Showing posts with label Vail Stewart Rumley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vail Stewart Rumley. Show all posts

Monday, April 2, 2012

Friends of library hosts award-winning author


Friends of library hosts award-winning author

Published 7:28pm Thursday, February 16, 2012
Shape-shifters, witches and vampires, oh my. They’re hot sellers these days — in books, on TV, in the movies. The dark, fantasy genre appeals to many, but confounds many more. So what’s the draw? In regards to young-adult fiction, author Leslie Connor has a few ideas.
“I think these are the readers that are often going through a period of struggle for acceptance,” she explained via email. “They may feel ‘other than’ in some way or another — or want to. An alternative world can offer an escape into a place where outcasts shine, and become heroes, find love.”
Though fantasy is not Connor’s genre, the “other-than” facet of preteen and teen life resonates with the author and has led to four published novels and national recognition for “Waiting for Normal.” In 2009, the novel about “a girl’s giant spirit as she seeks stability amid a broken family” won the Connecticut Book Award and the American Library Association’s Schneider Family Book Award.
“Personally, I was stressed out all through junior high. I feel as though I didn’t so much chose the genre as it chose me,” wrote Connor.
Friends of Brown Library has chosen Connor to spend Saturday afternoon in the gallery of the Washington Civic Center signing books, reading from her work, and talking with children, parents, and grandparents.
For the Ohio native who grew up in upstate New York, the event represents Connor’s first visit to eastern North Carolina, though she is no stranger to presenting her work in schools and libraries, as well as leading creative writing workshops.
“It’s a significant part of my work,” Connor explained.
“(Connor) is a charming and lucid purveyor of the ways to children’s hearts and minds through stories,” wrote Rachel Mills, president of Friends of Brown Library.
Friends of Brown Library, the organization that provides special programming to library-goers throughout the year, specifically sought out a young-adult novelist for the occasion, in hopes of exploring the disparity in the teen reading tastes of yore and the lure of fantasy today, according to Mills.
“I think it’s fine and healthy reading,” Connor said of the genre. “In the best of the vampire/fantasy books, the reader is following characters that must demonstrate positive traits to overcome troubles.”
Connor mentions J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter books as an example, a series thought by many to have leapt the generational divide — and made it cool in school to actually be seen with a book.
As for the generational gap in pop-culture tastes, Connor brings up the bemusement of older generations with Beatlemania in the early 1960s.
“I don’t think the parents of the Beatlemania generation understood what all the screaming was about — not at the time,” she said. “Of course, it’s obvious now!”
Friends of Brown Library will host Connor in the Washington Civic Center Gallery at 2 p.m. Saturday. The event is open to the public.

Written By: Vail Stewart Rumley for the Washington Daily News

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Bargains for the Book Bunch



Bargains for the book bunch

Published 12:32am Friday, January 20, 2012
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Spread across the Washington Civic Center floor, it’s a sea of books, table after table of hardcover books—art, history, biography galore. Tucked in odd places, on the stage and under tables are boxes of quality paperbacks—suspense, romance, mystery, chick-lit. Some are shiny new, some are gently used, but all the books at this sale have price tags just a fraction of their original cost.
Quality paperback books sell for $1 at the Friends of the Library annual book sale. Over 25,000 books were donated to help raise funds for the Brown Library. The event runs today and Saturday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from noon to 3 p.m. (WDN Photo/Vail Stewart Rumley)
A favorite of local bibliophiles, the Friends of the Brown Library annual book sale takes place today through Sunday at the Washington Civic Center. From 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. Friday and Saturday, and noon to 3 p.m. on Sunday, book lovers can browse through over 25,000 book titles donated specifically for the sale to raise funds to support the library.
“This is an event we look forward to every year,” said Washington resident Carol Smith.
Smith and her sister, Jean Williams, who lives in Swan Quarter, make a yearly date to attend the book sale together.
“We can hardly wait for it,” said Williams.
Thursday, Smith and Williams attended the Friends of the Brown Library Member’s Night, an opening event in which members of the organization get a sneak preview, and first dibs, on this year’s crop of books.
At 5:30 p.m., a line stretched out the door of the Civic Center as members waited to get in and start searching through the tables. A few patrons searched for specific titles from lists, others simply browsed. Some loaded books into sturdy bags brought from home, others made do with the plastic ones supplied by the Friends of the Brown Library.
“The quality of the donations has increased,” said Rachel Victoria Mills, one of the event’s organizers. “We have beautiful children’s books—we have whole sets. And the selection of quality paperbacks is wonderful.”
New quality paperbacks will cost anywhere between $10 and $20, but at this three day sale, the list price is $1.
Children’s books are $.25, and quality children’s books are $2.
In addition to books, the sale feature LPs, cassette tapes, videos, CDs, DVDs, and audio books.
To get it all there is a two-day affair of volunteerism.
“We had over 1300 boxes, averaging 20 books a box,” said Katie Lake, a Friend of the Brown Library and one of the organizers of the sale.
Volunteer Walt Warren orchestrated moving the books from the Coastal Mini-storage unit to the Civic Center, a task that took 10 trucks. Ginny Warren organized the sorting of the thousands of books into genres, then alphabetically.
“We could never, ever do this without the volunteers who come back year after year,” said Mills.
Friends of the Brown Library uses this annual sale to provide funds in addition to those allotted in the city-owned library’s annual budget. The proceeds are used throughout the year for new technology, special programming, and basic supplies the library might otherwise have to do without.
In addition to the Friday and Saturday event hours, Sunday is “Fill-Our-Bags for $5” day, where patrons can fill a provided bag with any of remaining books.



THANKS To:
 Vail Stewart Rumley
FOR WRITING SUCH A GREAT ARTICLE! 

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