River Friends of the Library
Wednesday, March 4, 2015
Friday, March 22, 2013
Big Read Master Class with Bob Jones and Fran Claggett
24 people in total gathered together on the evening of March 21st to hear and participate in a classroom discussion of Emily Dickinson, nineteenth-century poet.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=24Aauu-Z928
Here is a video clip or two showing what sort of event this was. It was held in Monte Rio along the Russian River at the Monte Rio Community Center. It was sponsored by The Friends of Monte Rio as a part of this month's focus on the NEA's Big Read project.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y-udgg5gPuM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=24Aauu-Z928
Here is a video clip or two showing what sort of event this was. It was held in Monte Rio along the Russian River at the Monte Rio Community Center. It was sponsored by The Friends of Monte Rio as a part of this month's focus on the NEA's Big Read project.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y-udgg5gPuM
Monday, March 11, 2013
Small Poems, Big Read by Bob Jones
KEEPING THE FAITH by
Bob Jones Sonoma West 3-14-13
Small Poems, Big Read
Once again, the gods of literacy and
libraries have called us to the Big Read. All praise and thanksgiving be given! No matter how advanced the format, we still
must read, ponder, and inwardly digest the writings of others. It’s how we learn to use our iPads, and it’s
how our souls tap into the wisdom of the ages.
Lo and
behold, the gods have directed us to read a poet. We might ask, Are the gods crazy? And such a poet! They want us to read Emily Dickinson, whose
work is vast, often difficult, and inexhaustible.
I know
some few things about Dickinson from studies down at Berkeley those good old
years ago. To my mind, much that has
recently appeared in the press about her is superficial and misleading. She is much more than the poet of "'Hope'
is the thing with feathers - " or "I'm Nobody! Who are you?", wonderful as those poems
are.
But how
about "Dare you see a Soul at the White Heat?", "My Life
had stood - a Loaded Gun - ", "The Black Berry - wears a Thorn in his
side - ," or "Split the Lark - and you'll find the Music - "? Some of these are all but unfathomable, and
yet they are worth the effort of trying to fathom them. That's what makes Dickinson a great poet. Time spent with her poems rewards us the way
time spent with all great art does.
To get
at Dickinson we need to go beyond thinking that the whole meaning of a poem can
be captured in a paraphrase. With great
poems like Dickinson gives us, we have to enter the world of the poem and live
there a while. We have to come back to
it again and again as we would come back to a favorite place in the woods or a
cliff by the sea. Each time we realize a
bit more of what is there for us. If the
"Big Read" helps us appreciate this way of reading, it has done an
even greater service than calling us to include books and reading in our lives.
It has given us a way to perceive what is important, and that's worth a lot.
If you participate in the Big Read, be sure
to get an edition of Dickinson’s poems that hasn’t edited out her multitude of
dashes, her strange spellings, terse diction, and inexact rhymes. It’s not Dickinson without these
oddities. The Complete Poems of Emily
Dickinson edited by Thomas H. Johnson includes 1775 poems that can keep you
delving for the rest of your life. The
book is one of the biggest reads you’ll ever find.
Short of all that, a really good choice is
the Shambhala Pocket Classics edition of around a hundred and forty poems
selected and introduced by Berkeley poet Brenda Hillman. She sets us on just the right path, pointing
out that Emily Dickinson and Walt Whitman are the “spiritual mother and father
of American Poetry.” Hillman says
Dickinson’s poems help us live more purely and more powerfully, and she’s right
about that too. This little book has
been available free at some local libraries, and you can Google Shambhala and
get if for eight dollars.
You do well to attend some of the Dickinson
events being held here abouts as well. We all benefit from discussion when it
comes to matters of the heart, head, mortality, and eternity, especially the
way Dickinson goes at them. Fran
Claggett, Professor in the Lifelong Learning Program at Sonoma State
University, and yours truly will host such a discussion at the Monte Rio
Community Center starting at 6:30 on March 21.
It would be great to see you there.
In the meantime, enjoy this:
“Faith” is a fine invention
When Gentlemen can see –
But Microscopes are prudent
In an Emergency.
And ponder this:
But
when all Space has been beheld
And
all Dominion shown
The smallest Human Heart’s extent
Reduces it to none.
Wednesday, March 6, 2013
Reader's Theater 2020 - Feb & March
February and March, 2020, promise some interesting one-act plays at the Guerneville Library.
The River Friends of the Library are presenting three plays each month.
February starts with "Designer What?" by local writer Christmas Leubrie, memories of halcyon days in S.F.; "Success Story" showcases the good, bad, and ugly, when you are a striving actor; and "The Lottery" is a famous, dystopian view of four leaf clovers, gone amok.
March opens with "Hipster Hobos" possibly set at Coffee Bazaar; "The Christmas Truce" is a reminder that most common people are innately good, even though their leaders may not be; we then have a special feature reading from local poet, Sashana Kane Proctor; and we close with, "Three Skeleton Key", which is pure suspense.
The River Friends of the Library are presenting three plays each month.
February starts with "Designer What?" by local writer Christmas Leubrie, memories of halcyon days in S.F.; "Success Story" showcases the good, bad, and ugly, when you are a striving actor; and "The Lottery" is a famous, dystopian view of four leaf clovers, gone amok.
March opens with "Hipster Hobos" possibly set at Coffee Bazaar; "The Christmas Truce" is a reminder that most common people are innately good, even though their leaders may not be; we then have a special feature reading from local poet, Sashana Kane Proctor; and we close with, "Three Skeleton Key", which is pure suspense.
Tuesday, March 5, 2013
Reader's Theater Feb 2013
Three plays, all by local authors were presented:
Neighbors by Chris Riebli
Read by: Denise Owen and Lynn
Woolley
follewed by
Ghost Dance of the Animal People by Lawrence Maykel
Read by: Peter Andrews, Christmas Leubrie, Laurie Lippin and Denise
Owen
and finally
The Junior Ambassador by Daniel Coshnear
Read by: Peter Andrews, Laurie Lippin, Damien Olsen, Bruce Robinson
and
Diz Struffles
Thursday, January 31, 2013
Readers Theater January 2013
There will be an encore presentation Saturday afternoon, Feb 2nd at the Library
The First Play took place on a Golf Course
The second play was about a Philandering Actress
The third play was about trusting your Post Office
The last play was about a Russian Princess
Sunday, September 30, 2012
Community Forum 2012-09-29
We sent out a postcard,
announcing some of the 4th quarter Guerneville Library events
and on the other side was a meeting announcement for Sept 29th
The opening 15 minutes
and on to 10:45
winding up thru 11:30 ish
x
I've summarized the meeting in my first article for the Russian River Times
Johanna Lynch, publisher of the Russian River Times, a West County monthly Newspaper, has asked me to put together a monthly column on the Library. I have accepted this offer and will attempt to use the space provided to keep the public aware of what’s been happening and what’s coming up at the Guerneville Library.
Library News.
Guerneville.
The
Guerneville Library held a brain-storming session in September to stir the
public interest in the plight of the library; and come up with ways to cut
expenses and generate additional revenue.
Library News.
Guerneville.
The
library doesn’t have a lot of room to maneuver.
It’s a bureaucratic government agency: slow to act, very
constrained. The hope was that the 40-50
people attending the two-hour forum would have dozens of ideas about how to
improve the current situation. We were
overjoyed with the results.
Videos of the event are on our Blog site,
This has been a year of turmoil for the
Sonoma County Library (SCL). Our
Guerneville Regional Library (GRL) has gone through changes in hours and
staffing, but the main stress factor has been people-related. For me, this has been evidenced by the SCL
director and staff no longer returning my calls and e-mails.
I am an active patron of the GRL, also a
member of the River Friends of the Library (FOL), and a decade-long member of
the Library Advisory Board (LAB). The
LAB is the central pivot-point of a four-part compact that allows the SCL to
function. Each of the dozen SCL
libraries has a LAB. The LAB brings
together the four parts of the system: the local library facility & staff,
its service community (represented by the LAB appointees), the central library
management structure, and fourthly, the Library Commission, which has oversight
of this four-part structure.
There is a fifth, peripheral part of the
structure, – that is the FOLs, which are financial support groups individually,
to each of the local libraries. The
primary revenue support for libraries, as for Parks and Fire Departments, is
property taxes, and these are significantly down and will lag any housing
market rebound for years to come. The
FOLs may be a viable conduit for fund-raising during the next decade.
As a result of the heightened awareness of
these groups, an all-hands meeting was convened six months ago to address the
problems. Out of that meeting, your GRL,
its LAB, and its FOL took several steps: the LAB increased its meeting
frequency by 50%, the LAB adopted a policy that encourages its members to
attend the Commission meetings. The LAB
and the FOL jointly agreed to support this community forum, which turned out to
be fertile with ideas.
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