South County Regional Library will have a delayed opening today due to a power outage. There is no estimated time for reopening at this time.

790 of 1119 results
Thumbnail
A black and white photograph of John Price Carr, Charlotte businessman. Image courtesy of Charlotte Mecklenburg Library's Robinson-Spangler Carolina Room.

Behind the Vault Doors: John Price Carr Family Papers, 1881-2008

December 29, 2020

John Price Carr (1854-1927) was born to Thomas Milton and Rebecca Price Carr in the Hopewell community of Mecklenburg County. His father was a Methodist minister and died at a young age, which forced Carr to quit school and financially support his family. Despite obstacles in his young life, he rose as a leader and successful businessman in Charlotte’s First Ward community.  

 

John Price Carr, photo courtesy of the Robinson-Spangler Carolina Room 

John Carr married Anna Elizabeth Little on February 14, 1878. Anna was the daughter of William Price and Hannah Sifford Little. Her father served as a Confederate soldier, was a farmer and former Mecklenburg County Sheriff.  

After their marriage, John Carr pursued several business opportunities. For a time, he raised and sold cattle alongside his brother, held an interest in a cotton gin, H.M. Bassamon & Co., and after selling this interest in 1891, he began buying land near North McDowell and E. 5th Street. By 1895, Carr owned and operated a moving company, in which he continued business throughout his life. When Presbyterian Hospital was about to close following a devastating fire in 1917, he and four other local businessmen stepped up to undersign a $40,000 loan to help the hospital buy the vacant Elizabeth College grounds. 

 

John Price Carr home, 200 N. McDowell, c. 1900 

John Price Carr’s moving business thrived, and he, Anna and their five children (Daisy Rebecca, Jonnie Little, Fannie Alice, Annie Price Wurzburg, and Laurie Milton), moved into a newly built house at 200 N. McDowell Street in 1904. After his death due to pneumonia in 1927, his family continued to live in their home until its sale in 1951. John Price Carr is buried in Elmwood Cemetery. 

The Robinson-Spangler Carolina Room houses the John Price Carr Family Papers, 1881-2008, which are only available for virtual research due to the COVID-19 crisis. Contact the Carolina Room’s Archivist for more information on how to access this collection: (704) 416-0150 or [email protected]

--

This blog was written by Robinson-Spangler Carolina Room staff.

Thumbnail

Become the best version of yourself in 2021

December 30, 2020

New year, new you? You bet. A new year gives us a chance to define, commit and achieve the personal goals that help us grow into better versions of ourselves. If you're looking for resources to help you set obtainable goals, Charlotte Mecklenburg Library has you covered. 

Below, you'll find our list of recommended reads to take your 2021 resolutions from thoughts to reality. Click here to find the books on this list online in our catalog.
 

Self Care

The Self-Care Solution: A Year of Becoming Happier, Healthier and Fitter—one Month at a Time by Jennifer Ashton
Dr. Jennifer Ashton is at the top of her field as an ob-gyn and news correspondent. But even at the top there's still room to improve, and with The Self-Care Solution, she upends her life one month at a time, using her own experiences to help you improve your health and enhance your life.

Dr. Ashton becomes both researcher and subject as she focuses on twelve separate challenges. Beginning with a new area of focus each month, she guides you through the struggles she faces, the benefits she experiences and the science behind why each month's challenge--giving up alcohol, doing more push-ups, adopting an earlier bedtime, limiting technology--can lead to better health. Month by month, Dr. Ashton tackles a different area of wellness with the hope that the lessons she learns and the improved health she experiences will motivate her (and you) to make each change permanent. Throughout the book, she offers easy-to-comprehend health information about the particular challenge to help you understand its benefits and to stick with it. Whether it's adding cardio or learning how to meditate, Dr. Ashton makes these daily lifestyle choices and changes feel possible--and shows how beneficial a mindful lifestyle can be.
 

Financial Wellness

Bounce Back.  How to Rescue Your Finances During Tough Times by Mitch Horowitz
"BOUNCE BACK TO FINANCIAL, SPIRITUAL, AND PSYCHOLOGICAL HEALTH WITH...FIVE POWERFUL CONDENSED CLASSICS."

The five works abridged and introduced by historian and New Thought scholar Mitch Horowitz in Bounce Back give you the greatest possible opportunity to navigate economic crisis and poise yourself for recovery.

Revolutionize your budgeting skills and be ready to take advantage of economic upswing with George S. Clason's classic guide to personal finance, The Richest Man in Babylon.

How to Attract Money is Joseph Murphy's most effective program of visualization. Offering specific prayers and affirmations, Murphy brings you closer to your goals and helps you attain the life you want.

Russell H. Conwell's motivational classic, Acres of Diamonds, teaches you to think in practical ways and transform seemingly modest ideas into large returns.

Transcendentalist philosopher Ralph Waldo Emerson offers his principles for self-directed living in Power and Wealth, helping you focus and exert your will in the world.

Think and Grow Rich, the world's greatest book on successful living, provides Napoleon Hill's famous 13 steps to wealth and achievement. Open the door to financial empowerment and bounce back from challenging times with these great primers of self-potential.
 

Personal Development

The Gifts of Imperfection by Brene Brown
In The Gifts of Imperfection, Brene Brown, a leading expert on shame, authenticity and belonging, shares 10 guideposts on the power of Wholehearted living--a way of engaging with the world from a place of worthiness.

Maybe You Should Talk to Someone by Lori Gottlieb
Gottlieb (Marry Him) provides a sparkling and sometimes moving account of her work as a psychotherapist, with the twist that she is in therapy herself. Interspersing chapters about her experiences as a patient with others about her work, she explains, "We are mirrors reflecting mirrors reflecting mirrors, showing one another what we can't yet see." By exploring her own struggles alongside those of her patients, Gottlieb simultaneously illuminates what it's like to be in and to give therapy. As she observes, "Everything we therapists do or say or feel as we sit with our patients is mediated by our histories; everything I've experienced will influence how I am in any given session at any given hour."

From "John," a successful TV producer who has walled himself away from other people, to "Julie," who has a terminal illness and is struggling to find her way through her life's closing chapters, Gottlieb portrays her patients, as well as herself as a patient, with compassion, humor and grace. For someone considering but hesitant to enter therapy, Gottlieb's thoughtful and compassionate work will calm anxieties about the process; for experienced therapists, it will provide an abundance of insights into their own work.
 

Adult Fiction

The Alchemist by Paul Coelho
This is a special 25th anniversary edition of Paulo Coelho’s extraordinary international bestselling phenomenon--the inspiring spiritual tale of self-discovery that has touched millions of lives around the world. Combing magic, mysticism, wisdom and wonder, The Alchemist has become a modern classic, selling millions of copies around the world and transforming the lives of countless readers across generations. Paulo Coelho's masterpiece tells the mystical story of Santiago, an Andalusian shepherd boy who yearns to travel in search of a worldly treasure. His quest will lead him to riches far different - and far more satisfying - than he ever imagined. Santiago's journey teaches us about the essential wisdom of listening to our hearts, of recognizing opportunity and learning to read the omens strewn along life's path, and, most importantly, to follow our dreams. 

My Grandmother Asked me to Tell You She’s Sorry by Fredrik Backman
From the author of the internationally bestselling A Man Called Ove, this charming, warmhearted novel is about a young girl whose grandmother dies and leaves behind a series of letters, sending her on a journey that brings to life the world of her grandmother's fairy tales.
 

Young Adult (YA)

Top 10 tips for Developing Money Management Skills by Larry Gerber
Readers are encouraged to think about money as a tool such as a Swiss Army knife that can be used for many different tasks, to create things we want in our lives. Money is like a tool, in more ways than one. It is an all-purpose survival kit, because life gets tough without it. If we handle money carelessly, it can do serious damage. And just like any tool, sometimes it works great, sometimes it doesn't. The ten tips found in this book are ideas shared by many people, from billionaires to working-class moms, dad and kids. Readers will learn about spending, saving, investing, setting financial goals, budgeting, borrowing and seeking financial advice. Some tips involve doing specific things: writing, adding and subtracting. Others suggest ways of thinking about money and what we do with it. This volume is intended to help readers get the most out of this tool we call money, whether dealing with a lot of it, or just a little. Readers are encouraged to think further with 10 Great Questions to Ask an Economics/Finance teacher and Myths & Facts.
 

Children

B is for Breathe: The ABC’s of Coping with Fussy and Frustrating Feelings by Melissa Monroe Boyd
From the letter A to the letter Z, B is for Breathe celebrates the many ways children can express their feelings and develop coping skills at an early age. Through fun, cute and exciting illustrations, this colorful book teaches kids simple ways to cope with fussy and frustrating emotions. This book will inspire kids to discuss their feelings, show positive behaviors and practice calm down strategies.
 

If you Come to Earth by Sophie Blackall
Meeting children from around the world gave Caldecott Medalist Blackall (Hello Lighthouse) a vision of a book "that would bring us together," she explains in an author's note. This exquisite catalogue of human experience is the result. A child with an elfin red cap, white skin and black hair frames the story, addressing a "Visitor from Outer Space." Magnificent spreads journey through the solar system and descend toward the Earth's surface, zeroing in on a quilted landscape. Fragmentary, often droll descriptions of Earth-side existence follow, about bodies and aging, home and travel, eating and drinking ("Some of us have more food than others"), and relationships ("Sometimes we hurt each other. It's better when we help each other"). Wide-eyed human characters of varying shapes, ethnicities and abilities show kind regard for each other: a librarian offers a tissue to a man overcome, dinner table companions share animated conversation.

Even for the accomplished Blackall, the artwork is dazzling. Encyclopedic paintings of the natural world--birds, sea life, an acorn and more--are rendered in painstaking detail and brilliant colors. It is a book that can be shared with strangers, visitors, friends old and new--a work in which differences build to reveal an inclusive human family on a single, precious planet. 
 

A Year in  Our New Garden by Gerda Muller
Anna and Benjamin move with their parents to a new house in the middle of a busy city. The wonder of this house is that it includes a large garden among the tall apartment buildings. Muller explores the design and planting of this city garden through the eyes of the children. This title can be read to younger kids as the story of a family creating a garden.

Older readers will appreciate in-depth explanations about the actual components needed to design a real garden. The narrative follows the family as they move from planning to planting to harvest. Multiple illustrations cover each page. Larger drawings that show the garden as a whole are combined with small framed and unframed insets that highlight specific details. The beautifully detailed paintings invite close inspection as the seasons change and the children play, picnic, plant, harvest and enjoy the garden's wildlife.

 

Thumbnail
Join Charlotte Mecklenburg Library for virtual technology classes to improve your skills and explore resources.

DigiLit goes online

January 6, 2021

As we all learn to work in a new environment, technology skills have never been more important. Whether just getting started with technology or looking to brush up on your skills, Charlotte Mecklenburg Library has something for you. Our popular “DigiLit” program – short for Digital Literacy – has gone online and is now accessible from home.   

What is DigiLit?  

The Library’s digital literacy brand: ‘DigiLit’ provides a range of technology training options. We offer a variety of learning tracks, from Basic Skills to Workplace Tools. We are currently offering our technology classes and 1-on-1 technology appointments online using Zoom video chat software.  Learn about Zoom here.

What classes are coming up? 

We are currently running a schedule of our Basic Skills and Workplace Tools classes, which feature popular Microsoft Office software and Google services. We continue to add more online classes, so please check cmlibrary.org/calendar frequently for the most up-to-date class availability.

Getting Started with Microsoft Excel Thursday, February 25  at 5:30 p.m.

In this introductory workshop, create a simple spreadsheet using Microsoft Excel. Participants must be comfortable with working in the Windows environment, and basic knowledge of Microsoft Word is helpful.

Beyond the Basics: Microsoft Excel Saturday, February 27 @ 1 p.m.

Go Beyond the Basics and learn to create formulas, functions, spreadsheet modifications, charts and graphs. Previous Excel experience is required.

Getting Started with Microsoft PowerPoint, Tuesday, March 2 at 11 a.m. 

In this introductory class, you'll learn how to create, edit, and save a presentation, as well as learn basic formatting techniques, including how to navigate the various functions in Microsoft PowerPoint. 

Beyond the Basics: Microsoft PowerPoint, Tuesday, March 9 at 11 a.m. 

Go beyond the basics and learn to create charts and graphs, adjust presentation timings, and add multimedia effects in this second of a two-part series introducing Microsoft PowerPoint. Previous Microsoft PowerPoint experience is required. 

Smartphone Basics Thursday, March 11 at 2 p.m.

Are you thinking about buying a smartphone? Do you already own one and want to learn more? Join the library to discuss several key features for mobile computing devices.

Getting Started with Microsoft Excel, Tuesday, March 16 at 11 a.m. 

In this introductory workshop, create a simple spreadsheet using Microsoft Excel. Participants must be comfortable with working in the Windows environment, and basic knowledge of Microsoft Word is helpful. 

Getting Started with Microsoft Outlook, Thursday, March 18 at 2 p.m.

If you're new to email, join us to create an email account using Microsoft's free email service Outlook. Learn to send emails, attach files, manage your contacts and organize your inbox.

Beyond the Basics: Microsoft Excel, Tuesday, March 23 at 11 a.m. 

Go Beyond the Basics and learn to create formulas, functions, spreadsheet modifications, charts, and graphs. Previous Excel experience is required. 

Getting Started with Microsoft OneDrive, Thursday, March 25 at 2 p.m.

Are you thinking about a better way to back-up your files? If you're new to the cloud, join us to create an account using Microsoft's free cloud service OneDrive. Learn to use cloud storage, Word, Excel, and PowerPoint.

Canva Design Class: Presentations, Thursday, March 25 at 6 p.m.

Are you looking for an alternative to PowerPoint or Google Slides? Join us for this hour-long tutorial on how to create beautiful slides that strengthen your message and present your information clearly and effectively. Some experience with Canva is required. 

Beyond the Basics: Intro to Microsoft Excel PivotTables, Tuesday, April 6 at 11 a.m. 

Have you ever wondered what is an Excel PivotTable and how it is used?  Join us as we explore what many people say is one of Excel's most powerful features. Learn how to organize your data for a PivotTable, how to create and manipulate them, and how to arrange the data in a format anyone can read--even if they don't know Excel! This is an ADVANCED class. Must be familiar with Excel. 

Getting Started with Gmail, Thursday, April 8 at 2 p.m.

If you're new to email, join us to create an email account using Google's free email service Gmail. Learn to send emails, attach files, manage your contacts and organize your inbox.

Canva Design Class , Tuesday, April 13 at 11 a.m. 

No design experience? No problem! Join us for this introductory course to Canva.com, a graphics design website that allows you to create stunning (and free!) flyers, business cards, and more in order to promote your business or personal brand! 

Getting Started with Google Drive, Thursday, April 15 at 2 p.m.

Are you thinking about a better way to back-up your files? If you're new to the cloud, join us to create an account using Google's free cloud service, Google Drive. Learn to use cloud storage, as well as managing, sharing, and real-time editing of files.  AN ACTIVE GMAIL ACCOUNT IS REQUIRED.

Smartphone Basics, Tuesday, April 20 at 11 a.m.

Are you thinking about buying a smartphone? Do you already own one and want to learn more? Join the library to discuss several key features for mobile computing devices.

 

Want to be notified about future events? Subscribe to our newsletter here.

 

What can I expect in a virtual technology class?  

Our classes are held via Zoom. You will need to register for the class you are interested in and then a Zoom link will be emailed to you. Once you join the Zoom call, your instructor will begin the class and you can ask questions using the chat feature. Most classes do allow you to do exercises along with the instructor and practice on your own. If you are new to using Zoom, we recommend this quick tutorial

Where can I find more resources?   

You can download the curriculum packets from our classes, find links to more resources, and more, at our DigiLit homepage here.

 

Thumbnail
In celebration of Dr. King’s legacy, we invite you to examine his critique of the “Other America”

One nation with two very different realities

January 6, 2021

This blog was written as part of Charlotte Mecklenburg Library's Black Lives Matter program initiative. Learn  more about the program and corresponding events here.

This month, our nation will celebrate the 92nd birthday of the late Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. To say that Black lives mattered to Dr. King would be an understatement — not only did he recognize the importance of Black lives, but he fought and paid the ultimate price for them with his own life. It is only fitting that we celebrate his birthday every January to commemorate his life and legacy.

In 1967, Dr. King delivered a speech entitled The Other America to students and staff at Stanford University. In his speech, Dr. King cites two stark realities for American citizens. He describes one America as "overflowing with the milk of prosperity and the honey of opportunity. This America is the habitat of millions of people who have food and material necessities for their bodies; and culture and education for their minds; and freedom and human dignity for their spirits." This America, according to Dr. King,  allows young people to "grow up in the sunlight of opportunity." But there is also the “Other America”. Dr. King states this Other America "has a daily ugliness about it that constantly transforms the ebulliency of hope into the fatigue of despair." This America is besieged by unemployment, poverty, and despair, and as we fast forward to today, one might ask if the “Other America” is still prevalent today?

In 2011, Michael Moore revealed in his piece The Forbes 400 vs. Everybody Else that the Forbes 400 boasted more wealth than the bottom 50% of U.S. households combined. With an even timelier topic, we also know that the African American and Latinx communities are disproportionately affected by police violence as reported by the Washington Post this month. The Other America seems just as relevant today as when Dr. King first spoke of it over 50 years ago.

The American Library Association (ALA), Social Responsibilities Round Table (SRRT), Martin Luther King Jr. Holiday Task Force, and the Black Caucus of the American Library Association (BCALA) will host its first-ever virtual Martin Luther King Jr. Sunrise Celebration scheduled for Monday, January 25 at 11 a.m. The keynote speaker for the celebration will be V.P. Franklin, author of The Young Crusaders: The Untold Story of the Children and Teenagers Who Galvanized the Civil Rights Movement, with the Call-To-Action delivered by Librarian of Congress and past ALA-President Carla Hayden. This virtual event is in conjunction with Beacon Press and OCLC and will be livestreamed on ALA's YouTube Channel. The theme of the event is fittingly The Other America. “As a co-chair of this event, I would like to invite all of you to join us for this rare opportunity to experience an event that has become a hallmark celebration at the annual ALA Midwinter meetings,” says LaJuan Pringle, branch leader at West Boulevard Library. “Regardless of whether you register for the virtual 2021 Midwinter Meeting, you can still gain access to this event. Please join us if you can!”

This blog post was written by LaJuan Pringle, branch leader at West Boulevard Library.

Thumbnail
Stay connected while staying home with online programming from the Library.

Online Programming from the Library - Week of 1/11/21

January 7, 2021

Did you know that you can continue to stay connected to the Library while staying home? How would you like to participate in a virtual storytime with your family or receive resume help all from the comfort of your couch? Join Charlotte Mecklenburg Library every week for a wide range of online programming for children, teens and adults. See a complete listing of this upcoming programming for the week of 1/11/2021 below. Click the corresponding links for more information and register for programs where applicable.

Daily appointments for Reading Buddies and Tutoring and Enrichment for school-age children can be accessed by clicking here. Adult Book Clubs, Writing Groups and Conversation Clubs happen weekly too!

Monday 1/11

Family Storytime – 9:30 a.m. (Children's programming)  learn more

Davidson Branch Family Storytime – 10 a.m. (Children's programming)  learn more

Career Talk Over Coffee – 10 a.m. (Adult programming)  register

Baby Sing and Sign Storytime – 10:30 a.m. (Children's programming)  learn more

Mindful Monday – 12 p.m. (Adult programming)  register

Technology Tutoring – 2 p.m. (Adult programming)  register

Steele Creek Branch Creating with Books: Preschool STEAM – 2 p.m. (Children’s programming)  register

University City Family Storytime – 3 p.m. (Children's programming)  learn more

Stronger Together: Support for Your Job Search – 4 p.m. (Adult programming)  register

Davidson Story Explorers – 4 p.m. (Children's programming)  learn more

My Next Step for Teens – 4 p.m. (Teen programming)  register

Independence Regional Branch STEAM 101: Gourmet Hot Chocolate for Teens – 4 p.m. (Teen programming)   register

Clayworks Workshop – 5 p.m. (Children's programming)  register

Mountain Island Branch Evening Storytime – 5:30 p.m. (Children's programming)  learn more

Avoiding Eviction: Know Your Rights and Resources Presented by LegalAid of North Carolina – 6 p.m. (Adult programming)  register

 

Tuesday 1/12       

Family Storytime – 9:30 a.m. (Children's programming)  learn more

Matthews Branch Family Storytime – 10:15 a.m. (Children's programming)  learn more

Sugar Creek Branch Preschool Storytime: Just for Me – 10:30 a.m. (Children's programming)  learn more

Book a Librarian - Business Research – 11 a.m. (Adult programming)  register

Hickory Grove Branch Preschool Storytime – 11 a.m. (Children's programming)  learn  more

Career Development Intensive Coaching – 12 p.m. (Adult programming)  register

Healthy Living for Brain and Body – 12 p.m. (Adult programming)  register

Parent Lunch and Learn: Emotional Support for Young Families – 12 p.m. (Adult programming)   register

Career Development Intensive Coaching – 12:30 p.m. (Adult programming)   register

History's Mysteries: How our Post Office Created America – 1 p.m. (Adult programming) 

Technology Tutoring – 2 p.m.   register

Story Explorers – 2 p.m. (Children’s programming)   learn more

Mock Interview for Teens – 3 p.m. (Teen programming)  learn more

West Boulevard Branch Family Storytime – 3 p.m. (Children’s programming)  learn more

Writing Group for Teens – 4 p.m. (Teen programming)  register

Hickory Grove Preteen Scene: Comic Book Club – 4:30 p.m. (Children’s programming)  register

Matthews Branch Chess Club – 5 p.m. (Children’s programming) register

South Boulevard STEAM 101 Art Club for Teens – 6 p.m. (Teen programming)  register

Teen Trivia Night: JackBox Games – 6 p.m. (Teen programming)  register

Plaza Midwood Branch Pajama Storytime – 7 p.m. (Children’s programming)  learn more

 

Wednesday 1/13

Family Storytime – 9:30 a.m. (Children's programming)  learn more

Cornelius Branch Family Storytime – 10 a.m. (Children's programming)  learn more

Mountain Island Branch Family Storytime – 10:30 a.m. (Children's programming)  learn more

Mint Hill Branch Family Storytime – 11:15 a.m. (Children's programming)  learn more

Finding Your Roots Using Ancestry.com: Library Edition – 12 p.m. (Adult programming)

Answering Interview Questions – 1:30 p.m. (Adult programming)   

Technology Tutoring – 2 p.m. (Adult programming)  register

South Boulevard Branch Listen and Move Storytime – 2 p.m. (Children's programming)  learn more

North County Regional Preschool STEM Program – 4 p.m. (Children's programming)  learn more

Random Fandom Teen Trivia – 4 p.m. (Teen programming)  register

French Conversation Club for Teens – 4 p.m. (Teen programming)  register

Hickory Grove Branch Community Service for Teens – 4:30 p.m. (Teen programming)  register

News Literacy with Checkology – 5 p.m. (Adult programming)  register

Welcome CLT: Citizenship – 6 p.m. (Adult programming)  register

Learning Circle: The 1619 Project – 6 p.m. (Adult programming)  register

 

Thursday 1/14

Family Storytime – 9:30 a.m. (Children's programming)  learn more

South Park Branch Family Storytime – 10 a.m. (Children's programming)  learn more

Allegra Westbrooks Branch Family Storytime – 10:30 a.m. (Children's programming)  learn more

Book a Librarian - Business Research – 11 a.m. (Adult programming)  register

Independence Branch Family Storytime – 11 a.m. (Children's programming)  learn more

Career Development Intensive Coaching – 12 p.m. (Adult programming)  register

Career Development Intensive Coaching – 12:30 p.m. (Adult programming)   register

Technology Tutoring – 2 p.m.  (Adult programming)   register

Sugar Creek Branch Story Explorers – 3 p.m. (Children's programming)  learn more

Learning Circle: Functional Fitness – 4 p.m. (Adult programming)  register

Artists at Home: Basic Photography Program for Teens – 4:30 p.m. (Teen programming)  register

Allegra Westbrooks Clayworks Pottery Workshop – 5 p.m. (Children’s programming)  register

Social (In)Justice Teen Book Club – 6 p.m. (Teen programming) register

Transform Your Resume – 6 p.m. (Adult programming)  register

Fragile Democracy: The Struggle Over Race and Voting Rights in North Carolina – 6:30 p.m. (Adult programming)  register

 

Friday 1/15

Family Storytime – 9:30 a.m. (Children's programming)  learn more

ImaginOn Branch Family Storytime – 10:30 a.m. (Children's programming)  learn more

Ted Talk Discussion Group: New Year's Resolutions – 11 a.m. (Adult programming)  register

Mindful Friday – 12 p.m. (Adult programming)  register

Teen Book Club: Discussion and Digital Games – 3 p.m. (Teen programming)  register

Canva Design Class: The Basics – 3 p.m. (Adult programming)  register

 

Saturday 1/16

Family Storytime – 9:30 a.m. (Children's programming)  learn more

Let's Get Graphic: A Discussion of the History of Graphic Novels and Comic Books – 10 a.m. (Adult programming)  register

Learning Circle: Let's Get Organized – 11 a.m. (Adult programming)  register

I can Read Black Stories (Facebook Live) – 11 a.m. (Children's programming)  

Sugar Creek Branch Story Explorers – 1 p.m. (Children's programming)  learn more

South Boulevard Branch Creando con Libros – 2 p.m. (Children's programming)  learn  more

Fundamentals of Chess for Teens – 2 p.m. (Teen programming)  register

Bullet Journal Group – 2 p.m. (Adult programming)  register

Thumbnail
Charlotte Mecklenburg Library will adjust services starting January 15, 2021, in compliance with the latest Mecklenburg County public health directive.

Library to adjust services on January 15, 2021

January 14, 2021

Desplácese hacia abajo para ver la versión en español

In compliance with the latest Mecklenburg County public health directive, Charlotte Mecklenburg Library announced it will adjust services starting January 15, 2021. During this reduced phase, the Library limits services to “grab and go” pickups of holds, mobile printing and returns at all branch locations, while programming continues online.

Library hours are Monday-Thursday 9 a.m.-8 p.m. and Friday and Saturday 9 a.m.-5 p.m. The Library is always open online at cmlibrary.org.

Find our complete multi-phased re-opening plan here

Customers can expect the following during the Library’s reduced service schedule:

  • Customer holds will be available as “grab and go” at the front entrance of each branch.
    Materials can be reserved here through the online catalog.
  • Mobile printing is available online and can be picked up at the front entrance of the branch like holds.
  • Customers should contact their branch by phone prior to pickup to schedule a time slot. Find your branch location here.
  • Access our online program calendar here
  • Staff will complete the check-out of materials for customers prior to placing them at the front entrance.
  • Staff will wear face masks/coverings and protective equipment. Masks/coverings are also required for customers.
  • All material/book drops remain closed. Materials and books should be returned to the designated receptacles located at branch locations during open hours only. Signs will direct customers to the proper bin.
  • Fines and fees are suspended.
  • Facilities, restrooms and computers will not be open to the public. 
  • Access to staff support online and by phone.​​
    • Chat with Library staff at cmlibrary.org by clicking on the “Ask a Librarian” button at the bottom of the screen.
    • Speak with staff during normal operating hours at 704.416.0101. To contact your branch directly, click here.
  • Wi-Fi access is available outside Library facilities 24/7.
  • Free mobile hotspots are available for customers to place on hold for checkout for seven (7) days at a time.

All programming and events for children, teens, adults, Outreach and the Job Help Center have moved to online or virtual formats. Find our online programming calendar here.

Note: Materials and books will be quarantined for 24 hours before they are checked in. There is no need for customers to “clean” or disinfect Library materials.

--

Conforme a la última directiva de salud pública del condado de Mecklenburg, la Biblioteca de Charlotte Mecklenburg anunció que ajustará sus servicios desde el 15 de enero del 2021. Durante esta fase reducida, la biblioteca limitará sus servicios a la recolección de reservas, la impresión móvil y la devolución de materiales en todas las sucursales, mientras la programación continúa en línea.

El horario de la biblioteca es de lunes a jueves de 9 a.m. a 8 p.m. y viernes y sábado de 9 a.m. a 5 p.m. La biblioteca siempre está abierta en línea en cmlibrary.org.

Encuentre nuestro plan completo de reapertura de varias fases aquí

Los clientes pueden esperar lo siguiente durante el horario de servicio reducido de la biblioteca:

  • Las reservas para clientes estarán disponibles en la entrada principal de cada sucursal. Los materiales se pueden reservar aquí a través del catálogo en línea.
  • La impresión móvil está disponible en línea y se puede recoger en la entrada principal de la sucursal como los otros materiales.
  • Los clientes deben comunicarse con su sucursal por teléfono para programar un horario antes de recoger sus materiales. Encuentre la ubicación de su sucursal aquí.
  • Acceda a nuestro calendario de programas en línea aquí.
  • El personal completará el registro de salida de los materiales para los clientes antes de colocarlos en la entrada principal.
  • El personal usará mascarillas/cubrebocas y equipo de protección. Los clientes también necesitan mascarillas/cubrebocas.
  • Todos los depósitos de materiales permanecen cerrados. Los materiales y libros deben devolverse a los receptáculos designados ubicados en las sucursales únicamente durante las horas de apertura. Los letreros dirigirán a los clientes al contenedor adecuado.
  • Durante esta fase se suspenden multas y tarifas.
  • Las instalaciones, los baños y las computadoras no estarán abiertas al público.
  • El personal estará disponible en línea y por teléfono para brindarle ayuda.
    • Charle con el personal de la biblioteca en cmlibrary.org haciendo clic en el botón "Ask a Librarian" en la parte inferior de la pantalla.
    • Hable con el personal durante el horario normal de atención llamando al 704.416.0101. Para contactar directamente a su sucursal, haga clic aquí.

Toda la programación y eventos para niños, adolescentes, adultos, el alcance a la comunidad y el centro de ayuda para empleo se han trasladado a formatos en línea o virtuales. Encuentre nuestro calendario de programación en línea aquí

Aviso: Los materiales y libros se pondrán en cuarentena durante 24 horas antes de que se registren. No es necesario que los clientes “limpien” o desinfecten los materiales de la biblioteca.

Thumbnail
Early voting in the municipal general election is available at Davidson, Matthews, Mint Hill and North County Regional Libraries

Early voting for Municipal General Election available at four Library locations

October 28, 2021

Early voting started October 21, 2021 through October 30, 2021. There are seven (7) early voting locations, which include these four Libraries:

  • Davidson Library –  119 South Main Street, Davidson, NC 28036
  • Matthews Library - 230 Matthews Station St., Matthews, NC 28105
  • Mint Hill Library -  6840 Matthews - Mint Hill Road, Mint Hill, NC 28227
  • North County Regional Library - 16500 Holly Crest Lane, Huntersville, NC 2807

Voting hours will vary. For all seven early voting locations and voting hours, please click here

For more information, please visit the Mecklenburg County Board of Elections website here.

Thumbnail
During Thanksgiving week only, select new titles will be available to check out with no holds on OverDrive/Libby.

Our gift to you!

November 3, 2021

This promotion has ended.

Thanksgiving is a time to reflect on the past year and focus on what you are thankful for. The Charlotte Mecklenburg Library is thankful for YOU, our customers!  And as a gift to our customers, we are selecting a small collection of e-books that will be available instantly with no waiting in our OverDrive/Libby resource.

This week only the below titles will be available to check out with no holds.  If you currently have one of these titles on hold, your hold will be immediately filled!  You can check out up to three of these titles.  Enjoy!

Dune by Frank Herbert (e-book)

The Midnight Library by Matt Haig (e-book)

The Hating Game by Sally Thorne (e-book)

The Henna Artist by Alka Joshi (audiobook)

Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind by Yuval Noah Harari (audiobook)

New Kid by Jerry Craft (youth audiobook)

How to Catch a Turkey by Adam Wallace (youth e-book)

Pete the Cat's 12 Groovy Days of Christmas (youth e-book)

The Bone Witch by Rin Chupeco (teen fiction)

One of Us Is Lying by Karen M. McManus (teen audiobook)

Promotion ends November 28, 2021 at 11:59 p.m.

­­--

This blog was written by Amy Richard, library collections manager at Charlotte Mecklenburg Library.

Thumbnail
Black female employee on the job.

Thorny path outlines guide for diversity in the workplace

November 15, 2021

This blog was written as part of Charlotte Mecklenburg Library's Black Lives Matter program initiative. Learn  more about the program and corresponding events here.

Business executive Sheryl Sandberg takes a simple view of workplace diversity.  The billionaire and philanthropist said, “We are building products that people with very diverse backgrounds use, and I think we all want our company makeup to reflect the makeup of the people who use our products.”  And that’s enough said.

In keeping with Sandberg’s work philosophy, diversity and inclusion (“D&I”) in the workplace would be a company priority.  That follows in line as a response to the racial unrest in 2020 following the deaths of George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery and others.  Street protests sprang up around the world as the events fueled the Black Lives Matter movement with growth and acceptance.  So, last September, when Glassdoor, a company review website, published its survey about D&I with adult employees and jobseekers, their findings were not surprising. It revealed many survey participants check how companies address D&I, and value those companies that do.     

Creating a diverse workplace is an understandable component to the process of a nation with growing multiracial populations.  To react otherwise is to deny talent, expertise, and profit-making opportunities.  And yet, the current efforts are lacking.

Diversity and Inclusion Strategist La’Wana Harris details several missteps when company management is not supportive of change.  In her book, Diversity Beyond Lip Service: a coaching guide for changing bias, Harris writes that these include company management giving a deaf ear to new voices, minority hiring for company “window dressing,” and employees attending an unbiased training workshop without follow-up to pursue the training.  Harris explains further in individual stories of failure and success for the cause of D&I, which she concludes needs strong and consistent support from committed company elites—typically, white men—to make the process work.  Until then, the path is rocky with an unsteady ride. 

An additional problem is the use of microaggressions in the workplace.  Microaggressions are identified as “indirect expressions of racism, sexism, ageism, or ableism,” according to a June 2020 article in the Business Insider newspaper.  Specifically, the article points out 14 troublesome comments and questions to minorities and others in marginalized groups.  For example, the question to an African American woman asking if her hair is “real” may imply her appearance is unprofessional.  As a response, the article recommends that question should not be asked and “natural hair, regardless of their ethnicity, should be accepted as professional and workplace-friendly.”

Repeated microaggressions can take a toll and cause stress such as racial trauma. In February 2019, the American Psychological Association published “Uncovering the Trauma of Racism” and identified workplace discrimination as a traumatizing act of racism, and thus, being a form of racial trauma. One book, with a featured booklist of this topic of workplace diversity, focuses on the possible hurt one can face in Right Within: how to heal from Racial Trauma in the Workplace by Minda Harts.  She shares from her experiences, and from others, to unpack and expose painful work situations while moving on to heal herself and encourage the reader.

The previously mentioned booklist is “Creating Workplace Diversity.” It features eight library books detailing the goal achieving diversity in the workplace with personal stories, research, challenges, and inspiration.         

Access the booklist here

--

This blog was written by Lawrence Turner, adult services librarian at South County Regional Library.

Thumbnail
New CMLibrary app launches December 1, 2021.

Exciting and fun user experience with the new, easy-to-use mobile app

November 15, 2021

Bring the joy of browsing the shelves to your phone with the Library’s new and improved mobile app. With new titles, staff lists and programs featured on the homepage, the new mobile app will provide a discovery every time you log in.  Access Charlotte Mecklenburg Library from your Android and Apple iOS phone or tablet anywhere 24/7. Search for "CMLibrary" or "Charlotte Mecklenburg Library" to download! The name of the new app will remain the same.

The new app will be available to download from the Google Play Store or the iPhone Store on December 1, 2021. After December 1, 2021, the old CMLibrary app will not be accessible. Your information linked to your Library card will be transferred over once you log into the new app. 

Notable Features with the new app: 

  • In-app Library card that can be used to check out materials 

  • Manage your account, search the catalog, renew and reserve books 

  • Scan the barcode of any book to see which branches have it available 

  • Find branch location information with the most up-to-date information on Library hours and closures 

  • See and register for events and programs through the Library calendar 

  • View new titles, curated staff lists and recommendations 

  • Connect with us on social media 

  • Access our homepage 

  • Pay fees 

See below for a sneak peek at the new features.

New home screen with easy to access menu at the top and discovery of new items at the Library.

See the upcoming programs and register right in-app. Check out the curated staff pick lists from Charlotte Mecklenburg Library's own librarians.

Find your next great read and place it on hold. Easily select the location where you would like to pick it up.

See all of the Library's locations and the most up-to-date branch hours and closures.

Forget your Library card while at one of our branches? Don't worry! You can access it in the app.

Update your settings, including your email account, within the app. Never miss one of the Library's updates.

 

Need help finding and downloading the new mobile app?

Open the App Store on your iPhone or Google Play Store on your Android phone.

                                               

 

Search for cmlibrary or Charlotte Mecklenburg Library and look for the i can app and click install.

Need to find your Library card?

Find your Library card on the home screen of the app here.

----

This blog was updated on December 7, 2021.