Thursday, September 24, 2009

Banned Books Week 2009






Banned Books Week 2009 will be celebrated from September 26 to October 3. This annual commemoration is sponsored by the American Library Association to champion the freedom to read and the rights of free expression. The list of "Most Frequently Challenged Books of 2008" has also been released. And Tango Makes Three tops the list. Among the new entries is The Kite Runner.

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Best of Baby Boom Children's Literature




The newspaper magazine supplement American Profile had a article about classic children's literature of the Baby Boomer Generation (1946-1964). Among its choices were The Cat in the Hat, Where the Wild Things Are, and The Giving Tree. To see the rest of the Top 10, and the reasons behind them, go to
http://www.americanprofile.com/article/35263.html


Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Target Book Club

A recent article in The New York Times discussed how the Target department store chain was having an impact on book sales. For example, Tatiana de Rosnay's Sarah's Key sold only 2000 copies in its original publication run. After being chosen as a selection of Target's Bookmarked Book Club, a specially printed edition sold over 145,000 copies. More information is found in the article: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/22/books/22target.html?scp=1&sq=target%20books&st=cse

Monday, August 10, 2009

Online Vs. Physical Bookstores


There was an interesting article by Simon Heffer in The Daily Telegraph about his preference for brick-and-mortar bookstores over online ones. He says the the experience of physically looking for and examining a book in a book store trumps looking for them in cyberspace. But that experience is fast becoming a thing of the past as bookstores shut down and move to the Internet. I agree with that sentiment, even though I bought a couple of books this weekend from Ebay and Alibris. The selection is wider at online bookstores, but Heffer is right that there is something special about browsing in a bookstore.

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Best Kids' Books?




In his New York Times column on Sunday, Nicholas Kristof chose his selections for what he thinks are "The Best Kids' Books Ever." Charlotte's Web tops the list. Harry Potter, the Hardy Boys, and Alex Rider are there too, as is one of my favorites, The Wind and the Willows. Kristof's column, including the full list is here: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/05/opinion/05kristof.html?em
Kristof's blog, "On the Ground," has additional selections from readers: http://kristof.blogs.nytimes.com/
Do you agree?


Monday, June 22, 2009

Ray Bradbury on Libraries


Eminent author Ray Bradbury is raising money and awareness for his local public library. "I don't believe in colleges and universities. I believe in libraries," he says. The whole story, including a video, is avaiable from The New York Times: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/20/us/20ventura.html?scp=2&sq=ray%20bradbury&st=cse

Monday, June 1, 2009

To Tweet or Not to Tweet-That is the Question


There were a spate of articles in the business section of yesterday's Charlotte Observer about Twitter and its' usefulness. This article (http://www.charlotteobserver.com/business/story/754733.html) was a general survey about it. There were also pro(http://www.charlotteobserver.com/business/story/754667.html) and con (http://www.charlotteobserver.com/business/story/754666.html) takes on Twitter. As for your library blogger, I'm with the "con" about Twitter. I think that it's all froth and little coffee.

Sunday, May 31, 2009

"Library Lady" Letter to Dear Abby


There was an interesting letter to "Dear Abby" from someone named "Library Lady":

DEAR ABBY: I work in a small public library. We love helping our patrons and receiving donations of books. However, there are a few things we'd like folks to keep in mind:
1. If the sign says "Closed," we are closed. The door may be unlocked to allow staff easy entrance, but we are not open for business.
2. We are not baby sitters. We are glad to see you and your children, and to get you started on research, but you must watch your kids and keep them under control.
3. We can accept books that are in good condition only. If the volume has been rotting in your basement or has been extensively written in, please throw it out. We cannot place defaced literature in our collection.
4. Any book checked out on your card is your responsibility. If you let your kids use your card and they return a book late, understand that you are the person liable for the fine.
5. Please leave your cell phone in the car or turn it off while using the library. Ringing phones and personal conversations are disruptive and distract the other patrons.
Thank you for helping us get the word out. -- LIBRARY LADY, ANYTOWN, U.S.A.

DEAR LIBRARY LADY: You're welcome. However, on the chance that your patrons miss reading today's column, your business hours should be clearly posted at the entrance of your building. And the rest of your rules should be printed in large block letters and hung behind the information and checkout desks where no one can miss them.

These things seem like common sense, but common sense is fast becoming a rarity in today's world, even in the library. What do you think?

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Trailer for New Tolkien Book-the Legend of Sigurd and Gudrun

There is a "new" book out by J.R.R. Tolkein, who died in 1973: The Legend of Sigurd and Gudrun. This is Tolkien's translation of a Norse epic poem. There is a trailer for it on You Tube:


Friday, May 22, 2009

Happy Birthday, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle!



Today is the 150th anniversary of the birth of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. For more information about him, and about his most famous creation, Sherlock Holmes, go to http://www.sherlockholmesonline.org/, the official site of the estate of Conan Doyle.

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

"Death to the Classics!"??


Check out this article from Encarta about the changes to the canon of literature entitled "Death to the Classics!" :http://encarta.msn.com/encnet/Departments/Elementary/?article=DeathToClassics&GT1=27001

Great "Tweets" of Literature


Some "Tweeters" are adding "tweeted" versions of classic works of literature to Tweeter. For example, James Joyce's Ulysses is "tweeted" as "jamesjoyce: Man walks around Dublin. We follow every minute detail of his day. He’s probably overtweeting. " More examples of literary "tweets" are found in The Daily Telegraph: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/scienceandtechnology/technology/twitter/5309001/Twitter-Great-works-of-literature-shortened-into-tweets.html

Friday, May 1, 2009

Something to Check Out on Free Comic Book Day-5/2/09


Saturday, May 2, is Free Comic Book Day. Many comic dealers will be giving away comic books and will have other promotions. Marvel Comics is publishing adaptations of classic literature in comic and graphic novel formats in their Marvel Illustrated imprint, similar to the Classics Illustrated from a couple of generations ago. The first issue of their version of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice has sold out. Among other offerings here are The Iliad, Moby Dick, and The Three Musketeers. Check your local comic shop (in Cabarrus County, check out Ballisitc Comics, 493B Concord Parkway, Concord, 704.782.5309) or Marvel: http://www.marvel.com/comics/Marvel_Illustrated

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Cafe Muse for Teens @ Kannapolis Library-4/30/09


The Kannapolis Library will be putting on Cafe Muse, an open mic poetry reading and "coffeehouse" for teens 12 and up on Thursday, April 30, at 6:30pm. Bring your own poem or recite one of your favorites! Refreshments will be provided. There will be a drawing for a Starbucks gift card. For more information, please call Jessica or Annie @ 704.920.1180.

Monday, April 27, 2009

Boom in Use of Library Services Everywhere

The puny economy has increased the usage of libraries seemingly everywhere. Check out this article about the libraries in Asheville and Buncome County, "Libraries Report Attendance Boom With Slow Economy": http://www2.independenttribune.com/content/2009/apr/25/libraries-report-attendance-boom-slow-economy/

Interesting statistic: In March 2008, patrons in the Buncome County system checked out 130,066 items. Last month, they checked out 148,311 items. A sign of the times.

Afterschool Storytime @ Concord Library-4/29/09



The Children's Room at the Concord Library will be having an afterschool storytime for children ages 3-8 on Wednesday, April 29, at 4pm. No registration is required. Please call them @ 704.920.2058 for more information.

Caterpillars and Butterflies Preschool Storytime @ Concord Library-4/29/09



The Children's Room at the Concord Library will be having a Preschool Storytime for 3-4 year olds on Wednesday, April 29, @ 10am. The theme is "Caterpillars and Butterflies." There will be caterpillar and butterfly stories and crafts, and the movie The Butterfly will be shown. Spaces are limited; please call the Children's Room @ 704.920.2058 to register and for more information.

Stretch Your Food Dollar Program @ Harrisburg Library-4/28/09


Pam Outen, Cabarrus County Home Extension agent, will be giving a presentation on Stretching your Food Dollar at the Harrisburg Library on Tuesday, April 28, @ 7pm. Outen will share many tips and strategies. This program is free and open to the public. Please call the Harrisburg Library @ 704.920.2080 for more information.

After School Program @ Harrisburg Library-4/28/09

The Harrisburg Library will be having an Afterschool "Click" program for children in grades 2-5 on Tuesday, April 28, @ 4pm. Reservations are required. Please call them @ 704.920.2080 to reserve a spot and for more information.

Friday, April 24, 2009

Storytime @ Mt. Pleasant Library-4/27/09




The Mt. Pleasant Library will be having Storytime for 2-5 year olds on Monday, April 27, @ 10:30am. The theme will be "Frog in a Fog." Please call them @ 704.436.2202 for more information.

Stamping for Kids @ Mt. Pleasant Library-4/25/09


The Mt. Pleasant Library will be hosting "Stamping for Kids" with Beverly Heintz on Saturday, April 25, at 10am. The participants will make a card. Please call them @ 704.436.2202 for more information.

Stories Under the Stars-Treasure Island @ Kannapolis Library-4/25/09



The Kannapolis Library will once again resume its tradition of hosting "Stories Under the Stars" on Saturday, April 25 @ 7pm. The Bright Star Children's Theater will be performing The Adventures of Treasure Island. The performance is free. Bring a lawnchair and a drink and popcorn will be provided. Please call the Kannapolis branch @ 704.920.1180 for more information.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

The Current State of the Library


As many of you know, the library is not immune to the economic troubles facing the country. We have had to cut our budgets severely and subsequently the acquisitions budget has taken a direct hit. We will not be able to purchase new books until the next fiscal year begins in July, and even then funds will be limited. But there is a way to help. All of the libraries in the system have set up "giving trees" with "wish lists" of specific titles that you can chose to donate. Or, you can make a check out to the Friends of the Library and make a contribution that way. Please contact your local branch for more details. Thank you for your support and generosity.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Coming Soon! The Return of Dan Brown!

He's back! Dan Brown, author of The Da Vinci Code and Angels and Demons, will have new book coming out in September: The Lost Symbol. It features his character Robert Langdon and the action takes place during a 12 hour period. For more information, go to http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090420/ap_en_ot/books_dan_brown. In case you haven't heard, the movie version of Angels and Demons opens in May.

World Digital Library Up and Running


The World Digital Library, last mentioned in a post on April 12, is now up and running as of yesterday: http://www.wdl.org/en/. This is a joint project of UNESCO and the Library of Congress. More details are avaiable here from The New York Times: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/21/technology/21library.html?_r=1 and from the Library of Congress: http://www.loc.gov/today/pr/2009/09-082.html. Links to the World Digital Library and the LOC's "American Memory" (http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/index.html), a American forerunner to the WDL, have been added to the "Links" on the left-hand side of the blog. Check them out!

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Another Library Video-LIBRARY: The Movie

Here's another library video from You Tube- LIBRARY: The Movie. It was shot by a movie and library fan for the Milo Free Public Library in Milo, ME.


Check Out This Video- The Library: Uncatalogued

Here is another interesting library video from You Tube (and yes, "interesting library video" is not an oxymoron): The Library: Uncatalogued. It is produced by the library staff from the College of St. Catherine in St. Paul, MN.




"New" Mark Twain Book Published Today


In reference to the post last Saturday about the "new" Mark Twain book, Who Is Mark Twain?, hits the stores today. This book is a collection of 24 unpublished stories and essays. The official notice from the publisher, including an excerpt read by John Lithgow, can be found here: http://theharperstudio.com/authorsandbooks/marktwain/. An interview with Bob Hirst, the general editor of the Mark Twain Papers and Project at UC-Berkeley, is avaiable at http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2009/04/21_twain.shtml

Laptime Storytime @ Harrisburg Library-4/23/09


The Harrisburg Library will be having a Laptime Storytime for babies and infants ages 9-30 months on Thursday, April 23, @ 10:30am. Please call them at 704.920.2080 for more information.

Elizabeth Strout-Local Pulitzer Prize Winner



Elizabeth Strout, an instructor in creative writing in the Master of Fine Arts' program at Queens University in Charlotte, was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction yesterday. The official announcement from Queens is here: http://www.queens.edu/news_detail.asp?press_id=2792&section=queens. Congratulations to this fine author!

Pulitzer Prize Winners Announced



The Pulitzer Prize Winners were announced yesterday. There are a couple with local ties. Elizabeth Strout, who is on the faculty of the MFA Program in Queen's University in Charlotte, won the Pulitzer for Fiction for Olive Kitteridge. Orangeburg, SC native Eugene Robinson, a columnist for the Washington Post, won for Commentary. Other noteworthy winners were Jon Meacham (Biography) for American Lion: Andrew Jackson in the White House; Annette Gordon-Reed (History) for The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family; and Douglas A. Blackmon (General Nonfiction) for Slavery By Another Name: The Re-Enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil War to World War II. Please contact your local library to check out or reserve these books.
Pulitzer Prizes Website: http://www.pulitzer.org/

Monday, April 20, 2009

Afterschool Storytime @ Concord Library-4/22/09


The Children's Room at the Concord Library will he hosting an afterschool storytime for 3-8 year olds on Wednesday, April 22, @ 4pm. Please call them at 704.920.2058 for more information.

Teddy Bear Tea @ Concord Library-4/22/09


The Children's Room will be hosting a Teddy Bear Tea Storytime for 3-4 year olds on Wednesday, April 22, at 10am. There will be a tea party, crafts, stories, and a movie: Corduroy. Bring your favorite stuffed animal. Space is limited, so please call the Children's Room @ 704.920.2058 to register and for more information.

The E-Book Revolution-Wall St.Journal Article

Here's an interseting article from today's Wall Street Jorunal, "How the E-Book Will Change the Way We Read and Write": http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123980920727621353.html
It's very provocative!

Sunday, April 19, 2009

New Video: What Libraries Mean

Here is another library video from You Tube, What Libraries Mean, from the Austin Public Library in Ausitn, Tx. I tried posting it to the Video Bar, but sometimes it's there and sometimes it isn't. Well, here it is:



Lynn Salsi-Annual Author Event & Luncheon-4/22/09


Lynn Salsi, a North Carolina author, storyteller, teacher, historian, and playwright, will be speaking on Wednesday, April 22, 2009, at the Annual Author Event & Luncheon sponsored by the Kannapolis Friends of the Library from 11:45am-1pm at The Club at Irish Creek on 1196 Fairway Drive in Kannapolis. Salsi is the author of The North Carolina Imagination Box and of The Life and Times of Ray Hicks, which has been nominated for a Pulitzer Prize. Tickets are $20 and includes a luncheon buffet. Tickets are avaiable from Friends of the Library Members or please call the Kannapolis Library @ 704.920.1180.

Lynn Salsi's Website: http://www.lsalsi.com/






Saturday, April 18, 2009

Go Green Workshop @ Harrisburg Library-4/21/09


Just in time for Earth Day, the Harrisburg Library will be hosting a "Go Green" workshop on Tueday, April 21, @ 6:30pm. Mandy Smith Thompson, Environmental Educator for the City of Concord, and Pete Pasterz, Recycling Coordinator for Cabarrus County, will be making a presentation about environmetally-friendly cleaning and non-hazardous waste alternatives. This class is for adults and registration is required. Please call the Harrisburg branch @ 704.920.2080 to sign up and for more information.

Writing Workshop with John Bigelow @ Mt. Pleasant Library-4/21/09


The Mt. Pleasant Library will be hosting a Writing Workshop with John Bigelow, a local writer and minister, on Tuesday, April 21, @ 6:30pm. Please call them at 704.436.2202 for more information.

Teen Movie Night @ Concord Library-Harry Potter @ the Prisoner of Azkaban-4/21/09


The Concord Library will be showing Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban on Tuesday, April 21, at 6pm as part of their Teen Movie Night. The movie will be shown in the auditorium and admission is FREE. Please call them @ 704.920.2050 for more information.

Afterschool Storytime @ Harrisburg Library-4/21/09


The Harrisburg Library will be having an afterschool storytime for 4-6 year olds on Tuesday, April 21, at 4pm. Please call them @ 704.920.2080 for more details.

New Mark Twain Book

Mark Twain has a new book coming out on Tuesday, which will be the 99th anniversary of his death. It's called Who is Mark Twain? and it is a collection of some of his unpublished essays and stories. Details are here from this article in today's Wall Street Journal: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124000246279630121.html

High School Book Club @ Harrisburg Library-4/20/09-Bleachers



The High School Book Club will be meeting at the Harrisburg Library on Monday, April 20, at 6pm. They will be discusssing John Grisham's Bleachers. Please call them at 704.920.2080 for more information.

Pre-K Storytime @ Harrisburg Library-4/20/09



The Harrisburg Library will be having a storytime for pre-K children ages 2 1/2 and up on Monday, April 20, at 10:30am. Please call them @ 704.920.2080 for more information.

Storytime @ Mt. Pleasant Library-4/20/09


The Mt. Pleasant Library will be having a storytime for 2-5 year olds on Monday, April 20, at 10:30am. They will be reading Dance the Night Away. Call them @ 704.436.2202 for more information.

Friday, April 17, 2009

Interview With Eudora Welty from You Tube

As a follow up to the post earlier this week about Eudora Welty centennial, here she is from a You Tube video, being interviewed by Beth Henley about her story "A Worn Path":

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Video-Your Life Work: The Librarian

Check out this video from You Tube: Your Life Work: The Librarian. It dates from the 1940s, I think. How things have changed! Actually, some of it holds up.

Ask the Answer Man!


Do you have a reference or any other kind of question? Well, help is on the way! Your library blogmaster is also The Answer Man, who is ready at a moment's notice to track down the answer to your question. Contact this mug at jseury@cabarruscounty.us, and he'll search out your information! Go to the left hand side under the Blog Archive or scroll down to the bottom of the page and either click on the URL (if you have Outlook as your email) or paste it into your email provider, and the Answer Man will get right to work! Put "Answer Man" in the subject line to get the ball rolling! Watch out, questions, you've met your match!

Happy 50th Birthday, Strunk & White's Elements of Style

The indispensible writer's bible The Elements of Style turns 50 today. Details are here from NPR: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=103140512. Actually, it was written by Strunk in 1918. E.B. White sung its praises in a New Yorker article in 1957. White revised Strunk's work and it was republished 50 years ago today. Copies of Strunk's original version can be found from Bartleby (http://www.bartelby.com/141/index.html) and from Google Books (http://books.google.com/books?id=IAy6NCD0Iq0C&dq=elements+of+style&printsec=frontcover&source=bn&hl=en&ei=_rznSaLQCo-EtweBndjFBQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=5). In honor of Strunk and White's emphasis on concise expression, this post will end now.