Library News
National Library Week 2022
Posted on April 01, 2022
During National Library Week April 3-9, connect with your library
By Ann Hammond
This week, the Sonoma County Library encourages all community members to visit their library in person or online to explore and access services and programs. The library offers an extraordinary array of programs, classes and resources that are available in person or from the comfort of home, including books, movies, story times, book clubs, and digital resources that range from historical research tools to video games.
April 3-9, 2022 is National Library Week, a time to highlight the essential role libraries and library workers play in transforming lives and strengthening communities. The theme for this year’s National Library Week is “Connect with Your Library,” which promotes the idea that libraries are places to get connected to technology through WiFi, computers and other resources.
Here in Sonoma County, your library system is implementing the ambitious goals of our Reimagining Plan, by offering opportunities to learn and participate, supporting community resilience, and fostering diversity, equity and inclusion.
In the past two years, we dramatically expanded our digital and online materials and services. Now that we are emerging into a post-COVID world, we are committed to a “both/and” approach to library services. Our patrons want to access the library when and how they choose, and we will continue to provide robust technological solutions, as well as excellent in-person services.
The library also helps the community connect with media, programs, ideas and classes, and of course, books. We connect our communities to each other, promote literacy, and are champions of free speech and civic engagement.
Libraries go above and beyond to keep their communities connected by expanding resources and embracing diversity, equity and inclusion in programming, resources and collections. Libraries across the country are making a difference in people’s lives by providing electronic learning resources like online homework help and WiFi access for students and workers who may lack internet access at home.
This National Library Week, the public can show their appreciation and support for their free public libraries by visiting their library in person or online, following us on social media and using the hashtags #NationalLibraryWeek and #sonomalibrary.
First sponsored in 1958, National Library Week is a national observance sponsored by the American Library Association and libraries of all types across the country each April.
For more information, visit sonomalibrary.org.
Ann Hammond is the Sonoma County Library Director
Explore Trusted News Sources
Posted on March 22, 2022
If you're looking for news you can trust, look no further than the Sonoma County Library. Did you know that your library card unlocks free access to thousands of credible news sources from around the globe?
San Francisco Chronicle
The San Francisco Chronicle is available to all library cardholders via Newsbank! Explore San Francisco through local news, events, and people. Search current and archived issues with full-color newspaper pages, full-text articles and content only published online.
America's News
Stay in the loop with America's News. Offering coverage on local and national topics, political and social issues, and more, America's News features a wide variety of credible, vetted news sources spanning the U.S.
The New York Times
Courtesy of the California State Library, all California public libraries have online access to The New York Times newspaper. This resource is available for access outside the library and has newspaper content from 1851 to present.
PressReader
PressReader offers unlimited access to more than 7,000 newspapers and magazines from around the world, featuring international news from 120 countries in 60 different languages. Top titles include: The Guardian, Newsweek, L’Équipe, Der Tagesspiegel, Libération, China Daily, and La Razón.
The Washington Post
Access the latest news coverage from The Washington Post with your library card. The Post features reporting and analysis from Washington and around the world, including award-winning investigative journalism and editorial commentary.
Looking for more? Check out the library's news sources here.
Library Statement on Racial Equity
Posted on February 25, 2022
Library commission resolution adopted February 7, 2022
![Library Statement on Racism and Social Equity](/sites/default/files/images/racial_equity/HS_Lib.Stmt.Race.ENG.png)
Resolution of a public statement on racism and social equity
WHEREAS, the Sonoma County Library stands with Black Lives Matter and our community in calling for peaceful, yet powerful action to turn the tide of systemic racism and begin the transition to a just and sustainable society; and
WHEREAS, the library states to those in our community who have been hurt by racism, bigotry, prejudice, misunderstanding and hate: we see you, we hear you, we stand with you, and, as we look outward to help our communities heal, we pledge to continue looking inward, and to face unflinchingly the truths in our own system; and
WHEREAS, it is not enough to eschew racism, we must all be anti-racists; and
WHEREAS, to achieve the change we wish to see, we must take accountability for the ways we have hurt our community by maintaining the status quo and we must commit to providing racially equitable service by eliminating practices and procedures that contribute to systemic racism; and
WHEREAS, the Sonoma County Library represents the communities we serve, and we must continue working towards the creation of the equitable and inclusive library we envisioned in our 2017 Statement of Inclusivity, which reads as follows;
Public libraries have long been known as one of the truly democratic institutions. Public libraries champion First Amendment rights and promote free access to information for all. Public libraries offer services and educational resources that promote inclusion and diversity to all in the community. In light of the uncertainty many feel in our current society, we reaffirm: Sonoma County Library values diversity, empowerment, community, unity, kindness, connection, and equity. Sonoma County Library provides service to all races, all genders, all sexual orientations, all religions, all abilities, all ages, all national or ethnic origins, all languages, all citizenship statuses, all economic statuses, all political affiliations, all people. Sonoma County Library is an inclusive community hub where people intersect and thrive.
LIBRARIES ARE FOR EVERYONE
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE SONOMA COUNTY LIBRARY COMMISSION:
That the commission hereby expresses its support for the statements and values in this resolution.
Deborah Doyle, Chair February 7, 2022
Ann Hammond, Director February 7, 2022
![Library Statement on Racism and Social Equity](/sites/default/files/images/racial_equity/HS_Lib.Stmt.Race.SPN.png)
Resolución de una declaración pública sobre el racismo y la equidad social
CONSIDERANDO QUE la Biblioteca del Condado de Sonoma está con Black Lives Matter (Las Vidas Negras Importan) y nuestra comunidad en la llamada a una acción pacífica pero poderosa para dar vuelta a la marea del racismo sistémico y comenzar la transición a una sociedad justa y sostenible; y
CONSIDERANDO QUE, la biblioteca declara a aquellos en nuestra comunidad que han sido heridos por el racismo, la intolerancia, el prejuicio, la incomprensión y el odio: los vemos, los escuchamos, estamos con ustedes y, mientras miramos hacia afuera para ayudar a nuestras comunidades a sanar, nos comprometemos a continuar mirando hacia adentro y a enfrentar inquebrantablemente las verdades en nuestro propio sistema; y
CONSIDERANDO QUE no basta con renuniciar el racismo, todos debemos ser antirracistas; y
CONSIDERANDO QUE, para lograr el cambio que deseamos ver, debemos asumir la responsabilidad por las formas en que hemos perjudicado a nuestra comunidad al mantener el status quo y debemos comprometernos a proporcionar un servicio racialmente equitativo mediante la eliminación de prácticas y procedimientos que contribuyen al racismo sistémico; y
CONSIDERANDO QUE, la Biblioteca del Condado de Sonoma representa a las comunidades a las que servimos, y debemos continuar trabajando hacia la creación de la biblioteca equitativa e inclusiva que imaginamos en nuestra Declaración de Inclusión de 2017, que dice lo siguiente;
Las bibliotecas públicas han sido conocidas durante mucho tiempo como una de las instituciones verdaderamente democráticas. Las bibliotecas públicas defienden los derechos de la Primera Enmienda y promueven el libre acceso a la información para todos. Las bibliotecas públicas ofrecen servicios y recursos educativos que promueven la inclusión y la diversidad para todos en la comunidad. A la luz de la incertidumbre que muchos sienten en nuestra sociedad actual, reafirmamos: La Biblioteca del Condado de Sonoma valora la diversidad, el empoderamiento, la comunidad, la unidad, la amabilidad, la conexión y la equidad. La Biblioteca del Condado de Sonoma brinda servicio a todas las razas, todos los géneros, todas las orientaciones sexuales, todas las religiones, todas las habilidades, todas las edades, todos los orígenes nacionales o étnicos, todos los idiomas, todos los estados de ciudadanía, todos los estados económicos, todas las afiliaciones políticas, todas las personas. La Biblioteca del Condado de Sonoma es un centro comunitario inclusivo donde las personas se cruzan y prosperan.
LAS BIBLIOTECAS SON PARA TODOS.
AHORA, POR LO TANTO, SEA RESUELTO POR LA COMISIÓN DE BIBLIOTECAS DEL CONDADO DE SONOMA:
Que la comisión expresa su apoyo a las declaraciones y valores de esta resolución.
Deborah Doyle, Comisionada 7 de febrero de 2022
Ann Hammond, Directora 7 de febrero de 2022
The Botanical Bus: Bilingual Mobile Herb Clinic
Posted on February 14, 2022
![Botanical Bus](/sites/default/files/events/botanicalbus/botanical-bus-article-image.png)
Talleres de bienestar virtuales
Cada primer sábado del mes de marzo a noviembre 2022
10:00 am – 11:30 am
La Biblioteca se complace en colaborar con The Botanical Bus: Bilingual Mobile Herb Clinic para ofrecer talleres de bienestar virtuales que alientan a los miembros de la comunidad a aprender sobre el conocimiento indígena de la medicina herbal. Promotoras de Salud, presentaran cada tema e intercambiaran conocimientos sobre remedios, recetas y medicinas para potenciar la salud integral dentro de la comunidad. Impulsados por el éxito comprobado del modelo comunitario de autocuración, los talleres mensuales gratuitos cultivan el liderazgo y potencian la salud integral de la gente, para la gente.
The Botanical Bus: Bilingual Mobile Herb Clinic. Ver toda la serie.
Mes de la Historia Negra 2022
Posted on February 08, 2022
Febrero es el Mes de la Historia Negra, un tiempo para reconocer, celebrar y honrar la rica y diversa historia, contribuciones importantes y logros de los afroamericanos.
Aunque el mes de febrero ha sido designado Mes de la Historia Negra desde 1976, en la Biblioteca del Condado de Sonoma reconocemos que el compromiso de celebrar y aprender sobre las generaciones de estadounidenses negros que han influido y enriquecido a la nación y la sociedad es más que solo un mes. Nos comprometemos a honrar la historia, las comunidades, y las culturas negras; reconociendo y celebrando los logros de los afroamericanas, a nivel local y nacional durante el Mes de la Historia Negra y todo el año.
Libros, colecciones, y recursos
Echa un vistazo a estas listas de recursos creadas y recomendadas por nuestros bibliotecarios:
- Voces negras (Guía de Libby)
- Resistencia y esperanza en la ficción negra
- Resistencia y esperanza en la no ficción negra
- Resistencia y esperanza en literatura negra para adolescentes
- Celebre Las Historias Negras (Edades 0-7)
- Celebre Las Historias Negras (Edades 8-12)
- Ganadores del Premio Coretta Scott King 2022
- Historias y experiencias negras (a través de Hoopla)
- Esclavitud, abolición, emancipación y libertad: fuentes primarias de la Biblioteca Houghton (Harvard)
- Petaluma Blacks for Community Development ofrece recursos sobre información sobre la historia de la salud afroamericana, el notable personal médico negro a través de los años, la escasez de alimentos, y la justicia alimentaria. Consulta este sitio PBCD4us.com cada semana durante febrero y marzo para leer actualizaciones.
Eventos Virtuales
Feb. 2 - Hora de cuentos bilingüe para familias: ¡Mambo Mucho Mambo!
https://events.sonomalibrary.org/events/bilingual-family-storytime-zoom-4
Feb. 9 - Hora de cuentos para familias: Celebrando el Mes de la Historia Negra
https://events.sonomalibrary.org/events/family-storytime-celebrating-black-history-month
Feb. 9 - Club de lectura Queer: Sister Outsider por Audre Lorde
https://events.sonomalibrary.org/events/queer-book-club-sister-outsider-audre-lorde
Feb. 16 - Cuentos folklóricos africanos y afroamericanos con Kirk Waller
https://events.sonomalibrary.org/events/celebrate-black-history-month-w-storytelling-kirk-waller?language=en
Feb. 23 - Alegría Afroamericana: Cuentos y canciones en Español en vivo por Zoom
https://events.sonomalibrary.org/events/alegria-afroamericana-cuentos-y-canciones-en-espanol-en-vivo-por-zoom
Feb. 24 - Serie de charlas sobre documentales
https://events.sonomalibrary.org/events/documentary-film-discussion-group-i-am-not-your-negro?language=en
Feb. 25 - Fomentando resiliencia y creatividad con Dra. Eki'Shola Edwards
https://events.sonomalibrary.org/events/boosting-resilience-and-creativity-dr-ekishola-edwards?language=en
Únase a la Dra. Eki'Shola Edwards mientras comparte su relato personal de resiliencia y esperanza. Como una música galardonada y una médica internista/estilo de vida, presentará técnicas simples para fomentar la creatividad y el bienestar seguido por una sesión de preguntas y respuestas.
Feb. 26 - Programa Virtual de Historia Negra: Salud y bienestar Negro
Presentado por Petaluma Blacks for Community Development, esta celebración del Mes de la Historia Negra se centra en el tema de este año de "Salud y bienestar Negro" al reunir a la comunidad para la música, la danza, la historia, la discusión, y más.
Regístrese ahora:
https://events.sonomalibrary.org/events/black-history-month-celebration-black-health-and-wellness?language=en.
Vaya a PBCD4us.com para obtener más información sobre el programa.
Feb. (todo el mes) - #GoodTrouble Kit (Proyecto de Carteles para Adolescentes); kits disponibles hasta que se agoten los suministros: https://events.sonomalibrary.org/events/goodtrouble-action-pack
En respuesta al incidente de quema de pancartas que ocurrió en la Biblioteca Sebastopol en enero de 2022; La Biblioteca del Condado de Sonoma está brindando a los adolescentes la oportunidad de ponerse de pie y hablar mediante la creación de carteles inspirados en movimientos sociales populares como Las Vidas Negras Importan, los derechos humanos, la lucha contra el acoso escolar, los derechos de las personas con discapacidad, la acción climática, el antirracismo, LGBTQIA, la neurodiversidad y la libertad de expresión.
Santa Rosa Zine Fest 2022
Posted on January 26, 2022
Sonoma County Library and the Santa Rosa Zine Collective are proud to announce the second annual Santa Rosa Zine Fest (#SRZF2022), a weeklong event in celebration of zines and local talent happening from March 22 to March 26.
What: Santa Rosa Zine Fest 2022
When: March 22 - March 26
Where: Virtual (March 22 - 25) and at the Northwest Santa Rosa Library (on March 26)
Registration for online events.
Schedule of Events:
- Tuesday 3/22 - 4-5:30pm
Seeking Liberation Through Art: A Conversation with Casper Cendre of ABO Comix and Rima Makaryan of The Monarch Project, and Deseree Fontenot of Shelterwood Collective
Register for this virtual event here - Wednesday 3/23 - 4:30-5:30pm
Binding, Printing & Connecting: A Xicana Indigenous Perspective with Amanda Ayala
Register for this virtual event here - Wednesday 3/23 - 6:00-7:00pm
Binding, Printing & Connecting: Letterpress History & Practice with Andrew Mecum of North Bay Letterpress Arts
Register for this virtual event here - Thursday 3/24 - 4-5:30pm
Details to come. - Friday 3/25 - 4-5:30pm
Zine Making as a Self-Publishing Adventure with Luis Blackaller (En Español)
*This session will be presented in Spanish.
Register for this virtual event here - Friday 3/25 - 6-7pm
Virtual Zine Social: Join us for a virtual zine social where artists and zine makers will share their work and what inspires them in an informal, interactive setting. This will be a fun way to meet creators and learn about their creative processes. Feel free to bring your own zines or comics to share!
Register for this virtual event here - Saturday 3/26 - 1-5pm
In-Person Zine Fest at Northwest Santa Rosa Library: This outdoor in-person event will feature tabling by local artists and creators, hands-on crafts, and Out of the Box: A Live Zine Workshop by Taira Creager, as well as the Sonoma County Library’s brand new Bibliobus! This event will bring together artists and creators of all experience levels to celebrate the DIY medium of the zine.
Register for this in-person event here
DIY Zine Kits for Teens and Tweens
Make your own zine with our free DIY Zine Kits! Stop by your local branch to pick up your kit which includes art supplies, templates, and other goodies to inspire your creativity! Supplies are limited.
More About Zines:
- Learn about zines from local zinemaker, Taira Creager - download your Basic Guide to Zines here.
- Make a zine with us - download our mini zine template here.
- Explore our booklist recommendations here.
Santa Rosa Zine Fest 2022 - Spanish
Posted on January 26, 2022
La Biblioteca del Condado de Sonoma y el colectivo de voluntarios SRZF están felices de anunciar el segundo Santa Rosa Zine Fest (#SRZF2022), un evento de una semana para celebrar los zines y el talento local que sucederá del 22 al 26 de marzo.
Nuestra lista de presentadores y talleres se anunciará muy pronto. ¡Vuelve a consultar esta página para más detalles!
Qué: Santa Rosa Zine Fest 2022
Cuándo: 22 de marzo - 26 de marzo
Dónde: Virtual (del 22 al 25 de marzo) y en la Biblioteca del Noroeste de Santa Rosa (el 26 de marzo)
Regístrate aquí para el evento presencial del sábado / Registro para eventos en línea: https://events.sonomalibrary.org/es/events/month?keywords=zine%20fest&la...
Horario de Eventos:
- Martes, 22 de marzo - 4-5:30pm
Buscando la liberación a través del arte: Una conversación con Casper Cendre de ABO Comix y Rima Makaryan de The Monarch Project y Deseree Fontenot de Shelterwood Collective
Regístrate para este evento virtual aquí - Miércoles, 23 de marzo - 4:30-5:30pm
Encuadernación, impresión y conexión: una perspectiva Indígena Xicana con Amanda Ayala
Regístrate para este evento virtual aquí - Miércoles, 23 de marzo - 6:00-7:00pm
Encuadernación, impresión y conexión: historia y práctica de la tipografía con Andrew Mecum de North Bay Letterpress Arts
Regístrate para este evento virtual aquí - Jueves 24 de marzo - 4-5:30pm
Detalles pronto. - Viernes, 25 de marzo - 4-5:30pm
Hacer zines como una aventura de auto-publicación con Luis Blackaller (En Español) Luis Blackaller (En Español)
Regístrate para este evento virtual aquí - Viernes, 25 de marzo - 6-7pm
Social virtual de zine: Únete a nosotros para una social virtual de zine. Los artistas y creadores de zines y comix compartirán su obra y lo que los inspira en un evento informal e interactivo. Esta será una forma divertida de conocer a los creadores y aprender sobre sus procesos creativos. ¡Siéntete libre de traer tus propias zines o cómics para compartir!
Regístrate para este evento virtual aquí - Sábado, 26 de marzo - 1-5pm
En person evento en la Biblioteca de Noroeste Santa Rosa: ¡La semana de eventos culminará el 26 de marzo con un festival presencial al aire libre para todas las edades, con un taller práctico con Taira Creager, presentaciones de artistas y organizaciones locales, y el nuevo BiblioBús de la Biblioteca del Condado de Sonoma!
Regístrate para este evento virtual aquí
Kits de Zines para Adolescentes y Preadolescentes
¡Haz tu propio zine con nuestros kits gratuitos! ¡Pasa por tu biblioteca local para recoger tu kit que incluye materiales de arte, plantillas y otros artículos para inspirar tu creatividad! Los kits son limitados.
Más Sobre Zines:
- Obtén más información sobre los zines de creador local, Taira Creager - descarga tu guía básica de fanzines aquí.
- Crea un zine con nosotros: descarga nuestra plantilla de mini zine aquí.
- Explora nuestras listas de libros recomendados aquí.
Horario de Eventos:
Registro para eventos en línea: https://events.sonomalibrary.org/events/month?keywords=zine%20fest
Sonoma County Chooses Best Picture Book of 2021
Posted on January 26, 2022
The votes are in and the Sonoma County Library
Mock Caldecott winner is:
Lucero
Written and illustrated by Yuyi Morales
The Honor Books (runners up) are:
Outside, Inside
Written by LeUyen Pham
My First Day
Written and illustrated by
Phùng Nguyên Quang
and Huỳnh Kim Liên
Watercress
Written by Andrea Wang
Illustrated by Jason Chin
Thank you to everyone who makes this contest possible to everyone who voted!
What's the Story?
Posted on January 24, 2022
Past What's the Story selections for
January to December, 2021 January to December, 2020
Selection for January 25, 2022
You Never Get It Back
by Cara Blue Adams
Linked stories in this collection offer glimpses of the life of Kate, a young woman from rural New England, moving between her childhood in the countryside of Vermont and her 20s and 30s in the Northeast, Southwest, and South in pursuit of a vocation. Along the way, we meet Kate’s difficult bohemian mother and younger sister, her privileged college roommate, and the various men she dates as she struggles to define what she wants from the world.
Do you enjoy this genre?
Similar reads and films are listed below, always free with a Sonoma County Library card.
Eat the Mouth That Feeds You
by Caribbean Fragoza
This collection of stories illuminates a spectrum of Latinx, Chicanx, and immigrant women's voices. In confrontations with fraught matrilineal lines, absent or abusive fathers, and the effects of historical violence, these women and girls navigate a male-dominated world.
What Kind of Woman
by Kate Baer
Through poems that are as unforgettably beautiful as they are accessible, Kate Baer’s words make women feel seen in their own bodies, in their own marriages, and in their own lives. Her poems are those you share with your mother, your daughter, your sister, and your friends.
Women and Other Monsters
by Jess Zimmerman
Through fresh analysis of 11 female monsters, including Medusa, the Harpies, the Furies, and the Sphinx, the author takes us on an illuminating feminist journey through mythology.
A Heart in a Body in the World
by Deb Caletti
From Seattle to Washington, DC, Annabelle is running through mountain passes and suburban landscapes, from long lonely roads to college towns. But no matter how hard she tries, she can’t outrun the tragedy from the past year, or the person that haunts her.
The Bridge Home
by Padma Venkatraman
Life is harsh in Chennai’s teeming streets, so when runaway sisters Viji and Rukku arrive, their prospects look grim. Fortunately, the girls find shelter and friendship on an abandoned bridge. With two homeless boys, the group forms a family of sorts. But when illness strikes, Viji must decide whether to risk seeking help from strangers or to keep holding on to their fragile, hard-fought freedom.
Caperucita se come al lobo
por Pilar Quintana
Los ocho relatos que componen este libro exploran las más fuertes pulsiones detrás de las relaciones de pareja: el amor, la obsesión, los celos, la rabia, la apatía, la ternura, pero sobre todo el deseo. Las fantasías, perversiones y atrevimientos sexuales son los grandes protagonistas de este volumen de cuentos, en el que, entre el realismo y la fantasía, entre lo descarnado, el humor y la ironía, y con un lenguaje llano y rico a la vez, Pilar Quintana consigue sorprender e inquietar a los lectores.
Selection for January 18, 2022
I Came All This Way to Meet You Writing Myself Home
by Jami Attenberg
A dazzling memoir about unlocking and embracing her creativity – and how it saved her life. What does it take to devote oneself to art?
Do you enjoy this genre?
Similar reads and films are listed below, always free with a Sonoma County Library card.
Please Don’t Sit on My Bed in Your Outside Clothes
by Phoebe Robinson
Author, comedian, actress, and producer Phoebe Robinson is back with a new essay collection that is equal parts thoughtful, hilarious, and sharp about human connection, race, hair, travel, dating, Black excellence, and more.
Poet Warrior
by Joy Harjo
Three-term U.S. poet laureate Harjo gives readers an in-depth look at her life and poetry. In this memoir combining narrative prose and poetry, Harjo recounts her upbringing in a Muscogee (Creek) Nation family and the trials she faced navigating the world.
The Middlesteins
by Jami Attenberg
Two siblings with very different personalities attempt to take control of their mother’s food obsession and massive weight gain to save her life after their father walks out and leaves her reeling in the Chicago suburbs.
All this could be yours
by Jami Attenberg
As Victor Tuchman, an abusive, criminal real estate developer, dies in a New Orleans hospital, his daughter, wife, son, and daughter-in-law reflect on his life and how it has impacted their own over the years.
Toni Morrison: The Pieces I Am
An artful and intimate meditation on the life and works of the acclaimed novelist. Toni Morrison leads an assembly of her peers, critics, and colleagues on an exploration of race, America, history and the human condition as seen through the prism of her literature.
(DVD)
Just Pretend
by Tori Sharp
Tori makes up stories all of the time, so she has never lived in just one world. Those stories might just save her when her world seems to crumble. Author Tori Sharp takes us on a journey through the many commonplace but complex issues of fractured families, as well as the beautiful fantasy narrative that helps her cope.
Ginger Kid
Mostly True Tales from a Former Nerd
by Steve Hofstetter
Comedian Steve Hofstetter grapples with life after seventh grade ... when his world fell apart. Formatted as a series of personal essays, Steve walks his readers through awkward early dating, family turbulence, and the revenge of the bullied nerds.
Selection for January 11, 2022
Red Comet
by Heather Clark
With a wealth of never-before-accessed materials, including unpublished letters and manuscripts, court, police, and psychiatric records, and new interviews, Heather Clark brings to life the woman behind the poet, Sylvia Plath.
Do you enjoy this genre?
Similar reads and films are listed below, always free with a Sonoma County Library card.
The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas
by Gertrude Stein, illustrated by Maira Kalman
The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas was written by Gertrude Stein in the style and voice of her life partner of nearly four decades, Alice B. Toklas. Recounting the vibrant and literary life the two make for themselves among the Parisian avant-garde, Alice opens the doors to the prominent salons they held in their home, hosting writers and artists such as Ernest Hemingway, T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, Pablo Picasso, and Henri Matisse.
Wintering
by Kate Moses
A fictional account of the last months of Sylvia Plath’s life and the painful creation of her Ariel poems finds her moving with her two children to London after divorcing Ted Hughes, who works to remind her about happier times.
Adelin
by Norah Vincent
On April 18th, 1941, 22 days after Virginia Woolf went for a walk near her weekend house and never returned, her body was reclaimed from the River Ouse. With Adeline, a reimagining of the events that brought Virginia Woolf to the riverbank, Norah Vincent posits connections not made before and explores the interior consciousness of the most interior of authors.
Margaret Atwood a word after a word after a word is power
A film that explores Atwood’s “backstory,” her early days in the Canadian wilderness and as a poet. Atwood’s novels are explored, including her latest, The Testaments, the highly anticipated sequel to The Handmaid’s Tale. Personal stories are shared by friends, family, and, of course, by Atwood herself.
(DVD)
Exquisite
The Poetry and Life of Gwendolyn Brooks
by Suzanne Slade
This picture-book biography explores the intersections of race, gender, and the ubiquitous poverty of the Great Depression, all with a lyrical touch worthy of the subject. Gwendolyn Brooks was the first Black person to win the Pulitzer Prize, receiving the award for poetry in 1950. And in 1958, she was named the poet laureate of Illinois. A bold artist who from a very young age dared to dream, Brooks will inspire young readers to create poetry from their own lives.
With a Star in My Hand
Rubén Darío, Poetry Hero
by Margarita Engle
A novel in verse about the life and work of Rubén Darío, a Nicaraguan poet who started life as an abandoned child and grew to become the father of a new literary movement.
Dulce María Loynaz, llamada La Dama de las Américas, vivió en el siglo XX y es una de las poetisas más grandes que ha dado la isla de Cuba. Además de escritora, fue abogada, periodista, viajera incansable y una gran amante de los perros, que siempre la acompañaron a lo largo de su vida. Su fascinante obra literaria la hizo merecedora de importantes reconocimientos, como el Premio Nacional de Literatura de Cuba y el Premio Miguel de Cervantes.
Selection for January 4, 2022
Deep Work
by Cal Newport
Deep work is the ability to focus without distraction on a cognitively demanding task. This book presents a series of four rules for transforming your mind and habits to support this skill.
Do you enjoy this genre?
Similar reads and films are listed below, always free with a Sonoma County Library card.
A World Without Email
by Cal Newport
Outlines recommendations for business leaders on how to maximize a working team’s professional productivity by improving administrative support and streamlining digital traffic.
Four Thousand Weeks
by Oliver Burkeman
A lively philosophical guide to time and time management, setting aside superficial efficiency solutions in favor of reckoning with and finding joy in the finitude of human life.
Learning How to Learn
How to Succeed in School Without Spending All Your Time Studying
by Barbara Oakley and Terrence Sejnowski
This work has empowered more than 2 million learners of all ages to master subjects that they once struggled with. It explains why sometimes letting your mind wander is an important part of the learning process, having a poor memory can be a good thing, the value of metaphors in developing understanding, and more.
6 Super Skills for Executive Functioning
Tools to Help Teens Improve Focus, Stay Organized & Reach Their Goals
by Lara Honos-Webb
An ADHD expert offers six powerful super skills to help teen readers pay attention, increase productivity, and get organized so they can achieve their goals. With this guide, teens will also learn to regulate their emotions and boost motivation, so they can be their very best.
The life-changing magic of not giving a f*ck
how to stop spending time you don’t have with people you don’t like doing things you don’t want to do
by Sarah Knight
This parody of Marie Kondo’s bestseller The life-changing magic of tidying up explains how to rid yourself of unwanted obligations, shame, and guilt.
Sólo una cosa
detrás de cualquier éxito se encuentra una sencilla y sorprendente verdad: enfócate en lo único
por Gary Keller
Emplea el Mindfulness para conseguir tus objetivos. El autor nos da pautas claras sobre cómo diferenciar lo importante de lo secundario, no distraernos, priorizar, hacer todo lo posible para conseguir ser más productivos y eficaces y orientar nuestros esfuerzos solo en las cosas que nos ayudan a progresar, para centrarnos en SOLO UNA COSA.
Kids with Cameras
Posted on December 16, 2021
A California Humanities Grant Project in Cloverdale
This 2021 project was made possible with support from California Humanities, a non-profit partner of the National Endowment for the Humanities. Visit www.calhum.org.
Cloverdale, California is known for its hot temperatures, active arts community, and popular wineries. It is also home to a large percentage of immigrant farmworkers; much higher than in surrounding cities. Of the fewer-than-9,000 people who live in this small town, 30% are Hispanic. If you look at just the K-12 student population, this number jumps to over 45%. As the public library, we are always looking for ways of engaging our diverse communities; especially those parts of our community that are under-represented.
We developed our program, Kids with Cameras: Stories of Covid, Resilience, and Hope for the Future, after talking with immigrant advocates, families, school board members, and other local leaders. Using the information gathered during our research and community assessment, we decided to focus on giving students the opportunity to develop digital literacy skills and then use those skills to share their Covid-19 stories with the greater community.
Ezequiel Guzman, President of Latinos Unidos Del Condado De Sonoma, an organization that promotes education, community responsibility, and empowerment of the Latinx community in Sonoma County, played a vital role by connecting us to the immigrant farmworker community in Cloverdale.
Bridget Hayes, Digital Literacy Specialist for the Sonoma County Library, presented three hands-on digital video workshops for children at the Cloverdale Family Apartments.
The ages of participants ranged from 8-16 years old. The parents of some of the younger participants stayed for the workshops and ended up being a big help! Bridget, a Spanish speaker, was able to communicate with parents who did not speak English. The students learned how to use the video equipment and then learned about storyboarding, lighting, composition, and editing. At that point, they were ready to put their skills to work and spent several days interviewing their friends and family members about life during the pandemic.
Not only did the students have fun learning new tech skills, but also they were able to help create a finished video sharing their stories with the greater community. We collaborated with the Alexander Film Society so the students and families were able to see their video on the big screen of a drive-in movie!