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A.K. Smiley Public Library Blog

Serving the City of Redlands, California since 1894

What's New

Take an adventure with real-life trailblazers

July 16, 2023 By Nancy McGee

I confess that I have a preference for reading non-fiction books. I like real stories, and I like to learn something and experience adventures undertaken by others, especially in natural surroundings. So here are a few of our new books you might like if you have the same reading preferences.

“Brave the Wild River: The Untold Story of Two Women Who Mapped the Botany of the Grand Canyon,” is authored by science journalist Melissa Sevigny. She recounts how Lois Jotter and Elzada Clover stood up to the misogyny of the times to become botanists. They underwent great risks running the Colorado River to be the first to survey and catalog the plants in the Grand Canyon. The women were truly trailblazers in their determination during the summer of 1938 to take on the dangerous 600 mile, 43-day boat expedition through the Grand Canyon, collecting and preserving 500 plant specimens. A map and photographs enhance this intriguing selection.

“The Last Ride of the Pony Express: My 2,000-Mile Horseback Journey into the Old West,” is a chronicle of Will Grant’s modern-day ride retracing the old pony express route. Readers who like American history, horses, and westerns will enjoy being an armchair adventurer in this narrative. Grant spends five months on his ride retracing the mail route from Missouri to California, as opposed to the grueling 10 days that the Express riders endured. His partners on the trail were two horses that he thoughtfully and carefully chose, Chicken Fry and Badger. He vividly describes the landscape, people, and animals he meets, and juxtaposes old West with the modern-day, including the hazards then and now.

If you read and enjoyed Lawrence Anthony’s “The Elephant Whisperer,” and Francoise Malby-Anthony’s bestseller, “An Elephant in My Kitchen,” then you will want to check out, “The Elephants of Thula Thula.” Francoise and her late husband founded the Thula Thula game reserve in 1998 in South Africa. She continues to run and expand the reserve and wildlife rehabilitation center and consequently has more stories of happiness and heartbreak to share about the elephant herd and other animal inhabitants and their caretakers.

“Empress of the Nile: The Daredevil Archaeologist Who Saved Egypt’s Ancient Temples from Destruction,” chronicles the life and accomplishments of a little-known French archaeologist. Lynne Olson brings Christiane Desroches-Noblecourt out of the shadows of history for her courageous efforts that saved many of Egypt’s ancient monuments from ending up underwater when the Aswan High Dam was built. Her childhood fascination with Egyptology culminated in a distinguished career of preserving and keeping many Egyptian treasures from leaving the country. Most notably, she led the international campaign that financed and accomplished the difficult task of dismantling many fragile temples and moving them up the Nile to be rebuilt on higher ground.

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A summer tour of Fire Island via three new books

July 9, 2023 By Shannon Harris

“Summer breeze, makes me feel fine, blowing through the jasmine in my mind” – Seals & Crofts

In this week’s What’s New at Smiley Library article, I will be taking you all on an unofficial tour of Fire Island, New York. I know what you are thinking, “Shannon, how are you going to take all of your dedicated readers to the glitzy Fire Island? Did you win the lottery or something?” Unfortunately, no, I did not: I will be taking you all there through the art of the written word! The three books that are featured in this article all take place on Fire Island. So, pack your proverbial bags and let’s go!

Bad Summer People by Emma Rosenblum is our first book that features our destination spot, Fire Island. Every summer, friends Jen and Lauren, along with their spouses, descend upon the island and start their usual summer routine of gossip, backstabbing, and manipulation until their usual summertime antics get thwarted by a dead body. I don’t know about you all, but this may throw a wrench in our vacation. Let’s see what the second book entails.

Kismet by Becky Chalsen is our second stop on our tour of Fire Island. Twin sisters Amy and Jo Sharp pack their bags and head to Fire Island for a whirlwind weekend of celebrations. Like with most gatherings involving family and friends, secrets are revealed and friendships are put to the test.

Ok, we have made it to our final destination on Fire Island, which by chance happens to be the title of the last book featured in this article. On Fire Island by Jane L. Rosen is told through the perspective of 37-year-old book editor Julia Morse. Julia dies and instead of “crossing over” she decides to spend her last summer watching over her family at their vacation home on Fire Island. This book isn’t as sad as it sounds, I promise.

I hope you all enjoyed our tour of Fire Island as much as I did.

Shannon Harris is a library specialist who dreams of living on an island one day.

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Pawesome picks for the dog days of summer

July 2, 2023 By Jill Martinson

With the dog days of summer upon us, it’s the perfect time to check out a few dog-themed fiction and nonfiction titles. Of course, we have classics like “James Herriot’s Favorite Dog Stories,” “Travels with Charley” by John Steinbeck, and the popular “Marley and Me” by John Grogan. We’re always adding new books to our collection, too. Here are some of our latest; I’m “paws-itive” you’ll find something you like.

Best-selling author of “A Dog’s Purpose,” W. Bruce Cameron’s most recent novel is “Love Clancy: Diary of a Good Dog.” Cameron has a way of capturing the character and spirit of dogs in his novels and this one is no different. Clancy, a yellow Lab, and the narrator of our story, offers insight into the life of his person, JayB, who recently lost his job and is figuring out his next move. Our canine companion keeps us informed with entries from his very own diary. You’ll come across a host of quirky characters, both human and furry, like JayB’s romantic interests, Odin, the older neighbor’s dog, and that pesky cat, Kelsey. Needless to say, the dogs are the stars in this humorous and touching read.

“The Year of the Puppy: How Dogs Become Themselves” by Alexandra Horowitz is a wonderful observation on the early development of a puppy throughout a year. Horowitz documents the day-to-day development of her own puppy, Quid, starting as a newborn and follows her as she becomes part of the Horowitz household, replete with three humans, two dogs and as Horowitz puts it a “wary cat.” How do puppies see and smell; what shapes their personalities? How do they socialize with people and other animals? This scientifically researched book is quite engaging and you’ll come away knowing a great deal about animal growth and behavior.

Murder mystery fans will enjoy the latest addition in David Rosenfelt’s K Team series, “Good Dog, Bad Cop.” Corey Douglas and his K-9 partner Simon Garfunkel join forces again to try and solve a cold case for Paterson Police Department. This time it involves someone quite well known to Douglas, his former mentor, Jimmy Dietrich. Dietrich, along with Susan Avery, were found dead, shot in his boat floating in the ocean outside of Long Island Sound. Was this really a murder-suicide? Perhaps it’s connected to the earlier execution-style killing of Danny Avery, Susan’s husband, who was also a former Paterson detective. Can you solve the mystery?

Be sure to stop by the display case near the circulation desk this July through August 15th on your next visit to the Library. You’ll see pictures of famous authors with their dogs and get to peruse new and classic books available for check out. Don’t forget to grab a FREE dog bookmark while supplies last. I’m sure you’ll find them quite fetching.

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The Adult Literacy and Friends of A.K. Smiley Public Library partnership

June 25, 2023 By Diane Shimota

Assembly Majority Leader Eloise Gomez Reyes as she presented Katherine Gifford, Diane Shimota, and Trudy Waldron with the certificate of recognition as a 2023 Non-Profit of The Year Honoree

On June 3, 2023, Assembly Majority Leader Eloise Gomez Reyes honored the Friends of A.K. Smiley Public Library (Friends) as one of the 2023 Non-Profits of the Year for Assembly District 50. The honor was awarded to the Friends for their support of the Redlands Adult Literacy Program. Since 2006 the Friends have co-sponsored and supported the Redlands Adult Literacy Program. This sponsorship was initiated when Smiley Library abruptly closed its grant-supported Adult Literacy Program due to the lack of local matching funds. Adult learners and their tutors sought support from the Friends.

In 2011 the Friends Board adopted a resolution which recognizes that adult literacy is of vital importance to the economic and social fabric of Redlands. The Friends consider the Adult Literacy Program one of its essential missions and promote adult literacy through public outreach and financial support. The Friends assist the literacy coordinator in reaching out to the community, forming new partnerships, and receiving grants and donations. A Friends-Library-city-state partnership has led to an expanded Adult Literacy Program which includes: family literacy, computer classes, anthology publications, book groups, leadership classes, and more.

Friends of the Library board members, tutors, staff, AmeriCorps member, and a Library trustee – all who support the Redlands Adult Literacy Program

Friends volunteers help raise funds for Library programs, such as the children and teen summer reading programs, Library programs, and the Adult Literacy Program. The Friends raise monies through memberships, bookstore sales, special sales, auctions, and private donations. Private donations directed to adult literacy are used as matching funds for literacy grants, events, and materials.

The Friends always seek new opportunities to reach out to the community. One volunteer highlighted her recent involvement at the Redlands Saturday Market, where she and other Friends volunteers shared information about the adult literacy program and the Library. She was amazed that many people did not know about A.K. Smiley Public Library or the Adult Literacy Program. Through this outreach, more than eight people volunteered to become literacy tutors.

Kim Green, a Friends board member, volunteer tutor, and Adult Literacy computer class instructor, shared: Volunteering as a tutor with the Adult Literacy Program led me to become involved with the Friends of the Library, and I’m very proud of what both organizations provide to the Redlands community. As a volunteer tutor, I have witnessed firsthand the life-changing power learning to read holds. What most of us take for granted – being able to understand job applications or driver license tests, helping our children with their homework, reading signs and menus – is a daunting if not impossible challenge for more than 20 percent of our community. The Adult Literacy Program is comprised of people of all ages and cultural and ethnic backgrounds, bound by the common belief that the ability to read, write, and communicate is imperative for connecting with our families, community, and world. I am incredibly proud to live where the powerful skill of literacy is available to anyone who expresses their interest and willingness to commit to the work necessary.

The Friends, literacy staff, and adult literacy volunteers witness the life-changing impact of adult literacy as adult learners reach their goals of obtaining new or better jobs, pursing their own education, helping their children with schoolwork, navigating medical decisions, volunteering in the community, earning their citizenship, and gaining self-esteem.

The Adult Literacy Program needs more volunteers to help adults improve their reading and writing skills. Please consider attending the next tutor orientation scheduled for August 22, 2023. If you have any questions or would like to attend the orientation, please contact Diane Shimota, Adult Literacy Coordinator, at 909.798.7565, ext. 4109 or email literacy@akspl.org

If you know someone who needs literacy services, please ask them to contact Diane Shimota. All literacy services are free and confidential. Training, materials, and ongoing support are provided. As many literacy volunteers say, “This is the best volunteer opportunity in Redlands!”

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Love, lasers, and epic space operas! Some new sci-fi novels to enjoy this summer

June 11, 2023 By Ciara Lightner

Looking for love, laser guns, and the decimation of Earth? Here are some new sci-fi books to enjoy these bright June days.

Malka Older returns with a cozy gaslamp mystery set on the planet Jupiter. The Mimicking of Known Successes centers on Mossa, a mysterious investigator, living on a human outpost on Jupiter many decades after the Earth has become uninhabitable. Mossa is sent off to look into the disappearance of a scholar from a local university that specializes in the rehabilitation of our home planet. While it is unclear what has happened to the missing man, what is clear is that she will need the assistance of a brilliant scholar from that same university. Only problem is the one she already knows happens to be her ex-girlfriend, Pleiti. Drawn into the mystery, the two must figure out how the missing man, a murdered doomsayer, and stolen genetic material of extinct animals all fit together.

Frontier by Grace Curtis is a western sci-fi set in a corrupt land and it centers on a protagonist fueled by love. Three hundred years have passed since humanity splintered into two factions: Those that chose to abandon a dying planet and seek their fortunes in other worlds, and those that stayed. The two factions come clashing together when the Stranger, a woman born in space, comes crashing down on Earth. Finding herself alone, the Stranger must navigate a hostile environment, and a humanity that deems all things involving space illegal. She meets zealots, convinced the planet’s climate problems are retribution, sheriffs obsessed with power, and many that are merely trying to survive. Also, a drug smuggling turtle. The Stranger must navigate her way to her objective, a way back home, and a way back to the woman she loves.

Some Desperate Glory by Emily Tesh is an epic space opera that begins on the Gaea station, where some of the last remnants of humans are determined to survive. Kyr (known as Vallie to her twin brother, Magnus, and Valkyr to her squad mates) longs for the day she will be assigned to be a soldier.

Training to be the best since childhood, she longs to avenge Earth, destroyed before her birth, by a collective of alien beings known as the majo. All is going to plan, until the day the assignments are handed out. Kyr’s brother is sent out on a mission he is guaranteed not to return from and Kyr, deemed by Command to contain too much valuable genetic material to waste, is assigned to the Nursery, to birth the next generation of soldiers. Devastated, Kyr sets off from her home, to save her brother and avenge humanity. But by doing so, may find out what really happened all those years ago and what Command is really hiding.

Enjoy these books and many more with prominent LGBTQIA+ representation at your local library, and remember that libraries are for everyone. Happy Pride!

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