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One for the Books: In honor of April Fools' Day, why not pick up a ‘punny' book from a Naperville library?

One for the Books: In honor of April Fools' Day, why not pick up a ‘punny' book from a Naperville library?

Chicago Tribune28-03-2025

Book it to a Naperville Public Library and get ready for some pun with a punny title! In honor of April Fools' Day, we're highlighting this Amazing Book Challenge category that encourages you to choose a title featuring a clever play on words or a witty twist on a popular phrase.
From a town that's constantly banning letters of the alphabet to a talking cat with nine lives, you can be sure of one thing with each title in this collection — it's pun intended.
To see the full list of recommendations and to check out the other categories, visit www.naperville-lib.org/ABC.
'Ella Minnow Pea' by Mark Dunn
Ella Minnow Pea lives on the island of Nollop, named after Nevin Nollop, author of the famous pangram, 'The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.' When the island's council bans letters from the alphabet as they fall from a statue of Nollop, Ella must act to save her community from growing totalitarianism. As letters vanish, they also disappear from the novel.
'Heart and Seoul' by Jen Frederick
Hara Wilson, a Korean adoptee, has always felt different from her white parents. At 25, she thought she had accepted it, but after her father's sudden death, a comment at his funeral sparks an identity crisis. She travels to Seoul in search of her roots, where she encounters a mysterious stranger, new family ties and a forbidden love that could either bring her home or tear everything apart.
'Home Is Where the Bodies Are' by Jeneva Rose
After their mother's death, three estranged siblings — Beth, Nicole and Michael — reunite to settle her estate. While sorting through belongings, they find home videos that reveal a chilling memory from 1999: their father, covered in blood, and a dead body. As they uncover their parents' dark secret, the siblings must decide whether to confront the truth or leave the past buried.
''Til Heist Do Us Part' by Sara Desai
A year after pulling off a high-wire diamond heist, Simi Chopra and her crew are back to struggling with bills. When a Mafia boss demands the return of the jewels plus interest, they must reunite to track them down. But the necklace is in the hands of a vengeful nemesis, forcing Simi to work her con to get it back. As she navigates a billionaire's mansion, a rival thief and a determined detective, Simi risks ending up in serious trouble.
'Fool Moon' by Jim Butcher
Harry Dresden, Chicago's only professional wizard, has been struggling to find work — magical or mundane — until a brutal murder brings him back into action. A mutilated corpse, strange animal markings and the murder occurring on the night of a full moon point to one thing: a werewolf stalking the city. With his supernatural expertise, Harry must navigate Chicago's dark underbelly to stop the killer before more victims are claimed, all while dealing with the dangerous creatures and forces that lurk in the shadows.
'Cat Out of Hell' by Lynne Truss
Alec Charlesworth, a grieving librarian who's lost his job and wife, discovers a file of interviews between a man named 'Wiggy' and a cat named Roger. To his shock, Roger speaks — and Alec learns that much of what we fear about cats is true: they think they're smarter than humans and they have nine lives. Roger, ancient and wise, reveals a dark history that may connect to the death of Alec's wife and other local tragedies. But can Alec trust the cat, or is Roger part of the dark forces at play?
'The Pun Also Rises' by John Pollack
A former world pun champion's funny, erudite and provocative exploration of puns, the people who make them and this derided wordplay's remarkable impact on history.
'Uganda Be Kidding Me' by Chelsea Handler
Chelsea Handler takes readers on a wild, hilarious ride through her travel misadventures. Whether she's fumbling through a safari in Africa, getting into trouble in the Bahamas or escaping a German hospital on crutches, Chelsea's sharp wit and outrageous humor make every journey unforgettable. With stories of family chaos, missteps and her devoted dog Chunk, Chelsea hilariously tackles the world's most absurd travel situations.
'The Ride of A Lifetime' by Robert Iger
Robert Iger reflects on his journey as CEO of Disney, where he led the company through a transformative period by prioritizing quality, embracing technology and expanding globally. Under his leadership, Disney became the world's largest media company, acquiring Pixar, Marvel, Lucasfilm and 21st Century Fox. Iger shares the leadership principles that guided his success and highlights the importance of curiosity, thoughtfulness and a decency-first approach in shaping his decisions and Disney's growth.

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Hollywood and Obama should be judged for covering up Joe Biden's frailty
Hollywood and Obama should be judged for covering up Joe Biden's frailty

New York Post

time2 hours ago

  • New York Post

Hollywood and Obama should be judged for covering up Joe Biden's frailty

One year ago this month, attendees packed the 7,100 seats inside the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles to watch a parade of A-list celebrities — George Clooney! Julia Roberts! Barbra Streisand! — unite in a common goal: to raise more money for President Biden's re-election campaign than had ever before been tallied for a single fundraising event. By that standard the evening was a smashing success: Over $30 million, a record, was raised. 6 George Clooney, Joe Biden, Julia Roberts and Barack Obama at the Los Angeles fundraiser last June 15th, the beginning of the end of the wide-scale cover-up of Biden's inability to maintain his presidential campaign. X/Chris Jackson 'How important the event was to his re-election bid could be seen,' the Associated Press reported, 'in Biden's decision to fly through the night across nine time zones, from the G7 summit in southern Italy to Southern California, to attend.' Advertisement Nothing was left to chance. Outside the Peacock, riot police ringed the Gaza protesters; inside, the biggest weapon was rolled out. Former President Barack Obama appeared onstage with his old No. 2, the pair of presidents interviewed by the ABC late-night host Jimmy Kimmel. Their recurring theme: A second Trump presidency would ruin America. Obama called the current moment 'a by-product of 2016,' when, he said, 'a whole bunch of folks . . . sat out . . . Hopefully, we have learned our lesson, because these elections matter.' When Roe v. Wade came up, and the audience hissed, Obama scolded them: 'Don't hiss; vote.' 6 Within weeks of the event at the Peacock Theater, Biden would bow out of the campaign, which passed onto Vice President Kamala Harris. AP Still sharp, still charming, the familiar smile still beguiling, the forty-fourth president deployed all his gifts to urge the high rollers at the Peacock — and by extension, all Americans — to support Biden with money and votes: the most precious commodities a civic-minded American can be asked to invest. Advertisement The only problem was: Biden. At the event's end, as he and Obama waved goodbye with Kimmel, the incumbent became catatonic, just as he had five days earlier, at a Juneteenth concert at the White House. His whole body froze, as if immobilized by a science-fiction ray-gun. Obama had to guide his friend, gently but firmly, off the stage. As the Washington Post later reported, the commander-in-chief, keeper of the nuclear option, appeared 'slow . . . frail.' 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Korean American artist reflects on her parents' immigrant experience in Tustin gallery exhibit
Korean American artist reflects on her parents' immigrant experience in Tustin gallery exhibit

Los Angeles Times

time12 hours ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Korean American artist reflects on her parents' immigrant experience in Tustin gallery exhibit

When Korean American artist Wendy Park was growing up in Southern California in the 1980s and '90s, the Compton Fashion Center swap meet was her playground. 'I grew up with immigrant parents from Korea and we worked in the swap meets all over L.A. We did Norwalk, Palmdale, Paramount and Compton was a place that I remember vividly,' said Park. 'I remember it being such a beautiful, colorful place.' Park's early life at the swap meet and her parents' immigrant experience are at the center of her third solo exhibition at Various Small Fires OC gallery in Tustin. Titled 'Of Our Own,' Park's paintings explore artifacts and rituals of daily life as an immigrant and the objects that can connect a current home to one left behind. In the exhibition, the large doubled paneled work, ''90s Compton Swap Meet' captures an uncharacteristically quiet moment at the swap meet, void of both customers and vendors. A carousel of sunglasses for sale with hand mirrors tied to the display sits along side a jungle of plants, some hanging and others potted in plastic pink swans. A broom, trash bag and metal hand truck lean against the brick wall, evidence of the work being done, next to a stall that sells baby strollers and battery-operated toy puppies that bark and flip. 'My mom was telling me how this really was a place of community,' said Park. 'It used to be a Sears building and a Korean man bought it and made all these little stalls and inside there were more kiosks and stalls. It was a place where Korean immigrants who don't have access to starting a business could come and work.' Swap meets themselves tend to be place of community for immigrant populations. They are places where they hear their own language spoken and purchase products and ingredients specific to their needs. 'This is painted from a woman's perspective of that era,' Park said of the work. 'It was a place of opportunity for Korean immigrants.' The subject matter is an incredibly timely one, given the countless raids made by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement across the nation in recent weeks with immigrant marketplaces and hubs like Santa Fe Springs Swap Meet, MacArthur Park and downtown Santa Ana targeted locally. 'Immigrants are the most hardworking people. They leave their families, they leave everything they know to come and start a new life. It is tragic that they finally get here, overcome their struggles and maybe live a good life and then get taken away,' Park said about the current climate. 'It is heartbreaking to see. It is an unfair situation and done poorly.' Park received a BFA from Otis College of Art & Design and spent 13 years in Disney animation. The bright colors that inform her work draw on that experience while also reflecting her point of view as a child, how colorful and alive the world seemed to her then. She references both American pop and Korean folk art in her work and makes newspaper kiosks, coin laundry carts and pots of Tiger Balm worthy of investigation. In 'Charms Cash' wads of dollar bills are tightly rubber-banded and stored in a can used to hold hard candy. 'It's really difficult for immigrants to trust the banking systems,' said Park. 'They are afraid of how much information they have to give or what might happen. My parents would hide money in the house or store it at the swap meet in candy containers like this.' Park's father sold plants at the swap meet and she got in the habit of hiding things in the plastic swan pots popular in the era, which are present in 'Go Swan' alongside an open can of beer and lit cigarette over a Korean board game. Some pieces are also historic documentation of sites that might otherwise be lost to fleeting memory. 'Western and 5th' depicts Korean market signage that no longer exists, but Park recalled visiting the center as child with her grandmother and aunts. The memory was unearthed with the help of an old photo of the 1992 L.A. riots. The concept for the '90's Compton Swap Meet' piece is an idea Park said she has carried in her mind for a while and its completion was made possible partly by oral history shared by her mother. When the two of them couldn't agree on the coloring of the building facade of the Compton swap meet, Park used a hip hop music video for reference. 'My mom members it as a brick-colored storefront but I was telling her I remember it like a rainbow,' said Park. 'I was watching a Tupac music video and it showed it with these colors in it.' Her memories helped Park piece together a more accurate representation of the place she and her family spent long days. Hours at the swap meet were so demanding in fact, that the family often couldn't get to church on Sundays. 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Park said now is the time immigrant families like need their community more than ever. 'The biggest thing is empathy; have an open heart and protect those who need it right now,' said Park. 'A lot of people are afraid to go out and get groceries, or do simple things.' Wendy Park's solo exhibition 'Of Our Own' is on view through July 19 at VSF OC, 119 N. Prospect Ave., Tustin. The gallery is open to the public Wednesday through Saturday, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

All the ‘Abbott Elementary' Season 4 Emmy predictions, including those ‘Sunny' guest stars
All the ‘Abbott Elementary' Season 4 Emmy predictions, including those ‘Sunny' guest stars

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

All the ‘Abbott Elementary' Season 4 Emmy predictions, including those ‘Sunny' guest stars

Abbott Elementary Season 4 has received straight A's from TV critics, earning a 100 percent on Rotten Tomatoes. But will that perfect score translate to the 2025 Emmys? To date, ABC's school-set mockumentary has been nominated for 24 Emmys and won four: Best Comedy Actress for Quinta Brunson as Janine Teagues (2023), Best Comedy Supporting Actress for Sheryl Lee Ralph as Barbara Howard (2022), Best Comedy Writing for Brunson for the pilot (2022), and Best Comedy Casting (2022). It's still waiting on that coveted victory for Best Comedy Series, for which it has been nominated for each of its first three seasons. Let's take a look at Abbott's strongest Emmy chances for Season 4, category by category. More from GoldDerby Ryan Murphy and the JFK Jr.-Carolyn Bessette controversy, explained: Why 'American Love Story' Instagram post got so much hate Everything to know about 'The Pitt' Season 2 'The Daily Show' leads Best Talk Series Emmy odds amid outrage over the low number of available slots As usual, there will be eight slots for this series race, and Abbott Elementary is sitting pretty in fifth place. (Hacks, The Studio, Only Murders in the Building, and The Bear are above it.) The fact that Abbott is one of the funniest shows in contention should work in its benefit, especially given the backlash that a certain kitchen dramedy has received over the years. It's a comedy category, after all. However, Abbott has something going against it that may not be recoverable: it airs on broadcast. Emmy voters have notoriously shunned the Big Four networks (ABC, CBS, Fox, NBC) in recent years, and instead have embraced shiny new streamers and reliable pay-cable channels. It has been more than a decade since ABC's Modern Family completed its five-year comedy series streak in 2014, and Fox's 24 was the last drama series to prevail, way back in 2006. Gilbert Flores/Variety via Getty Images Quinta Brunson won this award in 2023, the year that Hacks was on hiatus. That's important to note because the other two times she was nominated for Best Comedy Actress, in 2022 and 2024, she was beaten by Hacks star Jean Smart. Smart is back again this year and is Gold Derby's frontrunner to prevail, while Ayo Edebiri (The Bear) sits in second place, and Brunson rounds out the top three. There will only be five slots in this category, due to a lower-than-usual number of submissions. One of the throughlines of Season 4 was the romantic relationship between Janine and Tyler James Williams' Gregory Eddie, but it never came at the expense of other characters. "Quinta never wanted this to be the Gregory and Janine show," co-showrunner and executive producer Justin Halpern told Gold Derby "She wanted that to be, certainly, a storyline in it, and maybe it's even a reason why some people are watching it, but it wasn't the center that the show rotated around." Gold Derby predicts that Sheryl Lee Ralph and Janelle James (Ava Coleman) will reap nominations for the fourth time in a row, as they both rank within the seven expected nomination slots. A third supporting actress, Lisa Ann Walter (Melissa Schemmenti), is in 30th place. Ralph surprisingly won this category in 2022, despite the potential vote-split from her costar, and memorably sang "Endangered Species" during her acceptance speech. Her storylines in Season 4 included putting on a Christmas pageant, teaching Charlie Day's It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia character how to read, and stressing out about growing old. As for James, Season 4 was undeniably "the season of Ava," co-showrunner and executive producer Patrick Schumacker told Gold Derby. The feisty principal fell on the sword for the rest of the school following an audit, and was fired from her position. "They kind of threw everything at me this season and I feel like I delivered," the actress proudly told us. In addition, Ava experienced a mature romance with IT guy O'Shon (Matthew Law), and reunited with her estranged father, Frank (Keith David). If voters are watching, James is undoubtedly an Emmy threat in her Best Comedy Supporting Actress category. Tyler James Williams is in fifth place for an Emmy nomination, which would be his fourth overall. He won the Golden Globe in 2023 and declared at the podium, "I pray that this is a win for Gregory Eddie [and] that we may understand that his story is just as important as all of the other stories that have to be told." One of the actor's most memorable moments in Season 4 was stepping behind the camera as a director for "The Science Fair" episode. "I'm extremely grateful for the opportunity," Williams told Gold Derby. "There was just something about this show that was different. It feels very close to me, like family." Elsewhere in the Best Comedy Supporting Actor category, Chris Perfetti (Jacob Hill) is in 15th place, and William Stanford Davis (Mr. Johnson) is in 33nd place; both are looking for their first career nominations. As Davis revealed to Gold Derby, "What I really love about [Mr. Johnson] is his mystery. You don't know what he's going to do next, and you don't know what his experiences are. ... He feels like he's the smartest guy there." One opportunity for Abbott Elementary to experience an Emmy boost would be in the guest categories. To date, the only day player to receive a bid was Taraji P. Henson as Vanetta Teagues, Janine's estranged mother, in 2023. Henson was predicted to win, but lost to Judith Light (Poker Face). Disney/Gilles Mingasson Season 4 guest stars in contention for Emmys this year are Keith David as Frank Coleman for "The Science Fair," Talia Shire as Melissa's mother, Teresa Schemmenti, for "Winter Break," plus four It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia cast members for the cross-over "Volunteers" episode: Charlie Day as Charlie, Danny DeVito as Frank, Rob McElhenney as Mac, and Kaitlin Olson as Dee. (Glenn Howerton as Dennis also appeared, but was not submitted for Emmy consideration.) Olson currently enjoys the strongest Emmy odds, in 15th place for Best Comedy Guest Actress, while Day is in 20th place for Best Comedy Guest Actor. Abbott Elementary submitted three directors on this year's Emmy ballot: Jennifer Celotta for "Strike," Jaime Eliezer Karas for "Audit," and Randall Einhorn for "Please Touch Museum," the Season 4 finale. "As directors, all we're ever doing is serving the scripts," Einhorn shared with Gold Derby. He said that the mockumentary comedy has "maintained a consistent style," though he always tries to "find new and interesting ways to tell our story." Einhorn received the only directing nomination so far for Abbott, for "Party" in 2024, which lost to The Bear's "Fishes." The show has received two Emmy nominations for writing, both for Brunson: "Pilot" (which won in 2022) and "Career Day" (which lost to Hacks' "Bulletproof" in 2024). This year, it's only on the ballot once for writing, for the Season 4 premiere, "Back to School," written by — who else? — Brunson. It's a savvy strategy to only submit one episode for contention, so as not to split the vote. Abbott Elementary is a collaborative effort and that's reflected in its Emmy submissions, where artisans are eligible in 10 below-the-line races: casting, cinematography ("Karaoke"), costumes ("Costume Contest"), hairstyling ("100th Day of School"), makeup ("Ava Fest: Tokyo Drift"), music supervision ("Karaoke"), picture editing ("Karaoke" and "Ringworm"), production design ("Karaoke"), sound editing ("Please Touch Museum"), and sound mixing ("Please Touch Museum"). Besides its casting victory in 2002, the comedy has also been nominated for casting in 2023 and 2024, plus hairstyling in 2023 and 2024. There's no reason to think Abbott won't be adding more craft bids to its tally in 2025, particularly after fans and critics agreed that Season 4 schooled the competition. SIGN UP for Gold Derby's free newsletter with latest predictions Best of GoldDerby Everything to know about 'The Pitt' Season 2 Adam Brody, Seth Rogen, Jason Segel, and the best of our Emmy Comedy Actor interviews Kristen Bell, Tina Fey, Bridget Everett, and the best of our Emmy Comedy Actress interviews Click here to read the full article.

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