Third in a series: Inspired by the faculty reading list in our Jan/Feb issue, we’ve come up with our own lists of the books we’re reading this winter. Check back all week long for recommendations from The Penn Stater staff, and use the comment box to tell us what you’re reading.

What I’m Reading Now: Deception Point, by Dan Brown. He’s also the author of The Da Vinci Code, which I have, but haven’t read yet. Deception Point was one of his earlier books.
Book I Can’t Wait to Read: Cross Country, by James Patterson. I just received this book as a Christmas gift from my husband. The earlier books in his Alex Cross series haven’t let me down.
Also in the Queue: The 8th Confession, by James Patterson. This is the eighth book in his Women’s Murder Club series. Again, its predecessors have all been page-turners for me.
Favorite Book Ever: Along Came a Spider, by (you guessed it!) James Patterson. I was physically shaking when I finished this one. Loved, loved, loved this book.
I am a huge fan not only of James Patterson but also Dean Koontz, Mary Higgins Clark, and many others. I love fiction. I wish I had more time to relax with a great book and drift away to another place—if only for a short while.
Barb Marshall, editorial assistant
Coming Thursday: Art director Carole Otypka’s picks.
January 13, 2010 at 12:15 pm

Francisca Halamajowa with daughter Hela
I went to the State Theatre yesterday to see the premiere of No. 4 Street of Our Lady, a documentary made by three filmmakers from Penn State and chronicled in the November/December Penn Stater. What a powerful movie. Barely a dry eye at the end.
It told the story of Francisca Halamajowa, a Polish Catholic who risked her life by hiding 16 of her Jewish neighbors in her home during World War II—one family in a hole under her kitchen floor, and two families in a hayloft in her pigsty.
All this happened while there were Nazi troops camped out by the pigsty. The very shrewd Francisca warned the troops that if they stayed there and the pigsty were hit, well, you can imagine what would happen—so the troops moved a few hundred feet from there, although they remained on her property. Of the Jews harbored by Francisca, 15 survived. They have 100 descendants living today. Herb Maltz, one of the survivors and the father of Penn State filmmaker Judy Maltz, was among the people at the screening. (Today’s Centre Daily Times also has a good article about the screening.)
During a brief Q & A after the show, the question was asked, “Would you do the same?” I believe that without a doubt, I would. If I could help save one or more lives and it cost me my own, it would be well worth it.
Judy Maltz and the other Penn State filmmakers—Barbara Bird and Richie Sherman—plan to release the movie in several languages, including Hebrew, German, French, Spanish, and Ukrainian. Another screening, for middle and high school students, is scheduled for April 22 at Drew University in Madison, N.J.
Barb Marshall, editorial assistant
March 2, 2009 at 9:20 pm