JavaScript must be enabled on your browser for this PAC to work properly.

Oak Hill Public Library
About the Library
Community Profile
Library Catalog
Local History & Roots
Services We Provide
Oak Hill Schools
Welsh Museum
Youth News
Ohio Web Library
SERLS
Weather
Over Drive
Get a Library Card
Calendar
LearningExpressLibrary
Heritage Quest
Ohio Job & Family Services
Ohio Veterans Bonus
IRS
State of Ohio
Auditor of State
Ohio Dept. of Taxation
Southeastern Ohio Legal Services
auto repair
Educational Videos Khan Academy
Village of Oak Hill
Oak Hill Chamber of Commerce
Ohio Benefits Bank
Consumer Reports.org
Voter Registration Check
Obama Care/Health Insurance Marketplace
Help Obama Care/health insurance
Ancestry.com
oplin-primary school
oplin-secondary school
Oplin search
Supreme Court of Ohio - Domestic Relations and Juvenile Standardized Forms):
For Power of Attorney/Living Will/Advanced Directives
Supreme Court of Ohio - Probate Forms
Senior & Assisted Living in Ohio
Village of Oak Hill links
Legal Help
Senior Care
Govenor''s Office of Workforce Transformation Finder Tool

Know It Now!

The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao

by Junot Diaz

Library Journal Having caught everyone's attention with his short stories, D!az offers a debut novel starring ghetto geek Oscar, whose family labors under a Fuk# (or curse) that delivers prison, tragic accidents, and, worst of all, bad luck in love. With a national tour. Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information.

Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Publishers Weekly Matthew Sharpe is the author of the novels Jamestown and The Sleeping Father. He teaches at Wesleyan University. Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information.

Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Book list "*Starred Review* Díaz's gutsy short story collection Drown (1996) made the young Dominican American a literary star. Readers who have had to wait a decade for his first novel are now spectacularly rewarded. Paralleling his own experiences growing up in the Dominican Republic and New Jersey, he has choreographed a family saga at once sanguinary and sexy that confronts the horrific brutality at loose during the reign of the dictator Trujillo. Díaz's besieged characters look to the supernatural for explanations and hope, from fukú, the curse unleashed when Europeans arrived on Hispaniola, to the forces dramatized in the works of science fiction and fantasy so beloved by the chubby ghetto nerd Oscar Wao, the brilliantly realized boy of conscience at the center of this whirlwind tale. Writing in a combustible mix of slang and lyricism, Díaz loops back and forth in time and place, generating sly and lascivious humor in counterpoint to tyranny and sorrow. And his characters Oscar, the hopeless romantic; Lola, his no-nonsense sister; their heartbroken mother; and the irresistible homeboy narrator cling to life with the magical strength of superheroes, yet how vibrantly human they are. Propelled by compassion, Díaz's novel is intrepid and radiant."--"Seaman, Donna" Copyright 2007 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.

 

Powered by: YouSeeMore © The Library Corporation (TLC) Catalog Home Top of Page