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A.K. Smiley Public Library Blog

Serving the City of Redlands, California since 1894

Archives for March 2025

Women rule! New fiction for Women’s History Month

March 23, 2025 By Shannon Harris

March is Women’s History Month and what better way to celebrate women and how amazing we are than by reading novels written by women. Here are a few new titles that are available for check out at A.K. Smiley Public Library.

Bestselling author of Detransition Baby, Torrey Peters, gives us her latest title, Stag Dance, available for check out today. Stag Dance is comprised of three short stories and one novella, all of which discuss gender and gender identity. The story, Infect Your Friends and Loved Ones, imagines a future where everyone must choose their own gender.

Counterattacks at Thirty by Won-Pyung Sohn is about an office worker name Jihye, who has been silently enduring her semi-hostile work environment for years, until Gyuok is hired. Gyouk is a “rebel” of sorts and recruits Jihye and a few other office workers to commit small protests against the higher-ups they work with. Check out this title and the author’s previous novel, Almond.

33 Place Brugmann by Alice Austen takes place on the eve of the Nazi occupation in Brussels. This novel is about the eight residents who live at 33 Place Brugmann and how their lives are about to change forever. Readers of historical fiction will not want to miss this book.

The Moonlight Healers by Elizabeth Becker is a novel about a young woman named Louise Winston who discovers that the women in her family have magical abilities: they can heal with the touch of their hands. Readers of magical realism will not want to miss this enchanting novel about family, life, death, and magic.

Filed Under: What's New

Craft time for kids at Smiley Library!

March 17, 2025 By Emily Windver

Preschool Story Time and Crafts in January with Miss Emily in the Contemporary Club

Reading is fundamental. Do you know what else is fundamental? Having fun. And do you know what else is fundamental? Crafting – learning to create something you’re proud of. And do you know where you can have all of these experiences at once?

Craft Time!

As of January 2025, with the support of the marvelous and talented Youth Services Department, I have been hosting Craft Time after the last Preschool Story Time of each month. We had so much fun making bear puppets in January and paper butterflies in February. Come join us for our next craft on Tuesday, March 25! Crafts correlate with the story time books read by Miss Pamela and will be suited to the skills of 4-6 year olds, whose creativity we have found impressive and inspiring. Here are a few books that are available to check out in the Young Readers’ Room that will help you and/or your kids get creative in the meantime.

You know when a book lives in the back of your head because it’s just so delightful? Ed Emberley’s Fingerprint Drawing Book is one of those books. Requiring nothing more than paper, an inkpad, a marker, and your own thumb; this is a book that you will enjoy and learn from even if you don’t have a creative bone in your body. It guides you through each step of the process to make everything from a snail to a watermelon to a knight in fingerprinted armor – all smiling, of course. These mini artworks are so easy and so much fun. Once you’ve made one, it’s hard to stop.

If you’re looking for a craft that’s a bit more complicated and a lot more unique, look no further than The Usborne Book of Masks. It’s complete with instructions and templates for creating funny, cute, or scary masks. While some of the masks require more patience (the genuinely freaky Sea Witch, with glitter eyebrows and fish in her hair), there are simpler options as well (Hovering Bees, a face full of flowers surrounded by bees on wires). The diverse options of this book make it the perfect guide for a family craft night.

When I was younger, the American Girl book series changed my life – I was finally able to connect with history by seeing it through the eyes of girls my age. The American Girl craft books and cookbooks are wonderful for having tactile experiences that connect you with the past. Addy’s Craft Book begins each section with a short summary about an area of Addy Walker’s fictional life in 1864, and details how to create a related range of paper and fabric crafts that a girl like Addy would have learned. If you’ve ever wanted to try cross stitch or wondered what a Jacob’s Ladder is, this book can answer your questions.

Star Wars Origami rules the craft section of the Young Readers’ Room – it’s so popular that we have three copies. So much fun, even if you’re not a Star Wars fan – the intricate character designs will keep you busy and engaged. The way this book is formatted, it teaches you the basic paper folds and terms of origami before launching into the projects, which include a wide variety of characters and ships. It’s a great introduction to origami and, of course, to Star Wars origami.

Come by the Young Readers’ Room to check out any or all of these books, or spend some time perusing more options in our delightful craft book section. If you’ve gotten the itch for crafting something fun and book-inspired, don’t miss Story Time on March 25 at the Contemporary Club!

Filed Under: What's New

Redlands Adult Literacy Program celebrates five years of Family Literacy

March 10, 2025 By Diane Shimota

Alexandra and her children, Luisa and Tomas, building robots

Many adults enroll in A.K. Smiley Public Library’s Adult Literacy Program with the goal of improving their reading and writing skills so they can read to their children, help their children with school assignments, and communicate effectively with their children’s teachers and medical professionals. Recognizing the critical importance of literacy within a family, the Redlands Adult Literacy Program initiated family literacy services in 2019. Members of the family literacy program hold monthly meetings to help low-literacy parents develop skills that can support their children’s education, promote the value and pleasure of reading together as a family, and provide solutions to reduce the risk of multi-generational illiteracy.

Initially, the children in family literacy were ages 2 to 7 years old. Now, the program serves children up to the age of 12 and provides books of interest for a wider age group. The family literacy team provides a welcoming and consistent environment which supports learning. Each meeting dives into a book’s theme to involve and make learning fun for the whole family. During the meeting, families are engaged in interactive games, reading and writing, science, art, and math opportunities. The meetings model what parents can do at home to encourage a love of learning in their children.

One of the most important aspects of family literacy meetings is ‘parent time’ where parents meet separately while children participate in various activities. This special time for parents allows parents to ask difficult questions, share ideas with each other, and learn new ways to engage their children with literacy. The parent time helps parents learn new literacy skills that are immediately practiced when they rejoin their children in parent/child time. Family literacy consultant, Joan Prehoda, teaches a strategy that covers a single topic that encourages one aspect of reading, writing, or communication within families. Joan has shared strategies that support parents in many areas of literacy including: teaching the stages of writing development, developing children’s self-esteem, identifying and naming feelings, teaching problem solving skills that help children build their independence, identifying questions to ask children while reading to them to build reading comprehension, and sharing the importance of reading every day.

Over the past five years, the family literacy program has provided more than 1,500 books to build home libraries for family literacy participants. The children are always excited to choose new books to take home at the end of the family literacy meetings. Joan Prehoda shared that “during the last meeting I quietly uncovered the books and had to quickly step out of the way as the children swarmed around the table to see what books were available.” The books are readily available to children at home as the family literacy team has encouraged parents to leave them on shelves or tables in every room of the house and in the car so they can be taken along to appointments where families spend time in waiting rooms. Several parents were excited to report that because books are always within reach, their children are reading more and developing a love of reading.

Joan Prehoda and Renee Kennedy guide the overall family literacy program and are assisted by: Melany Chong who leads children in various interactive activities, Evan Shimota who teaches science lessons, and Barbara Vester who helps with community building exercises. “Without a caring and supportive team, the family literacy meetings would not be successful. Each team member contributes to our welcoming community that helps families develop a level of trust in us,” shares Renee Kennedy.

Future plans include hosting a book club for the older children to participate in.  Together, they will read the first chapter of their book club selection, then they will take the book home to read independently and prepare for a discussion of the book during the next book club meeting.

Renee Kennedy also leads a state-wide family literacy community that is available to leaders of family literacy programs throughout California. These meetings provide an opportunity to share and develop new family literacy practices which enhance family literacy programming at other libraries. “Selecting Renee Kennedy to spearhead the statewide family literacy effort is a reflection of how respected the Smiley Library family literacy program is,” observed Diane Shimota, Adult Literacy Coordinator at Smiley Library.

The Family Literacy Program seeks to address the special needs of families whose adult members are currently enrolled in the Redlands Adult Literacy Program or who would like to enroll in the adult literacy program in the future. To learn more about the Family Literacy Program, please call Diane Shimota, Adult Literacy Coordinator, at (909) 798-7565, ext. 4138, or email literacy@akspl.org.

The Redlands Adult Literacy Program also invites you to consider volunteering to be a literacy tutor for adult learners. The next Volunteer Tutor Orientation is April 22, 2025, at 6:00 p.m. in the Library Assembly Room. Call (909) 798-7565, ext. 4138, or email literacy@aksp.org to reserve a space or to obtain more information.

Filed Under: What's New

Youth Services now offering mental wellness and STEAM “book kits”

March 2, 2025 By Pamela Martinez

What’s New at Smiley you ask? I’m so glad you asked! The Youth Services Department is excited to announce nine newly acquired book kits for our Library of Things, consisting of six Mental Wellness (two in Spanish, four in English) and three STEAM Kits (English) available for check-out! The Mental Wellness backpacks are provided to you through a grant from California State Library. The STEAM kits were purchased from Penworthy Books.

These are the subjects for the Mental Awareness kits:

  • Grief
  • Bravery
  • Anger
  • Kindness
  • Spanish – Kit de Sentimientos
  • Spanish – Kit de Ansiedad

and the STEAM-to-Go:

  • Paw Patrol Phonics
  • Sensory Explorer
  • Trucks and Tools

You will find these kits in the Young Readers’ Room, hanging on hooks near the Computer Table Station.

With a valid library card, a borrower is able to check out one backpack or kit for two weeks with no renewal ability (one per family).

Each kit comes with a label attached to the backpack listing all contents inside.

Each kit comes with an explanatory, laminated sheet to help you maximize the use of the kit with your child.

We’ll be excited to see which kit you decide to check out first!

~ Pamela Martinez, Senior Librarian, Youth Services

Filed Under: What's New

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