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Showing posts from August, 2011

Brown Bag Lunch—The Cheeseman Cometh

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Over the past decade, the number of small, independent cheese producers in the United States has skyrocketed. Chip Brantley, a former cheesemaker and now lecturer in journalism at the University of Alabama, will give a brief history of the American cheese business and talk about the ins and outs of making cheese. Chip has written for many publications, including Gourmet , Southern Living , and the Oxford American . He is the author of The Perfect Fruit: Good Breeding, Bad Seeds and the Hunt for the Elusive Pluot . Wednesday, September 7, noon. In tandem with the Birmingham Public Library’s Eat Drink Read Write Festival (September 13-17, 2011), we are offering a month of Brown Bag Lunches which will both tickle your taste buds and inspire the “foodie” in you. Join in for some fantastic programming. Feed your body and mind at BPL's Brown Bag Lunch programs . You bring the lunch and we'll bring the drinks. Wednesdays at noon in Central Library’s Arrington Auditorium.

BPL Donation Campaign-- Celebrating 125 Years of Service

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The story of the Birmingham Public Library is the story of Birmingham. In fact, BPL is the oldest cultural institution in the city, born only fifteen years after the city’s founding. It grew along with Birmingham and reflects the city’s history in its buildings, collection, and people. You might be asking yourself, who is this handsome devil leaning over to look at me? This is John Herbert Phillips, “a tall man of Welsh descent from Kentucky,” and the superintendent of schools beginning in the early 1880s. It was he who formed what would become BPL. In August of 1886, the private Birmingham Library Association, a fee-based library, dissolved and bequeathed its 800-volume collection to Superintendent Phillips. By September of 1886, Mr. Phillips had opened up the first public library in a small reception room beside his office, a meager 15 by 18 feet in Birmingham’s high school, pictured here: What this means is that we are living in the exact time,

Friends Bookstore News

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The Friends bookstore reopened the last week in July after our "extreme" makeover with all new stock...and we continue to fill our shelves with patron-donated and library-released used books, media, and other appropriate stuff. Every day we get new stock. Just yesterday we got a donated collection of romance novels--hardbacks and paperbacks--filling a whole bookcart. Earlier in the week we got a collection of science fiction & fantasy books that are going fast. For the next week we're continuing a bargain sale of teen hardbacks ($.50 each) and paperbacks (2 for $.25). And we have new Eat, Drink, Read, Write festival t-shirts, as well as supplies often needed by library patrons, such as writing pads, pens, markers, and even flash drives. Our hours are Mon.-Sat. 9:30 to 5:30 and Sun. 2:30-5:30. COME AND SHOP WITH US, and DONATE your used books and media as well!!!

Brown Bag Lunch—Practical Principles of Self-Publishing

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From idea to conclusion, author and poet C.L. Threatt will teach the do's and don'ts of publishing on your own. The author of Different, But the Same and other books, he will have copies of his children's books for sale and signing after the program. Wednesday, August 31, noon. Feed your body and mind at BPL's Brown Bag Lunch programs . You bring the lunch and we'll bring the drinks. Wednesdays at noon in Central Library’s Arrington Auditorium.

Food for Fines - September 2011

During the month of September any Jefferson County library patron may bring in donations for our food drive and have overdue charges waived for participating. Our food drive benefiting local food banks is open to anyone, even if that someone doesn't have overdue books. For those with late materials however, this is a golden opportunity to take a bite out of library overdue charges and help someone else at the same time. One dollar will be waived up to a maximum of $10 per patron for each dated canned or packaged food item the patron donates. These waived fees applies only to fines for overdue materials, not lost materials. SUGGESTED donations •baby food •cereals •soup •canned juice •canned fruit •canned vegetables •peanut butter •crackers •rice or pasta •pasta sauce •dried beans •side dishes •snack foods

The Eat Drink Read Write Shirts Are Here!!!

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You, too, can own one of these shirts for a cool, 15 bones ($15). Just visit the Friends Bookstore at Central (2100 Park Place, 35203). The Bookstore has new books and videos available as well. We're less than a month away from the Eat Drink Read Write Festival and we can hardly wait. It's on like a ham bone! Come buy a shirt and we'll see you September 13-17! (Fashion model from Five Points West Youth Department, hair and make-up by library staff)

Brown Bag Lunch—Writing for the Children's Market

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Children's author Jo S. Kittinger will provide an overview of various genres and opportunities within the vast arena of children's publishing. The author of Rosa's Bus and other books, she will have copies of her children's books for sale and signing after the program. Wednesday, August 24, noon. Feed your body and mind at BPL's Brown Bag Lunch programs . You bring the lunch and we'll bring the drinks. Wednesdays at noon in Central Library’s Arrington Auditorium.

Book Review: Mister Wonderful

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If you’re more inclined to enjoy graphic novels of the Everyman rather than Superman, then you might want to check out some books by Daniel Clowes . Clowes is responsible for superbly getting it right about pseudo-intellectual, angsty teenagers faced with graduating into adulthood in his 1998 graphic novel, Ghost World . The 2001 movie stars Thora Birch, Scarlett Johansson, and Steve Buscemi. Clowes’ newest graphic novel is Mister Wonderful , a woe-is-me tale that takes place the evening of a blind date between a broken middle-aged man and woman who have little self-esteem and a lot of baggage. Before becoming a book, Mister Wonderful was a serialized comic strip in the   New York Times Magazine . Marshall had a “shockingly happy” childhood, but adulthood hasn’t been so kind to him. His wife slept around with all but one of his friends—the “but one” being the man who set him up on the date—so in the end he had neither wife nor friends. After a six-year dry spell he took up with a

Watercolor Society of Alabama to Host 2011 Alabama Members’ Showcase at the Central Library

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Everywhere USA by Marsha Solomon, Watercolor Society of Alabama The Watercolor Society of Alabama hosts its annual Members’ Showcase at the Central Library in the Fourth Floor Gallery. The opening reception and awards presentation will be held on Sunday, September 18, from 2:30 to 4:00 p.m. in the Fourth Floor Gallery. Approximately 50 aqua media paintings executed by watercolorists from across Alabama will be selected for the exhibit that will run through October 27, 2011. The public is cordially invited to attend. Wayne Spradley, resident of Pell City, Alabama, and well-known watercolor artist and instructor, is the juror for this year’s Showcase. Spradley has won over 300 awards nationally, including Arts for the Parks, National Park Academy, and the Alabama Duck Stamp. His works hang at the University of Alabama, Birmingham, the Alabama State House and Senate floors, and in the collections of former Presidents Carter, Reagan, and Bush, as well as in corporate, private,

Bards & Brews: Birmingham Public Library September Poetry Slam

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The Birmingham Public Library (BPL) hosts another Bards & Brews, the popular monthly poetry slam/beer tasting at the Central Library emceed by poetry slam events director Brian “Voice Porter” Hawkins. September's Bards & Brews will be on Friday the 16th , NOT the first Friday, and will be part of the line-up for the first annual Eat Drink Read Write Festival http://www.bplonline.org/eatdrinkfest . The September event will feature the winners of past Bards & Brews slams. The first place winner receives $100, second place winner $75, and third place winner $50. We're also looking for warm-up poets to perform/read original poems related to food and drink. Free the Hops (FTH) will provide information about craft beers. Back Forty Beer Company and Lazy Magnolia Brewing Company will provide beer for sampling. Continental Bakery/Chez Lulu will donate refreshments. You must be 18 years or older to be admitted and 21 years or older to be served. IDs will be che

Brown Bag Lunch—How to Become Your Own Book

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An hour with Alabama author Jim Reed , whose newly-published writers' workbook is designed to hone the writing skills of beginners and professionals alike. Jim Reed is the author of Dad's Tweed Coat and other books. He will have copies of How to Become Your Own Book for sale and signing after the program. Wednesday, August 17, noon. Feed your body and mind at BPL's Brown Bag Lunch programs . You bring the lunch and we'll bring the drinks. Wednesdays at noon in Central Library’s Arrington Auditorium.

The Friends Bookstore has new stock!!!

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As Tressa recently and graciously wrote, The Friends Bookstore, located on the second floor of the Central Library, has re-opened, after completing an "Extreme Bookstore Makeover." Not only did we paint the walls and redo the cabinets and the layout of the joint, we also removed old books that weren't selling and added books that will sell. In fact, from here on out, if the Lord wills it and the creeks don't rise, we plan to alert patrons and other interested parties of new stock as it arrives. We will notify you by email, if you would like. Just send an email to bplfriendsbookstore@gmail.com and ask to be added to the list. So, here's the skinny on the new materials this week: We have bestsellers from Nora Roberts, Iris Johansen, Richard North Patterson, Mary Higgins Clark and Carol Higgins Clark, as well as Johnathan Kellerman, Fern Michaels, and others-- for just $2.00 a pop. Lots of history books--including a shelf of donated books about the Civil War. Lots

Brown Bag Lunch—Every Writer Needs an Editor

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Birmingham book editor and designer Liz Reed will outline steps in the process of getting your book into print. Discussion begins with To Print or To Publish? Wednesday, August 10, noon. Feed your body and mind at BPL's Brown Bag Lunch programs . You bring the lunch and we'll bring the drinks. Wednesdays at noon in Central Library’s Arrington Auditorium.

Saved by the Bell. . .

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This August, The Business, Science, and Technology and Social Sciences Departments are ready for school to begin with two displays of books and DVDs for every age student, teacher, parent, administrator, or homeschooler. We have books on packing healthy lunches and preparing afternoon snacks. Did you forget how to use the Pythagorean theorem over the summer or cannot remember what the symbol Na stands for on the periodic table? The Business, Science, and Technology Department has math and science review books and study guides to get you prepared for class. Maybe you are a student heading off to college or a parent of one, we have survival guides located in the Social Sciences Department to help make the transition even easier. Or maybe you want to reform schools? We have the much talked about Waiting for "Superman": How We Can Save America's Failing Schools ready for you to check out from the Social Sciences display. For more information, contact the Business, Science, a