Time is continuing its ever forward march. We have already made it to the half point of January and things really do need to slow down a bit. Take a bit of a break and check out these new poetry books.
“Concentrate” is the debut poetry book by Courtney Faye Taylor. Taylor recounts the events of March 16, 1991, the day that Latasha Harlins, a fifteen-year-old girl, was killed by a convenience store owner. But the work is not just about Latasha’s death, but the all too short life she experienced. Taylor parallels these experiences with her own life and how trauma can permanently alter a person’s trajectory. Taylor shows how society reacted differently to the tragedy, through song lyrics, interviews from those involved in the criminal case, even the locations significant to the event, and Latasha’s legacy. Taylor strives to convey that erasure of an event is not the way to heal, it is through continued conversation and understanding. That solidarity comes from acknowledgement, and while the path to understanding is uncomfortable, it is the only path through.
“The Study of Human Life” by Joshua Bennett takes aspects of life into consideration in his latest work. Beginning with poems working through his own childhood, Bennett perceives the world and how the world perceives Bennett. It shows his coming to terms with his own relationship to his father and how his own expectations of himself did not meet up with the world’s expectations. The work ends in a series of poems focusing on new life and a new role of fatherhood. Bennett works through the conflict with bringing a child into a society full of strife, but also finds the joy in parenthood. Sandwiched between the two current ends of Bennett’s life, lies a work of speculative fiction. It is a what-if world in which Malcolm X returns to life after his assassination. What are the ramifications on a community when a leader who was killed in cold blood, suddenly is resurrected? Living up to its title, Bennett’s work shows that life, though invariably changing and heartbreaking, is worth exploring.
Franny Choi explores generation trauma in her latest work, “The World Keeps Ending, and The World Goes On.” Choi explores the past, focusing on the horrors endured by Korean Comfort Women during WWII, and the scars that are still carried by the community. She reflects on her father’s youth and the anti-police brutality protests he attends. She mirrors this by attending protests for the same reasons but decades later. She postulates what this means and what lessons we are leaving behind. Which relics we will leave to be looked at by school children in museums of the future? Choi explores the societal rifts that have formed between different ethnic communities and, much like Courtney Faye Taylor, imagines a world in which those rifts could be healed through understanding. Choi shows that the end of the world is an everyday occurrence for some and survival is a collective effort.
Check out these books (and more) and enjoy a brief respite.
Are you in the mood for a twisty spy novel set in 1850s London, like “
Reading YA book reviews for teens, by teens, is one thing, but here’s another: you can write your own YA book reviews for A.K. Smiley Public Library’s Teen Underground and simultaneously earn community service hours. It’s a real win-win situation, teens. You choose a book to read for fun (not a school assignment), available from our physical or digital Young Adult collection, read it, and then let your pen fly. Email us at
And of course, I can’t leave you without telling you about the latest book that kept me up all night. It’s Tiffany Jackson’s “
2023 has arrived and A.K. Smiley Public Library is here to help you make, and hopefully, keep your New Year’s resolutions. Regardless of your optimistic plans for the year, we have books and other resources for you!
2023 is literally a week away, and what better way to wrap up 2022 than with a list of staff recommendations. One of the many things I enjoy about working in a library is that if I am ever in a reading slump, I can always ask one of my colleagues for a book recommendation. So, here is a list of books that library staff really enjoyed reading this year. The following titles can be found here at A. K. Smiley Public Library.
Non-Fiction:

Public Library’s online resource Craftsy provides over 3,000 hours of free video lessons taught by skilled makers for diverse crafts such as painting, cooking, cake decorating, and woodworking. Available through the Libby app, it’s the perfect way to take an online course and find out which crafts will inspire your creativity. It’s available to all Smiley cardholders and best of all, it’s FREE.
This will route you to the Craftsy website where you’ll be logged in, ready to browse the collection and take a free course. No need to sign up for an extra account through Craftsy. My husband took the Make Quality Doors course and learned quite a bit. Of course, now I’m expecting him to upgrade our cupboards, so choose wisely.