[nfbwatlk] FW: [wtbbl] WTBBL -- "Reading Matters" Winter/Spring 2012 issue

Jacob Struiksma lawnmower84 at hotmail.com
Tue Mar 13 05:28:58 UTC 2012


 

Washington Talking Book & Braille Library

Administered by the Washington State Library

and Office of the Secretary of State

 

                       Reading Matters

                     Winter/Spring 2012

                                     David Junius, Editor

 

 

A Message from Danielle Miller, Program Manager 

 

          The motto “Winter is Coming,” from the House Stark in George R.R.
Martin’s Song of Ice and Fire series, suggests warning, constant vigilance
and preparation. I like to think of this as the epic fantasy version of “the
legislative session is coming” or the “revenue forecast is coming.” We’ve
been vigilant and have strived to be prepared. All things considered, your
own Talking Book & Braille Library is still getting out books and doing all
we can to provide much- needed services.

 

          The Patron Advisory Council (PAC) continues to work on the
library’s and its patrons’ behalf, and it welcomed two new members in
January. Our new members are Becky Bell and Frank Johnson. At our February
PAC meeting we thanked Mike Mello, our previous chair, for all of his work
and leadership and passed the gavel to the new PAC chair, Sue Ammeter. The
other officers for the PAC are Frank Cuta as vice chair and Karen Johnson as
secretary.

 

          I am positive that WTBBL has the best and most- dedicated
volunteers and donors. With the loss of funding and staff for the Evergreen
Radio Reading Service (ERRS) at the end of 2011, things looked grim.
However, patron donors allowed us to buy equipment that sends our  broadcast
to radio stations in Seattle, the Tri-Cities and Spokane free of charge. The
stations also agreed to waive their fees for airing our signal. Most
importantly, a core group of radio volunteers is continuing to produce
several local programs including The Seattle Times, “TV Times,” “Grocery
Cart,” “Shopping News,” and “Eastern Bargains.” As we transition to a new
model for the ERRS, you can expect some changes and fluctuation in what you
are hearing. I strongly encourage you to contact me and let me know how the
ERRS is working for you and what we can do to make it better.

 

          We have a lot coming up, including our quarterly book clubs,
volunteer appreciation event, our centenarian patron celebration, and many
conferences and outreach visits. In the next couple of months, our website
will be getting a facelift, so don’t be surprised if things look different.
We will ensure that the site is accessible and easy to navigate, as well as
attractive and useful. 

 

Our local audio book and braille production departments are continuing to
turn out excellent books for our collection, and we’ve started making
cartridge copies of books that were previously only available for download
on BARD. Day by day, there are more and more audio books to choose from. 

 

To take another quote from George R.R. Martin, “A reader lives a thousand
lives before he dies; the man who never reads lives only one.” WTBBL has the
first four books of the Song of Ice and Fire series -- DB45742, DB49913,
DB51406, DB62348 – for you to enjoy.

 

          I look forward to hearing from you! 

 

Danielle 

(206) 615-1588 or danielle.miller at sos.wa.gov

 

 




Braille Department Update by Ed Godfrey

 

Our 12 students in the 2011-2012 braille transcription class are now more
than halfway through the course. The class began last October and is due to
end in June. Class sessions are held weekly on Wednesday evenings. We look
forward to our graduates helping to transform print into braille for our
patrons in the coming year.

WTBBL’s seven proofreading teams continue their great work checking the
accuracy of the volunteer braillists’ transcriptions and making corrections
as needed. We currently have 10 books in review mode, so we look forward to
adding those to our stacks soon!

 

The new WTBBL Collection Development Committee is identifying new titles for
both braille and audio production. We all look forward to the new materials
and getting those in the transcription and recording workflow.

 

The Braille Authority of North America (BANA) recently announced that the
new Braille Formats rules have been approved by the BANA board. The
transcribers and proofreaders look forward to applying the new rules, which
will soon be published and posted online.

 

          Good things are happening in the Braille Department! Thanks for
your patronage and support.

 

 

Locally Produced Books from WTBBL by Herrick Heitman

 

Here are some books that have been recently added to the collection and are
now available for your enjoyment. These downloadable audio books are added
to our website as each book is completed. Digital cartridge copies are also
available for checkout.

 

 

Audio: Adult Fiction

 

Sand  by Will James.

A story set on the Great Plains where a man and his horse find a common bond
amid their triumphs and tragedies. Narrated by Laurie Bialik. 1996. 8 hours
30 minutes. Digital Book DBW 8259. Also available as a downloadable digital
book from WTBBL.

 

Audio: Adult Nonfiction

 

Sky Time in Gray’s River: Living For Keeps in a Forgotten Place by Robert
Michael Pyle.

The author follows the people, plants, and animals of Gray’s River, a small
town in southwest Washington, through the seasons. Winner of the 2007
National Outdoor Book Award for natural history literature. 2007. Narrated
by David Ritt. 9 hours 30 minutes. Digital Book DBW 8014. Also available as
a downloadable digital book from WTBBL.

 

Braille: Adult Fiction

 

Invisible Lives by Anjali Banerjee.

          Lakshmi Sen uses her magical ability to perceive secret longings
in others to bring happiness to the customers in her mother’s Seattle sari
shop. When she meets all-American Nick Dunbar, her powers seem to desert
her, making the choice between him and her Indian fiancé a seemingly
impossible task. 4 volumes. 2006. Braille Book BRW 1309.

 

Braille: Adult Nonfiction

 

The Way We Ate: Pacific Northwest Cooking, 1843-1900 by Jacqueline B.
Williams.

          The pioneers and homesteaders in the Pacific Northwest raised and
prepared much of their own food. This well-researched book follows food from
the barnyard and garden to the dinner table. It describes the ingredients,
equipment, and techniques the cooks used. 6 volumes. 1996. Braille Book BRW
1302.

 

 

New Service Being Tested!

 

Are you unable to read the Talking Book Topics publication or do you have
difficulty selecting books? WTBBL has volunteers available to go through the
magazine with you and help you make requests. Call (206) 615-0400 or (800)
542-0866 and ask for a Readers Advisor to make a 15- to 30-minute
appointment. 

 

 

 

Based on a True Story: An Author Profile of Ben Mezrich 

by Steve Goettsch

 

       Ben Mezrich has created his own highly addictive genre of nonfiction,
digging up incredible true-ish stories of smart young men beating the odds
and making tons of money. I say “true-ish” because of his unapologetic use
of fiction techniques in what is presented as nonfiction. He takes a
real-life tale and jazzes it up with narrative embellishments and imagined
scenes. His stories are fast paced and definitely a fun read.

Perhaps his best known work in recent years is The Accidental Billionaires
which was adapted into the film The Social Network. In it, Mezrich creates a
version of the founding of Facebook, using mostly secondary sources. Mark
Zuckerberg, the founder and main character, refused to be interviewed for
the book. 

As a Harvard student in 2003, Zuckerberg, who had just been jilted by a
girl, created a website called Facemash.com, which asked other students to
rate Harvard women from side-by-side photos hacked from the university
directory. This led to the birth of The Facebook, for which Mark enlisted
one of his closest friends, Eduardo Saverin, to invest in the site. The two
later had a mysterious falling out and ended up suing each other. The story
of two Asian girls at a Harvard lecture who found the socially inept
Zuckerberg more interesting than the talk by Bill Gates may be fact or
fiction, but it makes a good story.  

          Mezrich was previously known for Bringing Down the House. This
book tells the story of six MIT math students, hand-picked by an eccentric
mastermind who developed a system for beating the game of blackjack. The
students live dual lives, going to class during the week and flying out of
Boston on the weekends to hit the casinos with tens of thousands of dollars
in cash strapped to their persons. This unique system of card counting,
verbal cues, body signals and role-playing took Las Vegas for more than $3
million  and eventually made them targets of revenge. The book was also made
into the movie, 21.

 

A lesser–known Mezrich book written in 2007 is called Rigged: The True Story
of the Ivy League Kid Who Changed the World of Oil, From Wall Street to
Dubai. In it, an Italian-American kid from Brooklyn, fresh out of Harvard
Business School, enters the crazy world of Manhattan’s Mercantile Exchange,
where billions of dollars trade hands every week and fistfights break out on
the trading floor. Partnering with a young Muslim with family connections,
he embarks on a plan to revolutionize the oil-trading industry by creating
the Dubai Mercantile Exchange. Along the way he lives in opulent luxury as a
guest of the ruling sheiks.

 

All three books are available now as talking books from WTBBL:

 

The Accidental Billionaires - DB 69578

Rigged - DB/RC 68314

Bringing Down the House - DB/RC 55333    

 

 

 

Volunteer Spotlight: Dagmar Cronn

 

I had a friend and colleague who retired before I did from Oakland
University in southeastern Michigan. We are both chemists. She became a
volunteer reader of introductory chemistry textbooks after retirement. I
decided if she could do that, so could I, so we looked for a place in the
Seattle metropolitan area where I could read textbooks. Instead we found the
Washington Talking Book & Braille Library.

 

Soon after I retired and moved to Seattle, I called WTBBL about
volunteering. My assumption was that readers would be needed to tape books.
But, it turns out there was a greater need for readers for the Evergreen
Radio Reading Service. 

 

Not being a professional or someone with experience looked like a major
barrier, but I really wanted to be selected. I thought I needed an edge, so
I decided to look through the list of ERRS programs that needed new
volunteers and indicate an interest in something that others would not be
interested in. I spotted a program called “Grocery Cart.” This turned out to
be a once-a-week taped program of the grocery ads for Western Washington. I
figured nobody would want to read grocery ads, so I let the staff know I
would be willing to do the program. I auditioned and became the voice of
“Grocery Cart”!

 

There are two ironies to this tale. First, I, who had never paid attention
to newspaper ads, now read seven sets of grocery ads from cover to cover
every week. The bigger irony is that my self-centered question of “Why would
anyone want to read grocery ads?” never took into account my audience. The
program turned out to be one of the most popular programs on the ERRS. This
is because it is such an important service to people who cannot read the ads
themselves. 

 

I have become quite knowledgeable about the best prices at grocery stores
each week. I can’t claim my own grocery bills have gone down, but it’s nice
to know I can help my listeners keep theirs in check while finding out about
items they wouldn’t otherwise consider. Variety is the spice of life
“And
this week all spices are on sale at
”

 

 

 

Staff Profile: Alan Bentson

 

Alan Bentson is one of the two Readers Advisors at WTBBL. There are not many
blind people working in this position for the National Library Service, so
we are proud to have him working here, along with his colleague Wes Derby. 

 

Alan was born in 1952 in Silver Spring, Maryland, but he grew up and got his
education in Colorado. He went to public school until 10th grade, and
completed high school at the Colorado School for the Deaf and Blind in
Colorado Springs. “I benefitted from going to school in both environments,”
he said. “I think all blind children would broaden their horizons by
experiencing both forms of education.” He later majored in English at
Colorado College.

Alan’s start with WTBBL was a natural fit. “When I moved to Bremerton in
1981,” he said, “practically the first thing I did was contact the WTBBL to
see if they needed volunteers, and I’ve been there in one capacity or
another ever since.” 

 

Alan worked for WTBBL as a page for two years, then started as a full-time
Readers Advisor in January 1987, a time when talking computers were still in
their early stages of development. “When I started, we didn’t have email or
Internet or braille displays. I couldn’t even transfer calls or put people
on hold. The changes in my job have been amazing.”

 

Alan takes book requests, searches for titles that aren’t listed in the
library’s catalog, enters information into the catalog, adjusts patron files
to make sure the computer selects the right books and sends them often
enough, and much more. 

 

“Every time some new innovation comes out like the online catalog, or the
ability to download books, people tell me that they’re sorry I’m out of a
job. It never seems to happen, though. There are always lots of new
questions to answer about the new technologies. That’s what I like about my
job, the ability to improve our library service, one patron at a time.”  

 

 

GiveBIG in 2012!

 

A huge round of thanks to WTBBL donors who individually have given more than
$46,000 since July 1, 2011! In addition, the library has received some very
generous bequests totaling over $280,000.

 

It is difficult to express our appreciation for all of you who give
generously and regularly to WTBBL. Every year your gifts have helped us with
extraordinary and unexpected expenses not covered by our increasingly tight
budget. We know that you share your valuable resources with us and we are
very honored to provide WTBBL’s services to you.

 

We are also very grateful to patrons who have included us in their estate
plans. As you can see, their gifts this year have been substantial. Most of
those funds will go into our endowment at the Seattle Foundation to help
provide us an ongoing funding stream that will help WTBBL stay on the
leading edge of library services, even though state and federal support may
decline over the years.

 

This year the Seattle Foundation is sponsoring a program called GiveBIG
2012. It is an opportunity for our patrons and friends to give a little or
BIG during a one day blitz on May 2. In addition, gifts to WTBBL will be
matched in proportion to the total percentage of gifts received that day. As
a participating organization, WTBBL is also eligible to receive an
additional $1,000 in random drawings throughout the day. The Seattle
Foundation doesn’t take any of the funds
all money donated in WTBBL’s name
goes to the library. 

 

We are participating this year to make it easy for anyone to give. Gifts to
GiveBIG-WTBBL can be made on Wednesday, May 2, only at
www.seattlefoundation.org. You will need to use a credit card to give gifts
through this secure website.

 

So mark May 2 on your calendar. You will be hearing more from us as we get
closer to the GiveBIG date.

 

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