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Library News

Jacob Edwards Library

November 2024

Library Hours


Monday & Thursday 9 am - 8 pm

Tuesday, Wednesday & Friday 9 am - 5 pm

Saturday 9am - 1 pm


Curbside pickup is available during library hours!


Please note: the Library will be CLOSED on

Monday, November 11th in observance of Veterans Day

Thursday 28th and Friday 29th for Thanksgiving

New Database Alert!


Use the Newspapers.com Northeast Collection to search 827 publications from New England, New Jersey and Delaware for news articles, obituaries, and more from 1690–2011.

Honor and explore Native American Heritage with this hoopla collection. Discover the voices and stories that showcase Native American experiences and traditions, and immerse yourself in Native American culture and history.


Start streaming here!

The BPL eCard is a Boston Public Library card that you can sign up for online, and which provides access to all online resources.


BPL eCards are available to anyone who lives, resides part-time to attend school, owns property, or works in Massachusetts.

Programming

JEL programs are always free and all are welcome!


Knitting with Sonya


Tuesday mornings

10:30 am - 12:30 pm

Reading Room


For all handcrafters!



Mindfulness Meditation with Iris

Fridays, November 1st, 8th, & 22nd

2:00 - 3:00 pm


The Jacob Edwards Library is pleased to host Iris Vega, certified Mindfulness Meditation teacher and mentor, to present a series of sessions.


Inviting Mindfulness Meditation into your daily routine is an opportunity to cultivate awareness and presence.


You may bring your Yoga mat if you prefer doing the practice lying down.


Sponsored by Friends of Jacob Edwards Library.

November Art Exhibit

Tre Amici Painting Group:

Bernadette Meade, Rosemary Rodio and MaryLu Garrow


Meet & Greet

Thursday, November 7th

6:30 - 7:30 pm


The Jacob Edwards Library is pleased to present the work of the Tre Amici Painting Group featuring artists Bernadette Meade, Rosemary Rodio and MaryLu Garrow.


Each week three friends gather to paint – here is their story and paintings.


Rose Rodio (Webster, MA)

"22 years ago, my friend, Mary Lu convinced me to take an acrylic painting class. When the class ended, we decided to get together once a week to paint. Several years ago, Bernie joined us and I gained a painting buddy and a friend. We critique each other’s paintings and enjoy each other’s company to a glass of wine and background music."


Mary Lu Garrow (Oxford, MA)

"I have enjoyed painting for over twenty years. The medium I use is acrylic, and my themes are varied and inspire joy in me. For me painting is a weekly get together with friends. It is both social and tranquil. It allows me to become immersed in shaping, blending and realizing contentment with my finished painting."


Bernie Meade (Southbridge, MA)

"Each week, I join my good friends in the creativity of painting. Upon returning to MA to live after retirement, I also returned to painting after more than thirty years. Rose and Mary Lu have taught me a lot through their unique talents. My favorite thing to paint is flowers and it is on my bucket list to become a botanical illustrator. Life is joy each week in our painting group."


Sponsored by Friends of Jacob Edwards Library.

Jumpin' Juba


Thursday, November 14th

6:30 - 7:30 pm


The Jacob Edwards Library is pleased to welcome Jumpin’ Juba, a Boston-based blues and roots music group. Jumpin’ Juba has played over one thousand shows in Massachusetts since its formation in 1998. The group is led by Steve Hurl, whose finger-style electric guitar skills, blues-inflected vocals, songwriting and arranging give the band much of its flavor.


The hour-long show at Jacob Edwards Library will feature both classic American blues and country, early rock & roll, and occasional Latin and Caribbean grooves. More info about the band and links to video clips can be found here.


Steve is joined by upright acoustic bassist Dave Lockeretz and Jumpin’ Juba’s longtime drummer Brian Flan.


Sponsored by the Southbridge Cultural Council. The Southbridge Cultural Council is a local agency funded by Mass Cultural Council, a state agency.

In November, the group will discuss Wandering Stars by Tommy Orange in honor of National Native American Heritage Month.


From the publisher:


"Colorado, 1864. Star, a young survivor of the Sand Creek Massacre, is brought to the Fort Marion Prison Castle, where he is forced to learn English and practice Christianity by Richard Henry Pratt, an evangelical prison guard who will go on to found the Carlisle Indian Industrial School, an institution dedicated to the eradication of Native history, culture, and identity. A generation later, Star's son, Charles, is sent to the school, where he is brutalized by the man who was once his father's jailer. Under Pratt's harsh treatment, Charles clings to moments he shares with a young fellow student, Opal Viola, as the two envision a future away from the institutional violence that follows their bloodlines. Oakland, 2018. Opal Viola Victoria Bear Shield is barely holding her family together after the shooting that nearly took the life of her nephew Orvil. From the moment he awakens in his hospital bed, Orvil begins compulsively googling school shootings on YouTube. He also becomes emotionally reliant on the prescription medications meant to ease his physical trauma. His younger brother, Lony, suffering from PTSD, is struggling to make sense of the carnage he witnessed at the shooting by secretly cutting himself and enacting blood rituals that he hopes will connect him to his Cheyenne heritage. Opal is equally adrift, experimenting with Ceremony and peyote, searching for a way to heal her wounded family."

Franco-American Authors: A Reading and Discussion


Thursday, November 21st

6:00 - 7:30 pm


The Jacob Edwards Library is pleased to present three Franco-American authors reading from their new books. All welcome! Memoirist Charlie Gargiulo and poets Jeri Theriault and Steven Riel will discuss how their culture informs their creative writing. The authors, from Maine and Massachusetts, give voice to the strong presence of Franco-Americans throughout New England.


There will be an opportunity to purchase books and have the authors sign copies.


Jeri Theriault’s recent awards include the 2023 Maine Arts Commission Literary Arts Fellowship, the 2023 Monson Arts Fellowship, and the 2022 NORward Prize. She was a finalist for both the William Matthews Prize and the Atlanta Review International Poetry Contest. Her poems and reviews have appeared in The Rumpus, The Texas Review, Plume, Résonance, Rust and Moth and many other publications. Her recent collections are Self-Portrait as Homestead, (M)other, and Radost. She is the editor of WAIT: Poems from the Pandemic. Jeri, also a visual artist, lives in South Portland, Maine.


Self-Portrait As Homestead focuses on family and heritage, specifically the Franco-American culture the poet experienced growing up in Waterville, Maine. "Homestead", a motif suggested by street addresses, becomes “household,” a woman’s place, and alludes to the confinement by role, home and religion of the women characters, and their pushing against those constraints.


Leslie Ullman has this to say about Self-Portrait as Homestead:

"These deft, spare poems reclaim the flare of self-ness that has been tamped in women over many generations, and their fresh wordplay and inventive forms make their renditions of grandmother, mother, and self-as-girl-morphing-to-elder all the more arresting. Every gesture flies off the page in its caress of language, also evoking the iconic loneliness of women in the speaker’s past and in history itself. The result? A redemptive empathy for self and ancestor, the well-earned gift of a generation of women who have paid the price of breaking free and now step forth to bear honest witness and break old patterns. Such stories cannot be told often enough. These poems do so bravely and in searingly honed phrases and images."


***


Following the destruction of Lowell's Little Canada, Charlie Gargiulo grew up in public housing. After serving in the military, he graduated summa cum laude from University of Massachusetts Lowell. Gargiulo became a legendary community and human rights activist and stopped forced displacement efforts like Little Canada from happening to others. In 2019, he was honored by the International Institute as one of the 100 most important figures in Lowell history who has worked on behalf of the city's immigrant population.


"Legends of Little Canada is a memoir told through the eyes of a 13 year old Charlie Gargiulo, who in the 1960's watched an urban renewal plan destroy his world by forcibly displacing his family and friends from their poor but tight-knit French-Canadian neighborhood in Lowell. The book gives witness to the final days of the community around Moody Street that Jack Kerouac recalled in many of his Lowell stories.


Charlie Gargiulo paints a picture, a ‘bookmovie’ to use a Kerouac phrase, of this young kid, his friends, his band of brothers, creating their own magic in this gritty town of Lowell... I can put my hand on this old heart of mine and safely say Kerouac himself would have laughed and cried and absolutely loved this book.”

- Kevin Ring, founder and editor of Beat Scene Magazine


***


Steven Riel is the author of two full-length collections of poetry: Edgemere and Fellow Odd Fellow. His chapbook Postcard from P-town was published as runner-up for the inaugural Robin Becker Chapbook Prize. His poems have appeared in numerous periodicals, including The Minnesota Review and International Poetry Review. He edits the Franco-American journal Résonance. He holds an MFA in Poetry from New England College.


Shapeshifting abounds in Steven Riel’s latest collection Edgemere, as this pro-feminist gay poet marshals a parade of female personas that includes Senator Elizabeth Dole, Joan of Arc, and The Supremes. Riel’s poems zigzag across liminal spaces not just between male/female and human/inhuman, but between those fallen from AIDS and survivors who grieve them.


According to the award-winning poet Joy Ladin, “Steven Riel's Edgemere is gorgeous, heartbreaking, and witty - often at the same time. With exquisite precision and extraordinary musicality, Riel traces the shimmering, fragile webs of love, experience, and culture that connect us to one another. From the inner life of bullied 'sissy boys' to the ravages of AIDS to inimitable pop culture reveries such as In Search of Della Street, Riel's language creates a poetic space in which the individual, sometimes idiosyncratic perspectives he explores open into vistas on what it means to be human.”


Sponsored by Friends of Jacob Edwards Library.

Staff Pick

Check out our "staff picks" display on the main floor!

Teen Corner

Teen Advisory Group


Wednesday, November 13th

3:00 - 4:00 pm


Open to Southbridge students/residents ages 12-18.


Join our Teen Advisory Group (TAG) and help us improve our library services for teens. At monthly TAG meetings, you will weigh in on library programs, services, and materials, earn volunteer hours, make new friends, and build your leadership skills.

November 2024


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Welcome to the Children's Page

November

2024




Saturday

November 2, 2024

10:30am-11:30am

Buildwave®


"Everyone is creative!"


Buildwave® participants prove this to themselves, building with wave after wave

of materials, guided by a high-energy audiovisual spectacle!

















NEW TIME

STARTING Nov 12 2024

at 9:30 am







Imagination Station


Mondays

6:30pm-7:30pm





Lego Club



Tuesdays

3:30pm - 4:30pm

Saturdays

10:30am-11:30am






Crafty Wednesday

All Day

Every Week







Board of Trustees Meeting


The next meeting will be held on Tuesday, November 26th at 12 pm.


Details will be available on the Town of Southbridge website, under Public Meetings Calendar, for all public meetings.


All meetings are open to the public.

The mission of the Friends of the Jacob Edwards Library is to be the advocacy and fundraising arm of the Library. We raise money for items such as library programs, books, subscriptions, museum pass memberships, and other materials, as needed. 


New members are always welcome! Our membership dues go directly toward supporting the Jacob Edwards Library.


The next meeting will be held on Tuesday, November 12th at 2 pm.


Wishing all our patrons and friends a Happy Thanksgiving!

See you at the library!


Jacob Edwards Library

508.764.5426

jelibrary@cwmars.org

Jacob Edwards Library | Website
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