Stories from the Stacks

The Monthly Liaison: August 2023

Version en español

Sam Galloway presents the willow fish traps that he made for the Shoshone-Bannock Tribal Room of The Community Library's Wood River Museum of History and Culture.

Fish Full

Grasshoppers popped in the tall grass around us, and lodgepole pines creaked above our heads. My little sister and I were tucked on the riverbank where our father had set us. We had tired of fishing. He had not. So he placed us there – along with a tangle of poles, a few half-used jars of salmon egg bait, and a canvas creel already full of trout – while he continued casting an invisible fly along the seams of riffles.

 

We watched him wade away. My sister and I sat alert, staring at the damp green creel between us as it twisted and bucked from the movements of the trout it held. After a few minutes, the bag was still. The air was hot. We got restless. I wandered alone along the bank, launching sticks into the river and piling rocks into little make-believe villages.

 

When I returned to my little sister, I could barely see her blonde hair above the yellowing grass. Her head was bowed intently over her lap where she held one of the fish from the creel. She had reached into that dark bag, and now her small hand cupped the sticky white belly of a rainbow. Two salmon egg jars lay by her side, empty of their pearly bait. Her other hand was pushing bait into the dead fish’s mouth. Her cheeks were flushed; her eyes intent. Little pink balls were coming out of the fish’s gills. She had packed that fish completely full.

 

It is a feral memory – small and loose around the edges – and one that I know mostly through my mother’s re-telling of it. Yet it persists, and it makes me think of the fearlessness of my sister, and of the wonder of feeling alone in a wild landscape. We make up stories to pull the world around us. Who knows what my sister was thinking.

 

And I recall one of my favorite passages in literature: the final lines of Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston. The main character, Janie, has lived through a hurricane, and now she is sitting with a friend, reflecting:

 

Here was peace. She pulled in her horizon like a great fish-net. Pulled it from around the waist of the world and draped it over her shoulder. So much of life in its meshes! She called in her soul to come and see.

Jenny Emery Davidson, Ph.D.

Executive Director

A Collection of Stories; A Story of Choices

Creating the Wood River Museum of History and Culture


By Mary Tyson

Director of the Jeanne Rodger Lane Center for Regional History

Many years ago, I saw a light brick-colored, rough-surfaced figurine as tiny as a doll. As I imagined the artist’s hand forming the clay, time dissolved. The encounter with  Mexican artist Rufino Tamayo’s collection of pre-Hispanic figurines spotlighted what museums can do. It opened up the door to how a figurine from the past could speak so directly to me. It’s this kind of door-opening the Wood River Museum of History and Culture is inviting.  


Understanding the Importance of Story 


Library staff and community members discussed loudly and passionately what should be included in our first exhibits. From education to immigration, ski history to indigenous history, the possibilities went on and on until we were truly tired. And then, the realization above all others: As a library and museum it is our responsibility to receive, preserve, and tell stories from diverse community members.  


Honoring Time and Space 


Meanwhile, the building at Fourth and Walnut was springing up through the summer and then through the very long, snowy winter, and into spring. Once we made the big choices on the main exhibits and displays, we worked with a fabricator from Vancouver to create special exhibit cases, interpretive panels, hanging display mounts, and other innovative constructs. You name it; they will make it.  


They were also good at sourcing objects like refurbished typewriters from the 1920s to help with the experience of Hemingway as a prolific writer in the 20s and 30s before he set foot in Sun Valley. The typewriters provide a visceral experience for Museum visitors of what it’s like to write in the era that Hemingway did.  


Making Choices 


We had to be disciplined about choosing which objects would best illustrate the stories we were telling. 


In addition to artifacts in our own collection, we needed to search for items in the community that would do right by the exhibit, even though it was harder to accomplish. In some instances, we had to abandon or modify our ideas. For example, we wanted our “Flying Squirrel” ski lift chair for a photo op in the exhibit Portrait of a Mountain, but it was crumbling too much. And we didn’t have a Baldy chair in good enough shape, either. Time was of the essence, so we found a restored chair from Dollar Mountain, and with Tim Deckard’s passion, we rigged it so that it would swing a little, adding depth and interest to the exhibit (much to the chagrin of our construction manager, Morley Golden).  


We knew that in making another exhibit about Hemingway, we had to convey the great power in his writing. We curated objects that were emblematic of his disciplined writing life—his books and published stories.  


Honoring Curiosity 


Our Cabinet of Wonders displays an extraordinary arrangement of doors, drawers, pulls, and lifts that challenge you to open them up and discover the historical artifacts inside.


From the 25 unique items in the Cabinet of Wonders, to each and every subject and object in the museum, our choices were driven by curiosity, and created by teamwork, inspiration, and a relentless dedication to our community and to the stories that forged it. 

The Wood River Museum of History and Culture


All the exhibits at the Wood River Museum include interactive elements, where visitors are encouraged to write, type, talk, and remember – because we all are part of history! Visitors are invited to explore the Shoshone-Bannock Tribal Room, How in the World Did you Get to Sun Valley?,

A Writer in New Country: Hemingway in 1939, Portrait of a Mountain,

and the Cabinet of Wonders. Entrance to the Museum is FREE,

Tuesday-Saturday, 10:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. More here.

Herald from the Hemingway House

"The silence of the stars and the music of the

Big Wood River—not to mention Schubert and Mahler at the Pavilion—were beautifully

conducive to my current writing projects on

the sonic history of the Intermountain West.

"What a joy to return to Ketchum!"


~ Jared Farmer, geohumanist, writer, and history professor at Penn

Recommended Titles

People are raving about the new Wood River Museum of History and Culture, so we are inspired to recommend a collection of "Museum Reads"

relevant to the stories told there.

Find these and more recommendations, across genres, here.

Local Authors

byJulie Weston

MAIN Mystery Weston

by John Lundin

in MAIN Nonfiction

979.632 LUN

by Dick Dorworth

in MAIN Nonfiction

796.93 DOR

More Print Titles

by Darren Parry

in MAIN Display

RHD 979.7 PAR

by Diane Josephy Peavey

in MAIN Display

RHD 979.6 PEA

by Ernest Hemingway

in MAIN Display

FICTION Hemingway

Digital Titles

The Community Library Program Archive

on Vimeo

by Genevieve Rowles

in Axis 360 ebook

Film Adaptation

Streaming on Kanopy

Kids' Titles

by Barbara Lehman

in Picture Books

and Overdrive ebook


by Hazel Hutchins

in Picture Books

J EASY HUT

by Susan Verde

in Picture Books

J EASY VER

THANK YOU to Our July Donors

Rienza (8) makes a doodle-bot in the Children's Library.

Donors

Anonymous (3)

Brian Barsotti

Barbara and Lewis Brown

Jeani and John Ferrari

Patricia Houlihan and Daniel Jacobi

Randi and John Kanellitsas

The Lehman Foundation - Barbara and John Lehman

Alison and Hayes MacArthur (2)

Mary Lee Copp

Avery Moore and Steve Livingston

Careda and Stephen Mowry

Susan and Reuben Perin

Barbara Pfouts

Shaquille Sands

Julie Weston and Gerhardt Morrison (2)

Wood River Jewish Community

Tribute Gifts

David Brottman in memory of Kelly Thurber

Lynn and Dr. Bruce Kaplan in honor of Scott Harris

Patricia Leith in memory of Richard A. Maneval 

Diane Josephy Peavey and John Peavey in honor of this valuable

community resource! 

Beverley Robertson in memory of Monica Atkinson 


Page Turner Society

Big Wood Landscape

Brad and Susan Brickman

Daphne Coble and Patrick Murphy

Kathleen Diepenbrock and Kelley Weston

Claudia and John D. Gaeddert

Diana Hewett

Kevin Lavelle

Kyla Merwin

Elaine Phillips

Narda Pitkethly

Gay Weake

Anita Weissberg

Did You Know You Can Also Give

Out of Your Investments?

The Community Library is supported by people who believe in the free flow of news, entertainment, and information.

 

August is National Make-a-Will Month. It’s an annual reminder of how important it is to create your will and to update it as your circumstances change. Please consider including The Community Library in your estate plan…a gift in your will can make a lasting impact.


Director of Philanthropy, Carter Hedberg, is here to assist you. 

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