Persepolis Rising by James S.A. Corey

Persepolis Rising by James S.A. Corey

Introduction

Persepolis Rising by James S.A. Corey is the seventh book of The Expanse series. This novel happens 30 years after the events described in Babylon’s Ashes, the sixth book in the series. Winston Duarte and his band of former members of the MRCN are back from Laconia after thirty years of studying the protomolecule. They have the advantage of the Earth-Mars Coalition, take Medina Station. They plan to take over the solar system creating an Empire with Duarte as the leader. Can James Holden and his crew from the Rocinante defeat the Empire threatening to take over the 1300 worlds of man?

Summary

Transport Union President Camina Drummer heads the group that supplies all the 1300 worlds. She is usually at Medina Station, but she is near Earth at the transfer L-5 station to dedicate the station’s completion. The Rocinante heads to Medina Station after completing a mission for the Transport Union. The Rocinante crew are James, Naomi, Alex, Amos, Bobby, and Clarisa. They have been together for thirty years on the aging gunship. Holden and Naomi are ready to retire and make Bobbie the captain. After Winston Duarte’s forces capture Medina Station, they appoint Captain Santiago Jilie Singh governor of Medina station. The Rocinante is stranded on Medina Station. Duarte’s forces plan to take over the solar system. The Rocinante’s crew plan to escape Medina Station with the help of former OPA fighters. They want to free as many friendly forces they can.

Recommendation

Persepolis Rising reboots The Expanse by bringing back the Laconians. It appears to be the first book in a trilogy featuring the Laconians as the antagonists. It is a great novel. I liked the transition of the Rocinante’s crew, the conflicted anti-hero Santiago, and the horror of what Duarte is trying to do to himself. The only misstep is in aging the crew thirty years. It didn’t feel right that they hadn’t changed and stayed together all that time. A few jokes about aging didn’t solve that problem. I’m ready to read Tiamat’s Wrath (Book #8). https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/28335698-tiamat-s-wrath

Book #9 remains untitled with an unspecified release date, but I believe that date is in 2020.

Links

This is the link to the Goodreads page of Persepolis Rising by James S.A. Corey.

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/33357930-persepolis-rising

This is the link to my review of Nemesis Games by James S.A. Corey.

This is the link to my review of Babylon’s Ashes by James S.A. Corey.

Babylon’s Ashes by James S. A. Corey

Babylon’s Ashes by James S. A. Corey

Introduction

Babylon’s Ashes by James S. A. Corey is the sixth book of The Expanse series. This novel follows the exciting events detailed in Nemesis Games, the fifth book in the series. A group of belters led by Marco Inaros calls themselves the Free Navy. They have taken Medina Station and have gotten the upper hand on Earth, Mars, and the OPA. Can James Holden and his crew of the Rocinante regain Medina Station and defeat the Free Navy before the Free Navy can keep the 1300 worlds for themselves?

Summary

The Free Navy has taken over Medina Station. Marco Inaros has put Captain Michio Pa in charge of the station while he works on bigger plans. Marco’s son Filip is with Marco on Pallas Station. Filip hopes to prove himself to his father. James Holden’s crew is back together on the Rocinante. James’s crew are Naomi, Alex, Amos, Bobby, and Clarisa. The governments of Earth and Mars send them to Medina Station to stop the Free Navy. The Free Navy is trying to capture the colony ships and closing off the 1300 worlds from the Solar System. Naomi faces a difficult choice. What she decides will affect the fate of The Expanse.

Recommendation

I liked the novel overall and was happy that the author resolved the storylines for Nemesis Games in this novel. The character development of Pa and Filip was satisfying. Checking in with the crew of the Rocinante worked well. I liked how when some scenes were seen from one POV and then from another POV. Marco was a one-note villain, and he ended with a whimper and not a bang. Prax’s story should have been developed more. I’m not sure why there were chapters from the Medina station POV’s since their actions did not affect the plot. The space for chapters on Salis, Jakulski, Vandercaust, and Roberts could have been better used in developing the other plots further. 

I received a copy of this novel from winning a Goodreads giveaway. When I read the novel in March 2018, I posted a review on Goodreads. I’m writing this review because I read Persepolis Rising (Book #7 of The Expanse) and wanted to give Book 6 a full review before I reviewed Book 7.

Links

This is the link to the Goodreads page of Babylon’s Ashes by James S. A. Corey.

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/25877663-babylon-s-ashes

This is the link to my review of Nemesis Games by James S. A. Corey.

Confluence Conference Pittsburgh 2019

Confluence Conference Pittsburgh 2019

Introduction

I attended the Confluence Conference Pittsburgh 2019 on July 27, 2019, and July 28, 2019. They held the conference at 1160 Thorn Run Road Coraopolis, PA in the Sheraton Pittsburgh Airport Hotel. I also attended the conference in 2016, 2017, and 2018. The Parsec organization of Pittsburgh runs the literary science fiction, fantasy, and horror conference. The events included panels, readings, interviews, writing workshops, and filk concerts. I attended five panels, two fiction writing workshops, and the guest of honor presentation.

The link to the Confluence website.

http://parsec-sff.org/confluence/

They held the Confluence Conference Pittsburgh 2019 at the Sheraton Pittsburgh Airport.

Confluence Conference Pittsburgh 2019 Program Guide Cover

Picture of my badge from Confluence Conference Pittsburgh 2019

Summary

Saturday, July 27th at 9 AM

First Pages Writing Workshop with Cat Rambo.

This workshop was by pre-registration only. She instructed us to bring the first 500 words of our novels to the workshop. Cat Rambo took the nine submissions and mixed them up. She read the submissions one at a time. After reading the submission, she commented on what questions she had to the reader from the submission. I submitted the first two pages from my novel, Assassin in New Marl City. Her comments were useful and to the point. Her comments make me think I need to write a new chapter one set before the pages I submitted. I liked hearing what the other people submitted. This workshop clarifies that the first two pages of a novel are critical for making the novel publishable. I’m glad that I attended the workshop.

They held the workshop in the Boardroom with 9 attendees.

Saturday, July 27th at 11 AM

NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts, a lecture by Geoffrey Landis.

The program started as the NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts. It operated from 1998 to 2007 under that name. They submitted proposals about concepts that are anticipated for 40 years in the future. In ten years they submitted 1309 proposals. In 2011 NASA revived the program under its current name, NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts. The process is to first submit a white paper, submit a proposal, and then conduct a Phase I study. About one-third of the projects go on to Phase II.

He detailed four proposals. The Venus land sailor challenge is to create a Venus rover mission. The obstacles are the need for high-temperature electronics and a method of locomotion. A wind-powered turbine is workable. The triton hopper would explore Neptune’s moon, triton, by hopping up to 20 km per day from the pole to the equator of the moon. 120 hops would take two years covering 2400 km. Other options are to use the hopper system on Pluto or Europa. A submarine on Saturn’s moon, Titan, would explore areas not seen from orbit. Kraken Mare is a lake about the size of Lake Superior. They approved a Phase II study called Dragonfly.

Geoffrey Landis wrote an SF novel about a manned mission to Mars.

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1501279.Mars_Crossing

They held the lecture in Ballroom 1 with 42 attendees.

Saturday, July 27th at 2 PM

Beginnings and Endings panel with Cat Rambo, Frederic S, Durbin, and Bob Angell (his pseudonym is R. R. Angell)

The panelists gave advice about writing story beginnings and endings. The first chapter has to leave the reader convinced that the story will go somewhere. All scenes must mean something. There are three levels of editors, development, copy, and proofreader. They are important in different ways. An editor is experienced at finding problems but not fixing them, that’s what you as the writer must do. Successful flash fiction is about one thing. It’s important to orient the reader at the story’s beginning because the reader needs a reason to care about the characters. Show an item in action before you explain it. Weave in something relatable to explain an unknown item. Use cliffhangers, always leave the reader wanting more. Avoid the unsatisfying ending. Tie everything up and don’t miss the aftermath. The panelists all gave sound advice.

They held the panel in Commonwealth East with 43 attendees. (It was a full house, standing room only)

Saturday, July 27th at 3 PM

The Guest of Honor Presentation with Tobias S. Buckell.

He started with a speech about himself. He is from Grenada and is of mixed-race but looks white. Buckell came to the US in 1995. He overcame his ADD and dyslexia to become a published writer. His status as a mixed-race person became real for him when Leonard Nimoy passed away in 2015 because Spock was biracial. He became an SF fan after reading Childhood’s End by Arthur C. Clarke when he was nine.

Buckell read his short story called Toy Planes.

Buckell finished his presentation with a Q and A session.

His most recent novel is the Tangled Lands written with Paolo Bacigalupi.

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/35297399-the-tangled-lands

They held the presentation in Ballroom 1 with 47 attendees.

Saturday, July 27th at 4 PM

Return to the Solar System: Recent SF Set in Our Solar System panel with Geoffrey Landis, Ian Randal Strock, Bill Keith, and Ken Chiacchia.

The panel recommended authors that have set their stories in our solar system. Some are Allen Steele’s novels, the Expanse series by James S. A. Corey, and The Quantum Thief by Hannu Rajaniemi. Others are Mike Flynn’s alternate histories, Thin Air by Richard K. Morgan, and Icehenge by Kim Stanley Robinson. More are Terraforming Earth by Jack Williamson, Kirinyaga by Mike Resnick, and the Proteus series by Charles Sheffield. Many good recommendations, I’ll move a few of these up my Goodreads to-read list.

They held the panel in Commonwealth West with 29 attendees.

Saturday, July 27th at 5 PM

Blue-Collar SF and Fantasy panel with Marie Vibbert, Charles Oberndorf, Eric Leif Davin, and Tamora Pierce.

Stories written from a worker’s POV will be more rooted in reality than wish-fulfillment stories. As the US changes from an industrial to a service economy it will change the nature of the stories told. Some authors who use the blue-collar perspective are Thomas Disch in 334, Alfred Bester in The Stars My Destination, and Mack Reynolds in Black Man’s Burden. Other writers using the theme are China Mieville and Cory Doctorow.

They held the panel in Commonwealth West with 29 attendees.

Saturday, July 28th at 9 AM

Short Story Writing Workshop with Cat Rambo

This workshop was by pre-registration only. The participants submitted a story under 5000 words by June first. She distributed the stories of the other participants on July first. She required the participants to-read each of the stories and make written comments on a copy of the stories. At the workshop, the participants followed the Milford workshop format.

Cat’s Critiquing Guidelines

1. In the session, you will speak up to 3 minutes with your critique; you do not need to use up the entire three minutes, but Cat will ruthlessly cut you off at the three-minute mark.

2. Focus on the big picture items, not typos or nitpicks. Pacing, character, plot, world-building, etc.

3. The author wants to know what worked, what was effective, and that you’d like to see more of as much as they want to know what didn’t work, wasn’t effective, or seems removable.

4. Identifying what’s broken and why will probably be more useful to the author than suggested fixes.

5. You will give the author a copy of the story with your notes on it.

Seven people submitted stories, and we workshopped them in this order.

Kathleen Monin–The Morality Variable

Deborah Stevenson–Cursed Good Luck

Brandon McNulty–Insert

Gene Turchin–Machines

Karen Yun-Lutz–Last Entry

Gary Gillen–Grognard

Richard Lohmeyer–Small, Fragile Things

After the Participants critiqued each story, then Cat Rambo gave her critique. All the stories were great. I think all the stories could be published soon. I appreciate all the comments on my story and I’m glad that I took part in this workshop.

They held the workshop in the Boardroom with 7 attendees.

Saturday, July 28th at 12 PM

The Evolving Short Story Market panel with Mary Soon Lee (prolific short story writer), Scot Noel (publisher of Dream Forge magazine), and Mark Painter (podcast creator).

The three panelists were knowledgeable on the subject and had varied backgrounds. Some good markets for online free magazines are Strange Horizons, Uncanny, and Beneath Ceaseless Skies. Scot Noel publishes a print magazine called Dream Forge. They have recently published the second issue. https://dreamforgemagazine.com/ Magazines have submission guidelines and the writers must follow them precisely to hope to make a sale. The writer must know about the magazine they are sending to so the writer has the best chance to succeed. Social media has changed the writer’s responsibility. Writer’s need a platform. The publisher wants to know how the writer can help the publisher sell the story, like a musician’s responsibility. They suggested getting a 25-year-old mentor, so you can get an insight into how to sell to that age group.

They held the panel in Commonwealth with 15 attendees.

Recommendation – Conclusion

I’m glad I attended the Confluence SF Conference Pittsburgh 2019. My star of the con was Cat Rambo. She conducted both workshops I attended with insightful comments and relevant anecdotes. She also moderated an excellent panel on writing. I attended five panels, two fiction writing workshops, and the guest of honor presentation. My other highlights were the lecture on NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts and the Guest of Honor Presentation. I also attended Confluence in 2016, 2017 and 2018 and plan to return in 2020. They will hold confluence 2020 from July 24 to 26, 2020 with author guest of honor Martha Wells.

Links

Recap for the Confluence SF Conference on July 30 and July 31, 2016, at the Sheraton Pittsburgh Airport Hotel. I attended 15 panels and the U.S.S. Improvise improv sketch comedy routine.

They held the Confluence Conference from August 4 to August 6, 2017, at the Sheraton Pittsburgh Airport Hotel. I attended seven panels, one writing workshop, one author reading, and the guests of honor presentation.

They held the Confluence Conference from July 27, 2018, to July 29, 2018, at the Sheraton Pittsburgh Airport Hotel. I attended two lectures, two panels, one fiction writing seminar, one author reading, and the guest of honor presentation.

Confluence SF Conference Pittsburgh 2018

Confluence SF Conference Pittsburgh 2018

Introduction

I attended the Confluence SF Conference Pittsburgh 2018 on July 28, 2018. They held the conference at 1160 Thorn Run Road Coraopolis, PA in the Sheraton Pittsburgh Airport Hotel. The drive from Cleveland, Ohio was two hours taken in the morning and back in the evening. I also attended the conference in 2016 and 2017. I missed writing this post in 2018, so I am writing it now to prepare for writing my post for the 2019 conference. To write this post, I followed my notes and recollections in writing this post. The Parsec organization of Pittsburgh runs the conference. It is a literary science fiction, fantasy, and horror conference. The events included panels, readings, interviews, writing workshops, and filk concerts. I attended two lectures, two panels, one fiction writing seminar, one author reading, and the guest of honor presentation.

The link to the Confluence website.

http://parsec-sff.org/confluence/

They held the Confluence SF Conference Pittsburgh 2018 at the Sheraton Pittsburgh Airport.

Confluence SF Conference Pittsburgh 2018 Program Guide Cover

Picture of my badge from Confluence SF Conference Pittsburgh 2018

Summary

Saturday, July 28th at 10 AM

AI: The Real Deal, a lecture by Ken Chiacchia.

The presenter explained what they know in the artificial intelligence field and what still needs to be figured out. Machine intelligences do some tasks well, but not other tasks. Steps in the advancement of AI are to identify items in pictures, to identify phrases spoken, to perform written language translations, and to perform speech recognition. Task-specific tasks are current but general tasks are not possible now. Other tasks AI is good at are improving images, predicting severe thunderstorm, and materials discovery for energy applications. A challenge to getting AI right is that bias can lead to large errors. To put AI advancement in SF terms, the Matrix is happening, while Skynet probably won’t.

They held the lecture in Comm0nwealth West with 15 attendees.

Saturday, July 28th at 11 AM

Set the Controls for the Edge of the Sun, a lecture by Geoffrey Landis.

They scheduled the Parker Solar Probe to launch on August 8, 2018. This lecture was about what’s planned and what they hope to learn. The lecturer started as a solar cell designer. He went to the Mars project, then the Venus/Mercury project, and now is examining ways to exploring the sun. The issue with a solar probe is that near the sun the heat is too much. We can fix this with angles solar panels or split panels using mirrors.

The Parker Solar Probe goals are to trace the energy that heats the sun’s corona and accelerates the solar wind. Also, to examine the magnetic fields at the sources of the solar wind. The Parker Solar Probe launched on August 12, 2018. Its mission is to fly by the sun from 2018 to 2025. On October 29, 2018, it became the artificial object that has been the closest to the sun.

Geoffrey Landis’s SF novel about a manned mission to Mars.

They held the lecture in Commonwealth West with 30 attendees.

Saturday, July 28th at 12:30 PM

A Reading by Brenda Clough

She read from a Neo-Victorian novel in progress. The assassination of Czar Alexander was a prominent plot point in this part of the novel. The viewpoints alternated between two characters. It was melodramatic and featured cliffhangers including a rail accident and a hippo stampede. She had planned to read from her Time Travel Trilogy Edge to Center due to be released in 2019 but her iPad wouldn’t cooperate.

The River Twice is the first novel of the Edge to Center Trilogy.

They held the reading in the Equinox room with 10 attendees.

Saturday, July 28th at 1 PM

Fiction Skills Seminar given by Frederic S. Durbin.

The essential writing skills are action, description, dialogue, and point of view. The seminar covered three skills by using prompts given randomly on slips of paper. He gave us five minutes to write and volunteers read their responses. Critiques followed. I will detail those prompts and my response to them.

My Action Prompt was soldiers in combat. I wrote: The sweat dripped through my eyebrow but I could not flinch. It stung my eye and I bit my lip. The enemy was near, A snap of a twig signaled my reaction. I threw off the leaf blanket and jumped into the clearing. I read this response.

My Description Prompt was a teenager at their first job. I wrote: Burnt chicken odor filled the air. I walked behind the counter into another world. The cook’s knife was flying as he sliced the meat and filled the tin. My manager pointed at the counter. The band on my hat was tight and the new tee-shirt was dry. A tray of green peppers lay on the counter. That was my job.

My Dialogue Prompt was an abandoned house. I wrote:

“Quiet, Jerry, I think the house is abandoned but I’m not sure.”

“Don’t be afraid. We can get in and out before anyone sees us.”

“This is a crazy idea.”

“Come on. I picked the lock. Let’s go in.”

It was fun seeing what I would come up with under time pressure. I’m glad I took part in this seminar.

They held the seminar in the Board Room with 12 attendees.

Saturday, July 28th at 2 PM

Private Enterprise in Space panel with Ian Randal Strock, Kenneth B. Chiacchia, Lawrence Connolly, Herb Kauderer, and Mark Painter

The panel was about business in space. What happens after Musk, Bezos, and Branson pave the way? We should sell business in space as something exciting. The issue is balancing short term profit versus long term benefit. There must be many draws to make it work in space. This was a panel of skeptics because big projects need big reasons and it’s not clear what those are yet.

They held the panel in the Solstice Room with 20 attendees.

Saturday, July 28th at 3 PM

The Guest of Honor Presentation with Catherynne M. Valente

She read from her recent novel, Space Opera. It was a chapter from the beginning of her novel with the point of view character named Decibel Jones is chosen to perform in an intergalactic singing contest. After the reading, she said that the pitch for the novel was to write a novel depicting Eurovision in space. She had fun with have the galaxy like Earth acts that most current people dislike such as Yoko Ono. Sounded like a fun book. It’s a nominee for the biggest SF awards for 2018.

They have held the Eurovision song contest every year since 1956. One act from each country enters the contest and votes cast determines the winner where the voters cannot vote for their own country’s entrant.

https://eurovision.tv/

They held the presentation in Ballroom 1 with 70 attendees.

Saturday, July 28th at 5 PM

Integrating Character, Plot, and Worldbuilding lecture by David Levine.

He showed his process for developing characters, plot, and worldbuilding simultaneously and cohesively. His analogy of the interrelation of the three parts is a plant. A plant must have roots (setting), a stem (plot), and leaves (character). The writer’s superpower is revision. Make the story internally consistent. A story has seven points which the author must answer. A person in a situation with a problem tries to overcome it but continues to fail (through three to five-try/fail cycles) until the character succeeds (resolution) and is rewarded (proving it was worth attempting the problem). So, fill in those blanks to have a successful story.

The lecturer had a handout asking questions an author should ask when creating a story. The three main questions asked when thinking about the interrelationship between the three aspects of story writing.

World to Character. What do they want and why can’t they get it?

World to Plot. What changes can you make in the magic or the tech to make characters’ jobs easier or harder?

Character to Plot. How does the story end?

They held the panel in the Solstice Room with 20 attendees.

Recommendation – Conclusion

I enjoyed attending the Confluence SF Conference Pittsburgh 2018. My star of the con was Catherynne M. Valente. She was engaging with her reading of Space Opera and Q and A after her reading. I added her novel to my Goodreads to-read list. I attended two lectures, two panels, one fiction writing seminar, one author reading, and the guest of honor presentation. My other highlights were the fiction writing seminar and the Integrating Character, Plot, and Worldbuilding lecture. I also attended Confluence in 2016, 2017 and 2019 and plan to return in 2020. They will hold Confluence 2020 from July 24 to 26, 2020 with author guest of honor Martha Wells.

Links

Recap for the Confluence SF Conference on July 30 and July 31, 2016, at the Sheraton Pittsburgh Airport Hotel. I attended 15 panels and the U.S.S. Improvise improv sketch comedy routine.

They held the Confluence Conference from August 4 to August 6, 2017, at the Sheraton Pittsburgh Airport Hotel. I attended seven panels, one writing workshop, one author reading, and the guests of honor presentation.

Writing Progress Report for August 2019

This is my Writing Progress Report for August 2019.

I attended the Confluence Conference from July 26 to July 28, 2019, at the Airport Sheraton in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

Writing Progress from July 2019

I wrote three blog posts for garydavidgillen.com including my writing progress report for July 2019 linked below.

I bought and used the editing program Pro Writing Aid to edit the novel, Assassin in New Marl City. I edited and typed Assassin Chapters 30, 32, and 33 in August 2018, reviewed Chapters 34, 35, and 36 on September 2018, and I completed the review in February 2019. Reduced total chapters to 30. Reviewed Chapters 1 to 16 using Pro Writing Aid and submitted to my novel-writing class.

I completed the first draft of Assassin in New Marl City totaling 99,981 words in July 2018. Completed pre-draft two (30 chapters long) in December 2018 at 89,072 words. I completed draft two edits for Chapters 22, 23, and 24 in July and will start the third draft edits after draft two is complete.

In July, I submitted a story called All Potions Sold Greenhouse to the Introductory Writing Workshop at Parma, Ohio library.

In July, I submitted a story called White Bracer to the Intermediate Writing Workshop at South Euclid-Lyndhurst, Ohio library.

In May, I edited and submitted the short story Grognard to the Confluence Short Story Writing Workshop. Cat Rambo conducted the workshop at the Science Fiction Convention named Confluence in Pittsburgh on Sunday, July 28.

The stories: I submitted The Four Humors, Space Station Sunyata, Grognard, Get to the Point, LARP Film noir, and Sleeping Sickness to magazines.

Statistics of magazine submissions for 2019 are; 1 different story submitted 1 time with 0 accepted, 0 pending, and 1 rejection.

Events from July 2019

I attended the Confluence Conference from July 26 to July 28, 2019, at the Airport Sheraton in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. I took part in two workshops at the conference both instructed by Cat Rambo. I attended the first pages workshop and the short story workshop.

Link to Confluence website

http://parsec-sff.org/confluence/

Writing Goals for August 2019

I plan to write five blog posts for garydavidgillen.com including my Writing Progress Report for August 2019.

I plan to work on second draft edits for Chapters 21 and 25 to 30 of Assassin in New Marl City using Pro Writing Aid.

After the second draft is complete, I plan to work on third draft edits for Chapters 1 to 16 of Assassin in New Marl City using comments from the Advanced Writing Workshop at Parma, Ohio. I started the third draft edit for Chapter One used at the first pages workshop at Confluence 2019.

Polish and submit the stories Caliburnus, Space-Dog Confession, White Bracer, Mage Squad, I Shall Not Return, Prisoner of Tarnal, and Kay-Eye for submission to short fiction magazines.

Submit The Four Humors, Space Station Sunyata, Grognard, LARP Film noir, and Sleeping Sickness to other short fiction magazines.

Edit Searcher of Riven.

Hire an editor for Searcher of Riven from Fiveer.

Edit Ruins of Yarnud.

Hire an editor for Ruins of Yarnud from Fiveer.

Put the novel, Assassin in New Marl City, into the writing program, Scrivener.

Buy e-book covers for Searcher of Riven and Ruins of Yarnud from Fiveer.

Buy an e-book cover for Assassin in New Marl City from Fiveer.

Planned Events for August 2019

The next conference I plan to attend is the Indy Writer’s Conference in Parma, Ohio on October 12, 2019, sponsored by the Cuyahoga County Library.

Link to Cuyahoga County Library website

https://www.cuyahogalibrary.org/