Page 69 - Wallingford Magazine Issue 47 Spring 2024
P. 69

Our Poetic Town

 Thursday,  Feb  1st  from  6-7:30pm  in  the  Community
 Room and then continue on the first Thursday of every
 other month.

 Kayleigh Sprague, Head of Teen Services
       Spring Cleaning                         Forsythia                                  Lilacs
 Adults are invited to join our new Beginners' Ukulele
 Club at the Wallingford Public Library! Adult patrons   Winter wanes. The last snow melts  From this morning to this evening  Lilacs on my windowsill
 who have not played before or who are just starting out   on the northside of my storage shed   In the clouds and steady rains  Give off sweet scent, still,
 are welcome to attend. Local Ukulelist Steven Lazarus   which needs cleaning, an overhaul.   Forsythia bushes have blossomed out  Even as they fade and wilt
 will lead and facilitate the club. Please bring your own   Exploding in brightest gold
 instruments and join us on the second Monday every   I unlock the closed doors, pull them open.  Clearly, and without a doubt  by Karen Jacobson Burwell
 Month from 10-11am in the Collins Room. No registra-  Like ancient gates, they creak, groan,  The trimming was done just in time
 tion required.  like my own bones, in need of oil.   Stretching upward and reaching out
                                               Golden branches toward heaven climb        Baltimore Oriole
 Rachel Taylor, Head of Adult Programming  Feet planted in the doorway, I survey
 for reading aficionados – and everything in between!   what must be plucked from this abyss.  by Karen Jacobson Burwell  Flying,
 We wholeheartedly embrace the concept that reading   Opening a trash bag, a black hole of no   fluttering
 is an inherently subjective experience. What is a work                                   through woodlands,
 of art for one reader is dreck or a slog for another. Our   return for unusables, I toss in leaky  Gold and Yellow Greeting  orchards,
 goal is to do our best to ensure that the library's collec-  watering can, surplus plastic containers  black and white
 tion contains something (or many things) for everyone.   and trays, worn-out boots, rusty clippers,   The light sweet fragrance of daffodils  wings fan the air,
 We own classic works of literature, bestselling popular   Emanates from the vase on the windowsill  feed his fire,
 fiction,  beach  reads,  mysteries  and  thrillers,  graphic   mud dried rags, broken clay pots, frayed  Twenty-four yellow blossoms in a glass vase  announce his arrival.
 novels, rom-coms and an incredibly wide range of non-  rope, a bent trellis, empty spray bottles,  Bring outdoor sunshine to this indoor space   Then,
 fiction covering biography and memoir, history from all   hole-riddled kiddie pool, dead mouse,  ever so quickly,
 over the world, cookbooks, books on science, nature   Nearby, tall vase full of forsythia’s gold,  the flame’s
 and religion and shelves and shelves of books on sports   inefficient trowels, a splintered rake.  With the daffodils, make a statement bold  hot orange
 and art of all kinds. There is a similar range of books   I have warrior blood in my veins.   “Spring is here,” the flowers seem to say  is extinguished
 across a wide spectrum of writing styles and interests   Today, I plunge into spring.  Greeting me at the start of each day  when
 in the library's teen and children's collections.                                        he vanishes
       by Karen J. Ciosek                      by Karen Jacobson Burwell                  from view.
 Our goal is to match each reader with the right book at                                  by Karen J. Ciosek
 the right time. Every day, people come to the Informa-  Flower
 Tech Connect is a new program we’re really passionate  tion Desk and ask for a great read. Our highly trained   At the end
 about - everything is going online, from the bank, the  staff absolutely love to get those questions, and care-  Line in italics from Book of Love #7 by Emily Dickinson.  she resembled an abandoned nest    Invitation
 pharmacy, to the DMV. If being online feels overwhelm-  fully spend time getting to know that person's reading   I have no life but this  clinging to the arthritic branches of an elm.
 ing or confusing to you, the library can help! Tech Con-  interests and favorite  genres,  and most importantly,   to nod my head in the wind,  Listen to butterflies beat
 nect is a free service staffed by digital navigators who  trying to figure out the kind of book that that person   to stretch my limbs to the sun,  White whisps of hair and the hard angles    their wings.
 will teach you what YOU want to do on your devices.  is in the mood for at the time. Then they head to the   to catch a bee upon my tongue.  of cheekbones. Eyes like cupped hands
 Our digital navigators will develop a customized plan  stacks and start pulling books. One of the many amaz-     Watch a spider climb its
 to help you successfully connect to the online world.  ing things about the public library is that patrons can   I have no life but this  striving to hold water. Her hands in mine-   invisible thread.
 This includes one-on-one training as well as assistance  check out a whole stack of books for free, so often a   to watch the sky, blue or grey,  a collection of twigs. Bird bones. Barely there.
 in signing up for free or discounted home Internet as  patron  will  come in  looking  for one book  and  head   to feel free from earth’s bed,  Touch the opening roses,
 well as a long-term loan of your very own computer, if  home with five. Then, a few weeks later, they will come   to savor life above instead.  There was nothing left that we needed    inhale their perfume
 needed.  back in looking for more!            to say. Her voice had returned to wind without  lifting into the air
       I have no life but this
 Call us today at (203)626-4774 to set up your appoint-  Cindy Haiken, Readers’ Advisory Librarian  to quench my thirst with cold rain  any discernible sounds. My heart had emptied   this sun-filled day.
 ment with a digital navigator during  library  business   to smile on all who pass by  Itself of every meaningful word.   Oh, such small miracles.
 hours.  Lastly, what languages are spoken?   to bring joy to someone’s eye.
 We have many staff members who speak Spanish at      We dovetailed there at the meeting place    Glorious gifts waiting
 Janet Flewelling, Head of Emerging and Creative Tech-  varying levels of fluency and we hold regular Spanish   I have no life but this  of our grief, which is a room in late afternoon  to be witnessed. Free
 nologies  and French conversation groups that are open to the   to be a harbinger of spring     treasures to marvel at
 public too! Our collection of books and movies is even   to inspire a verse or two  when the sun is at half mast and gold arms of
 What do you feel is the highest lev-  more diverse, with a robust Spanish language collec-  to live life well before I go.                light reach across the cold emptiness of space   when you're not
 el of reading material you offer?    tion and a smaller number of items representing over   busy with life.
 The  Wallingford  Public  Library  has  reading  material  20 different languages.   by Karen J. Ciosek  to warm anything along its path.
 that ranges from board books that will appeal to new-                                    by Karen J. Ciosek
 borns, all the way up to literary fiction and non-fiction  Sunnie Scarpa, Library Director  by Judy Nacca


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