Month: December 2021

10 Tips For Reading Resolutions

With the new year coming right up, it’s time for New Year’s Resolutions, and because we’re a library, and because this is appearing on a library web site, and because we do a lot of business in books, and because—

Okay, that’s enough, right? 

We present you with a list of 10 Tips to help you with your reading resolution. 

10. Don't Fight the Crowds

You know how they gyms are always packed in January? How frustrating is it to have to wait to jump on the dreadmill? Is there any sadder human condition than patiently waiting to do something you don’t even want to do!?

Reading in January can be a little like that, too. You might find that a lot of other folks put books YOU WANTED TO READ on hold for themselves, especially self-improvement stuff, fitness stuff, diet stuff, Kyle Starks comics (not really, but in my dream world, Kyle Starks comics are in short supply every January). 

My advice to gym-goers is to be a little flexible in January. Can’t get on the stationary bike? Hit the elliptical or push a sled today. Somebody’s hogging up the squat cage to do curls? Change up the order you planned out and do something else first.

Same goes for books. Change up the order. Maybe you can’t get Book A right away, but you can get another book by the same author, and it might scratch the same itch. Maybe this is a good time to explore Hoopla, which allows multiple patrons to check out the same things. 

9. Reading Can Be Fun

Reading doesn’t always have to be about self-improvement. It doesn’t always have to be homework. A lot of us put too much pressure on books and reading to make us complete, different people, and its good to step back and remember we can read something goofy, something thrilling, or something that’s entertaining but not life-altering. 

If the goal is to be a better person, reading can help. If the goal is to read, let that goal stand alone.

8. Ambition Isn't Always Your Friend

You probably know if you’re the kind of person who is ambitious to a fault. The sort of person who sets out on Day 1 of a fitness journey by waking up at 4 AM, jogging for an hour, blending up some kale for breakfast, etc., and then waking up the next day sore, drained, and defeated.

With reading, if you set a goal of reading one book every week, and if we’re into February and you’re still on your first title, it feels like total failure.

Be ambitious, but be realistic. It’s okay to set a goal that ends up being a little too easy. And let’s face it: how often have you failed in your New Year’s Resolution because it was TOO EASY?

7. Leave Room For Spontaneity

Making a reading list is the most fun part of a reading resolution. It’s fast-paced, exciting…okay, is there a more book nerd thing out there than calling reading list building “fast-paced?

If you make your entire book list on January 1st, you’ll run into a problem by summer. See, publishers and authors you love are still working, and in a few months there will definitely be some new books you’d like to peek at. 

6. Make Your Goal For The You of Today

Classic gym scenario: A guy in his 40’s walks in, sets his bag down, and immediately loads up a barbell with his PR bench weight from when he was 25. This…usually doesn’t end well.

Maybe you read A LOT in the past. Maybe you were reading a book a day at one point. But let’s not forget that maybe, at that point, you didn’t have a job or kids or global pandemic or a house where it seems like the gutters have to be cleaned out seven times a year. Do gutters have a purpose other than collecting leaves? 

Set a goal for you, not you from 10 years ago.

5. Setting a Goal Means Setting Aside Time

There is always going to be something in your day that’s more urgent, more appealing, or that will feel better than reading. Always. You have to carve out reading time, make it something you MUST do, like brushing your teeth, not something you SHOULD do, like flossing (I’ve spoken to a dentist recently, I know most of you aren’t flossing every day).

4. Create Opportunity

One secret of elite runners is that they keep a pair of shoes and some running gear in the trunks of their cars. Why? Because opportunity strikes now and then, and you have to take advantage of it.

Put a book in the trunk of your car. Load up your phone with a couple eBooks. Next time you’re sitting in a parking lot or waiting for someone to finish their set at the gym (because you did a fitness goal AND a reading goal, you ambitious, wonderful person), read a couple pages.

People have written entire novels in 15-minute bursts. You can certainly read one that way.

3. Put Your Sweats On

I’m going to share with you the deepest, darkest secret of elite fitness folks: They don’t always want to do it.

Sometimes it’s cold. Or they’re hungry. Or they just aren’t in the mood. Sometimes they want to watch the next episode of Squid Games intead of hitting the road.

There’s a trick to get past it, something to tell yourself:

You don’t have to go for a run today. But you DO have to put on your sweats, lace up your shoes, and walk to the end of the street. 

If you get dressed and get to the end of the street, you’ll always go a little further because you’ve done the hardest part, you’ve started.

Reading works the same way. 

You don’t have to read 30 pages today. But you do have to sit down and read for 2 minutes.

2. Break Your Goal Into Seasons

One of the worst parts of exercise is that you never really “get there.” It’s not like you can exercise a lot for 6 months and then take the back half of the year off. It can make exercise feel endless, like one day’s workout just bleeds into the next. The trick is to set a short-term goal: “I’m gonna run Bolder Boulder this year, then take a week off.”

Break your reading goal into seasons, sessions, semesters, or something that gives you a distinct start and end point. Give yourself a week off between sessions. It’s handy because you can make one of your breaks during holidays or a summer vacation when you might not have as much control over your schedule. Plus, if you mess up one session, that’s okay, the next session is its own, distinct thing, and you can still start fresh and ace that one.

1. Make YOUR Goal For YOU

It’s tempting to look at the reading goals of others and bump yours up to compete.

Look…it’s disheartening to get passed on a running path. It always happens when you’re actually feeling pretty good about yourself. Everything is clicking, then *BOOM*, someone blows by you like you’re standing still. 

First of all, don’t get down. It’s probably Captain America. It’s not reasonable to be upset when you get passed by Captain America. I don’t know who the Captain America of speed reading is…Nancy Pearl? There’s no shame in reading less than Nancy Pearl.

Second, your goal is for you and only you.

Don’t make a reading goal to impress your friends or your spouse or your coworkers. Make a reading goal because you want to read.

Books about Books (Read a book that celebrates books)

Read a fiction or nonfiction book that celebrates the wonder of books. Hmm, a bit meta perhaps?! Whether historical, futuristic, or contemporary perspective, the following titles shine a spotlight on the beautiful and life-changing thing we call The Book.

Fiction

The Book Woman of Troublesome Creek by Matt Haig

You will adore the courageous protagonist, Cussy Mary, in this bestselling historical fiction setting. As Cussy hauls books to the hills of her Appalachian community we learn details about the Kentucky Pack Horse Library Project, and Cussy learns about herself.

BookeBook

The Midnight Library by Matt Haig

This uber-popular story is described by The Washington Post as, “A feel-good book guaranteed to lift your spirits.” Who doesn’t need a little lifting these days? Imagine a magical library with infinite books, including the one that describes your current life as well as the life you might have lived. This is Matt Haig and “what if” speculative fiction at its best.

Book / eBook / Audio eBook

Cloud Cuckoo Land by Anthony Doerr

Pulitzer Prize-winning author Anthony Doerr has done it again! He has created a huge, fantastical literary fiction novel interweaving different time periods, settings, and characters – all centered around the reading experience and the stewardship of Earth. Dedicated to “the librarians then, now, and in the future” this is a book to cherish. (Said the librarian.)

Book / eBook

The Reading List by Sara Nisha Adams

Contemporary fiction set in London describing the power of books to heal. A chance encounter with a list of library books helps forge a bond between an elderly widower and a lonely teenager. Told from both perspectives, the author explores difficult topics such as mental illness, grief, abandonment, self-doubt – and the benefits of community and reading.

Book / eBook

Read between the Lines by Rachel Lacey

This playful contemporary romance is about a Manhattan bookstore owner who is ready to fall in love with her favorite lesbian romance author. Or is she? With a mistaken identity twist and a wintry backdrop this new book from award-winning author Rachel Lacey is the perfect title to charm your heart.

Book

Nonfiction

The Gilded Page by Mary Wellesley

Take a look at some books back in history. Way back. Get some new information on old manuscripts such as the Lindisfarne Gospels and Chaucer and many you’ve never heard of before. Origins include the stories of grinders, binders, and scribes.

Book

Dear Fahrenheit 451 by Annie Spence

A funny yet moving tribute to the classic and contemporary books that shaped the life of librarian Annie Spence. Acknowledging that some books change our lives while others…let’s just say it…disappoint us – she ponders the obvious question: Why? For any book lover, these fun insights will help you think of your old favorites in a new way.

Book

The Library Book by Susan Orlean

For true crime fans and history buffs, this heavily researched book tracks the clues surrounding the devastating fire in the Los Angeles Public Library in 1986. Detailing the past history of the library as well as introducing readers to a colorful cast of characters, author Susan Orlean weaves a mesmerizing story.

Book / eBook

The Bad-Ass Librarians of Timbuktu by Joshua Hammer

If that title doesn’t grab you, how about the tag line from to publisher: “To save precious centuries-old Arabic texts from Al Qaeda, a band of librarians in Timbuktu pulls off a brazen heist worthy of Ocean’s Eleven.” Superhero librarians anyone? This book proves that truth is sometimes more exciting than fiction!

Book

The Writer’s Library by Nancy Pearl & Jeff Schwager

We eavesdrop on various interviews with diverse, acclaimed authors as they tell us about the books that influenced them in their lives. Get your to-read list ready as you get inspired with a plethora of reading suggestions!

Book / eBook

LibraryReads (Read a book that was a LibraryReads selection)

LibraryReads is a list of the best books of every month as selected by library staff nationwide. The books are selected for adult readers but may be fiction or nonfiction of any type or style. You can find the current LibraryReads list, as well as the archive of all previous lists, at www.LibraryReads.org.

Kid Gloves by Lucy Knisley

Lucy Knisley looks back on her long-desired journey to become a mother in this charming, witty, and moving memoir. Through her own illustrations, we see her struggles with fertility, miscarriage, pregnancy, and eventually motherhood.

Book

Daughter of a Daughter of a Queen by Sarah Bird

The epic story of Cathy Williams, a woman born as a slave but told by her mother to consider herself a captive – the daughter of a queen. She spends her youth searching for an escape and finds it with the Union army. To keep her freedom and independence, she boldly took on the identity of a man and served her country as a Buffalo Soldier.

Book / Large Print / Audio eBook

House of Thieves by Charles Belfoure

An upstanding architect from 1886 New York gets drawn into the criminal underworld when his son racks up debts with the wrong group. To pay it back, he must use his extensive knowledge of New York City buildings to craft the perfect robbery.

Book / Large Print / eBook / Audio eBook

Strange Weather by Joe Hill

Joe Hill was once best known as Stephen King’s son, but has since earned a reputation as a master of horror fiction in his own right. These four terrifying novellas are a perfect treat for anyone who’s already discovered the razor sharp, smart writing of Joe Hill. And for anyone who hasn’t – it’s the perfect place to start.

Book / Large Print / eBook / CD Audiobook / Audio eBook

Professor Chandra Follows His Bliss by Rajeev Balasubramanyam

Professor Chandra is a world-renowned economist whose work is at Nobel Prize level, but whose personal life involves a failed marriage and three baffling children. When he is almost killed in a bicycle hit-and-run, his doctor encourages him to let go of the stress that’s killing him and, instead, to follow his bliss.

Book / Large Print

Meet Me at the Museum by Anne Youngson

An English farm wife overwhelmed by loneliness and a Danish museum curator in the midst of grief make an unlikely connection through letters in this quiet, thoughtful, moving book.

Book / Audio eBook

Dear Mr. You by Mary-Louise Parker

Mary-Louise Parker is best known for her performances in films like Fried Green Tomatoes, but in her first book we get a memoir in letters. Each letter is composed to a man who helped create the person she became, ranging from her grandfather to her adopted daughter’s uncle.

Book

Past Tense by Lee Child

Lee Child’s Jack Reacher series has long been a fan favorite, and library employees agree! This is the 24th in the long-running series, and is every bit as suspenseful and exciting as the early books. And bonus – it opens up some information about Reacher’s past.

Book / Large Print / eBook / CD Audiobook

Books for Living by Will Schwalbe

Every reader should find something in this book that speaks to them. Will Schwalbe is exploring all the reasons we read, and all the ways reading affects our lives. From sheer entertainment to exploring the big questions of life and death, he believes there is wisdom to be found in the pages of our books.

Book

Red, White & Royal Blue by Casey McQuiston

This swoon-worthy romance between America’s First Son and the Crown Prince of England is not only an absorbing and emotional love story, it’s also an award-winning book written by a Northern Colorado author!

Book / Audio eBook

Faithful Fiction (Read an inspirational fiction book)

Coming out of the season that gives us holidays like Christmas and Hannukah can leave us with the appetite for comforting stories with a strong core of faith. To earn this badge, just find a book that satisfies that appetite and provides that comfort.

If I Were You by Lynn Austin

Two friends join the ambulance drivers during the London Blitz, reunited by the Nazi threat after a childhood disagreement. Years after the end of the war, they encounter each other again, this time in America and faced with life changing lies. This dual-timeline World War II story includes friendship, romance, terrible loss, lies, and the power of faith to overcome hardship.

Book / eBook / Audio eBook

The Timepiece by Beverly Lewis

An Amish family is confronted by secrets from the past that can also have an enormous impact on their future. Silvia, an only daughter, is not only faced with complicated feelings about another woman’s presence in the family, but must also decide about her future when the man who’s been courting her abruptly stops his pursuit.

Book / Large Print / eBook / CD Audiobook / Audio eBook

Ayesha at Last by Uzma Jalaluddin

This Pride and Prejudice-inspired Muslim love story pits a modern and independent Ayesha against the conservative and judgmental Khalid. Ayesha, who wants to be a poet but is pursuing a teaching career to pay off a debt with a rich uncle, doesn’t want an arranged marriage. Khalid is certain that his family can arrange a marriage with someone much more suitable than Ayesha. Unfortunately, neither of them can stop thinking about each other.

Book

Treasured Grace by Tracie Peterson

Grace Martindale’s parents died unexpectedly, leaving her responsible for her two younger sisters. She enters a marriage with a minister who’s heading West, hoping for a fresh start, but when he dies of cholera on the way she is left a widow in an unfamiliar place. She has valuable skills as a healer and midwife, so she decides to stay and help the local people along with a French-American fur trapper.

Book / Large Print / eBook / CD Audiobook / Audio eBook

Redeeming Love by Francine Rivers

With a movie fresh in the theaters, now is the perfect time to read the beloved novel of a fallen woman in 1850s California who must come to trust, against her nature and experience, the man of faith who has married her, and who is determined to love her unconditionally.

Book / Audio eBook

The Red Tent by Anita Diamant

The life of biblical figure Dinah is explored in everyday detail in The Red Tent. The insulated world of women comes to life through Dinah, who is a beloved daughter, a skilled midwife, a wife, and a mother who must witness her son’s entry into a world where she cannot follow.

Book

One Little Lie by Colleen Coble

Jane Hardy has no sooner been appointed interim sheriff after her father’s retirement than her father is arrested for theft and possible murder. She suspects the involvement of a cult from her family’s past, and soon has the help of a journalist who began documenting her career only to get involved with the effort to clear her father’s name.

Book / Large Print / eBook / Audio eBook

Aftermath by Terri Blackstock

Jamie, a criminal attorney, feels compelled to defend her lifetime friend Dustin when he’s accused of setting bombs that killed dozens, but she hasn’t seen him since he left foster care when they were young. She struggles not only with trust for Dustin, but also with the increasing evidence that Dustin is being set up, and in a way that could be more devastating than the accusations themselves.

Book / eBook / Audio eBook

Jewel of the Nile by Tessa Afshar

Chariline is an orphan who knows only that her father was a Cushite, as evidenced by her beautiful dark skin, and that her parents had a tragic love. While visiting her grandfather at the queen’s court, she discovers that her father is alive and may be in Rome. Against the wishes of her family and the queen, she stows away on a ship headed to Rome, determined to learn about her family’s past.

Book / eBook

At Home in Mitford by Jan Karon

The first in the beloved, classic Mitford series introduces Father Tim, a bachelor rector who’s looking for something more out of life. Enter a very large dog, a lovable young boy, an attractive neighbor, a jewel theft, and a sixty-year-old secret.

Book / Large Print / eBook / CD Audiobook

Icy Fingers (Read horror)

The long nights of winter have made horror stories a seasonal favorite since the Victorian age. Take advantage of the atmosphere by reading one of these chilling tales, then chase away the icy fingers up your spine with a warm drink and a cozy blanket.

The Hollow Places by T. Kingfisher

Kara discovers a hole in the wall at her uncle’s house, and through that hole is a mysterious dimension, a bunker, and the words “pray they are hungry.” This is a modern retelling of the classic Algernon Blackwood short story “The Willows,” and has enough chuckles mixed in with the scares to keep you reading throughout the night.

Book

Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia

Noemi is a 1950s debutante in Mexico City who heads to the country to save her cousin, a newlywed who has fallen mysteriously ill in her new country home. When Noemi arrives, she finds a failing manor, unsettling in-laws, and an atmosphere that invades her nightmares.

Book / Large Print / Audio eBook

Devolution by Max Brooks

Max Brooks is best known for bringing zombies to terrifying life in World War Z, and now he brings the same treatment to bigfoot in Devolution. This terrifying story, told through a series of diary entries, isn’t for gentle spirits or weak stomachs, but it should satisfy fans of vicious massacre tales.

Book / Large Print / eBook

Empire of Wild by Cherie Dimaline

The traditional Métis legend of the Rogarou, a werewolf-like creature, combines with elements of a marriage in trouble, a missing person, and a native community that still has links to the old ways. This is a book for fans of rich, smart writing with horror nipping at its heels.

Book / eBook / Audio eBook

The Return by Rachel Harrison

A group of friends decides to have a reunion at a quirky, remote hotel to celebrate the sudden reappearance of Julie, who vanished two years ago and has no memory of what happened to her. As happy as they are to be back together, Julie’s changes in appearance, appetite, and habits have her friends concerned. And eventually terrified.

Book

Home before Dark by Riley Sager

Maggie’s family is famous because of the book her father wrote: a memoir called House of Horrors. It tells the story of the night 25 years ago that Maggie’s family fled their haunted home. Maggie was too young to remember the events, and now that she’s grown she doesn’t believe a word of it. When she inherits Baneberry Hall, the house in question, she doesn’t hesitate to move back in and start the renovations that could reveal the house’s dark history.

Book / Large Print / Audio eBook

Ring Shout by P. Djèlí Clark

Clark takes the real history of the Ku Klux Klan and weaves a story where a group of resistance fighters is facing the threat of Ku Kluxes: not hood-wearing humans, but actual monsters who use fear and violence to awaken Hell on Earth.

Book / Audio eBook

The Only Good Indians by Stephen Graham Jones

Four Blackfoot men with a shared experience from their youth find that experience coming back to haunt them. One by one the men are hunted by something out of Blackfoot legend that is bent on terrifying, violent revenge.

Book / Large PrinteBook

Tiny Nightmares by Lincoln Michel & Nadxieli Nieto

If you’re up to try some scary stuff this winter but are nervous about taking the full plunge, these super short horror stories are just what the doctor ordered. In just a few pages a night you can get your frights while also having plenty of time left over for episodes of your favorite sitcom to chase away the shadows.

Book

Kill Creek by Scott Thomas

This haunted house story is truly a horror fan’s horror novel. It draws together four iconic horror writers (see if you can identify their real-life inspirations) to spend Halloween night in an infamously haunted house – all streamed live on the internet. Needless to say, the ghosts have other plans.

Book

Spider-Man Reads For Newbie Web-Heads

With a new Spider-Man flick hitting the theaters, now is the perfect time to share some Web-Head Love!

The trickiest part of being a Spider-Fan is that Spidey has been around for a looooong time. He’s gone through a lot of changes, he’s been a vampire, sort of, a Man-Spider, for awhile, and he’s been dead like…a dozen times. Who knew spiders, like cats, had 9 lives!?

We’re taking some of the challenge out of loving the world’s greatest web slinger by bringing you this list of Spider-Man books you can read and enjoy without a whole lot of background. If you’re just getting started with Spidey, these are for you. And if you’ve been on board since Amazing Fantasy 15*, but you haven’t read these, you’re missing out!

*Amazing Fantasy 15 is the first appearance of Spider-Man -Smilin’ Pete. I’ve ALWAYS wanted to do that just like my hero, Smilin’ Stan Lee!

Spider-Man: Life Story

Imagine a Spider-Man who ages in real-time. Spidey first appeared in the early 60’s as a teenager, which would easily make him a card-carrying member of AARP by now.

This book takes that idea, a Spider-Man through the decades, and makes it into a wonderful, imaginative, super-fun story. 

Peter Parker: The Spectacular Spider-Man

There are several different books under this title. Don’t worry about that. Spider-Man has been published as The Amazing, The Spectacular, The Sensational. Hey, where’s “The Library-Loving Spider-Man?” C’mon, Marvel…

I, the writer of this list have read A LOT of Spider-Man, and this book is easily the best encapsulation of what Spider-Man is: A good guy doing his best with what he’s got. The final issue in this short series is the finest comic book I’ve ever read. It’s the one I’ll be buried with. I guess I should’ve warned you earlier that I’m that nerdly of a nerd, that I’ve seriously considered being buried with a specific comic book.

Spider-Man 2099 Classic

In the 90’s Marvel launched a series of comics that took place in the impossibly-distant future of 2099! You could tell these were futurisitic because the first issues all had totally rad foil covers. 

Spider-Man 2099 was one of the best 2099 titles, featuring a new Spider-Man in Miguel O’Hara and a lot of 90’s dystopic goodness, a very Blade Runner future with mega corporations and all that. 

It’s a fun dive into the past. Or maybe into the future. Kind of both.

Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man

These stories aren’t groundbreaking Spidey yarns with multiverses and Spider Slayers and whatnot, they’re just really solid, very sweet stories about Spider-Man. 

One of the strengths of Spider-Man comics is that Spider-Man can still interact with regular people, and this book puts that heart on front-street display. 

Marvels

This isn’t a 100% Spider-Man book, but it’ll do, I’ll allow it. Marvels tells the stories of the first decades of the Marvel Universe as seen by an average person. What’s it like to see Galactus appear out of nowhere? How do people feel about Captain America, The Hulk, Iron Man, and how is Spider-Man different?

This is a great way to get an idea of how chaotic and exciting those early decades were, and Alex Ross’ painted art gives the book a truly spectacular feel. Amazing feel? Sensational— alright, I’ll stop.

Spider-Man: Nothing Can Stop The Juggernaut

This villain-of-the-week story of Spidey battling The Juggernaut has really gained a lot of popularity over the years. Probably because it’s kind of awesome. How does Spider-Man, a strong but not world-shattering superhero, battle the unstoppable Juggernaut without ending up like a bug splattered on the windshield of a truck?

While not a story that will leave you forever changed, it’s a great example of what Spidey was up to in those issues you’d pick up off the rack at the grocery store. It sets up a premise, gives you just enough time to think that maybe Web-Head can’t pull it off, then makes with a satisfying end. 

Ultimate Comics: Spider-Man

Most casual comics fans have at least heard of Miles Morales, who took on the mantle of Spider-Man. This is the start of his story and the place you want to go to follow his adventures from the beginning.

These early issues have a flavor really similar to the newest crop of Spider-Man movies, including a sidekick ripped straight from the panels!

In this version of the Marvel Universe, Peter Parker died while saving the day. Miles has an accident that gives him similar, but slightly different spider powers, and he somewhat reluctantly takes on the Spider-Man role. What makes this book really cool is that characters in the book, even villains, question whether or not this is respectful to Peter’s legacy, and the comic asks and answers the questions and complaints of fans in the real world. The comic acknowledges that Miles has big webs to fill. 

I’m a long-, longtime Spider-Man reader, and I want to tell you, if you’ve avoided Miles because you don’t think you could love another Spider-Man the way you love Peter Parker, give him a shot. I see it like I see cats: you’ll always have favorites, but there’s room enough and time enough to love more than one cat with all your heart.

Spider-Man/Deadpool: Isn’t It Bromantic?

Spider-Man comics can be overly sincere. It doesn’t all have to be kneeling and shouting at the sky about responsibility.

This one is silly. What’s amazing about it is that it totally shouldn’t work, and it totally does. The bizarre, murderer-for-hire that is Deadpool has a reason to team up with Spider-Man that makes sense. Pretty much. Mostly. Enough, anyway.

Our days can’t be all caviar and Masterpiece Theater. Sometimes you need a cheeseburger and a carnival.

Spidey

You know what’s tough? Finding comics for kids. Really young kids have good options, and teenagers have options, but kids between about 6 and 10 have a hard time.

This book might be PERFECT for that crowd. It’s not childish, but it’s not so adult that you’ll have to stop every few pages to explain something to your kid.

And I don’t mean this as an insult, by the way. I had a lot of fun reading Spidey, and I’m old. I think this is good if you’re young at heart, even just a little, and I definitely felt young at heart after reading this book. Though my doctor says that “young at heart” feeling I describe might be related to my cholesterol. See, I told you I’m old.

Untold Tales of Spider-Man

In the 90’s someone had a genuinely good idea. See, one of the hard things about comics by then was that continuity, the string of events that had occurred within a fictional character’s life, was so long, and so many things had happened that it could be tough to tell new stories. It’s not like you could just write a story where Uncle Ben miraculously was alive again.

So what they did is go back to Spider-Man’s earliest days and weave some new tales in between those issues published in the 60’s.

The result is just so *swoon* charming. They used a similar art style to those early days, but updated it a little. There are little callbacks and fan service moments that serve hardcore readers, but you’ll easily follow the action if you’ve never read those early issues. It’s like the Star Trek reboot movies that way.

This one isn’t on the shelf at HPLD, but I want to remind you that you can get comics through Prospector, Interlibrary Loan, and you can find lots of digital Spidey comics (and novels, and audiobooks) on Hoopla!

Heartbeats (Read a romance)

The biggest benefit to reading a romance is the confidence that comes with a guaranteed happy ending. You can sit back and enjoy the trials, tribulations, and arguments with the comfort of knowing that all will be right in the end. Take some time this winter to cuddle up with one of these love stories –- happily-ever-after certified by your local library!

Seven Days in June by Tia Williams

Named a best book of the year by dozens of organizations, this is an emotional and satisfying story of lost love and second chances. Two bestselling writers with a secret past have been writing to each other through their books for years, and when they meet again it brings up past pain, but also future potential.

Book

Big Bad Wolf by Suleikha Snyder

Paranormal romance fans will want to buckle up for this romance between a genetically altered shapeshifter/ex armed forces member and a lawyer psychologist who has been assigned to his murder case. The perfect pick for fans of action-packed and steamy paranormals.

Book / eBook / Audio eBook

Gray Hair Don’t Care by Karen Booth

Makeup artist Lela Bennett is 47, newly divorced, and facing the prospect of reentering the dating scene. When she has an impulsive fling with her college crush Donovan and he responds by leaving before she wakes up, Lela decides to embrace her age, flaunt her silver hair, and start her new job with confidence. The same new job that will bring Donovan back into her life, along with the chance for lasting love.

Book / Audio eBook

The Lady’s Guide to Celestial Mechanics by Olivia Waite

Astronomy meets embroidery in this historical romance of star-crossed lovers. Lucy was forced to watch her love marry another and turns to a job translating a French astronomy text to escape. The widowed Countess of Moth hoped to hand off the translation job and count her final obligation to her dead husband complete, but instead the two women discover a connection and an attraction, if they can overcome the threats to a happy future together.

Book / eBookAudio eBook

Rafe by Rebekah Weatherspoon

Find the single mom’s wildest dream in Rafe. Sloane is an overworked surgeon and divorced mother of twins, and when her nanny walks out without notice she’s left with an urgent need for childcare. Enter Rafe, the tall, handsome, motorcycle riding nanny who’s great with the twins, great in the kitchen, and interested in Sloane. This is low in angst and high in fluffy wish fulfillment.

BookAudio eBook

It Happened One Summer by Tessa Bailey

Fans of the hit TV show Schitt’$ Creek will see shades of Alexis Rose in Piper Bellinger, and that’s no mistake. It Happened One Summer is Tessa Bailey’s attempt to give Alexis Rose her happily-ever-after, although in this case we have a Hollywood It-Girl matched with a surly sea captain from the Pacific Northwest.

Book / eBook / CD Audiobook

You Had Me at Hola by Alexis Daria

Jasmine is a soap opera star weathering a messy public breakup, and Ashton is an established telenovela star whose character was just written off the show. Both actors have been cast in a bilingual streaming comedy, and both have a lot to lose. One-on-one rehearsals reveal chemistry between the two, but they have to decide if they can mix business with pleasure.

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Spoiler Alert by Olivia Dade

April is not only a working scientist, but a cosplay-wearing, fanfiction-writing, certified superfan of the Gods of the Gates series. Marcus Caster-Rupp is the star of the Gods of the Gates TV show, but he’s also a fan of the book series – and has taken up writing anonymous fanfiction that fixes what he sees as mistakes in the show’s writing. When April’s plus sized cosplay goes viral and draws the attention of online trolls, Marcus asks her to dinner – and they soon discover exactly how much they have in common.

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Whiteout by Adriana Anders

This hot love story takes place in the coldest place on Earth, Antarctica, and pits a scientist and the research station chef against a mob of terrorists who are after a virus found in the Antarctic ice. This is the page-turning pick for anyone who likes their love stories to come with bad guys, conspiracies, and life-or-death stakes.

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The Duke Who Didn’t by Courtney Milan

Chloe Fong is practical, organized, and loves lists. Her childhood love, Jeremy Wentworth, is her free-spirited opposite but has always been head over heels for Chloe. Jeremy has spent three years trying to become serious enough for Chloe, with no luck, but now he’s back to prove that although he might never be serious, he’s serious about Chloe.

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Not-So-Boring Nonfiction (Read a nonfiction book)

Nonfiction can be informative, fascinating, and full of fun facts to wow your friends with!  These titles offer suggestions for a wide range of nonfiction subjects including memoirs, social and cultural history of times past, and people around the world.

Somebody’s Daughter by Ashley C. Ford

Step into Ashley’s world of growing up a poor Black girl in Indiana with a family separated by the incarceration of her father. Ashley tells about her personal journey searching for who she is and what she was born into, the complications of family love and the things that can turn a child’s world upside down.

Book / eBook

You Can’t Be Serious by Kal Penn

A series of funny, consequential, awkward, and ridiculous stories from Kal Penn’s idiosyncratic life. The grandson of Gandhian freedom fighters, and the son of immigrant parents, Kall’s story about struggle, triumph, and learning how to keep your head up, and that everyone can have more than one life story.

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The Unfit Heiress by Audrey Clare Farley

This is a look at the court case and story of Maryon Cooper Hewitt, who had her daughter, Ann Cooper Hewitt, sterilized without her consent or knowledge for an inheritance. It also takes a look at the history of eugenics, how the laws were created that allowed it, and how this is not really a long-ago history.

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Last Call by Elon Green

This is the disturbing and largely-forgotten story of a serial killer who preyed upon gay  men in 80s and 90s New York. The Last Call Killer evaded capture for decades, and Elon Green’s book puts the case into context: high city crime rates, the sexuality of victims, and the overwhelming AIDS epidemic.

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Midnight in Chernobyl by Adam Higginbotham

A powerful investigation into how propaganda, secrecy, and myth have obscured the true story of one of the twentieth century’s greatest disasters. This nonfiction thriller tells the real story of the accident, from hundreds of hours of interviews, letters, unpublished memoirs, and documents from recently declassified archives, which brings the disaster to life through the eyes of the men and women who witnessed it firsthand. Midnight in Chernobyl is the story of human resilience and ingenuity, and the lessons learned when mankind seeks to bend the natural world to his will.

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Last Boat Out of Shanghai by Helen Zia

Shanghai is China’s richest, most modern city. When the long civil war was over, the thriving middle-class citizens of Shanghai fled in fear of the Communists. Chinese American journalist Helen Zia tells the story of four young Shanghai residents who abandoned everything to become refugees in Hong Kong, Taiwan, and the U.S.

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Driving While Black by Gretchen Sorin

Beginning in 1936, this is story of Victor and Alma Green, who encouraged a method of resisting through their creation of travel guides for Black only hotels, as well as informal communications networks that kept Black drivers safe. This is about the forgotten history of Black motorists and why travel was a central underpinning of the Civil Rights movement.

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My Vanishing Country by Bakari Sellers

CNN analyst and one of the youngest state representatives in South Carolina history, Bakari Sellers illuminates the lives of America’s forgotten Black working-class men and women and takes the reader on an eye-opening journey through the South’s past, present, and future. Sellers humanizes the struggles that shape the lives of his family members, neighbors, and friends. The struggle to gain access to healthcare, to make ends meet as the factories shut down and move overseas, to hold on and keep moving forward without succumbing to despair.

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Heaven and Hell by Bart D. Ehrman

What happens when we die? Where did the ideas of heaven and hell originate? Focusing on the the teachings of Jesus and his early followers, this tells the accounts of the oldest near-death experiences on record,  and how the notions of eternal bliss or damnation became accepted today. This is a reflection on where our ideas of the afterlife come from, assuring us that even if there may be something to hope for when we die, there is certainly nothing to fear.

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Empire of Pain by Patrick Radden Keefe

This is the saga of three generations of the Sackler family, beginning with three doctor brothers who rose from poverty during the Great Depression and created an empire through drug research and marketing pharmaceuticals like Valium and OxyContin. The story chronicles the investigation into the greed and indifference of this elite, wealthy family which caused the suffering, addiction, and deaths of hundreds of thousands of people.

Book / eBook

Farm Livin’ (Read a Book about Living on a Farm)

There ain’t no culture like an agriculture! Read these stories about the risks and rewards, the joys and sorrows of life on the farm.

Cold Comfort Farm by Stella Gibbons

When the recently orphaned socialite Flora Poste descends on her relatives at the aptly named Cold Comfort Farm in deepest Sussex, she finds a singularly miserable group in dire need of her particular talent: organization.

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Count the Ways by Joyce Maynard

Eleanor and Cam meet at a crafts fair in the early 1970s. She’s an artist and writer, he makes wooden bowls. Within four years they are parents to three children. To Eleanor, their New Hampshire farm provides everything she always wanted, until unforeseen challenges threaten that peace. How will their family find redemption?

Book / Large Print

Dairy Queen by Catherine Gilbert Murdock

After spending her summer running the family farm and training the quarterback for her school’s rival football team, sixteen-year-old D.J. decides to go out for the sport herself, not anticipating the reactions of those around her.

Book / CD Audiobook / Audio eBook

Daughters of the Wild by Natalka Burian

In rural West Virginia, Joanie and her foster siblings live on a farm tending a mysterious plant called the vine. The older girls are responsible for cultivating the vine, performing sacred rituals to make it grow. After Joanie’s arranged marriage goes horribly wrong, leaving her widowed and with a baby, she plots her escape.

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Dead on the Vine by Elle Brooke White

Charlotte Finn never wanted to inherit the family’s produce farm—much less plow a heap of money into it. Her plan is to hammer a great big FOR SALE sign into the farm’s fallow furrows—but Charlotte’s sunny hopes of a quick sale succumb to a killing frost when she finds a dead body entwined supine in the tomato vines, run through…with a pitchfork?

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An Ill Wind by Pat Miller

Colorado author Miller tells the tale of Emma Cooper, kidnapped from her pioneer life in Missouri and taken to the frontier via the Santa Fe trail. Will she ever see her family again?

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My Antonía by Willa Cather

The classic story of European settlement on the tall-grass prairie of the American midwest, with its beautiful yet terrifying landscape, rich ethnic mix of immigrants and native-born Americans, and communities who share life’s joys and sorrows.

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On Brassard’s Farm by Daniel Hecht

In a radical departure from her urban life, Ann Turner buys a piece of remote land and sets up a tent home deep in the forest. She’s trying to escape an unending string of personal disasters in Boston; she desperately wants to leave behind a world she sees as increasingly defined by consumerism, hypocrisy, and division. But she quickly learns that life in the woods is never easy.

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Sycamore Promises by Paul Colt

A young couple leaves Ohio for the promise of a new life on the Kansas plains. They settle a prime tract of farmland near Lawrence, Kansas. A second young couple slips the bonds of slavery in Missouri. Circumstance brings them together. Set against the backdrop of a nation divided over the issue of slavery, the young settlers fight to hold their land and realize the future that unites them.

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Waiting Season by Melanie Lageschulte

Melinda Foster hoped to spend January relaxing by her farmhouse’s fireplace while paging through the seed catalogs’ promises of spring. Instead, she finds herself struggling to keep the worst of winter’s threats from her door. Shoveling snow, thawing her farm’s water lines, and anxiously watching over the pregnant sheep in her barn fill her shorter days and longer nights.

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High Plains Library District Hosts “Discover Exoplanets: The Search for Alien Worlds” Traveling Exhibition

(Erie– December 2021) – Discover Exoplanets: The Search for Alien Worlds is a national traveling exhibition exploring the fascinating world of space and astronomy. Discover Exoplanets covers topics such as the search for habitable worlds beyond our Solar System, how NASA scientists are searching for these worlds, and how they may be like our own.

The exhibit will be on display at Erie Community Library starting December 10th, 2021.

Discover Exoplanets strives to make science fun with hands-on, multimedia activities where visitors can build their own solar systems, see the most recent NASA discoveries, and learn about whether popular TV and movies feature “Science Fact or Science Fiction.” People of all ages and backgrounds will enjoy exploring the universe and our place in it in a way that is understandable, inspirational, and relevant.

High Plains Library District and Erie Community Library were selected to be one of only seven sites nationwide to host the Discover Exoplanet exhibit. “We’re very proud to make this great exhibit available, and we hope this will be one of many times the library can connect the community to science, exploration, and a little bit of fun!” said HPLD Marketing Specialist Peter Derk.

Erie Community Library is located at 400 Powers St, Erie, CO 80516. The exhibition is free and open to the public during library hours.

Discover Exoplanets was developed by the Space Science Institute’s National Center for Interactive Learning (NCIL) in partnership with NASA’s Universe of Learning. This project was made possible through support from NASA, under cooperative agreement number NNX16AC65A.