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For Everyone
Thursdays, February 7 & 21
6:30-8:00 PM
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For Children & Families
All Ages
Saturday, February 2
10:30-11:15
Tuesday, February 12
6:00-7:30 PM
Thursday, February 14
10:00-10:45 AM
Ages 6 months-3 years
Thursdays,
1:30-2:00 PM
Ages 3 & 4
Registration required and ongoing
Mondays, Feb. 4-Feb. 25
9:15 AM or 10:15 AM
For tots ages 6-23 months
Registration required.
Mondays, Feb. 4-Feb. 25
6:30 PM
For ages 6 months to 3 years
Registration required.
Tuesdays, Jan. 29-Feb. 26
10:00 AM
For 2 year olds
Registration required.
School Age
Every Wednesday
2:30-
4:00 PM
Age 4 and older
Thursdays, February 7 & 21
Grades 1+
Thursday, February 28
3:30-5:00 PM
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For Tweens & Teens
Friday, February 8
4:00-5:00 PM
4th-8th grade
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For Adults
Wednesday, February 6
7:00 PM
Wednesday, February 13
7:00 PM
Thursday, February 14
6:00 PM
Tuesday, February 19
6:30 PM
Thursday, February 21
11:00 AM
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From the arctic to the tropics and everywhere in between, owls are everywhere! On
Wednesday, February 13th,
Howard Aprill, a naturalist at
Wehr Nature Center, will use stunning photos, real owl calls, and hands-on owl artifacts to illustrate how owls thrive in one of the most challenging environments on Earth - your backyard. Learn which owls call Wisconsin home and how you can find, observe, and enjoy neighborhood owls. Join us at
7:00 p.m. in the
Shorewood Village Center.
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Ever wondered about your family's past?
Dive in, build a family tree, and learn who your predecessors were with Ancestry. Ancestry is the world's largest online database of historical and genealogical records and you can access it at no cost through the library! Ancestry Library Edition is available only for use in the library, whether you log in via one of our computers or bring your own laptop or tablet.
Let us help you get started: Bring your computer (several will be provided) on
Tuesday, February 19th at
6:30 p.m. for an introductory lesson on researching your family tree with Ancestry.
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Teen writers: We invite Shorewood residents and/or students in 6th-12th grade to submit a piece of creative writing to our 2019 Teen Short Story and Poetry Contest. Winners of each category will receive a $50 Visa gift card. Contest rules and deadlines are on our
website
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LegoFest
returns Saturday, February 23rd.
Enjoy awe-inspiring Lego creations from Wisconsin Lego Users Group. Then be inspired to create some incredible structures of your own in our Build-a-Brick area. You can also try out Lego Mindstorms and enter a drawing for Lego-related prizes! All ages are welcome. Saturday, February 23rd from from 10:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. in the Shorewood Village Center.
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The Shorewood Public Library offers you
Season's Readings - our fifth annual adult winter reading program. Pick up one of our designated reading logs. For every book you read or listen to, fill out a log and put it in one of our prize drawing gift bags. There are ten great prizes to choose from, and you may submit as many entries as you'd like. What better way to pass the cold winter days than by warming up with a good book? And your winter reading could win you some cool prizes from the library!
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THE CONVERSATION CONTINUES
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Our conversation series focusing on Ta-Nehisi Coates'
We Were Eight Years in Power has wrapped up, but the conversation on race and privilege has not.
UW-Madison journalism professor
Sue Robinson joins us
Thursday, March 7th at
6:30 PM to talk about how power and privilege shape public discourse - and why it's so hard to talk constructively about racial inequality. This program is co-sponsored by
Boswell Book Company, who will be selling copies of Robinson's book
Networked News, Racial Divides: How Power and Privilege Shape Public Discourse in Progressive Communities.
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Special Saturday: Music & Movement
Shake off the icicles and get the blood flowing at our Special Saturday for families with young children on
Saturday, February 2nd at
10:30 a.m.! Wisconsin Conservatory of Music joins us with sound and movement that builds brains and muscles.
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Game Night
Whether you prefer a strategic board game that pits you against other players, or like to play cooperatively, Game Night has something for you. Join your fellow game enthusiasts on
Thursday, February 14th at
6:00 p.m. Bring your own game to share, or play one provided by our resident game expert, Nick!
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The Room of Requirement
If you read our monthly newsletter, I suspect you're a person that knows the many possible roles the public library can play in a person's life. These roles may change over an individual's life span and with different life experiences. The library may be a location for a video job interview, a place to learn English, a space to meet another person with an energetic two-year old, or serve as a location to experience dignity, regardless of circumstances.
If you want to see a video documenting how the public library strives to inspire learning and strengthen communities, watch Ex Libris: The New York Public Library. Or read why the public library remains an essential part of the heart, mind, and soul of our country in The Library Book by Susan Orlean.
The staff at the Shorewood Public Library takes pride in providing you with exactly what you need, when you need it, be it a book, smile, study room, or respect.
Rachel Collins
Library Director
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A monthly update from the Friends of Shorewood Public Library
Write a Note Supporting Libraries
In conjunction with Library Legislative Day on Tuesday, February 12th, 2019, the Wisconsin Library Association is asking all library users to send handwritten notes to Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers and Wisconsin lawmakers, sharing your support of libraries.
The Friends of the Shorewood Public Library encourage library users to share their thoughts on why the Shorewood Public Library is important to them. Research shows that libraries are essential to literacy, democracy, and community-building - but your personal message will tell the story in a more special and impactful way!
Click here to learn how to reach out to your legislators.
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For even more recommendations, follow our staff blog and explore our curated booklists on all kinds of genres, topics, read-alikes and more.
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Residue by Michael McGarrity
Retired Santa Fe Police Chief, Kevin Kerney, becomes the prime suspect in a decades-old missing persons case. With the help of his wife, son, and a few trusted law enforcement cohorts, Kearney tries to prove his innocence and find out what really happened that fateful night. McGarrity keeps the pace fast and provides distinctive descriptions of all things New Mexico, from the green chile stew to the high mountain desert scrub.
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Head west in this humorous tale of two hired guns on a mission to kill a wayward prospector. On their journey, Charlie and Eli Sisters encounter a witch, a grizzly bear, cheaters, and a dentist who introduces them to oral hygeine. Award-winning author Patrick deWitt blends violence, whimsy, action, and personality in this quick read. The Sisters Brothers was recommended to me by one of our AM Book Club members, and I look forward to passing it on to more adventurous readers.
- Recomme
nded by Hayley
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Madhuri Vijay's visit on January 15th gave audience members insight into her stirring new novel.
A young woman sets off on an ill-advised journey to remote Kashmir, with very little idea of what she will encounter there. She is driven by grief and the possibility of redemption. What she finds there changes her, and the changes wrought by her are not all for the better. It's a sad tale that is lightened by beautiful description, pithy wit, and deep characters. It is sure to satisfy literary fiction fans.
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