Sunday, May 27, 2012

Summer Reading… Not Just for Kids!

It’s that time of year again… summer reading! Sign up has been steadily moving along this week as kids, teens, and adults are embarking on the adventures of reading through the hot sweltering days ahead.  The children and teen programs run through the end of June and the adult program runs through July. There are many activities and drawings involved through all age groups in the next few weeks.

The theme of adult summer reading is “Between the Covers”.   Frankenstein weeping while reading Gone with the Wind and Scarlett O’Hara shocked at reading Frankenstein. That’s the artwork for the theme. It’s quite adorable.  For chances to win the t-shirts and other prizes, adults who sign up will receive tickets to write down what books they have completed through the summer to enter drawings at the end of the program.  Also, the first fifteen individuals who sign up for the program will receive tote bags to cart their books (or audiobooks) around!

The first event on the adult summer reading agenda will be a Social on Thursday, May 31 at 6 p.m.  A chance for adults who are participating in the program to get together and kick start the program.  (The theme for the evening will be night-time snacks!)   Through the summer there will be a Book and Movie that has been incorporated into this summer’s theme and two films.  A Library and Lunch will be held on Tuesday, June 12 at noon and a Book Chat on Tuesday, July 10 at 6 p.m.   Two chances for participants to meet and discuss the books they are currently reading. To end the program there will be a Murder Mystery scheduled for Thursday, July 19 at 6 p.m.  More details will be released on the event as they become available.

There are no particular books that need to be read.  In case you need suggestions, on the library website check out New, Notable, and Awarded Books under the What’s New tab for books to browse.  On the library catalog interface (before and after you log in) there are links to the newly cataloged material the library has acquired including separate sections for new DVDs, music, new young adult, new gentle reading fiction, audio books, new adult, and new children’s items!  There are also links to awarded books that the library owns.  For non-fiction buffs, there are also topical searches in a variety of subjects from Antiques and Collections to True Crime.  Or ask the circulation desk!  Shannon, one of our newest circulation staffers and I had a fun encounter with a teen this week.  We both gave them so many Hunger Games readalikes they may have been overwhelmed.  Though we know they will be back next week when they’re through with their batch of books.

The teen summer reading program theme is “Own the Night”.  Teens set a goal of how many hours they plan on reading during the program's five weeks.  If they reach their goal, they are eligible to win a t-shirt and those who read 35 or more hours have the opportunity to join in on the High Readers Party at the end of the program.     

Own the Night activities will include Animals in the Night a program by Josh Jagel of Meade State Park, Game Time full of board games, video games, and card games, Follow the Evidence a program by Patsy Guinn of the evidence division of the Liberal Police Department (I’m calling it our look into CSI!), Mad Science of Central Oklahoma will explore dreams, Yoga a program by Alli Lyon, Who Glows There a program by Dr. Patrick Ross from Southwestern College, Tai Chi a program led by Lydia Augustine, Zombies! Zombies! Zombies! a program by Zach Carpenter and friends talking about why zombies are so popular, DIY Crafts where the production of ornaments and button bracelets will take place, Magician Steve Crawford, and the end of the summer reading Ice Cream Party in August!  These are the events in store for teens at the library this summer.

For both adults and teens, if you prefer to read at home instead of joining in on library activities that’s fine as well! We’d still love to see you signed up this summer and participating in the capacity that you are able.
So pick up a summer reading packet and sign-up sheets this month and grab a newsletter at the circulation desk.  Stay tuned and connected through our social media pages.   If you have any questions or suggestions don’t hesitate to ask. Hope to see you at the library this summer!

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Summer Reading Begins

                The library is bustling with activity this time of year as we approach the start of our summer reading programs.  Every age group is able to take part, so no one will feel left out.  For the adults, our program this year is entitled “Between the Covers”.  The adult session lasts longer than that of the other two.  It will go from May 29 through July 31.   Some unique things are planned for the adults, including the start of the program social, book discussions, movies, and a murder mystery.  Paulina will have more details in next week’s column.
Teens entering seventh through twelfth grade can look forward to “Own the Night” which runs from May 29 through June 29.  Sign up and set a reading goal to earn a cool tee shirt.  In addition, there will be programs taking place throughout the five weeks that you can attend, including a program by the evidence division of the Liberal Police Department, Yoga, and much more.   When you sign up, you’ll get a sheet with all the info on it.
Children from infant through entering sixth grade can sign up for “Dream Big…Read”.  Besides the reading portion of the program to earn the tee shirt, there are also age group gatherings each week for stories and crafts and special programs the whole family can attend, including Mad Science, a storyteller, and a program on nocturnal animals, to name a few.   When children sign up, they’ll get a program sheet that tells all about the activities. 
Sign up week is May 21 - 26.  We are hoping that patrons can make it into the library during that week, but if not, it will be possible to sign up after the 26th of May.  New this year is the option to print out your sign-up sheets on line, fill them out, and have them ready when you come in to sign up.  To access each set of forms, go to www.lmlibrary.org, Adult Summer Reading will be in the column on the left.  Teens go to Youth Pages at the top of our home page, click on teen drop down, then following summer reading in left column.  For children, it’s Youth Pages on the top of the home page, kid’s page, then summer reading on the left.  All the forms can be picked up when you are at the library as well.  Parents need to accompany minors, as a media release form will need to be signed.  
Parents, the Dream Big…Read! Program is truly beneficial to your children in that it provides reading practice, through a fun program, for five additional weeks into the summer.  Research proves that children lose reading skills throughout the summer unless they read.  Access to reading materials has been consistently identified as a vital element in enhancing the reading development of children. Of all the activities in which children engage outside of school, time spent actually reading is the best predictor of reading achievement – the more students read, the better readers they become (Allington, 2006; Anderson, Wilson, & Fielding, 1988).”  (Taken from Summer Reading Loss by Maryann Mraz & Timothy V. Rasinski at www.readingrockets.org/article/15218/)
The library affords wonderful access to reading materials to help your child keep up his or her reading skills this summer and a fun program to go along with those materials.  Why not plan to join us?  See you at Memorial Library!

 
COMING UP AT THE LIBRARY THIS WEEK
·         Sign up week May 21-26.  Stop by the Children’s Desk
·         Teen Gaming, Thursday, May 24 at 4:00

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Non-fiction

"Helen, she’s back—I thought Ms. Librarian of the mid-nineties just had a column in here. Why doesn't someone give her a cat? On second thought, cats don’t read columns. Oh, well..maybe she’s lonesome and wants to talk to us about more books—and more books. I wonder if she drinks beer—I do." Hi, guys! I’m sitting here looking at another major golf tour on TV and remembering how my dear, darling grandmother, whom I called “Foof”, loved the game and, at one time, was Kansas Women’s Golf Champion—or something like that, anyway. I know she always said, “You can hit the ball a mile, but you can lose your game on the putting green”, and she was so pleased when I took Golf at Washburn University in Topeka as part of my Phys. Ed. Course. I told her my final score was some now-forgotten low number for 9 holes, and she was so proud of me—and then I said, “You know, it’s terribly annoying when you dig up grass and dirt, with your swing, but the ball is still sitting there!” Foof said “Wait a minute—you whiffed the ball on each hole—you didn’t actually hit it?” and I told her that eventually, after several swings, I certainly did hit the ball. When she stopped laughing, I learned each stroke counted --and promptly gave up the game. I love the definition of Golf—“a perfectly good walk spoiled.”

I’m about to order a pretty white, floaty dress for Summer heat and I’m sure it will come in handy when it’s between 97 and 100 degrees—and another fact I can confidently say is that this column is Non-Fiction and we will find just the perfect “read” for you, out there—I’m confident. So, let’s begin with a truly funny book, “Cruising Attitude; Tales of Crashpads, Crew Drama, and Crazy Passengers at 35,000 Feet”, by Heather Poole, and the stories she tells are endlessly funny and you can hardly put the book down!

Prince William’s wife, Catherine, “was born to parents who had both worked as airline crew before going into the party supply business—“and some of those who have married flight attendants are Robert De Niro, Wayne Newton, Russian Prime Minister, Vladimir Putin, Greece Prime Minister George Papandreous, and Kelsey Grammar, among others and while times and requirements have changed, the job is still a desirable one, with thousands of people applying each year.”

I just hooted when she said, every time she gets on the plane, she tries to identify the “Crazy”, who will say or do or demand or plans to do, on their own, something that really would make that particular flight strange, or tiring, or fraught with possibilities of disaster…and then there was the princess who didn’t like her seat, the light, had to have fresh, uncooked vegetables, wanted changed from Business class to First Class, no foam cup but a regular china mug, needed supporting help to get to the bathroom (which may or may not have been the reason the sink was overflowing with what might or might not have been brown water, clutched Heather’s arm tightly and hissed, “I haven’t asked for much on this flight, and I’ve been pretty nice on this flight considering the circumstances.” Heather said, “I inhaled deeply and nodded my head in agreement—because, in fact, she had asked more of me than any other passenger had in 15 years of flying!” The “brown water” inner vision got me! Ye Gods and Little Fishhooks! What a charmer to have to take care of.

Her stories are a great panoramic view of how the stewardesses/flight attendants got started, their early standards, and, today, in her airline, “the average age of a flight attendant is 40 years old and for the first time in history, being a flight attendant is considered a profession, not just a job. Ninety-six percent of the people who apply to an airline don’t get hired” -- you might want to read that again, should you know someone who is applying and thinking it’s a no-brainer -- they better have some brains as well as looks and ambition. Get the book and sit back to enjoy and learn what being a “stew” really is. Great reading!

Wow—what a change this next book is—“Revelations; Visions, Prophecy and Politics in the Book of Revelation”, by Elaine Pagels, and in its first pages, I was lost. ???? First of all, this gal is Professor of Religion at Princeton University and the author of a bestseller, “Beyond Belief” and her knowledge just leaps off the page!

“Revelations” is, hands down, the most controversial book of the Bible and, in her previous books, "Pagels has brought readers to the suppressed biblical texts known as the Gnostic Gospels—now, she turns to a text that is firmly, dramatically, within the New Testament canon. What is the meaning of its surreal images of dragons, monsters, angels and cosmic wars. Why were other books of revelations discarded while this one survived?"

So, she returns to the last days of the mighty Roman Empire, where militant Jews in the city of Jerusalem had been defeated and it resulted in the desecration of the Great Temple in that city; in the aftermath of that war, John of Patmos, “a Jewish prophet and a follower of Jesus Christ, wrote the Book of Revelation, prophesying God’s judgment on the pagan empire that devastated and dominated his people.” Well, Christians, needing hope and promise, championed/agreed with John’s prophecies because they offered hope and promise as offering hope, but “others seized on the Book of Revelations as a weapon against heretics and infidels of all kinds”, and the book has fascinated these same people up to today. And this is what I found fascinating—“Those who loved John’s visions refused to discard them and instead reinterpreted them—as Christians have done for 2,000 years” and, perhaps, the best way to look at Revelations is each generation sees its own conflicts, sufferings, and hope in the grand visions that John had or saw.

On a fabulous trip to Greece—I’d go again next week, given the chance—the one place I thought I had no interest in climbing up another small mountain—literally!—to reach was on the island of Patmos and being able to see the cave where John was held prisoner, and where he did his writing of the Revelations. So, I stayed on board ship and have regretted it ever since—what a wonderful opportunity it would have been for this Episcopal layreader to have seen John’s cave. We were told that the reason his captors let his writings of strange visions go out to the world was that the Romans thought he was crazy and these were hallucinations and no one would take them seriously. In this writing, God sends terrible catastrophes upon Earth and its people and then steps in to save them. Not an easy book, but one that, if read one chapter at a time is worth your effort.

We seem to be getting several books written about the heroic dogs who are in war zones and the, literally, life saving skills they are taught that has saved their soldier/handler many times, and the book,"Soldier Dogs; The Untold Story of America’s Canine Heroes”, by Maria Goodavage, is really great to read in that it has how the dogs are trained—as well as their soldier/handlers. The lives they save are real lives “and play an increasingly crucial role in real battlefield situations.” Throughout history, dogs have been messengers, sled pullers, first-aid deliverers and scouts—“My life is in my dog’s nose”, many handlers have told the author.

A lot of the beginning training work is done “on leash” but it becomes an advanced course when the dog is taken off leash, and encouraged to move off from his handler 50 to 60 ft. and sniff out IED’s—and the first thing they learn is to bond with their “person”, and the worst thing, to me, would be to ignore the blast of explosives going on all around them (but then, I don’t like someone eating popcorn around me in the movie!)

Marine Corps Gunnery Sergeant Kristopher Knight—“Gunny” is a legendary trainer, tough on men and dogs, will step in and address a problem (very frank, almost brutal in making his points but sound judgement and great skills in managing men and dogs) and the lessons handed out are remembered—on both sides of the leash. If an aggressive dog doesn’t back off his target, “the trick, say the veteran handlers, is to remain calm and in control while getting the dog’s attention via a little ‘ass whupping’, whereby the dog is thrown down on his back and quickly slapped on his head—the idea is not to hurt him so much as to let him know, in no uncertain terms that this behavior will not be tolerated.” Justice, as we all know, can come from unexpected places “and it is not unheard of for other instructors or handlers to mete out quid pro quid punishment. Kick a dog hard in his belly when he’s already flat on his back, for instance, and don’t be surprised when what goes around comes around.” Yes! I’ll bet on it being the last time an unfair punishment is given to the dog by that particular trainer.

Great book—and a branch of one of my dogs, my Belgian Shepherd, Trooper, called a French Malinois, was strapped across the shoulders of a Seal Team member as they parachuted into B.Laden’s compound. They are a short-coated black and brown dog who is a little hard-headed but smart and devoted to their “person”, and that dog is still “in service” today. Wouldn’t you love to have a one-on-one talk with “Gunny” and hear his stories, both with dogs and handlers? Great book, find, heel, and read, dear readers.

Last quick look at a book is “The Man Without a Face; The Unlikely Rise of Vladimir Putin”, by Masha Gessen. In 1999, "the family surrounding Boris Yeltsin went looking for a successor to the ailing and increasingly unpopular president of Russia and Putin, with very little governmental experience, beyond having worked as deputy mayor of St. Petersburg, seemed the perfect choice."

The infatuated West were determined to see in him the progressive leader of their dreams, “even as with ruthless efficiency Putin dismantled the country’s media, wrested control and wealth from a growing middle class and decimated the fragile mechanisms of democracy.” Surprise! After just a few years, every obstacle was overcome and every opposing view silenced---those who would not be dominated left or died.” Quite a book with great insights into Putin as he was and is will be for awhile.

Enjoy a good book, here at the beginning of Summer, with, in daytime hours, a glass of iced tea (with lime, please) and, in the evening on your patio, a glass of cold white wine (perhaps a chilled “Clos de Bois”?) In any case, be sure your animals have fresh water morning and evening and be sure to read one of the books mentioned here—or all of them! Be glad you have a great library in Liberal and thanks for reading along! Caio!