Solar Eclipse Inspired Reading

Excitement for the solar eclipse on August 21st is growing! Before the historic event, check out books recommended for all ages. Click the cover to reserve your copy.

Children’s Titles

Teen Titles

Adult Titles

Want more? Join us for a Solar Eclipse Party at the Forest Park Branch, 1:30pm, August 21, and at #popscope events.

Visit your neighborhood branch and the Business, Science, and Technology Department page for more resources. 

NASA created a quick guide about the solar eclipse. 

Maryland State Library for the Blind and Physically Handicapped has solar eclipse glasses while supplies last.

Six More Recommendations from Adult Summer Challenge Participants

Summer’s not over yet! There’s still time to discover your favorite summer read.

Adult Summer Challenge 2017 participants recommend the following:

Cherrie W. (Central Library) on Here Comes the Sun by Nicole Dennis-Benn: I’m still reeling from reading this book[…] […]I am amazed at how well it describes growing up in poverty in the Caribbean. To read about the generational neglect and pain of the three protagonists – Delores, Margot, and Thandi and their life experiences amid the colonialism, classism, and colorism that existed in Jamaica at that time, in addition to the challenges of living in a country that relies on tourism dollars, was painful and yet poignant. Excellent read!

Monty P. (Central Library) on American Eclipse by David Baron: David Baron shows us a fascinating glimpse of 1878 America as several scientists and adventurers travel into the West to chronicle the first major solar eclipse in our nation’s history.  Pioneering scientists James Craig Watson, astronomer Maria Mitchell, Thomas Edison, and many more braved early railroad travel, stagecoach and numerous hazards to bring us out of a barbarous Gilded Age and onto the world scientific stage by recording a remarkable celestial event.  This book reminds me of some of Bill Bryson’s work, with multiple facets of interest and wonderful details.  This is a good book-group choice in this year when we are anticipating another total solar eclipse.

Anne M. (Govans Branch) on A Doubter’s Almanac by Ethan Canin: This is the story of a family that falls to pieces under the pressure of living with an abundantly gifted tyrant.  Milo Andret is a mathematician whose way of living in the world is painful, both for his family, colleagues and lastly, himself.  He had an unwillingness to ease anyone’s pain; or rather, a complete ‘inability’ to ease it.  His or anyone else’s.

Mona P. (Light Street Branch) on A Patchwork Planet by Anne Tyler: Baltimore author has written a sweet story of a single dad who struggles to be a good person, father, son, worker, and friend.

Lucie F. (Staff) on The Muse by Jessie Burton: I was happily caught up in Jessie Burton’s beautiful words and in the entwining stories of the two heroines in two different eras, as a mysterious painting of St. Rufina is created, then discovered. At first Odelle and Olive seem very different: one is a Trinidadian immigrant and writer trying to find her place in 1960’s London, the other a wealthy British daughter on vacation in Civil-War-era Spain, who paints in secret. The painting’s backstory connects them plot-wise, but as the novel progresses, Burton explores their connection more deeply in terms of what it means to create, to put your creation out in the world, and the way it affects relationships.

Emily  A. (Washington Village Branch) on Lilac Girls by Martha Hall Kelly: The extensive research done for this story combines with the former journalist author’s talent to provide an extensive view of society on two continents from the beginning of Germany’s invasion of Poland in World War Two and throughout the war, to the late-twentieth-century aftermaths of the three main characters. Well done!

For a chance to win fabulous prizes, submit an entry to the Adult Summer Challenge here. The program ends August 16.

Eight Page-Turners: More Adult Summer Challenge Reviews

We’re still receiving terrific reviews from our 2017 Adult Summer Challenge participants. Take these, for example:

Tracy G. (Canton Branch) on A Darker Shade of Magic by V. E. Schwab: Read this riveting fantasy novel on my honeymoon and it swept me away to another world, just as I had hoped! Great for teens and adults alike.

Alexandra P. (Central Library) on Hunger: A Memoir of (My) Body by Roxane Gay: Gay’s writing is always brave, bold, and powerful but never more than in Hunger. Her honesty and vulnerability make the reader want to be more honest and vulnerable themselves.

 Jamie P. (Edmondson Avenue Branch) on The Sellout by Paul Beatty: I don’t usually read social satire, but this book is an amazing rip through race in America — hard to find a more complex and important subject to spend time with… to spend time laughing with and at (and at yourself)… because some things are so tangled and fraught that you have to get out a good laugh before you get your back up to working on making it better.

Bob M. (Govans Branch) on Trajectory by Richard Russo: Russo’s best writing since Nobody’s Fool. This book contains four short stories (really novellas) that reflect upon life in middle age. One of our best living American male writers, writing at his highest level. Very funny and poignant, highly recommended.

Terry S. (Light Street Branch) on Route 66 A.D. by Tony Perrottet: A witty and wonderful trip with the author and his pregnant wife as they retrace the steps of ancient Roman tourists around the Mediterranean, while comparing notes from the ancients’ writing with modern experience.  (Spoiler alert: Little has changed.)

Tracy D. (Staff) on Crapalachia: A Biography of a Place by Scott McClanahan: This book will make you feel every person you’ve ever known, those ghosts you loved that have never left. I felt really sad, because fate, but really hopeful, because reflection, while reading this book. Though home follows you, you can never go back. “I felt darkness because I had been deep in the hollers, and I knew glory because I had stood on top of the beautiful mountaintops. More mountaintops please. More mountaintops.”

Dominic F. (Central Library) on Younger Next Year by Chris Crowley and Henry S. Lodge: A must-read for anyone approaching 50 or retirement, especially men. How to exercise and the science of why it’s necessary are explained in fun and interesting style. This book could change your life. Sounds hokey, but it could.

Lu Ann M. (Washington Village Branch) on Tricky Twenty-Two by Janet Evanovich: Evanovich never fails to deliver–Stephanie Plum, a bond-enforcement agent in New Jersey, and her cohorts serve up adventure and humor.  I try to read these at home, because people tend to look at you like you’re crazy when you are by yourself and laughing out loud.  Can’t wait until #23.

For a chance to win fabulous prizes, submit an entry to the Adult Summer Challenge here.

 

Hampden Memories Fill Branch #7

by Gregg Wilhelm

For all the time I spent at the Hampden Branch as a kid, I never truly noticed the great marble plaque that recorded the building’s date of construction and the benefactor who made it possible. Philanthropist Robert Poole funded the project at the turn of last century; the iron works he owned by the Jones Falls manufactured four cast iron columns that grace the library’s Greek revival facade.

The library opened in the summer of 1900, and one-hundred-and-seven-teen years later, the plaque was the perfect backdrop to a late-July evening reminiscing about Hampden history.

Presented by the Greater Hampden Heritage Alliance and hosted by photographer Denny Lynch, nearly 50 people showed up (old-timers and newcomers) to hear from guest speakers. My father, Fred Wilhelm, spoke about a picture he once possessed, but has since lost, of the Ku Klux Klan marching up Roland Avenue protesting the presence of Catholics in the neighborhood (ironic given colonial Maryland’s Catholic roots). He found a copy on the Internet to show us.

Fred grew up in Love Point on Kent Island with his mother and stepfather. During summers, he took the ferry to Baltimore and visited his paternal grandparents. His grandfather worked at several barbershops, the one I recall was attached to his and my great-grandmother’s house on Roland Avenue across from Engine 51 firehouse. That’s where my father met my mother, Joan, Hampden born and raised.

Joan remains a voracious reader, and there is no doubt that I inherited her love of books. We would venture to Branch #7 weekly, and almost daily during summer breaks. Hampden’s reputation as insular and homogenous is no doubt mostly deserved. Not many black people crossed our paths, but the library was one of the first places I encountered different people and learned from them. I remember Mrs. Essie Williams, an African American desk supervisor who worked at the Hampden Branch for over 20 years. She would recommend a book, help me check it out, and then I leapt from the library’s stone porch and tore up 37th Street to tear into another new world she introduced me to.

So many memories from Denny, my father, Debbie Falkenhan (Falkenhan Hardware), Alice Ann Finnerty (The Turnover Shop), the current owner of Dr. Albert Shelley’s distinctive concrete house built shortly after the great fire of 1904 (3849 Roland Avenue, adjacent to Shelley’s Alley), Guy Holliday (Stone Hill historian), and many in the audience, were shared Thursday evening. Perhaps my favorite moment of the evening was Sun photographer Amy Davis giving us a sneak peak at her new book about bygone Baltimore movie theaters, which features both The Ideal and The Hampden that once graced The Avenue. Alas, the debate over which theater was home to the “gold fish pond” was not settled (my father and I agree it was The Hampden).

When the librarian kindly kicked us out at 8pm, conversations and recollections continued on that same porch I leapt from so many times as a kid. Thanks, Pratt Library, for reminding us that the branches–the stories they hold and the stories they allow others to tell–are mortar holding together a neighborhood’s people.

Gregg Wilhelm grew up on Keswick Road, went to School 55, and marched in the Hampden Small Fry parade better than he played first base. He’s been publishing books since 1992, and in 2004 he founded CityLit Project.