Here is the January Dover Public Library Children's Room Newsletter. Lots of free events happening in January so take a look!
Monday, December 31, 2012
Thursday, December 27, 2012
2012 Librarians’ Choice
We are proud to present the 2012 Librarians’ Choice; our favorite books of the year. We hope you enjoy them!
Dare Me by Megan
Abbott
Death in the Floating
City by Tasha Alexander
The Darlings by
Cristina Alger
A Rural Affair by
Catherine Alliott
Spring Fever by
Mary Kay Andrews
Pure by Julianna
Baggott
Dead Scared by
S.J. Bolton
Behind the Beautiful
Forevers by Katherine Boo
The Other Guy’s Bride
by Connie Brockway
Girl of Fire and
Thorns by Rae Carson
Finding Emilie by
Laurel Corona
Walking Back to
Happiness by Lucy Dillon
Gods of Gotham by Lyndsaye Faye
Another Piece of My Heart
by Jane Green
Kingmaker’s Daughter
by Philippa Gregory
Sarah Thornhill
by Kate Grenville
The Secret Race
by Tyler Hamilton
Peaches for Father
Francis by Joanne Harris
Country Plot by
Cynthia Harrod-Eagles
Polar Wives by
Kari Herbert
Mrs. Kennedy and Me
by Clint Hill
Miss Dreamsville
& the Collier County Women’s Literary Society by Amy Hill Hearth
A Place of Secrets
by Rachel Hore
The Snow Child by
Eowyn Ivey
Grown Up Kind of
Pretty by Joshilyn Jackson
Lucky Dog Matchmaking
Service by Beth Kendrick
Flight Behavior
by Barbara Kingsolver
Stormdancer by
Jay Kristoff
Defending Jacob
by William Landay
The Flight of Gemma
Hardy by Margot Livesey
The Virgin Cure
by Ami McKay
Drift: the unmooring
of American Military Power by Rachel Maddow
Crossing the Borders
of Time by Leslie Maitland
Year of the Gadfly
by Jennifer Miller
Sutton by J.R.
Moeringer
The Secret Keeper by
Kate Morton
Buddha in the Attic by
Julie Otsuka
Expats by Chris
Pavone
Property of a Lady
by Sarah Rayne
Girl on the Cliff
by Lucinda Riley
Under the Never Sky
by Veronica Rossi
Casual Vacancy by
J.K. Rowling
Elsewhere by
Richard Russo
Where’d You Go,
Bernadette by Maria Semple
Seating Arrangements
by Maggie Shipstead
Nocturnal by
Scott Sigler
Talking with my Mouth
Full by Gail Simmons
Mr. Penumbra’s 24
Hour Bookstore by Robin Sloan
The Light Between
Oceans by ML Stedman
An American Spy
by Olen Steinhauer
Le Road Trip: a
traveler’s journal of love and France by Vivian Swift
Daughter of Smoke
& Bone by Laini Taylor
Heads in Beds by
Jacob Tomsky
The Shoemaker’s Wife
by Adriana Trigiani
The Age of Miracles
by Karen Thompson Walker
The Summer House
by Marcia Willett
Bedbugs by Ben
Winters
The Bluebird Effect by
Julie Zickefoose
Wednesday, December 26, 2012
Jolabokaflod
What country publishes more books per capita than any other country in the world? If you said Iceland you would be correct! Most of these books are sold between September and November because "The culture of giving books as presents is very deeply rooted in how families perceive Christmas as a holiday." It is so ingrained it actually has a name Jolabokaflod, or the "Christmas Book Flood." I have always wanted to visit Iceland because it looks so beautiful, and now I want to even more. Read more about Iceland's "Book Flood" as well as their attitudes towards libraries at NPR.
Thursday, December 20, 2012
Happy Holidays
Holiday hours for the Library will be:
Closed Monday & Tuesday, December 24 & 25
Monday, December 31 open 9 to 4
Closed Tuesday, January 1
Tuesday, December 18, 2012
Escape
I read a pretty funny/sad article on the NPR web site titled "Don't Hide Your Harlequins--In Defense of Romance." The author talks about how she fell in love with romances at age 12, and has loved them ever since. The adults in her life w
ere unimpressed: "My mom, a teacher, thought romances were beneath me. My school librarian gave me her disapproving look when I checked out more romances from the bookmobile. And my best friend's mother told me I should be ashamed for reading such trash." Come on in and get an armload of romances we won't give you a disapproving look--escapism at its best!
Thursday, December 13, 2012
The Return of the Gothic Novel
When I was a teenager there were tons of Gothic novels to be devoured, loaded with atmosphere and suspense. The trend seemed to die out and I moved on to historical fiction and science fiction. In the past few years Gothic novels seem to be making a resurgence. The Lantern, The Ghost Orchid, The Butterfly Cabinet, and The Thirteenth Tale all have elements of a Gothic novel. They are spooky and mysterious and extremely hard to put down. I went to bed two hours early last night
because I needed some extra sleep. My best laid plans were foiled by a
terrific new Gothic novel by Lucinda Riley.
It starts off on a rugged cliff in Ireland, where a small
girl in a long white gown stares sightlessly out to sea listening to
her dead mother calling her. Grania Ryan, who recently fled NYC after a heartbreaking loss, sees Aurora and rescues her, the start of their relationship. Grania's mother is very wary because the two families have a long tragic history together from the Edwardian era on. Through flashbacks and letters the tangled story is slowly revealed. I ended up going to sleep an hour later
than usual and I wouldn't have quit then if my eyes hadn't stubbornly
insisted on closing while I was trying to read. Damn you The Girl on a
Cliff!
Tuesday, December 11, 2012
Wireless Printing
The Dover Public Library now has the capability to allow patrons using our WiFi to print from their laptops. Yeah! This has been on our wish list for quite some time and we are very excited that this service is up and running. Users are able to print Word, Excel, Powerpoint, and PDF documents. The cost is $.15 per page for black/white and $.50 for color. Follow the link for instructions on how to start printing today, and stay tuned for the next item on our wish list--fax service.
Thursday, December 06, 2012
Try a Graphic Novel!
Library staff made a concerted effort this year to significantly augment our Graphic Novel Collection. The popularity of this genre (definition: a narrative work in which the story is conveyed using sequential art, usually in a comics format.) has grown exponentially and has great appeal among readers the library world now calls “New Adults” (definition: persons in their twenties still finding their way in building a life and figuring out what it means to be an adult. Term coined in 2009 by St. Martin’s Press!) We’d already collected lots of anime and manga for children and teens, but our paltry collection of comic books for adults were interfiled among the regular fiction titles.
Now we have a Graphic Novel section (which also encompasses
non-fiction, memoirs and short stories) at the beginning of our stacks and we’ve
added nearly 100 new titles in 2012. Many popular authors of traditional print
books have also embraced the format: Jonathan Kellerman, James Patterson,
Anthony Bourdain, Dean Koontz, and Janet Evanovich are among those prose
writers with new graphic novels co-written with illustrators.
There are also many adaptations of the bestsellers and classics
now in graphic form including: The Hobbit, A Wrinkle in Time, The Girl with the
Dragon Tattoo, The Odyssey, Game of Thrones, and the Wheel of Time series. These aren’t the old “Classics Illustrated”
comic books from the 1950s and 60s, but modern retellings with superb
illustrations. Try “The Graphic Canon, vol. 1” for a glimpse of everything from
Gilgamesh to Shakespeare in highly-stylized comic book form.
Although we have most of the “Year’s Best” graphic novels
(Sailor Twain; Are You My Mother?; My Friend Dahmer; Jerusalem; Journalism;
Days of Destruction, Days of Revolt; Marbles; Saga Vol. 1; The Hive; Dotter of
Her Father’s Eyes; Drawn Together; Not the Israel My Parents Promised Me), the
book named to every critic’s 2012 “Best” list is one which we will not buy! It
is “Building Stories” by Chris Ware, which depicts the lives of the tenants of a
Chicago apartment building. The “book” is really a box, and inside the box are 14 differently sized, formatted, and bound pieces: books,
pamphlets, broadsheets, scraps, and even a unfoldable board that would be at
home in a Monopoly box ($50). It sounds
fascinating and I’d love to see it and explore it (I’ve heard you can read the “pieces”
in any order you choose) but Ware’s “book” would not last 2 circulations in the
public library before someone would lose, misplace, or tear a piece and ruin
the story for others! We have enough
trouble keeping track of all the audio CDs contained within the packaging of an
audiobook (at least once a day we find a disk missing and discover it’s been
inadvertently left behind in someone’s device or car.)
So you can understand why we won’t purchase “Building
Stories” but we do now have hundreds of graphic novels for all ages (new adults
and old ones!) and we invite you to explore this burgeoning new genre at your
library!
Wednesday, December 05, 2012
Mozart Concert Photos---Dec.1, 2012
Here's some (not very good) photos from our (amazingly excellent) Family Friendly Mozart Concert on Saturday, December 1. I only had my iPhone and it was so crowded (over 120 people in our Lecture Hall) that I could not even get inside the room until the end of the performance! Thus, the blurriness on many of the photos.
So many thanks to our wonderful performers: Naho Bessho on piano, Sally Wituszynski on violin, and soprano Melissa Manseau. Brava! Brava! Brava!We hope to arrange another classical music concert for families in the near future! Watch this spot!
So many thanks to our wonderful performers: Naho Bessho on piano, Sally Wituszynski on violin, and soprano Melissa Manseau. Brava! Brava! Brava!We hope to arrange another classical music concert for families in the near future! Watch this spot!
Job Opening at the Library
We have a part-time job opening for
a "Library Assistant I" in our Children's Room. Averages 12 hrs/week.
There is a 2-week rotational schedule of hours needed:
Week 1: Tue. 5-8:30pm; Wed. 2-5:30pm; Fri. 2-5:30pm
Week 2: Mon. 5:30-8:30pm; Wed. 2:30-5:30pm; Sat. 9-5
More info:
We are looking for a person with an extensive knowledge of children’s literature, a background (academic degree or practical experience) in early childhood education, well-developed customer relations skills, artistic or graphic design ability, and familiarity with computer technology. Public library experience not required, but highly desirable.
Duties include checking library materials in and out, registering new borrowers, providing readers’ advisory services and guidance in locating library materials, and assisting patrons in the use of computer workstations and Internet access. Duties may also include creating displays & materials to promote reading, and conducting preschool story times.
Hourly rate is $12.09
Position is open until closed.
Starting date: mid-to-late December
Benefits include vacation, holiday and sick leave on a proportional basis.
The job vacancy announcement is available in the Children’s Room or at http://1.usa.gov/11F1q3K . A supplemental job description may be read at: http://1.usa.gov/VmNGnP.
Applications may be picked up at the City Manager’s Office at City Hall, or downloaded at http://1.usa.gov/UFYAbS . All completed applications must be returned to the City Manager’s Office or mailed to:
Employment
Office of the City Manager
City of Dover
288 Central Avenue
Dover, NH 03820
(Completed applications may not be faxed or emailed.)
Week 1: Tue. 5-8:30pm; Wed. 2-5:30pm; Fri. 2-5:30pm
Week 2: Mon. 5:30-8:30pm; Wed. 2:30-5:30pm; Sat. 9-5
More info:
We are looking for a person with an extensive knowledge of children’s literature, a background (academic degree or practical experience) in early childhood education, well-developed customer relations skills, artistic or graphic design ability, and familiarity with computer technology. Public library experience not required, but highly desirable.
Duties include checking library materials in and out, registering new borrowers, providing readers’ advisory services and guidance in locating library materials, and assisting patrons in the use of computer workstations and Internet access. Duties may also include creating displays & materials to promote reading, and conducting preschool story times.
Hourly rate is $12.09
Position is open until closed.
Starting date: mid-to-late December
Benefits include vacation, holiday and sick leave on a proportional basis.
The job vacancy announcement is available in the Children’s Room or at http://1.usa.gov/11F1q3K . A supplemental job description may be read at: http://1.usa.gov/VmNGnP.
Applications may be picked up at the City Manager’s Office at City Hall, or downloaded at http://1.usa.gov/UFYAbS . All completed applications must be returned to the City Manager’s Office or mailed to:
Employment
Office of the City Manager
City of Dover
288 Central Avenue
Dover, NH 03820
(Completed applications may not be faxed or emailed.)
The Truth about Style
I just finished the BEST fashion book. I am
not usually so passionate about books on style and fashion but The Truth
about Style by Stacy London is much more than that. You may already be
familiar with Stacy as she is the host of TLC's What Not to Wear. If you have seen the show you know there is some
psychoanalyzing that is done to figure out how to help women out of
their fashion ruts. In The Truth About Style, Stacy turns that sharp
analyzing eye on herself. She reveals how she was affected by a
devastating case of psoriasis that started when she was only 4 years
old. Imagine how it felt to be a young girl who finds herself alienated
by a very visible disease at a time when children can be very cruel.
Stacy also talks about being affected by anorexia, and how it feels to
be a single, childless woman at her age. This book is by turns touching,
humorous, illuminating, inspiring, and fascinating
Monday, December 03, 2012
Mozart in the Morning
On Saturday, December 1 the Library hosted its first Mozart Family Concert, with over 100 enthusiastic people in attendance. The concert featured Naho Bessho on piano, Melissa Manseau as the soprano, and Sally Wituszynski on violin. The crowd couldn't have been more pleased, and were raving about the performance. Stay tuned for further concerts in the series--you really don't want to miss them!
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