What We’re Reading Wednesdays: The Science Department Edition!

In a repeating series highlighting current and recent reads around Durham Tech, here’s what the Durham Tech Science Department is currently reading and has recently read:

As always, if you’re interested in a title, you can either search our catalog to see if we have the book or request it through interlibrary loan if we don’t have it. Need help doing either of these things or don’t yet have a library card? Ask in the library.


Is your department, club, campus, committee, or subgroup interested in participating in a What We’re Reading blog post? The goal of the What We’re Reading posts is to highlight books, professional literature, blogs, or any other things you might be currently reading or have recently finished. Contact OCC librarian Meredith Lewis for more information.

What We’re Reading Wednesdays: The English & Communications Department Edition!

In a repeating series highlighting current and recent reads around Durham Tech, here’s what the Durham Tech English & Communications Department is currently reading and has recently read:

As always, if you’re interested in a title, you can either search our catalog to see if we have the book or request it through interlibrary loan if we don’t have it. Need help doing either of these things or don’t yet have a library card? Ask in the library.


Is your department, club, campus, committee, or subgroup interested in participating in a What We’re Reading blog post? The goal of the What We’re Reading posts is to highlight books, professional literature, blogs, or any other things you might be currently reading or have recently finished. Contact OCC librarian Meredith Lewis for more information.

What We’re Reading-Born a Crime

The book was read by Courtney Bippley, a Reference Librarian at the Main Campus Library. The library copy of this book is currently available on the New Book shelf in the library.

Born a Crime: Stories from a South African Childhood by Trevor Noah

Born a Crime: Stories from a South African Childhood by Trevor Noah

Why did you choose to read this book?

I watch The Daily Show on a fairly regular basis. When Trevor Noah took over from Jon Stewart I was unsure if this guy I’d never heard of before would be up to the challenge. I think he’s been doing a pretty good job so I wanted to know a little more about him.

What did you like about it?

All of the memories chosen for the book illustrated how and why Trevor became the comedian, and man, he is today. One of the chapters has the best Hitler story I’ve ever read; it was hilarious while also making me cringe in my living room. If that doesn’t make you want to read this book I’m not sure what will.

Was there anything noteworthy about the book?

I learned a lot about South Africa. I expected to learn about Trevor Noah, but his story requires some context of South African culture and politics that he provides in brief nuggets preceding each chapter. Now, I’m certainly not an expert after reading this book since the sum of what I learned about South Africa in school was:

  • It’s a country that exists.
  • It’s in Africa.
  • It had Apartheid.
  • Apartheid was bad.
  • But it’s over now.
  • Nelson Mandela was from South Africa.

Needless to say I didn’t have a whole lot of knowledge about South Africa to start with so your mileage may vary with how much you learn.

What feeling did the book leave you with?

Awe of Trevor Noah’s mother. Seriously. The whole book could be considered a love letter to her, and she deserves it.

Who would you recommend the book to?

Anyone who likes a good memoir, watches The Daily Show, or is just interested in South Africa’s transition to a post-apartheid country.

What would you pair this book with?

I would pair this book with a bowl full of Jell-O since its Trevor’s favorite food. And, a viewing of You Laugh but It’s True, a documentary about Trevor Noah before he became famous in the US.

What We’re Reading Wednesday: The ACA Instructors Edition

In a repeating series highlighting current and recent reads around Durham Tech, here’s what the Durham Tech ACA Instructors are currently reading and have recently read:

As always, if you’re interested in a title, you can either search our catalog to see if we have the book or request it through interlibrary loan if we don’t have it. Need help doing either of these things or don’t yet have a library card? Ask in the library.


Is your department, club, campus, committee, or subgroup interested in participating in a What We’re Reading blog post? The goal of the What We’re Reading posts is to highlight books, professional literature, blogs, or any other things you might be currently reading or have recently finished. Contact OCC librarian Meredith Lewis for more information.

What We’re Reading-Kindred

This book was read by Courtney Bippley who is a Reference Librarian at the Main Campus Library.

Kindred by Octavia E. Butler

Why did you choose to read this book?

A friend recommended this book to me and I trust her judgement. Also, I’d been meaning to read a book by this author for a while. She’s well known for being an award winning, female, African American scifi/fantasy writer. I’m sorry I didn’t read one of her books before she died in 2006.

What did you like about it?

I liked the realism of the time travel. Not in the sense that time travel made sense (because no explanation was ever really given for it) but that going into the past would, for many, be terrible. The heroine didn’t want to travel in time, why would she when going back meant that she would be forced into slavery. There are relatively few people who would be better off in a previous time period.

Was there anything noteworthy about the book?

This book was first published in 1979, and the heroine travels from ‘modern’ time to the antebellum South. It is interesting to contrast not only those two time periods, but also the ‘modern’ of that time and what is modern culture now. In that sense the book really leads the reader to look back at two different time periods in American history, though that was not the intent at the time of publishing.

 

Also, and this is nitpicking on my part, this is not science fiction. All the descriptions and materials say it is science fiction, and it is not. It is fantasy. There is no science-based reason for the time travel in the book, ergo, fantasy. This has been a PSA.

Who would you recommend the book to?

Fans of fantasy or time travel stories. Or, people interested in the antebellum South.

What would you pair this book with? 

I didn’t plan it, but the timing worked out that I read this book right before Martin Luther King Jr. day. That was a good pairing. I am not suggesting you wait a whole year before reading it yourself though.

What We Read Wednesday: The Durham Tech Faculty & Staff Best Reads of 2016 Edition

In a repeating series highlighting current and recent reads around Durham Tech, here are the best books that Durham Tech faculty and staff read in 2016


For Durham Tech Library availability and more details about the 2016 Durham Tech faves, check out the pdf of the book list: Durham Tech 2016 Best Books

You can also check out (literally) the books from the downstairs library display of Durham Tech’s favorite books of 2016.


Is your department, club, campus, committee, or subgroup interested in participating in a What We’re Reading* blog post? The goal of the What We’re Reading* posts is to highlight books, professional literature, blogs, or any other things you might be currently reading or have recently finished. Contact OCC Librarian Meredith Lewis for more information.

*Could also be What We Read– recent reads also accepted (and encouraged).

What We’re Reading Wednesdays: The Library Staff Edition

In a (hopefully) repeating series highlighting current and recent reads around Durham Tech, here’s what the Durham Tech library staff is reading and has recently read–

The Awkward Yeti website homepage screenshot

Several librarians also enjoy regularly reading The Awkward Yeti, including their current comics on germs in preparation for the new semester.

As always, if you’re interested in a title, you can either search our catalog to see if we have the book or request it through interlibrary loan.  Need help doing either of these things or don’t yet have a library card? Ask in the library.


Is your department, club, campus, committee, or subgroup interested in participating in a What We’re Reading blog post? The goal of the What We’re Reading posts is to highlight books, professional literature, blogs, or any other things you might be currently reading or have recently finished. Contact OCC Librarian Meredith Lewis for more information.

What We’re Reading-Ghost Talkers

This book was read by Courtney Bippley-Reference Librarian at the Main Campus Library

Ghost Talkers by Mary Robinette Kowel

Why did you choose to read this book?

The premise of this book was intriguing to me. Using mediums to get intelligence from ghosts of soldiers seems like a logical tactic if ghosts were a real and reliable phenomenon.

What did you like about it?

I like that the book didn’t shy away from the culture of the time in regard to racism and sexism. The author worked these issues into the plot, characters, and setting in a way that felt real without overdoing it. I also liked that despite the WWI setting the book read more like a mystery than a war book. I wasn’t inundated with page after page of descriptions of soldiers dying in the trenches and other horrors of war. Instead, the author gives glimpses of this reality but stays true to the main plot.

What feeling did the book leave you with?

The ending of this book felt bittersweet to me, which is perhaps the best you can hope for from a book set in one of the world wars.

Who would you recommend the book to?

Anyone who likes alternate histories or fantasy books.

What would you pair this book with? 

I would pair this book with a documentary on WWI spy tactics and a ring of salt around the house to keep ghosts away.