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"The wind is tossing the lilacs,
The new leaves laugh in the sun,
And the petals fall on the orchard wall,
But for me the spring is done.

Beneath the apple blossoms
I go a wintry way,
For love that smiled in April
Is false to me in May."
-  Sara Teasdale, May  

 



"The month of May was come, when every lusty heart beginneth to blossom, and to bring forth fruit; for like as herbs and trees bring forth fruit and flourish in May, in likewise every lusty heart that is in any manner a lover, springeth and flourisheth in lusty deeds.  For it giveth unto all lovers courage, that lusty month of May."
-  Sir Thomas Malory, Le Morte d'Arthur 

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Allenstown Public Library Trustee Meetings
Trustee Meetings for the Allenstown Public Library are held
at the library on the third Tuesday of the month at 4:30.

Allenstown Public Library Trustees:

Kim Carbonneau
Deb Moreshed
Statia Nichols

The Public is welcomed and encouraged to attend. 

"The afternoon is bright,
with spring in the air,
a mild March afternoon,
with the breath of April stirring,
I am alone in the quiet patio
looking for some old untried illusion -
some shadow on the whiteness of the wall
some memory asleep
on the stone rim of the fountain,
perhaps in the air
the light swish of some trailing gown."
-  Antonio Machado, 1875-1939
   Selected Poems#3, Translated by Alan S. Trueblood

 


"Late February, and the air's so balmy snowdrops and crocuses might be fooled into early blooming. Then, the inevitable blizzard will come, blighting our harbingers of spring, and the numbed yards will go back undercover.  In Florida, it's strawberry season— shortcake, waffles, berries and cream will be penciled on the coffeeshop menus."
-  Gail Mazur, The Idea of Florida During a Winter Thaw

 


"The word 'March' comes from the Roman 'Martius'. This was originally the first month of the Roman calendar and was named after Mars, the god of war.  March was the beginning of our calendar year. We changed to the 'New Style' or 'Gregorian calendar in 1752, and it is only since then when we the year began on 1st January. The Anglo-Saxons called the month Hlyd monath which means Stormy month, orHraed monath which means Rugged month. All through Lent the traditional games played are marbles and skipping. The games were stopped on the stroke of twelve noon on Good Friday, which in some places was called Marble Day or Long Rope Day.  The game of marbles has been played for hundreds of years and some historians say that it might have been started by rolling eggs. In the past, round stones, hazelnuts, round balls of baked clay and even cherry stones have been used."
-  Facts About March

"The shortest day has passed, and whatever nastiness of weather we may look forward to in January and February, at least we notice that the days are getting longer.  Minute by minute they lengthen out.  It takes some weeks before we become aware of the change.  It is imperceptible even as the growth of a child, as you watch it day by day, until the moment comes when with a start of delighted surprise we realize that we can stay out of doors in a 
twilight lasting for another quarter of a precious hour."
-  Vita Sackville-West

"I prefer winter and fall, when you feel the bone structure in the landscape - the loneliness of it - the dead feeling of winter.  Something waits beneath it - the whole story doesn't show."
-  Andrew Wyeth  

"In the sheltered heart of the clumps last year's foliage still clings to the lower branches,  tatters of orange that mutter with the passage of the wind, the talk of old women warning the green generation of what they, too, must come to when the sap runs back."
-  Jacquetta Hawkes 

"Out in a world of death far to the northward lying, 
Under the sun and the moon, under the dusk and the day; 
Under the glimmer of starts and the purple of sunsets dying, 
Wan and waste and white, stretch the great lakes away. 

Never a bud of spring, never a laugh of summer, 
Never a dream of love, never a song of bird; 
But only the silence and white, the shores that grow chiller and dumber, 
Wher'ever the ice winds sob, and the griefs of winter are heard. 

Crags that are black and wet out of the grey lake looming, 
Under the sunset's flush and the pallid, faint glimmer of dawn; 
Shadowy, ghost-like shores, where midnight surfs are booming 
Thunders of wintry woe over the spaces wan."
-  Wifred Campbell, The Winter Lakes


"Shall we liken Christmas to the web in a loom?  There are many weavers, who work into the pattern the experience of their lives. When one generation goes, another comes to take up the weft where it has been dropped. The pattern changes as the mind changes, yet never begins quite anew. At first, we are not sure that we discern the pattern, but at last we see that, unknown to the weavers themselves, something has taken shape before our eyes, and that they have made something
very beautiful, something which compels our understanding."
-   Earl W. Count, 4,000 Years of Christmas

"Design for November"

Let confusion be the design
and all my thoughts go,
swallowed by desire: recess
from promises in
the November of your arms.
Release from the rose: broken
reeds, strawpale,
through which, from easy
branches that mock the blood
a few leaves fall. There
the mind is cradled,
stripped also and returned
to the ground, a trivial
and momentary clatter. Sleep
and be brought down, and so
condone the world, eased of
the jagged sky and all
its petty imageries, flying
birds, its fogs and windy
phalanxes . . .

--William Carlos Williams


Past Events
"The breezes taste
Of apple peel.
The air is full
Of smells to feel-
Ripe fruit, old footballs,
Burning brush,
New books, erasers,
Chalk, and such.
The bee, his hive,
Well-honeyed hum,
And Mother cuts
Chrysanthemums.
Like plates washed clean
With suds, the days
Are polished with
A morning haze.
"
-   John Updike, September

What wondrous life is this I lead!
Ripe apples drop about my head;
The luscious clusters of the vine
Upon my mouth do crush their wine;
The nectarine and curious peach
Into my hands themselves do reach;
Stumbling on melons, as I pass,
Ensnared with flowers, I fall on grass."
-  Andrew Marvell, Thoughts in a Garden  

"Summertime
And the living is easy
Fish are jumpin'
And the cotton is high

Oh, your daddy's rich
And your mama's good lookin'
So hush little baby now
don't you cry

One of these mornin's
You're gonna rise up singin'
Then you'll spread your wings
And take to the sky

But til that mornin'
Ain't nothin' can harm you
With your daddy
And your mammy
standin' by."
-  George Gershwin and Dubose Heyward, Porgy and Bess  

"The collision of hail or rain with hard surfaces, or the song of cicadas in a summer field. These sonic events are made out of thousands of isolated sounds; this multitude of sounds, seen as totality, is a new sonic event."
-  Iannis Xenakis

Donald Ray Pollock Reads from his work. 
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Civil War 150 Year Remembrance

New Hampshire's part in the Civil War.




Alice at Seventeen: Like a Blind Child  
by Darcy Cummings

One summer afternoon, I learned my body
like a blind child leaving a walled
school for the first time, stumbling
from cool hallways to a world
dense with scent and sound,
pines roaring in the sudden wind
like a huge chorus of insects.
I felt the damp socket of flowers,
touched weeds riding the crest
of a stony ridge, and the scrubby
ground cover on low hills.
Haystacks began to burn,
smoke rose like sheets of
translucent mica. The thick air
hummed over the stretched wires
of wheat as I lay in the overgrown field
listening to the shrieks of small rabbits
bounding beneath my skin.



Poetry Foundation
Poetry
No Cyber Bullying Allowed!
Cyberbullying
will not be tolerated at the Allenstown Public Library
Just to make things perfectly clear:


The computers at the Allenstown Public Library are not to be used to abuse, harass, intimidate, stalk, or in any other way bother another human being on this planet.

There will be no excuses and no second chances on this, we are adamant that this library is a safe zone.

NO CYBER ABUSE ALLOWED!

"Shall we liken Christmas to the web in a loom?  There are many weavers, who work into the pattern the experience of their lives. When one generation goes, another comes to take up the weft where it has been dropped. The pattern changes as the mind changes, yet never begins quite anew. At first, we are not sure that we discern the pattern, but at last we see that, unknown to the weavers themselves, something has taken shape before our eyes, and that they have made something
very beautiful, something which compels our understanding."
-   Earl W. Count, 4,000 Years of Christmas


Google

"The world's favorite season is the spring. 
All things seem possible in May."
-  Edwin Way Teale

"Spring rain
leaking through the roof
dripping from the wasps' nest."
- Matsuo Basho

"In somer when the shawes be sheyne,
And leves be large and long,
Hit is full merry in feyre foreste
To here the foulys song.

To see the dere draw to the dale
And leve the hilles hee,
And shadow him in the leves grene
Under the green-wode tree.

Hit befell on Whitsontide
Early in a May mornyng,
The Sonne up faire can shyne,
And the briddis mery can syng."
- Anonymous, May in the Green Wode, 15h Century


"The Lost Years" : Now Available at the Library!

What Should I Read Next?
A website to help you discover your next book to read!

http://whatshouldireadnext.com/

Recipe Page!
http://www.ichef.com/
New York Times Best Sellers List
http://www.nytimes.com/best-sellers-books/combined-print-and-e-book-fiction/list.html
FAX
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offers free fax services to 
residents of the town. 



Booklist Online

Book reviews and MORE

You can read classic books online at
Project Gutenberg.

Read the News
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"Loud are the thunder drums in the tents of the mountains.
Oh, long, long
Have we eaten chia seeds
and dried deer's flesh of the summer killing.
We are tired of our huts
and the smoky smell of our clothing. 
We are sick with the desire for the sun
And the grass on the mountain."
-  Paiute Late Winter Song

"Each leaf,
each blade of grass
vies for attention.
Even weeds
carry tiny blossoms
to astonish us."
- Marianne Poloskey, Sunday in Spring 

"A Death in March"

Even so the Spring goes forward.
The rind of the trees weepy with sap. No spigot to carry it off.
From here to the other side, ice is motley. The river's current
expression: a stutter of ice cakes on the shore. Fret of spume.
Some days, though, we waken to snow,
fugacious erasure of mud and broken branches.
We feel the setback. Want the spectacular squalor
of Spring: its colourless smear. There's no word for that.
For snow falling, fugue slow, through fog. Earth and air
unable to settle what it's to be. Now is after. Or, ahead?
Interrugnum: Its beauty is brutal. A raw wind through bereft.

-- Anne Compton

"The word February is believed to have derived from the name 'Februa' taken from the Roman 'Festival of Purification'.  The root 'februo' meaning to 'I purify by sacrifice'.  As part of the seasonal calendar February is the time of the 'Ice Moon' according to Pagan beliefs, and the period described as the 'Moon of the Dark Red Calf' by Black Elk.  February has also been known as 'Sprout-kale' by the Anglo-Saxons in relation to the time the kale and cabbage was edible."
-  Mystical WWW

 


"Have you ever noticed a tree standing naked against the sky, 
How beautiful it is?  
All its branches are outlined, and in its nakedness 
There is a poem, there is a song.  
Every leaf is gone and it is waiting for the spring.  
When the spring comes, it again fills the tree with 
The music of many leaves, 
Which in due season fall and are blown away.  
And this is the way of life."
-  Krishnamurti 

Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird
 

 I
 Among twenty snowy mountains,
 The only moving thing
 Was the eye of the blackbird.

 II
 I was of three minds,
 Like a tree
 In which there are three blackbirds.

 III
 The blackbird whirled in the autumn winds.
 It was a small part of the pantomime.

 IV
 A man and a woman
 Are one.
 A man and a woman and a blackbird
 Are one.

 V
 I do not know which to prefer,
 The beauty of inflections
 Or the beauty of innuendoes,
 The blackbird whistling
 Or just after.

 VI
 Icicles filled the long window
 With barbaric glass.
 The shadow of the blackbird
 Crossed it, to and fro.
 The mood
 Traced in the shadow
 An indecipherable cause.

 VII
 O thin men of Haddam,
 Why do you imagine golden birds?
 Do you not see how the blackbird
 Walks around the feet
 Of the women about you?

 VIII
 I know noble accents
 And lucid, inescapable rhythms;
 But I know, too,
 That the blackbird is involved
 In what I know.

 IX
 When the blackbird flew out of sight,
 It marked the edge
 Of one of many circles.

 X
 At the sight of blackbirds
 Flying in a green light,
 Even the bawds of euphony
 Would cry out sharply.

 XI
 He rode over Connecticut
 In a glass coach.
 Once, a fear pierced him,
 In that he mistook
 The shadow of his equipage
 For blackbirds.

 XII
 The river is moving.
 The blackbird must be flying.

 XIII
 It was evening all afternoon.
 It was snowing
 And it was going to snow.
 The blackbird sat
 In the cedar-limbs.


"The Lord of Misrule - December 17th.  This is the first day of the Roman festival Saturnalia.  It was a period of great 
feasting and festivity, with a lot of drinking and eating.  Slaves would become masters for the festival, and everything 
was turned upside down. This part of the Roman festival survived into the 17th Century.
"
-   Customs and Folktales for December

"Now the seasons are closing their files
on each of us, the heavy drawers
full of certificates rolling back
into the tree trunks, a few old papers
flocking away. Someone we loved
has fallen from our thoughts,
making a little, glittering splash
like a bicycle pushed by a breeze.
Otherwise, not much has happened;
we fell in love again, finding
that one red feather on the wind."
-   Ted Kooser, Year's End

 


November

by Thomas Hood

No sun--no moon!
No morn--no noon!
No dawn--no dusk--no proper time of day--
No sky--no earthly view--
No distance looking blue--

No road--no street--
No "t'other side the way"--
No end to any Row--
No indications where the Crescents go--

No top to any steeple--
No recognitions of familiar people--
No courtesies for showing 'em--
No knowing 'em!

No mail--no post--
No news from any foreign coast--
No park--no ring--no afternoon gentility--
No company--no nobility--

No warmth, no cheerfulness, no healthful ease,
No comfortable feel in any member--
No shade, no shine, no butterflies, no bees,
No fruits, no flowers, no leaves, no birds,
November!



"'Tis the last rose of summer,
Left blooming alone;
All her lovely companions
Are faded and gone."
-   Thomas Moore, The Last Rose of Summer, 1830

 


Try to praise the mutilated world.

 

Remember June’s long days, 
and wild strawberries, drops of wine, the dew. 
The nettles that methodically overgrow 
the abandoned homesteads of exiles. 
You must praise the mutilated world. 
You watched the stylish yachts and ships; 
one of them had a long trip ahead of it, 
while salty oblivion awaited others. 
You’ve seen the refugees heading nowhere, 
you’ve heard the executioners sing joyfully. 
You should praise the mutilated world. 
Remember the moments when we were together 
in a white room and the curtain fluttered. 
Return in thought to the concert where music flared. 
You gathered acorns in the park in autumn 
and leaves eddied over the earth’s scars. 
Praise the mutilated world 
and the gray feather a thrush lost, 
and the gentle light that strays and vanishes 
and returns. 

—Adam Zagajewski



(Translated, from the Polish, by Clare Cavanagh.) 
From the issue of September 24, 2001. 


Read more http://www.newyorker.com/
archive/2003/09/15/
030915on_onlineonly
03#ixzz
1XmTcjNPe

"And hate the bright stillness of the noon
without wind, without motion.
the only other living thing
a hawk, hungry for prey, suspended
in the blinding, sunlit blue.

And yet how gentle it seems to someone
raised in a landscape short of rain—
the skyline of a hill broken by no more
trees than one can count, the grass,
the empty sky, the wish for water."
-  Dana Gioia, California Hills in August 

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Creepy, Crawly Stories
Nature Games and Quizzes
Birds~ Birds~ Birds~

Books Come to Life!

A Path Between Houses  
by Greg Rappleye

       Where is the dwelling place of light?
       And where is the house of darkness?
       Go about; walk the limits of the land.
       Do you know a path between them? 
               Job 38:19-20


The enigma of August. 
Season of dust and teenage arson. 
The nightly whine of pickup trucks 
bouncing through the sumac 
beneath the Co-Operative power lines, 
country & western booming from woofers 
carved into the doors. A trace of smoke 
when the wind shifts, 
spun gravel rattling the fenders of cars, 
the groan of clutch and transaxle, 
pickup trucks, arriving at a friction point,
gunning from nowhere to nowhere. 
The duets begin. A compact disc, 
a single line of muted trumpet, 
plays against the sirens 
pursuing the smoke of grass fires.

I love a painter. On a new canvas, 
she paints the neighbor's field. 
She paints it without trees, 
and paints the field beyond the field, 
the field that has no trees, 
and the upturned Jesus boat, 
made into a planter, 
"For God so loved the world. . ." 
a citation from John, chapter and verse,
splattered across the bow 
the boat spills roses into the weeds. 
What does the stray dog know, 
after a taste of what is holy? 
The sun pulls her shadow toward me, 
an undulant shape that shelters the grass, 
an unaimed thing.

In the gray house, the tiny house, 
in '52 there was a fire. The old woman,
drunk and smoking cigarettes, fell asleep. 
The winter of the blizzard and her son 
Not coming home from the Yalu. 
There are times I still smell smoke.
There are days I know she set the fire 
and why.

Last night, lightning to the south. 
Here, nothing, though along the river
the wind upends a willow, 
a gorgon of leaves and bottom-up clod 
browning in the afternoon sun. 
In the museum we dispute 
the poet's epiphany call--
white light or more warmth? 
And what is the Greek word for the flesh, 
and the body apart from the spirit, 
meaning even the body opposed to the spirit? 
I do not know this word.
Dante claims there are pools of fire 
in the middle regions of hell, 
but the lowest circles are lakes of ice, 
offering the hope our greatest sins 
aren't the passions but indifference. 
And the willow grew for years 
With no real hold upon the ground.

How the accident occurred 
and how the sky got dark:
Six miles from my house, 
a drunk leaves the Holiday Inn
spins on 104 and smacks a utility pole. 
The power line sparks
across the hood of his Ford
and illuminates the crazed spider web 
of the windshield. His bloody tongue burns 
with a slurry gospel. Around me, 
the lights go down, 
the way death is described 
as armor crashing to the ground, 
the soul having already departed
for another place. Was it his body I heard 
leaning against the horn, 
the body's final song, before the body 
slumped sideways in the seat?

When I was a child, 
I would wake at night
and imagine a field of asteroids, rolling 
across the walls of my room.
In fact, I've seen them, 
like the last herd of buffalo, 
grazing against the background of fixed stars.
Plate 420 shows the asteroid 433 Eros, 
the bright point of light, as it closes its approach 
to light. I loose myself in Cygnus, 
ancient kamikaze swan,
rising or diving to earth, 
Draco, snarling at the polestar, 
and Pegasus, stone horse of the gods, 
ecstatic, looking one last time at home.

August and the enigma it is. 
Days when I move in crabbed circles, 
nights when I walk with Jesus through the fields. 
What finally stands between us
and the world of flying things? 
Mobbed by jays, the Cooper's hawk 
drops the dead bird. It tumbles 
beneath the cedar tree, 
tiny acrobat of death, 
a dead bird released
in a failed act of atonement.
A nest of wasps buzzing beneath the shingles, 
flickers drilling the cottonwood, 
jays, sparrows, the insistent wrens, 
the language of birds, heads cocked, 
staring the moon-eyed through the air. 
Sedge, asters, and fleabane, 
red tins of gasoline and glowing cigarettes, 
the midnight voice of a fourteen-year-old girl 
wailing the word "blue" from the pickup's open doors, 
illuminated by the dome light, 
the sulphurous rasp of another struck match, 
and foxglove, goldenrod and chicory, 
the dry flowers of late summer,
an exhaustion I no longer look at.


Time passes. The authorities 
gather the wreckage, the whirr 
of cicadas, and light dissembles the sky. 
A wind shift, and the Cedar Creek fire 
snaps the backfire line
and roars through the cemetery. 
In the morning, 
I walk a path between houses. 
I cross to the water 
and circle again, the redwings 
forcing me back from the marsh. 
Smoke rises from a fire 
still smoldering along the power lines, 
flaring and exhausting itself 
in the shape of something lost. 
Grass fires, fires through the scrub 
of the clear-cut, fires in the pulpwood,
cemetery fires,
the powder of ash still untracked 
beneath the enormous trees, 
fires that explode the seed cones 
on the pines, the smoke of set fires 
and every good intention gone wrong, 
scorching the monuments 
above the graves of the dead.



Listen


Jane Eyre
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click here for the survey!




Job Opportunity
Circulation Clerk, Part-time, Allenstown Public Library

Duties: The Allenstown Public Library is looking for an energetic, customer-service focused and detail-oriented part-time library circulation clerk to work in our fast-paced environment.  This position requires active multi-tasking and strong attention to detail.   We are actively looking for someone with prior library experience!

Responsibilities include but are not limited to:
Check in/out library materials,  register new patrons, assist patrons in locating library material, assist patrons in the use of library equipment, answer patron and telephone inquiries, shelve materials, assist patrons with online reference, contact patrons for reserves and over-due books, assisting technical services with materials processing.
Qualifications: High school diploma or equivalent required, some college preferred.
This position requires active multi-tasking and strong attention to detail.  
Experience in a public library strongly preferred.
Closing Date: Open until filled
Salary: Approximately 10-20 hours per week at $10.00/hour. Hours include one evening per week

Address: Please send resumé with letter of interest to:
Director, Cathy Vincevic
Allenstown Public Library
59 Main Street
Allenstown, NH 03275

allenstownlib@comcast.net


Book Humor for You!

New Book!
in the library now!

James Patterson
talks about "Guilty Wives" now available at the library!

Book Donations
Keeping the Library Vibrant!
 The Allenstown Public Library welcomes your book, DVD, and books on CD donations.

 Even though we have had, like everyone else, budget cutbacks we are going to do our best to keep up with the bestseller list.

 However, other new books, especially if you have read, and enjoyed, a book, but do not need to keep it, are very welcome.

 Please call before you bring the books.   Please, only bring books to us when we are open. 
Particularly, PLEASE, don't bring books and leave them in the rain! 
It makes us sad...and the books are ruined...

 We need books for the Young Adult section, Children's books, both Junior level and Pre-School, and Adult Fiction. 

 Your  generous gift will be shared many times! 

 Sorry, we cannot accept encyclopedias. 

New In the Library
Now!

How Fast Can You Read?
Take the test and see!

ereader test
Source: Staples eReader Department


Dixon crossing Niagara below the Great Cantilever Bridge
U.S.A. 1895-1903
GIF made with the NYPL Labs Stereogranimator - view more at http://stereo.nypl.org/gallery/index
GIF made with the NYPL Labs Stereogranimator

New York Public Library
Digital Gallery

http://digitalgallery.nypl.org/nypldigital/index.cfm


She is my picnic girl / words and music by Harry Connor. Digital ID: 1157576
Cats!
Storytime for March 27
Here's what we did at storytime today - cats! We read Bad Kitty by Nick Bruel, Scattercat by Lynley Dodd, and Mitzi, Molly, and Max the Kittens by Gisela and Siegfried Buck, and we made black cats out of cootie catchers.


Instructions for the craft are over at Yummy Worm.

March Storytimes
We've been doing great things in storytime this month!

St. Patrick is said to have driven snakes out of Ireland, so we made a snake craft last Tuesday. It was a lot of work but had great results.  Here are the instructions.

Today, we did spring and made collage cardboard frames with pictures cut from seed catalogs.

March!


Map
Sofia the Lion Tamer

March In Like A Lion!

The Turtle Catcher
Now at the library!

The Wedding Quilt
Available at the Library!

11/22/63
Now at the library!

Storytime is ON!
Come Hear Stories and Make Crafts!
Each Tuesday from 3:00 to 4:00!
Lions Club Donates Boxwood Plants to Library
In Memory of Teresa R. Stone
Thank you!



Good Story to Read!
http://storyoftheweek.loa.org/2011/11/horseman-in-sky.html
Knitting and Crocheting Group

Knitting and Crocheting Group

Knitting and Crocheting Group





Fall!

Storytime is ON!
Watch the Beautiful Mermaid!



Summertime!





Concerto For Cows

Flowers

Flowers


"Without libraries, what do we have? We have no past and no future." - Ray Bradbury

(We couldn't have said it better.)

Spring!

Spring Quote
It was one of those March days when the sun shines hot and the wind blows cold:  when it is summer in the light, and winter in the shade.  ~Charles Dickens

3 D Lilies!

Sunflower
>


Libraries in the Age of E-books

Some have wondered about the relevance of libraries in the age of computers. They may think that in the age of Kindle and other e-books the need for libraries has diminished. I’m here to tell you that is far from the truth.

For starters, let’s look at the price of one e-book:

One Kindle costs $189 on Amazon, a Nook e-reader from Barnes & Noble Costs $199, and that’s not including the actual books!  E-books now make up 9 to 10 percent of trade-book sale but at the cost of any where from free (unusual) to 25 dollars the costs quickly add up. The reality is that most people do not have the kind of money to invest in e-books at this time.

The prime reason libraries became public was to make sure that everyone has equal access to knowledge. For this library that means continuing to invest in hardcover books. There are libraries who are investing in e-books, those who have considerable financing.

Perhaps, one day, this library will too, but for now, we are comfortable with buying hardcover books.

After all, isn't there something warmer about curling up with a real book?


New Website for TATTAL!
TATTAL, our teen volunteer group, now has its very own website at tattal.mywebcommunity.org.
Why Support your Local Library?

  • In a world where knowledge is power, libraries make everyone more powerful.
  • Libraries bring people and ideas together. Think of the library as the living room of your community.
  • Libraries are unique. Where else can you have access to many things on CD, DVD, the Web or in print – as well as personal service and assistance in finding it?
  • Libraries help bridge the divide between those who have access to information and those who do not. Families making less than $15,000 annually are two to three times more likely to rely on library computers than those earning more than $75,000.
  • Nearly 73% of libraries are their communities' only source of free computer and Internet access- which rises to 82% in rural areas.
  • Libraries don’t just offer the hardware, but also offer the expertise of librarians in helping teach people how to use the Internet and find the information they need quickly. While Google can give you 50,000 responses to your inquiry, your librarian can help you find the one answer you need.
  • Libraries are part of the American Dream. They offer free access to all. They bring opportunity to all.
  • Libraries and librarians provide free and equal access to information for people of all ages and backgrounds – in schools, on college and university campuses and in communities large and small.
  • Libraries are for everyone, everywhere.

Library Facts

DID YOU KNOW?

  • 62% of adults in the U.S. have public library cards (Harris 2010 survey) 
  • Americans go to school, public and academic libraries nearly three times more often than they go to the movies. 
  • Reference librarians in the nation’s public and academic libraries answer nearly 5.7 million questions weekly. Standing single file, the line of questioners would span from Long Island, New York, to Juneau, Alaska.
  • A 2009 poll conducted for the American Library Association found that 96% respondents agreed that public libraries play an important role in giving everyone a chance to succeed because it provides free access to materials and resources. 

 


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March!


 

Library Thing!


Library Thing!
This is a new way to view the collection at the Allenstown 
Public Library!

We will be adding more as time goes by, please be patient!

For now: Take a peek!