Thursday, April 25, 2013

Why We Love Our Community

Last week was National Library Week, and the theme was "Community Matters." We had a board set up in front of the desk here at the library asking what YOU love about our community. Did you see it? Did you leave a Post-It note?

Here are some of your responses from last week:


  • my friends!
  • Everything Natural
  • the nice people
  • Memorial Day parade in Clarks Summit
  • Abington Community Library (!)
  • getting movies and seeing friends
  • my family
  • Duffy's Coffee House
  • schools
  • feeling safe
  • South Abington Park
  • winter ice sculptures
  • rummage sales
  • great dog park
  • Manning's Ice Cream
We here at the library feel privileged to be a part of this fabulous community! Thanks for your support.

Laura
On behalf of the ACL

Map Of Clarks_Summit
Source

Thursday, April 18, 2013

YA: Try Something New!

Today is Support Teen Literature Day, as part of National Library Week.

What else is going on? Well, April is School Library Month. This Tuesday the 16 was National Library Workers Day. Yesterday the 17th was National Bookmobile Day. And today is for the teen lit!

The theme this year for National Library Week is Community Matters. Click here for more information on the American Library Association website, along with a message from Caroline Kennedy, Honorary Chair of National Library Week. We invited community groups in the area to put up displays around the library. Check out our Facebook page for pictures of them!

Okay, now back to Teen Literature Day.

Ever heard of The Hunger Games? This series by Suzanne Collins is just one example of YA lit that has become popular with, well, everyone.

Movies have been made from hot YA lit, like the popular Twilight series by Stephenie Meyer. Divergent, the first in a series by Veronica Roth, is set to come out as a movie next year.

So why are adults reading more YA novels than ever before? Well, they're well-written! The genre is so exciting these days, with creative and unique books being written and released every year. The heroes are young, brave, and inspiring. The settings range from high schools to post-apocalyptic worlds to space. Historical fiction creates interest in past time periods. Dystopian literature makes us think how the way we're living now might affect our future.

This is a good time to head back to the YA section of our library and try some new titles. And ask us at the desk! I read more YA than any other genre, probably. We've got lots of recommendations for you.

Today only, take a look at the cart in front of the circulation desk for some of our Staff Picks for YA.

Want more? Check out these recommendations.

Laura
On behalf of the ACL

Source

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

From Our Director: The Library Changed My Life

In 1992, something happened in this building that changed my life forever. I was leaving a Friends of the Abington Community Library Spring Book Sale (back in the day when the book sale still fit in the Ryon Room!) with an armload of books and providentially invited to join the organization by Friends member Geri Rodgers. This relationship with the Library began to change my life as I became active, serving on the Friends Board as Treasurer and Book Sale Chairman. My family was already avid library supporters, particularly in the initiative to build this building.

When my youngest child was in fifth grade, I decided to go back to work, and found myself in a part-time job at … this Library! What was originally ‘something to do while the kids were in school,’ became my passion as our Director, Mary Tuthill, gave me more and more responsibility.

In 2001 a unique opportunity presented itself for me to obtain a Master’s Degree in Library Science from the University of Pittsburgh. I was one of the first participants in an online, asynchronous learning ALA-accredited program designed to meet the needs of motivated, independent learners living too far away from campus for a traditional program. With the total support and encouragement of Mary, my husband, and children, I returned to my alma mater after nearly thirty years! This was particularly challenging as I was still working part-time, holding down numerous community volunteer and board positions, and had children still at home. However, everyone else in my Master’s program was just as busy if not more so and I found comfort in that.

Soon after obtaining my degree in 2003, I was asked by Mary Tuthill to work full-time. Within the year, she announced her retirement. I never imagined applying for her job, but was encouraged to do so, and a year after obtaining my degree, six years from starting a ‘little part-time job,’ and fifteen years after joining the Friends, I was now the Director of the Abington Community Library.

How did the Library change my life? I feel I have grown along with the Library and the System. I've changed from a stay-at-home mom to the director of the second largest library in Lackawanna County, embracing changes primarily due to new technology, but also due to its mission. I have seen formats change as traditional print has gone into large print, talking books, E-Books, and MP3 formats. And, I have seen libraries change from a place where librarians ‘shushed’ people to exciting places filled with people of all ages involved in research, recreational reading, and remarkable programming.

I am proud to be part and parcel of this change. I am excited about the future and direction libraries are taking. I am grateful of the opportunity to be a leader in our community, and strive, along with my wonderful ‘team’ (staff, boards, Friends, and volunteers) to provide the best in material and programming for our patrons and community.

I’ll close with a question and invitation. Are you a member of the Friends of the Abington Community Library? If not, let me invite you to become one at our upcoming Book Sale. It could change your life, too!

NOTE: This year’s Spring Book Sale will be held on Saturday, April 13 from 9AM-2PM at the Clarks Summit United Methodist Church.

Leah Ducato Rudolph
Director of the Abington Community Library


Thursday, April 4, 2013

Libraries Are a Jouney, Not Simply a Destination.

Today, I came across an article that intrigued me. While I know how libraries inspire me, I wondered what the author was referring to in 6 Ways Libraries Can Inspire You. ZoĆ« Triska, Associate Books Editor, The Huffington Post, shared a project engineer’s journey to becoming a children’s book author and I discovered an inspired and inspirational little girl with purple hair, Isabella.

Check out these titles for children by Jennifer Fosberry and Mike Litwin:

My Name Is Not Isabella
My Name Is Not Alexander
Isabella: Girl on the Go
Isabella: Star of the Story

Believing wholeheartedly in Emerson’s “Life is a journey, not a destination,” I wondered what journeys were being experienced at our library every day from the man faithfully enjoying the morning newspaper in the Quiet Reading Room, the students being tutored every afternoon, the ladies focused upon their current quilting project, to the patrons checking out the current best seller or a novel by their favorite author.
 
Stop by the library today. You never know where you’ll be inspired to go!

Oh, you want to know the 6 ways libraries can inspire you? 
For the full article: