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Staff Picks Category: Biography

The Sharper Your Knife, The Less You Cry by Kathleen Flinn []

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Flinn is an American journalist and computer executive in London and gets let go from a high power high stress job and decides to go to cooking school at the Cordon Bleu in Paris. When enrolling in cooking school, she set out to write a book about her experiences so this chronicles her year of self-discovery and finding love. It is full of humor, recipes and her adventures in a new country and language.

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Ginger Geezer: The Life of Vivian Stanshall by Lucian Randall and Chris Welch []

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“You got a light, mac? No…but I’ve got a dark brown overcoat.”
Vivian Stanshall, sousaphone player, ukulele maestro and vocalist extraordinaire, practicer of elaborate practical jokes, rubber ears sporter and snake owner, certainly lived up to the oft dubbed title as the “great British eccentric”. Oh, and he lived on a boat.
He and his colleagues from the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band created the most wonderfully silly, chaotic and beautiful music know to man by melding 1930’s jazz and novelty numbers, psychedelic rock, Python-esque comedy and Beatles arrangements. To my knowledge, this group is the only group to list wah-wah rabbits as an instrument on a recording. Stanshall shared most of the lead vocal duties with Neil Innes (later found in the Rutles), but it was the former who was the expert frontman and instigator of this riffraff outfit.
Stanshall’s biography delves into the life of this complicated character before and after his run with the Bonzos. Fame, family life, alcoholism, brilliant radio projects (including “Rawlinson’s End”), madcap stunts and the slow decline of spirit helps makes Ginger Geezer paint a mighty confounding portrait. Viv wouldn’t have had it any other way.

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Hot Burritos: The True Story of the Flying Burrito Brothers by John Einarson with Chris Hillman []

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This refreshing biography about the pioneer country rock outfit unearths plenty of new insight. Author John Eirarson leaves behind previously scattered, sensational headlines for contemporary accounts of the group’s living members (including extensive interviews with founding member/ex- Byrd Chris Hillman). Where as most biographies of the Burritos tend to lean on the “tortured soul” angle of the late Gram Parsons, “Hot Burritos” discusses the collective innovation and follies of this seminal group.

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La Vie en Rose []

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This biographical film tells the story of Edith Piaf’s life with striking cinematography, music, and a spectacular performance by Marion Cotillard as Piaf. It is an emotional portrayal of poverty, family, fame, love, and music within the framework of one woman’s true experiences.

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Calvin Coolidge At Home in Northampton by Susan Lewis Well []

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Using original material from the collections of the Calvin Coolidge Presidential Library and Museum, Well presents the daily life and residences of Calvin Coolidge in Northampton, Massachusetts. She uses new sources to document the unique and interesting personal life stories of Coolidge’s landlords and neighbors.

Copies are also available to purchase in at the library or in our online store.

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The Taste of Country Cooking by Edna Lewis []

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Because she was by nature reserved and even shy, Edna Lewis never received the credit she deserved for helping recreate American cooking in a style that treasured in equal measure our culinary heritage and our fresh, local foodstuffs. In this, her autobiography, she lets us see how this came about—a childhood totally immersed in the living tradition of country cooking as practiced in a small Virginia Piedmont community settled by slaves.

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Emerson & Eros by Len Gougeon []

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Emerson is considered to be a man of mythic proportions. His influence on his era was incalculable and extends forward into our own. What made a man who was unremarkable and uninspired into a legend who started a philosophy (Transcendentalism) and spurred others into action on large causes (women’s suffrage, anti-slavery, etc…)? Gougeon explores these tantalizing questions.

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With Malice Toward None by Stephen B. Oates []

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Oates brings to life both Lincoln’s deep humanity and personal struggles, and his genius in guiding the nation through the Civil War despite political pressures on all sides (not least from his own cabinet). If you don’t have a profound respect for Abraham Lincoln as our greatest president, you will after reading this book.

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