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For the birds

Tuesday, September 9th, 2008

Personally, the only chicken I like is the one on my plate. I’ve decided that, while I do enjoy the small, cute, chattery yard birds, anything bigger than a pigeon just kind of grosses me out. Other people, however, do like chickens. And we have books about it, of course.

I’ll admit that Extraordinary Chickens and Extra Extraordinary Chickens are kind of cool.  These two books are filled with gorgeous pictures of unusual fowl. They will knock your socks off. I’ve never seen such interesting, unexpected, extraordinary chickens. Maybe if most chickens were this fancy, I wouldn’t find them so disturbing.

I’ve been assured that aside from providing delicious dinners and the eggs for lovely breakfasts, keeping poultry has other benefits. Apparently chickens eat all manner of bugs and creepy-crawlies. Chickens help gardens by providing chemical-free pest control! I was unaware of that. I thought they ate corn. See? Even librarians learn something new everyday.

To help people who already understand the positives of chickens, we have a whole slew of books about keeping chickens. Storey’s Guide to Raising Chickens seems to be a classic. You could also check out Storey’s Illustrated Guide to Poultry Breeds if Extraordinary Chickens has inspired you. Living with Chickens: Everything You Need to Know to Raise Your Own Backyard Flock and Keep Chickens!: Tending Small Flocks in Cities, Suburbs and Other Small Spaces both appear to be good choices for many people around Fairborn who want to have a backyard flock. We have a relatively new book about housing chickens called, of all things, Chicken Coops: 45 Building Plans for Housing Your Flock.  We also have a book called Hen and the Art of Chicken Maitainence: Reflections on Keeping Chickens if you’d like a little more philosophical approach to the whole endeavor.

Click here for a more complete list of books about chickens. If I keep looking at these books, maybe I’ll even change my mind about chickens.

But I doubt it.

The Things Out There

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008

“Not only is the universe stranger than we imagine, it is stranger than we can imagine.”
-Sir Arthur Eddington English astronomer (1882 - 1944)

One nice thing about being an adult is that generally you aren’t forced to learn about things that bore you. If I’m not interested, I don’t have to read whole books on botany or articles about the role of archivists in state government. I can spend my free time reading all of Stephen King’s books or learning how to grow perfect roses. On the other hand, it is easy to get stuck only learning about the couple subjects that most interest you and ignoring everything else. There are some strange things out there, that you may not even have imagined exist.

The library has books about subjects so wild we thought you might have overlooked them. Maybe one of these new things might pique an interest you didn’t even know you had.

The Girl Who Gave Birth to Rabbits by Clifford A. Pickover

Jumbo’s Hide, Elvis’s Ride, and the Tooth of Buddha by Harvey Rachlin

  The Family That Couldn’t Sleep by D.T. Max

Special Cases: Natural Anomalies and Historical Monsters by Rosamond Wolff Purcell

Ghost Lights and Other Encounters with the Unkn own by E. Randall Floyd

The Two-Headed Boy, and Other Medical Marvels by Jan Bondeson

Ghosthunting Ohio by John B. Kachuba

Mutants, On Genetic Variety and the Human Body by Armand Marie Leroi

First Day of School Memories

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

The first day of school is such an exciting time for kids. By the time school starts, kids are sick of summer. All the fun stuff they’d had to look forward to-vacation, camp, lessons, etc.- is over. They’re sick of the pool. It’s too hot. There’s nothing good on TV. They’ve read all the books in the whole library and gotten their Summer Reading Club prizes. They can’t wait for the novelty of the first day of school with new classes, new teachers, new stuff to learn and new friends.

The people at the library couldn’t wait for school to start when we were kids, too. We fondly recall our own first day of school memories:

Nichole, a shelver, recalls that in fourth grade, her parents went to “meet the teacher” day prior to her first day of school. The teacher had each parent write a letter to their child, which she then collected. The letters were waiting for the students in their desks when they arrived for the new school year. While she doesn’t remember exactly what the letter contained, Nichole does remember it was so sweet, it made her cry!

Reference associate Celise remembers that, starting in junior high, she wore a white button up shirt and cool new jeans on the first day of school every year.

Mark, our circulation manager, remembers that he always enjoyed the first day of school because it meant new shoes. They had to last the whole year, but they were new and exciting that day!

Our children’s associate, Diana, was a teacher before she came to work at the library. She has more memories about the first day of school from the teacher’s side of the desk than the student side. She remembers how scary it was to think about meeting all those new kids. They know your name, but you don’t know most of theirs.

And me? I always remember that while I looked forward to the start of school, I really didn’t much appreciate the first day. The first day of school was filled with all those administrative items: filling out paperwork, getting textbooks, learning the new rules. I always found it tiresome to have to be told “No gum in class this year. Here’s where we keep the hall pass.” I like the second day of school better, when you cracked open the new texbook and starting learning something new!

Add your favorite first day of school memory in the comments, please!

St. Lawrence the Librarian

Tuesday, August 19th, 2008

Here’s the situation: someone, maybe one of your kids, has something overdue. You call the library and politely ask that they tell you what it is so that you can go look for it. AND THEY WON’T TELL YOU WHAT IT IS! They tell you that YOU have to have the library card number so YOU can find out what your own kid needs to bring back so that YOU don’t run up a bunch of fines. Whose idea was this?

Well…we have this policy about not revealing to anyone (at least without a court order) what anyone else happens to be reading or watching. That means we won’t tell parents what their kids are reading, and we won’t tell kids what their parents are watching. The policy is based on a philosophy that goes clear back to Saint Lawrence the Librarian, who was martyred in A.D. 258 for refusing to tell the Roman authorities who was checking stuff out of the Church library. After all, if the Romans had a list of borrowers from the Church library, they would have a list of Christians all ready to persecute. One stop shopping.

Anyway, Saint Lawrence wouldn’t squeal, and, according to legend, the Romans were so angry that they grilled him, literally (which is why he’s also the patron saint of cooks). Supposedly, at the moment of his death he told them (this is so cool) “Assum est, inquit, versa et manduca,” or, “This side’s done, turn me over and eat!” The moral of the story is, sorry, we can’t tell you what anyone else has checked out. If you want to keep track of your kids’s stuff, or even your parents’, write down their card number so you have it.

The Feast Day of Saint Lawrence is August 10th, and if you feel like celebrating along with the library community, we recommend that you throw a barbecue. Here’s a good barbecue recipe from the Better Homes and Gardens New Cookbook:

Snappy Barbecue Sauce

1 cup catsup
1 cup water
¼ cup vinegar
1 tbsp. sugar
1 tbsp. Worcestershire sauce
1 tsp. salt
1 tsp. celery seed
2 or 3 dashes bottled hot pepper sauce

Combine all ingredients in a saucepan. Bring the mixture to a boil; reduce heat and simmer, uncovered, for 30 minutes. Use to baste pork, beef, or poultry. Pass any remaining sauce. Makes about 1 ½ cups.

Dog Days of Summer

Thursday, August 14th, 2008

Well, the weather today is gorgeous, but we’re getting ready to enter the “dog days of summer.” Ever wonder why they’re called that? Click here! Then, check out some of these dog books to help counter the irritable mood that sometimes develops when the weather is hot and steamy. If these books can’t make you smile, you might be a lost cause!

Marley & Me

Dogs I Have Met

The Dangerous Book for Dogs

Dogs: A Natural History

Shelter Dogs

Dogs of Bedlam Farm