just in time for you to plan your Labor Day weekend reading activities, here are some books added to the library collection in the past few months. Not travelling anywhere but want to imagine you are? Try Douglas H. Chadwick's Yellowstone to Yukon: a portrait of a 500,000 square mile region spanning from the U.S. to northern Canada with one of the most remarkable collections of wildlife in the world that is facing increasing challenges from an expanding human presence.


Also consider the books below, and don't forget to peruse our catalog at library.thoreau.org.


Tyche Hendricks. The Wind Doesn't Need a Passport: Stories from the U.S. - Mexico Borderlands. (2010)


Tyche Hendricks is an editor for The California Report on KQED Public Radio, and she reported on immigration and immigrant communities at the San Francisco Chronicle for many years. For this book, she traveled throughout the U.S.-Mexico border region, talking to cowboys, environmentalists, nurses, nuns, factory workers, and other ordinary people who live and work in this dynamic, complex, often misunderstood area. They share a deep sense of their history and culture, and their stories bring to life and bring understanding to heatedly debated issues of immigration, drug violence, trade, manufacturing, and more.


Peter H. Gleick. Bottled & Sold: The Story Behind Our Obsession with Bottled Water. (2010)


Thirty billion plastic bottle of water are sold in a year in the United States alone, while billions of people around the world still lack access to safe water and sanitation. Peter Gleick, President of the Pacific Institute for Studies in Development, Environment, and Security, examines the reasons behind the explosive worldwide growth of the bottled water industry in recent years and what it means for the future of drinking water, society, and the environment.


Julian Crandall Hollick. Ganga: A Journey Down the Ganges River. (2007)


Running from high in the Himalayas, through northern India, down to the sea, the Ganges for millions of Indians is not just a river but also a goddess. Hollick travels its length, exploring its mythology, ecology, economy, and the lives of the people who live along it, portraying a paradoxical relationship in which religious devotion goes hand in hand with increased ecological degradation and economic exploitation.


Cristina Eisenberg. The Wolf's Tooth: Keystone Predators, Trophic Cascades, and Biodiversity. (2010)


Based on her fieldwork with wolves and on research findings by other scientists around the world in recent decades, Eisenberg surveys the latest thinking on trophic cascades, or the effects created in an ecosystem when top-level predators or other keystone species are removed. Examples from Yellowstone, the Aleutian Islands, Amazon rain forests, and coral reefs show how such effects can be complex, wide-ranging, and unexpected with potentially catastrophic implications for local biodiversity. She also looks at how resource managers are using this knowledge to guide ecosystem recovery, including how it could be applied to move forward a vision of rewilding the North American continent.


Lane H. Kendig with Bret C. Keast. Community Character: Principles for Design and Planning. (2010)


The character of a community is what makes it unique, livable, and inviting. These elements can be difficult to define, yet are often what people want to preserve or to create when planning. Moving beyond simplistic measures of density and land use, the authors here provide a comprehensive system for planning and zoning communities that incorporates a wide range of measures to define character and that reflects the complexity of the interaction of the built environment with its social and economic functions.


Joe Romm. Straight Up: America's Fiercest Climate Blogger Takes on the Status Quo Media, Politicians, and Clean Energy Solutions. (2010)


Climate expert, physicist, former official in the U.S. Department of Energy, and senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, Joe Romm draws from his influential blog, ClimateProgress.org, to discuss climate science, clean energy solutions, global warming politics, and how the mainstream media have failed in their coverage of these issues. Proposing technological and other measures to reach a low-carbon, low-oil, low-net-material use economy, he argues that any efforts to avert catastrophic global warming will ultimately require citizen action to bring public pressure to bear on governments that have historically been reluctant to act.