fireun: (thinkthink)
[personal profile] fireun
 About half a year ago as part of community outreach efforts with the bookstore I managed, I had my assistant manager contact one of the small local libraries, Your Home Public Library, to see if they might be interested in partnering with the store to start a book club/reading group. The library had been looking for programming to fill extended hours, and the director was enthusiastic about the idea.

Thus started the most fascinating and fun project I have been involved in. I started out as a liaison between my store and the community, and am now more of a liaison between the library itself and the community.

My store has closed, but I refused to cut my connection with the library. Honestly the Director, Steve Bachman, has been a huge influence in my decision to actually go through with my desire to get myself in gear and go for my library degree. Rarely have I had the pleasure of working with someone so obviously in love with what he does.

And it really shows in what our little reading group has evolved into. What started as a few curious folks wandering through to see what the Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society was about into a group of friends who meet once a month to talk about one thing we all have in common- a love of books.

We started out with a book at a time, planning for next month, and going from there. We made bookmarks for the event, and posters, both of which I displayed in the store as well as communal posting boards throughout the area. I have moved on to pointing folks to the library website and facebook, adding to my habit of making book recommendations at regular intervals in my livejournal.

I am by far the youngest person there, but as soon as those discussions get rolling, I hardly notice. Sometimes we manage to stay on track and discuss the book of the month for a half hour or so before chatting and getting to know each other better. When we read The Art of Racing in the Rain, we spoke more on the impact canines and companions have had in our lives, interspersed with a discussion of the book itself. And it all fit. The conversation flowed naturally and we all went away knowing just a bit more about the person sitting next to us than we had before.  We read The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time, and had community members who work with autistic individuals show up for the discussion and give their viewpoints. We read The Help and had a group so big we could hardly contain ourselves at our usual table, everyone wanting to talk about what they had just read, touching on a hard topic in a safe environment.

It is amazing what will come out of something as simple as a monthly book discussion. This is my little family. We all notice when a regular is absent. Folks have started bringing other books and movies to lend to each other, sharing beyond whatever it is we have selected for the month. I had a phenomenal support system there for me when I went through the process of closing the bookstore that had more or less been my life for seven years. We ask after each other, not just the books.

This isn't just a book club. Sure, it isn't huge, but the people who are there make it a sublimely enjoyable experience. I am someone who gets intense enjoyment out of sharing something I have read and enjoyed with other people. Doing this outside of the retail environment I had been familiar with has been exhilarating. I want to do this for a living. I want to greet these folks, see what they have for me, and what I can suggest for them. The library is in an old building that rattles and grumbles as the heat turns on and off, a building with so much personality it adds its own little something to each meeting, and I adore that as well.

Here's hoping a few of you get interested enough by this to join us! [livejournal.com profile] djkc  accompanies me with fair regularity. It is not at all what you remember from discussing books in school. Trust me.

Date: 2010-02-26 10:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bclainhart.livejournal.com
Hey April, I've been meaning to get in touch with you for a while since it has been months that I've been away from Mark's and have only talked to you briefly at the store. First, congrats on Syracuse. I see your journal entries in my RSS and have been meaning to tell you that for a while. Second, I'm starting my LIS degree at Drexel next month (they run on quarters) and am beyond excited. My concentration is going to be in Digital Libraries though. It will be interesting to see how similar our classes are to each other. Perhaps tea and homework sessions from time to time?

Also, have you read "This Book is Overdue!: How Librarians and Cybrarians Will Save Us All" yet? If you want to borrow it, I can easily get it to you this weekend sometime. It will probably only take you an afternoon to burn through it. I made the mistake of reading it before I knew if I had been accepted and it made the wait all the more agonizing though.

What book are you reading in your book club this month? I'm in a few online book clubs but they just aren't that satisfying. BTW, Vestal Library book sale tomorrow starting at 9 am.

Date: 2010-02-26 11:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fireun.livejournal.com
Hey Ben! Long time no see! Congrats on Drexel! have you joined NYLA yet? Some really good librarian/student resources in there. The SMART committee is all about tech and libraries. Might be something you would want to look at :) Am looking to concentrate on digital myself. Great minds think alike. I am all for tea and homework sessions! Keep in touch!

Have not heard of that book. Sounds good though. If you have time, give me a ring (let me know if you need my number) and we can try and meet up for a book grab.

We will be doing Tom Sawyer in March, meeting the 18th, to tie into the Big Read. Next month though we are doing Alice I Have Been. April 15th is the date for that discussion. I have a copy if you are interested, and here is the review I wrote before the book was officially released. It was a very well written, interesting bit of historical fiction.

http://fireun.livejournal.com/1137880.html

Date: 2010-02-27 12:16 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bclainhart.livejournal.com
I should have your number. I'll give you a call sometime and I can get the book to you. I think you'll enjoy it. Alice I Have Been looks really good. I'll definitely have to try to make that one.

It will be great to have someone working on the same program even if we are at different schools. When will you start? Are you doing the classes primarily online or will you travel to Syracuse? As of right now I plan to take the first quarter online but may possibly spend a quarter down in Philly to take some classes on campus (though I really don't want to take out too much in loans and living there, even for 10 weeks, would be expensive). Part of the reason I choose Drexel was for their 10-week quarter schedule rather than semesters.

I've been reading Virtual Dave's blog ( http://quartz.syr.edu/rdlankes/blog/ ) and watching some of his videos the last few weeks. He seems like a cool guy. You'll have to let me know if you have any classes with him.

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