Wednesday, December 4, 2013

More December Displays!



"Unwrap the Gift of Reading"



Again-not a completely original idea of mine. We did this last year and decided to repeat it again. I put a bit more effort making the graphic this time so I think we can save them and hopefully use them again in 2014. Similar to the Blind Date with a Book idea some library use around Valentine's Day.
I reused the green background from a co-workers previous display, which is great because 1) it fit the color scheme and 2) I suck at putting up the background paper!
Mine always ends up with tears (in the paper) and tears (mine weeping at my failure)


Members of the Youth Services staff select their favorite books or anything that sounds intrusting and cover them in wrapping paper, leaving only the bar-code showing in the back.  Suggestions are attached on a gift tag on the front and instruction that allow patrons to unwrap their books only after they have checked them out and taken them home.



Detective stories and gourmet cooking. Can you guess what book this is?



Monday, December 2, 2013

Goodbye Movember..Hello Decemeber Displays!

Time to switch the displays in the teen section. Thankfully I was able to do it without interrupting any patrons, who usually love to sit in the armchairs at the end caps just as I'm ready to work on them.


This was my display for "Movember" I've seen variations on the mustache display posted about the internet and decided to give it a try. The letters are all hand cut and the result was quite striking. (IMHO)

Absent from this photo is my mustache box. 

I've been trying a new "book-mark-marketing" campaign to give away freebie or passives in my displays as well as promote upcoming teen events. I hand cut over 100 mustaches and attached them onto craft sticks to serve as bookmarks and general silliness. 

"Please take one" pleaded the little box that held them.  While I hope most of them got into the hands of their intended audience, most did not. They were raided after preschool story times and by flocks of second grade girls. But the most annoying was a shevler (an adult) took two dozen for herself and then gave them away to circ staff. Rather awkward situation trying to ask for them back, as they were given as "gifts"

So I just placed them in the books as bookmarks and I think maybe a few books went home. Happy to have brought joy to some folks....but I couldn't spend the entire month of November cutting out mustaches.


Onto December! "Make Reading a Hobbit" at the suggestion of my boss who liked the ALA poster but didn't have time to order it. We had some Hobbit book marks already on hand. I'm waiting to see how long our one available copy of "The Hobbit" stays on the shelf (Who wouldn't want to read it with Martin Freeman on the cover and his face on a super cute bookmark?)

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

The Popularity List


From NYT, Contmeplating Obama's Place in History.

This is the list I'm working from. The 43 men I'd like to know better. (Don't tell my husband)
Read the article as the author Nate Silver does a far better job of explaining it than I ever could.

Do I agree with all these rankings? Of course not! I'm already not a be fan of Woodrow Wilson. Nor do I idolize Kennedy or Reagan like some of the folks in the generation before me. What ever you think of George W. Bush is fine, but I think he should defiantly be ranked above about the likes of John Tyler. As presidents go, I admire the great ones but also take a liking to the overlooked and forgotten. The underdog presidents.

You probably don't agree with this list either. That's okay.



  1. Abraham Lincoln
  2. Franklin D. Roosevelt
  3. George Washington
  4. Theodore Roosevelt
  5. Thomas Jefferson
  6. Harry Truman
  7. Woodrow Wilson
  8. Dwight D. Eisenhower
  9. John F. Kennedy
  10. Ronald Reagan
  11. James K. Polk
  12. Lyndon B. Johnson
  13. Andrew Jackson
  14. James Monroe
  15. James Madison
  16. John Adams
  17. Barack Obama
  18. Bill Clinton
  19. William McKinley
  20. John Quincy Adams
  21. Grover Cleveland
  22. George H.W. Bush
  23. Ulysses S. Grant
  24. Gerald Ford
  25. William Howard Taft
  26. Jimmy Carter
  27. Calvin Coolidge
  28. Chester A. Arthur
  29. Richard Nixon
  30. James A. Garfield
  31. Martin Van Buren
  32. Rutherford B. Hayes
  33. Zachary Taylor
  34. Benjamin Harrison
  35. Herbert Hoover
  36. John Tyler
  37. Millard Fillmore
  38. George W. Bush
  39. Andrew Johnson
  40. William Henry Harrison
  41. Warren G. Harding
  42. Franklin Pierce
  43. James Buchanan

Saturday, November 23, 2013

Save the Best for Last- A Presidential Reading Challenge




My Goal- To read one biography and /memoirs of each American President.  A “grown up “book not a children’s bio. That would take me a week.  

 So far this year I've read 141 books for my Goodreads challenge. It included mostly adult and YA novels, as well as graphic novels. I didn’t include picture books or short chapter books because then again I would have completed my challenge too soon.  I also didn’t count the mad skimming/reading of several dozen pregnancy/breastfeeding/child care books I devoured last year in preparation for the birth of my daughter. Even with my busy schedule, I always find time for books.


But why the Presidents? Why would I want to read about a bunch of (mostly) dead white men when there are realms of fiction and fantasy to explore?

Well...I’ve never found an exact reason. I love history which plays a part. But I guess it all started way back in college. I had an acquaintance who prided herself in knowing all sorts of bizarre facts about the presidents. She would challenge anyone to name any president and she would spout out a factoid. I had a pretty similar thought “Who in their right mind studied the presidents?” I will state that we were both theater major and American History was nowhere on our required course studies. Also the person in question was bluntly; a hippie. When she wasn’t talking about dead presidents she was foaming at the mouth about her displeasure at the current commander in chief at the time: George W. Bush.

Later a year after college working in my first theater job, somehow I was challenge to learn the names of the presidents in order. Which I did, studying over the course of an evening between set changes and reciting the list the next day with great success. Soon this became my “parlor trick”. Reciting the list while doing chores and even correctly stating it after 8 drinks in one very foolish Cinco de Mayo. 

But really, what is so special about learning 44 names in order?  We can recite lyrics to our favorite songs, and even sometimes entire movies and musicals, but we can’t be bothered to learn the names of our former leaders. Right now there are hot-headed true-blooded “’Mericans’” who couldn’t name ten presidents much less all of them.

And what of those presidents? Besides the big names –Washington, Lincoln , Roosevelt- can the majority of our citizens even recall the historical contributions of our presidents. I’ve known college bound teenage patrons, bright kids, who couldn’t tell me who was president during the major wars in our history. I’m talking The Revolution and the Civil War, much less who in command during the War of 1812 or the Spanish American War.  I challenged some of our teen age volunteers to list as many presidents as they could in two minutes as a way to keep them busy at the desk. I think the most they got was 6…and they didn’t even include the current president.