Imagine Your Story, Part 3: Reviews from Adult Summer Challenge Participants

Elizabeth H. on Someone to Care by Mary Balogh: Probably one of the best romances I’ve read this year. Didn’t have a promising start for my tastes, but I LOVED how Violet had a whole tribe of family to care for her and support her, and the MCs are in their 40s which is positively ancient by most historicals’ standards both of which are things I LOVE in my romances. There is also just a deep amount of love and respect between the characters that ughhh I got ALL the swoons with this one!

Someone to Care
by Mary Balogh
Book|eBook|Audiobook|Playaway|CompactDisc

Amy Y. on The City We Became by N.K. Jemisin: This novel felt EXTREMELY timely (early on a young black man is shown constantly looking over his shoulder in fear of literally monstrous police officers, and a white woman harasses two men of color in a city park). In some ways, the novel felt sort of like a cross between Into the Spider-Verse, Captain Planet, Night Vale, and of course Lovecraft—who is directly referenced but also subverted (imagine racism and gentrification as eldritch abominations). Jemisin centers BIPOC voices and Others whiteness. I think it is good, as a white person, to have this experience. While dealing with heavy topics, the book is a fairly light and often humorous read.

The City We Became
N.K. Jemisin
Book|eBook|Audiobook

Eileen T. on The Body: A Guide for Occupants by Bill Bryson: …Okay, seriously? I really enjoyed this one! It’s not humorous per se, but it’s definitely entertaining. Some of the stuff he talks about I knew before, some I learned recently, and some I had never heard of. Regardless, I enjoyed listening to all of it! This is something that I think I could definitely get something new out of each time I read or listened. Bill Bryson is also one of those authors who CAN narrate their own work. In any case, this was unlike anything I’ve been reading or listening to lately, so it was pretty cool in that respect as well. Some of the stuff on viruses and bacteria is very relevant as well, lol. Highly recommend this one.

The Body: A Guide for Occupants
by Bill Bryson
Book|eBook|Audiobook|CompactDisc

Join the fun! For a chance to win fabulous prizes in the Adult Summer Challenge, create a free Beanstack account and log each book you finish between June 17 and August 12.

Adult and YA Novels with Black Protagonists!

Hannah Lane, African American Department

 Representation and imagination in literature is a powerful tool against the dangers of a “single story,” as discussed by feminist author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. The protagonists in these novels are complex, multifaceted Black individuals of various backgrounds and identity intersections. We hope that readers appreciate the journeys of these characters and the stories they tell.

Here is a list of 20 fantasy, science fiction, and contemporary fiction novels to add to your Summer Challenge Reading list! 

Akata Witch Series, Book 1
by Nnedi Okorafor
eBook|Book

Akata Witch Series, Book 2
by Nnedi Okorafor
eBook|Book

Americanah
by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
eBook|Book

Binti–Home
by Nnedi Okorafor
Audiobook|Book
Binti: The Night Mascarade
by Nnedi Okorafor
Audiobook|Book
Black Deutschland
by Darryl Pinckney
Book
Black Leopard, Red Wolf
by Marlon James
eBook|Audiobook|Book
The Boy in the Black Suit
by Jason Reynolds
eBook|Audiobook|Book
Boy, Snow, Bird
by Helen Oyeyemi
eBook|Book
Children of Blood and Bone
by Tomi Adeyemi
eBook|Audiobook|Book
Children of Virtue and Vengeance
by Tomi Adeyemi
eBook|Audiobook|Book
Dear Martin
by Nic Stone
eBook|Audiobook|Book
Dread Nation Rise Up
by Justina Ireland
eBook |Audiobook|Book
The Everlasting Rose
by Dhonielle Clayton
eBook|Audiobook|Book

Felix Ever After
by Kacen Callender
eBook|Book
A Girl Named Disaster
by Nancy Farmer
Audiobook|Book
The Gravity of Us
by Phil Stamper
Book
Juliet Takes a Breath
by Gabby Rivera
Book
Under the Udala Trees
by Chinelo Okparanta
eBook|Audiobook|Book
X
by Iiyasah Shabazz & Kekla Magoon
Ebook

For more information about Books by Mail and Sidewalk Service, go to Prattlibrary.org!  And to find even more books that compliment your reading tastes, don’t forget about the Books and Authors database, accessible for free with your Pratt Library card.

Free Access: Foundation Directory Online Essential Account

Trying to search for grants from home? You can access Candid’s Foundation Directory Online through Enoch Pratt Free Library

You will need your library card number to access. If you do not have a library card, you can receive an instant digital card here

 In this video, Grants Librarian Anna Tatro demonstrates how to access the Foundation Directory from home and provides instructions on how to create a spreadsheet of Baltimore funders. 

Read to Reef Book Club Extended into July 2020

The Enoch Pratt Free Library and the National Aquarium are happy to share that the spring season of the Read to Reef Book Club has been extended!

Who can participate?

Baltimore-area children in fifth grade and younger with a valid Enoch Pratt Free Library card may receive a Read to Reef bookmark and record the five aquatic- or conservation-themed books they have read that are appropriate for their age levels.

How it works:

Read to Reef bookmarks will be mailed directly to your home! To request your child’s bookmark:

Call one of the Pratt library branches that are open for sidewalk service and provide library staff with your child’s name, library card number, and mailing address. The bookmark will be mailed to your home! Note: If your child does not have their own library card, please sign them up for an e-card.

You have until July 24, 2020 to request a bookmark. Bookmarks are while supplies last.

Read 5 books about the ocean, environment, or conservation. Be sure to view the Read to Reef booklist and request books that you would like to read for pickup using our sidewalk service. Don’t know which book to read first? Check out some of our favorite books from the list below!

Write the titles of the 5 books you read on your Read to Reef bookmarks.

Visit the aqua.org/read to reserve your timed entry using your Read to Reef bookmark code. Bookmarks must be used by September 30, 2020. Blackout dates: Saturdays in July and August, Labor Day weekend (September 5-7, 2020).

Visit the National Aquarium and have a great time!

Recommended Titles

Breathe
by Scott Magoon
Book|Video
I’m the Biggest Thing in the Ocean
by Kevin Sherry
Book
Hey Water
by Antoinette Portis
Book
My Visit to the Aquarium
by Aliki
Book
Galapagos Girl
by Galapaguena
Book
The Thing About Bees: a love letter
by Shabazz Larkin
Book
Moonlight Crab Count
by Dr. Neeti Bathala and Jennifer Keats Curtis
Book (English)|Book (Spanish)
A House for Hermit Crab
by Eric Carle
Book (English)|Book (Spanish)
Coral reefs : cities of the ocean
by Maris Wicks
Book
The Truth About Dolphins
by Maxwell Eaton
Book

Imagine Your Story, Part 2: Reviews from Adult Summer Challenge Participants

Robert B. on Circe by Madeline Miller: …Circe is an incredibly fascinating journey through Greek epic and mythology but from a feminist perspective. You’ll meet familiar faces like Prometheus, Hermes, Odysseus, Penelope, and Telemachus but Miller succeeds in recasting her characters in more human form and we vividly see their strengths and weaknesses. This novel is a real page-turner and you won’t regret picking it up.

Circ
by Madeline Miller
Book|eBook|Audiobook

Jaime W. on Midnight Bayou by Nora Roberts: Five stars — this book had romance and ghosts and was captivating as it flipped between 1899 and 2002. A great read set in a gorgeous city, taking place in a lovely mansion on the bayou.

Midnight Bayou
by Nora Roberts
Book|eBook

Melina T. on Theft by Finding by David Sedaris: If you like David Sedaris, you’ll love his diaries — it’s not an internal dialogue but rather wry observations about the world. It’s funny, sad, sometimes upsetting, but just so David Sedaris. I really liked it!

Theft by Finding
by David Sedaris
Book|Discs|eBook|Audiobook

Lakeisha H. on The Warmest December by Bernice L. McFadden: The pain you get is sometimes the pain you give. The cycle of alcoholism and abuse rages through three generations. In The Warmest December pain becomes ever present as breathing. Understanding and forgiveness in unlikely circumstances are needed for change even if it comes down the road of endless tears, blood and bottles.

The Warmest December
by Bernice L. McFadden
Book|Discs|eBook|Audiobook

Laura M. on Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI by David Grann: Real-life murder mystery, and sad example of greed and subjugation of the first peoples.

Killers of the Flower Moon
by David Grann
Book|Discs|eBook|Audiobook

Join the fun! For a chance to win fabulous prizes in the Adult Summer Challenge, create a free Beanstack account and log each book you finish between June 17 and August 12.