Blog Category: all

Posted by JDavanza on Wed, Mar 19
Elsa Grieder returns to the Library to host a play reading series on Tuesday mornings at 10:00, May 27-June 17.    Plays include The Good Doctor by Neil Simon, The Elephant Man by Bernard Pomerance, Coastal Disturbances by Tina Howe and The Perfect Party by A.R. Gurney.  Registration begins at 9:00 AM on Thursday, May 15, 2008, in person or by phone at the Library’s Reference Desk (247-1920 x 2). Group is limited to 10 participants.
Posted by JDavanza on Wed, Mar 19
Taken from his NY Times Obituary by Gerald Jonas, March 19, 2008: “Arthur C. Clarke, a writer whose seamless blend of scientific expertise and poetic imagination helped usher in the space age, died early Wednesday in Colombo, Sri Lanka, where he had lived since 1956. He was 90.  The author of almost 100 books, Mr. Clarke was an ardent promoter of the idea that humanity’s destiny lay beyond the confines of Earth. It was a vision served most vividly by “2001: A Space Odyssey,” the classic...
Posted by JDavanza on Wed, Mar 19
On Keeping a Reading Diary       My visionary friend Louise Blalock often asks people she cares about to give her a baby picture of themselves, and to describe a “lost book” from their childhood.  “Everyone has one”, she’d say, “that wonderful book whose story you remember but whose title and author are lost to time.  You’d give anything to find it again but the way to it is lost.”       Like most people, I have one.  It is a story about a girl growing up on an island off the coast of...
Posted by JDavanza on Tue, Mar 18
It’s coming. Just like you remember it from childhood.  May 18. Really.
Posted by JDavanza on Tue, Mar 18
What do you think of when you think “Spring”?  Gardening? Outdoor exercise? Spring cleaning? Strawberry shortcake?  What ever springs to mind, you are sure to find a book, magazine, or even movie about it–at the library!
Posted by JDavanza on Wed, Mar 12
Take a look at a collection of Lawn and Garden books currently on display in the new magazine section on the main floor of the Library.  Checking out a few of these beautiful and helpful gardening books will give you a welcome preview of spring and summer!
Posted by JDavanza on Mon, Mar 10
Yes, the movie was powerful, but the book No Country for Old Men will knock your socks off!  Check it out–at the library!
Posted by JDavanza on Mon, Mar 10
Award winning poet Michele Cooper will be reading from her recently published book Posting the Watch at the library on Tuesday, March 18 at 7PM.  Michele is well-known in Rhode Island as editor of The Newport Review and the Crone’s Nest and for her tireless encouragement of poets, both new and experienced.  Welcome Michele back to RI and enjoy her wonderful poems!
Posted by KChin on Thu, Mar 06
Before there was Carrie Bradshaw writing her column for Sex And the City, there was Dorothy Parker.  As early as the 1920’s Parker was writing sexy, sardonic, stilletto-tipped stories about the battle of the sexes for such respected magazines as Vogue and Vanity Fair.  In Parker’s ascerbic world, the women usually come across looking obsessive, silly, and shallow; but the men, shown usually as either clueless or feckless, don’t fare very much better. Although many of...
Posted by JDavanza on Wed, Mar 05
Spring is almost here, and one of the best outdoor opportunites we have here in Barrington is access to the wonderful East Bay Bike Path.  But did you know that public bike paths and bike-friendly roads have a long and interesting history or that the creation of bike paths is sometimes complicated by social and political issues?  Since the bike path is so important in Barrington, you might enjoy reading a recent book specifically about the place of bikes and bike riders in...

Pages

chat loading...