Our May 2021 Newsletter
This month: Construction Update, Spotlight on Asian-American Literature, Community Art Project, Grafton Land Trust Partnership, Gardening & Horticulture Database Spotlight, Friends Book Sale and more!
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We are in the home stretch, construction-wise, and we hope, pandemic-wise, with 5 weeks to go to our substantial completion countdown, and over 200 million people in the US vaccinated against COVID-19, including 8,649 from Grafton with at least one dose, and 4,715 with 2 doses. What does this mean for us? We look forward to opening to the public this summer -- still socially distanced, still masked, without indoor programming -- to offer browsing by appointment along with curbside and home delivery, computer access by appointment, and passport acceptance, notarization, and book donations.
Our shelving will be delivered June 11 and then take about 2 weeks to install and then the movers will arrive July 12 to begin moving us from 53 North Main Street back to 35 Grafton Common. We will be closed to the public (no curbside) for about a month, and will do our best to keep up with remote requests like ebook troubleshooting. Your library card is good at all C/W MARS member libraries, so place your summer reading requests early and schedule pickup for another local library. Our Summer Reading Program will be virtual, and there will be some DIY grab bag activities for pickup at a remote location so we don't get in the way of the movers.
What a long, strange (two!) years it has been! To that end, we invite you to participate in a special art project to capture your mood, emotions, experience through the last year on an 8"x8" canvas, to create our first art display in our new building. Details follow. We can't wait to see what you create.
Beth Gallaway,
Library Director
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In April, the exterior siding was painted, the foyer was finished, cabinetry was installed, IT was on site running cable, carpeting was completed on the second floor, bathrooms and hallways were tiled, appliance were ordered, the Children's amphitheatre is under construction, exterior sun shades were installed. In May, we will finalize carpeting, finish repainting the Main Reading Room and give the building some time to off-gas (note: chemical off gassing should be very low as we chose materials with high standards for minimal impact).
Some costs have run over the 2017 estimate, but our Capital Campaign is making up the difference by covering some FF&E costs: IT, furniture and shelving.
Check out construction photos in albums on our Facebook Page:
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Upcoming Library Planning & Building Committee Meetings
Library Planning and Building Committee
Monday May 3, 2021 6 PM Eastern Time (US and Canada)
Join Zoom Meeting:
Meeting ID: 817 5988 1407
Passcode: 430234
Dial: (646) 558-8656
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Take home a canvas the week of May 3-8 and return the finished product the week of May 24-28 to take part in a Community Art Quilt display when our renovated library opens! For more info, click here for the Facebook event information.
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Asian American Literature
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At a time when very little feels normal, reading is an essential escape more than ever -- the ability to inhabit someone else's mind for a few hours can be the best antidote to the alarming headlines. The authors of East Asian literature are the prominent voices of their cultures today. The best East Asian writers are women. In Japan and Korea especially, those writers who have the greatest clarity of mind and creative spirits are insightful, fascinating, and imaginative women.
Asian American Literature* is the body of literature produced in the United States by writers of Asian descent. Asian American literature became a category during the 1970s but didn't see a direct impact in viewership until later in the 1970s. It encompasses the rich and widely diverse cultural and ethnic heritages found in such countries as China, India, Japan, Vietnam, Korea, and more. Common themes in Asian American literature include race, culture, and finding a sense of identity. Long-standing traditions have played a major role in shaping the future of Asian Americans. Some literature touches upon the effects of traditional Asian culture on Asian Americans living in a more liberal country.
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Featured Book of the Month:
Island of the Sea Women by Lisa See
While working as divers with the all-female diving collective on a small Korean island, Mi-ja and Young-sook find their friendship challenged by their differences and forces outside their control.
This beautiful, thoughtful novel illuminates a world turned upside down, one where the women are in charge, engaging in dangerous physical work, and the men take care of the children. A classic Lisa See story; one of women’s friendships and the larger forces that shape them.
The Island of Sea Women introduces readers to the fierce and unforgettable female divers of Jeju Island and the dramatic history that shaped their lives. Request this book.
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Some of the most popular titles and series in recent years include:
2017 National Book Award Finalist Pachinko by Min Jin Lee
And of course, the most popular books from the recent past, also made into movies:
*Our focus this month is on East Asian Fiction. A future spotlight will be on fiction from South Asia!
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OUR PARTNERSHIP WITH THE
GRAFTON LAND TRUST
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Watch this space for a partnership with the Grafton Land Trust! Local Gold Award candidate Girl Scout Madison Berardi created a Reference Guide that is now available for checkout at the Library (and all 4 elementary schools!) and we are in process of developing a series of booklists and social media promotions encouraging residents to exercise body and mind: take a hike with a good book! Madison's beautifully photographed and captioned fact-filled guide book might be a good place to start.
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The Friends of the Grafton Public Library are hosting a Book Sale. Several vendors will be on site including Anzio's, Gary's Ice Cream and Quite Fetching. The event features exclusive bookmarks designed by Sarah Bejer on sale from the Capital Campaign.
All proceeds benefit the Grafton Public Library.
Please wear a mask, follow all social distancing rules, and stay on marked pathways. If you have materials to donate, please contact info@friendsgpl.org. Click here for Facebook event information.
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Did you know if you have to return an Overdrive or Libby book before you finish it, you can request it again and when it arrives it will cue to the page where you left off?
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Gale OneFile
Gardening and Horticulture
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See all of our upcoming LIVE and PASSIVE PROGRAM events, including Children & Teens:
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See what is
happening
around town:
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Bookworms Virtual
Book Club
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Virtual Book Discussion:
Not Just for Young Adults Book Group
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Virtual Book Discussion:
Daytimers' Book Group
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Virtual Book Discussion: GPL Mystery Book Group
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Virtual Book Discussion: Reads Well With Others Book Group
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Virtual Book Discussion: Inspirational Book Group
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BEANSTACK READING CHALLENGES
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C/W MARS has added over 3,000 new titles to their OverDrive magazine collection! These magazines are always available and there are never any holds or waiting. Go to https://cwmars.overdrive.com/cwmars-grafton/content or open the Libby app and log in with your library card number to access.
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Sign up for individual newsletters and stay up to date with the latest news, events, items and more!
Teen - for grades 6-12 and their caregivers
Children for ages 0-grade 5 and their caregivers
Wowbrary - weekly new releases of library materials in digital and physical formats.
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FRIENDS OF THE
GRAFTON PUBLIC LIBRARY
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FRIENDS UPDATE
Next Friends Board Meeting:
Wednesday May 12, 7:30 PM
via Zoom
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Have a recommendation on ebooks the Library should purchase?
Need reference, research, reader's advisory or information and referral help?
Have questions?
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