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Off the Shelf

Read about additions to your library's shelves as well as memories about the library from out staff and patrons.
AUGUST 28, 2009
My First Library Memory

I remember my mom taking me to the Mt. Washington branch as a child.  The shelves of books always seemed to me to be a little intimidating, bursting with potential mystery and adventure. What did their secrets hold?  I loved the smell of the place. I remember it still. They had 8mm films to check out and it was so exciting to flip through the films to find some gem I hadn't seen before or a favorite I'd seen over and over again.  I distinctly remember always looking through the origami books.  Another treat was the party planning books.  My mom threw such great birthday parties and she'd get great ideas from books.  I especially loved the cake decorating!  My absolute favorites were the Dr. Seuss books and the Dorrie books by Patricia Coombs.  They are long out of print and hard to find on library shelves now, but I'll never forget them.

Chris from the  Amelia Branch

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AUGUST 28, 2009
My First Library Memory

I grew up in Warren, Michigan, a suburb of Detroit and the third largest city in the state. My parents always took us to a library.  The Arthur J. Miller Branch of the Warren Public Library.  I can't remember my first visit but some of my earliest memories are of being at the library. I loved the children's section which wasn't very big at all compared to the children's sections in the Clermont County Libraries. Mom and dad would take us to the library every week and we waited in anticipation for library day.

 

When we were finally old enough mom would turn our library card over to us and let us ride our bikes to the library.  We would go in groups. Sometimes 6 or 7 of us. This entailed crossing over 2 major roads and to be able to ride your bike to the library was quite a status symbol in our neighborhood. In the summer the library had air conditioning.  We did not. So we pedaled almost two miles in the broiling heat and entered that cool cool building almost every day. As I got older I could stay for hours.  I would park the little rolling step stool in front of the section that held my fascination...animals, The Titanic, insects, Princess Anastasia, Crafts, Origami....pretty much the same things that kids read today. The librarian knew us all by name and she let us stay for as long as we wanted as long as we were quiet and didn't disturb anyone else.  I also remember participating in the Summer Reading program every year.  I read and read many books throughout the summer working to recieve a certificate....a piece of orange paper with a racoon on it signed by...the Librarian !! That certificate would proudly hang on my bedroom wall until it was replaced by the next certificate, the following summer.

 

As I grew up I continued to visit my library.  It was a social center.  You never knew what friends and classmates would be there.  It was also a place of study and reference work.  I spent many a school night there doing rese  arch for high school papers.  I attended college at a two year community college just 6 miles from where I lived and continued to write papers there before taking my drafts home to type on my dads Underwood typewriter.  I pursued my Bachelor's degree at another college where I commuted 25 miles each way and still visited my local branch to do research and write my papers. 

 

When I was 23 I moved to Lexington, Kentucky to attend Library School at the University of Kentucky.  I visited my library one last time to just walk through with gratitude for all that I had learned there and all of the books I had read. I was also grateful to that wonderful staff for letting the neighborhood kids stay and stay.....as long as we were quiet!  When I visited my home town I always visited the library.  Several years later when I drove up I noticed that the building was closed and I looked the library up in a phone book to discover that a new building had been built. I was curious and decid ed to check it out. I didn't recognize any of the staff.  The library was big and beautiful. I was happy to see that the children's section was much larger. As I was about to leave a big group of children, obviously friends, rode their bikes up and made their way to the front door. They were a boisterous bunch and as they loudly made their way past me I could overhear them telling each other to be quiet or the Librarian would ask them to leave. It's good to see some things never change.

 

~Lisa from the Goshen Branch

 

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AUGUST 28, 2009
My First Library Memory

I remember the day I first realized that you were allowed to get ANYTHING you wanted at the library. One day it just clicked. There were no teachers telling me I had to read the same books as everyone else, regardless of my interest in them. I could get books as hard to read as I wanted, with no one to second guess me. Any subject, any genre. If it was too hard no one needed to know. I could read just for myself, for fun, without the pressure of trying to figure out the theme, motivation or point of view.

 

The library opened my eyes to something amazing. Reading suddenly changed from something I couldnt stand to my greatest pleasure. I never went anywhere without a book again.

~Laura from New Richmond

 

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AUGUST 25, 2009
My First Library Memory

My first visit to a Clermont County Public Library was in 1976.  I was 10 years old.  Our family had just relocated from North College Hill to Felicity and it was a shock to my system.  All of those trees, and the stars were so big!  I was definitely not adjusting to country life.  However, my mother called around and found out that there was a library in Bethel located in the Grant Memorial Building. Our family frequented the Groesbeck Branch frequently so a library was a big part of our lives. As soon as we stepped into the door we were greeted with warmth and friendliness.  I'll never forget how welcomed we felt. The staff and the wonderful books, especially the works of Laura Ingalls Wilder, helped me to adjust to country life.

 

~Tracey from the Bethel Branch

 

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AUGUST 13, 2009
Reel Reads

Check out some of the latest books to hit the big screen.

Public Enemies (July)

I Love You, Beth Cooper (July)

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (July)

Julie & Julia (August)

Taking Woodstock (August)

The Time Traveler's Wife (August)

Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs (September)

The Other Man (September)

The Road (October)

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Categories: BooksMovies

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