April 2023
National Library Week:
April 23-29, 2023
Spring is in the air, which can only mean one thing...National Library Week is soon!

Be sure to join us in the library the week of April 23-29 for our annual celebration, where we'll be handing out information about the library, as well as giveaways, and the chance to win a prize in our raffle.

Look out for more information coming soon!
New Print Books
New Ebooks
Featured new additions to our ebook collections:


  • How to be a Coffee Bean: 111 Life-Changing Ways to Create Positive Change by Jon Corgon & Damon West | Access via O'Reilly


  • Praxis Core 2023-2024 For Dummies, 4th Edition by Carla C. Kirkland & Chan Cleveland | Access via O'Reilly


How to access: To access O'Reilly titles select your institution as "Not Listed" and enter your academic email address ending in .edu. Oxford Scholarship Online, Wiley, Springer, and Taylor & Francis titles are available automatically while connected to the RHEC network.
Featured Resource:
Disability in the Modern World
Disability in the Modern World is a landmark online collection that fills the gap in academic literature about the community and contributions of people who experience disability, with a comprehensive and international set of resources to enrich study in a wide range of disciplines from media studies to philosophy. Disability in the Modern World includes primary sources, supporting materials, archives, documentaries, and interviews. The content is essential for teaching and research not only in the growing discipline of disability history and disability studies, but also in history, media, the arts, political science, education, and other areas where the contributions of the disability community are typically overlooked. 

How to access: if you're using the RHEC network, via wired connection or wi-fi, you automatically have access.
This Month's Display:
National Poetry Month
Did you know April is National Poetry Month?

Library staff are celebrating by displaying some of our favorite poetry collections! As well as several new titles to explore.

Stop by today and find your new favorite!
Special Event:
Poetry Reading at Raleigh Court Branch Library
Join us on Saturday, April 8th at 11:00 a.m. for “Poetry Café,” featuring readings from five local celebrated poets at the Raleigh Court Branch of Roanoke Public Libraries to celebrate National Poetry Month. Sponsored by Roanoke Public Libraries, Virginia Tech Roanoke Center, and the Roanoke Higher Education Center, the event is free and open to the public.

In addition to scheduled readings, Poetry Café will also include an open mic segment, where the community is encouraged to share their own work!

Featured poets will include T.J. Anderson III, Bryan "Harvest Blaque" Hancock, Dionte "Taye The Truth" Hall, Jeanne Larsen, and Meighan Sharp. Read more about the poets here.

Stop by for some free coffee, food from Scratch Biscuit Company, and hear some of the most talented poets in the city!
Staff Pick of the Month
by Warsan Shire
(PR6119.H518 B55 2022)

Warsan Shire may be a familiar name if you've ever seen or heard the 2016 visual album Lemonade by Beyonce, in which Shire wrote all the spoken poetry. She again collaborated with Beyonce in 2020 for the musical film Black is King.

In her first full-length collection, Shire explores themes of strained mother-and-daughter relationships, the experiences of refugees and immigrants, Black womanhood, and adolescence. Many of the poems are absolutely heartbreaking. My favorite in the collection is "Home," where Shire, who is a Somali British writer born in Nairobi, writes about the impossible choices refugees are forced to confront:

No one leaves home unless home is the mouth of a shark. You only
run for the border when you see the whole city running as well.
The boy you went to school with, who kissed you dizzy behind the
old tin factory, is holding a gun bigger than his body. You only
leave home when home won't let you stay.

The subject matter and themes in Bless the Daughter Raised By a Voice in Her Head can be painful, but the collection is beautifully crafted, impactful, and accessible.

Helpful hint to readers: there is a short glossary at the back of the collection listing non-English words that you may want to refer to from time to time!
Review by Jessica Yopp, Library Associate