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Angie Thomas Speaks During Community Read 2019

Angie Thomas: author, activist, inspiration

April 1, 2019

Angie Thomas makes the political personal, and that’s what she believes makes her an activist.

The author of the New York Times best-selling novel and Community Read 2019 featured title The Hate U Give spoke at Central Piedmont Community College’s Halton Theater on Tuesday, March 19, 2019 about finding her voice. She also encouraged the audience – especially young people – to find and use theirs.  She spoke of growing up in segregated Mississippi in the shadow of the KKK and discovering the story of Emmett Till in an  issue of Jet magazine when she was six years old. “He could have been my brother,” she remembers.

Even as a child, Thomas connected political landscape with her personal reality – and she saw the same quality in the outspoken activists she admired. Musicians used their art as activism, and much of it spoke to her. “As a teen, I connected with hip hop. Tupac [Shukar] cared about me, even when nobody else did – I heard it in his lyrics.”

Like the main character of Starr in The Hate U Give, Thomas attended a mostly white, suburban college. It was only a few miles from the house she grew up in, but it was worlds away. There, she developed a second persona. “Code-switching” became her defense mechanism, and it also made her angry. “I was often the only black student in my classes, and I was so careful to fit in. When Oscar Grant was killed by California police in 2009, my classmates saw what the media presented – that maybe he deserved it, he was an ex-con, he may have been selling drugs, all of it. They didn’t see his value, and I took that personally. He could have been my brother too.”

Thomas took action. “I did the only thing I knew how to do - I wrote. I shed light on the darkness. I made the political personal.” She wrote a short story for her creative writing class, and her professor suggested she expand it to a novel – which became The Hate U Give.

“Empathy is far more powerful than sympathy,” Thomas explained, “and books are one of the best ways to create empathy. If you spend 300 pages in the shoes of a character, you WILL feel empathy.” She challenged the diverse audience to ask themselves whether they know what it’s like to be someone different, and further challenged them to go find out.

That’s what Community Read 2019 is all about, and what libraries have the power to do – to be a platform for learning about one another, about issues important to our shared community, and about the world. Libraries bring us together around books, ideas, curiosity, and around the shared goal of building a stronger community.

Angie Thomas left an inspired audience with a final thought: “If you change the world around you, you will find yourself changing the world. There are issues you can change. Care enough to change them.”
 

Community Read 2019 was made possible with the generosity of presenting sponsor Bank of America and additional support from Foundation For The Carolinas and the Charlotte Mecklenburg Library Foundation.

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Donation of books at ImaginOn

There's still time to donate to the 9 Books For Kids book drive!

April 2, 2019

There's still time to participate by donating books during the 9 Books For Kids book drive. If you would like to help as an individual, you can drop off new and gently used children’s and teen books at any of the donation locations – including all 20 Charlotte Mecklenburg Library locations.

9 Books for Kids is an easy way to have a huge impact on students and their learning experience. Help improve student learning and achieving by the simple act of donating books.

HOW YOU CAN HELP

You can drop off your book donation at any Charlotte Mecklenburg Library location or partner location through April 12, 2019. 

Collect books for kids! Feel great about ensuring that children can enjoy their own library - at home. Donate books!

 

 

 

 

 

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National Library Week 2019

April 2, 2019

The week of April 7- 13, 2019 is National Library Week, a time to celebrate the valuable role libraries, librarians, and library workers play in transforming lives and strengthening our communities. Charlotte Mecklenburg Library will participate by highlighting different services and programs on social media each day beginning April 7, using the theme “Libraries = Strong Communities.”

This year's theme truly aligns with our mission of improving lives and building a stronger community. It illustrates how today’s libraries are at the heart of our cities, towns, schools and campuses, providing critical resources, programs and expertise. Libraries also provide a public space where all community members, regardless of age, culture or income level, can come together to connect and learn. National Library Week is an opportunity to highlight the changing role of public libraries in our society. Libraries are about more than just the services they offer, they are about the people they serve. 

Library programs are designed to encourage community members to meet and discuss civic issues, work together using new technologies like 3D printing or learn alongside one another in English language or technology classes. Library staff also partner with other civic and service organizations to actively engage the people they serve, always striving to make sure their community’s needs are being met.

Celebrate National Library Week by sharing your library story—how do you library?

We invite our community to follow along, share and comment on social media at twitter.com/cmlibraryfacebook.com/cmlibrary and instagram.com/cmlibrary using the hashtags #NationalLibraryWeek and #LibrariesTransform.

Melinda Gates Serves as Honorary Chair

Melinda Gates has dedicated her life to achieving transformational improvements in the health and prosperity of families, communities and societies. Now she will lend her support to advocate for our nation’s libraries as honorary chair of National Library Week. Over the last 20 years, Gates has invested more than $1 billion through her foundation’s Global Libraries initiative to enhance the power of libraries to improve lives. As co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, she sets the direction and priorities of the world’s largest philanthropy. She is also the founder of Pivotal Ventures, an investment and incubation company working to drive social progress for women and families in the United States.

Celebrations during National Library Week include:

  • Monday, April 8: State of America's Libraries Report released, including Top Ten Frequently Challenged Books of 2018.
  • Tuesday, April 9: National Library Workers Day, a day for library staff, administrators, and Friends groups to recognize the valuable contributions made by all library workers. #nlwd19
  • Wednesday, April 10: National Bookmobile Day, a day to recognize the contributions of our nation's bookmobiles and the dedicated professionals who make high-quality bookmobile outreach possible in their communities. #BookmobileDay2019
  • Wednesday, April 10: Library Giving Day is a one-day fundraising event with the goal of encouraging people who depend on and enjoy public libraries to donate to their individual library system. #LibraryGivingDay

Make a gift to your Library

We also invite you to support the Library - not only on April 10 but every day of the year! - by making a donation to the Charlotte Mecklenburg Library Foundation. 

DONATE NOW

“Libraries = Strong Communities” is a national campaign sponsored by the American Library Association. 

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Charlotte Mecklenburg Library connects employers with job seekers

April 2, 2019

On Wednesday, March 20, 2019, Charlotte Mecklenburg Library’s Job Help Center hosted its semi-annual job fairfr the community. The turnout from both employers and job seekers was tremendous with more than 400 prospective employees attending, to meet with 39 employers who were on hand to collect resumes and set interviews. Traffic and interaction were non-stop for nearly the entire event. One success story included Mecklenburg County ABC who interviewed four prospective employees on the spot during the Job Fair.

David Sniffin, Leading on Opportunity Leader at the Job Help Center, said, “It’s exciting to see the enthusiasm and engagement between our employers and job seekers during the Job Help Center Job Fair at Main Library. This event is a successful, working example of how the Charlotte Mecklenburg Library is contributing to the Leading on Opportunity initiative in our community by improving lives and building a stronger community.”

Among the companies in attendance were AAA Carolinas, Carowinds, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools, Charlotte Motor Speedway, Snyder’s-Lance, Marriott City Center and many more. 

The Job Fair came after Job Readiness Week, where the Job Help Center offered classes and programs on resume writing, interviewing and other job-related topics.

Good luck in your job search and we hope to see you at our next job fair in the fall.

 

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Historical fiction blends into female detective novels with these three series at Charlotte Mecklenburg Library

Historical fiction blends into female detective novels

April 4, 2019

Although Women's History Month is in March, you can still vicariously experience that spirit though the work of fictional female detectives. To successfully solve mysteries and crimes is noteworthy for anyone and these women navigate down avenues traditionally held by men. Three current series fit the bill with women fulfilling this mission in New York City and Alabama in novels spanning more than half a decade from the turn of the century, the Great Depression and the early 1960s. 

Photo Caption: From l to r: the Darling Dahlias, Molly Murphy and Ellie Stone mystery series

The Molly Murphy Mysteries:  Writer Rhys Bowen introduced a young red-headed woman to New York City and delivered a series of 17 private detective novels with Molly Murphy.  Novelist Plus, the digital reader’s literacy advisory resource, writes of the series, she’s a “feisty yet resourceful Irish immigrant woman [who] investigates intricately plotted mysteries and deals with an ever-dramatic and complicated personal life in these charming and atmospheric historical mysteries set in early 20th-century New York City. The lushly rendered period settings, well-developed characters, and suspenseful, fast-paced plots will keep historical mystery fans hooked.”  The Library has 14 titles of this series in regular print, large print and e-book formats available.  

The Darling Dahlias Mysteries: Author Susan Wittig Albert has delved into small-town, rural South life during the 1930s with a 12-member women’s gardening club.  The women find their talents though are just as sharp for solving mysteries and Albert’s group jump into mysteries large and small.  Again, in Novelist Plus, the series is named “for the ladies of the garden club of Depression-era Darling, Alabama, this engaging, fast-paced series of cozy mysteries is rich in historical detail (including some of the less pleasant details of the era). Follow the ladies of the club as they investigate suspicious town newcomers, stolen money, and even murder amidst the flurry of small-town gossip surrounding each case.”  Charlotte Mecklenburg Library has seven of the eight books in this series available in regular print, large print and e-book formats.

The Ellie Stone Mysteries:  James Zuskin writes about a central character described as “flawed” by Novelist Plus in his amateur sleuth novels. It also says that the 1960s, New York City stories are "atmospheric mysteries [which] feature the adventures of reporter Ellie Stone, a self-professed ‘modern girl’ who sometimes sleeps with the men she meets and generally plays by her own rules. As a woman in a traditionally male job, Stone must work harder and smarter than her male counterparts if she is to succeed.”  The Library system has the six books in this series as regular print.

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Charlotte Today: Spring into a new book

April 4, 2019

This April, Dana Eure, Library Branch Channel Leader and Interim Director of Libraries, made a guest appearance on WCNC's Charlotte Today and shared six titles to help you spring into an new book.

Click here to search for the titles

Adult fiction

Daisy Jones and the Six by Taylor Jenkins Reid

Daisy is a girl coming of age in L.A. in the late sixties, sneaking into clubs on the Sunset Strip, sleeping with rock stars, and dreaming of singing at the Whisky a Go-Go. The sex and drugs are thrilling, but it's the rock and roll she loves most. By the time she's twenty, her voice is getting noticed, and she has the kind of heedless beauty that makes people do crazy things. Another band getting noticed is The Six, led by the brooding Billy Dunne. On the eve of their first tour, his girlfriend Camila finds out she's pregnant, and with the pressure of impending fatherhood and fame, Billy goes a little wild on the road. Daisy and Billy cross paths when a producer realizes the key to supercharged success is to put the two together. What happens next will become the stuff of legend. The making of that legend is chronicled in this riveting and unforgettable novel, written as an oral history of one of the biggest bands of the seventies. Taylor Jenkins Reid is a talented writer who takes her work to a new level with Daisy Jones & The Six, brilliantly capturing a place and time in an utterly distinctive voice.

Adult nonfiction

See You in the Piazza: New Places to Discover in Italy by Frances Mayes

The Roman Forum, the Leaning Tower, the Piazza San Marco: these are the sights synonymous with Italy. But such landmarks only scratch the surface of this magical country's offerings. In See You in the Piazza, Frances Mayes introduces us to the Italy only the locals know, as she and her husband, Ed, eat and drink their way through thirteen regions--from Friuli to Sicily. Along the way, she seeks out the cultural and historic gems not found in traditional guidebooks. Frances conjures the enchantment of the backstreets, the hubbub of the markets, the dreamlike wonder of that space between lunch and dinner when a city cracks open to those who would wander or when a mind is drawn into the pages of a delicious book--and discloses to us the secrets that only someone who is on intimate terms with a place could find.

 

Picture book

Duck, Duck, Dinosaur: Spring Smiles by K (Kallie). George, illustrated by Oriol Vidal

On a sunny springtime day, siblings Feather, Flap, and Spike set out to explore the many flowers, leaves, and seeds outside, but their day is complicated by Spike's dino-sized sneezes.

 

Youth fiction

A Good Kind of Trouble by Lisa Moore Ramee

After attending a powerful protest, Shayla starts wearing an armband to school to support the Black Lives Matter movement, but when the school gives her an ultimatum, she is forced to choose between her education and her identity.

 

Youth nonfiction

Art for Spring by Rita Storey

Offers step-by-step instructions on how to create spring crafts, including a fish wind sock, mini greenhouse, and rain painting.

 

Teen fiction

Rayne & Delilah’s Midnite Matinee by Jeff Zentner

"Every Friday night, best friends Delia and Josie become Rayne Ravenscroft and Delilah Darkwood, hosts of the campy creature feature show Midnite Matinee on the local cable station TV Six. But with the end of senior year quickly approaching, the girls face tough decisions about their futures. Josie has been dreading graduation, as she tries to decide whether to leave for a big university and chase her dream career in mainstream TV. And Lawson, one of the show's guest performers, a talented MMA fighter with weaknesses for pancakes, fantasy novels, and Josie, is making her tough decision even harder. Scary movies are the last connection Delia has to her dad, who abandoned the family years ago. If Midnite Matinee becomes a hit, maybe he'll see it and want to be a part of her life again. And maybe Josie will stay with the show instead of leaving her behind, too. As the tug-of-war between growing up and growing apart tests the bonds of their friendship, Josie and Delia start to realize that an uncertain future can be both monstrous...and momentous."

 

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Community Read reaches beyond books

Community Read 2019 Reaches Beyond Books

April 11, 2019

Community Read 2019 is over – but the conversations and relationships it sparked continue. And that was the point.

Throughout March, our community came together around books. This year’s featured titles, The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas, Wishtree by Katherine Applegate, and Love by Matt de la Peña provided readers of all ages opportunities to discuss important themes of compassion, perspective and understanding.

With the support of presenting sponsor Bank of America and additional funding from Foundation For The Carolinas and your Library Foundation, over 2,500 copies of The Hate U Give were distributed throughout the community. More than 200 programs and events were offered at Library and partner locations - including book talks, film viewings and talkback panels, tree plantings, art projects, discussions with police, city and county officials, teenagers, educators, and much more.

Partners were key to the success of this year’s Community Read. Program director Meryle Leonard explains, “We knew we’d need to work with partners with different perspectives, experiences and expertise. This was a natural opportunity to position the Library system as a facilitator and resource for community programs and dialogue - to become a resource for organizations and individuals who want to have these important and sometimes uncomfortable conversations. We especially wanted to engage the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department. Their support and participation was essential to the programs reach and success.”

What are people saying about Community Read?

Thank you for all the work you have done with the Community Read program. The program was very successful at Johnson C. Smith University. It was good to have the community in collaboration with JCSU's students, faculty and staff engage in this conversation. I extend appreciation to Toussaint Romain for his outstanding and passionate   presentation that left all of us thinking about how we can do more in our communities.

Monika Rhue (Nooma), HBCU Library Alliance Board Chair, Director of Library Services and Curation, James B. Duke Memorial Library, Johnson C. Smith University

Thank you. The event last night at JCSU was s blast. Full house too. 

Toussaint Romain

Many thanks to CMPD and the Charlotte Mecklenburg Library for allowing the Mayor’s Mentoring Alliance to join this community conversation. There were many familiar faces in the audience as we had a good deal of mentoring agency representatives attend. Hopefully, we laid the foundation for more of these types of conversations to take place! Glad to work with each of you! 

Tiffany Johnson, Mayor's Mentoring Alliance & Out Of School Time Specialist

Thank you for inviting CPCC to be a part of the event last night.  It was a phenomenal  program.  My mentoring group would also like to thank CML for bringing this author and treating them with honor.  We read the book earlier this year as a group, so they could connect the dots.  Also allowing them to be seated before everyone else made them feel very special.  Thanks to everyone on your team who worked tireless to make this event a success.

Gloria Kelley, Dean of Library Services, Central Piedmont Community College

Overheard:

“It is nice to know my thinking is similar to other citizens in the community.”

“Ability to have open and honest dialogue.”

“I learned how to improve my thinking and improve my community.”

“Hearing different perspectives form a diverse group of people.”



Highlights

There were many highlights to this year’s Community Read, including inspirational visits from authors Angie Thomas and Matt de la Peña. Both discussed writing as a form of activism – an opportunity to encourage empathy and start discussion.

Just like Community Read 2019.

Angie Thomas Recap

Matt de la Peña Recap

Did you participate in Community Read 2019?

Take our survey!

THANKS TO OUR SPONSORS:

Presented by Bank of America with additional support from Charlotte Mecklenburg Library Foundation and Foundation For The Carolinas

THANKS TO OUR COMMUNITY PARTNERS:

Carolina Youth Coalition • Central Piedmont Community College •  Charlotte-Mecklenburg Community Relations • Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department • Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools • Community Building Initiative • Communities In Schools of Charlotte-Mecklenburg, Inc. • Fort Mill School District • Girl Talk Foundation • Harvey B. Gantt Center for African-American Arts + Culture • International House • James B. Duke Memorial Library at Johnson C. Smith University • Levine Museum of the New South • Mayor’s Mentoring Alliance • Mecklenburg County Sheriff’s Office-Library Services • ourBRIDGE • Pass the Peace Feasts • PBS Charlotte • The Possibility Project-Charlotte • Stan Greenspon Center for Peace and Social Justice • Swanky Pen • Teen Health Connection • Time Out Youth • Trinity Episcopal School • Union County Public Schools • UNC Charlotte Department of Theatre • WBAV-FM • YMCA of Greater Charlotte

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Thank you for donating!

9 Books for Kids Book Drive a Success in 2019

April 12, 2019

Thank you to all of you who so generously donated to the 2019 9 Books for Kids book drive and made this year another success!  UPDATE: Because of you, the Library collected more than 11,200 books this year! Thank YOU!

Donating books is an easy way to have a huge impact on students and their learning experience. You are helping improve student learning and achieving by the simple act of donating new and gently used children’s and teen books.

Volunteers are now sorting and counting the books so we can distribute them into our community. These donations help increase the number of books in the homes of children through the Library's outreach efforts like the Community Bookshelf program, Summer Break Book Bucks, Little Free Libraries and partnerships with Read Charlotte and Promising Pages. 

Again, THANK YOU for your donations to the 9 Books for Kids book drive!

       

 

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Staff member Jenna Marrotta and poet Sky pose together after she received her poem.

The Poet is In @Main : The power of Library programs

April 29, 2019

To celebrate National Poetry Month, Library staff member Pam Turner came up with the idea to do a poet-in-residence program at Main Library. Her original concept was to have two poets spend an hour a day at an unused public service desk and write poetry on-demand for anyone who asked.

The Poet is IN @ Main has grown from Turner’s original concept. Instead of having only two poets available for an hour each day, a group of poets and Library staff members occupy the desk from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., during the month of April, to write poems for anyone who stops by with a prompt. The poets sit behind the desk, equipped with typewriters and personalized stationery, ready to deliver poems for those who seek them.

One poem recipient was Library staff member Jenna Marrotta. On April 2, 2019, she came to visit the poets and scribbled a prompt down for her poet to use as inspiration. “I wrote that I have a son recently diagnosed with Autism and that I would like to have a poem that helped express my love for my son, but also describes how completely different our life has become after receiving this diagnosis,” Marrotta said.

She worried that her prompt might be too specific for anyone to be able to compose a poem. However, Marrotta received the following:

Hey mommy

It’s me

your special little boy

and i wanted you to know

it was nt always perfect

but your love helped me grow

Weve always had problems trying to comprehend

They way to love each other

in a way we both understand

you always wanted me to look you in your eyes

but you never realized how much I loved your lullabyes

You always thought I neede special tending

I always felt your ability to worry was never ending

But I want to thank you

We were never tv ready

Life was always hectic

and i didn’t always do as i directed

But i never told you

So i don’t think you know

How much of me I got from you

How I cherished all the things we’d do

even when you though i wasn’t paying attention

Icouldnt tell you then, because i didn’t have the words

You hadnt yet taught me how to navigate this absurd

crazy world

But it was you who showed me, all the things i could do

Like Reading, and cooking and video games

i mean you were the one you taught me how to write my name

and maybe our relationship was never the same

As the ones we saw on tv

But i promis you

the reality

was so much more we

So much more me

So much so that i couldn’t possibly

wishfor any other

I’ve only made it this far …

Because of my mother

 

Her poet signed the poem “From a man on the spectrum for a mother he never knew.” Marrotta was immediately brought to tears. Her poet happened to be on the spectrum himself. She felt his poem shared his own voice, but also captured the voice of her son who is not yet able to communicate his thoughts. Also, in another coincidence, April 2  happened to be World Autism Day.

She stated, “This is a poem I will cherish forever and it was particularly meaningful to me, especially today.”