Thursday, July 19, 2012

Summer Reading...Week Four!

We are at Week Four in our Summer Reading Program. WA Hoo! We have had a tremendous turn out of children coming in each week to return their books, stamping and stickering their Reading Logs, placing a sticker on The Wall of Fame, and then checking out more books. It is wonderful to see so many eager readers. I know the teachers and school librarians will be tickled with the results!

Here are two pictures of The Wall of Fame.


Week One.



 Week Four. Can you see the variety of different colored stickers?




We are curious what you've been reading. Send us an email to tell us what books you have enjoyed so far this summer.

Thursday, June 28, 2012

Summer vacation...Week One

Week One in our Summer Reading Program is off to a great start. We have over 460 children signed up! That is more than last year. Congratulations! Our Wall of Fame is quickly filling up with stickers from those summer reading participants visiting the library. Each time a child who is signed up for the summer reading program visits the library they, too, can place a sticker on our Wall of Fame.

As for our special programs, we do have a few spaces left for the Northern Stars Planetarium. If you are interested in having your child attend, please call or stop in to put their name on the signup sheet. For our other programs, many are already filled, but call us to double check.

We do have lots and lots of exciting books to keep your child reading all summer long. We always love to help children find the perfect match, so never hesitate to ask us for suggestions.
On display are books from the Maine Student Book Award list. For students in Wentworth, we also have the review forms they need to fill out to qualify for the MSBA Book Group.

Studies show that children who read throughout the summer do better when they get to school in the fall. Come on in and sign up for our summer reading program where children can earn a free book just by reading throughout vacation. See you soon!

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Goodbye, Jean Craighead George

Newbery Award winning author, Jean Craighead George passed away Tuesday, May 15, 2012. She wrote over 100 books, both fiction and nonfiction and will be remembered for her love of the natural world. My favorite book is My Side of the Mountain, the story of young Sam Gribley who leaves his crowded home in NYC for a mountain in Vermont. Sam carves out a home in an old tree and finds food with the help of a falcon he names Frightful. Written as a diary, we share Sam's exciting year surviving on his own.

Visit George's author site for more information about her life and her books.

Stop in the Library and check out her books. They are perfect for a family read aloud.




A Log's Life by Wendy Pfeffer

A Log's Life by Wendy Pfeffer; Illustrations by Robin Brickman
S&S. 1997

As the weather warms up and families spend more time outdoors, A Log’s Life by Wendy Pfeffer is an excellent book to share with young readers. In simple language and amazing cut-paper collage, the book introduces to young readers the life cycle of a tree. 

Beginning with a great oak, we see it teaming with life. Squirrels live in a hole in the trunk, a woodpecker searches for insects in the rough bark, wood-boring beetles burrow under the bark chewing wood. Then, during a storm, the tree is hit by lightning and topples to the ground. Over the course of many seasons, summer, winter, fall, and summer, as many animals and insects find shelter in the downed tree, it also slowly rots. And soon, there is no log left but fertile earth. Soon, a seedling oak sprouts and grows and grows until it becomes majestic. Then, another storm and the tree falls, and the cycle begins again.

Scholastic provides lesson plans or go to YouTube for the book trailer.

Monday, May 7, 2012

It's time to plant your garden!

Here are some great books to inspire you to share gardening with your child.



Ready Set Grow!
Young gardeners learn how to grow plants from seed,  how to propagate plants, when to harvest seeds, how long different plants take to grow, what to do about pests, and much more. Features more than 30 simple gardening projects, which include flowers and vegetables, specially designed to be completed during summer vacation.





Green fingers and muddy boots : a year in the garden for children and families  by Ivor Santer  illustrated by Lucy McCrick.
 This book, with accompanying worksheets on a CD (included), presents fun and practical activities to do in the garden every month of the year, come rain or shine.

Grow it Cook It!
Shows how to grow plants and then how to use them in delicious kid-appealing recipes and encourages healthy eating in children.




Kids in the garden : growing plants for food and fun by Elizabeth McCorquodale.
A fun and accessible guide for children to use on their own or with adults, Kids in the Garden encourages children to learn about gardening, healthy eating and caring for the environment. Instructions are step-by-step with bright photography and fun illustrations. This book is aimed at children aged five upwards with adult supervision, then for older children up to 11 to complete on their own.

The vegetables we eat
by Gail Gibbons.
Illustrations and simple text describe the various vegetables people eat.

Garbage helps our garden grow: a compost story by Linda Glaser ; photographs by Shelley Rotner.
Amazing things happen inside a compost bin. In this book, you can watch as one family makes compost for their garden and also learn how to start your own compost bin.

Wednesday, April 25, 2012



I had a wonderful afternoon on Wednesday, April 25 visiting at Wentworth during their Maine Student Book Award celebration. 65 students enjoyed ice cream, then we sat around and listened as Mrs. Merritt and others introduced the new, 2012-2013 Maine Student Book Award List.

Some of the books talked about were:

Amelia Lost by Candiace Fleming ” Between chapters on Amelia's childhood, growing up, and training to be a pilot, are chapters on the search, after contact with her was lost during her final flight, including information from Coast Guard cutters sitting in the Pacific and ordinary Americans sitting in their living rooms.”

Dead End in Norvelt by Jack Gantos “In the historic town of Norvelt, Pennsylvania, twelve-year-old Jack Gantos spends the summer of 1962 grounded for various offenses until he is assigned to help an elderly neighbor with a most unusual chore involving the newly dead, molten wax, twisted promises, Girl Scout cookies, underage driving, lessons from history, typewriting, and countless bloody noses.”

Mission Unstoppable, Book One in the Genius Files by Dan Gutman “On a cross-country vacation with their parents, twins Coke and Pepsi, soon to be thirteen, fend off strange assassins as they try to come to terms with their being part of a top-secret government organization known as The Genius Files.”

The Aviary by Kathleen O’Dell “In late nineteenth-century Maine, eleven-year-old Clara Dooley gains a friend and uncovers a magical secret that changes her life when she learns to care for the once-feared birds in the aviary attached to the Glendoveer mansion where she lives.”



Sidekicks by Dan Santat “When Captain Amazing feels he is getting too old to be a reliable superhero, he tries to hire a new sidekick, but his pets have different ideas.” This book is rarely on our shelves, it is that popular.









For a complete list of the titles, click here to visit the official Maine Student Book Award site.

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

National Poetry Month


April is National Poetry Month. To learn about it visit Poets.org

One of my favorite poets is American poet, Valerie Worth. She was born in 1933 and died in 1994 from cancer. She is best known for her “’small poems” for children. Worth wrote about ordinary things using simple free-verse. My favorite of her poems is “Back Yard” where she describes the sun moving around the yard on a lazy summer day. It is in the book, all the small poems and fourteen more. (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1994)