Creating a Better Library Environment 3

More of a picture of the library environment I inherited in 2013 can be seen in these pictures. The Fiction collection which was very small for a high school of 1400 students had a bare cardboard coloured notice board at the end which I attempted to brighten up with posters and an untidy collection of videos, dvds, teacher reference at the other end.Library before photo 2013

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Old video area  Oct 2013

In order to make the library more inviting. I expanded the Fiction and created a quiet reading nook. The notice board was also covered to highlight reading promotion material.

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Painting the posts in the library the key colours of red, mint green or deep blue also lifted the atmosphere.

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2121 by Susan Greenfield

2121: A Tale From the Next Century2121: A Tale From the Next Century by Susan Greenfield
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Baroness Greenfield is a prominent neuroscientist. In this novel she extrapolates knowledge of brain research to create a plausible future society in which humans divide into two groups according to their perception of the value of brain activity over sensation. Whilst it was interesting to read Greenfield is not a stylist and this dystopian narrative was somewhat laboured.

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Love & Friendship: In Which Jane Austen’s Lady Susan Vernon Is Entirely Vindicated

Love & Friendship: In Which Jane Austen's Lady Susan Vernon Is Entirely VindicatedLove & Friendship: In Which Jane Austen’s Lady Susan Vernon Is Entirely Vindicated by Whit Stillman
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I loved this reworking of Jane Austen’s epistolary novella Lady Susan. The title evokes her hilarious juvenilia Love and Freindship, although the first part of the novel is not written in letters, but ostensibly by the nephew of Lady Susan as a narrative vindicating her in the face of the scandalous version given by the spinster authoress (Jane Austen). This nephew writing about his aunt deliberately evokes the biography of Austen written by her nephew. The nephew author (who, it transpires, is in prison) also provides Austen’s novel as a counterpoint to his narrative with annotations explaining how Austen prejudices the reader against Lady Susan.

Lady Susan is a widow who has spent all her husband’s money and now relies on extended visits to relatives and friends to live in the style she expects. She is determined to marry her daughter off to a dim but wealthy noble and flirts outrageously breaking up marriages and attachments in her wake. She is viewed with suspicion by her relatives but is able to charm men into viewing her actions benignly.

A fun read which promises to be a great film with Kate Beckinsale as Lady Susan

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