Happy National Savings Day! Many might not know that it’s a holiday, but it makes cents (see, what we did there?) to celebrate by spotlighting personal finance books available on Hoopla. With Hoopla, you can download up to 12 ebooks, music, TV shows, and movies instantly. What are you waiting for? The guide to financial freedom can be downloaded in seconds.
As an employee at the Pratt, I have had the pleasure of experiencing so many cultures from the steady flow of customers especially when I started in the position as an office assistant in the Circulation Department. I encountered customers from different ethnic backgrounds and learned a lot about different languages and behaviors. But I have always been intrigued about deaf customers that would come in for services because of how they are able to communicate with others who are hearing and are still able to get what is needed. Being in that department, I was able to learn some basics in ASL, including “library card,” “computers,” “hello,” and “thank you” so we could help deaf customers feel comfortable at the Pratt. To tell the truth it felt very good to bridge that gap in basic communication.
Lauren Read, BST Librarian, Signs about the two eBooks titles Deaf President Now! and Baltimore’s Deaf Heritage
Deaf President Now! by John B. Christiansen and Sharon N. Barnartt eBook
Baltimore’s Deaf Heritage by Kathleen Brockway eBook
Now that we are in COVID-19 pandemic, I often wonder about our deaf customers who are always seen and not heard. In doing some research, I found the Pratt Library has a great catalog of resources to help expand knowledge about the deaf community.
This summer we invited you to tell us a story involving a library in 100 words or fewer. Thank you to everyone who submitted a story! Here are some of our favorites.
Whitney C.: When I was 15 I dressed up as the Cat in the Hat for Halloween. One of the librarians from our small town saw me and loved the costume. She asked me to do a special storytime dressed in costume reading Dr. Seuss books. I loved how excited the children were, and it made me realize you can do fun things to make a difference in your community.
Heather D.: My tiny story involves a tiny library! I discovered the Little Free Library in my neighborhood while out on a walk, and now delight in finding them all over the city!
Jonina D.: The first time I entered a summer reading program was after sixth grade. The wonderful Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh – founded in 1890 – offered so much more than the suburban Whitehall Library – founded in 1963. I finished first: competitive reader that I am, though only for summer reading programs. Checked in for the big party, yet somehow I didn’t hear the announcement that the celebration was starting, so missed the whole thing. (Turned out okay, library staff consoled me by agreeing to help me start a new junior-high-school book-reviewing group.) What was I doing? Reading!
Ruby M.K.: When I was 14, our family moved to Kenshaw Avenue. My mother would walk to the corner of Kenshaw and Reisterstown Road and say, “This is a great place for a library.” She wrote a letter suggesting Enoch Pratt build a branch there. They listened! Because I lived in Atlanta for 46 years, one of the first things I did when I moved back was walk into the Reisterstown Road branch and register for a card. Each time that I visit, I feel a special warmth that people are using the library that my mother helped build.
Inshirah W.: Hi, my name is Inshirah, and me and my daughter always had these fun visits at the library. That’s where I was able to see her most times. It was hard for me but I knew that’s where we shared our most joy, happiness and all. Anissa took her first steps in the kids’ room of the library. When this Covid is over we plan to revisit the library and have those same memories.
Whether you’re headed to the ballot box or the mailbox, the Pratt Library offers the 2020 Voting Guide full of information and resources for the upcoming election season. Don’t forget, you can also register to vote at select Pratt locations!
The 2020 Voting Guide includes information on becoming an informed voter; voting in person and by mail; important information and dates; how to get involved; and free upcoming voting and civic engagement programs. To take a look at the 2020 Voting Guide, please visit here.
Want to learn more about voting rights? Check out these films on Kanopy.
Finding Edith, Surviving the Holocaust in Plain Sight by Edith Mayer Cord eBook|Book
Edith Mayer Cord is a 92 year old Holocaust survivor who now lives in Maryland and she wrote a book: Finding Edith, Surviving the Holocaust in Plain Sight, and it is available in book format or as an eBook (through Hoopla) at the Pratt Library. Mrs. Cord’s living with antisemitism and ethnic persecution is relatable to the issues still facing our world today. She is always willing to tell her story to all that want to hear about it in person, or by reading/listening to her book. She has talked at a couple of Pratt Library locations. As she talks about her story there are parts that still bring her to tears and cause a quiver in her voice, even though the events happened 76 years ago. Her book is a powerful addition to your reading list.
Her book, Finding Edith, Surviving the Holocaust in Plain Sight, is the story of religious and ethnic persecution of Jews, running from country to country to stay safe, wondering if her family was alright, where they were, and contemplating if life would ever return to normal. Edith was born in 1928 and grew up in Vienna, Austria, until the Nazis began grabbing power throughout different parts of Europe. Her father helped her family to escape Vienna and she moved several times, trying to hide in plain sight as she tried to go to school as someone else. During all that time of hiding herself, keeping her real feelings and thoughts to herself, Edith created within herself an incredible inner strength to stay strong and survive.
Edith Mayer Cord
After the war, Edith struggled to regain a life, to get her education and to reunite with her family. Edith was determined to come to America but before she could she had to catch up on her studies. She not only had to get her education through high school, while learning a new language well enough to understand the school work, but work to keep food on the table and a roof over their heads. She struggled, but persevered and gained entrance into the University of Toulouse and graduated with her Baccalaureate in 1949 and a Degree in Letters in 1952.
Upon coming to America she was determined to make a life for herself. Edith came to America alone and her mother followed a year after her arrival in New York. Edith had developed a very strong sense of survival and even though she started out her life at the bottom she ended up a professor and later became a broker and financial advisor. Meeting her and hearing her words were an honor for me. Her book tells her story with brutal honest of how a person can survive horrors in your life, learn to deal with those horrors, and can live a successful and productive life.
There are many books and movies that you can find at the library via Hoopla, Libby, or through Sidewalk Service that relate to Mrs. Cord’s persecution that will resonate today, such as:
The Diary of Anne Frank by Frances Goodrich read by Jason DamronAudiobook