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Friday, 29 June 2012

SPL Shelf Life [kids]

Posted on 09:51 by Unknown

Mitchell’s License, By Hallie Durand, 36 pages.@ SPL: JP Duran
Once, a little boy named Mitchell would make a terrific fuss each night about going to bed. However, everything changed when Mitchell was exactly three years, nine months and five days old. That was the night that he obtained his driving “license.” Now, every night, Mitchell drives his “car” to bed.
First he checks his car’s “tires” (which are actually his dad’s feet). He inspects the engine (dad’s stomach), cleans the windshield (dad’s glasses), and gets into the driver’s seat (dad’s shoulders). Then he starts up the “car” and braves the busy two-way traffic (Mitchell’s mom) in the hallway. He can drive his car slowly or quickly, make right and left turns, and reverse. Mitchell has learned to drive safely. He stops and looks both ways at the corners on the way to his bedroom. Sometimes, when toys are in the way, Mitchell has to honk his horn (dad’s nose) as loudly as he can. Sometimes his car needs oil, so Mitchell pours some water down his dad’s throat.
Strangely, his car is unable make turns toward the cookie jar, but otherwise, Mitchell loves driving to bed on the shoulders of his very patient father every night, and he crawls under the covers without a fuss.
Illustrated by artist Tony Fucile, this colourful, entertaining picture book will be of special interest to children who are reluctant to go to bed at night. Hallie Durand is the author of an equally engaging series of children’s chapter books about a girl named “Dessert” (the first book is entitled “Dessert First”).
**Recommended for ages three to five.

Catching Time, By Rachna Gilmore, 28 pages.
 
@ SPL: JP Gilmo
On a beautiful Saturday morning, Sara wants to go to the park, where there’s a wonderful playground with swings, slides and trees. However, her busy parents are bustling around the house, vacuuming, tidying, doing laundry and washing dishes. They agree that the family can go to the park when they’re finished … if there’s time.
Knowing from experience that her mom and dad rarely have enough time, Sara decides to help by catching some of the precious commodity. Finding her butterfly net and a big jar, Sara watches and waits. What does time look like, and where does it go? Is it gurgling down the drain in the sink where Dad is washing the dishes? Is the vacuum cleaner catching time and whooshing it away? Is time hiding in the cupboards and corners of the house? Perhaps it’s under the furniture, or perhaps it lives outside?
Try as she might, Sara can’t see or catch any time at all, and by the middle of the afternoon, her jar is still empty. In desperation, she shouts “Stop!” Everyone stops, looking at her. When Sara explains what she has been trying to do, her parents leave their chores and the family goes to the park, enjoying the rest of the afternoon together.
Ottawa-area author Rachna Gilmore’s important message in this beautifully-illustrated picture book is simply that family time is very precious …and time truly does fly.
** Recommended for ages four to seven.
These reviews appeared in The Stratford Gazette on June 21, 2012. Written by Sally Hengeveld, Librarian

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SPL Shelf Life [adult]

Posted on 09:47 by Unknown

A Question of Death: An Illustrated Phryne Fisher Treasury by Kerry Greenwood@SPL: FIC Green
What was old is new again, the Roaring Twenties are fashionable once more. Cropping up in Woody Allen’s Midnight in Paris, and HBO’s Boardwalk Empire, the recent Shelf Life-reviewed book Bobbed Hair and Bathtub Gin, about four female writers of the ’20s, has been out of the library ever since Shauna’s review hit the paper. Now meet the fictional detective of the flapper set, the Honourable Phyrne Fisher.
As someone who appreciates the bundles of money and title her family inherited that brought them out of poverty, Phyrne openly adores her clothes, alcohol and men – not to the extent of Zelda Fitzgerald, however – and in this illustrated edition of short stories, she shares some of her favourite fashions, adventures and cocktail recipes of the 1920s (although the author advises not indulging in too many green chartreuses).
The colourful illustrations by Beth Norling are reminiscent of Erté (whose name Phryne drops in an included “interview”), but these are second banana to the stories themselves, which perfectly illustrate the clash of two worlds – the conservative, class-conscious previous generation and the rather freer, more bohemian world of the (admittedly) wealthy flapper set. Australian by birth, English by inheritance and jet-setter by choice, Phryne solves each case with a cool nerve and a few trusty associates – her maid Dot, her friend Dr. Elizabeth MacMillan plus a few others who return now and then.
These short stories are a perfect introduction to Phryne and her wonderfully described era, and if you like these stylish and glamourous mysteries, there is a whole series of full novels out there to enjoy as well. And although the series was televised in 2012 as Miss Fisher’s Murder Mysteries, it was on the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, so we will have to wait awhile to catch it in North America. You may want to stock up on gin and tonic in any case.
This review appeared in The Stratford Gazette on June 21, 2012. Written by Robyn Godfrey, Librarian.
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Strategic Plan Update: What Did the Community Say?

Posted on 09:42 by Unknown

Last fall and winter, Stratford Public Library undertook a community engagement process of unprecedented depth and scope in preparing to update the Library's strategic plan. "Over 1300 opinions were provided by community members, who view the library as a vital community resource. They expressed a wide range of opinions on issues from accessibility to technology to the role of library staff.", commented Board Chair, Geoff Williams. "The following statements summarize what the community told us."

The community says that it wants:
  • Ease of access and library space that is easy to use and get around
  • A library that is at the cutting edge of technology and digital media
  • Library facilities that are modern but still have some traditional comforts
  • A safe and welcoming library space which permits quiet reading as well as social interaction and group research/study
  • A library that continues to change and grow and be a part of our community
  • A library that continues to have a helpful, professional and knowledgeable staff
  • A library that works on improving services to more/all groups in our community (participatory culture)
During the summer, library staff will use these statements (and the reports that provide the detail behind them – available at www.stratford.library.on.ca/librarytomorrow.html) to prepare suggestions for the Library Board of how these might be translated into library services. The Library Board will continue its strategic planning in the fall. The Library will use Powernoodle, the local cloud-based software application which supports group decision-making, as a tool to facilitate this process.

The support of the Government of Ontario, through the Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Sport, is acknowledged as well as that of the Ontario Library Association and Perth Community Futures Development Corporation
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Thursday, 21 June 2012

Read with Gisele

Posted on 09:44 by Unknown
Read with Gisèle  event on Saturday June 23 - tickets are no longer available.  Your child may still be able to get a free story book and book bag (there will be enough for 100 kids) following Gisele's reading of Gifts by Jo Ellen Bogart and Barbara Reid.   After the reading, kids have a chance to meet Gisèle and have her autograph their book!  


Unfortunately, there is no more room to sit in the library auditorium to actually hear her read it!  We don't want any disappointed children (or adults!).


TVO is proud to partner with presenting sponsor TD Bank Group and with the Ontario Library Association on this tour.
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Wednesday, 20 June 2012

You Asked... We Answered!

Posted on 11:01 by Unknown
Your Opinion Matters to us. We've received hundreds of responses to our Library Survey in the past year. We are trying to provide answers to some of the many interesting questions asked by you in the Survey results. 


#3 

  • Why can’t I find a copy of Nora Robert’s Naked in Death eBook in your catalogue, or in your downloadLibrary.ca selection? I know I found it there last week, and now I can’t find it.”
  • “Why do you have such long waiting lists for Audiobooks & eBooks on downloadLibrary?”

Library customers have taken to Electronic (or “e-“) content like ducks to water. Hundreds of you have borrowed thousands of eBooks, audiobooks and videos (travel, kids documentaries and more) since January 2011!


SPL staff work hard to keep up with skyrocketing demand:

  • New titles are added weekly
  • Electronic budgets have been doubled for 2012
  • Nearly 13,000 eBooks, Audiobooks and Videos can be borrowed from www.downloadLibrary.ca.

Challenges for libraries purchasing and loaning e-content:
  • Libraries cannot buy the same digital books as individuals. 
  • A few key publishers don’t make their catalogue available to the Library market. Simon & Schuster (new Steve Jobs biography) is a good example.
  • Other publishers sell library editions for a time, and then withdraw particular titles. Nora Robert’s Naked in Death (eBook) was recently made unavailable. We know you want to read them, we just can’t buy them.
  • Libraries also agree to different contractual conditions than a person who has purchased eBook content directly from the Internet.
Electronic publishing is in its infancy and is still evolving. Canadian libraries – including Stratford – continue to work with eBook vendors to make more books available to our library customers. Stay tuned…. and do check out www.downloadLibrary. As always, call, e-mail or come on in if you need a hand with any of it.


Wendy Hicks, Deputy Director

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Monday, 18 June 2012

Imagine: A Summer of Fun at the Library

Posted on 13:33 by Unknown




Summer is almost here! Join hundreds of children in Stratford this summer in SPL's TD Summer Reading Club IMAGINE. Register TODAY! 

Come by the library or visit our summer programming site to see what spectacular programs we are offering this year! Registration takes place at SPL on the lower floor.  

When children register before library close on Thursday, June 28, 2012, they will be eligible to be entered into a draw. The winner will receive two tickets to see the Canadian premier of "How to Train Your Dragon: Live Spectacular" at the John Labatt Centre, London on Wednesday, July 4, 2012 at 7:00 p.m.

A special thanks goes out to the Stratford Beacon Herald for generously donating these tickets!
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Keep it Cool Stratford!

Posted on 12:34 by Unknown

With a heatwave expecting to hit Stratford over the next few days, the City of Stratford is launching its "Keep it Cool" program.  The following City facilities and programs will be available to the public, starting this evening.
 
Tuesday, June 19
Kiwanis Community Centre - open 8:30am - 9pm - games room
Stratford Public Library - open 10am - 9pm - magazines, newspapers, free public internet and wireless hotspot
 
Wednesday, June 20
Kiwanis Community Centre - open 8:30am - 9pm - games room
Stratford Public Library - open 10am - 9pm - magazines, newspapers, free public internet and wireless hotspot
Stratford Lions Pool - 6-8pm - open swim
 
Thursday, June 21
Kiwanis Community Centre - open 8:30am - 9pm - games room
Stratford Public Library - open 10am - 9pm - magazines, newspapers, free public internet and wireless hotspot
Stratford Lions Pool - 6-8pm - open swim
 
For additional public swim times and to purchase season's passes, please visit www.stratfordrecreation.ca or www.facebook.com/cityofstratford.  Regular admission for public swimming is $3.00 per child (2 years to 15 years); $3.75 per youth (16 to 18 years); $3.75 per senior or special population; and $4.75 per adult.  Season passes, day passes and 5-visit card passes are also available for purchase at the pool. 
 
For a complete listing of children’s programs at the Stratford Public Library, please  visit http://www.stratford.library.on.ca/kids/home.htm
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SPL Shelf Life [kids]

Posted on 09:55 by Unknown

Builder Goose: It’s Construction Rhyme Time! By Boni Ashburn, 26 pages.
@ SPL:  JP Ashbu   
In Builder Goose: It’s Construction Rhyme Time, preschoolers will love listening to author Boni Ashburn’s clever renditions of twenty-two favourite Mother Goose nursery rhymes,set in a busy construction site.
Instead of “Hey diddle diddle / the cat and the fiddle”, preschoolers will hear “Hey diddle diddle / this hard hat is little / but needed on every job site / If a wrench gets dropped, or a 2 by 4 falls / you’ll see why it’s worn day and night!”
Remember the itsy-bitsy spider which climbed up the waterspout?  In Builder Goose, the spider becomes an itsy-bitsy skid steer: “The itsy-bitsy skid steer / drove up the steep dirt hill / stockpiled rock with nimbleness and skill / Up came the loader / to haul it all away / and the itsy-bitsy skid steer / kept working hard all day.”
“Here we go around the mulberry bush” becomes “Here we go around the construction site”, and “Simple Simon met a pieman going to the fair” becomes “Simple survey, measure that way, measure this way too”.
“Baa baa black sheep, have you any wool?” has been rewritten as “Bump bump wheelbarrow, have you any nails?”
Ashburn’s catchy construction rhymes, all of which feature various animals as the construction workers, along with Sergio De Giorgi’s colourful illustrations, will be a definite hit with the many preschoolers who are fascinated by diggers, dump trucks, cranes, hard hats and other construction equipment.
Parents and grandparents might find this to be an ideal time to also introduce or reintroduce some traditional nursery rhymes to young children.
** Recommended for ages 2 to 5 years.
 
Froggy Builds a Tree House, by Jack London, 30 pages.
@ SPL:  JP Londo
Look out – trouble-prone (but lovable) Froggy is back in a new misadventure!
Froggy and his friends – Bear, Beaver and Turtle - are building a tree house (with lots of help from his dad).  The friends have visions of a wonderful hideaway where they can stow away and enjoy pizza parties during the summer.
Froggy is his usual awkward self, dropping nails, a hammer and a board on his father’s hard hat. His friends encounter some mishaps too, but finally, the tree house is finished.
Now Froggy and his friends decide that girls will not be allowed. “Boys only!” announces Froggy.
Needless to say, his little sister, Frogilina, is quite unhappy with this decision!
Later, when Froggy and his friends try unsuccessfully to haul a pizza up to the tree house, Frogilina saves the day when she catches the pizza and brings it up to the house – along with a generous helping of flies for Froggy’s piece.
Froggy and friends reconsider their “Boys only” rule and all ends well in this latest offering from author Jonathan London and illustrator Frank Remkiewicz, who have collaborated on all of the comical and very popular Froggy stories.      
** Recommended for ages 3 to 6 years.

These reviews appeared in The Stratford Gazette on June 14, 2012. Written by Sally Hengeveld, Librarian
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SPL Shelf Life [adult]

Posted on 09:49 by Unknown

Your Brain on Nature: The Science of Nature’s Influence on Your Health, Happiness and Vitality by Eva M Selhub and Alan C Logan
@SPL: 612.82 Sel

Outdoorsy folks have known it for years: Something about the big wild is very, very good for our souls. Really, anyone who’s ever noticed a change in their mood when they get out for a quick walk on a nice day knows it, too. And what about those insufferably cheerful people, swanning around, chirping about how their chronic health problems or depression became manageable when they took up a lifestyle including whole foods, time outdoors and exercise? (Full disclosure: I am one of these people.) Well - as is typical for us insufferably cheerful folks - there’s more good news: Some perfectly good science has emerged endorsing a holistic approach to lifestyle management. It’s been collected in a concise, eminently readable volume called Your Brain on Nature.

Written by an MD and a naturopathic doctor (both instructors at Harvard), Your Brain on Nature takes care to ground itself in history before taking off with all the newest, shiniest research. Around the world, there’s a rich history of health care providers recommending exposure to nature to cure what ails us. But, the explosion of the pharmaceutical industry in the latter half of the twentieth century started a trend. Without hard science proving exposure to nature helped our mental health, or that whole foods were better for our bodies than the new, processed foods meant to save us time and money, physicians and patients began relying on pills. Our health began to break down, with Generation Y becoming the first generation in Canadian history expected to live shorter, sicker lives than their parents. So what are we missing?

Selhub and Logan investigate many recent studies on the biggest changes in our lives, from the amount of screen time we log on an average day; to the cognitive effects of visual and physical exposure to natural scenes; to the science behind the whole foods movement and why processed foods are breaking down our health – they even examine literature on benefits of pet ownership. In plain language and with a sense of humour, they take on the health-eroding elements of our lives with a practical outlook. They don’t desire we all become smartphone-shunning Luddites eating homemade granola in tree forts; rather, they advocate a more mindful, balanced approach to the technologies, foods and pharmaceuticals that fuel our culture. After all, they argue, what we’re doing isn’t working. The science is in. We need nature, too. Your Brain on Nature is highly recommended to fans of Michael Pollan, readers of popular science nonfiction, and to anyone wishing to explain to their loved ones why they really do need to put down that phone and get out for a walk.

This review appeared in The Stratford Gazette on June 14, 2012. Written by Shauna Thomas, Librarian. 
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Thursday, 14 June 2012

Hot Hot Reads

Posted on 08:54 by Unknown
The erotic novel Fifty Shades of Grey has taken the publishing world by storm.  SPL has the series in ebook, audiobook, and print, but because of the popularity, there are long waits.  If you are looking for something to read while you wait that is... equally as spicy... you may want to try some of these.


 Bending the Rules by Susan Anderson


Kissing Midnight by Emma Holly


Smooth Talking Stranger by Lisa Kleypas


Best Erotic Romance


In Bed with a Highlander by Maya Banks

Naamah's Kiss by Jacqueline Carey (and the rest of the Naamah's trilogy)


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Wednesday, 13 June 2012

Summer Holidays are Fast Approaching!

Posted on 13:19 by Unknown
Ahh... summer. If you you are like me you have been planning out your summer schedule for some time now. But have you thought about managing your library holds while you are away? You don't want to miss your turn with Fifty Shades of Grey or The Iron Lady after all!  You may want to consider "suspending" your holds until you return or have more time to pick  them up. 


To check your requests and manage your holds, you need to log into your account. To do that, click on "My Account" in the top right corner of any library webpage or Log In on the catalogue site. You will need to enter your library card (or username) and your PIN. Your PIN is generally the last 4 digits of your phone number. Once logged in, move to My SPL and then click on Holds to see the listing of requests you have.


To Suspend a Hold:
  1. To change the status of a request, click in the checkbox next to each title, and then click the Suspend button. 
  2. A calendar will appear where you can select the reactivation date.
  3. Cancelled and suspended holds are each shown on separate pages. You can reactivate suspended holds at anytime from the Suspended page.
While in the catalogue, you might also want to ensure the items you have out are renewed to prevent any annoying late fees.

Did you know that you can be notified about your holds by email?  To set this up call the library at 519-271-0220 or ask the next time you are in.  

Have a wonderful summer full of great reads!


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Thursday, 7 June 2012

SPL Shelf Life [adult]

Posted on 13:49 by Unknown

The Assassin in the Marais: A Victor Legris Mystery, by Claude Izner@SPL: FIC Izner
In the Parisian spring of 1892, more things are changing besides the colour of the grass. The Belle Epoque era is on the wane, bohemia is taking over. The world of man is shrinking as horizons expand past old fashioned ideas of the 19th century, and socio-political unrest has had the City of Lights under siege, with the terrorist bombings of the criminal Ravochol.
Antique bookseller Victor Legris does not welcome all these changes, but cannot resist poking his nose into a series of bizarre coincidences surrounding a unique goblet. The goblet leaves a trail of mayhem through Paris, and Victor, his partner Kenji and their assistant Joseph all follow its various tangled leads.
Victor’s amore Tasha is being secretive. Kenji’s past comes to play. A senile patriarch may know something, but Joseph has a hard time interpreting his paranoid gibberish.
All the while the goblet remains tantalizingly out of their reach, and out of the reach of the fervent assassin who doggedly pursues them all, murdering nearly all who come into contact with the relic. Is he after the jewels that adorn the cup’s cat-like face? Or does the clue lie in the chalice’s origins?
This is the third in the Victor Legris series, penned by sisters Liliane Korb and Laurence Lefevre (under the pseudonym Izner), and although there is some character development, it is great as a stand-alone mystery as well. The authors are historians of the period, so their novel is very evocative of turn-of-the-century Paris in all its dirt and glory.
Fans of the Belle Epoque era, historical mysteries or just Paris in general will like this series.
This review appeared in The Stratford Gazette on June 7, 2012. Written by Robyn Godfrey, Librarian.
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SPL Shelf Life [kids]

Posted on 13:44 by Unknown
The Lemonade Crime, by Jacqueline Davies, 152 pages.
@ SPL:  J FIC Davie

Was Scott Stacey guilty or innocent of stealing the $208 that Evan and Jessie Treski had worked so hard to earn at their lemonade stand?
The facts certainly seemed to indicate that Scott was the culprit. The money had disappeared from the pocket of Evan’s shorts when he was swimming in Jack’s backyard pool; Scott was the only boy who had gone back into the house... and Scott had just bought himself a very expensive Xbox 20/20.  Every student in Mrs. Overton’s class was envious of that new Xbox, and no one more so than Evan.
At Jessie’s urging, the class called Scott to stand trial for the theft. 
With the students acting as jury members, witnesses and judge, the trial began after school one day. One by one, the witnesses were questioned. Suddenly, what had seemed to be a watertight case against Scott fell apart.
What did the class learn?  Plenty, as it turned out.  They learned that jumping to conclusions is unwise and unfair.  They learned that there can be more than one answer to a question, and more than one culprit to a crime. They discovered that finding the guilty party isn’t always easy, that being fair is sometimes very difficult, and that “justice” may not always prevail. They also learned that what signifies justice to one person can be perceived as injustice by someone else.
Jacqueline Davies wrote The Lemonade Crime as a sequel to The Lemonade War, but either of these well-written, thought-provoking books can be enjoyed on its own.
** Recommended for ages 8 to 11 years.


The Case of the Missing Deed, by Ellen Schwartz, 189 pages.
@ SPL:  J FIC Schwa

When five cousins – Sebastien, Genevieve, Clare, Olivia and Alex - arrive at Otter Island for their annual summer visit with Grandma, they are dismayed to discover that the Tantalus Mining Company is planning to open a large mine on the small, peaceful island.  Otter Island will be changed forever.  Ignoring residents’ wishes and their fears for the island’s environment, Tantalus is determined to move forward as quickly as possible.
Worse, the company’s plans include using the land on which Grandma’s house is located, as well as those of various other residents. If Grandma can’t prove her property ownership by showing her deed, she’ll lose her home. Before his recent death, Grandpa hid the deed for safekeeping – but Grandma can’t remember the hiding spot.
Meanwhile, Tantalus officials are pressuring Grandma for the deed and aggressively pressuring other islanders to sell their properties to the company, while trying to convince the islanders that no environmental harm will result from the mine.
The cousins help Grandma search for the missing deed again and again, to no avail. Then they find a series of complicated clues to the deed’s whereabouts in some of Grandma’s recipes.  It appears that Grandpa, who loved puzzles and codes, had left these clues before his death. Now it becomes a race against time to find the deed – a race that will also unearth an environmental report, hidden by Tantalus, explaining that the mine’s operation will do tremendous harm to the island.
The Case of the Missing Deed is the first title in an appealing new Canadian chapter book series for children, “The Teaspoon Detectives”, featuring secret codes, clues hidden in recipes, intrigue, adventure and five very determined cousins.
** Recommended for ages 8 to 11 years.


These reviews appeared in The Stratford Gazette on June 7, 2012. Written by Sally Hengeveld, Librarian

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Friday, 1 June 2012

The Queen's Diamond Jubilee

Posted on 07:01 by Unknown
Hear Yea, Hear Yea! By Royal Decree, the staff of SPL are dressed up for the Queen's Diamond Jubilee! You will see crowns, tiaras, and even a facinator or two! 
The Diamond Jubilee celebrates the Queen's 60 years as Monarch. For more information on the Queen's Diamond Jubilee check out the official website. 

The official SPL fascinator, designed by Deputy Director Wendy Hicks



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