Stuffed Animal Sleepover Success

Oh what a night it was!  Stuffed animals lined up in droves to spend the whole night at the library, and everyone went home sleepy but happy the next morning.

Some stuffies played games while others visited the Bedford Flag.  Some watched a movie while others used the iPads.  Everyone enjoyed some dinner and toasted marshmallows.  Keep scrolling to see how the whole night unfolded!

February TAG

TAG (Teen Activities Group) meets most Wednesdays at 1:30 pm during the school year and is open to everyone in grades 6 through 12. We enjoy snacks and all different kinds of activities – crafts, games, movies, experiments, and more! There is no sign-up – just drop in!

2/5 – Bookmark Making – Make a bookmark from our craft supplies so you’ll always know where you are in your book!

2/12 –  DIY Valentines – Create Valentine’s Day cards for your friends and loved ones!

2/19 –  No TAG – Have a happy Vacation Week!

2/26 – Movie: The Princess Bride – A classic fairytale adventure filled with comedy and thrills (PG).  

February Teen Book Clubs

We are now offering TWO different teen book clubs! One is for homeschool kids ages 12 and up, and the other is for any teens! Both book clubs meet in the Reference Room, right around the corner from the Teen Area.

Homeschool Book Club (ages 12+)

Friday, February 7, 10:30-11:30 am

We’ll be reading Code Talker by Joseph Bruchac.

Six-year-old Ned Begay leaves his Navajo home for boarding school, where he learns the English language and American ways. At 16, he enlists in the U.S. Marines during World War II and is trained to be a code talker, using his native language to radio battlefield information and commands in a code that was kept secret until 1969. Rooted in his Navajo consciousness and traditions even in dealing with fear, loneliness, and the horrors of the battlefield, Ned tells of his experiences in Hawaii, Guadalcanal, Bougainville, Guam, Iwo Jimo, and Okinawa.

Teen Book Club

Thursday, February 13, 4-5 pm

We’ll be reading The Poet X by Elizabeth Acevedo.  Copies are available to check out at the Circulation Desk. Please also bring ideas of what kinds of books you would like to read in the future so we can plan more great meetings!

This coming-of-age story from the streets of Harlem centers of Xiomara Batista, a teenage poet seeking to express herself.

Winter Reading: almost finished!

Have you joined Winter Reading at the library?  There are only a few days left to log your reading!  Whether you use the app or the website, all of your reading for the month of January should be logged by the end of Friday, January 31st.

13 readers have earned the Golden Penguin badge and a free Book Nook coupon so far, reading for an amazing 720 minutes (12 hours) so far this month!  Keep up the fantastic work, and let’s see how many new readers can reach that goal. 

Handy feature: the Beanstack Tracker app lets you set a timer on your tablet or smartphone while you read, so you can relax and enjoy your book without thinking about the clock.  When you’re finished reading, tap “Done” and Beanstack will automatically log that time for you.

Chinese New Year Celebration

Happy Lunar New Year! Join the library to celebrate the Year of the Rat with crafts, activities, and your name in beautiful Chinese calligraphy. Kids of all ages are welcome to test their chopsticks skills, fold origami, decorate cupcakes, color, stamp, and more.

Stop by anytime between 2:00pm and 4:00pm this Saturday, January 25th!

Add it to your calendar by going to the official library event page.

Postponed! Winter Lecture Series

Due to concerns with COVID-19 flu we have postponed the last program in the series.  We will post a new date when available.

 

History of the United States in Six Songs

Professor Dan Breen will present a lecture series on American music.  Each Sunday Professor Breen will pick a song to review and the history around that song:

The six session series begins on Sunday February 2nd  at 2 pm in the library meeting room.  The lectures continue on Sundays into March.  (February 2nd, 9th, 23th, March 1st, 8th,  15th) .

Sunday, February 2nd
 
1) Yankee Doodle–Although pre-dating the Revolution, “Yankee Doodle” would emerge as an unofficial national anthem during the siege of Boston in 1775.  And yet the theme of the song has more to do with fashion than with fighting.
 
Sunday, February 9th
 
2) Home Sweet Home–by some accounts, this was the most popular American song of the 19th Century.  What does it say about the emerging culture of the famously restless American people that their favorite song was all about home?
 
Sunday, February 23rd
 
3) Tiger Rag–this, perhaps the first hit Jazz record, would immediately spawn major controversy.  Its story is really the story of the intersection of music, law, technology and society as the US entered World War One.
 
Sunday, March 1st
 
4) West End Blues–a world away from Tiger Rag, this may be the most sublime recording in the history of American popular music.
 
Sunday, March 8th
 
5) God Bless America–written during World War One and then all but forgotten, this song would emerge again just in time for World War Two.  It may be the most popular of all patriotic songs, despite its curious lyrical content.
 
Sunday, March 15th
 
6) Strange Fruit–one of the most ambitious and moving of all popular songs, “Strange Fruit” is also an enduring testament to the determination of Billie Holiday.  It may also be considered the first great protest song.
 
Dr. Daniel Breen is a professor of Legal Studies at Brandeis University. In the past fourteen years,  Dan has lectured at the Library about World War I, World War II, the Great Depression, the American Revolution, Prohibition, Supreme Court cases, the Civil War, the Roosevelts, great moments in science,  the Space Race and presidential campaigns. Dr. Breen has a BA from the University of Wisconsin,  a JD from the University of Georgia and a PhD in History from Boston College. He has taught at Framingham State University and Newbury College. 

 Thanks to the Friends of the Bedford Free Public Library for sponsoring this program. Free and open to the public.

On Exhibit in the Gallery…

“On Growing Up”

Photography by Suzanne Révy and Tira Khan

January 9-March 12, 2020.

Artists reception: Sunday, February 9th, 4-5 pm at the Library.

In the Artists’ own words…

TIRA KHAN

I began photographing my three daughters because I wanted a portrait to hang on my living room wall. I envisioned them freshly bathed, dressed and happy, all at the same time. For me, that was an impossible trifecta. Instead, I began to photograph moments more authentic — when my girls were wrapped in their own thoughts, oblivious to me.

I saw my photographs as a way of studying the girls in their natural habitat, as a journalist might. Not wanting to bother them, I never asked my daughters to stop what they were doing, and they didn’t seem to mind me snapping away. More likely, I was too timid to ask them to pose. Though had I asked, I’m sure they would have refused.

Over the years, people would encourage me to photograph something more important, something that mattered to the external world. But I found myself drawn to these moments when my daughters were introspective — perhaps I thought taking their photo would lead me closer to their inner world. Children and adolescents have a seriousness about them that we, as a culture, sometimes forget. I paid attention when not much was “going on.”

As the girls aged, I realized that these small moments added up to something much larger – the development of character, personality. Now, as I feel more confident, they are more confident too. We see each other head-on, unapologetic in our flaws. But we are also, at times, more wary. I hope these small moments –  witnessed in these photos – show personal growth, enabling them to interact with the world beyond home and family.

As Susan Sontag says: “Photographs are really experiences captured.” I feel like these photos captured early family life and who the girls have become. The childhood “magic” has morphed into teen melodrama and more. It’s now a different kind of energy. We grew up together.

SUZANNE REVY

I could not prove the Years had feet
Yet confident they run
Am I, from symptoms that are past
And series that are done

I find my feet have further goals
I smile upon the aims
That felt so ample- yesterday
Today’s have vaster claims

I do not doubt the self I was
Was competent to me
But something awkward in the fit
Proves that— outgrown— I see  ~  
Emily Dickinson

When my older son became a Bar Mitzvah, my husband and I were asked to speak to him at the end of the service. These services last about two hours, so we decided that brevity was warranted. As our children mature, such moments can be emotionally fraught for parents and finding the right words was a difficult task. I am a fan of Emily Dickinson’s poems, and when I came across the one which starts “I could not prove the years had feet,” I knew that I had found the words I was looking for. I recited this brief poem  to my son on that special day. 

As my sons grew into their teenage years, they seemed to have gone into their rooms, and I was not sure when they would be coming out. As a parent, I have witnessed each chapter in their lives and have created a visual diary of photographs showing their creative and imaginative play, their explorations in the woods behind the house, trips to local pools or amusement parks, and – more recently – their changing bodies, interior spaces and ubiquitous technologies.They are hurtling toward an emotional departure from childhood at an alarming pace, and each chapter of their lives has proven to be fleeting and ephemeral. The selections presented here are part of a third portfolio of images that were begun when my children were toddlers. The photographs are traces of the perils and poignance in the day to day life of a family with two growing boys.

This exhibit would not be possible without assistance from the Friends of the Bedford Free Public Library.
The public is invited to view the exhibit during regular library hours.

Winter Reading Goals

It’s Winter Reading time, everyone! You can continue to sign up at bedfordlibrary.beanstack.org or on the Beanstack Tracker app.  After you sign up, stop by the Children’s Room to pick up a delectably scented bookmark to keep track of your reading as you go.

This is the BFPL’s first time trying a Winter Reading challenge, and we originally set a community-wide goal of 5,000 minutes read during the month of January.  6 days into the challenge, readers have already logged 4,412 minutes.  Clearly, we underestimated your Winter Reading enthusiasm! 

You rose to the challenge, so we’re rising to your abilities: we’ve reset the community goal at 10,000 minutes before January 31st.

Keep on reading during these dark winter days and lighting up your mind!