Library Notes
April Everett
March 17, 2013
Bless this [Un]Happy Home
We had watched our share of house-hunting shows on TV. We weren’t like those people, always demanding more space, expecting perfect paint colors, paying more attention to the curtains than the HVAC. No, we weren’t like those people, we were DIYers. We didn’t want a fixer-upper, but we weren’t afraid to get a little dirt under our nails.
When we closed on our house, we got the keys and jumped right in. The furnace wouldn’t cut on, one of the walls upstairs crumbled to the ground with a mere thump, and the bathroom floor turned out to be rotting from water damage. It felt like a scene out of that 80s classic The Money Pit (starring Tom Hanks).
That was almost three years ago, and since then our house has quite marvelously become a very happy home. We have learned so much as we drywalled, sanded, painted, installed p-traps, and replaced flooring. This article is not intended to be a laundry list of laudable improvements we have made; rather, my hope is that it will inspire those of you who may find yourselves with a home that’s more fixer than upper. Spring is only a few short days away and the library has so many wonderful resources to help you patch and perk up your dwelling place:
HOME REPAIR
Help, it's broken! : A Fix-it Bible for the Repair-Impaired by Arianne Cohen is an excellent one-stop shop for anything from fishing your wedding ring out of the sink to installing a garbage disposal. In addition to the many real-life scenarios, Cohen also shares a yearly maintenance guide to help you avoid repairs.
Wiring 101 : 25 Projects You Really Can Do Yourself by Jodie Carter and Plumbing : Basic, Intermediate & Advanced Projects by Merle Henkenius are packed with detailed, step-by-step instructions. Projects are arranged in order of complexity, and the authors steer clear of jargon.
HOME IMPROVEMENT
As a home owner, one of the hardest decisions I have made is paint color. The Art of Exterior Painting : A Step-by-Step Guide to Choosing Colors and Painting your Home by Leslie Harrington and James Martin is an excellent resource for the indecisive painter, with full-color photos and lots of advice on blending in, accenting architecture, and techniques.
Thrifty DIYers will appreciate Budget Makeovers : Give Your Home a New Look edited by Jean Nayar. Kitchen Makeovers for Any Budget by Chris Gleason is full of advice on when and how to refinish cabinets, and details four complete modeling projects.
LAWN & GARDEN
If you’re looking to spruce up your deck or patio, look no further than Deckscaping: Gardening and Landscaping on and Around Your Deck by Barbara W. Ellis. This book gives advice on landscaping and planting techniques as well as furniture choices, water features, and ornaments.
If you’re ready to move off the deck and tackle the yard, the New Complete Home Landscaping by Catriona Tudor Erler is a comprehensive guide to landscape design. Erler explains design elements, offers tips on adding features, and advises readers on what to plant.
UPCOMING PROGRAMS
In addition to our books, DVDs, and databases, the library offers a variety of programming for all ages. This spring, the library will offer a home organizing workshop on Saturday, April 20th, and a home gardening workshop on Monday, April 23rd. Visit the library in-person or online at www.rowanpubliclibrary.org for more details. Best wishes on all your home improvement projects!
Rowan Public Library is headquartered in Salisbury NC, with branches in Rockwell and China Grove. The mission of the Rowan Public Library is to provide to the citizens of Rowan County library materials and services that inform, educate, and entertain; to promote literacy, the enjoyment of reading, and lifelong learning; and to serve as a center for community activities and services.
Sunday, March 17, 2013
Sunday, March 10, 2013
Library Notes
John Tucker
Finding and Mapping your Course-Orienteering
A new craze has taken hold in Charlotte and throughout the south-Orienteering. It is the skill of charting and finding your way by use of a compass and map. This outdoor activity began in 1919 by a Swiss scout leader who believed that the activity was not simply a survival skill, but a fun event for scouts and families. In the year 1961, the International Orienteering Federation was formed and in 1971 the United States Orienteering Federation became a reality. Orienteering has been a long time competition in the Olympics but until recently was only talked about in circles of Boy and Girl Scouts. The Public Library has always been the go-to-resource for finding your way with information and this skill of Orienteering is no different.
The Scout Merit Badge Series; “Orienteering” published by the Boy Scouts of America would be the first resource to investigate. This booklet describes the fun in learning to use a compass and a map. It sounds so basic, but the truth is that explorers like Lewis and Clark, Marco Polo, and Amelia Earhart used these same skills to cross many new horizons. Today, competitions for Orienteers are growing in number at scout camps and merit badge outings, but also local programs for families and teams of friends. This book presents two types of Orienteering, score orienteering and cross country orienteering. The later event is like the television show the Great Race-finding one’s way around the countryside unassisted. After reading this text we might leave the GPS device at home and participate in the skill that will keep us from getting lost in the world.
A second book to investigate is “Maps and Compass: the Complete Orienteering Handbook” written by Bjorn Kjellstrom. Being oriented to one’s surroundings and charting a course through the unknown sounds like a true skill for life. Orienting skills are used by surveyors, engineers, military personal, hunters and fishermen, backpackers, sailors, and camp counselors searching for “lost sheep”, cross-country runners and cyclists who chose their routes as opposed to following a predetermined course. For most of us orienteering skills solely embrace our ability to read a road map in preparation of a family vacation. This text is broken up into user friendly chapters beginning with map reading, compass skills and then the adventure of putting them together in the field.
A third resource to consider is titled “Orienteering: The Skills of the Game” by Carol McNeill. For those who are competitively minded this book will help to refine your skills. From experienced guides to young explorers this book will help you enjoy your time in the field. Skills covered include: aiming off, punch and run, and running on the compass needle. Speed is the main point in this text so that you can increase the odds that your team will come in first place.
Getting oriented is indeed a life skill that enables us to select a course, map out our path, and check our progress along the way. We all look for help when “orienting ourselves” in a new direction such as times of a career change, education or finding a job. We map out our career path and obstacles that might challenge our charted path. As an avid sailor I would not be able to sail the lakes, rivers and waterways of North Carolina unless I had and followed an accurate map. Such maps keep me safe as well as those who travel with me. The same holds true for planes, trains and automobiles. Remember that LIFE happens along the journey and not simply at the end of the road. Our lives are better enriched as we become oriented to our surroundings. This process can begin with a single trip to the public library. We simply need to know which direction we wish to discover. Happy Reading!
John Tucker
Finding and Mapping your Course-Orienteering
A new craze has taken hold in Charlotte and throughout the south-Orienteering. It is the skill of charting and finding your way by use of a compass and map. This outdoor activity began in 1919 by a Swiss scout leader who believed that the activity was not simply a survival skill, but a fun event for scouts and families. In the year 1961, the International Orienteering Federation was formed and in 1971 the United States Orienteering Federation became a reality. Orienteering has been a long time competition in the Olympics but until recently was only talked about in circles of Boy and Girl Scouts. The Public Library has always been the go-to-resource for finding your way with information and this skill of Orienteering is no different.
The Scout Merit Badge Series; “Orienteering” published by the Boy Scouts of America would be the first resource to investigate. This booklet describes the fun in learning to use a compass and a map. It sounds so basic, but the truth is that explorers like Lewis and Clark, Marco Polo, and Amelia Earhart used these same skills to cross many new horizons. Today, competitions for Orienteers are growing in number at scout camps and merit badge outings, but also local programs for families and teams of friends. This book presents two types of Orienteering, score orienteering and cross country orienteering. The later event is like the television show the Great Race-finding one’s way around the countryside unassisted. After reading this text we might leave the GPS device at home and participate in the skill that will keep us from getting lost in the world.
A second book to investigate is “Maps and Compass: the Complete Orienteering Handbook” written by Bjorn Kjellstrom. Being oriented to one’s surroundings and charting a course through the unknown sounds like a true skill for life. Orienting skills are used by surveyors, engineers, military personal, hunters and fishermen, backpackers, sailors, and camp counselors searching for “lost sheep”, cross-country runners and cyclists who chose their routes as opposed to following a predetermined course. For most of us orienteering skills solely embrace our ability to read a road map in preparation of a family vacation. This text is broken up into user friendly chapters beginning with map reading, compass skills and then the adventure of putting them together in the field.
A third resource to consider is titled “Orienteering: The Skills of the Game” by Carol McNeill. For those who are competitively minded this book will help to refine your skills. From experienced guides to young explorers this book will help you enjoy your time in the field. Skills covered include: aiming off, punch and run, and running on the compass needle. Speed is the main point in this text so that you can increase the odds that your team will come in first place.
Getting oriented is indeed a life skill that enables us to select a course, map out our path, and check our progress along the way. We all look for help when “orienting ourselves” in a new direction such as times of a career change, education or finding a job. We map out our career path and obstacles that might challenge our charted path. As an avid sailor I would not be able to sail the lakes, rivers and waterways of North Carolina unless I had and followed an accurate map. Such maps keep me safe as well as those who travel with me. The same holds true for planes, trains and automobiles. Remember that LIFE happens along the journey and not simply at the end of the road. Our lives are better enriched as we become oriented to our surroundings. This process can begin with a single trip to the public library. We simply need to know which direction we wish to discover. Happy Reading!
Sunday, March 03, 2013
Library Notes
March 3, 2013
Erika Kosin
Dr. Seuss and Beginning Readers
Each year thousands of children’s books are published due to the various stages of development and reading abilities of children such as chapter books, picture books, and informational books, but there are also books that help children learn their reading independence called beginning readers. Beginning Readers are those books that help children transition from having picture books read to them to reading books on their own. They are great for building basic vocabularies and providing context for new words to help encourage children as they learn to read. Beginning readers may take the form of early chapter books, known to libraries as the “easy readers”, or they may fall into the picture book category, using distinct vocabulary and large format pictures as Move Over, Rover! by Karen Beaumont and Not a Box by Antoinette Portis.
Since 2006, the Assocation for Library Services to Children (ALSC) a division of the American Library Association (ALA) has an annual award to the “author and illustrator of the most distinguished American book for beginning readers, recognizing the winner’s literary and artistic achievements in demonstrating creativity and imagination to engage children in reading”. This award has been appropriately named the (Theodor Seuss) Geisel Award. Past winners and honor books have included picture books and “easy readers”, but they all have a story told in words and pictures that an emergent reader can use to learn to read on their own.
Why would Theodor Geisel, best known as Dr. Seuss, have this award named after him? Not only are his books funny and popular, but The Cat in the Hat was created to provide first graders with a new reading primer that they would not want to put down using only 225 words (it actually ended up with 236) from a list of 348. The Cat in the Hat was so successful that Geisel and his wife decided to launch “Beginner books” a division of Random House publishers that would focus on fun reading primers for children. With this imprint, the first Berenstain Bears book and P.D. Eastman’s Go Dog Go were published along with another challenge for Dr. Seuss, a book with only 50 words, Green Eggs and Ham. This endeavor has led to the standard in children’s beginning reader books, a fun story with a limited number of words that encourages children to learn to read.
Some favorite characters for beginning readers that can be found at the Rowan Public Library, by those other than Dr. Seuss, include:
“Elephant and Piggie” series by Mo Willems – Elephant and Piggie are best friends, even though they are very different. Look for special guest Pigeon on the back cover of each book!
“Frog and Toad” by Arnold Lobel – Each book includes five short adventures of frog and his friend Toad, from flying a kite, to cleaning house, each adventure will keep kids entertained. While published too early to win an award, a definite favorite among children.
“Fly Guy” series by Tedd Arnold – Follows the adventures of Fly Guy, an actual fly, and his human friend Buzz.
“Pearl and Wagner” by Kate McMullan – Tells about the adventures of two unlikely friends Pearl, a hardworking rabbit, and Wagner, a daydreaming mouse, as they spend time in and out of the classroom.
“Henry and Mudge” by Cynthia Rylant – Henry learns about life, loyalty and love with the help of his bullmastiff Mudge.
March 3, 2013
Erika Kosin
Dr. Seuss and Beginning Readers
Each year thousands of children’s books are published due to the various stages of development and reading abilities of children such as chapter books, picture books, and informational books, but there are also books that help children learn their reading independence called beginning readers. Beginning Readers are those books that help children transition from having picture books read to them to reading books on their own. They are great for building basic vocabularies and providing context for new words to help encourage children as they learn to read. Beginning readers may take the form of early chapter books, known to libraries as the “easy readers”, or they may fall into the picture book category, using distinct vocabulary and large format pictures as Move Over, Rover! by Karen Beaumont and Not a Box by Antoinette Portis.
Since 2006, the Assocation for Library Services to Children (ALSC) a division of the American Library Association (ALA) has an annual award to the “author and illustrator of the most distinguished American book for beginning readers, recognizing the winner’s literary and artistic achievements in demonstrating creativity and imagination to engage children in reading”. This award has been appropriately named the (Theodor Seuss) Geisel Award. Past winners and honor books have included picture books and “easy readers”, but they all have a story told in words and pictures that an emergent reader can use to learn to read on their own.
Why would Theodor Geisel, best known as Dr. Seuss, have this award named after him? Not only are his books funny and popular, but The Cat in the Hat was created to provide first graders with a new reading primer that they would not want to put down using only 225 words (it actually ended up with 236) from a list of 348. The Cat in the Hat was so successful that Geisel and his wife decided to launch “Beginner books” a division of Random House publishers that would focus on fun reading primers for children. With this imprint, the first Berenstain Bears book and P.D. Eastman’s Go Dog Go were published along with another challenge for Dr. Seuss, a book with only 50 words, Green Eggs and Ham. This endeavor has led to the standard in children’s beginning reader books, a fun story with a limited number of words that encourages children to learn to read.
Some favorite characters for beginning readers that can be found at the Rowan Public Library, by those other than Dr. Seuss, include:
“Elephant and Piggie” series by Mo Willems – Elephant and Piggie are best friends, even though they are very different. Look for special guest Pigeon on the back cover of each book!
“Frog and Toad” by Arnold Lobel – Each book includes five short adventures of frog and his friend Toad, from flying a kite, to cleaning house, each adventure will keep kids entertained. While published too early to win an award, a definite favorite among children.
“Fly Guy” series by Tedd Arnold – Follows the adventures of Fly Guy, an actual fly, and his human friend Buzz.
“Pearl and Wagner” by Kate McMullan – Tells about the adventures of two unlikely friends Pearl, a hardworking rabbit, and Wagner, a daydreaming mouse, as they spend time in and out of the classroom.
“Henry and Mudge” by Cynthia Rylant – Henry learns about life, loyalty and love with the help of his bullmastiff Mudge.
Sunday, February 24, 2013
Library Notes
February 24, 2013
Dara L. Cain
The Caldecott Medal: Celebrating 75 Years of Distinguished Picture Books
January 28th was a very exciting day in the library community! At the American Library Association Midwinter Meeting at the Washington State Convention Center in Seattle “approximately 12,500 webcast viewers joined more than 1,300 onsite audience members for the 2013 ALSC book and media awards.” This year marks the 75th anniversary of the Caldecott Medal which was established in 1938 and named in honor of nineteenth-century English illustration Randolph J. Caldecott. “This medal is to be given to the artist who has created the most distinguished picture book of the year.”
The prestigious Caldecott Medal was awarded this year to This Is Not My Hat illustrated and written by Jon Klassen. In this humorous story a little fish knows that it is wrong to steal a hat from a sleeping big fish but decides he can’t help it if the hat fits him perfectly. There’s just one problem! The unsuspecting little fish doesn’t realize that the big fish wants his hat back, and rightfully so. Readers will enjoy anticipating the consequences as the big fish chases the unsuspecting little fish.
The Caldecott committee selected five Honor Books this year noteworthy of attention. Creepy Carrots! illustrated by Peter Brown and written by Aaron Reynolds is a cleverly-frightful tale. Jasper Rabbit insists on eating the best carrots grown in Crackenhopper Field every morning, noon, and night. Things take an unsuspecting turn for Jasper when he senses that he is being followed. Is it Jasper or are the carrots from Crackenhopper Field “creeping” up on him everywhere he goes? Taking matters into his own hands Jasper comes up with a plan to keep the creepy carrots inside the carrot patch permanently.
Extra Yarn illustrated by Jon Klassen and written by Mac Barnett takes place in a cold soot covered town where a young girl named Annabelle discovers a mysterious box filled with colored yarn. After knitting a sweater for herself, her dog, a boy and his dog, her classmates, her teacher, her parents, the people in town, and the buildings it seems that there is an infinite supply of yarn in the box. When the archduke arrives and demands that Annabelle sell him the magic box, she refuses, and he decides to steal it. Much to his dismay he finds the box empty and tosses the box into the sea. Magically, the box finds its way back to a happy Annabelle who has transformed the town from black soot to a plethora of beautiful colors.
How many kinds of green are there? There’s forest green, sea green, jungle green and khaki green just to name a few! Green illustrated and written by Laura Vaccaro Seeger is an engaging concept book that explores the color green using cleverly positioned die-cuts of varying sizes, shapes, and quantities that form unexpected connections between adjacent spreads. A “slow green” inchworm becomes the hook on which hangs a “faded green” sign and the “glow green” fireflies become the leaves on the “shaded green” tree. Seeger takes it one step further by discussing the absence of green: a stop sign is “never green” to the “forever green:” a child planting a seedling that becomes a massive tree.
Elliot, a quiet boy who enjoys wearing tuxedos, discovers during his visit to the aquarium that a penguin would be the perfect pet. What could be more wonderful than a “properly dressed” penguin! In the story One Cool Friend, illustrated by David Small and written by Toni Buzzeo, an absentminded father agrees to his son’s request. In this humorous tale Elliot sees to it that his penguin named Magellan receives the upmost care after doing the proper research. He creates a home for him at night in the freezer with a supply of frozen seafood to eat. During the day he lets him splash around in a tub of ice water. In his bedroom there is even an ice skating rink created from a backyard wading pool and an air conditioner. How will Elliot’s father react when he realizes what he has agreed to?
Does the phrase, “I’m not tired” and “I’m just not sleepy” sound familiar to any parents? In the charming bedtime story Sleep Like a Tiger, illustrated by Pamela Zagarenski and written by Mary Logue, a not-so sleepy girl in a red dress and crown has very understanding parents who innocently coax her to bed as they talk about the ways different animals fall asleep. The child, snug in her pajamas, imitates each of the animals she talks about - from bears who are “mighty sleepers” to snails that “curl up like a cinnamon roll.” Finally, she drifts off to sleep imagining herself snuggled into the tiger’s tail while embracing her own stuffed tiger.
February 24, 2013
Dara L. Cain
The Caldecott Medal: Celebrating 75 Years of Distinguished Picture Books
January 28th was a very exciting day in the library community! At the American Library Association Midwinter Meeting at the Washington State Convention Center in Seattle “approximately 12,500 webcast viewers joined more than 1,300 onsite audience members for the 2013 ALSC book and media awards.” This year marks the 75th anniversary of the Caldecott Medal which was established in 1938 and named in honor of nineteenth-century English illustration Randolph J. Caldecott. “This medal is to be given to the artist who has created the most distinguished picture book of the year.”
The prestigious Caldecott Medal was awarded this year to This Is Not My Hat illustrated and written by Jon Klassen. In this humorous story a little fish knows that it is wrong to steal a hat from a sleeping big fish but decides he can’t help it if the hat fits him perfectly. There’s just one problem! The unsuspecting little fish doesn’t realize that the big fish wants his hat back, and rightfully so. Readers will enjoy anticipating the consequences as the big fish chases the unsuspecting little fish.
The Caldecott committee selected five Honor Books this year noteworthy of attention. Creepy Carrots! illustrated by Peter Brown and written by Aaron Reynolds is a cleverly-frightful tale. Jasper Rabbit insists on eating the best carrots grown in Crackenhopper Field every morning, noon, and night. Things take an unsuspecting turn for Jasper when he senses that he is being followed. Is it Jasper or are the carrots from Crackenhopper Field “creeping” up on him everywhere he goes? Taking matters into his own hands Jasper comes up with a plan to keep the creepy carrots inside the carrot patch permanently.
Extra Yarn illustrated by Jon Klassen and written by Mac Barnett takes place in a cold soot covered town where a young girl named Annabelle discovers a mysterious box filled with colored yarn. After knitting a sweater for herself, her dog, a boy and his dog, her classmates, her teacher, her parents, the people in town, and the buildings it seems that there is an infinite supply of yarn in the box. When the archduke arrives and demands that Annabelle sell him the magic box, she refuses, and he decides to steal it. Much to his dismay he finds the box empty and tosses the box into the sea. Magically, the box finds its way back to a happy Annabelle who has transformed the town from black soot to a plethora of beautiful colors.
How many kinds of green are there? There’s forest green, sea green, jungle green and khaki green just to name a few! Green illustrated and written by Laura Vaccaro Seeger is an engaging concept book that explores the color green using cleverly positioned die-cuts of varying sizes, shapes, and quantities that form unexpected connections between adjacent spreads. A “slow green” inchworm becomes the hook on which hangs a “faded green” sign and the “glow green” fireflies become the leaves on the “shaded green” tree. Seeger takes it one step further by discussing the absence of green: a stop sign is “never green” to the “forever green:” a child planting a seedling that becomes a massive tree.
Elliot, a quiet boy who enjoys wearing tuxedos, discovers during his visit to the aquarium that a penguin would be the perfect pet. What could be more wonderful than a “properly dressed” penguin! In the story One Cool Friend, illustrated by David Small and written by Toni Buzzeo, an absentminded father agrees to his son’s request. In this humorous tale Elliot sees to it that his penguin named Magellan receives the upmost care after doing the proper research. He creates a home for him at night in the freezer with a supply of frozen seafood to eat. During the day he lets him splash around in a tub of ice water. In his bedroom there is even an ice skating rink created from a backyard wading pool and an air conditioner. How will Elliot’s father react when he realizes what he has agreed to?
Does the phrase, “I’m not tired” and “I’m just not sleepy” sound familiar to any parents? In the charming bedtime story Sleep Like a Tiger, illustrated by Pamela Zagarenski and written by Mary Logue, a not-so sleepy girl in a red dress and crown has very understanding parents who innocently coax her to bed as they talk about the ways different animals fall asleep. The child, snug in her pajamas, imitates each of the animals she talks about - from bears who are “mighty sleepers” to snails that “curl up like a cinnamon roll.” Finally, she drifts off to sleep imagining herself snuggled into the tiger’s tail while embracing her own stuffed tiger.
Sunday, February 17, 2013
Library Notes
Blissful Journeys: One Reader’s Vicarious Trip through Love and Happiness
February 17, 2013
Pam Everhardt Bloom
The thought of February makes me want to cry. Cold weather is not my idea of a good time. Add dark skies and my normally sunny disposition takes a nosedive. In February, I always make the effort to sit in the sun when the occasion presents. I also look for books to lighten my mood.
“Le Road Trip: A Traveler’s Journal of Love and France,” by Vivian Swift fits the bill. Who wouldn’t want to travel vicariously to France when the illustrations so beautifully duplicate a moment in time? The book is filled with hundreds of beautiful watercolors that document the author’s honeymoon journey. Ms. Swift is a seasoned traveler, as is her new husband, and this memoir/journal is full of tips and musings of their road trip and their leisurely exploration of a much loved and visited France. This is not a guide book in the traditional sense. Instead the book opens with the author’s statement, “Every road trip has its ups and downs, just like a love affair, or the stock market…But more like a love affair.” With chapters titled “Phase One: Anticipation,” to “Phase Five: The Going Gets Tough,” this book might make the perfect belated Valentine gift to yourself in the cold dreary month of February.
A selection that unexpectedly fit my category of light fare and a book I continue to think about is, “Geography of Bliss: One Grump’s Search for the Happiest Places in the World” by Eric Weiner. Weiner, a foreign correspondent for National Public Radio has reported a multitude of sad situations throughout the world. This time the field of positive psychology becomes Weiner’s guidepost as he sets out to discover places of bliss. He describes carrying a conviction based on a Henry Miller saying, “One’s destination is never a place, but a new way of seeing things.”
See them I did and I laughed out loud while reading this book. Ten countries in ten chapters with an introduction and epilogue; at the very least you might just find a new understanding of happiness. Or like me, a newfound obsession with Iceland. (Note: Asheville, N.C. is mentioned in one chapter.) The book on CD is also available at the library and I intend to listen to Weiner reading his book as soon as possible.
Meanwhile, I’m currently reading “12,000 Miles in the Nick of Time: A Semi-Dysfunctional Family Circumnavigates the Globe” by Mark Jacobson. Jacobson, a respected writer and journalist, sets off on a three month journey with his wife and three children, ages 16, 12, and 9. Light fare from a man who is known for exploring the seamy side of urban life? The first chapter, “Burning is Learning,” finds the family at the Holy River Ganges witnessing a cremation. Decidedly different from my view of world travel, I’m laughing by chapter two as I read Jacobson’s rational for whisking his children away from Brooklyn, N.Y.; “The biggest swindle in the history of the species was underway right here in the U.S.A. Corporate social engineers, closet Mengeles every last one of them, had dismantled the stages of human development… Like Moses, I would lead my children from pop bondage.” More than just a travel book, this book, like “Le Road Trip,” is a love affair. Jacobson, however, is in love with his children and this book will make any parent smile.
Love of place, love of happiness, love of family; it is a blissful journey for February. My mood has lifted.
Blissful Journeys: One Reader’s Vicarious Trip through Love and Happiness
February 17, 2013
Pam Everhardt Bloom
The thought of February makes me want to cry. Cold weather is not my idea of a good time. Add dark skies and my normally sunny disposition takes a nosedive. In February, I always make the effort to sit in the sun when the occasion presents. I also look for books to lighten my mood.
“Le Road Trip: A Traveler’s Journal of Love and France,” by Vivian Swift fits the bill. Who wouldn’t want to travel vicariously to France when the illustrations so beautifully duplicate a moment in time? The book is filled with hundreds of beautiful watercolors that document the author’s honeymoon journey. Ms. Swift is a seasoned traveler, as is her new husband, and this memoir/journal is full of tips and musings of their road trip and their leisurely exploration of a much loved and visited France. This is not a guide book in the traditional sense. Instead the book opens with the author’s statement, “Every road trip has its ups and downs, just like a love affair, or the stock market…But more like a love affair.” With chapters titled “Phase One: Anticipation,” to “Phase Five: The Going Gets Tough,” this book might make the perfect belated Valentine gift to yourself in the cold dreary month of February.
A selection that unexpectedly fit my category of light fare and a book I continue to think about is, “Geography of Bliss: One Grump’s Search for the Happiest Places in the World” by Eric Weiner. Weiner, a foreign correspondent for National Public Radio has reported a multitude of sad situations throughout the world. This time the field of positive psychology becomes Weiner’s guidepost as he sets out to discover places of bliss. He describes carrying a conviction based on a Henry Miller saying, “One’s destination is never a place, but a new way of seeing things.”
See them I did and I laughed out loud while reading this book. Ten countries in ten chapters with an introduction and epilogue; at the very least you might just find a new understanding of happiness. Or like me, a newfound obsession with Iceland. (Note: Asheville, N.C. is mentioned in one chapter.) The book on CD is also available at the library and I intend to listen to Weiner reading his book as soon as possible.
Meanwhile, I’m currently reading “12,000 Miles in the Nick of Time: A Semi-Dysfunctional Family Circumnavigates the Globe” by Mark Jacobson. Jacobson, a respected writer and journalist, sets off on a three month journey with his wife and three children, ages 16, 12, and 9. Light fare from a man who is known for exploring the seamy side of urban life? The first chapter, “Burning is Learning,” finds the family at the Holy River Ganges witnessing a cremation. Decidedly different from my view of world travel, I’m laughing by chapter two as I read Jacobson’s rational for whisking his children away from Brooklyn, N.Y.; “The biggest swindle in the history of the species was underway right here in the U.S.A. Corporate social engineers, closet Mengeles every last one of them, had dismantled the stages of human development… Like Moses, I would lead my children from pop bondage.” More than just a travel book, this book, like “Le Road Trip,” is a love affair. Jacobson, however, is in love with his children and this book will make any parent smile.
Love of place, love of happiness, love of family; it is a blissful journey for February. My mood has lifted.
Sunday, February 03, 2013
Take a delightful dip into thrilling true crime stories
By Edward Hirst
Rowan Public Library
The appeal of historical true crime is not so difficult to imagine: vivid eras are brought to life in these accounts; they are usually well researched. Readers are offered the satisfaction of the compulsion to face the worst in human nature; the assurance that justice has been done, and the chance to empathize with the victims in their hours of need.
Erik Larson conveys what life was like in Chicago as the 19th century drew to a close in the book “The Devil in the White City: Murder, Magic, and Madness at the Fair that Changed America.” Chicago’s city leaders were out to prove to the nation and to the world that Chicago was up to the challenge of putting together a monumental World Exposition.
Larson goes into great detail to describe the effort put forth by numerous architects, builders and politicians. He also tells the darker story of H.H. Holmes, whose engaging charm seduced at least a score of unfortunate women, and the activity that took place at a building just a short distance away from the fair site.
“The Great Pearl Heist” is the story of an elaborate criminal scheme that unfolded over a period of several months in 1913 London. The pearls in question were part of a magnificent necklace that had been assembled over a long period by Max Mayer, one of the finest jewelers in London. It was a situation made for a heist, and one of the greatest criminals of the period, Joseph Grizzard, seized the opportunity to make it.
Fortunately for law and order, the London’s Scotland Yard and the underwriter who had insured the necklace for Lloyd’s of London were just as inventive and daring.
In “The Girls of Murder City: Fame, Lust, and the Beautiful Killers Who Inspired Chicago,” Douglas Perry writes about Maurine Watkins, a girl reporter with the Chicago Tribune in the 1920s, who was the first to cover the sensational story of two Jazz Age women who killed their men with the same casualness they gave to filing their nails. In this account, journalist Perry illuminates both the murderesses who held court at Cook County Jail and the newspaper writers who showcased them.
Paul French writes in the book “Midnight in Peking: How the Murder of a Young Englishwoman Haunted the Last Days of Old China” of a mutilated corpse that is found at the base of Fox Tower on Jan. 8, 1937, which poses a special problem for Peking police.
The victim was a free-spirited young woman named Pamela Werner. When Pamela wasn’t attending school in Tientsin, she lived in Peking with her adoptive father, Edward Werner, a scholar and former British consul. She had been beaten to death and then dumped at Fox Tower.
The British government increased its efforts to impede the investigation, suggesting that a cover-up, if not a full-blown conspiracy, was afoot. Racial bigotry also played a role in the British government’s insistence that the investigation should focus on Chinese rather than foreign residents.
Be sure to stop by Rowan Public Library for your chance to step back in time.
By Edward Hirst
Rowan Public Library
The appeal of historical true crime is not so difficult to imagine: vivid eras are brought to life in these accounts; they are usually well researched. Readers are offered the satisfaction of the compulsion to face the worst in human nature; the assurance that justice has been done, and the chance to empathize with the victims in their hours of need.
Erik Larson conveys what life was like in Chicago as the 19th century drew to a close in the book “The Devil in the White City: Murder, Magic, and Madness at the Fair that Changed America.” Chicago’s city leaders were out to prove to the nation and to the world that Chicago was up to the challenge of putting together a monumental World Exposition.
Larson goes into great detail to describe the effort put forth by numerous architects, builders and politicians. He also tells the darker story of H.H. Holmes, whose engaging charm seduced at least a score of unfortunate women, and the activity that took place at a building just a short distance away from the fair site.
“The Great Pearl Heist” is the story of an elaborate criminal scheme that unfolded over a period of several months in 1913 London. The pearls in question were part of a magnificent necklace that had been assembled over a long period by Max Mayer, one of the finest jewelers in London. It was a situation made for a heist, and one of the greatest criminals of the period, Joseph Grizzard, seized the opportunity to make it.
Fortunately for law and order, the London’s Scotland Yard and the underwriter who had insured the necklace for Lloyd’s of London were just as inventive and daring.
In “The Girls of Murder City: Fame, Lust, and the Beautiful Killers Who Inspired Chicago,” Douglas Perry writes about Maurine Watkins, a girl reporter with the Chicago Tribune in the 1920s, who was the first to cover the sensational story of two Jazz Age women who killed their men with the same casualness they gave to filing their nails. In this account, journalist Perry illuminates both the murderesses who held court at Cook County Jail and the newspaper writers who showcased them.
Paul French writes in the book “Midnight in Peking: How the Murder of a Young Englishwoman Haunted the Last Days of Old China” of a mutilated corpse that is found at the base of Fox Tower on Jan. 8, 1937, which poses a special problem for Peking police.
The victim was a free-spirited young woman named Pamela Werner. When Pamela wasn’t attending school in Tientsin, she lived in Peking with her adoptive father, Edward Werner, a scholar and former British consul. She had been beaten to death and then dumped at Fox Tower.
The British government increased its efforts to impede the investigation, suggesting that a cover-up, if not a full-blown conspiracy, was afoot. Racial bigotry also played a role in the British government’s insistence that the investigation should focus on Chinese rather than foreign residents.
Be sure to stop by Rowan Public Library for your chance to step back in time.
Sunday, January 27, 2013
Library Notes
Lynn Denison
January 22, 2013
Now is the time when NASCAR fans are becoming excited about the beginning of a new season. The NASCAR season is the longest running season of any sport in the United States, usually beginning in February and lasting through November. One of our new books at Rowan Public Library is NASCAR Nation, How Racing’s Values Mirror the Nation’s, by Chris Myers. To quote the author, “America is the greatest country on earth. . . . If cars are for most Americans, then NASCAR is also for most Americans. Baseball is American’s pastime and football is American’s passion, but NASCAR is its roots . . . It’s family time and it’s NASCAR time. NASCAR has millions of steadfast fans.”
In NASCAR Nation, longtime Fox Sports broadcaster and NASCAR prerace show host, Chris Myers, makes the case for what makes racing the embodiment of the best that makes America great. As you read this book you’ll enjoy learning about Chris’ experience of going from a NASCAR outsider approximately ten years ago to a part of the inner circle in the close knit NASCAR community that he now calls home. It is a light and easy read and one recommended for those who are new to NASCAR as well as for those who can’t remember when NASCAR wasn’t a big part of their lives.
NASCAR is the highest class of stock car auto racing in the United States. “Stock car” means, in the original sense of the term, an automobile that has not been modified from its original factory configuration. Later the term stock car came to mean any production-based automobile used in racing. This term is used to differentiate such a car from a race car, a special, custom-built car designed only for racing purposes. Today most American stock cars may superficially resemble standard American family sedans, but are in fact purpose-built racing machines built to a strict set of regulations.
For those new and long time racing fans the library has a plethora of books as well as DVDS’s on the subject. One of the DVD’s is Red Dirt Rising, a film that “chronicles the origins of stock car racing during the Fightin’ Forties and explores the origins of what has become one of the most lucrative sporting organizations in the world.” We also have Petty Blue, the story of the Petty family, known as “NASCAR’s royal family of racing;” Together: the Hendrick Motorsports Story; The Ride of Their Lives, and many other NASCAR related DVD’s.
Some of the books we have include In the Blink of the Eye: Dale, Daytona, and the Day that Changed Everything, by Michael Waltrip and Ellis Henican; Growing Up NASCAR: Racing’s Most Outrageous Promoter Tells All, by Humpy Wheeler & Peter Golenbock ; He Crashed Me So I Crashed Him Back, by Mark Bechtel; Real NASCAR: White Lightning, Red Clay and Big Bill France, by Daniel S. Pierce; and a beautiful book, NASCAR Then & Now by Ben White with many photographs by Nigel Kinrade.
These are just a few of the offerings we have available. Please stop by Rowan Public Library soon to explore these and other materials to increase your knowledge of NASCAR and help you enjoy this exciting racing season even more.
Lynn Denison
January 22, 2013
Now is the time when NASCAR fans are becoming excited about the beginning of a new season. The NASCAR season is the longest running season of any sport in the United States, usually beginning in February and lasting through November. One of our new books at Rowan Public Library is NASCAR Nation, How Racing’s Values Mirror the Nation’s, by Chris Myers. To quote the author, “America is the greatest country on earth. . . . If cars are for most Americans, then NASCAR is also for most Americans. Baseball is American’s pastime and football is American’s passion, but NASCAR is its roots . . . It’s family time and it’s NASCAR time. NASCAR has millions of steadfast fans.”
In NASCAR Nation, longtime Fox Sports broadcaster and NASCAR prerace show host, Chris Myers, makes the case for what makes racing the embodiment of the best that makes America great. As you read this book you’ll enjoy learning about Chris’ experience of going from a NASCAR outsider approximately ten years ago to a part of the inner circle in the close knit NASCAR community that he now calls home. It is a light and easy read and one recommended for those who are new to NASCAR as well as for those who can’t remember when NASCAR wasn’t a big part of their lives.
NASCAR is the highest class of stock car auto racing in the United States. “Stock car” means, in the original sense of the term, an automobile that has not been modified from its original factory configuration. Later the term stock car came to mean any production-based automobile used in racing. This term is used to differentiate such a car from a race car, a special, custom-built car designed only for racing purposes. Today most American stock cars may superficially resemble standard American family sedans, but are in fact purpose-built racing machines built to a strict set of regulations.
For those new and long time racing fans the library has a plethora of books as well as DVDS’s on the subject. One of the DVD’s is Red Dirt Rising, a film that “chronicles the origins of stock car racing during the Fightin’ Forties and explores the origins of what has become one of the most lucrative sporting organizations in the world.” We also have Petty Blue, the story of the Petty family, known as “NASCAR’s royal family of racing;” Together: the Hendrick Motorsports Story; The Ride of Their Lives, and many other NASCAR related DVD’s.
Some of the books we have include In the Blink of the Eye: Dale, Daytona, and the Day that Changed Everything, by Michael Waltrip and Ellis Henican; Growing Up NASCAR: Racing’s Most Outrageous Promoter Tells All, by Humpy Wheeler & Peter Golenbock ; He Crashed Me So I Crashed Him Back, by Mark Bechtel; Real NASCAR: White Lightning, Red Clay and Big Bill France, by Daniel S. Pierce; and a beautiful book, NASCAR Then & Now by Ben White with many photographs by Nigel Kinrade.
These are just a few of the offerings we have available. Please stop by Rowan Public Library soon to explore these and other materials to increase your knowledge of NASCAR and help you enjoy this exciting racing season even more.
Sunday, January 20, 2013
Library Notes
1-20-2013
Marissa Creamer
The Magic of Snow
The hustle and bustle of the holidays is behind us; the glittery decorations have been put away for another year; the giddy euphoria of New Year’s Eve is past. We are left with the stark reality of January, with its resolutions to lose weight and exercise, and the cold, gray, dreariness of winter. In winter we need some magic, some sparkle, something to brighten up the gray landscape; we need snow. There is something magical about the first snowfall; everything looks pristine when covered in a fresh blanket of glistening white. The stark gray trunks of trees are beautiful in contrast; the world is peaceful and quiet.
The mystery of the snowflake has long fascinated humans. The first medieval scientist to examine snowflakes was so astounded by their remarkable symmetry that he wondered if these ice crystals might even have souls. You can explore the magic of snowflakes with “The Snowflake: Winter’s Secret Beauty,” by Kenneth Libbrecht. This fascinating book details what snowflakes are, how they form, and why each one is unique. Libbrecht also discusses snow crystals and what type of weather conditions produce snowflakes. These fleeting works of art were “plucked from the air as they fell” and photographed by Patricia Rasmussen.
Of course, it was the snowflake savant Wilson Bentley who first photographed snowflakes, on his Vermont farm back in 1885. "Under the microscope, I found that snowflakes were miracles of beauty; and it seemed a shame that this beauty should not be seen and appreciated by others. Every crystal was a masterpiece of design and no one design was ever repeated. When a snowflake melted, that design was forever lost. Just that much beauty was gone, without leaving any record behind." Using a bellows camera with a microscope attached, Bentley was finally able to replicate the visual complexity of a single snow crystal in a photograph. His passion for the amazing diversity of snowflakes led to a collection of over 5000 photographs. Read more about Wilson Bentley and his enthusiasm for snow in the Caldecott Medal-winning children’s book “Snowflake Bentley,” written by Jacqueline Briggs Martin, with illustrations by Mary Azarian.
Although snow is a relatively rare occurrence in this area, you can still bring the gossamer beauty of a snowfall into your home with “100 Snowflakes to Crochet,” by Caitlin Sainio. Designed for all skill levels, this book begins with a review of crochet basics, and contains discussions of materials and finishings, the structure of snowflakes, and methods of blocking and starching your creations. The “Snowflake Selector” lets you browse for a pattern that matches your skill level so you can make your own indoor snowdrift. Projects show you inventive ways to use your creations, and include a beautiful “Blizzard Scarf,” snowflake-adorned pillows, framed snowflake art, and a colorful snowflake mobile.
Come to Rowan Public Library for these and other books about snow, and make sure you are well stocked with plenty of reading material in case we actually see some of the white stuff and get snowed in!
1-20-2013
Marissa Creamer
The Magic of Snow
The hustle and bustle of the holidays is behind us; the glittery decorations have been put away for another year; the giddy euphoria of New Year’s Eve is past. We are left with the stark reality of January, with its resolutions to lose weight and exercise, and the cold, gray, dreariness of winter. In winter we need some magic, some sparkle, something to brighten up the gray landscape; we need snow. There is something magical about the first snowfall; everything looks pristine when covered in a fresh blanket of glistening white. The stark gray trunks of trees are beautiful in contrast; the world is peaceful and quiet.
The mystery of the snowflake has long fascinated humans. The first medieval scientist to examine snowflakes was so astounded by their remarkable symmetry that he wondered if these ice crystals might even have souls. You can explore the magic of snowflakes with “The Snowflake: Winter’s Secret Beauty,” by Kenneth Libbrecht. This fascinating book details what snowflakes are, how they form, and why each one is unique. Libbrecht also discusses snow crystals and what type of weather conditions produce snowflakes. These fleeting works of art were “plucked from the air as they fell” and photographed by Patricia Rasmussen.
Of course, it was the snowflake savant Wilson Bentley who first photographed snowflakes, on his Vermont farm back in 1885. "Under the microscope, I found that snowflakes were miracles of beauty; and it seemed a shame that this beauty should not be seen and appreciated by others. Every crystal was a masterpiece of design and no one design was ever repeated. When a snowflake melted, that design was forever lost. Just that much beauty was gone, without leaving any record behind." Using a bellows camera with a microscope attached, Bentley was finally able to replicate the visual complexity of a single snow crystal in a photograph. His passion for the amazing diversity of snowflakes led to a collection of over 5000 photographs. Read more about Wilson Bentley and his enthusiasm for snow in the Caldecott Medal-winning children’s book “Snowflake Bentley,” written by Jacqueline Briggs Martin, with illustrations by Mary Azarian.
Although snow is a relatively rare occurrence in this area, you can still bring the gossamer beauty of a snowfall into your home with “100 Snowflakes to Crochet,” by Caitlin Sainio. Designed for all skill levels, this book begins with a review of crochet basics, and contains discussions of materials and finishings, the structure of snowflakes, and methods of blocking and starching your creations. The “Snowflake Selector” lets you browse for a pattern that matches your skill level so you can make your own indoor snowdrift. Projects show you inventive ways to use your creations, and include a beautiful “Blizzard Scarf,” snowflake-adorned pillows, framed snowflake art, and a colorful snowflake mobile.
Come to Rowan Public Library for these and other books about snow, and make sure you are well stocked with plenty of reading material in case we actually see some of the white stuff and get snowed in!
Sunday, January 06, 2013
New Adventures for a New Year
by Marissa Creamer Rowan Public Library
It’s a new year and
Rowan Public Library has new adventures to help you through the doldrums of
winter. Curl up with one of these stories featuring young people (and a “space
cat”) who embark on a journey and experience exciting adventures:
“The
Theory of Everything” by Kari Luna blends realism, science fiction, fantasy,
and eighties rock music into an unusual story with heart. Sophie has started
yet another high school, but that hasn’t stopped her “episodes.” One minute
she’s talking to “Fab Physics Boy,” and the next thing she knows she’s in the
middle of a panda marching band. Or watching birds in the wallpaper pattern
peel off the wall and fly away. Like her missing theoretical physicist father,
Sophie has no control over these visions, and her mother fears she may be
suffering from a mental illness. Determined to figure out her visions once and
for all, Sophie sets out for New York City to search for her father and learn
about his string theory of parallel universes. Has he become lost in one of these alternate
worlds? Guided by her shaman panda Walt,
Sophie learns more about her travel episodes, love, and acceptance.
Another fourteen year old girl embarking on a
journey is featured in the latest Fairyland book by Catherynne Valente. In “The
Girl Who Soared Over Fairyland and Cut the Moon in Two,” September is beginning
to fear that she will never find her way back to Fairyland when the Blue Wind
arrives and winks her “out of the world like a firefly.” Soaring to the moon in
her Model A Ford, which seems to be coming to life, September hopes to be
reunited with her old friends Elle and Saturday. First, however, she must
deliver a package to the Whelk of the Moon. She soon learns that the moon is in
danger of being destroyed by the terrible Yeti Cinderskin, and sets out to
confront him. Along the way September meets many creatures that guide her as she
searches for her path in life. As usual,
Valente’s descriptions are magical: “his clothes flashed—long periwinkle
trousers with teal patches and curling cornflower shoes like a jester’s. But
what his coat hid within flashed brighter. September gasped. Planets hung on
the lining of that thick jacket—small globes full of swirling clouds or
shifting seas, continents like tiny chunks of ruby or topaz, cool silver moons
and boiling purple suns. Light poured out from the depths of the coat, bathing her
in colors.” If you are new to Fairyland, make sure you begin with September’s
first visit: “The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own
Making.”
In
the latest “Binky the Space Cat Adventure” by Ashley Spires, Binky is embarking
on a journey as well. In “License to Scratch,” Binky, his assistant space dog
Gordie, and commanding officer Gracie see disaster on the horizon at the
appearance of “SUITCASES!” Their humans
are about to set off into deep space unprotected! Binky and Gracie are loaded
into portable space pods for the long “flight” to the “pet hotel, “which turns
out to be...the vet! Will their humans ever return? Agonizing days of boredom
lead to an escape attempt and the discovery of sinister goings-on involving
aliens (bugs). Sadly, this fifth title is reported to be the last Binky
Adventure. Don’t miss out on the trademark combination of dry humor, slapstick,
and heart in this graphic novel series for all ages.
Journey
to Rowan Public Library for these adventures and find many more.
LIBRARY NOTES
USING LESS IN THE NEW YEAR
PAUL BIRKHEAD
Have you ever noticed the piles of trash that collect on curbsides the day after Christmas? The amount of paper and cardboard that gets thrown away is quite staggering. However, in a day or two, the refuse gets carted away and the problem appears solved, right? Not quite. Let the resources at Rowan Public Library educate you about what happens to all the trash that we generate, why we throw away so much, and what we can do to lessen our impact on the environment.
Garbology: Our Dirty Love Affair with Trash is a book by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Edward Humes. In Garbology, Humes gives the reader an inside look at what happens to the roughly 102 tons of garbage that an average American generates over a lifetime. The journey from curb to landfill is both fascinating and heartbreaking. It is especially disheartening to learn that edible food makes up a large portion of our trash.
Food waste is the topic of the book, American Wasteland, by Jonathan Bloom. Bloom makes a point that even as grocery prices skyrocket, the amount of food Americans squander continues to increase. One reason might be that Americans are more detached than ever from the sources of their food. Another reason is that fewer Americans have memories of times when food was not in abundance, such as during the Great Depression. The problem of food waste can also be partially blamed on modern technology. In a sad bit of irony, modern-day, efficient refrigerators and freezers have enabled us to keep food longer, but it has also made it easier to forget about food until it’s too late to salvage.
Don’t Throw It Out is a book by the editors of Yankee Magazine. Inside the book are hundreds of nifty and thrifty ideas to help you waste less and save more. Want to get that last bit of ketchup out of the bottle, keep your eggs fresh, or bring biscuits back to life? Practical tips are shared so the reader can tackle questions that crop up in the kitchen. In fact, the book analyzes every room of a typical house and advice is given to “make it last”, “fix it fast”, and “pass it along” the right way.
In the coming year, let us all pledge to be mindful of the three R’s of the environment: Reduce, Reuse, and Recycle. Also, don’t forget to stop by Rowan Public Library and check out a book or two. It’s the ultimate in book recycling.
USING LESS IN THE NEW YEAR
PAUL BIRKHEAD
Have you ever noticed the piles of trash that collect on curbsides the day after Christmas? The amount of paper and cardboard that gets thrown away is quite staggering. However, in a day or two, the refuse gets carted away and the problem appears solved, right? Not quite. Let the resources at Rowan Public Library educate you about what happens to all the trash that we generate, why we throw away so much, and what we can do to lessen our impact on the environment.
Garbology: Our Dirty Love Affair with Trash is a book by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Edward Humes. In Garbology, Humes gives the reader an inside look at what happens to the roughly 102 tons of garbage that an average American generates over a lifetime. The journey from curb to landfill is both fascinating and heartbreaking. It is especially disheartening to learn that edible food makes up a large portion of our trash.
Food waste is the topic of the book, American Wasteland, by Jonathan Bloom. Bloom makes a point that even as grocery prices skyrocket, the amount of food Americans squander continues to increase. One reason might be that Americans are more detached than ever from the sources of their food. Another reason is that fewer Americans have memories of times when food was not in abundance, such as during the Great Depression. The problem of food waste can also be partially blamed on modern technology. In a sad bit of irony, modern-day, efficient refrigerators and freezers have enabled us to keep food longer, but it has also made it easier to forget about food until it’s too late to salvage.
Don’t Throw It Out is a book by the editors of Yankee Magazine. Inside the book are hundreds of nifty and thrifty ideas to help you waste less and save more. Want to get that last bit of ketchup out of the bottle, keep your eggs fresh, or bring biscuits back to life? Practical tips are shared so the reader can tackle questions that crop up in the kitchen. In fact, the book analyzes every room of a typical house and advice is given to “make it last”, “fix it fast”, and “pass it along” the right way.
In the coming year, let us all pledge to be mindful of the three R’s of the environment: Reduce, Reuse, and Recycle. Also, don’t forget to stop by Rowan Public Library and check out a book or two. It’s the ultimate in book recycling.
Sunday, December 23, 2012
Library Notes
Rebecca Hyde
December 23, 2012
What do food critics do between meals? How can one plan a life around tasting food, good and bad? Would you want to know a food critic as a friend? Would they be obnoxious, controlling tablemates? For the following writers, food criticism is the art of living.
M. F. K. (Mary Frances Kennedy) Fisher was a writer for whom food was the thread of memories: love of food and a passion for cooking bring together descriptions of friends and meals, social commentary on food preparation and consumption, and advice on how to develop a taste for living. Life is best lived when attention is paid to small details and to relationships: an intermingling of food, love, and security. The young M. F. K. Fisher found life good when eating hoarded chocolate bars at school. When aging and ailing, she recommended the practice of spare but appreciative eating. The last essay in “An Alphabet for Gourmets” collected in “The Art of Eating,” describes the “Perfect Dinner”:
Fisher was a great correspondent. As with cooking, she started early. Letters to friends and family have been collected in “M. F. K. Fisher, a Life in Letters: Correspondence, 1929-1991.” Here again is the thread of interest in developing a discerning taste or mind, whether applied to food or to the complexities of public and home life. Most of her letters begin with a thanks of appreciation for a note received. The importance of other people and the warmth of her interest in them shine forth in Fisher’s letters. In a last letter to good friend and neighbor Lawrence Clark Powell, Fisher speaks of aging and coping and why : “It’s a question of dignity. I don’t know the answer, but it adds enough spice to the dish to make it edible, whether or not I want to eat it. The only answer for that is to say ‘bon appetit’ to myself and to you too. Love,…”
Jeffrey Steingarten is a food critic with a sense of humor. He has collected some of his more outrageous “Vogue” magazine essays in “The Man Who Ate Everything: and Other Gastronomic Feats, Disputes, and Pleasurable Pursuits.” He is a frequent critic of our obsession with health. “Salad the Silent Killer” pokes fun at our attempts to categorize food as good or bad: even the “good” guys (raw vegetables) contain chemicals which make the vegetable indigestible, or nutritionally useless, unless cooked. In “Primal Bread,” on the other hand, here is a person who flatly says the world is divided into two camps, those who can live happily on bread alone and those who need vegetables, meats, etc. Steingarten belongs to the first category, and will always use its bread in judging a restaurant.
Ruth Reichl, in a “Los Angeles Times Book Review,” wrote of M. F. K. Fisher’s genius in insisting on the importance of life’s small moments. Reichl must be a likable person. We also have her funny, perceptive, touching book,” Tender at the Bone: Growing Up at the Table.” In her apprenticeship, Reichl is guided by the discovery at an early age that “food could be a way of making sense of the world… if you watched people as they ate, you could find out who they were.” Food could also be dangerous. Her manic-depressive mother sometimes served strange food, crafted from food bargains. On one occasion, twenty-six people ended up in the hospital. Reichl’s stints along the way as a waitress in a failing restaurant, an impoverished social worker on New York’s Lower East Side, and staff member in a collectively owned restaurant in Berkley, helped prepare her for her job as food critic for “The New York Times.” The book is the story of how a person finds what they’re born to do.
Rebecca Hyde
December 23, 2012
What do food critics do between meals? How can one plan a life around tasting food, good and bad? Would you want to know a food critic as a friend? Would they be obnoxious, controlling tablemates? For the following writers, food criticism is the art of living.
M. F. K. (Mary Frances Kennedy) Fisher was a writer for whom food was the thread of memories: love of food and a passion for cooking bring together descriptions of friends and meals, social commentary on food preparation and consumption, and advice on how to develop a taste for living. Life is best lived when attention is paid to small details and to relationships: an intermingling of food, love, and security. The young M. F. K. Fisher found life good when eating hoarded chocolate bars at school. When aging and ailing, she recommended the practice of spare but appreciative eating. The last essay in “An Alphabet for Gourmets” collected in “The Art of Eating,” describes the “Perfect Dinner”:
Fisher was a great correspondent. As with cooking, she started early. Letters to friends and family have been collected in “M. F. K. Fisher, a Life in Letters: Correspondence, 1929-1991.” Here again is the thread of interest in developing a discerning taste or mind, whether applied to food or to the complexities of public and home life. Most of her letters begin with a thanks of appreciation for a note received. The importance of other people and the warmth of her interest in them shine forth in Fisher’s letters. In a last letter to good friend and neighbor Lawrence Clark Powell, Fisher speaks of aging and coping and why : “It’s a question of dignity. I don’t know the answer, but it adds enough spice to the dish to make it edible, whether or not I want to eat it. The only answer for that is to say ‘bon appetit’ to myself and to you too. Love,…”
Jeffrey Steingarten is a food critic with a sense of humor. He has collected some of his more outrageous “Vogue” magazine essays in “The Man Who Ate Everything: and Other Gastronomic Feats, Disputes, and Pleasurable Pursuits.” He is a frequent critic of our obsession with health. “Salad the Silent Killer” pokes fun at our attempts to categorize food as good or bad: even the “good” guys (raw vegetables) contain chemicals which make the vegetable indigestible, or nutritionally useless, unless cooked. In “Primal Bread,” on the other hand, here is a person who flatly says the world is divided into two camps, those who can live happily on bread alone and those who need vegetables, meats, etc. Steingarten belongs to the first category, and will always use its bread in judging a restaurant.
Ruth Reichl, in a “Los Angeles Times Book Review,” wrote of M. F. K. Fisher’s genius in insisting on the importance of life’s small moments. Reichl must be a likable person. We also have her funny, perceptive, touching book,” Tender at the Bone: Growing Up at the Table.” In her apprenticeship, Reichl is guided by the discovery at an early age that “food could be a way of making sense of the world… if you watched people as they ate, you could find out who they were.” Food could also be dangerous. Her manic-depressive mother sometimes served strange food, crafted from food bargains. On one occasion, twenty-six people ended up in the hospital. Reichl’s stints along the way as a waitress in a failing restaurant, an impoverished social worker on New York’s Lower East Side, and staff member in a collectively owned restaurant in Berkley, helped prepare her for her job as food critic for “The New York Times.” The book is the story of how a person finds what they’re born to do.
Sunday, December 16, 2012
Library Notes
April Everett
12/16/12
Giant, gold-rimmed glasses. Cheesy, big-toothed grin. Fringed Western shirt. Turquoise bolo tie. The year is 1994, the phase is cowgirl, and what blooms is a yearbook photo I will forever wish extinct. Fast forward to 2005. I’ve answered a Craigslist posting for a temp job transcribing a poorly written manuscript for a peculiar, elderly woman. I begin to suspect that my “boss” has stolen the manuscript and is trying to pass it off as her own, which is the only crime worse than being the actual author of the wretched work. I pay a visit to the history room of the local university (my “boss” is an alleged alumni), and I pull out volume after volume of their yearbooks until I finally locate her name. It’s most definitely not her.
Whether you’re looking for a humorous trip down Fashion Faux Pas Lane or trying to solve good, home-grown mysteries, the dusty old yearbook can prove a valuable tool. Fast forward to 2012 and meet North Carolina Yearbooks, a collection of college and high school yearbooks from all over North Carolina. This collection is available for browsing through DigitalNC.org, the official site of the North Carolina Digital Heritage Center. The Center is a statewide digitization and digital publishing program maintained by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The Center works with libraries, archives, museums, historical societies, and other cultural heritage institutions from across the state to provide online access to their special collections.
DigitalNC.org allows you to browse photographs, newspapers, scrapbooks, maps, artwork, manuscripts, and more supplied by more than 80 counties in North Carolina. These items are grouped into collections such as Images of North Carolina, North Carolina City Directories, and North Carolina Newspapers. Of course, my personal favorite is the North Carolina Yearbooks collection. The yearbooks offer high quality images and are searchable. They are surprisingly “real” as the onscreen format mimics a real yearbook and allow you to turn pages like a physical book. According to the Center’s website, the student yearbooks “provide a window into college life in North Carolina from the 1890s to the present. From sports teams to sororities, fashions to hairstyles, these volumes document the changing attitudes and culture of college students year by year.” A number of private and state-funded institutions are participating in the yearbooks project.
Visit the Digital Heritage Center online at DigitalNC.org and use the tabs along the top of the page to browse by collection or by county. Note that there are also special exhibits and slideshows covering topics such as basketball, lighthouses, and therapeutic travel in North Carolina. While you’re browsing, be sure to look up a friend, family member, or (better yet) your boss in one of the North Carolina yearbooks.
April Everett
12/16/12
Giant, gold-rimmed glasses. Cheesy, big-toothed grin. Fringed Western shirt. Turquoise bolo tie. The year is 1994, the phase is cowgirl, and what blooms is a yearbook photo I will forever wish extinct. Fast forward to 2005. I’ve answered a Craigslist posting for a temp job transcribing a poorly written manuscript for a peculiar, elderly woman. I begin to suspect that my “boss” has stolen the manuscript and is trying to pass it off as her own, which is the only crime worse than being the actual author of the wretched work. I pay a visit to the history room of the local university (my “boss” is an alleged alumni), and I pull out volume after volume of their yearbooks until I finally locate her name. It’s most definitely not her.
Whether you’re looking for a humorous trip down Fashion Faux Pas Lane or trying to solve good, home-grown mysteries, the dusty old yearbook can prove a valuable tool. Fast forward to 2012 and meet North Carolina Yearbooks, a collection of college and high school yearbooks from all over North Carolina. This collection is available for browsing through DigitalNC.org, the official site of the North Carolina Digital Heritage Center. The Center is a statewide digitization and digital publishing program maintained by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The Center works with libraries, archives, museums, historical societies, and other cultural heritage institutions from across the state to provide online access to their special collections.
DigitalNC.org allows you to browse photographs, newspapers, scrapbooks, maps, artwork, manuscripts, and more supplied by more than 80 counties in North Carolina. These items are grouped into collections such as Images of North Carolina, North Carolina City Directories, and North Carolina Newspapers. Of course, my personal favorite is the North Carolina Yearbooks collection. The yearbooks offer high quality images and are searchable. They are surprisingly “real” as the onscreen format mimics a real yearbook and allow you to turn pages like a physical book. According to the Center’s website, the student yearbooks “provide a window into college life in North Carolina from the 1890s to the present. From sports teams to sororities, fashions to hairstyles, these volumes document the changing attitudes and culture of college students year by year.” A number of private and state-funded institutions are participating in the yearbooks project.
Visit the Digital Heritage Center online at DigitalNC.org and use the tabs along the top of the page to browse by collection or by county. Note that there are also special exhibits and slideshows covering topics such as basketball, lighthouses, and therapeutic travel in North Carolina. While you’re browsing, be sure to look up a friend, family member, or (better yet) your boss in one of the North Carolina yearbooks.
Sunday, December 02, 2012
News and Notes Enough with the Words and Promises
By John Tucker
As musical carols are to the holidays, debates and promises are to an election year. Like it or not--listeners are always treated to an earful. The difference is we look forward to one, and hope that we will survive the other. Have your ears taken in more statements and stalemates than can be digested in a single sitting? If so, don’t give up on the words flying around; change the mode of communication to a book rich in wisdom, supported by smiles and a belly laugh or two. Might I suggest a trip to the library where a humorous look at life awaits?
First to catch my eye was the book titled “Cosbyology” by Bill Cosby, a collection of laugh-out-loud stories that embrace family life, work, school and sports. “Cosby”- the comic son of William and Anna who was born in 1937; “ology”- study of…how does one study the life of a comic? We laugh our way through his ordeals and “first” situations of life experiences. I found my smiles turned to chuckles, then to laughter that had to be shared with others. It is quite the collection of essays and observations from the “Doctor of Comedy”.
Second, the book titled “Cotton Mill Boys: and other characters I’ve known” by Richard Thorpe is a memoir of life in a mill village from the 1940s and 1950s. These recollections of childhood will give new meaning to life on a road called Railroad Street and chicken dinners from scratch before B.C. (meaning before Colonel Sanders). Can you remember the joy of the two o’clock whistle? How about learning that your house key not only unlocked your home, but every other house at the mill? If you can’t remember when… this book can help you recall a simpler time.
A favorite collection of wit and wisdom is titled “Look Who’s Laughing” compiled by Ann Spangler and Shari MacDonald. These short stories record the humor in everyday relationships. No bond is too sacred for these jovial jaunts. You will snicker at the tale of a preacher visiting a church member and helping himself to the bowl of peanuts on the coffee table. By the end of their visit, the parson confessed that he had eaten all of the peanuts in the bowl. “Oh that’s alright. Ever since I lost my teeth, all I could do was suck the chocolate off of them.” I thought that would get to you, please check out the rest of the tales in this rib-tickling text.
On a more serious note, peruse the famous “Poor Richards Almanack” written by Benjamin Franklin. These words and phrases record some of the best advice you might recall from your childhood. Phrases like: “No gain without ______”, or “A true friend is the best ____________”. “A penny saved is a ___________________”. “Blessed is he that expects nothing, for he shall never be disappointed.” “A true friend is the best possession.” “The doors of wisdom are never shut” so catch up on your reading with Ben’s gem of a classic.
In the library collection of short stories and witty essays one text looked out of place, until I opened the first page. “Dancing the Dream” by Michael Jackson is a collection of photos which we might expect and they are wrapped in words, pros and poetry that radiate creativity. Michael Jackson’s observations and reflections help us see that trust, love and faith in others and ourselves is the foundation of a life well lived.
Words are truly a part of our daily lives and these are but a few of the joyous resources that weave together smiles, dreams and visions to take us from our daily grind into a relationship with joyful words. Come to the library and encounter words of joy found faithfully unchanged in a book.
By John Tucker
As musical carols are to the holidays, debates and promises are to an election year. Like it or not--listeners are always treated to an earful. The difference is we look forward to one, and hope that we will survive the other. Have your ears taken in more statements and stalemates than can be digested in a single sitting? If so, don’t give up on the words flying around; change the mode of communication to a book rich in wisdom, supported by smiles and a belly laugh or two. Might I suggest a trip to the library where a humorous look at life awaits?
First to catch my eye was the book titled “Cosbyology” by Bill Cosby, a collection of laugh-out-loud stories that embrace family life, work, school and sports. “Cosby”- the comic son of William and Anna who was born in 1937; “ology”- study of…how does one study the life of a comic? We laugh our way through his ordeals and “first” situations of life experiences. I found my smiles turned to chuckles, then to laughter that had to be shared with others. It is quite the collection of essays and observations from the “Doctor of Comedy”.
Second, the book titled “Cotton Mill Boys: and other characters I’ve known” by Richard Thorpe is a memoir of life in a mill village from the 1940s and 1950s. These recollections of childhood will give new meaning to life on a road called Railroad Street and chicken dinners from scratch before B.C. (meaning before Colonel Sanders). Can you remember the joy of the two o’clock whistle? How about learning that your house key not only unlocked your home, but every other house at the mill? If you can’t remember when… this book can help you recall a simpler time.
A favorite collection of wit and wisdom is titled “Look Who’s Laughing” compiled by Ann Spangler and Shari MacDonald. These short stories record the humor in everyday relationships. No bond is too sacred for these jovial jaunts. You will snicker at the tale of a preacher visiting a church member and helping himself to the bowl of peanuts on the coffee table. By the end of their visit, the parson confessed that he had eaten all of the peanuts in the bowl. “Oh that’s alright. Ever since I lost my teeth, all I could do was suck the chocolate off of them.” I thought that would get to you, please check out the rest of the tales in this rib-tickling text.
On a more serious note, peruse the famous “Poor Richards Almanack” written by Benjamin Franklin. These words and phrases record some of the best advice you might recall from your childhood. Phrases like: “No gain without ______”, or “A true friend is the best ____________”. “A penny saved is a ___________________”. “Blessed is he that expects nothing, for he shall never be disappointed.” “A true friend is the best possession.” “The doors of wisdom are never shut” so catch up on your reading with Ben’s gem of a classic.
In the library collection of short stories and witty essays one text looked out of place, until I opened the first page. “Dancing the Dream” by Michael Jackson is a collection of photos which we might expect and they are wrapped in words, pros and poetry that radiate creativity. Michael Jackson’s observations and reflections help us see that trust, love and faith in others and ourselves is the foundation of a life well lived.
Words are truly a part of our daily lives and these are but a few of the joyous resources that weave together smiles, dreams and visions to take us from our daily grind into a relationship with joyful words. Come to the library and encounter words of joy found faithfully unchanged in a book.
Sunday, November 25, 2012
Library Notes
November 16, 2012
Erika Kosin
Creating new Traditions this Holiday Season
Think back to your childhood during the holidays. What do you remember? Many of us cherish the times spent with family, for me I always remember sitting with my siblings and cousins around a block of cheese laughing as we geared up to play a rousing game of cards or Trivia Pursuit. I think fondly of that time, even if as the youngest, I was always the one that the older kids did not want on their team. As we are now ensconced in the holiday season, think about activities that you can share with your children to create memories they will cherish. It may be one event you can attend as a family or a series of things leading up to the holidays. Whether you are celebrating Christmas, Hanukah, or Kwanzaa, make the festivities memorable by creating family traditions.
Not sure where to start, the library can help. From cookbooks such as the Usborne Little Book of Christmas Cooking to holiday decorations that can be found in the book Christmas Decorations Kids Can Make by Kathy Ross, you can spend quality time with your children while preparing for the holiday. Grandparents, aunts and uncles love homemade gifts from their favorite children, so why not check out Holiday Gifts, Favors and Decorations by Helen Sattler or Holiday Crafts by Alan and Gill Bridgewater. Each book contains crafts and ideas for both Christmas and Hanukah. For those gearing up for Kwanzaa, you will find fun ideas in Crafts for Kwanzaa by Kathy Ross. How to Make Holiday Pop-Ups by Joan Irvine can be fun and engaging for the crafty child, showing them how to create homemade pop-up cards for various holidays that they can share with family and friends.
For those of you who are not crafty or may be challenged in the kitchen, you can look for cultural traditions from around the world by perusing the Festivals of the World or the Christmas in series. Both contain holiday and festival traditions from different countries and there is even one that focuses on American Christmas traditions of yesteryear called Christmas in Colonial and Early America. Another idea is to find a fun holiday picture book that can be shared with your children. Make it a tradition by reading this book as a family every year.
Family traditions may include making crafts, baking cookies, sharing a holiday story, or attending a special event. The most important element of a family tradition is the time spent together. This holiday season sit back, relax and enjoy making memories, I know your children will.
Check in with the Rowan Public Library to see what fun programs are happening this holiday season.
November 16, 2012
Erika Kosin
Creating new Traditions this Holiday Season
Think back to your childhood during the holidays. What do you remember? Many of us cherish the times spent with family, for me I always remember sitting with my siblings and cousins around a block of cheese laughing as we geared up to play a rousing game of cards or Trivia Pursuit. I think fondly of that time, even if as the youngest, I was always the one that the older kids did not want on their team. As we are now ensconced in the holiday season, think about activities that you can share with your children to create memories they will cherish. It may be one event you can attend as a family or a series of things leading up to the holidays. Whether you are celebrating Christmas, Hanukah, or Kwanzaa, make the festivities memorable by creating family traditions.
Not sure where to start, the library can help. From cookbooks such as the Usborne Little Book of Christmas Cooking to holiday decorations that can be found in the book Christmas Decorations Kids Can Make by Kathy Ross, you can spend quality time with your children while preparing for the holiday. Grandparents, aunts and uncles love homemade gifts from their favorite children, so why not check out Holiday Gifts, Favors and Decorations by Helen Sattler or Holiday Crafts by Alan and Gill Bridgewater. Each book contains crafts and ideas for both Christmas and Hanukah. For those gearing up for Kwanzaa, you will find fun ideas in Crafts for Kwanzaa by Kathy Ross. How to Make Holiday Pop-Ups by Joan Irvine can be fun and engaging for the crafty child, showing them how to create homemade pop-up cards for various holidays that they can share with family and friends.
For those of you who are not crafty or may be challenged in the kitchen, you can look for cultural traditions from around the world by perusing the Festivals of the World or the Christmas in series. Both contain holiday and festival traditions from different countries and there is even one that focuses on American Christmas traditions of yesteryear called Christmas in Colonial and Early America. Another idea is to find a fun holiday picture book that can be shared with your children. Make it a tradition by reading this book as a family every year.
Family traditions may include making crafts, baking cookies, sharing a holiday story, or attending a special event. The most important element of a family tradition is the time spent together. This holiday season sit back, relax and enjoy making memories, I know your children will.
Check in with the Rowan Public Library to see what fun programs are happening this holiday season.
Sunday, November 18, 2012
Library Notes / November 9, 2012 / Dara L. Cain
Election Day Books for Children
How many years until you turn 18 years old? That is when you can vote on Election Day! Below are several titles that you may enjoy sharing with your youngsters about this historic day to educate them about the election process and the role of the president. Remember, children are the future voters of America.
Duck for President by Doreen Cronin is a fun and educational picture book for young children. Fed-up with his chores Duck holds an election to determine who should be in charge of the farm. In a close election Duck defeats Farmer Brown only to set out on the campaign trail once again, connecting with voters at town meetings, marching in parades, giving speeches, and making appearances on late-night television. After being elected governor Duck has his eyes set on the presidency and is surprised to learn that running a country is very hard work and life on the farm may have its advantages.
Young readers are invited to learn about the election process by following six children running for presidency in the story If I Ran for President written by Catherine Stier. From a child’s point of view discover the election process from beginning to end. Find out about campaigning, primaries, debates, party conventions, and what takes place on Election Day. Brief explanations about the voting process, the popular vote versus the electoral vote, and political parties are discussed.
Catherine Stier is also the author of Today on Election Day. In this picture book characters in the story narrate and share their perspectives about Election Day and the importance of voting. David goes with his older brother Jake to watch him vote for the first time. Find out how Jake learned about the candidates and the ballot issues in preparation to vote. Aidan accompanies his grandfather to the polling place and watches his grandfather vote on the computer which is only one of the ways Americans cast their votes. Bailey tells how she helps her aunt who is campaigning for a seat on the city council and what her job would be. To get a detailed explanation on the history of the election process dating back to Roman Times to the present day check out the book Vote by Philip Steele.
What are the responsibilities of being elected to political office? How does a person get elected? What are the challenges a person will encounter running for office? Read Getting Elected: A Look at Running for Office by Robin Nelson and Sandy Donovan to find out the answers to these questions and more. Another enlightening book that introduces students to how our government works is How Do We Elect Our Leaders by William David Thomas. This is a great choice for children ready to learn more than the basics regarding how we elect our government leaders from the president of the United States and members of Congress to state governors and local mayors. There are sidebars that include interesting information including how animals came to be symbols for the two major parties, women voting and holding office, and gerrymandering.
Don’t forget to check out these other great titles that your children are sure to enjoy. What would the country be like if a kid became President of the United States? Find out in the chapter book The Kid Who Ran For President by Dan Gutman. If your child ever thought about becoming president you are going to want to read So You Want to Be President? by Judith St. George. This book includes facts about the qualifications and characteristics of U.S. Presidents along side colorful caricatures. And lastly, find out what it would be like to live at the White House in the story If The Walls Could Talk: Family Life at the White House by Jane O’Connor. Learn about each presidential family’s time and contribution during their stay at the White House.
Election Day Books for Children
How many years until you turn 18 years old? That is when you can vote on Election Day! Below are several titles that you may enjoy sharing with your youngsters about this historic day to educate them about the election process and the role of the president. Remember, children are the future voters of America.
Duck for President by Doreen Cronin is a fun and educational picture book for young children. Fed-up with his chores Duck holds an election to determine who should be in charge of the farm. In a close election Duck defeats Farmer Brown only to set out on the campaign trail once again, connecting with voters at town meetings, marching in parades, giving speeches, and making appearances on late-night television. After being elected governor Duck has his eyes set on the presidency and is surprised to learn that running a country is very hard work and life on the farm may have its advantages.
Young readers are invited to learn about the election process by following six children running for presidency in the story If I Ran for President written by Catherine Stier. From a child’s point of view discover the election process from beginning to end. Find out about campaigning, primaries, debates, party conventions, and what takes place on Election Day. Brief explanations about the voting process, the popular vote versus the electoral vote, and political parties are discussed.
Catherine Stier is also the author of Today on Election Day. In this picture book characters in the story narrate and share their perspectives about Election Day and the importance of voting. David goes with his older brother Jake to watch him vote for the first time. Find out how Jake learned about the candidates and the ballot issues in preparation to vote. Aidan accompanies his grandfather to the polling place and watches his grandfather vote on the computer which is only one of the ways Americans cast their votes. Bailey tells how she helps her aunt who is campaigning for a seat on the city council and what her job would be. To get a detailed explanation on the history of the election process dating back to Roman Times to the present day check out the book Vote by Philip Steele.
What are the responsibilities of being elected to political office? How does a person get elected? What are the challenges a person will encounter running for office? Read Getting Elected: A Look at Running for Office by Robin Nelson and Sandy Donovan to find out the answers to these questions and more. Another enlightening book that introduces students to how our government works is How Do We Elect Our Leaders by William David Thomas. This is a great choice for children ready to learn more than the basics regarding how we elect our government leaders from the president of the United States and members of Congress to state governors and local mayors. There are sidebars that include interesting information including how animals came to be symbols for the two major parties, women voting and holding office, and gerrymandering.
Don’t forget to check out these other great titles that your children are sure to enjoy. What would the country be like if a kid became President of the United States? Find out in the chapter book The Kid Who Ran For President by Dan Gutman. If your child ever thought about becoming president you are going to want to read So You Want to Be President? by Judith St. George. This book includes facts about the qualifications and characteristics of U.S. Presidents along side colorful caricatures. And lastly, find out what it would be like to live at the White House in the story If The Walls Could Talk: Family Life at the White House by Jane O’Connor. Learn about each presidential family’s time and contribution during their stay at the White House.
Sunday, October 21, 2012
Salisbury Salutes Sidney
Gretchen Beilfuss Witt
October 21, 2012
In recognition of a long and illustrious career in the arts, Rowan Public Library will celebrate the life and work of Salisbury native Sidney Blackmer. Born July 13, 1895, Sidney began his career on the Broadway stage, which was interrupted by his service to the country during World War I. After the war he returned to Broadway, successfully made the trek to Hollywood, participated in early radio and finally crossed over into television. With a career spanning over 50 years, he worked with other greats of stage and screen – Shirley Booth, Paul Newman, Alfred Hitchcock, and Elia Kazan.
The Rowan Public Library has over the years collected items concerning Sidney Blackmer’s career. However recently, due to the generosity of Jonathan Blackmer, Sidney’s son, the library has access to many more photographs, movie advertisements, and other interesting artifacts. Beginning in the month of November and for the remainder of the year, several areas of the library will house displays of the Blackmer Collection. In conjunction with these displays a film festival will commence on November 18th. Each Sunday for three successive Sundays at 3:00 pm the library will screen some of Blackmer’s many films. November 18 after kicking off the celebration with a reception and presentation by Mike Cline about Blackmer’s career, the afternoon will conclude with showing “Teddy, the Rough Rider,” a short in which Sidney portrays President Teddy Roosevelt. Following this short will be the feature film “Panther’s Claw,” based on Oursler’s stories about Police Commissioner Thatcher Colt whom Sidney plays.
Our second installment on Sunday November 25 (perhaps as an amusement for visiting Thanksgiving guests) will include one short and two feature films. The short, “Disorder in the Court”, will be familiar to Three Stooges fans and features Suzanne Kaaren Blackmer, Sidney’s wife. The two full-length films will be “The Count of Monte Cristo” with Blackmer as Mondego and “Charlie Chan at Monte Carlo.”
The third afternoon of the festival will again begin with a short featuring Suzanne as well as a television episode from Boris Karloff’s Thriller series entitled “The Premature Burial.” Our festival will conclude with the showing of Blackmer’s most remembered role - Roman Castevet in “Rosemary’s Baby.” A quintessential psychological horror film, it is listed in the top ten of American Film Institute’s Thrillers.
Make plans to come see the displays and enjoy the movies as Salisbury Salutes Sidney.
Gretchen Beilfuss Witt
October 21, 2012
In recognition of a long and illustrious career in the arts, Rowan Public Library will celebrate the life and work of Salisbury native Sidney Blackmer. Born July 13, 1895, Sidney began his career on the Broadway stage, which was interrupted by his service to the country during World War I. After the war he returned to Broadway, successfully made the trek to Hollywood, participated in early radio and finally crossed over into television. With a career spanning over 50 years, he worked with other greats of stage and screen – Shirley Booth, Paul Newman, Alfred Hitchcock, and Elia Kazan.
The Rowan Public Library has over the years collected items concerning Sidney Blackmer’s career. However recently, due to the generosity of Jonathan Blackmer, Sidney’s son, the library has access to many more photographs, movie advertisements, and other interesting artifacts. Beginning in the month of November and for the remainder of the year, several areas of the library will house displays of the Blackmer Collection. In conjunction with these displays a film festival will commence on November 18th. Each Sunday for three successive Sundays at 3:00 pm the library will screen some of Blackmer’s many films. November 18 after kicking off the celebration with a reception and presentation by Mike Cline about Blackmer’s career, the afternoon will conclude with showing “Teddy, the Rough Rider,” a short in which Sidney portrays President Teddy Roosevelt. Following this short will be the feature film “Panther’s Claw,” based on Oursler’s stories about Police Commissioner Thatcher Colt whom Sidney plays.
Our second installment on Sunday November 25 (perhaps as an amusement for visiting Thanksgiving guests) will include one short and two feature films. The short, “Disorder in the Court”, will be familiar to Three Stooges fans and features Suzanne Kaaren Blackmer, Sidney’s wife. The two full-length films will be “The Count of Monte Cristo” with Blackmer as Mondego and “Charlie Chan at Monte Carlo.”
The third afternoon of the festival will again begin with a short featuring Suzanne as well as a television episode from Boris Karloff’s Thriller series entitled “The Premature Burial.” Our festival will conclude with the showing of Blackmer’s most remembered role - Roman Castevet in “Rosemary’s Baby.” A quintessential psychological horror film, it is listed in the top ten of American Film Institute’s Thrillers.
Make plans to come see the displays and enjoy the movies as Salisbury Salutes Sidney.
Sunday, October 14, 2012
Library Notes
Oct. 14, 2012
Marissa Creamer
It’s Never Too Late to Start Over
Many novels tell the story of a journey of self-discovery. Often, this search for self is an inner journey, but as these new novels at Rowan Public Library illustrate, the journey may be a literal one as well. And as our protagonists learn, now matter how old you are, it’s never too late to start over.
In “The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry” by Rachel Joyce, we are introduced to the retired (as well as retiring) Harold Fry, who is settled into his quiet routine in his quiet English village. One day blends into another, until the day Harold receives a letter from an old friend he has not seen in many years, informing him that she is dying of cancer. Harold pens a reply and takes it out to the postbox, but finds he just can’t let the letter go. “Harold thought of the words he had written to Queenie, and their inadequacy shamed him.” Thus begins Harold’s odyssey. As he continues to walk to the next postbox, then the next, not quite ready to let the letter go, Harold has a chance encounter with a young woman who convinces him that as long as he keeps walking, Queenie will live. Never mind that she is in hospice 600 miles away, and he has left without proper walking attire, a map, or his cell phone, Harold decides to walk the entire distance and deliver the letter in person. This solitary journey gives Harold time to ruminate on his life and failed relationships, and the reason for his need for atonement is gradually revealed. Along the way, Harold sends pithy postcards to Queenie, urging her to wait for him. As his journey continues, Harold meets a variety of characters, becomes a bit of a celebrity, and learns that “you could be ordinary and attempt something extraordinary.”
Another novel that reminds us that it’s never too late to start over is “The 100-Year-Old-Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared.” Jonas Jonasson’s European bestseller has reached the U.S. three years after its Swedish publication. This entertaining yarn tells the story of Allan Karlsson, who flees from the Old Folks’ Home to avoid his 100th birthday party. After stealing a cash-filled suitcase, our vodka-loving hero embarks on a wild adventure, and ends up on the lam from both a criminal syndicate and the police. Along the way, we learn that the former demolitions expert, much like Forest Gump, has not only witnessed some of the most important events of the twentieth century, he has actually played a key role in them.
Other novels that you may enjoy include Hilma Wolitzer’s “An Available Man,” a story about becoming single later in life, and the chaos and joys of finding love the second time around; “Harry Lipkin, Private Eye,” by Barry Fantoni, a mystery featuring Miami’s only 87-year-old private investigator; and “The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel,” by Deborah Moggach, recently adapted into a film starring Judi Dench and Maggie Smith. You can find all of these titles at Rowan Public Library.
Oct. 14, 2012
Marissa Creamer
It’s Never Too Late to Start Over
Many novels tell the story of a journey of self-discovery. Often, this search for self is an inner journey, but as these new novels at Rowan Public Library illustrate, the journey may be a literal one as well. And as our protagonists learn, now matter how old you are, it’s never too late to start over.
In “The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry” by Rachel Joyce, we are introduced to the retired (as well as retiring) Harold Fry, who is settled into his quiet routine in his quiet English village. One day blends into another, until the day Harold receives a letter from an old friend he has not seen in many years, informing him that she is dying of cancer. Harold pens a reply and takes it out to the postbox, but finds he just can’t let the letter go. “Harold thought of the words he had written to Queenie, and their inadequacy shamed him.” Thus begins Harold’s odyssey. As he continues to walk to the next postbox, then the next, not quite ready to let the letter go, Harold has a chance encounter with a young woman who convinces him that as long as he keeps walking, Queenie will live. Never mind that she is in hospice 600 miles away, and he has left without proper walking attire, a map, or his cell phone, Harold decides to walk the entire distance and deliver the letter in person. This solitary journey gives Harold time to ruminate on his life and failed relationships, and the reason for his need for atonement is gradually revealed. Along the way, Harold sends pithy postcards to Queenie, urging her to wait for him. As his journey continues, Harold meets a variety of characters, becomes a bit of a celebrity, and learns that “you could be ordinary and attempt something extraordinary.”
Another novel that reminds us that it’s never too late to start over is “The 100-Year-Old-Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared.” Jonas Jonasson’s European bestseller has reached the U.S. three years after its Swedish publication. This entertaining yarn tells the story of Allan Karlsson, who flees from the Old Folks’ Home to avoid his 100th birthday party. After stealing a cash-filled suitcase, our vodka-loving hero embarks on a wild adventure, and ends up on the lam from both a criminal syndicate and the police. Along the way, we learn that the former demolitions expert, much like Forest Gump, has not only witnessed some of the most important events of the twentieth century, he has actually played a key role in them.
Other novels that you may enjoy include Hilma Wolitzer’s “An Available Man,” a story about becoming single later in life, and the chaos and joys of finding love the second time around; “Harry Lipkin, Private Eye,” by Barry Fantoni, a mystery featuring Miami’s only 87-year-old private investigator; and “The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel,” by Deborah Moggach, recently adapted into a film starring Judi Dench and Maggie Smith. You can find all of these titles at Rowan Public Library.
Sunday, October 07, 2012
LIBRARY NOTES: PUMPKINS
PAUL BIRKHEAD – OCTOBER 7, 2012
This is the time of year that wherever you look, you’re bound to see a pumpkin. Whether they are displayed at the store or sitting in a field, these orange-colored cousins of the squash are a reminder that autumn has arrived. Not only do pumpkins abound in our community, but in Rowan Public Library as well.
Pumpkins have their origin in Central America, but are now more likely to be grown in North America. In fact, the state of Illinois produces most of the world’s pumpkin supply. Pumpkins come in all shapes and sizes. While the average pumpkin weighs a respectable fifteen pounds, some of the largest have tipped the scales at over 1,800 pounds. The quest to grow some of these gigantic pumpkins is told in the book Backyard Giants by Susan Warren. This humorous and fascinating tale describes the competition between farmers as they grow these monstrous pumpkins from seed to weigh-in.
Can you imagine how many pies you could get out of a 1,800 pound pumpkin? Pumpkin is the main ingredient in many seasonal favorites such as pies, muffins, soups and breads. The library has shelves and shelves of recipe books. One of my new favorites is Baking with the Cake Boss by Buddy Valastro. Buddy is an award-winning baker, owner of the famous Carlo’s Bake Shop, and star of TLC’s popular show, Cake Boss. In this book, Buddy teaches his techniques and tricks for successful baking and decorating. Yes, there is a recipe for pumpkin pie in the book.
Sometimes a pumpkin gets cut up for use in a pie, while other times it gets carved into a jack-o-lantern. Carved pumpkins are synonymous with Halloween. While most anyone can take a knife to a pumpkin and stick a candle inside, those who want to create a jack-o-lantern that’s extra special consult a book from the library. I recommend Sarah L. Schuette’s How to Carve Freakishly Cool Pumpkins.
There are a multitude of children’s books in the library that involve pumpkins. It’s early in the season, but these types of books are already flying off the shelves. Some of the most popular titles include: Five Little Pumpkins, Too Many Pumpkins, Biscuit Visits the Pumpkin Patch, The Pumpkin Fair, and The Berenstain Bears and the Prize Pumpkin.
Whether you’re baking a pie, carving a jack-o-lantern, or simply decorating your porch, pumpkins play a big role during the fall season. Make sure to come by Rowan Public Library this month and celebrate pumpkins.
PAUL BIRKHEAD – OCTOBER 7, 2012
This is the time of year that wherever you look, you’re bound to see a pumpkin. Whether they are displayed at the store or sitting in a field, these orange-colored cousins of the squash are a reminder that autumn has arrived. Not only do pumpkins abound in our community, but in Rowan Public Library as well.
Pumpkins have their origin in Central America, but are now more likely to be grown in North America. In fact, the state of Illinois produces most of the world’s pumpkin supply. Pumpkins come in all shapes and sizes. While the average pumpkin weighs a respectable fifteen pounds, some of the largest have tipped the scales at over 1,800 pounds. The quest to grow some of these gigantic pumpkins is told in the book Backyard Giants by Susan Warren. This humorous and fascinating tale describes the competition between farmers as they grow these monstrous pumpkins from seed to weigh-in.
Can you imagine how many pies you could get out of a 1,800 pound pumpkin? Pumpkin is the main ingredient in many seasonal favorites such as pies, muffins, soups and breads. The library has shelves and shelves of recipe books. One of my new favorites is Baking with the Cake Boss by Buddy Valastro. Buddy is an award-winning baker, owner of the famous Carlo’s Bake Shop, and star of TLC’s popular show, Cake Boss. In this book, Buddy teaches his techniques and tricks for successful baking and decorating. Yes, there is a recipe for pumpkin pie in the book.
Sometimes a pumpkin gets cut up for use in a pie, while other times it gets carved into a jack-o-lantern. Carved pumpkins are synonymous with Halloween. While most anyone can take a knife to a pumpkin and stick a candle inside, those who want to create a jack-o-lantern that’s extra special consult a book from the library. I recommend Sarah L. Schuette’s How to Carve Freakishly Cool Pumpkins.
There are a multitude of children’s books in the library that involve pumpkins. It’s early in the season, but these types of books are already flying off the shelves. Some of the most popular titles include: Five Little Pumpkins, Too Many Pumpkins, Biscuit Visits the Pumpkin Patch, The Pumpkin Fair, and The Berenstain Bears and the Prize Pumpkin.
Whether you’re baking a pie, carving a jack-o-lantern, or simply decorating your porch, pumpkins play a big role during the fall season. Make sure to come by Rowan Public Library this month and celebrate pumpkins.
Sunday, September 30, 2012
Library Notes 9-30-12
Edward Hirst
Rowan Public Library has recently added a number of new documentaries on DVD that will appeal to a variety of tastes. You are sure to find one, (or two), that can be enjoyed by the whole family.
In the movie Cave of Forgotten Dreams director Werner Herzog is given rare access to film inside the Chauvet Cave located in the south of France, home to the most ancient visual art known to have been created by man. The Chauvet cave paintings were made over 30,000 years ago, depicting predatory animals such as bears and lions, as well as bison, rhinos, mammoths and perhaps most striking of all, a wall of beautifully rendered horses.
Victims and perpetrators of Sierra Leone's brutal civil war from 1991 - 2002 come together for the first time in a program of tradition-based truth-telling and forgiveness ceremonies. They revive the ancient practice of Fambul Tok (family talk) in the film by the same name that charts the beginning stages of a process to help the people and communities of Sierra Leone move past these painful memories with forgiveness.
The Hammer was inspired by the life of deaf UFC fighter, Matt Hamill, and tells the story of what it takes to be a champion, on and off the mat. Raised among those with the ability to hear, Matt later finds himself no less an outsider amidst the Deaf Community. But through sheer determination, he uses his 'perceived' disability as an asset, and becomes not only the first deaf wrestler to win a National Collegiate Championship, but an inspirational force to both hearing and deaf alike.
In 2009, U.S. Marines launched a major helicopter assault on a Taliban stronghold in southern Afghanistan. Embedded in Echo Company during the assault, photojournalist and filmmaker Danfung Dennis captures the action in the movie Hell and Back Again. When Sergeant Harris returns home to North Carolina after a life-threatening injury in battle, the film evolves from war reporting to the story of one man's personal struggles to overcome the difficulties of transitioning back to civilian life with the help of his wife Ashley.
By 2006, as many as 5,000 electric cars were destroyed by the major car companies that built them. In Revenge of the Electric Car the viewer is taken behind the closed doors of Nissan, GM, the Silicon Valley start-up Tesla Motors and an independent car converter to find the story of the global resurgence of electric cars, following the race to be the first and the best, and to win the hearts and minds of the public around the world.
Fans of car racing, especially the elite Formula One, will enjoy the excellent documentary Senna, a profile of Brazilian driver Ayrton Senna. Senna would go on to become one of Formula One's best and most accomplished competitors ever--and his steely nerves and willingness to take risks on the track paid off in Grand Prix after Grand Prix. Though Senna's racing career would be far too short, his legacy lives on, and Senna is a gripping reminder of how blazing a talent can be--even behind the wheel of a car.
Edward Hirst
Rowan Public Library has recently added a number of new documentaries on DVD that will appeal to a variety of tastes. You are sure to find one, (or two), that can be enjoyed by the whole family.
In the movie Cave of Forgotten Dreams director Werner Herzog is given rare access to film inside the Chauvet Cave located in the south of France, home to the most ancient visual art known to have been created by man. The Chauvet cave paintings were made over 30,000 years ago, depicting predatory animals such as bears and lions, as well as bison, rhinos, mammoths and perhaps most striking of all, a wall of beautifully rendered horses.
Victims and perpetrators of Sierra Leone's brutal civil war from 1991 - 2002 come together for the first time in a program of tradition-based truth-telling and forgiveness ceremonies. They revive the ancient practice of Fambul Tok (family talk) in the film by the same name that charts the beginning stages of a process to help the people and communities of Sierra Leone move past these painful memories with forgiveness.
The Hammer was inspired by the life of deaf UFC fighter, Matt Hamill, and tells the story of what it takes to be a champion, on and off the mat. Raised among those with the ability to hear, Matt later finds himself no less an outsider amidst the Deaf Community. But through sheer determination, he uses his 'perceived' disability as an asset, and becomes not only the first deaf wrestler to win a National Collegiate Championship, but an inspirational force to both hearing and deaf alike.
In 2009, U.S. Marines launched a major helicopter assault on a Taliban stronghold in southern Afghanistan. Embedded in Echo Company during the assault, photojournalist and filmmaker Danfung Dennis captures the action in the movie Hell and Back Again. When Sergeant Harris returns home to North Carolina after a life-threatening injury in battle, the film evolves from war reporting to the story of one man's personal struggles to overcome the difficulties of transitioning back to civilian life with the help of his wife Ashley.
By 2006, as many as 5,000 electric cars were destroyed by the major car companies that built them. In Revenge of the Electric Car the viewer is taken behind the closed doors of Nissan, GM, the Silicon Valley start-up Tesla Motors and an independent car converter to find the story of the global resurgence of electric cars, following the race to be the first and the best, and to win the hearts and minds of the public around the world.
Fans of car racing, especially the elite Formula One, will enjoy the excellent documentary Senna, a profile of Brazilian driver Ayrton Senna. Senna would go on to become one of Formula One's best and most accomplished competitors ever--and his steely nerves and willingness to take risks on the track paid off in Grand Prix after Grand Prix. Though Senna's racing career would be far too short, his legacy lives on, and Senna is a gripping reminder of how blazing a talent can be--even behind the wheel of a car.
Sunday, September 09, 2012
Library Notes
Rebecca Hyde
‘How-to” manuals are plentiful. But if you’re a novice or an armchair explorer, then a book describing “how it all came about” may offer both information and motivation. The following books are for people who have dreamed of learning to sing, playing a musical instrument, or creating a garden.
It’s interesting that Renée Fleming (“The Inner Voice”) set about her education as a singer by devouring the autobiographies of predecessors. She wanted practical advice: how did they learn and who taught them; how did they survive auditions and disappointments? She calls her own story the autobiography of a voice: of the story of finding her voice, of working to shape it, and how it, in turn, shaped her. She still studies, and historic recordings are essential in preparing for a new role. Clearly styles have changed among sopranos. Fleming constantly battles with herself over her performance as an actress: simple or layered, histrionic or direct?
In “Piano Lessons,” NPR’s Noah Adams describes his fifty-second year, when he decided to learn to play. From January (“Why does a fifty-one-year-old man decide he has to have a piano?”) to December (“My wife falls in love with a piano player in a tuxedo, and the night is still young,” Adams immerses himself in concert-going, piano-shopping, interviews with pianists, and in choosing his method of study. Along the way he admits the piano listening as been great but his learning curve has collapsed. Piano camp is his salvation, when Adams must play before an audience. Success is exhilarating. As a surprise Christmas present to his wife, he puts on evening dress, lights the candles, and plays.
From the Ground Up” is Amy Stewart’s chronicle of realizing her dream of creating a garden. Almost everything is a first for her: first time dealing with oxalis, with scale and aphids, and tourists sunbathing on the front porch (the house is near the beach in Santa Cruz). She buys composts and then makes it, and provides us with her recipes for worm juice and compost tea. Tomatoes are her greatest challenge, but luckily the biggest chore in August is dealing with all the extra vegetables. The final Chapter deals with leaving a garden you’ve created.
Rebecca Hyde
‘How-to” manuals are plentiful. But if you’re a novice or an armchair explorer, then a book describing “how it all came about” may offer both information and motivation. The following books are for people who have dreamed of learning to sing, playing a musical instrument, or creating a garden.
It’s interesting that Renée Fleming (“The Inner Voice”) set about her education as a singer by devouring the autobiographies of predecessors. She wanted practical advice: how did they learn and who taught them; how did they survive auditions and disappointments? She calls her own story the autobiography of a voice: of the story of finding her voice, of working to shape it, and how it, in turn, shaped her. She still studies, and historic recordings are essential in preparing for a new role. Clearly styles have changed among sopranos. Fleming constantly battles with herself over her performance as an actress: simple or layered, histrionic or direct?
In “Piano Lessons,” NPR’s Noah Adams describes his fifty-second year, when he decided to learn to play. From January (“Why does a fifty-one-year-old man decide he has to have a piano?”) to December (“My wife falls in love with a piano player in a tuxedo, and the night is still young,” Adams immerses himself in concert-going, piano-shopping, interviews with pianists, and in choosing his method of study. Along the way he admits the piano listening as been great but his learning curve has collapsed. Piano camp is his salvation, when Adams must play before an audience. Success is exhilarating. As a surprise Christmas present to his wife, he puts on evening dress, lights the candles, and plays.
From the Ground Up” is Amy Stewart’s chronicle of realizing her dream of creating a garden. Almost everything is a first for her: first time dealing with oxalis, with scale and aphids, and tourists sunbathing on the front porch (the house is near the beach in Santa Cruz). She buys composts and then makes it, and provides us with her recipes for worm juice and compost tea. Tomatoes are her greatest challenge, but luckily the biggest chore in August is dealing with all the extra vegetables. The final Chapter deals with leaving a garden you’ve created.
Sunday, September 02, 2012
April Everett
Library Notes
08/30/12
If you’ve been to the library recently, you may have noticed flyers, posters, or bulletin boards featuring “Hunger Games” and the numbers 4-1-1. Rowan County is participating in a community read program this fall, which focuses on Suzanne Collins’ The Hunger Games. The 411 (4 Districts, 1 Book, 1 Community) is more than just a community read—it’s a community experience. The libraries, parks departments, community colleges, and many local businesses of Cabarrus, Rowan, Stanly and Union counties have partnered to make this Fall one you won’t soon forget! Read it. Do it. Survive it.
EVENTS @ YOUR LIBRARY
Dystopian Film Series
Dystopian films, like The Hunger Games, are typically set in the future in a society where the government is corrupt or ineffectual. Join us at Headquarters (Salisbury) for a dystopian film series:
• Tues., Sept. 4th, 6:30 pm – Wall-E (G)
• Tues., Oct. 2nd, 6:30 pm – In Time (PG-13)
• Tues., Oct. 9th, 6:30 pm – I am Legend (PG-13)
Admission is free, and popcorn and lemonade will be served at each showing.
Contests
Show off your creative side by participating in one or all of our Hunger Games contests:
• Writing (adults and teens)
• Short Film (teens only)
• Bookmark Design (teens only)
• Costume Design (teens only)
Pick up entry forms at the library or online at 411communityread.wordpress.com. The deadline for these contests is Fri., Sept. 14th. Winners will be announced at the final event on Oct. 13th at the Cabarrus Arena.
Speakers
Join us for a special lecture, “Language of Film: How we are Manipulated by Media,” by John Santa on Tues., Sept. 18th, 6-7:30 pm at Headquarters (Salisbury). This project is made possible by a grant from the North Carolina Humanities Council, a statewide nonprofit and affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Teen Programs
Teens (grades 6-12) are invited to a special evening of Hunger Games crafts, book discussions, games, and more!
• Tues., Sept. 11th, 5:30 pm, South Rowan Regional (China Grove)
• Mon., Sept. 24th, 5:30 pm, East Branch (Rockwell)
• Tues., Sept. 25th, 5:30 pm, Headquarters (Salisbury)
Book Discussions
The Hunger Games is full of great topics for discussion including freedom, corruption, and survival. A variety of programs have been planned focusing on different topics and/or different audiences:
• Mon., Sept. 17th, 6:30 pm – Headquarters (Salisbury), Regular book discussion
• Tues., Sept. 18th, 6:30 pm – South Rowan Regional (China Grove), Regular book discussion
• Tues., Sept. 25th, 6:30 pm – South Rowan Regional (China Grove), Catching Fire book discussion
• Thurs., Oct. 4th, 12:30 pm – Headquarters (Salisbury), Brownbag lunch discussion (bring your lunch; beverages and dessert will be provided)
And much more!
The programs highlighted above are just the events being held at the library. Additionally, there are survival training days, archery demonstrations, corn mazes, and much more! For a complete list of programs, pick up a brochure at the library or visit 411communityread.wordpress.com.
Library Notes
08/30/12
If you’ve been to the library recently, you may have noticed flyers, posters, or bulletin boards featuring “Hunger Games” and the numbers 4-1-1. Rowan County is participating in a community read program this fall, which focuses on Suzanne Collins’ The Hunger Games. The 411 (4 Districts, 1 Book, 1 Community) is more than just a community read—it’s a community experience. The libraries, parks departments, community colleges, and many local businesses of Cabarrus, Rowan, Stanly and Union counties have partnered to make this Fall one you won’t soon forget! Read it. Do it. Survive it.
EVENTS @ YOUR LIBRARY
Dystopian Film Series
Dystopian films, like The Hunger Games, are typically set in the future in a society where the government is corrupt or ineffectual. Join us at Headquarters (Salisbury) for a dystopian film series:
• Tues., Sept. 4th, 6:30 pm – Wall-E (G)
• Tues., Oct. 2nd, 6:30 pm – In Time (PG-13)
• Tues., Oct. 9th, 6:30 pm – I am Legend (PG-13)
Admission is free, and popcorn and lemonade will be served at each showing.
Contests
Show off your creative side by participating in one or all of our Hunger Games contests:
• Writing (adults and teens)
• Short Film (teens only)
• Bookmark Design (teens only)
• Costume Design (teens only)
Pick up entry forms at the library or online at 411communityread.wordpress.com. The deadline for these contests is Fri., Sept. 14th. Winners will be announced at the final event on Oct. 13th at the Cabarrus Arena.
Speakers
Join us for a special lecture, “Language of Film: How we are Manipulated by Media,” by John Santa on Tues., Sept. 18th, 6-7:30 pm at Headquarters (Salisbury). This project is made possible by a grant from the North Carolina Humanities Council, a statewide nonprofit and affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Teen Programs
Teens (grades 6-12) are invited to a special evening of Hunger Games crafts, book discussions, games, and more!
• Tues., Sept. 11th, 5:30 pm, South Rowan Regional (China Grove)
• Mon., Sept. 24th, 5:30 pm, East Branch (Rockwell)
• Tues., Sept. 25th, 5:30 pm, Headquarters (Salisbury)
Book Discussions
The Hunger Games is full of great topics for discussion including freedom, corruption, and survival. A variety of programs have been planned focusing on different topics and/or different audiences:
• Mon., Sept. 17th, 6:30 pm – Headquarters (Salisbury), Regular book discussion
• Tues., Sept. 18th, 6:30 pm – South Rowan Regional (China Grove), Regular book discussion
• Tues., Sept. 25th, 6:30 pm – South Rowan Regional (China Grove), Catching Fire book discussion
• Thurs., Oct. 4th, 12:30 pm – Headquarters (Salisbury), Brownbag lunch discussion (bring your lunch; beverages and dessert will be provided)
And much more!
The programs highlighted above are just the events being held at the library. Additionally, there are survival training days, archery demonstrations, corn mazes, and much more! For a complete list of programs, pick up a brochure at the library or visit 411communityread.wordpress.com.
Sunday, August 26, 2012
Library Notes
Erika Kosin
Back to School Fun
During the summer months many kids avoid books that have school or teachers in the title, unless it is on their school summer reading list. Now that school is back in session, these same children want to read stories that revolve around the world they are currently in and can relate to, therefore gravitating to books that take place at school. Some of these books revolve around homework, pertain to a big test, include the wacky antics of some students, or even revolve around a holiday pageant. In the world of children’s literature many of the books have scenes that take place at school, including popular series such as Junie B. Jones and the Little House books. Here are a few available titles at Rowan Public Library that might interest upper elementary school kids that take place at school.
Almost Late to School and More School Poems by Carol Diggory Shields: A collection of 22 school related poems about various things such as giggle attacks, being late, detention, having to hold it, and participating in fund-raisers.
Framed by Gordon Korman: Griffin Bing is known to his friends as “the man with the plan”. In fact his plans have gotten them into a bit of trouble in the past. Now they are starting middle school and the new principal, Mr. Egan, is already weary of Griffin and his friends. When the schools treasured super bowl ring is replaced with Griffins retainer in the display case, Griffin finds that no one of authority will listen to him and sets out to prove his innocence only his plans keep getting him into more and more trouble.
Fourth-Grade Fuss by Johanna Hurwitz: Julio and his best-friend Lucas find fourth grade to be a lot of fun but are worried about the big fourth-grade test. Their teacher told them not to worry about the test until after the holiday break, but now that the standardized test is drawing near, it is time to hunker down and get serious. As they plot and plan ways to succeed on the test, using a pencil that has never written a wrong answer or wearing their underpants inside out, they find there are some things in life you just can’t plan for.
The Report Card by Andrew Clements: Fifth-grader Nora Rowley is a genius. She is so smart, that she has spent the last few years making sure she seemed average. After the fourth-grade standardized testing seemed to divide the students of her school, making those who scored high feel smarter and those who scored low feel like they were dumb, Nora knew she had do to something. By purposely getting all D’s on her report card, she will prove to everyone that grades do not matter, but will her secret be revealed in the process?
Erika Kosin
Back to School Fun
During the summer months many kids avoid books that have school or teachers in the title, unless it is on their school summer reading list. Now that school is back in session, these same children want to read stories that revolve around the world they are currently in and can relate to, therefore gravitating to books that take place at school. Some of these books revolve around homework, pertain to a big test, include the wacky antics of some students, or even revolve around a holiday pageant. In the world of children’s literature many of the books have scenes that take place at school, including popular series such as Junie B. Jones and the Little House books. Here are a few available titles at Rowan Public Library that might interest upper elementary school kids that take place at school.
Almost Late to School and More School Poems by Carol Diggory Shields: A collection of 22 school related poems about various things such as giggle attacks, being late, detention, having to hold it, and participating in fund-raisers.
Framed by Gordon Korman: Griffin Bing is known to his friends as “the man with the plan”. In fact his plans have gotten them into a bit of trouble in the past. Now they are starting middle school and the new principal, Mr. Egan, is already weary of Griffin and his friends. When the schools treasured super bowl ring is replaced with Griffins retainer in the display case, Griffin finds that no one of authority will listen to him and sets out to prove his innocence only his plans keep getting him into more and more trouble.
Fourth-Grade Fuss by Johanna Hurwitz: Julio and his best-friend Lucas find fourth grade to be a lot of fun but are worried about the big fourth-grade test. Their teacher told them not to worry about the test until after the holiday break, but now that the standardized test is drawing near, it is time to hunker down and get serious. As they plot and plan ways to succeed on the test, using a pencil that has never written a wrong answer or wearing their underpants inside out, they find there are some things in life you just can’t plan for.
The Report Card by Andrew Clements: Fifth-grader Nora Rowley is a genius. She is so smart, that she has spent the last few years making sure she seemed average. After the fourth-grade standardized testing seemed to divide the students of her school, making those who scored high feel smarter and those who scored low feel like they were dumb, Nora knew she had do to something. By purposely getting all D’s on her report card, she will prove to everyone that grades do not matter, but will her secret be revealed in the process?
Sunday, August 19, 2012
Preschoolers: Dream Big – Read
We had a wonderful Summer Reading Program at Rowan Public Library! The theme this year was “Dream Big-Read” and the staff had a lot of fun selecting books to share with three to five year-olds at the Moon Wisher program. When the staff thought of the concept of “Night” we thought of bedtime, a time of lullabies and bedtime stories. We also thought of dreams (including a child’s aspirations and a few other scary things). I would like to recap some of the great books that were used in our preschool story times this summer. Let us revel in the surprises of the night as we Dream Big – Read! with our children.
Your child is sure to enjoy Nathaniel Willy, Scared Silly, a fun folklore retold by Judith Mathews and Fay Robinson. When grandma says good-night and shuts Nathaniel Willy’s door there’s a terrible squeak. Nathaniel Willy is scared silly and believes he heard a ghost. Full of joyous rhyme and fun sound effects Grandma tries to comfort Willy by setting off a chain of noisy events as she runs to get the cat to comfort him.
“When I grow up what will I be?” is the theme of the book I Can Be Anything by Jerry Spinelli. A young boy’s hopes and dreams are infinite as he learns he can be anything from a dizzy-dance spinner to a silly-joke teller. This book serves as a great reminder that life is full of possibilities and you can be anything that you want to be when you grow up.
Sometimes one of the hardest things to do is to get your little one tucked into bed at the end of the day. In Dinosaur vs. Bedtime by Bob Shea little dinosaur faces the many challenges of the day and succeeds! Nothing can stop little dinosaur as he tackles the leaves, the slide, a bowl of spaghetti, talking grown-ups; that is until bedtime approaches. You’ll have to read the story to find out who will win, little dinosaur or bedtime.
When you think of monsters we tend to think of big, mean, and scary. But not all monsters are scary. In Big Green Monster Ed Emberley uses die-cut pages to reveal parts of a monster. This book is great to help aide a child control nighttime fears of monsters. Another fun monster book is Monster Musical Chairs by Stuart J. Murphy. This entertaining story is a great way for your child to practice his subtraction skills. As six monsters play a crazy game of musical chairs, readers learn to subtract one chair at a time and count the remaining monsters in the game.
In Sooey, South Dakota, on an itchy straw bed, loudmouth Little Runt can’t get to sleep in Bed Hogs by Kelly DiPucchio. Rose, the reigning beauty queen, has stinky feet, big sister Flo’s drools enough to fill a milkin’ pail, brother Ed shakes and jiggles when he dreams, mama dances in her sleep, and papa snores. It’s no wonder Little Runt can’t fall asleep! When Little Runt cleverly and inconspicuously kicks each member out of bed, he realizes he’s cold, scared, and lonely all by himself. Sometimes you don’t appreciate what you have until it is gone.
The book Can’t Sleep Without Sheep by Susanna Leonard Hill is a hilarious take on a familiar bedtime ritual. When a young girl named Ava has trouble falling asleep she always counts sheep. That is until one night the sheep admit that they are exhausted of jumping. The sheep send in replacements only to find out that horses are too pretty, chickens are too ridiculous, pigs are too slow, cows are a complete disaster, and buffalo are too chaotic. Ava learns that her sheep are irreplaceable and a little appreciation can go a long way.
Don’t forget all of these nighttime titles are available at Rowan Public Library!
Sunday, August 12, 2012
“Red Brick, Black Mountain, White Clay,” a Meandering Memoir of North Carolina
By Pam Everhardt Bloom, August 3, 2012
“Red Brick, Black Mountain, White Clay” by Christopher Benfey tells an intriguing story of art and crafts, history, Black Mountain College and the North Carolina connections found in Benfey’s lineage. A family memoir, the author describes his title, “Red Brick, Black Mountain, White Clay,” as three different paths, “each mapping the experiences of relatives or ancestors of mine trying - by art, by travel, or by sheer survival - to find a foothold in the American South.” The journey won’t disappoint. From the red clay of the North Carolina Piedmont to the hidden white clay pits of the Cherokee and on to the creative world of Black Mountain College, Benfey weaves a fascinating and true story that will surprise with its twists and turns and uncanny parallels.
He definitely has a fascinating family. Benfey takes their stories and finds tangents to explore that meander through equally interesting connections. His maternal ancestors and their ties to the red clay of the Piedmont, the red brick mentioned in the title, become a natural extension for Jugtown and its pottery. Stories of another ancestor, Quaker explorer and naturalist William Bartram, link with accounts of the quest by colonial explorers for the snow white clay of the Cherokee; a new world clay that would hopefully reveal the secret of Chinese porcelain.
Benfey’s father, a Jewish refugee from Berlin, had an uncle and aunt named Josef and Anni Albers. These famed Bauhaus artists found refuge at Black Mountain College, an experimental school in the mountains of North Carolina, founded in 1933. Recommended by American architect Phillip Johnson, Josef and Anni Albers brought innovative ideas and cutting edge artists to Black Mountain. That list of artists and innovators included Buckminster Fuller, Willem de Kooning, Jacob Lawrence and Robert Rauschenberg to name only a few. The Albers were most influential in the field of modern art and had an amazing impact on American art.
While delightful on its own, “Red Brick, Black Mountain, White Clay” could easily be the catalyst needed to explore North Carolina arts, past and present. Additional selections at the library about Black Mountain include books such as “Black Mountain, An Exploration in Community” by Martin Duberman and “Fully Awake: Black Mountain College,” a film by Catherine Davis Zommer and Neeley House. For more about Jugtown and the Seagrove area and the Cherokee, find these titles and others; “The Traditional Potters of Seagrove, North Carolina and Surrounding Areas from the 1800’s to the Present” by Robert C. Lock, “Jugtown Pottery, History and Design” by Jean Crawford, “Arts and Crafts of the Cherokee” by Rodney L. Leftwich, “North Carolina Art Pottery, 1900 - 1960” by A. Everette James, “Turners and Burners, the Folk Potters of North Carolina” by Charles G. Zug III, “The Potters Eye, Art Tradition in North Carolina Pottery” by Mark Hewitt and Nancy Sweezy and “North Carolina Pottery, the Collection of the Mint Museums.”
By Pam Everhardt Bloom, August 3, 2012
“Red Brick, Black Mountain, White Clay” by Christopher Benfey tells an intriguing story of art and crafts, history, Black Mountain College and the North Carolina connections found in Benfey’s lineage. A family memoir, the author describes his title, “Red Brick, Black Mountain, White Clay,” as three different paths, “each mapping the experiences of relatives or ancestors of mine trying - by art, by travel, or by sheer survival - to find a foothold in the American South.” The journey won’t disappoint. From the red clay of the North Carolina Piedmont to the hidden white clay pits of the Cherokee and on to the creative world of Black Mountain College, Benfey weaves a fascinating and true story that will surprise with its twists and turns and uncanny parallels.
He definitely has a fascinating family. Benfey takes their stories and finds tangents to explore that meander through equally interesting connections. His maternal ancestors and their ties to the red clay of the Piedmont, the red brick mentioned in the title, become a natural extension for Jugtown and its pottery. Stories of another ancestor, Quaker explorer and naturalist William Bartram, link with accounts of the quest by colonial explorers for the snow white clay of the Cherokee; a new world clay that would hopefully reveal the secret of Chinese porcelain.
Benfey’s father, a Jewish refugee from Berlin, had an uncle and aunt named Josef and Anni Albers. These famed Bauhaus artists found refuge at Black Mountain College, an experimental school in the mountains of North Carolina, founded in 1933. Recommended by American architect Phillip Johnson, Josef and Anni Albers brought innovative ideas and cutting edge artists to Black Mountain. That list of artists and innovators included Buckminster Fuller, Willem de Kooning, Jacob Lawrence and Robert Rauschenberg to name only a few. The Albers were most influential in the field of modern art and had an amazing impact on American art.
While delightful on its own, “Red Brick, Black Mountain, White Clay” could easily be the catalyst needed to explore North Carolina arts, past and present. Additional selections at the library about Black Mountain include books such as “Black Mountain, An Exploration in Community” by Martin Duberman and “Fully Awake: Black Mountain College,” a film by Catherine Davis Zommer and Neeley House. For more about Jugtown and the Seagrove area and the Cherokee, find these titles and others; “The Traditional Potters of Seagrove, North Carolina and Surrounding Areas from the 1800’s to the Present” by Robert C. Lock, “Jugtown Pottery, History and Design” by Jean Crawford, “Arts and Crafts of the Cherokee” by Rodney L. Leftwich, “North Carolina Art Pottery, 1900 - 1960” by A. Everette James, “Turners and Burners, the Folk Potters of North Carolina” by Charles G. Zug III, “The Potters Eye, Art Tradition in North Carolina Pottery” by Mark Hewitt and Nancy Sweezy and “North Carolina Pottery, the Collection of the Mint Museums.”
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