Showing posts with label Karen Kappenman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Karen Kappenman. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Geocaching Anyone?



What is Geocaching? Good question! During Southampton’s first Community Read, funded through a grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services, and sponsored by the MBLC, residents of Southampton found out exactly what geocaching is. The theme for our Community Read was “Sense of Place” and so we planned activities and programs that would help to develop a fuller sense of the place we call Southampton. Through Geocaching, Southampton residents explored a local park in search of “treasure”!

Geocaching is a high tech treasure hunt in your neighborhood, but instead of searching for an actual “X” on a map using a compass to guide you, you use latitude and longitude coordinates and a GPS receiver to find the prize. Geocachers look up coordinates to a location on the Internet, and use their GPS receiver to guide them to the treasure, or cache, hidden by another geocacher. A traditional cache might be a Tupperware container with a notebook and small prizes inside. Once you find the cache, you sign the logbook and may take something from the cache and leave something else in its place for the next “treasure hunter.”

The Edwards Public Library in Southampton hosted Brian White, a local expert Geocacher, who created a cache at Conant Memorial Park in Southampton, right across from the library. Residents and avid Geocachers turned out to hear Brian explain geocaching and then trekked out to the park with GPS units to locate the cache. Rules state that a cache cannot be buried, but it can be hidden underneath sticks or brush. The GPS coordinates will lead you close to the cache, but from there you will need to search for the actual location of the treasure. See www.geocaching.com for more about geocaches in your area.

Need a GPS receiver? The Edwards Public Library is the first public library in the state to have a GPS receiver for loan! You must come to the library to check it out and can use it for 2 days at a time to go on geocache adventures. Check it out! There are over 3000 geochaches in Massachusetts and nearly 400,000 worldwide.

Maybe the next time someone asks you, “What are you doing this weekend?”, you can tell them, “Using a multi-billion dollar satellite system to find Tupperware hidden in the woods!” Brian White says “Fantastic parks, hidden caves, historical locales, beautiful waterfalls – you’ll be exposed to it all through geocaching. And by spending time on the hunt with friends and family, you’ll probably end up finding a lot more to treasure than a simple geocache.”

~ Karen Kappenman, Director, Edwards Public Library, Southampton

Thursday, June 5, 2008

MLA Conference Report ~ Nancy Pearl


Massachusetts Library Association Annual Conference 2008 Report

Two reports on Nancy Pearl's MLA programs.

Opening Books, Opening Doors: Providing Effective Readers’ Advisory Service

What an exciting program I attended at MLA! Nancy Pearl talking about Readers’ Advisory services. I felt like I was listening to the queen of Readers’ Advisors. I mean, who could know more about this service than Nancy Pearl? Nancy brought up the question that all librarians everywhere fear the most: Can you help me find a good book? Desk paralysis sets in, the mind goes blank and the stomach knots. No matter how many great books you may have read in the last month you can’t remember a single one of them. And I thought that was just me!

Nancy has 2 rules for a good Readers’ Advisor:

1. It’s not about you (your likes or dislikes when it comes to reading)

2. You need to read widely (outside your comfort zone) and ask yourself what it is in this book that someone else might enjoy?

Nancy started out talking about using the whole library when providing readers’ advisory services to your patrons. Thinking more broadly about the kinds of books your readers are asking for, and making the connections to the non fiction section of the library makes so much sense, and provided that “aha!” moment for me for that patron who can’t get enough of her favorite mystery writers – how about true crime and the paranormal for starters? I have to admit I hadn’t thought along those lines before. The first patron I steered in that direction was completely overjoyed to find this “new” area of our library! Nancy calls this doing “holistic RA”.

Finding that perfect book for your patron is about finding an experience that that patron can relate to, enjoy, and wants to replicate. Basically, everyone relates to books through at least one of four “doorways”.

The “doorways” to enjoyment that readers everywhere experience when they read the books they love vary from reader to reader and from book to book. First, there are books that use story as the doorway: you know a person enjoys books with a story doorway when you hear them say something like this about a book they loved: “I couldn’t put it down, I stayed up until 3:00 a.m. I couldn’t wait to see what happened next!” Examples of books that have story as the doorway are: Michael Crichton’s Prey, Dan Brown’s DaVinci Code, and books by authors such as John Grisham, James Patterson, and Robert Parker. Non fiction connections for people who enjoy story as the main doorway to a book could include True Crime or Adventure such as The Perfect Storm.

Second, there are books with Character as the doorway. People may say “I loved the people in this book, I missed the characters when I finished that book, I felt like I knew them!” Books with Character as the doorway usually have a character’s name in part of the title such as John Irving’s Prayer for Owen Meany or James Joyce’s The Dubliners or Finnegans Wake. Non fiction connections for people who enjoy character as the main doorway to a book would include memoirs and biographies.

Third, some books use Setting or Place as the largest doorway. Lovers of these books claim that the time and place are so well evoked that you know it as well as you know your own house, town or country. Examples of books with this type of doorway include Annie Proulx’s The Shipping News, Willa Cather’s Death Comes for the Arch Bishop, or A Thousand Splendid Suns by Hosseini. Science Fiction or Fantasy books use Setting as the largest doorway.

Finally, there are books with Language as the largest doorway. People who appreciate these books mention that the book was really well-written, or that they loved the writing. These books are the book award winners. They tend to be the slowest moving books, and what happens next is not that important. Books like The amazing Adventures of Harry and Clay, The Book Thief, and books by Ian McKeun, Rumor Godden, Alice Hoffman and John Updike would all be examples of books with Language as the largest doorway.

All books include the four doorways mentioned above, but one of the doorways is largest and it is this distinction that draws a certain type of reader to the book.

“A good book is any book that you liked” – Nancy Pearl

~ Karen Kappenman, Director, Edwards Public Library, Southampton


Book Buzz 2008

I am sorry to say I thought the session was over when everyone in the room rushed up to grab their free copies of novels by panelists Katherine Hall Page, Linda Barnes, and Mameve Medwed. While I missed the reviews for new titles coming out I thoroughly enjoyed the author panel moderated by Nancy Pearl.

It is usually interesting to get insight into the author behind the book and this case was no exception. Mameve Medwed, author of How Elizabeth Barrett Browning Saved My Life, admitted she is never able to read her own books. When she is done they are dead and gone. Medwed admitted she is always listening in. Eavesdropping led her to the first line in her upcoming novel, “It all started with the twin pharmacists.” Carlotta Carlyle creator Linda Barnes has an acting background and often hams it up just to hear the voices, cadences and accents of her characters (Although when asked she wouldn’t “perform” for the audience.)

Katherine Hall Page talked about her Faith Fairchild series. Developing Faith Fairchild as a caterer was Page’s way to give her protagonist access to a wide number of characters and situations. And yes, she does try out all the recipes included in her mysteries.

All three authors agreed romances and mysteries were often trivialized – likened to sitting at the children’s table at Thanksgiving. Shelving all fiction together would be a better way to garner acceptance. Nancy Pearl chimed in saying she would like to see neighborhoods of books.

Each had an answer when asked about the problems with publishing. Barnes wished franchising would be eliminated. Medwed reminded us it is the book itself that matters. And finally, Page lamented that publishers are putting their money in bestsellers while cutting mid-list authors and new voices.

~ Deb Kern, Director, Dickinson Memorial Library, Northfield

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

MLA Conference Report ~ Genre Blocks

Massachusetts Library Association Annual Conference 2008 Report

Genre Blocks: Fantasy


An excellent recap on the Genre Blocks: Fantasy session was written by Sarah the Dyslexic Librarian on the MLA blog at http://mlamasslib.blogspot.com/2008/05/
genre-block-fantasy.html
. Please read this account, and I won’t try to duplicate what she has so aptly recorded about the wonderful session we were able to attend.

Let me make it clear that I was not one of those “types” who reads fantasy literature. Puh-leeze! I mean, how many serious librarian types do you know that would read that “stuff?” (I am a closet fantasy reader and my interest in fantasy has been growing since I was forced to read Doomsday Book by Connie Willis before I could attend a session on Readers’ Advisory Services offered by MBLC and C/W MARS). I was instantly hooked – this was not what I had expected. I went on to read every other book that Connie Willis has written and then moved on to Neil Gaiman (Stardust and Neverwhere), John Connolly (Book of Lost Things), Audrey Niffenegger (Time Traveler’s Wife), you get the idea. For me, reading fantasy is like eating potato chips – you can’t eat just one – it creates an insatiable desire for more, more, more!! So, it was very exciting to attend the MLA session on Genre Blocks: Fantasy and hear experts in the field (Bonnie Kunzel, http://www.bonniekunzel.com; Susan Fichtelberg, http://www.encouteringenchantment.com; and Elizabeth Haydon, http://www.elizabethhaydon.com) tell me what my readers want to know: FANGS AND FUR ARE DEFINITELY IN!!!

There was a handout entitled What’s New in Fantasy that is extremely useful for anyone with fantasy readers in your library. (the MLA blog mentioned above covers most of the information on this handout) I fully expect to use this handout to build our collections and to watch for new books coming out in the near future by popular authors in this genre.

What my experience with reading Fantasy has confirmed to me is that when you venture outside your comfort zone to read books that might be of interest to your patrons, you will often find something that will capture you in a way you never imagined. Isn’t this experience exactly what we would hope for all readers? So, moving on to the fangs and fur… stay tuned!

~ Karen Kappenman, Director, Edwards Public Library, Southampton