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A.K. Smiley Public Library Blog

Serving the City of Redlands, California since 1894

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Jill ‘Mummified’ Martinson’s dreadfully good ideas for Halloween

October 9, 2022 By Jill Martinson

Beckoning all Halloween and fright fans! If you’re hosting or attending a party this year, it’s the perfect time to start looking for recipes, crafts, and decorating ideas that will help set the ultimate eerie ambience. The following books will spark your creativity and give you plenty of ideas for a dreadfully good time.

Based on the popular movie, “Tim Burton’s The Nightmare Before Christmas: The Official Cookbook & Entertaining Guide,” with recipes by Kim Laidlaw, crafts by Caroline Hall, and text by Jody Revenson, is ideal for Jack Skellington fans. For recipes, try Sally’s concoction of Worm’s Wort and Frog’s Breath Soup, the Roasted Squash Mummy Tartlets with their leering olive eyes, or the green and gooey Oogie Boogie Lemon Meringue Cupcakes. One of my favorites is the Man-Eating Marshmallow Crispy Wreaths. Beware of their spiked fangs! Decorate your abode with Vampire Protection Parasols and Black-Light Bugs, Spiders, and Scorpions. Be sure to check out The Nightmare Before Christmas movie on DVD, available at the library, too.

The Mitchell family’s “Best of How to Haunt Your House” is well suited for artistic people who enjoy creating their own spooky Halloween displays and decorations. Projects, which range from easy to quite elaborate, can involve painting, using a hot glue gun, soldering, and all sorts of different materials. For the adventurous, make a full-sized mummy or scarecrow. I really like some of the smaller projects like the Forbidden Books. Antiquing plastic vampire bats to use as hinged clasps for the Book of Vampire History is truly clever. The Potion Bottle Collection includes creative containers for Distilled Spider Venom and Goblin’s Teeth. Some of the bottles even glow under black light. This book will really unveil your inner mad scientist.

If you’re wondering which spine-tingling films to watch to set the Halloween mood, check out David J. Skal’s book “Fright Favorites: 31 Movies to Haunt Your Halloween and Beyond.” It covers some of the most iconic classic and modern films, along with color pictures and background stories for each. Dracula, The Shining, Hocus Pocus, there’s something for everyone here.

So, you’ve picked out your film from the “Fright Favorites” book. Now, how are you going to watch it? Head over to Smiley Library’s DVD section for a variety of frightening flicks. Another great option is to use our Kanopy database. Free to those with a Smiley library card, this video streaming service has some outstanding options for scary movies–some familiar and some quite obscure too! Here’s a link where you’ll find Kanopy as well as many other databases: www.akspl.org/elibrary

Festivities wouldn’t be complete without some musical ambience. For your listening pleasure, check out the following CDs: “Fright Night in the House of Horrors,” “Spooky Scary Sounds for Halloween,” or “New Wave Halloween Just Can’t Get Enough.”

Stay tuned, boys and ghouls, for next week’s spooktacular article featuring nightmarish novels by our very own ‘Sanguinary’ Shannon Harris.

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Yay! Fun new books in the Young Readers’ Room!

September 25, 2022 By Pamela Martinez

Fall has arrived! Cooler temperatures and an earlier nightfall equal…extra time to read! Please find all of these new book suggestions on the “NEW BOOK” shelf in the Young Readers’ Room.

My first suggestion for your fall reading pleasure is “Maddie and Mabel,” written by Kari Allen and illustrated by Tatjana Mai-Wyss. A new series for beginning readers, this is a cute, sister sibling story written in an easy format. A typical big sister/little sister duo, Maddie and Mabel do so many activities together, including adventures and even getting into a disagreement…will they make up in time to continue their fun together, before bedtime? Check out this book quickly to find out the answer!

Who is a fan of “The Dragon Masters” series? Let me rephrase that, who hasn’t read “The Dragon Masters” series yet? The newest release, volume 22, is ready for your reading pleasure! “Guarding the Invisible Dragons” written by Tracey West is on the shelf, awaiting its first check-out! Can Drake and the crew of Dragon Masters locate the parents of a newly discovered nest filled with invisible dragons — before they lose their invisible powers? With a new non-binary character introduced to the team, The Dragon Masters continue to work together to accomplish their quest.

“Last Gate of the Emperor – The Royal Trials,” volume 2, is ready for you to check out! If you’ve read the first in the series: “Last Gate of the Emperor,” written by Kwame Mbalia, you’ll be running to the New Book shelf for this next installment! What more could you want in a book series besides Old Earth, pirates, adventure, and intergalactic travel? You’ll find all of these subjects and more in this series. Follow the main character, Yared, as he travels through time and space to accomplish his mission.

Bruce Hale has released another winning title: “Super Troop.” An outdoor adventure filled with rule breaking, or is it the rules breaking you?! Remember back to summer camp and the friend who you enjoyed hanging out with? In this story Cooper and his best friend, Nacho, 6th grade graduates, are looking forward to spending the summer at the best summer camp ever, until they break the rules at an amusement park…uh oh! Now their comic book summer camp plans have changed and they must attend a Boy Ranger camp. Not thrilled at this turn of events, the boys still manage to squeeze in a good time! This book, filled with blended families, middle grades, and boys and girls, will have you laughing at all of the antics these kids manage to get into!

Charlie Thorne is back for a third adventure written by Stuart Gibbs: “Charlie Thorne and the Curse of Cleopatra.” In the first two books of the series, Charlie dealt with Einstein and Darwin discoveries; this time around, Cleopatra is the focus. Will Charlie’s skills with history, math, and timeless adventure be enough to solve this new mystery? Check out this title today to find out!

The Youth Services Crew would be thrilled if you would stop by and let us know which of these titles you enjoyed the most! Let us know…we love a good mystery too!

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Chilling tales of True Crime

September 18, 2022 By Diana Lamb

“Murder is the unique crime, the only one for which we can never make reparation to the victim.”   – P.D. James

On a chilly evening in late December, 2011, Russ Faria returned home to discover a shocking and unforgettable scene. There on the living room floor, lay his wife, Betsy. A dark stain of blood covered her face and pooled around her head. The blade of a black-handled kitchen knife was embedded in Betsy’s neck. She had been stabbed 55 times. The Troy, Missouri police, a judge, and jury believed Russ Faria was guilty of the crime. However, four days before her death, Betsy changed the beneficiary on her life insurance policy from Russ to her friend, Pamela Hupp. Did Russ Faria murder his wife or did Pam Hupp kill her for money? Find out the details in “Bone Deep: Untangling the Betsy Faria Murder Case,” by Charles Bosworth Jr. and Joel J. Schwartz.

Brynhild Storset began life as a poor Norwegian farm girl in 1859. As a young girl, she dreamed of escaping poverty by marrying a wealthy man and having children. When this dream died, Brynhild crossed the Atlantic to start a new life in America, and she changed her name to Belle. Along the way, Belle’s dreams and ambitions turned dark. During her lifetime, Belle would become a dangerous serial killer, who murdered at least 40 men, women, and children. “America’s Femme Fatale,” by Jane Simon Ammeson, chronicles the macabre yet fascinating life of Belle Storset Sorenson Gunness.

“The Doomsday Mother,” by John Glatt, centers around the troubling story of Lori Vallow Daybell and the murder of her two children. Lori was raised in Rialto, Calif., and graduated from Eisenhower High School in 1991. How could a devoted wife and mother end up being indicted on first-degree murder charges of her own children? Evil spirits, zombies, doomsday visions, past lives, light and dark spirits, brainwashing, and the end of the world all play a role in this national attention-grabbing story. Currently, Lori is awaiting trial in Idaho.

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Welcome fall with some new Sci Fi additions

September 11, 2022 By Ciara Lightner

New Science Fiction has arrived at A.K. Smiley Public Library. While you stay inside trying to avoid the heat, pick up some new books and think of a not-so-distant future…. fall.

Mosscap and Sibling Dex return in “A Prayer for the Crown-Shy.” In the second novel of Becky Chamber’s Monk and Robot series, Mosscap begins their quest to discover what humans need. But as Mosscap continues their quest amongst the humans, they begin to feel as though they are losing connection with the robot society. As Mosscap wanders the countryside, contemplating the nature of the self, Dex begins to ask introspective questions as well. Dex wrestles with the question of existence without purpose and the need to contribute to society even at great personal harm. Another great and hopeful entry into the science fiction genre, Chambers continues the complex question of what it means to exist in the world and to be human.

Another science fiction entry, but much darker, Christopher Rowe shows the world after a sentient AI war has come to pass in the “These Prisoning Hills.” Athena Parthenus, an AI, started a war and began to take over humans and nature through nanotechnology. One day she disappears and leaves behind an infected and corrupted landscape in the American Southeast. This is where Marcia, a veteran of the AI war must travel at the behest of the remaining federal government. On a rescue mission Marcia must reacquaint herself with the horrors she faced in the war and what new horrors may await her. Rowe’s novel shows us a world in which the AI war has begun and no clear victor has been declared.

“January Fifteenth,” by Rachel Swirsky, is the date when U.S. citizens receive their UBI. UBI stands for universal basic income, a set amount of money that will ideally cover a person’s basic needs for the year. For some of the characters in Swirsky’s work, this is their only means of survival. For others, it is money to be wasted in ever increasingly eccentric ways. And for certain groups, it is a way for the government to control its citizens. Following these characters throughout the day, the novel explores the nature of government assistance programs in order to understand the pitfalls as well as the successes. Swirsky’s speculative work shows that no matter the time, humanity is complex and there are no easy solutions to its problems.

Explore these books and more the next time you visit the Library.

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Take advantage of our eResources for students

September 4, 2022 By Jennifer Downey

High school and college students, now that school is back in full swing, you might be finding yourself buried under term papers and other projects. Well, don’t panic – Smiley Library has your research needs covered with our Gale in Context eResources. You may access these at the Library or on our website at www.akspl.org/elibrary.

Do you need to write a report about a famous or influential person? Gale in Context: Biography is a reliable, user-friendly resource where you can find information about thousands of notable people. This database allows you to search for people by name, occupation, nationality, ethnicity, birth/death dates and places, or gender, as well as by keyword. Gale in Context Biography provides you with articles, book chapters, and other primary source material on a wide range of contemporary and historical public figures.

Have you been given an assignment to debate a hot-button issue? Then Gale in Context: Opposing Viewpoints is the tool for you. You’ll find a wide range of up-to-date information about a wide array of controversial topics sourced from academic journals, magazines, statistics, and websites.

As for those endless projects and term papers, head for Gale in Context: High School (hint – it’s great for college students, too!) Whatever your topic, you’re sure to find all the information you need to ace your project. In addition to many print sources, this database offers images, videos, and audio selections from such renowned sources as the NPR, BBC News, and the New York Times Video.

Using Gale’s databases helps you formulate your topic, apply critical thinking skills, and complete your school projects without having to worry about fake news or other unscrupulous journalism. Gale updates its resources regularly and all their sources are reputable and reliable.

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