December LibraryOur Library Cafe is open 24/7; the Welcome Mat is always out.
Do come in from daily chores and spend some time with us.
Pull up your chair, bring your coffee or wine and tell us,
How You Celebrate the December Holidays
Note the "Topics for the Day" - We want to hear all about it.
And please, continue to share your library news in addition to these holiday topics.
Let's make the library a bustling place to be this month. December 1-3: - Do you carve wood, knit, crochet or sew? Have you spent the last year
making things for your family? Share your talents with us! How about a photo?
December 3: - The First Sunday in December,
Advent begins - do you hang an Advent calendar or read from a special Advent book?
December 4-7: - Do you always have something special to eat on Christmas Eve? Or Christmas morning?
How about a recipe?December 6: - Today is the
Feast of St Nickolas - Do you do anything special for the day?
December 7: -
Pearl Harbor Remembrance - Do you 'remember' anyone who died during WWII? Have you ever visited Pearl Harbor?
December 8-10: - What goes on at your home every year as you prepare for the holidays—
what traditions take place-come heck or high water!
December 11-13: - Are you
gifting someone a book this year? What was the
best book you ever received? Do you have a favorite Book that you will give this year?
December 12: The
First Day of Hanukkah - Will you be sharing a traditional meal? What is your favorite Hanukkah food? Is your Menorah a family keepsake or a newer one?
December 14: -
Santa Lucia Feast day (Sankta Lucia in Swedish), Do you make and serve for breakfast Lucia buns?
December 14-16: - What's your
favorite holiday sweet or your favorite holiday dessert? While reading are you in the habit of eating sweets? What story included characters eating a memorable sweet?
December 17-19: - What
movies or TV programs do you never miss as Christmas approaches? Tell us
why it is so special for you!
December 19: The
Last Day of Hanukkah - Do you have a family
recipe for latkes that you can share? Do you remember when you were a child how your family prepared the meal to celebrate Hanukkah? Who in your family lite the
Menorah candles?
December 20-22: - What is your
favorite book with a holiday theme that you must read every year? Did you find and read a new books with a holiday theme this year? Did you visit a Bookstore decorated for the holidays?
December 21: The First Day of Winter -
The Winter Solstice - Do you do something to celebrate the start of more sunlight banishing the darkness of the past year?
December 23: - As a child was there an
annual event you attended and do you still attend that event? What is your
favorite Holiday Carol or Hymn or Song?
December 24-25: -
Christmas Eve and Christmas Day - Will you still be wrapping or baking on Christmas Eve - is there a special meal you usually prepare and do you open gifts on Christmas Eve or on Christmas Day? Are you home or visiting friends or family this year? Will there be a special Christmas day meal? What special thing have you planned for Christmas Day evening after such a full day?
December 26-28: - What Decoration did you see or make that you will
best remember? What will be your
best memory from this year's Holidays? Did you
receive as a gift a book? Are you saving it for later or will you read it immediately?
December 29-31: - When do you take down your decorations? Are you
making a reading list for next year? Which book from your list will you read first?
Everyone is welcome! As the month of December goes on there will be additional topic question every couple of days - We start with our first topical question on Sunday, November, 26th through Tuesday the 28th - on the 29th we pickup and share the next topic and so forth.
During the month there will be special days that we will note as additional topics. Please do not jump ahead - the next nearly 2 weeks are shown so that y'all get the jest of what we are doing this year.
Again, the Library as usual continues with this Holiday/December theme an addition.
Rosemary, I have never heard of Chimamaanda Nogozi Adichie. Here is a link of her speaking that tells much about herself.
https://www.npr.org/2013/09/20/186303292/what-are-the-dangers-of-a-single-storyHere is another link of her blog.
https://www.chimamanda.com/about-chimamanda/She sounds very interesting, and I may give her books a try.
Happy Hanukkah, to all who observe this glorious festival.
Hanukkah makes me think of cherry blossoms. In my mind's eye I see the cherry trees in full bloom around the Tidal Basin in Washington, at the Jefferson Memorial. It's long ago, in the past, and I've found an empty bench under a cherry tree, so I sit down to peruse my new book:
Seasons Of Our Joy, A New-Age Guide To The Jewish Holidays, by Arthur Waskow. At the time when I was taking a college course in Advanced Yiddish. My retirement project. I was in the chapter on Hanukkah when a half-dozen cherry petals fluttered down and landed on the page I was reading. They've been there ever since - a bit faded, alas, but still very evocative of a wonderful feeling of celebration.
Come to think of it, my Yiddish has turned a bit rusty, somewhat like the cherry blossoms in my book.
l'chayim