Beat Manhattan!

Take Charge Challenge

This fall, my library is offering a series of community events to support the Take Charge Challenge, which is a friendly year-long competition between Lawrence and Manhattan for a $100,000 energy efficiency grant! I’m super excited to announce the line-up of events at the Lawrence Public Library very soon, which will include hands-on workshops, art exhibits, and public lectures.

So how the heck does Lawrence win this thing?  We’re competing with Manhattan, KS, in 3 main areas: 1) Home Energy Audits, 2) Switching to Compact Fluorescent Lightbulbs (CFLs), and 3) Community Participation in a Westar Class or Take Charge Challenge event. We’ve been trailing in Community Participation… but that will all change this fall!

One thing you can do right now is to click this link and log any light bulbs you’ve switched from incandescent to CFLs this year. (FYI, Cottin’s Hardware at 1832 Mass. is offering 10% discounts on CFLs for the Take Charge Challenge.) For every 5 CFLs you switch out, you’ll pocket $75 in annual energy savings. You can also help just by spreading the word… and the link 🙂

For more info and a great list of media features that have covered the TCC, click here!

Read What You Want

So, I pretty much have to share this article with you from today’s local paper.  Hey, if this were 1995, I’d be cutting you a clipping and sending it to you in the mail!

Failed Summer Reads

About a month ago, one of our library’s favorite reporters from the Lawrence Journal World called us up to pitch a story about tips on getting through mammoth Summer Reading projects.  I think we surprised her with our unanimous advice: if you need tips to slog your way through it, then you’re reading the wrong Summer book!  Far from the retro “shushing librarians,” we suggest saving the Tolstoys and the Melvilles for December.

For more on why our library thinks you should read what you want (and to rehash an infamous War & Peace Bookclub incident), read on: LJWorld: “Failed Summer Reads”

I’m Throwing a Big Party

While all of you have been taking finals, graduating, planning weddings, weathering thunderstorms, etc., I’ve been busy planning a big ol’ party!  At the library, late May means one thing, and one thing only: school’s out, and Summer Reading’s in.

This year we’re dressing up Summer Reading a little more fancy for adults, and our patrons seem really excited about it.  Tomorrow’s party launches the adult side of Summer Reading, where we sneakily sign up unsuspecting partygoers for a summer of books and reading, their mouths too full of free desserts to protest.  I had lots of fun writing the blurb that we then slathered all over our promotional materials:

Lawrence Public Library is kicking off Adult Summer Reading with a mixed-media Final Fridays extravaganza, featuring art for your eyes, ears, brain and mouth: from the visual to the literary, the musical to the culinary.

This year’s travel-themed Adult Summer Reading program highlights popular media from around the world. Tour the globe one continent at a time as you mingle your way through this unique social exhibit, chatting with library tour guides about what’s hot in the international literary arts scene, viewing visual art objects from Mexico to Indonesia, and tasting sumptuous culinary arts crafted by Four and Twenty Blackbirds pastries.

Cathy Hamilton, Director of Downtown Lawrence, will headline the event with tales and photos from the international cruise she won from Food and Wine Magazine this spring. Free and open to the public.

Today as we were setting up, my colleague and work buddy put it most aptly when she said “I feel like I’m back in high school decorating for the prom.”  Who knew that being a librarian could feel a little bit like prom-committee?  Throw in a dash of books, movies, arts, and culture, and holy cow… that’s my job.

Have I mentioned how excited I am that Cathy Hamilton, aka Boomer Girl, is helping us get this party started?  Wish me luck tomorrow night, and come on down to the party!

Hey, KLA

Things have been busy for my real-life alter-ego, Rachel Smalter Hall.  Last week I squeezed in a few hours to go to Topeka for the annual Kansas Library Association conference.  I absolutely loved Johnson County Library’s talk on “Free Range Librarians,” aka blowing up the reference desk!  Hilariously, they spent a lot of time discussing health and personal safety concerns for librarians who have to spend up to 90 minutes at a time not sitting at a desk.  I think it speaks volumes that this is even a legitimate conversation for our profession to be having.  Kudos to JoCo Libraries for going renegade!

In other news, author Charles Shields came and went last Thursday (the same day as KLA…), leaving a packed auditorium full of happy Lawrence Public Library patrons in his wake.  A few twitter friends even stopped by, including @larryvillelife!  Verdict? Our Read Across Lawrence Kickoff was pretty awesome.  The Lawrence Journal World even published a nice little article about it the next morning.

Remixing the Library

Last Friday, Angela Murillo and I had a fantastic time presenting our keynote at the University of Iowa B Sides Conference, “Unpacking the ‘Library’: Exploring Works in Progress Across the Fields of LIS.” And although I’m having trouble embedding the ol’ Prezi presentation in WordPress… I hope you’ll check it out here.  Here’s a screenshot to entice you:

Remixing The Library presentation screenshot

And here are our presentation notes.  You can click on any of these headings to go straight to that portion of the keynote:

I. Overview
II. Introductions
III. An Innovating Profession

a. Classification
b. Catalogs
c. Open Source Tools
d. Open Access Journals
e. Institutional Repositories
f. Creative Commons

IV. Building B Sides
V. Building Tools in the Future
VI. And B Sides is Still Innovating…

Or, just continue to view notes from the entire presentation: Continue reading

Librarians Taking Charge

This month, I’ve had the opportunity to reflect on what I’d like to say to a room full of aspiring librarians.  B Sides Co-Founder Angela Murillo and I were invited to give a keynote at the Unpacking the “Library” conference at the University of Iowa on March 25th, which is literally just a few days away.

Deweyfree PolaroidWe immediately knew we wanted to talk about the importance of innovation and creativity in our field.  These were the driving forces behind the birth of B Sides, and ideas we’re both very passionate about.  As we started collecting our thoughts, we realized we wanted to dig up the “creation stories” of some of our favorite library innovators — from Melvil Dewey to the Maricopa County Deweyless Library; from Charles Folsom’s hole-punched card catalog to Oakville Ontario’s BiblioCommons Social OPAC — and share those inspiring stories with our peers.

But it wasn’t until yesterday that I finally recognized what’s at the core of what I want to share on Friday, which is the advice to: Take ownership — realize that no one else is going to fix this for you or give you a break.  You are your institution’s best advocate.

I think my profession tends to defer to those whom we view as “authorities” — database vendors, product distributors, city council members — and trust them to act benignly in our best interests, making things better for us.  But that’s not how it really works, usually, and we don’t have to buy into that fiction.  We can make our own decisions and advocate for ourselves.  I remember feeling so professionally empowered and liberated when Angela and I realized that we could take ownership of our ideas and choose to make things really happen for ourselves last year, and that epiphany has become a driving force in my career.

I’m looking forward to sharing the rest with you on Friday.  Stay tuned for our presentation notes and slides!

My New Job

Goldie Hawn in Foul Play

Today I officially started my new job as the Adult Programs Librarian at Lawrence Public Library!

I’ve gotten my feet wet these past few months by planning our Read Across Lawrence initiative and meeting with community partners for Civil War on the Western Frontier, as well as moderating a book talk or two, but today is the first day I’ve really been empowered to think about the future of programs at our library.  I’m excited to develop a long-term strategy and push the envelope of what public library programs can be.

This is a milestone for me in more ways than one — I’ve had my share of professional supervisory positions in another life, but this is my first full-fledged “librarian” job.  I’m feeling an odd swell of kinship with fake movie librarians like Goldie Hawn, Parker Posey, and Bat Girl.  Onward, librarians!

Hanging Out With Civil War Buffs

When kids in Lawrence, KS, are in second grade, they go out to the banks of the Kaw River to build mud huts and learn about the time Quantrill came over from Missouri to burn down the Free State.  15 years later, this Kansas-Missouri rivalry matures into college students chanting “Muck Fizzou” at basketball games.  And then there’s the civil war re-enactors…

Black Jack Costumes

This Wednesday, I met my first true Lawrencian Civil War Buffs!  My library plans to be involved with the Civil War on the Western Frontier Festival this August, which commemorates the anniversary of Quantrill’s bloody raid.  And so I was in the thick of it all, sitting at a planning meeting with the most hardcore of a town full of hardcore buffs.  When we went around the table for introductions, half introduced themselves as their civil war persona:  “John Brown.”  “Reverend Cordley.”  “The Honorable S.A. Riggs.”  Later someone suggested a Civil War movie, and a hush fell over the room: “That one’s from the Missouri perspective.”

I’ve never lived in a place that took such pride in its Free State Civil War roots.  It’s one of the things I love about living here  — slowly learning the culture, understanding what makes this community tick.  The arts.  College basketball.  Civil War re-enactments.  Who knew??  I think public libraries are in a great position to vitalize our communities by offering programs that really mean something to the people who live there, and I’ve been doing my best to learn what that means in Lawrence!  I can’t wait to see what the CWWF festival brings this August.  And I can’t wait to build my mud hut.

B Sides Remix

B SidesThis is my first tournament season living in Lawrence, KS, and I’m getting the vibe that everything else grinds to a halt here in March, to make way for March Madness and Spring Break.  All my work meetings and appointments for the coming weeks seem to take these two things into consideration.  And today all the cute little old ladies at the library were wearing their knitted Jayhawk sweater vests.  Sounds good to me!

Meanwhile, back in Iowa, things are going full speed ahead.  In less than two weeks I’m headed to Iowa City to give a keynote talk with my co-presenter Angela Murillo at the University of Iowa for the B Sides conference, Unpacking the “Library”: Exploring Works in Progress Across the Field of LIS.  I’m also going to sit on a fun panel on information literacy and instruction with Megan Conley and Katie L.D. Hassman.

B Sides is a project that Angela and I started last year as a labor of love as a vehicle for “unauthorized” voices in library and information science to be heard and recognized.  We were listening to Public Enemy one day, and got a few ants in our pants about restrictive academic publication models, and the rest is history.  Although B Sides started as an online journal, it’s now evolved into a conference and then some.

For our keynote, “Remixing the Library,” Angela and I have some pretty killer visuals that we’re excited to unveil.  I’ll embed those for you here once we’ve had a chance to put on the finishing touches.  Many thanks to the B Sides editors Julia Skinner and Katie L.D. Hassman, and everyone else who’s making this fantastic event happen!

Twitter Book Club

To Kill a Mockingbird

These last few weeks have been pretty crazy!  I’ve been helping plan my library’s Read Across Lawrence festival, which has been on hiatus for a few years but is back with a vengeance this April.  This year’s book is To Kill a Mockingbird, which I’m really loving during my first post-adolescence read — Scout, Boo, and Atticus stand up to the test of time, unlike certain other beloved novels that I wish I’d never tried to reread… has that ever happened to you?  And then there’s Dill!  After reading Charles Shields’ biography of Harper Lee, I Am Scout, I realized that Scout Finch’s childhood friend Dill is based on Truman Capote, who was Harper Lee’s next door neighbor growing up in Monroeville, Alabama.  Crazy!

We’ve planned a lot of fabulous events for Read Across Lawrence (stay tuned), but one of the events I’m most excited about is our library’s first ever Twitter Book Club.  And my first ever, too.  Local tweeps @larryvillelife, @THERaymondMunoz and @nuthousepunks will be using the hashtag #TKAMB to help us explore the hipster dilemma: “what can Atticus and Boo and Scout still tell us about ourselves, as contemporary scenesters?

And now, back to the “Lyla’s disillusionment” episode of Friday Night Lights