Tag Archives: Library News

Yay Cubs!

Dear Cubs Fans (and baseball fans…and people in desperate need of a happy ending…),

Congratulations!  The Cubs won their first World Series since 1908!

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People and commentators have been throwing around facts to put that length of time in perspective: the last time the Cubs won the World Series, Teddy Roosevelt was President, women couldn’t vote, the First World War was still 6 years away, the Model T Ford was months old, the first fully animated film was created that summer…

But those are all big events, that are kind of difficult to take in.  None of us knew Teddy Roosevelt, and we’ve all see animated films in some form or another, so imagining their loss is really just theoretical.  So let’s think about the small scale….

In 1908, the Peabody Institute Library was 46 years old, having been dedicated on September 29, 1854.  It opened it’s doors on October 18.  It looked a little different, as well:

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Courtesy of the Peabody Archives

There was no Children’s Room in the Library–and wouldn’t be for 19 years.  When the Children’s Room was opened,  Miss Esther Johnson served as the first Children’s Librarian from 1927 until her retirement in 1977.*

It would be 53 years before any branch libraries were built.  The original West Branch was built in 1961, and the South Branch was opened in 1967, 59 years after the Cubs won the World Series.*

In 1908, Peabody itself was a town, and wouldn’t become a city for another eight years.

And what of the books?  If you were a patron to the Library way back in 1908, what would be some of the new books you could look forward to checking out?   Here’s what a Five Book Friday in 1908 might have looked like:

1517110A Room With A View
A perennial favorite, and one of Merchant-Ivory’s most wonderful adaptations, E.M. Forster’s novel is at once a beautiful romance and a sharp social commentary on the strictures of British society.  When Lucy Honeychurch and her strict cousin and chaperone, Charlotte Bartlett arrive at the “The Pension Bertolini”, they are dismayed to find that the rooms they have been promised–rooms with a view of the Arno River–are instead rooms facing the interior courtyard of the hotel.  But Mr. Emerson, another British gentleman, traveling with his son George, offer to switch rooms with the ladies, setting in motion a trail of unexpected meetings, revelations, and wonderfully impetuous choices that make for engaging reading even today.

1537357The Wind in the Willows: In 1908, Kenneth Grahame retired from his job with the Bank of England to the English countryside.  There, he began expanding the bedtime tales he had told his son Alistair about a Toad, a Mole, a Rat, and a Badger, into a manuscript.  Though it took him some time to get the work published–and some help from Teddy Roosevelt, who loved the stories–the public loved the charming, utterly madcap, stories of Grahame’s animals, from Toad’s obsession with motor-cars to his escape from prison, and Rat and Mole’s adventures together.  Since its publication,the book has been reprinted and illustrated extensively, and was adapted by Disney into both an animated film (which, as mentioned was first presented as an art form to the public in 1908) and an attraction.

1270772Anne of Green GablesLucy Maud Montgomery’s classic novel has been translated into over 20 languages, and savored by readers of all ages all over the world, but it was in 1908 when the 11-year-old Anne Shirley was mistakenly sent to Matthew and Marilla Cuthbert, a middle-aged brother and sister who had intended to adopt a boy to help them on their farm in Prince Edward Island.  Montgomery based a good deal of the story on her own childhood experiences on Price Edward Island, and crafted the characters, including the long-beloved Gilbert Blythe, on her friends and neighbors.  Her honesty, willingness to confront the real tragedies of life, along with the joys, has made this book one that speaks to readers across generations and language, and has made P.E.I. into a site of literary pilgrimage to this day.

2427520The Tale of Jemima Puddle-DuckBeatrix Potter had already written eight other stories for children before composing this book about Jemima, an Aylesbury duck who strikes out on her own, but this book was an overwhelming success, remaining one of Potter’s most famous and beloved.  A retelling of “Little Red Riding Hood”, Potter’s story is of a duck who sets out to find a place to lay her eggs without human interference–and instead finds herself at the mercy of a sly, cunning, and hungry fox.  Potter based the farm on which Jemima lives on Hill Top, a working farm in England’s Lake District which she bought in 1905, and based many of the characters on the workers on the farm, as well as her dog, Kep, who ends up being the hero of this tale.  Graham Greene read, and commented, on this book while writing The Wind and the Willows, and by 1910, a plush version of Jemima was already being sold to children, complete with shawl and bonnet.

220px-scouting_for_boys_1_1908Scouting for BoysRobert Baden-Powell served in the Second South African War, fought between the British and Dutch settlers in South Africa, and their allied African tribes.  It was a bitter, bloody, and drawn-out war (what was supposed to be a single battle lasted over three years), and convinced a large number of Britons to worry that their control over the world was slipping.  Upon returning home, Baden-Powell. inspired by seeing young boys, aged 12-15, assist the British Army, rewrote an earlier work on  scouting that was meant to organize and train young boys to be self-sufficient, strong outdoorsmen.  Though Powell’s work wasn’t specifically entitled to encourage boys to enter the military when they grew up, the sixth section of the book notes that “Play the game: don’t look on, The British Empire wants your help, Fall of the Roman Empire was due to bad citizenship, Bad citizenship is becoming apparent in this country to-day”.  The book became one of the best-selling books in history, and became the foundation for the Boy Scouts.  In 1910, the Boy Scouts of America was founded by Baden-Powell as well.

And thus we conclude our tour of 1908, and return to the present with nothing but happiness for the Cubs and their fans, and relief that their long wait is finally over.  Hooray!

*Many of these fact came from a perusal of our Archives.  Check out their resources here, and their timeline of the Library here!

Five Book Friday!

downloadThat’s right….As if the Library wasn’t a great enough place already, this year, the West Branch is an official polling place for early voting in Massachusetts!  Those who choose to take advantage of this new option can check out the schedule of polling locations and places by clicking on this link, which will take you to the website for the Secretary of the Commonwealth.  The application for an Early Voter Ballot can be found by clicking here, as well.  We hope this process will make it a little easier for you to fulfill your civic duty by voting when you are able to do so…and also, hopefully, minimize the stress of these elections by allowing you do avoid any nonsense that may occur on Election Day itself.  You can also visit the Torigian Life Center and City Hall to cast an Early Ballot.

See?  Libraries are good for All Things.
See? Libraries are good for All Things.

If you have any problems, especially on Election Day, you can feel free to talk to one of the wardens (police officers) at the polling place, or call the Secretary of the Commonwealth’s Elections Division at 617-727-2828 or 1-800-462-8683. Additionally, the national Election Protection Hotline is 1-866-OUR-VOTE or 1-888-VE-Y-VOTA (en Español).

And just a friendly reminder, pursuant to General laws chapter 56, section 25, it is against the law to allow the marking of his ballot to be seen by any person for any purpose. This includes a voter photographing their own ballot after marking it.  So party like it’s 1992 while at the polling places, ok?

Ok.  Now that all that Adulting has been done and dusted, let’s get to the books….This week is a survey of histories of many different kinds.  We hope you enjoy!

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3757073The Terranauts: Ostensibly, T.C. Boyle’s newest novel is science fiction; it’s set in a version of 1994, in the deserts of Arizona.  With global warming an ever-growing threat, eight ‘Terranaunts’ are preparing to enter a three-acre biodome where they will live completely sealed off from humanity in preparation for an off-earth colony.  Yet while Boyle’s book has plenty of interesting scientific details, and his alternative America is a fascinating place, this book is really about the lives, loves, and choices of the Terranauts themselves–those who enter the dome, and those who are left outside.  By switching narratives, he allows the reader to full experience life through these characters eyes, making this a much more personal, searching, and therefore, realistic story than might otherwise be expected.  Many are calling this book Boyle’s masterpiece (or one of them, at least!), with Publisher’s Weekly proclaiming it “A sprawling tale of achievement, yearning, pride, and human weakness…a multilayered work that recalls the tragicomic realism of Saul Bellow and John Updike.”

3757027Napoleon’s Last IslandWhen Thomas Keneally was visiting Melbourne, he learned the story of the Balcombe family, who lived on the island of St. Helena.  Mr. Balcombe worked for the British East India Company, and was responsible for provisioning ships bound for the Cape Colonies.  The family also played host to St. Helena’s most famous inhabitant–Napoleon Bonaparte, who was sent to live there in exile following his defeat at Waterloo.  Taken with the Balcombe’s story, and, most specifically with the experiences of their thirteen-year-old daughter Betsy, he crafted this novel, a fascinating blend of fact and fiction that explores not only the relationships on the tiny St. Helena, but also its place in the wider world of the French Revolution and Terror.  At the heart of it all, however, is Betsy, and her remarkable, heartbreaking, horrible, and vivid memories.  The New York Times Review of Books was particularly taken with Keneally’s “Insightful and nimble prose. . .[Keneally] seamlessly unites fiction and the ‘truth,’ which means in this case that its armature of fact supports its layers of fictional invention as thought they were weightless.  The delight Keneally took in pulling off this trick shows on every page.”

3783601The Authentic William James: From the imagined past to the reconstructed past to an historical mystery we go.  Stephen Gallagher’s fin-de-siecle investigator Sebastian Becker has seen some of the worst that Britain has to offer.  Now an agent for the Crown, Becker is once again called upon to use his familiarity with madness and the human soul to evaluate the sanity of a confessed arsonist known as “Wild West Showman, The Authentic William James”.  The quest will take Becker to the wild world of Hollywood, where his hunt into James’ psyche will force him to reconsider his own duty–to his country, and the man he pursues.  Stephen Gallagher clearly delights in delving into shadowy, nearly-forgotten corners of history for his tales, and this book is no different, offering readers a very unique view of his subject, through the eyes of a increasingly interesting protagonist.  Publisher’s Weekly agrees, giving this book a starred review and saying “Gallagher gives Sebastian Becker another puzzle worthy of his quirky sleuth’s acumen in his outstanding third pre-WWI mystery…[He] makes the most of his unusual concept in the service of a twisty but logical plot line.”

3817995A Life Discarded: 148 Diaries Found in the Trash: A bit of actual (and recent) history here:  In 2001, 148 tattered and mould-covered notebooks were discovered lying among broken bricks in a dumpster on a building site in Cambridge, England.  Filled with dense handwriting, the books were the partial record of a life, spanning fifty years from 1952 until weeks before they were discarded.  This book is biographer Alexander Masters’ five-year journey to discover the author of the diaries, and piece that person’s life back together, with results that are as surprising as they are touching.  Masters’ is a talented biographer, and this real-life detective novel is also about putting the titular ‘discarded life’ in a much broader context, making these diaries the center of a considerably larger, and deeply emotional, and undeniably odd tale.  This book got rave reviews in England, where it was first published, with The Spectator hailing it as “Playful, unsettling and altogether compelling … pin-sharp and generously open to eccentricity … an ingenious new twist on the concept of a ghostwritten biography, in which the ghost turns out to be the kind of person who usually disappears between the cracks of society without leaving a trace behind…brilliantly fleshed out and brought back to life.”

3789541TruevineAnd finally, another true, and nearly forgotten story to round our our survey, this one opening in 1899, on a tobacco farm in Truevine, Virginia.  As the story goes, one sweltering summer day, a man approached two young boys, George and Willie Muse, who worked as sharecroppers on the farm, and lured them away with candy.  Albino black children, the boys were captured into a circus that performed all around the world, and they became celebrities, performing as “Ambassadors from Mars”,  among other far more derogatory titles.  Back in Truevine, their mother frantically searched for her missing children, leaving a scar on the family that lingers to this day.  In this haunting and meticulously researched story, journalist Beth Macy followed not only the Muse brother’s experiences in the circus, but also the effects their disappearance had on those left back home.  What she discovered was a tale much more twisted, challenging, and morally complex than she ever suspected, and the book, as a result, is a fascinating, moving, and occasionally chilling tale about race and family and memory that is already being nominated for non-fiction awards, include the Kirkus Prize.  Kirkus said in its review, “The story draws on years of diligent, investigative research and personal investment on the author’s behalf, and it features numerous interviews with immediate family, neighbors, distant relatives, Truevine townsfolk, and associated friends, most notably Nancy Saunders, Willie’s fiercely outspoken primary caregiver. Macy absorbed their own individual (and often conflicting) interpretations of the Muse kidnappings, condensing and skillfully braiding them into a sturdy, passionate, and penetrating narrative.”

Until next week, beloved patrons–happy reading!

For the Love of Poetry

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We here at the Free For All are committed to helping all our readers overcome their metrophobia, and live a life full of poetry.  We want to make poetry more than an arduous few weeks in high school where you learned how to dissect a verse into its component meters and feet and rhymes, and, instead, help us all better appreciate the sheer beauty and power of poetry without fear of getting it ‘right’.

To that end, there are several programs coming up on the Library’s Super-Terrific Calendar of Events for poetry lovers and recovering metrophobes alike that we wanted to bring to your attention:

First is the 82 Main Poetry Series, a partnership between The Peabody Institute Library and Mass Poetry that will bring a series of monthly poetry readings in the library’s historic Sutton Room.  Our first reading will take place on September 19th at 7pm, and will feature Boston’s current poet laureate, Danielle Legros Georges, who will offer a reading followed by a Q&A session.

Danielle-Legros-Georges-credit-priscilla-harmel-201x300Danielle Legros Georges was born in Haiti and raised in the United States. She received a BA from Emerson College in Boston and an MA in English and creative writing from New York University. She is the author of two poetry collections—The Dear Remote Nearness of You (Barrow Street Press, 2016) and Maroon (Curbstone Books, 2001). She has received grants and fellowships from the Barbara Deming Fund, the Massachusetts Cultural Council, and the Black Metropolis Research Consortium. In 2014 Legros Georges was chosen as Boston’s second poet laureate. She is a professor at Lesley University and lives in Boston, Massachusetts.

Professor Georges’ visit will kick off a series of three further poetry readings and discussions, each of which are described in our calendar (or click here).  You can sign up for these events by calling the Library, or online, by clicking here.

3144950In October, we are thrilled to be welcoming back Professor Theo Theoharis to the Library for another of his wonderful literary discussions.  This time, his program, which begins on October 19th, at 7:30pm, is also based on poetry, specifically The Penguin Anthology of Twentieth Century American Poetry, edited by Rita Dove. The book is remarkable for being the first book of it’s kind to be compiled by an African-American woman poet. Together with the classic work by American white men–Frost, Williams, etc.–, the sessions will also focus on poems by black women–Rita Dove, Lucille Clifton, Audre Lord– and men–Robert Hayden, Langston Hughes, Sterling Brown–to show the range of experiences and voices that make up recent American poetry. The aim is to celebrate what Walt Whitman called ‘the various carols’ to be heard in American life.

For those of you who have had the pleasure of hearing Professor Theoharis’ talks at the Library before, you know that this is going to be a series to remember.  Those who need further convincing are welcome to call the Library for more information, but be prepared for my rhapsodical praise of these incredible programs.  You can sign up by calling the Library, or by clicking here.  Beginning Monday September 19th, books will be available at the Main Library on a first-come first-served basis. Meetings will be held on October 19th, October 26th, November 1st and November 9th at 7:30 p.m.

Poetry has, for too long, been treated like an inaccessible and/or ‘boring’ mode of expression, but the truth of the matter is that it is all around us–in the commercials we hum inadvertently to the songs in our earbuds to the films we see to the graffiti on walls to the words on our pages, and its high time we celebrated the loveliness and the humanity of this form of expression.  Come join us at the Library and learn just how fundamental, how inspiring, and how moving poetry can be–and how easy it is to love–at the Library this fall!

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The Guardian: http://bit.ly/2c8fSf2

The 82 Main Poetry Series is generously funded by the Friends of the Peabody Institute Libraries.

Five Book Friday!

Beloved Patrons, have you see the updates to our Library’s website?  Screen Shot 2016-08-19 at 1.45.32 PM

In addition to providing upcoming events and news, take a look at the text box in the lower left-hand side of the screen….

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It’s the five most-recent posts from this here Free For All, providing you with up-to-the-minute updates on all the joyful nonsense that goes on here!

We’re going to be working on updating our website even further in the coming weeks, so keep your eyes peeled for lots of good things yet to come, but, for now, a huge thanks to our fantastic Web Site Magician, for all her hard work!

And now…how about some new books?!  Here are just a few of the many new tomes that hopped up onto our shelves this week, and are eager to meet you!

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3630536Eileen: This is a new-to-us book, which was released in 2015.  However, when Massachusetts’ native Ottessa Moshfegh’s haunting novel has been long-list for the Man Booker Prize, the book was reprinted, and we made sure to get a copy for ourselves.  Set in the 1960’s, this novel follows, Eileen Dunlop, outwardly an unremarkable employee at a boys’ prison outside Boston.  But at heart, Eileen is a disturbed, desperately lonely young woman who spends her days trying to survive her job, and her evenings trying to clean up after her alcoholic father.  But when a bright, beautiful new counsellor comes to the prison, Eileen finds herself pulled into a new, all-consuming friendship–and finds herself willing to do anything to keep that friendship.  Anything.  The Hitchcock-ian twist in this book, and Moshfegh’s ability to create a thoroughly creepy, yet irresistibly compelling atmosphere has had reviewers around the world raving, including The Guardian, who said “The great power of this book, which won the PEN/Hemingway debut fiction award last month, is that Eileen is never simply a literary gargoyle; she is painfully alive and human, and Ottessa Moshfegh writes her with a bravura wildness that allows flights of expressionistic fantasy to alternate with deadpan matter of factness…As an evocation of physical and psychological squalor, Eileen is original, courageous and masterful.”

51wJyTbXPEL._SX336_BO1,204,203,200_I Contain Multitudes: The Microbes Within Us and a Grander View of Life: For all that anti-bacterial hand stuff has become part of our life, and for all that we hear about the dangers of tiny little organisms we can’t see, Ed Yong’s book argues that microbes are an indispensable part of our lives, protecting us from disease, digesting our food, and, literally, keeping life on earth moving by providing the bonds that bring lifeforms together.  In this ‘microbe’s eye view’ of the world, Yong gives us a new way to look at the world around us, and our part in it, in a way that is fascinating, informative, and instantly engaging.  The beauty of this book is how it can take something as apparently straight-forward as the microbe and make it sound wondrous.  Booklist agrees, cautioning, “Bottom line: don’t hate or fear the microbial world within you. Appreciate its wonders. After all, they are more than half of you.”

3779001I Will Send RainWe’ve all seen photos of the Dust Bowl–of desperate-looking women and their barefoot children; we’ve heard the stories of the malnutrition and relentless wind-storms that ruined crops and made the depths of the Great Depression seem all the more hopeless.  Rae Meadows’ novel takes us inside those stories, into the world of Annie Bell, whose Oklahoma farm has been ravaged by those storms, and whose family is slowing coming apart at the seams.  With her son suffering from dust pneumonia, her daughter looking for anyway out of their current existence, and her husband plagued with dreams of rain, Annie begins to realize that she can no longer live for others; in order to survive, she has to make her own choices.  This story is at once deeply personal and wonderfully representative of a time that continues to haunt our collective imagination.  Publisher’s Weekly gave this tale a starred review, saying “Meadows’s strength lies in letting her story be guided by the shadow and light of her well-rendered characters…A vibrant, absorbing novel that stays with the reader.”

3764084 (1)The Girl with the Lower Back Tattoo: As Emmy Award-winning comic, television and film star Amy Schumer’s star continues to rise, she proves, once again, that she isn’t about to back down, or allow public notoriety to make her into anything but her authentic self.  In this memoir, Schumer mines her own past for stories about how she became the person she is today, from the hilarious to the heartbreaking, from the deeply…extremely…sometimes uncomfortably personal to the universal.  Schumer’s sense of humor shines through this book, but she also shows how big-hearted, and extraordinarily brave she is with this candid and very frank book that will introduce you–or re-acquaint you–with one remarkable woman.  The Washington Post wrote, “‘Schumer is a talented storyteller. She’s known for standing in a spotlight and sharing every corner of her soul with thousands of strangers. So it’s no surprise that her book is packed with hilarious, honest and often vulnerably raw details of her life… Readers will laugh and cry, and may put the book down from moments of honesty that result in uncomfortable realistic details from her life.”

3743649Perfume River: Another historical novel, this one partially set during the  the Vietnam War, this newest release from Robert Olen Butler explores both the personal lives of one family and the turmoil of a generation at war.  Professor Robert Quinlan and his wife, Darla. now in their seventies, met while working in anti-war protests, and married with the hope of changing the world for good, and for ever.  Now, the fissures in their own relationships are becoming more and more apparent, especially as Robert’s relationship with the rest of his family–including his brother and father, a veteran of the Second World War–crumbles around him.  When a homeless man comes into Robert’s life, he assumes at first that he is just another Vietnam veteran looking for assistance, but the longer he remains, the more he realizes that this man’s impact on his family will be greater than Robert could ever imagine.  A deeply thoughtful, quietly tragic, and deeply moving work, critics are hailing this as another of Butler’s masterpieces, with Booklist declaring it “A deeply meditative reflection on aging and love, as seen through the prism of one family quietly torn asunder by the lingering effects of the Vietnam War. Butler…shows again that he is a master of tone, mood, and character, whatever genre he chooses to explore. This is thoughtful, introspective fiction of the highest caliber, but it carries a definite edge, thanks to an insistent backbeat that generates suspense with the subtlest of brushstrokes.”

Now available for you: Hoopla!

We here at the Library are always looking for new and shiny resources for you, beloved patrons, and trying our darnest to put the world at your fingertips.  Today, we got a little closer to that goal by making Hoopla available to you!

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Hooray for Hoopla!

Hoopla is an online service that allows you to download & stream free videos, music, audiobooks, comics, and ebooks on your mobile device or computer.  For those of you who use Overdrive, it is much like that, except with even more resources, like videos–not only feature films, but workout videos, educational programs, kid’s programming, and much more; tv shows, ranging from The Librarians (obviously!) to National Geographic and back again; and music, from Hamilton to Mozart.   Additionally, while Overdrive allows you to download files, Hoopla is a streaming service, meaning your desired material is available immediately, without having to take up any real space on your devices.  This is sensational for those of us who like to listen to audiobooks at work, would like to try a new yoga routine, even on the go, or who would like to catch up on their favorite new show without ads, fees, or membership costs.

It’s a really fantastic resource, no matter your age or interests….and best of all, it’s really easy to use!  In fact, Hoopla can be mastered in four easy steps.  First and foremost, check out the website at http://www.hoopladigital.com/home

*Note: Click on the screen shots below to enlarge them.

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This is the home screen for Hoopla, found at http://www.hoopladigital.com/home
  1. Register for a hoopla account by visiting hoopladigital.com, or by using our mobile app on your iOS or Android device. You will need to provide an e-mail address, create a password, and have your library account information ready. Our free mobile app can be found in the App Store and the Google Play store.
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When you click on “login” (upper right of the home screen), this is what you will see. You can set up your account from here.

2. Easily browse titles on your computer or mobile device by clicking Browse All on the format (Music, Movies, Audiobooks, eBooks, Comics, and Television) you would like to browse further on. You can also search for a specific title by clicking on the Search box or magnifying glass and typing in your title(s)/keyword.

The search box is at the top of the home screen.
The search box is at the top of the home screen.

3. To borrow a title, click on the title and then click the Borrow button.  Your borrowed titles can be played right after borrowing, and found under the My Titles menu for viewing/listening. Enjoy your selected titles! (Note: You will be able to borrow 10 titles each month.)

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The big blue BORROW button will make your material appear

Borrowed titles will be automatically returned when your lending period is over. There are no holds, wait lists, or late fees for any of hoopla’s content.

If you have any questions, you can click on the Help link found at the bottom of hoopladigital.com, or check in with your friendly Library Staff via phone or in person!

We sincerely hope you enjoy this new resource–let us know if you find any new favorites while browsing Hoopla!

Make a joyful noise…

Have you met our pianos?

If you’ve walked down Main Street in the past few weeks, you might have noticed that there are two pianos, one right by our front door, and one hanging out on the sidewalk across the street.  There are also pianos hanging out at East End Veteran’s Memorial Park on Walnut Street, and inside the Northshore Mall.
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Each piano has been painted by contributing artists Jessica Andersen, Desiree Ferreras, Deana Jacome, and Jeffrey Rezende with vibrant colors and patterns that really make them stand out–our piano is black and green with bright red and yellow flowers that stands out beautifully against the red brick of the Library.

But why have these pianos come to Peabody?  They are here for you.  Thanks to a generous donation from the city’s Community Development Block Grant  and from the Peabody Cultural Council, as well as donations from Peabody Access Telecommunications, the Library and Rousselot, these pianos have arrives as part of a public project called “Play Us a Tune”, that is intended to bring music to the streets (and malls) of Peabody.  As you’ll notice on each piano, there is a sticker printed in English, Spanish, and Portuguese that encourages you to play–whatever comes to your mind, or to your fingertips.  You can learn more from the clip below:

So far, the project has been an enormous success.  Though the pianos were only supposed to be here until May, their stay has been extended thanks to really high public appeal.  We have professional students who come every afternoon around 4pm to practice most days, and patrons who are just learning, trying out their skills on these free and colorful instruments.

And speaking as someone in the Library, it’s a sheer joy to hear your tunes, and watch the happiness it brings to people’s faces to hear this piano music floating down Main Street.  So why not come down and meet our piano, or any of the other pianos in Peabody, soon?  They’ll be here for the rest of the month, and can’t wait to make your acquaintance!

And, finally, to whoever is playing ragtime tunes outside the Library on Thursday evenings–I love you.

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Ask and ye shall receive…

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First and foremost, I sincerely hope all of your Memorial Day celebrations were fun and restful and full of memories and sunscreen (says me and my sunburned feet).  And secondly, since we all need something to perk us up on the day back from a long holiday weekend, I thought I’d bring you this exciting tid-bit of Library News:

Did you know that you can request that the library purchase books that are not in our collection?

I have seen the slips at the Circulation Desk plenty of times, but I had never really thought about actually using them.  But then my Thursday Evening Colleague, who is also responsible for processing all the new books that come into the Library, told me that if there were books that we had discussed on this Blog that weren’t on our shelves, or in Overdrive, that I should request them.

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As a result, if you check out Overdrive, you’ll see a whole wealth of new books that have been added over the course of the past few weeks..particularly romances by Eloisa James, Jackie Ashenden, and Lauren Layne, as they are extra-special favorites of ours around here.  You’ll also find some unique historical selections, and a number of books from our “Best of 2015” series.  I can’t guarantee that all your literary needs and appetites will be met by our additions to Overdrive, but we definitely gave it our best shot!

Additionally, I also thought it would be fun to request a few books over which we have consistently raved over the past year (and by “we” I mean “I”).  That way, we could have copies on hand to share with you, and also ensured that we had complete series from authors so that you could start at the debut and binge-read whenever the mood took you.

I have to admit, I felt a little sheepish at first requesting these books for the Library.  On top of giving me a paycheck for hanging out with you and The Books, our Library (and, indeed, NOBLE as a whole) offers some incredible resources, programs, and expertise free of change to the entire community.  After all it’s given me, it seemed a wee bit selfish to ask for more.  But the truth of the matter is that Libraries thrive when patrons utilize them, and they get better when given a chance to respond to patrons needs and desires.  As we’ve said before, we’re here because of you, and we’re here for you, and knowing what you want to read, or hear, or see, will only help to make us better.

Now, the other truth is that our budget is not bottomless, so there are times of the year when we are in a good position to respond to Book Purchase Requests, and times when we simply are not.  But if there are books you would like to see on our shelves, be sure to come by, talk to one of the marvelous Librarians, and fill out a Book Purchase Request form soon!

And, in case you were wondering, here are a few of the books that I requested.  You can see them on the Free For All’s display by the Circulation Desk, too:

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2709181Johannes Cabal the Necromancer: As you can see from the photo above, Johannes Cabal has been given pride of place in this week’s display, not only because this series has some truly inspired cover art, but also because this series, by Free For All Favorite author Jonathan L. Howard is one of my favorites ever.  In this debut, we meet Johannes Cabal, a necromancer of some little infamy, who sold his soul to the Devil in order to learn the secrets of his particular science.  Now, he wants his soul back–but Hell doesn’t offer a very simple exchange policy.  Instead, Johannes finds himself with a ramshackle traveling circus, and the job of capturing one hundred souls in order to trade for his one.

This series, which is currently four books long, is endlessly inventive, borrowing, parodying, and redefining a number of timeless literary tropes, from the locked room mystery (in Johannes’ case, the room is onboard a dirigible full of potatoes) to the horrors of weird fiction (including the Dreamlands, where Cabal confronts fear itself in the shape of the Phobia Animus), and the horrors of an undead invasion, courtesy of Cabal’s brother, Horst.  It also features, at its heart, one of the most intriguing, conniving, and sympathetic antiheroes you’ll ever meet. Maybe it’s because Cabal respects the Dewey Decimal system.  Maybe it’s because he’s an even bigger introvert than I am. Maybe it’s because, despite all his terrible habits and volatile tempers, Howard does such a perfect job at showing, in most subtle of ways, what makes Cabal really tick, that it’s impossible not to root for him in the end.  But you don’t have to take my word for it.  The Library now has the complete series, and has already pre-ordered Book Five: The Fall of the House of Cabal, due out in late September.

2702516Sandman Slim: The Library had one book from Richard Kadrey’s genre-exploding and addictive series already, but we’re now filling out the series, so that you can have every adventure in this paranormal, dark-fantasy noir at your fingertips.  Kadrey’s writing style alone is a marvel–like the best noir authors, he manages to fit a world of significance, emotion, and power into a single short sentence, or a punchy snatch of dialogue, making these really dark, twisty plots into a story that is ruthlessly gripping from beginning to end.  What I also really appreciate is how fearless Kadrey is in his plotting…when we first meet James Stark (aka Sandman Slim), he has recently escaped from Hell, where he was sent after being betrayed by his fellow magicians.  After spending eleven years killing monsters, Stark is far from human, and is planning on every trick he’s learned in order to get revenge for himself, and for the girl he left behind.  From this foundation, inventive enough in itself, this series has expanded to encompass the sleaze of Hollywood to the depths of Hell itself, and confronted Weimar Republic mystic societies, horrific and deadly shopping malls, and the death of Death himself.  I can promise you, you haven’t read anything like these books before, and if for that reason alone, it’s time you gave them a try.

Happy Tuesday, and happy reading!