Author Archives: Laura

Bugs! Bugs! Bugs!

bebugCome to the Bethel Branch on Saturday, May 18 at 11:00 a.m. as we’re joined by the Cincinnati Museum Center.

Attendees ages 3 – 10 are invited to get up close and personal with all kinds of fun and interesting creatures! Participants can build a toy bug, play hide-and-seek with a very hungry frog and meet some ofss the museum’s other live insects friends!

Sign Up Now! Space is limited, so please reserve your spot by visiting the branch, calling 734-2619, or registering online. This program is for ages 3 – 10.

Children’s books about bugs.

Children’s Book Week 2013

cbw2013 Established in 1919, Children’s Book Week is the longest-running national literacy initiative in the country. Every year, commemorative events are held nationwide at schools, libraries, bookstores, homes — wherever young readers and books connect!

Celebrate at the Amelia Branch. Stop in anytime during regular library hours Monday-Saturday, May 13-18 to find a craft featuring characters from some of your favorite children’s books!

Children’s Book Week originated in the belief that children’s books and literacy are life-changers. In 1913, Franklin K. Matthiews, the librarian of the Boy Scouts of America, began touring the country to promote higher standards in children’s books. He proposed creating a Children’s Book Week, which would be supported by all interested groups: publishers, booksellers, and librarians.

Mathiews enlisted two important allies: Frederic G. Melcher, the visionary editor of Publishers Weekly, and Anne Carroll Moore, the Superintendent of Children’s Works at the New York Public Library and a major figure in the library world. With the help of Melcher and Moore, in 1916, the American Booksellers Association and the American Library Association sponsored a Good Book Week with the Boy Scouts of America.

Children’s Book Week is administered by Every Child A Reader, a 501(c)(3) literacy organization dedicated to instilling a lifelong love of reading in children.

Celebrate Mother Goose Day!

bagooseResearch shows that children who memorize nursery rhymes become better readers. Many of our favorite nursery rhymes have been around since Shakespeare’s time! Come celebrate Mother Goose Day at the Batavia Branch on Monday, May 6 at 6:30 p.m. Attendees ages 5-12 can listen to stories, play games and make a craft.

Sign Up Now! Space is limited, so please reserve your spot by visiting the branch, calling 732-2128, or registering online. This program is for ages 5-12.

Collections of nursery rhymes.

Maurice Sendak’s Final Book

sendak My Brother’s Book  is the final book from Maurice Sendak completed before his death in May 2012.  From the publisher: With influences from Shakespeare and William Blake, Sendak pays homage to his late brother, Jack, whom he credited for his passion for writing and drawing. Pairing Sendak’s poignant poetry with his exquisite and dramatic artwork, this book redefines what mature readers expect from Maurice Sendak while continuing the lasting legacy he created over his long, illustrious career. Sendak’s tribute to his brother is an expression of both grief and love and will resonate with his lifelong fans who may have read his children’s books and will be ecstatic to discover something for them now. Pulitzer Prize–winning literary critic and Shakespearean scholar Stephen Greenblatt contributes a moving introduction.

2013 Award Winners

Caldecott Award
This is not my hat - J. Klassen
A follow-up to the award-winning I Want My Hat Back follows the antics of a tiny fish who wears a perfectly fitting round blue hat while trying to avoid an enormous sleeping fish.

Creepy carrots! - Aaron Reynolds
The carrots that grow in Crackenhopper Field are the fattest and crispiest around and Jasper Rabbit cannot resist pulling some to eat each time he passes by, until he begins hearing and seeing creepy carrots wherever he goes.

Extra yarn - Mac Barnett and J. Klassen
With a supply of yarn that never runs out, Annabelle knits for everyone and everything in town until an evil archduke decides he wants the yarn for himself.

Green - Laura Vaccaro Seeger
Illustrations and simple, rhyming text explore the many shades of the color green.

One cool friend - Toni Buzzeo
Elliot, a very proper young man, feels a kinship with the penguins at the aquarium and wants to take one home with him.

Sleep like a tiger - Mary Logue
At bedtime a young girl asks “Does everything in the world go to sleep?”.

Newbery Award

The one and only Ivan - Katherine Applegate
When Ivan, a gorilla who has lived for years in a down-and-out circus-themed mall, meets Ruby, a baby elephant that has been added to the mall, he decides that he must find her a better life.

Splendors and glooms - Laura Amy Schlitz
When Clara vanishes after the puppeteer Grisini and two orphaned assistants were at her twelfth birthday party, suspicion of kidnapping chases the trio away from London and soon the two orphans are caught in a trap set by Grisini’s ancient rival, a witch with a deadly inheritance to shed before it is too late.

Recounts the scientific discoveries that enabled atom splitting, the military intelligence operations that occurred in rival countries, and the work of brilliant scientists hidden at Los Alamos.

Three times lucky - Sheila Turnage
Washed ashore as a baby in tiny Tupelo Landing, North Carolina, Mo LoBeau, now eleven, and her best friend Dale turn detective when the amnesiac Colonel, owner of a cafe and co-parent of Mo with his cook, Miss Lana, seems implicated in a murder.

Coretta Scott King (Author) Book Award

Presents the stories of ten African-American men from different eras in American history, organized chronologically to provide a scope from slavery to the modern day.

Each Kindness - by Jacqueline Woodson; illustrated by Earl B. Lewis
After their teacher Ms. Albert gives a lesson on kindness, Chloe realizes that she and her friends have been wrong — they’ve been relentlessly cruel to new student Maya, making fun of her shabby clothes and refusing to play with her. But has Chloe learned her lesson too late? This gorgeously illustrated, quiet, and realistically melancholy story delivers its message gently yet indelibly, bringing home the full emotional impact of having missed one’s final chance to make up for hurting someone else. For another honest look at kid-level relationship dynamics, check out Mary Ann Rodman’s My Best Friend, also illustrated by Earl B. Lewis.

No crystal stair - Vaunda Micheaux Nelson
A fictionalized biography of the bookseller and civil rights activist who owned the African National Memorial Bookstore in Harlem, New York City.

Coretta Scott King (Illustrator) Book Award

I, too, am America - Langston Hughes
Presents the popular poem by one of the central figures in the Harlem Renaissance, highlighting the courage and dignity of the African American Pullman porters in the early twentieth century.

H.O.R.S.E - Christopher Myers
“Two friends try to outdo each other on the basketball court in an out-of-this-world game of H.O.R.S.E”–.

A 50th anniversary tribute to the Civil Rights leader and the inspirational speech he delivered in August of 1963 combines magnificent artwork by the Caldecott Honor-winning artist of Henry’s Freedom Box with the actual text from one of the most powerful and memorable speeches in our nation’s history. Includes a CD of Martin Luther King, Jr. giving his famous speech.

Michael L. Printz Award

In Darkness - by Nick Lake
Fiction. In this book that Kirkus Reviews calls “engrossing, disturbing, illuminating” and “a journey well worth taking,” readers meet Shorty, a young Haitian man who is trapped in the ruins of a hospital after the devastating 2010 earthquake, waiting for someone — anyone — to come to his rescue. As he thinks about the events that led him there, we learn Shorty’s story, which alternates with that of 19th-century slave Toussaint L’Ouverture, the leader of the revolution that ousted the French and established Haiti as a black republic. Brutal yet mesmerizing, this novel weaves Haiti’s past and present together brilliantly and is certain to provoke both thought and discussion.

Code Name Verity - by Elizabeth Wein
Historical Spy Thriller. After crash-landing in France in 1943 and being captured by Nazis, a female wireless operator for the British (who goes by Queenie, Eva, Verity, and various other aliases) reveals bits of code in exchange for reprieve from torture…and to postpone her execution. Woven into Verity’s confession is a powerful, gritty tale of war, friendship, espionage, and great courage — one that reviewers describe as “gut-wrenching” (Booklist), “downright sizzling” (Horn Book), “heartbreaking” (VOYA), and “unforgettable” (Kirkus Reviews).

Dodger - by Terry Pratchett
Historical Fiction. Late one rainy night in Victorian-era London, 17-year-old Dodger (a street urchin who makes his living scavenging in the city’s sewers) witnesses a young lady being held against her will. A noble sort, Dodger rescues the girl — and from there, his story takes many unexpected turns, including some that involve famous historical figures and fictional characters from the period (such as Charles Dickens and Sweeney Todd). A ripping good tale filled with dry humor, unusual characters, and great descriptions of Victorian London, Dodger is a bit different from Terry Pratchett’s other novels but no less enjoyable — especially for readers who enjoy a clever turn of phrase.

Fifteen-year-old Ari Mendoza is an angry loner with a brother in prison, but when he meets Dante and they become friends, Ari starts to ask questions about himself, his parents, and his family that he has never asked before.

The white bicycle - Beverley Brenna
A young woman with Asperger’s Syndrome travels to the south of France with her mother and friends and strives for independence. This is a story about life, obstacles and ultimately, the dignity found in the search for independence.

Schneider Family Book Award

Wounded in Iraq while his Army unit is on convoy and treated for many months for traumatic brain injury, the first person Ben remembers from his earlier life is his autistic brother.

While the rest of the class makes birthday cards for the principal, Stanley struggles with his words and letters. 650:.

A dog called Homeless - Sarah Lean
Fifth-grader Cally Louise Fisher stops talking, partly because her father and brother never speak of her mother who died a year earlier, but visions of her mother, friendships with a homeless man and a disabled boy, and a huge dog ensure that she still communicates.

Twelve Days of Christmas

12 days of Christmas

Join us at the Goshen Branch on Tuesday, December 11 at 6:30 p.m. to celebrate the Goshen Township Holiday Event.

Bring the family and enjoy a visit from the library’s storytelling troupe, The Dreamweavers. Mrs. Claus will visit and read stories. Kids can make a special mitten craft to take home. Don’t forget your camera!

Kids’ books about the holidays.

All Aboard the Polar Express

polar expressJoin us at the Goshen Branch on Saturday, December 8 at 2:00 p.m. for a fun afternoon. We’ll read the story, ride the “train”, serve hot chocolate and make train snacks. We’ll create a polar craft and watch the movie too! Be sure to wear your pajamas.

Sign Up Now! Space is limited, so please reserve your spot by visiting the branch, calling 722-1221, or registering online.

The Polar Express books and movie.

Santa Visits the Owensville Branch

santa clausJoin us at the Owensville Branch on Tuesday, December 4 at 6:30 p.m. as we wait for a visit from Santa.

We’ll hear Santa stories, play Santa games, watch a Santa movie, and decorate cake pops while we wait for the Big Man to appear. Bring your cameras!

Sign Up Now! Space is limited, so please reserve your spot by visiting the branch, calling 732-6084 , or registering online.

Books about Santa.