Saturday, September 26, 2020 OPINION East Oregonian A5 Library staff suggest good reads for everyone ERIN MCCUSKER LIBRARIES PROVIDE — COUNT Y WIDE N eed a book to read? Area library directors and staff have suggestions for all. Even though libraries have been closed or offering limited services during the pan- demic, they are still getting new books and checking them out to library customers at curbside. Whether you love mystery, fan- tasy, nonfiction or romance, your library has something for everyone’s tastes. One of the services a library provides is called readers’ advisory. According to Diana Tixier Herald, readers’ advisory is, “the act of putting people together with the books they love.” There is nothing better than sinking into a book that takes you away to a wonderful place, familiar or a whole new experience. The staff at your libraries get to know a variety of books and audiobooks for all ages. Read on for suggestions from them. “The Bright Lands” by John Fram, suggested by Kristin Williams of the Ath- ena Public Library. This book has charac- ters that are simultaneously sympathetic and repellent, a setting that glistens with Texas heat, and football — that fall tradi- tion we’re all missing. It’s gritty and har- rowing, sometimes confusing but definitely holds your attention right to the bloody, collection of essays will find the reader laughing one moment and wiping away a tear the next. Each piece is a gem. “Germs vs Soap” by Didi Dragon, suggested by Annette Kubishta of the Helix Public Library. Released in June 2020, this book is timely and helps adults explain to children the importance of handwashing. In its fun format it teaches how germs absolutely do not like soap and “THERE IS NOTHING BETTER THAN SINKING INTO A BOOK THAT TAKES YOU AWAY TO A WONDERFUL PLACE, FAMILIAR OR A WHOLE NEW EXPERIENCE.” disturbing finale. This book is Friday Night Lights, but with murder. Want more after you finish this one? Try “Valentine” by Elizabeth Wetmore. “One Long River of Song” by Brian Doyle, suggested by Kathleen Schmidtgall of Weston Public Library. The late Brian Doyle possessed an amazing talent for cap- turing the human condition in a way that has the reader nodding in agreement. This how kids can make sure the germs don’t spread. “Midnight Sun” by Stephenie Meyer, suggested by Cecili Longhorn of the Stan- field Public Library. If you want a whole new look at “The Twilight Saga” series, check out “Midnight Sun” — you will get a great glimpse of the story from Edward’s point of view. My favorite thing about this book is that you get to hear more about his family and where they came from. You must check it out! “The Witch Elm” by Tana French, suggested by Jennifer Costley of the Pend- leton Public Library. The last mystery to be released by the “Dublin Murders” author, “The Witch Elm” is unpredictable, disturbing and uncomfortable. When you close the book, you’ll wonder if you regret reading it, and then stay up all night think- ing about whether or not it should have ended differently. “From Blood and Ash” by Jennifer L. Armentrout, suggested by Susie Sotelo of the Umatilla Public Library. Vampires, werewolves, deities, oh my! Captivating, steamy and action-packed, From “Blood and Ash” is a perfect introduction to Sci-Fi/fantasy/romance. You won’t be able to put it down! For contact information for the 12 pub- lic libraries in Umatilla County, visit www. ucsld.org/our-libraries. ——— Erin McCusker is the district director of the Umatilla County Special Library Dis- trict. Reach her at 541-276-6449 or direc- tor@ucsld.org. One practical option to minimize destructive wildfires WES MELO OTHER VIEWS e are in the heart of wildfire sea- son and daily news reports sum- marize destructive wildfires throughout the western states. Many of us who are not personally affected by an evacuation, or worse, the loss of one’s home, are living with the health hazard of breathing smoke day after day. Most western lands are “fire prone” and in many circumstances have become heav- ily overgrown since fire suppression over many decades has interrupted fire’s natural action of reducing fuels. Fire is a natural disturbance that occurs in most wildlands of the West and has influenced plants and animals for millen- nium, long before man came on the scene. Think through how fire occurred in nature W before human intervention. Science con- firms combustion requires heat, oxygen and fuel, and requires a source of ignition. Once fire ignites, natural conditions such as temperature, humidity, wind, terrain, as well as fuel conditions and volume, influ- ence fire behavior. Burning will continue until a change in one or more of those factors interrupts the combustion process. Wind — even minor breezes — and thermals from fire can carry embers long distances, depositing them on additional combustible material and extending the burn. Fire usually stops when it burns into areas without enough fuel to support combustion, fuels get wet from precipitation, and/or external tem- peratures will no longer support fire. Significant changes to ecosystems occur when human activity interrupts natural cycles, including wildfire, enabling sub- stantial fuels to accumulate before ignition. Fire exclusion has led to major changes from historical wildland ecologies in many wildlands of the west. If we hope to reduce the damages currently occurring from cat- astrophic wildfires, active management of fire-prone wildlands is critical to mimic the outcome of natural, low intensity fire activity. Natural fire ignition occurs mostly through lightning strikes igniting combus- tible materials. Studies indicate that before humans intervened, wildland fires gener- ally reoccurred between five to 50 years in most fire-prone wildlands, significantly minimizing major fuel buildup while less- ening damage to fire resistant vegeta- tion. Unlike past centuries, human activ- ity is now a major source of wildland fire ignition. Where there is heavy fuel buildup, once ignition occurs (regardless of the source) wildfires can be devastating, resulting in wildlife death, harming water quality, damaging soils, destroying fire resistant species and creating severe smoke con- ditions that are especially dangerous for humans with respiratory conditions. Wild- fires also endanger the safety and lives of firefighters and civilians, and in the past several years, have destroyed thousands of homes. Many recent fires in California were reportedly mostly caused by multiple lightning storms and are an example of what happens when excessive fuels and weather conditions create severe wildfire conditions. Since humans interrupted the natural cleansing process of wildfires, it is time for proactive wildland management to aggres- sively focus work on controlling fuels to minimize further severe destructive fire behavior. Fuels management must focus on thinning, prescribed burning and in some cases understory removal, mowing or mulching to reduce fuel loads. Given the scientific understanding of combustion, that is really the only practi- cal option we have if we hope to minimize destructive wildfires. ——— Wes Melo is the vice-chairman of Com- munities for Healthy Forests, a nonprofit founded in Roseburg to inform the pub- lic and policy makers with facts support- ing the need to restore and manage forest lands. He is a 1966 graduate of the Uni- versity of California-Berkeley with a bach- elors of science degree in forestry. Elephants, birds – and a really big tiger stupendous sustained roar, then turned and with a bound or two and a soaring leap, dis- appeared into the bush. DR. ANDREW I imagine that driver could have smelled CLARK a fresh breakfast of spotted deer on that A SLICE OF LIFE tiger’s breath. I’d read about tiger roars and I’ve heard lots of lion roars, but I had no ave you ever had an adventure idea that any animal was capable of such a with a wild tiger? A really close sound. It was paralyzing. Having vented his adventure? frustration, the tiger was nowhere to be seen The last column was about birdwatch- again. The Gypsy came tearing up beside us ing on elephant back and this column is a with everyone talking at once, and I’m sure continuation. this episode will become family legends for The next morning we were out for all of us. another birding/tigering adventure in a This all took less than 10 seconds, and Maruti Gypsy pickup, the Indian heir to the not one of the humans involved reacted at Suzuki Samurai — a small, light four-wheel all. We were transfixed and dumbstruck. drive. You stand in the The immediate was rivet- with everyone immo- open back section hold- “I IMAGINE THAT ing, bilized and absolutely ing extended rollbars with silent in the shock of what nice views all around. The DRIVER COULD was happening. The after- drivers are very savvy HAVE SMELLED A math was a combination about tigers and we soon stunning and hilarious. found fresh pugmarks in FRESH BREAKFAST of The potential could have the dust so we followed those tracks. OF SPOTTED DEER been disastrous beyond Bingo! A full-adult imagination had that tiger ON THAT TIGER’S jumped into the vehicle male tiger sauntering along the dusty road, on top of all those women, BREATH.” going home after the men, and children. night’s hunt. What an When we were living utterly magnificent animal and much bigger in East Africa Serengeti country there was than I had imagined — an adult male Ben- a tale about a leopard who became tired of gal Tiger can weigh more than 600 pounds. all the attention during his nap time so he He left the road to walk through the open dropped from his tree branch through the forest, so we drove alongside and watched open roof hatch into a vehicle of tourists and him for about one-quarter mile until he expressed his irritation, leaving them with crossed the road in front of us and went into a lot of scratches, bites, blood, excitement, some thick lantana bushes. and memories. Had the tiger done the same And here is where the real adventure it would have been much more serious, see- ing as a tiger is nearly five times the size of begins. Shortly after that point was another a leopard and, in their normal hunting strat- egies, one strike of a forefoot breaks the Maruti Gypsy that had run out of fuel, so necks of their prey. They are tremendously all the people had transferred into a third strong. Gypsy — about 12 men, women and chil- dren stood in the back of that little open After this episode we spent five days in vehicle, excited to see a tiger. We knew the steep, rugged hill country of northern exactly where one was, so we turned around India, birdwatching. The birds were exotic and led them to that enormous, beautiful, and wonderful, the air was pure and sweet wonderful beast lying in the lantana brush and a pleasure to breathe — like Eastern only about 20 to 30 feet from the road. We Oregon — and from a high ridge we had gestured that the tiger was right there, and horizon-to-horizon views of the Himalayas moved forward 20 to 30 yards so they could to the northeast. Wonderous views of that come up and see him. immense, beautiful, and utterly terrifying I had no idea how athletic tigers are. As range of jagged, forbidding mountains. those people stood there in that little open And then we returned to Delhi for our vehicle, totally exposed, suddenly that enor- son’s wonderful and joyous Hindu wedding. mous tiger burst out of the brush with a ——— snarl, charged the vehicle in a couple of Dr. Andrew Clark is a livestock vet- erinarian with both domestic and inter- bounds to about 4 feet away, stood glaring national work experience who lives in the driver straight in the eye — their faces Pendleton. only a few feet from each other — gave a H Special section highlights hometown sports ANDREW CUTLER FROM THE EDITOR’S DESK P rep sports is about as American as you can get. For the last two seasons — spring and autumn — area high school athletes have been blockaded from participat- ing in any kind of extracurricular activity because of the COVID-19 virus. For a lot of us the virus really hit home when we suddenly realized that those Fri- day night lights, we are so accustomed to, were extinguished. There isn’t that much economic impact to a prep sports blackout — there are no million-dollar contracts at stake — but the loss of high school and college sports is felt in a different, and I believe, more poi- gnant way regarding our overall morale. Spring means for many track and field, golf, baseball and softball. Autumn trans- lates into football, soccer, cross country and volleyball. Those sports are part of the normal fabric of our lives, as intricate as social media or an iPhone. Now, all of that has been put on hold and shuffled around. In the Oregon School Activities Asso- ciation’s recently adopted school activi- ties calendar, all official sports seasons for the winter, fall and spring (in that order) have been moved to 2021 — from January through June — and condensed into sev- en-week regular seasons, with a “culmi- nating week” to follow the purely regional competition. With no high school sports to focus on for a while, we wanted to do something to put it back in the spotlight. Next week, we will publish a special section called “Sidelined.” The section focuses on high school athletes and how they are coping with the unique — to say the least — high school sports seasons that evaporated. I believe “Sidelined” presents a precise review of how deep the COVID-19 virus has hurt communities across the county, state and nation. The virus, really, has just about touched every part of our lives in one way or another. A year ago, a shut- tered high school or college sports season would have seemed the stuff of science fic- tion. But here we are. I believe “Sidelined” is a great way to look at a different aspect of the damage of the virus. A lot of sports fans take those Friday night lights for granted. We’ve grown accustomed to them. To see them go dark suddenly is a shock. Yet, it can be no less of a shock for the hundreds of high school athletes out there who have had things turned upside down. Sports in small towns across the county and Eastern Oregon take their hometown sports seriously. So, do we. That’s why I think “Sidelined” will be a great read. I hope you do too. ——— Andrew Cutler is the publisher/editor of the East Oregonian.