Is your New Year's Resolution to read more?
Come help start a Friends of the Library sponosred book club. Informational meeting will be Tuesday January 12, 2010 6:30 p.m. at the library.
Wednesday, December 16, 2009
Saturday, August 8, 2009
Summer Reading Program Picnic
All of our Buckaroos had a great time at the 3rd Annual Picnic that wrapped up our Saddle Up and Read program. We had hotdogs, chips, veggies, pasta salad, and ice cream. There were lots of prizes passed out including your choice of books to take home! Hope to see you at the library this winter and for next summer's reading program.
Tuesday, July 7, 2009
2009 Summer Reading Program
Thursday, June 25, 2009
Facepainting
Tuesday, May 26, 2009
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
What is the Librarian Reading? Kate’s recent reads.
Out Stealing Horses by Per Pettersen of Oslo, Norway. (2003) A book full of descriptors, the reader feels a part of this cabin in the forest story. For a translation, it is well done. I liked this book, I liked the character and his perspective on the golden years of his life. I liked the dog. An older Norwegian looks back on his life and remembers his parents, realizing that his father abandoned his family not just for the neighbor’s wife but because they were part of the resistance to the war and involved in an underground smuggling of refugees. It is a story of loss and survival, and of becoming a man in spite of it all.
Indian Creek Chronicles by Pete Fromm (1993) Another cabin in the woods story but this cabin is a wall tent in the Bitterroot Wilderness Area on the Montana/Idaho border along the Selway River. A Missoula college student from back East gets a job protecting Salmon eggs in the wilderness for the National Park Service. He takes the job, knowing he will be snowed in for seven months cut off from friends, family, grocery stores and college life. Again there is a likeable dog. Not only must he survive the cold and snow, he must fill up his days with tasks in order to stay sane in his solitude. This is a great book for anyone who thinks they would like to spend a winter in the west in a tent in the woods. I loved that he took the Foxfire books to his camp and actually used them to make his moccasins. It was a good thing that he was a young man, he seemed to take on a great many arduous tasks.
The School of Essential Ingredients by Erica Bauermeister (2007) What a wonderful book, what a nice surprise. This is a story of a cooking school taught by the mysterious and sensual Lily who learned to cook as a child while her mother sat and read book after book. The story includes glimpses into the lives of the people who show up to take Lily’s cooking class. The classes are held in Lily’s restaurant which is closed on Monday nights. The foods are prepared as a class with a sensuous reverence usually reserved for bodies colliding. The participants all bring baggage which must be dealt with as they form a cohesive group. After class they all sit down to eat together, becoming friends that last. I will read this again and again I liked it so much.
Out Stealing Horses by Per Pettersen of Oslo, Norway. (2003) A book full of descriptors, the reader feels a part of this cabin in the forest story. For a translation, it is well done. I liked this book, I liked the character and his perspective on the golden years of his life. I liked the dog. An older Norwegian looks back on his life and remembers his parents, realizing that his father abandoned his family not just for the neighbor’s wife but because they were part of the resistance to the war and involved in an underground smuggling of refugees. It is a story of loss and survival, and of becoming a man in spite of it all.
Indian Creek Chronicles by Pete Fromm (1993) Another cabin in the woods story but this cabin is a wall tent in the Bitterroot Wilderness Area on the Montana/Idaho border along the Selway River. A Missoula college student from back East gets a job protecting Salmon eggs in the wilderness for the National Park Service. He takes the job, knowing he will be snowed in for seven months cut off from friends, family, grocery stores and college life. Again there is a likeable dog. Not only must he survive the cold and snow, he must fill up his days with tasks in order to stay sane in his solitude. This is a great book for anyone who thinks they would like to spend a winter in the west in a tent in the woods. I loved that he took the Foxfire books to his camp and actually used them to make his moccasins. It was a good thing that he was a young man, he seemed to take on a great many arduous tasks.
The School of Essential Ingredients by Erica Bauermeister (2007) What a wonderful book, what a nice surprise. This is a story of a cooking school taught by the mysterious and sensual Lily who learned to cook as a child while her mother sat and read book after book. The story includes glimpses into the lives of the people who show up to take Lily’s cooking class. The classes are held in Lily’s restaurant which is closed on Monday nights. The foods are prepared as a class with a sensuous reverence usually reserved for bodies colliding. The participants all bring baggage which must be dealt with as they form a cohesive group. After class they all sit down to eat together, becoming friends that last. I will read this again and again I liked it so much.
Wednesday, March 4, 2009
Greetings from the Carnegie Library Circulation Desk,
I am happy to report that the Big Timber Friends of the Library have purchased a new collection of how-to books for the library. These books are straight from Black and Decker, most of them published in 2008. Here is the list:
Complete Guide to Roofing
Complete Guide to Wiring 1 & 2
Flooring 101: 25 Projects you can do yourself
Plumbing 101: 25 Repairs
Complete guide to windows and entryways
Build your Kids a Treehouse
Guide to decorating with Ceramics
Guide to Dream Bathrooms
Guide to finishing walls and Ceilings
Gates and Garden Walls
Also purchased were:
ASVAB FOR Dummies
Bartending for Dummies
GED for Dummies
Idiot's Guide to Creating a Web Site
Idiot's Guide to Meditation
Idiot's Guide to Publishing Children's Books
Come on By, Take a Look
Grab a Chair, Read a Book.
We would love to see you, Kate;Your Librarian
I am happy to report that the Big Timber Friends of the Library have purchased a new collection of how-to books for the library. These books are straight from Black and Decker, most of them published in 2008. Here is the list:
Complete Guide to Roofing
Complete Guide to Wiring 1 & 2
Flooring 101: 25 Projects you can do yourself
Plumbing 101: 25 Repairs
Complete guide to windows and entryways
Build your Kids a Treehouse
Guide to decorating with Ceramics
Guide to Dream Bathrooms
Guide to finishing walls and Ceilings
Gates and Garden Walls
Also purchased were:
ASVAB FOR Dummies
Bartending for Dummies
GED for Dummies
Idiot's Guide to Creating a Web Site
Idiot's Guide to Meditation
Idiot's Guide to Publishing Children's Books
Come on By, Take a Look
Grab a Chair, Read a Book.
We would love to see you, Kate;Your Librarian
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
Second Annual Soup and Bread Luncheon
Here we are at our second annual Soup and Bread Luncheon to raise
extra money for children's books. There were so many soups to choose
from this year. Mulligatawny, Beef Noodle, Chili, Taco, Cream of Potato
and Vegetable, Split Pea, Butternut Squash, Spicy Bean, Chicken Noodle,
Cream of Tomato, all with fresh bread and dessert for $5.00.
Entertainment was provided by Mimi at the piano. Conversation was free and flowing like a river. A great time was had by all. Hope to see you all next year. Kate and Jacque would like to thank the Friends of the Library and all who helped this year to provide yet another wonderful event at the library!
extra money for children's books. There were so many soups to choose
from this year. Mulligatawny, Beef Noodle, Chili, Taco, Cream of Potato
and Vegetable, Split Pea, Butternut Squash, Spicy Bean, Chicken Noodle,
Cream of Tomato, all with fresh bread and dessert for $5.00.
Entertainment was provided by Mimi at the piano. Conversation was free and flowing like a river. A great time was had by all. Hope to see you all next year. Kate and Jacque would like to thank the Friends of the Library and all who helped this year to provide yet another wonderful event at the library!
Tuesday, February 10, 2009
February News
Our second annual soup and bread luncheon is Wednesday February 18th starting at 11:00 a.m. The proceeds will go toward purchasing new children's books. Be sure to get your homemade soup and bread. This event is provided by the Carnegie Friends of the Library.
Come for a visit
We are located on the corner of McLeod and 4th Ave. in downtown Big Timber. We strive to keep our new Fiction and Non-Fiction up to date. We have a wonderful selection of Montana Authors. We have 6 public access computers. There is a comfortable chair for you in the Magazine area, study tables in the Teen space and other parts of the library. Story time is on Fridays at 10:45 in the new Children's section of the library.
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