Amelia Library Writers Group September 11, 2012

Join us for Amelia Library’s writers group on Tuesday, September 11, 2012  at 6:00 p.m.   There are some fun activities coming up in the next few months for writers so be sure to come to learn all about them.

We will have a speaker at our meeting who has self published.  He will talk to the group about his experiences and share some tips and techniques that worked for him.

 

If you have writing to share, please bring copies.

Prompts for September 11, 2012

I want to try something a little different for prompts this month:

Start your story with this phrase:   I am still looking for the silver lining.

    1. Story setting:  on a veranda
    2. Include these words in your story:  debris, nun, cheer, zipper

 

  1. Start your story with this phrase:  The last time it snowed
    1. Story setting:  in a village
    2. Include these  words in your story:  global, native, granny smith apple, Germany

 

  1. Start your story with this phrase:  Looking out the window
    1. Story setting:  at a tea room
    2. Include these words in your story:  cloudy, United States, lava, oregano

 

  1. Start your story with this phrase:  With legs like
    1. Story setting:  at breakfast
    2. Include these words in your story:  inflated mastodon, reverse strike

 

  1. You’re on a top-secret spy mission—for your grandmother. She can’t make it to her Monday Night Bingo (you tell us why), but she’s certain that one of the regulars is cheating, and she sends you to check it out. Conduct a covert operation to catch this cheater in the act.

 

1967 Music and Library Memories

In 1967, the Bethel Library, founded in 1929 by the Bethel Women’s Club and housed in the Grant Memorial Building, officially became a Branch of the Clermont County Public Library system.

What music were you listening to in 1967?  Do you remember these Grammy Award winners?

And how about these top hits and artists?

Come share your music and library memories from 1967 to the present on Saturday, August 11, 2012 when the Bethel Branch Library will officially celebrate its 45th Anniversary.  Bring the family for fun activities from 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.  Kids can see dog tricks performed by Oliver the Bassett hound, make a craft and have their face painted.  All ages are welcome to listen to music by the Daniel Patrick Family Singers, meet Browser the library’s mascot, check out library and local history displays, enter contests to win prizes, mingle with local and library dignitaries and enjoy refreshments.

Take a “Step Back in Time with Stories of Bethel Library’s Past” on Tuesday, August 7, 6:30-7:45 p.m. and share your library memories with our panel of guest speakers including former and current Bethel library staff, “Worldwalker” author Steven Newman, Walter Carter from the Bethel Historical Museum and Bethel library volunteers and patrons.

What music were you listening to in 1967 in Bethel, Ohio?  We want to know!

 

 

 

Amelia Library Writer’s Group – July 10 meeting

The Amelia Library Writer’s Group will not meet on Tuesday, July 10th so that members may have the option to attend the Fundamentals of Fiction program being presented at the Union Township branch library.  The program is 6-7:30 p.m. and is being presented by Brooks Rexroat.  Mr. Rexroat is a local published author, teacher and musician and will be talking about the important elements of fiction.

On Tuesday, July 17th Mr. Rexroat will present  Preparing for Publication  6:00-7:30 p.m.

Registration is required for both programs either online  calling 513 528-1744.

The Amelia Library Writer’s group will meet again on August 14 at 6:00 p.m.

Ghost Hunting

cincinnati haunted handbookSpend an evening with Jeff Morris, author of Haunted Cincinnati, at the Amelia Branch on Monday, June 25 at 6:30p.m. Mr. Morris will discuss local haunts and ghost hunting. Register online.

Mr. Morris was gracious enough to answer some questions about ghost hunting.

What prompted you to begin ghost hunting?

Well, the answer to this question I guess depends upon what exactly is meant by the term ‘ghost hunting.’  My interest in the field started about 7 or 8 years ago in 2004 or 2005.  At this time, I lived on the west side of Cincinnati on a road called Wesselman Road.  My place was near a supposedly haunted road called Buffalo Ridge Road and as I started to hear more about the stories of ghost cars, ghost children, and haunted abandoned crematoriums from this road, I became more and more fascinated.  My friends and I would often drive up and down the road at night, hoping to experience one of the many ghost stories that supposedly happened along the road.  It was very exciting and a completely different experience than that which I was used to.  It is completely different than a horror movie or one of those theatrical haunted houses that open near Halloween that you know are fake.  There was a sense of mystery that amplified the terror whenever I drove up and down this haunted road.

As time passed, I began exploring the rest of the supposedly haunted places in the Cincinnati area.  Upon exploring these places, I became more and more interested in the history of the ghost stories.  I began to wonder if the story about the hitchhiker dying on the haunted bridge or the children who haunt Weselyan Cemetery were actually based on historical occurrences or if they were urban myths.  This research into the history of the city of Cincinnati was as fascinating as the ghosts.  I had no sense of the historic and the tragic things that have happened in the city during its years of existence and the research into the history helped to increase my interest in both history and the paranormal.

In 2006, I started a ghost tour in Miamitown, Ohio, not too far from Buffalo Ridge Road that originally started my interest in ghosts.  One of the first groups to take my tour was a paranormal investigation group called Cincinnati Area Paranormal Existence Research (CAPER).  I became close with this group, and they worked with the tour throughout the next year or so.  Eventually, they invited me to join their group.  This was  a completely different experience than what I had done so far with the paranormal.  Up to this point, my research had all been historical research and going to the places hoping to experience something.  CAPER took a more scientific approach to ghost hunting, using scientific equipment in order to document any paranormal activity that we experience.

What’s been your scariest experience ghost hunting?

This is another question that is not incredibly easy to answer.  I’m not saying this in an attempt to sound macho or anything like that, but ghosts do not scare me.  I’ve been startled by ghosts from time to time, but I go to these places hoping to see and capture evidence of ghosts.  I’ve seen figures and have chased after them, heard noises and investigated them, and spoken to ghosts in an attempt to get them to exhibit themselves to me.  I actually go to haunted places and collect some artifact from the place and bring it back to my house, hoping that a ghost follows me back to my house.

This is not to say that I have never been scared when going to the haunted places.  Most of the time though, the fear is based on the things that aren’t paranormal.  For example, I worked with a handful of paranormal groups on an overnight investigation of the Mansfield Penitentiary in Mansfield, Ohio.  It was a creepy place, but it was also old and at spots unsafe.  At one point I was walking along a narrow walkway along a line of cells in one of the wings of the jail.  The walkway itself was barely wider than my shoulders.  The railing on my right came up no higher than my knees, and a five story drop to a concrete floor was beyond the railing.  On top of all this, it was pitch black in the building since the lights had been extinguished.  All I had to light my way was a flashlight.  I remember thinking that if one of these ghosts that I was looking for were to jump out of one of the cells on my left, I would almost certainly fall those 5 stories to my death.  I was scared at that point.

What’s your favorite local haunted site?

In my books, Cincinnati Haunted Handbook and Haunted Cincinnati and Southwest Ohio, I write about 101 different haunted locations all within an hour’s drive of downtown Cincinnati.  Each sight took a lot of research and I have become quite attached to many of the sights.  I will always hold Buffalo Ridge Road as a personal favorite because it was the first place that interested me in the paranormal.  I also hold dear many of the sights in Miamitown where I have been doing the ghost tour for the last 6 years.

Perhaps the most important site with my current line of work though is a place called Satan’s Hollow in Blue Ash.  The reason that it is so important to me, is it was a huge factor and inspiration in the genesis of the Haunted Handbook series of books of which I am the series editor and, for many of the books, author.  When I was writing my first book, Haunted Cincinnati and Southwest Ohio, I came across stories for Satan’s Hollow.  There was very little detail on which to go to find the place though.  All the stories say was that it is in Blue Ash.  A book about Blue Ash in the library actually mentions the site but says that it does not exist.  Eventually, my coauthor and I gave up on finding the place.  Later, during one of our book signings, we ran into a paranormal group who said that they had found Satan’s Hollow.  They explained the directions to us and we were eventually able to find the place.  It is a tunnel system that is very creepy.  Voices echo throughout the tunnels and shadows are constantly moving down the dark corridors.  It is one of the scarier places to go in Cincinnati.

After having found this place, I mused over how much easier it would have been to find this place if there was a book which described how to get here.  This gave me the idea for the Haunted Handbook series which is essentially a travel guide to haunted places near the target city.  It tells you how to get to all of the places.  It tells you the rules and laws to visiting the places.  And of course it tells you the ghost stories and the true history behind the ghost stories.  Satan’s Hollow was the location that inspired me to write the first book in the series, Cincinnati Haunted Handbook.  Since then I have written Nashville Haunted Handbook, Twin Cities Haunted Handbook, and am currently working on Chicago Haunted Handbook.

What should every ghost hunter carry in his ghost hunting kit?

I’ll give two answers to this question.  The first and most obvious answer is “flashlight.”  When you are out searching for ghosts, most of the time you will do so at night and in the dark.  If you don’t have a flashlight, you won’t be able to move around or see.  You won’t be able to investigate anything that you hear or think that you see.  Flashlight is definitely the most important tool in any ghost hunter’s kit.

This being said, my personal favorite piece of equipment is the audio recorder.  While it can be interesting to notice temperature and EMF fluctuations with many other ghost hunting tools, gauges such as these do not record, only inform you in the moment.  I feel that the most important things to bring are audio and video recorders.  My favorite is the audio recorder because video evidence is not only more expensive to get but is also much rarer.  The digital audio recorder can be purchased at WalMart for less than $30 and collect strange evidence quite often.  I can’t count the number of times I’ve reviewed audio from an investigation and come across a voice that wasn’t there when the recording was made.  Because of my audio recorder, I have the possible voice of a ghost saved on my computer.

What’s the scariest book you’ve ever read or movie that you’ve watched?

When I was a little kid, I read a book about true ghosts.  It was called “Real Ghosts” by Daniel Cohen.  In the book, he detailed some of the most famous real ghost stories from history.  When I read the book, I was only in the fourth grade and it scared me to death.  For about a month straight, I slept with the lights on because I was scared that if the lights went off, I would encounter one of the ghosts from the book.  As time went on and I lost more and more sleep to my fears, I began to think about things logically.  I began to realize that there wasn’t really anything that a ghost could do to me and that there probably weren’t any ghosts in the house anyway.  Eventually the lights went off at night, but I still remember that book as the scariest thing that I’ve ever read.

Eating Local

kaleDeborah Jordan, founding member of the Central Ohio River Valley (CORV) local food initiative, will be joining us at the Milford-Miami Twp. Branch on June 23 to share the philosophy of “eat local”. Register for her workshop.

Ms. Jordan was kind enough to take the time to answer some questions.

Could you explain your philosophy about eating local? What’s considered local?
There are a dozen reasons to eat local: from taste to community connections to our health and the health of the planet.  We all eat and can influence our food system by voting with our forks.   I want to support a just and sustainable food system which is based in a local economy, not food from factory farms or from half way around the world.

We all know about the epidemic of childhood obesity and diabetes, partly from the lack of access to fresh, healthy food and the resulting poor food choices.  I was fortunate to spend time on a farm as a child and see where food comes from; so many children haven’t had that experience.  Potato chips or French fries are as close to a potato as they get.   They think milk comes from the grocery store.  We have to reconnect a whole generation to their food sources and to how to cook.

What’s local is up for discussion; most people agree on 50 to 100 miles or what’s within a day’s harvest and drive.  We are certainly not growing enough in our “foodshed” to  feed our local population, but we have the capacity to grow a lot more of what we need.  Everything I eat is not local, but I do try to go local as much as I can.

What’s your favorite resource for eating local? 

Besides our own garden where we grow small amounts of fruits (strawberries, raspberries, and apples) and vegetables (greens, tomatoes, herbs, squash, beans, etc.) we belong to our neighborhood Community Supported Agriculture or CSA .  We paid upfront plus work an agreed upon number of hours over the growing season in return for a weekly share of produce from May to November.   Our first pickup was lettuce, bok choy, radishes, and onions.  Last year, I tried kohlrabi for the first time since it was in our share and enjoyed it!   I like the idea of a direct connection to the farmer, and I like the idea of a direct connection to the soil and seasons when I help grow food.  I also appreciate how hard farmers work to feed people.

Could you tell us about CORV? What is it and how did it begin?

Central Ohio River Valley initiative is a “grassroots effort to connect community members with local growers and with fresh, healthy local food.  It aims to promote self-sufficiency, sustainability, and the wise use of resources.”   That’s straight from our mission.  We’ve just completed our fifth annual food guide plus give educational presentations and table at events.  I’m actually the producer of the guide, but there is a wonderful “kitchen cabinet” that helps make it happen each year.    I got the idea of the food guide while visiting my friend in Seattle and going to a sustainability fair where I picked up a local food guide.  Back in Cincinnati, I connected with Susan Miller Stigler who wanted to do something around local food.  The time was ripe, and the connections kept happening, including funding to print 10,000 copies.  We printed 45,000 this year plus have a website.

What’s your favorite local food?

Right now, we just finished a few weeks of delicious, prolific , and early strawberries from our own patch, so I would say strawberries.  I will answer differently in a few weeks, which is what I like about eating seasonally: enjoying the changes each month brings.

Do you have a recipe that showcases local food?

My disclaimer: I am not a chef.  That’s why I like including some restaurants in the guide because they know how to showcase local food.    Since there are lots of greens right now, I like steaming chard and/or kale with garlic and onions, even radishes, and putting a vinegar/oil dressing on them.   To really showcase local food, I suggest looking at these cookbooks:  Simply in Season and From Asparagus to Zucchini.

Friday Chat at the Amelia Library – Travel Resources May 11, 2012


Join fellow travelers at the Amelia Library on Friday, May 11th at 10:30 a.m. as we chat about travel websites and the Mango language database.   The Mango Language database is available on the library website.  It is a database  where you can learn a few foreign phrases to use during your travels or learn a language in-depth for more extensive travel.

Clermont County library also has language learning materials on CD and phrase books and dictionaries that can be checked out.

During our chat we will explore some of the websites on the internet.

Most of the major travel guide companies have websites that are easy to access such as Fodors, Frommers, Lonely Planet and Tripadvisor.  Many include reviews and travel tips by other travelers.

The CDC  is a website maintained by the Centers for Disease Control  that will give you updates on needed vaccinations and travel alerts.

The State Department provides information about passports and the National Park Service has information on the National Parks.  The National Park Service has recently devoted a webpage to Civil War History for the 150 years anniversary.

If you are looking for alternative transportation Airlines, Buses, and Trains all have their own  website where you get information about making reservations and travel.  Travel Apps are also available for your mobile phone.

Don’t leave home uninformed. Join us at the Amelia Library as we explore travel resources on Friday, May 11th.

Happy Anniversary River City Writers’ Group

It happened during a conversation with a library patron. We were talking about her love of writing, and some of the things she has written about, when she said “I wonder if a writers’ group would do well in New Richmond?” Her question got us brainstorming to find a way to try it.

At the time, Clermont County Public Library already had one very successful writers’ group, at the Williamsburg Branch Library. We visited them, to see just what went on in a writers’ group, anyway. On April 18, 2011, we had our inaugural meeting of the River City Writers’ Group. I’m pleased to say that they’ve been meeting on the 1st and 3rd Monday’s of each month, for the past year. They have shared short stories, memoirs, novels, writing prompts, and poetry. For the past few months, poetry has been the focus, and several even participated in a Brown County Poetry Reading.

Writing groups have become so successful that five Clermont County Public Library branches now offer creative writing groups. Check our calendar to find a writing group near you.

Amelia Writing Group

The next meeting of the Amelia Writing Group will be March 13 at 6:00 p.m.

Writing Prompts for March 13th

1,  It was a beautiful day so I decided to take a walk into the woods behind my house.

2.  A funny thing happened on my way ………………………………

3.  A reporter arrives in town and asks odd questions.

4.  They had nothing to say to each other.

Five Words

Little boy, cart, torn page, market, green

Have fun!

ACT/SAT Preparation Program

Mr. Bisig, the founder of College and Beyond, speaks at the Amelia Branch on February 21 about taking the ACT/SAT. He’s spoken about a number of college issues over the years, appearing locally in the Business Courier, Cincinnati Magazine, and Simply Money. Call 752-5580 to register for the program.

Question: Do ACT and SAT scores play into scholarship amounts more than academic record?
Dan Bisig: Test scores are just one of the items taken into consideration for scholarships. When added to the GPA in particular, the higher the test score, the greater the eligibility for more scholarship dollars. However, please realize that some scholarships also factor in a number of other items including the curriculum a student has taken compared to the available school options, extracurricular activities and maybe even an essay. Bottom-line – Do your homework!

Q: How important are ACT/SAT scores when applying to college versus academic record or extracurricular activities?

DB: Once again, test scores are just one component of the admissions process for many colleges. The more selective the college, the greater the emphasis that is placed by Admissions Officers on ALL of these items (including essays) when they select their incoming freshman class.

Q:Is there a practice test online or in a study guide that you recommend?

DB: First, it is important to realize that every student has their own way of preparing for tests. Ask them, “What have you found to be the best way to study and prepare for a tough test?” There are many available options: some may need a tutor, others group sessions, maybe a Prep Book or a focused computer program.

Amelia Writer’s Group

The next meeting of the Amelia’s Writer’s group will be on February 14th.  Rudi will present notes from a discussion on Stephen King’s “On Writing” during the first half.

At the last meeting the group came up with the following guidelines for giving and receiving feedback.

Giving Feedback

1.  Be respectful of group members and genre topics

2.  Everyone is encouraged to participate.

3.  Begin with positive feedback and then constructive feedback.

4.  Avoid repeating comments that have already been presented.

5.  Be specific and back up with examples.

Receiving Feedback:

1.   Ask for specific feedback, if wanted.

2.  Listen to feedback and avoid commenting.

3.  Write down comments and ask for clarification later.