Monday, December 19, 2011

Tell me this isn't funny -

I am not sure why...but it is. That said, may I recommend adding "The Trip" to your Netflix Instant Queue? It's brilliant really.



Reminds me of a plaque I read while exploring an installation art exhibit in Glasgow last winter:

"I think the best kind of humour is the kind where you don't understand what you are laughing at - you intuitively know there's something that is both funny and 'other'." 
   -David Shrigley

Though I know why this clip is funny:

But the question that remains for me is who has a better handle on Michael Cain in this one. Impeccable. What is your vote?

Sunday, December 18, 2011

Marbling Marvels

Anythink has a big program during the holiday season each year called "Gifts from the Heart" where each Guide (or librarian) at the branch has a craft program going on in different parts of the library. Our Tech Guide had dress-up polaroid photo shoots, our Children's Guide made felt "Merry Mice" with the kids, our Adult Guide made paper beads, and I chose to do paper marbling.

Though it turned out to be the most involved of the program of the day (not to mention logistically tricky), it was really marvelous to see all these tweens and teens get so entranced by what they created.

It was cool to realize at the end of the day that although I was initially attracted to the academic aspect of promoting literacy in the community, I am beginning to see that I enjoy how broad the term "literacy" can be. What a cool opportunity I have to bring together the materials that help youth in the Thorton community have new experiences whether it is recommending a great book they can appreciate or helping them create their own uniquely marbled pattern. There are some discouraging days on the job but this last Saturday certainly wasn't one of them.

Nutcrackin' Good Time...

To satiate our festive feelings this season, Matt and I went to Colorado Ballet's production of the Nutcracker this last weekend. Matt had yet to have the Nutcracker experience, so it was fun introducing him to something I have such fond memories of as a child. And as you can see from the program, it was an grand production - complete with chest bumps from the malevolent mice.

After years of watching Ballet West perform this, it was fun to see a different interpretation. I turned into a bit of an amateur connoisseur of the thing, pointing out the differences in choreography and costumes. Though I missed a few things from Ballet West, I loved Mother Ginger and the baby bons bons in this one. It was guffaw funny and I laughed probably a little more than was appropriate for a ballet. 

Other highlights of the evening included a walk down lovely Larimer that was lit up with a canopy lights.
 And just the unique pleasure that comes when spending time with such a dapper chap.

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Blackout Poetry and Knockout Doodles.

Don't be surprised if your tween and teen writers turn their newspaper blackout poetry into something like this along the way....


The thing is, it can add some flavor to their writing.

On the same note, I had 11 - that's ELEVEN - tweens and teens at writing club today! They all participated and truly came up with some stellar pieces. Feeling pretty pleased:)

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Merry Colorado Christmas to all!

...but how can these neighbors of ours sleep?

Friday, December 2, 2011

I heard this could happen...

The ALA puts out a "Top Ten Banned Book" list every year to represent the most challenged books in school and public libraries across the U.S. Though I am against censorship, like any decent librarian, I can sympathize with parents or other library users on why they may be offended by a handful of books that make it to that list. Of course, I would never sympathize enough to take them off the shelf but I do see why people would want to have their kids avoid some of these titles, especially until they are the appropriate age to read them.

But a few of the titles that make it onto the Top Ten Banned Book list are truly baffling for me to understand where the offense lies. For example, did you know that the following books have been challenged in a public and/or school library collection?:

1. Bridge to Terrabithia
Okay - so this is certainly a boring and heavy handed book that few kids can even enjoy. But offensive content? Do you want to guess why it was banned? It's has been seen as "paganism" in reference to the imaginary world that Jess and Leslie create.

2. To Kill a Mockingbird, Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Roll of Thunder Hear My Cry, etc
Indeed these are the "racist" books. Too many "n-" words to be decent reading. Of course, these are for the most part canonized school reading fare but challenged nonetheless.

3. Captain Underpants
Stupid - even intellectually offensive but to be censored from a collection based on it's potty humor? Truly...

4. Lord of the Rings, A Wrinkle in Time, Harry Potter
Yep. These are in the "occult" challenge category.

I always found this fantasy/"occult" category to be among the most disconcerting and even baffling of challenges. Okay, so you are looking for an excuse not to have to read "Bridge to Terrabithia" - fair enough. Okay so you aren't keen on exposing yourself to the uncomfortable realities of racism. Okay so you think potty-humor is offensive in its own right - but to basically rule out the fantasy genre because of your backwards sense of imagination v. religion? This is hard to wrap my mind around. Surely this doesn't happen - and if it does, it is in a land far from me.

But this last week I feel as if I have been officially christened into professional public librarianship. While placing a hold on Fablehaven (a fantasy series by a BYU grad Mormon) for a customer, I made a passing remark how this was a fun series. She asked me what it was about. I began explaining it was sort of like Lion, Witch and the Wardrobe meets Harry Potter. Kids get thrown into an alternate universe while visiting their grandparents where they have adventures with magical creatures, etc. "Oh really? Maybe we shouldn't get that afterall. I don't want him reading that kind of stuff."

I then attempted probe her a bit, as a chance to turn this into a "reader's advisory" moment, assuming that she thought the book might be too much fluff or something. Perhaps I could find a happy medium for her agenda and her young son's taste...

"What kinds of things would you like him to read? Maybe we could find a good series that would have the escapism and fantasy in it that he would like but would suit more what you are interested in him reading."

Diplomatic enough right?

"Well, we just don't believe in that kind of stuff. We don't read Harry Potter and those types of books that have magic and satanic stuff in it like that."

?....Wasn't sure how to respond to that immediately. I couldn't help but pause briefly to ponder how we lept from magic to "satanic stuff" in reference to Harry Potter. When I came to, I tried to play up the Lion, Witch and the Wardrobe  thing, thinking that no one can accuse CS Lewis of being satanic. In the end, she decided that she would read the book before deciding whether it was appropriate for her son.

Though I got the feeling that she left feeling satisfied with our interaction, I was a bit rattled. Could it be that here in Colorado there are library going folk that would find as much issue with their kid reading HP as they would in having them play a Ouiji board? I can't help but think living in a world where fantasy is not only taken seriously but challenged on religious grounds would prove to be an exhausting lifestyle after awhile. In spite of how unfortunate I find that thought to be, there is something really satisfying about having my own ALA moment where I witnessed the need for "intellectual freedom". I am thanking my lucky stars that the librarians who served me while I was growing up didn't let people like that filter out what I could read.