$150K Down, $150K to Go Before December 31st!

In early November, our Berryville Library Building Project launched a fundraising challenge: raise $300,000 before the end of the year. If we reach this goal, we have an anonymous donor who will donate $100,000 to the building fund. The combined $400,000 from this challenge would get us to $3.2 million already raised since April 2021 and allow us to set a date to break ground in 2024. The plan is to then raise the remaining $300,000 needed during the building process.

In November, we raised an amazing $150,000, 50% of our goal, through a mailing, radio spots on our local KTHS and KUAF stations, and a telethon on KTHS.

We cannot thank the people who donated and helped us with the telethon and mailing and other fundraising efforts enough. However, we still need to raise that other 50% to reach our goal!

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Walk a Mile in My Shoes: December

This year, our theme is “Walk A Mile In My Shoes.” The idea that you can’t understand someone (and shouldn’t judge them) until you’ve walked a mile in their shoes is a pretty common sentiment. And research has shown that reading fiction is one way to really get such a walk going. So, that’s what we are going to do this year: use fiction (and some nonfiction when we just can’t resist) to take walks in someone’s shoes. We hope you join our journey. For December, our theme is poverty.

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Maker Corner: November

Over the past few years, we’ve been developing and expanding our reach into the world of making, by offering both programs and resources.

What exactly is making? Well, we actually helped craft a formal definition for it for library staff across the nation. But the short answer is pretty simple: it is the process of being willing to get your hands dirty and learn while you create whatever you want to make to accomplish a task or just have fun. Do you cook?  Do you craft? Do you invent? Do you build? Do you fix things? You are a maker! 

In fact, some are even talking about making as at the core of a new type of literacy: invention literacy  (i.e., the ability to look around you and figure out how human-made things work). Like any type of literacy, you can never be too old or too young to start your making journey and nurturing the growth mindset on which all making depends. You also can never have enough tools in the forms of books to get your creative juices flowing.

So, this year we plan to highlight all of the various making resources we have–which range from needlework to Legos to more. November is all about needlework, from sewing to quilting to more!

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Max Miller’s Tasting History

Max Miller rocketed to fame in the early days of the pandemic because his relatively new YouTube channel Tasting History about food and history was well-made and interesting. And since he had been furloughed from his job, he didn’t have anything else to do but make videos about things like how to make your own Roman-style garum at a time when a lot of other people had plenty of free time to watch videos on how to make garum. It took off so much that he ended up quitting his job and getting a cookbook published from Simon and Schuster. Not bad for someone who started making YouTube videos as a hobby at the urging of his friends, whom he jokingly suspects of doing so just because they wanted him to offload his food history trivia on strangers rather than them.

I’ve been a Tasting History fan for a couple of years now and eagerly awaited the release of the book. I was not disappointed. Thanks so much to Julie for purchasing a copy for the library and my brother for buying me a personal copy for my birthday! 🙂

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Book Buzz: Fictional Libraries, Homages to Classics, Historical Mysteries, Second-Chance Romances, and Extreme Knitting

Every month, we’re profiling new-ish releases that are getting critical and commercial buzz. For November, we’re looking at historical fiction about libraries (both the gothic kind and the WWII espionage kind), a modern literary homage to a 19th century classic, a brooding mystery set in 1950s small-town Minnesota, an Atlanta-based contemporary romance, and a nonfiction audiobook that ponders the mysteries of knitting.

Continue reading “Book Buzz: Fictional Libraries, Homages to Classics, Historical Mysteries, Second-Chance Romances, and Extreme Knitting”

Walk a Mile in My Shoes: November

This year, our theme is “Walk A Mile In My Shoes.” The idea that you can’t understand someone (and shouldn’t judge them) until you’ve walked a mile in their shoes is a pretty common sentiment. And research has shown that reading fiction is one way to really get such a walk going. So, that’s what we are going to do this year: use fiction (and some nonfiction when we just can’t resist) to take walks in someone’s shoes. We hope you join our journey. For November, our theme is self-empathy, particularly telling your own story.

Continue reading “Walk a Mile in My Shoes: November”

TV Review: Ghosts (2019)

When Mike and Alison Cooper learn that Alison has inherited a house in the English countryside from a distant relative, the news could not have come at a better time. They’ve been looking for a place, and the stately historic mansion is far more than they could have ever afforded on their own. They end up with more than they bargain for, though, when Alison has a nearly fatal accident. Its lingering side effects include her being able to see the quirky, tragic ghosts who haunt the place. And wow are there a lot of them, from all different time periods. They range from the surprisingly astute caveman Robin to the over-the-top melodramatic Romantic poet Thomas to the snobby grand Edwardian lady Fanny to more modern ghosts. We won’t even get into all the ghosts crammed in the furnace room. Hilarious complications ensue.

Kelli suggested this delightful British show to me, and I am so glad she did. Thanks for the great recommendation, Kelli! It’s a hilarious show with a lot of heart. Despite the ghostly subplots, it is not really horror, though it does have some amusingly effective jump scares. So, if you want to watch something appropriate for Halloween but are in the mood for something that’s not horror or just don’t have a high tolerance for scary stuff to begin with, check out this show instead.

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Maker Post: October

Over the past few years, we’ve been developing and expanding our reach into the world of making, by offering both programs and resources.

What exactly is making? Well, we actually helped craft a formal definition for it for library staff across the nation. But the short answer is pretty simple: it is the process of being willing to get your hands dirty and learn while you create whatever you want to make to accomplish a task or just have fun. Do you cook?  Do you craft? Do you invent? Do you build? Do you fix things? You are a maker! 

In fact, some are even talking about making as at the core of a new type of literacy: invention literacy  (i.e., the ability to look around you and figure out how human-made things work). Like any type of literacy, you can never be too old or too young to start your making journey and nurturing the growth mindset on which all making depends. You also can never have enough tools in the forms of books to get your creative juices flowing.

So, this year we plan to highlight all of the various making resources we have–which range from needlework to Legos to more. October is all about woodworking!

Continue reading “Maker Post: October”

Dale Ross’s A Voice for Ira

One of Carroll County’s claims to fame is being the birthplace of iconic long-time Cosmopolitan editor Helen Gurley Brown. Born in Green Forest in 1922, Helen left the county as a child. As an adult, her career path included work as a secretary, ad copywriter, and author before reinventing Cosmopolitan in the 1960s as a magazine for modern single women. After her death in 2012 at the age of 90, she and her husband David Brown–a noted movie producer in his own right who worked on Jaws, among other films–were buried in Sisco Cemetery here in Carroll County at her mother’s family’s plot.

However, as local historian Dale Ross explains in his book A Voice for Ira, Helen’s father Ira is an interesting figure in his own right. Both of Helen’s parents were schoolteachers, but Ira also pursued a successful political career in the 1920s and 1930s. He served multiple terms as a state representative before being appointed Game and Fish Commissioner. He had signaled an interest in running for Secretary of State before he was killed in a bizarre elevator accident in the summer of 1932.

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Nothing’s Sweeter Than Being a Friend of the Library

Friends board members and volunteers gathered around one of the kids’ tables. We’ve outgrown the library! Help us build a new one.

It’s October, which means it’s time to start renewing your Friends of the Berryville Library memberships! Or joining for the first time. 🙂

We’ve had a really eventful year for the Friends, so keep reading to learn more about how the building project and other Friends work is progressing.

Continue reading “Nothing’s Sweeter Than Being a Friend of the Library”