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A.K. Smiley Public Library Blog

Serving the City of Redlands, California since 1894

What's New

Academy award-nominated movies available to check out

March 3, 2024 By Shannon Harris

The 96th Academy Awards are approaching and if you are like me, and try to watch the nominations for Best Picture, you are in luck! A.K. Smiley Public Library has some of the Best Picture nominees available on DVD for check out. So, get your comfortable clothes on and grab your favorite snacks, I am taking you all out for a quadruple feature. Let’s go to the movies!

Our first feature film is Barbie. Barbie is nominated for eight Oscars including, Best Picture, Best-Supporting Actor (Ryan Gosling), and Best-Supporting Actress (America Ferrera). Check out this film and see what happens to Barbie and Ken when they leave Barbieland and visit the ‘real’ world.

Our second film in our quadruple feature is Past Lives, which is nominated for two Oscars, Best Picture and Best Writing (Original Screenplay) by Celine Song. Past Lives is a romantic drama and explores the concept of unrequited first love.

Our third film, The Holdovers, has been nominated for five Oscars, including Best Picture, Best Actor (Paul Giamatti), and Best Supporting-Actress (Da’Vine Joy Randolph). The Holdovers is a comedy drama about a cantankerous teacher and a rebellious student who are required to stay together at school during the Christmas holiday. During their time together, an unlikely friendship is formed.

Our last film of the quadruple feature is Oppenheimer which has been nominated for 13 Oscars including Best Picture, Best Actor (Cillian Murphy), and Best Director (Christopher Nolan), just to name a few. Oppenheimer is a biopic about J. Robert Oppenheimer’s involvement with the Manhattan Project and his invention of the atomic bomb.

Come and check out these DVDs at A.K. Smiley Public Library. Popcorn not included.

-Shannon Harris is a Library Specialist at A.K. Smiley Public Library who wants Cillian Murphy to win for Best Actor.

Filed Under: What's New

California dreamin’: tantalizing, obscure histories of the Golden State, current travel guides

February 25, 2024 By Nancy McGee

I have heard it said that you do not really appreciate history until you have some history of your own. That being said, you may not have a good recollection of California history from your fourth-grade class. No worries, A.K. Smiley Public Library has a pretty impressive collection of California history, old and new!

“Fascinating True Tales from Old California: Crooked Con Men, Eccentric Immigrants, and Fearless Females Who Shaped the Golden State” is informative and entertaining. It is authored by historian Colleen Adair Fliedner and begins with a brief chronological timeline. Short chapters tell interesting tales of Californians and events from 1542 through 1940. There is some overlap and references between chapters of some of the individuals highlighted as they were in the same time-frames and may have crossed paths at some point. Trivia fans can glean some little-known facts about how California was once infested with fleas, experienced pirate attacks, and possibly discover some locations of buried treasure.

Another enjoyable read on our beautiful state is historian Noelle Sullivan’s “It Happened in Southern California: Stories of Events and People that Shaped Golden State History.” Short chapters range from “1600s Big Bears and Basketmakers” to “2003 The Governator.” The book concludes with “Southern California/Hollywood/Silver Screen Facts and Trivia,” a bulleted section to further enhance your trivia arsenal.

If you would like to visit some of the places mentioned in the two previous books, check out “Moon Southern California Road Trips: Drives along the Beaches, Mountains, and Deserts with the Best Stops along the Way,” and “Fodor’s Northern California.” These selections can help you plan your excursions. “Route 66 Adventure Handbook,” by Drew Knowles will take you to some of these locations, as well as beyond California on the “mother road.” Create more of your own memories and history using these books as your guide.

If you are inspired to do a deeper dive into California history, A.K. Smiley Library has plenty of books waiting for you, and our Heritage Room has more than just books for your perusal.

Filed Under: What's New

Young adult non-fiction accounts so relevant you won’t want to put them down

February 18, 2024 By Kristina Naftzger

Teens, every once in awhile, a new Young Adult (YA) book passes through my hands on its way to the shelves and doesn’t make it out. It usually starts something like this: a cover or title will catch my eye and I’ll think “Oh this looks intriguing…let me take a quick peek.” Next thing you know, it’s three and a half hours later and the unsuspecting book is trapped in my iron clutches.

This phenomenon happened to me twice in the last month, and both of the culprits were YA nonfiction titles. The first was “Accountable: The True Story of a Racist Social Media Account and the Teenagers Whose Lives It Changed” by Dashka Slater. The book reads like a smart investigative podcast, with voices directly from the high school students involved in creating the racist account, the account’s followers, and its targets. The author digs into the story with the kind of depth and messiness it deserves, not glossing over anything, from the students’ raw and honest reflections, to the school district’s possible mishandling.

While the book’s tone isn’t preachy, it also doesn’t shy away from the account’s shattering impacts on everyone it touched, including its creator and followers. Is this a clear-cut story about villains and victims? Read it and decide for yourself.

On another note, teens, I secretly wish I was in a band, but unfortunately, my musical skills are limited to playing the triangle (non-professionally) and singing incorrect lyrics off-key. Despite this, I am a music lover, so imagine my excitement when my eyes caught sight of “Rise Up and Sing!: Power, Protest, and Activism in Music” by Andrea Warner. Clutches…activate!

The book takes a look at the entwined relationship between social justice movements and music in the realms of climate justice, Indigenous rights, disability rights, racial justice, gender equality, LGBTQIA+ rights and more, and best of all, it includes playlists—perfect for me to triangle along with! A diverse array of both modern and older artists and songs are featured, making it an excellent choice for anyone looking to spice up their Spotify account. “Rise Up and Sing!” loudly celebrates music’s singular power to unite, teach, disrupt, inspire, and transform. If social activism gets your heart pumping as much as a good beat, this book is for you.

Excellent news…my clutches have, at last, relinquished the titles above. If your clutches are interested, stop by the Teen Underground at A.K. Smiley Public Library and check them out! If these titles don’t excite you, don’t worry, we have so many more books/DVDs/video games/and more that might…come fill your clutches!

Kristina Naftzger is a Youth Services Librarian at A.K. Smiley Public Library, where she clearly thinks way too much about her own, and everyone else’s, clutches.

Filed Under: What's New

What’s Old: celebrating a century of service at the Circulation Desk 

February 11, 2024 By Ted Conable

In the heart of A.K. Smiley Library, a silent centenarian has quietly celebrated a milestone – the circulation desk, installed in 1923, recently turned one hundred years old. This robust piece of furniture has been a steadfast witness to a century’s worth of California history, from the Roaring Twenties to the digital age.

While modern circulation records don’t go back to the beginning, Smiley currently circulates an average of 239,217 books per year, meaning potentially tens of millions of books have passed over the circulation desk since its installation. Beyond the sheer volume of books it’s seen, the circulation desk has also observed numerous transformative moments in Redlands over the years.

Before the attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, Redlands as a community was largely against entering World War II, with many residents being part of the America First organization led by Charles Lindbergh. After Pearl Harbor however, the community changed its perspective, leading to voluntary efforts like victory gardens, Red Cross drives, and repurposing local buildings for military housing. The Library was no exception to the wartime effort, and in 1944, head librarian Mabel Inness led a Victory Book Drive which collected 1,778 books for men in the service camps.

Plaque on the circulation desk: “Presented by Eldridge M. Lyon 1923.” A philanthropist who was an outstanding resident and friend of Redlands, Mr. Lyons had been a trustee of Smiley Library for many years who had a keen interest in the “university of the people.”

The desk has been present through many major architectural changes at the Library itself, including the additions in 1926, 1930, and 1990. It was here when the Library was painted off-white in 1939, and it was here when the iconic brick-red color was redone in 2002. After the 1933 Long Beach earthquake when the Library Tower was removed, the circulation desk remained and was there when the Tower was rebuilt in 1999.

Beyond the walls of the Library, the desk has witnessed cultural shifts, technological advancements, and societal changes. In the era where radio dramas once captivated living rooms, the circulation desk was a community hub to share the magic of storytelling. As television claimed its place in the household, the circulation desk anchored readers in a world of books amidst the glow of screens. In the digital age, the desk seamlessly transitioned to becoming a metaphorical gateway to a vast expanse of information. From the advent of radio to the rise of the internet, our circulation desk has endured as a permanent fixture in the community of Redlands’ pursuit of knowledge.

Approach the desk not just to check out a book or movie but as a participant in a tradition spanning generations. Simply by borrowing from the Library, we contribute to a legacy of resilience, adaptability, and community spirit that A.K. Smiley proudly carries forward into the next century. The next time you bring a book to the circulation desk, remember – you’re not just returning a book, you’re engaging with a piece of living history, a century-old companion in our collective journey of reading and learning.

Filed Under: News + Events, What's New

Recognizing ‘African Americans and the Arts’ with new poetry

February 4, 2024 By Ciara Lightner

Black History Month has arrived! This year’s theme is African Americans and the Arts, and here are some of the latest poetry books to celebrate with this month and all year round.

Aster of Ceremonies is the latest work from esteemed author Jjjjjerome Ellis. Ellis seeks to connect the past and present through their work by invocating people that were once listed as runaway slaves. They seek to reform the idea of the enslaved person running away as a loss of property, to a person regaining their freedom. Furthering the connection, Ellis draws on the fact that many of these ancestors have a stutter, something that Ellis has as well. Ellis celebrates their stutter, theirs, and the ancestors,’ not only through the poetry of the work but also through music as well. Nature also is a driving force of the work, acting as authorities over the land both in the past and for Ellis in the present. Poignant and beautiful, Ellis’s work acts as a gateway into our collective past as a means to define our future.

Plantains and Our Becoming by Melania Luisa Marte is a work that grabbles with the nature of colonialism and identity. Marte, a musician as well as a poet, looks at what it means to exist as an Afro-Latina when that word doesn’t even exist in the dictionary. The work flows through both English and Spanish and explores the experiences her families faced in their travels from the Dominican Republic and Haiti to the United States. Marte is able to take the stories passed down the generations of her family to write her own story and make a new journey of her own. Her work also explores how a woman’s beauty is a commodity to be used, as long as it does not benefit the woman herself too much. Referencing icons such as Cardi B and Megan thee Stallion, Marte shows that even with fame, femicide is still a risk. Marte’s debut work is a celebration not just of her legacy, but all those who look to define themselves.

Tender Headed is the debut work of Olatunde Osinaike and is an exploration of the intersection of masculinity and blackness. It is there that Osinaike finds himself at a crossroads of the man he was taught to be and the man he wants to become. Osinaike’s work is unafraid to put its heart on its sleeve and appear vulnerable. It is through this vulnerability that Osinaike hopes growth will happen. That in taking accountability, the current generation can hope to leave some of the pain of the past generation behind them. While there are moments of heaviness, and melancholy, there are also moments of joy and love. The author looks into a future with his own children and sees the endless possibilities if the hard work is down now. Osinaike’s work is not a condemnation of masculinity, rather a celebration of what it could be.

Check out these works and more! Happy Black History Month!

Filed Under: What's New

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