Saturday 30 September 2017

GIVE ME LESBIANS IN LITERATURE

marcellahartwell:

sawyerblue:

jamjarsthebook:

wizardshark:

SPACE PIRATE LESBIANS

HOCKEY LESBIANS

HACKER LESBIANS

MOBSTER LESBIANS

CIA LESBIANS

DRAGON SLAYER LESBIANS

WIZARD LESBIANS

FARMER LESBIANS

MERCENARY LESBIANS

KUNG FU LESBIANS

GAMER RIVAL LESBIANS

BOXER LESBIANS

SPEAKEASY 1920S CHICAGO LESBIANS

JUST GIVE ME!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! LESBIANS WITH THE SAME VARIETY OF STORIES THAT CISHETS GET

MY BOOK HAS BODYGUARD LESBIANS

I RAISE YOU WITCH LESBIANS! 

Ok.. ok. I’m no lez-fiction expert like Dannika at the @lesbrary but I am totally here for wlw fiction visibility.

To google we go!

SPACE PIRATE LESBIANS

Hmm, striking out on the first prompt. Shit.

HOCKEY LESBIANS

HACKER LESBIANS

MOBSTER LESBIANS

CIA LESBIANS

DRAGON SLAYER LESBIANS

WIZARD LESBIANS

FARMER LESBIANS

MERCENARY LESBIANS

KUNG FU LESBIANS

  • Action and adventure. Definitely some kicking and punching. Maybe not kung-fu per se:  This is Devin Jones

GAMER RIVAL LESBIANS

BOXER LESBIANS

  • See HOCKEY LESBIAN for sports themed books above

SPEAKEASY 1920S CHICAGO LESBIANS

  • Also features mafia themes! May not be set in Chicago! Speakeasy 


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Friday 29 September 2017

"Well-run libraries are filled with people because what a good library offers cannot be easily found..."

Well-run libraries are filled with people because what a good library offers cannot be easily found elsewhere: an indoor public space in which you do not have to buy anything in order to stay.

In the modern state there are very few sites where this is possible. The only others that come readily to my mind require belief in an omnipotent creator as a condition for membership. It would seem the most obvious thing in the world to say that the reason why the market is not an efficient solution to libraries is because the market has no use for a library. But it seems we need, right now, to keep re-stating the obvious. There aren’t many institutions left that fit so precisely Keynes’s definition of things that no one else but the state is willing to take on. Nor can the experience of library life be recreated online. It’s not just a matter of free books. A library is a different kind of social reality (of the three dimensional kind), which by its very existence teaches a system of values beyond the fiscal.



- Zadie Smith (via hglteens)

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Wednesday 27 September 2017

Canada’s access-to-information system has worsened under Trudeau government: report

Canada’s access-to-information system has worsened under Trudeau government: report:

allthecanadianpolitics:

Canada’s access-to-information system has only gotten worse under Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government, and a new Liberal bill intended to fix the problems has “worrisome” elements, a new report has found.

A freedom-of-information audit from News Media Canada, a national association representing the Canadian news media industry, gives the federal government a failing grade for timely disclosure of information. It also said its performance in this year’s audit “was even worse than in the latter years of the former Stephen Harper government.”

“The results are not encouraging and show a system that seems as broken as ever,” said a report on the audit by journalist and professor Fred Vallance-Jones and Emily Kitagawa, a freelance journalist and social worker.

Nathan Cullen, the NDP democratic reform critic, called the findings “shameful.”

“It’s got to be a bad day for Liberals when Stephen Harper was more open to the Canadian public than they are,” he said.

Continue Reading.



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positivedoodles:[Image description: drawing of a green bird...



positivedoodles:

[Image description: drawing of a green bird holding a blue book and a brown to-go coffee cup and saying “I wish you all the books you want to read and all the coffee you want to drink.” in an orange speech bubble.]



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the-lily-blooms-late:That weather guy in the Sorcerer’s Stone...



the-lily-blooms-late:

That weather guy in the Sorcerer’s Stone who clearly knows what’s going on. Also he’s Ted Tonks



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Sunday 24 September 2017

Monday 18 September 2017

Sunday 17 September 2017

Saturday 16 September 2017

bookmania: Book Mania drops by Manila International Book Fair...









bookmania:

Book Mania drops by Manila International Book Fair 2017.

It was incredible!!



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Thursday 14 September 2017

mishpacha: bakrua: captainsnoop: so… you know how in like 90% of zombie fiction it’s bites that...

mishpacha:

bakrua:

captainsnoop:

so… you know how in like 90% of zombie fiction it’s bites that kill you and make you a zombie, right?

okay so

i want you to get anything denim from your house and just fucking bite it. bite it as hard as you can

chances are you can’t bite through the denim very well

so, here’s what i’m thinking:

zombie apocalypse?

all-denim outfit.

the anti-zombie juniform

even in a zombie apocalypse you’re not catching me wearing a double denim 

The true apocalypse would be those fashion choices.



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amileinmymoccs: Hello Tumblr! Recently I’ve been listening to...



amileinmymoccs:

Hello Tumblr!

Recently I’ve been listening to some great podcasts and to my surprise, there are a lot of First Nations related ones! This is so inspiring to me, as I myself have a radio show on my Reserve and I think these are great topics to mention. Also one day, when I get my own website/blog up and running, I hope to make my own podcasts too! If you’re interested in listening to some that are Native-related, here are 7 that I recommend.

1. CBC’s New Fire by Lisa Charleyboy

Lisa is a blogger and social media trailblazer for young Native women. Also known as Urban Native Girl, Lisa talks about a wide variety of issues Natives face in a urban, modern day society. This is also a CBC Radio podcast so it’s great quality.

2. CBC’s Unreserved by Rosanna Deerchild

Unreserved touches on history, current issues and reconciliation in her CBC podcasts. She also celebrates successful and inspiring First Nations authors, educators,  athletes, and musicians.  

3. Kanata Pod by Indian & Cowboy

Kanata Pod is a new series that features activists and creators focused on the next 150 years of Canada. They also talk about Native representation in the community and in major media

4. Stories From the Land

Stories from the land is a wide collection of stories from different individuals from different First Nations communities across Canada. With these stories, they aim to connect all tribes with teachings and philosophy 

5. Red Man Laughing by Ryan McMahon 

Ryan McMahon shows the importance of Native humour in his podcasts. It’s something we Natives can all connect with and learn from. While being humorous, Ryan also tackles important issues such as reconciliation, youth, and families.

6. Media Indigena by Rick Harp

Media Indigena is a weekly program where a roundtable of Indigenous people talk about current issues in society. They talk about huge issues the mainstream media is too afraid to talk about and they keep it very current.

7. Missing and Murdered: Who Killed Alberta Williams?

Also a CBC podcast, this podcast is important as it goes in depth into one of the cases of the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women in Canada. It shows first hand of the ignorance and tragedy towards the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women cases. In this case, Alberta Williams was found dead along the “Highway of tears” (A highway in BC where many, many other Indigenous women were found murdered) in 1989 and they’ve never found her killer. Nearly thirty years later, the family and a retired cop find new evidence into solving this heartbreaking case.

There you have it, that’s what I’ve been listening to lately! I haven’t listened to every single episode yet but that’s what I’ll be doing for the next week or two lol. If you’ve listened to these as well let me know what you think! Also if you have any suggestions let me know :)

Bye for now!

Xxxx

Ryan McMahon recently did some really cool work with the older kids at the Piikani rez near where I live. It was this sleepover at the school where the kids learned about copyright and copyright infringement from an Indigenous perspective, the difference between cultural appropriation vs appreciation, and how to decide what is ok to share, with who, in what medium. 

When my mom mentioned to him that I was going to be working as a librarian at a school with a fairly large Indigenous population and would be thrilled to receive any suggestions of good resources/activities to do with the kids he got her a copy of the student and teacher versions of the project handout for me to get a better understanding of the Indigenous perspective as well as get some ideas for possible activities I could do, and also offered to meet up for a coffee chat if I had time before moving for my new job.

He’s really nice, does some really neat and varied work with kids and teens, and his sense of humour’s on point, I highly recommend.


Btw, @amileinmymoccs, I don’t know if you already know, but Kanata Pod, Red Man Laughing, and Stories from the Land are part of an all-Indigenous podcast network, Indian & Cowboy. When you’re at the point of actually getting your podcast up and running they might be an interesting place to look into a partnership.

Plus if you haven’t heard of them they have a few other podcasts for you to check out. ;)



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Wednesday 13 September 2017

Hey, Writers

theactualcluegirl:

thescalexwrites:

Yes, you. You, with the pen in hand, the laptop atop your lap. You, with the scribbles and the scrawls. You with the tappity-taps and clickity-clicks. You, with the eraser marks. You, with the red and green squiggles. You, who knows a piece of written paper equals a little more than half a typed page. You, who knows 50,000 words is about 100 regular pages. You, who doesn’t know how to spell a word because you’ve only heard it spoken, but never seen it written. You, who stuffed your work in the attic drawer. You, who saved your story inside a chain of files so nobody would read it by accident.

Your writing is important. Don’t give up.

Your writing is important even if you’re not one of those who has the energy and social skills to make yourself popular.

Your writing is important even if you’re shy and can’t really introduce yourself well, or broadcast your achievements to the world so people know how to find you.

Your writing is important even if you accidentally offended that one really popular person and now nobody who likes them will read your stuff, let alone comment.

Your writing is important even if you aren’t good at writing to fic prompts, and never make half of a ficlet bingo card, and are afraid to join Big Bangs or gift exchanges.

Your writing is important even if there’s only a handful of people who like your ship/fandom/angle on such and such a character, and they’re always the only ones who talk to you about it.

Your writing is important even if the people you read never bother to read your work, and they never say why.

Your writing is important because You. Are. Writing!  Not because you are shilling it everywhere and tapdancing to win the attention of readers who might possibly leave you a comment but only if they think you’re cute.

Your writing is important because it brings something into the world that was not previously there.  Because it gives you a voice that outlasts you.  Because someone, somewhere, needs to read what you are writing, even if they never scratch up the courage to say so.  Your writing is important because every time you do it, even if you don’t publish a word of what you write, you are learning something new.  Something that will make the next thing you write even better.

Your writing, my darlings, is important.

Because.

The things that have been said are all more important than my addition, but as a librarian and English major I feel the need to point out that readership size has no relation to the importance of a work of art (literary or otherwise):

- Many, if not most, of the works we consider to be iconic classics nowadays weren’t seen as such when they were first written, or even during the artists’ lifetimes (the same is true for visual and auditory art – Van Gogh, for example, was so unappreciated in his time that pretty much the only person who’d buy his works was his brother; now his art is one of the most beloved and well-recognized in the world).

Some literary examples of books that didn’t do well at first include Moby Dick, The Lord of the Rings, Brave New World, Wuthering Heights, The Great Gatsby, and The Handmaid’s Tale

Additionally, it took a LOT of tries before J.K. Rowling found someone willing to publish the Harry Potter series.

- Then there’s the issue that works that works that aren’t famous or popular can unwittingly become priceless to future generations. This has largely to do with the fact that stories, whether non-fiction, realistic, or fantastical ones, are treasure troves for understanding generations past; their beliefs, morals, fears, clothing, daily life, language, relationships with members of their own culture vs outsiders, etc can all be gleaned from things people write and how they write it.

There are tons of writers that few people are even aware exist (let alone have taken the time to read their work) whose impact on modern society and/or what we know about the past can’t be understated.

In fact, the works that make historians everywhere weep with joy are the ones that definitely had little to no audience, such as stories/letters/diary entries/memoirs with tons of description (which to a contemporary person would’ve been a snore fest), law books, dictionaries, manuals, and the list goes on.

-And in equal turns, many works which were once wildly popular are now largely ignored if not outright forgotten by the general public.

For example, The Life of Olaudah Equiano: Or Gustavus Vassa, the African was instrumental in helping abolish slavery in the UK, but unless you study the history of abolitionism/slavery or are a historian who studies the late 1700s, you’ve likely never heard about it, and if you have, you probably haven’t read it. 

Like, the only reason I’ve read it was that we were required to for one of my classes when we were looking at memoirs and personal accounts from the late 1700s. And even then the only reason that particular book was chosen was because my prof was a total “sjw” hippie who took every opportunity to bring intersectionality into his classes (I miss his classes, they were great). 

On Amazon it’s #181,844 on their best-sellers e-book list at the moment I’m writing this, despite having sold like hotcakes when it was first published and having a gigantic social impact. 

And you know all those nonsense poems by Lewis Carrol? They were all based on popular songs and rhymes from the time they were written (around the 1860s ish). They’re not nearly as nonsensical as people think they are – they’re basically pop culture spoofs used for satire. 

“How Doth the Little Crocodile”, for example, was a spoof of a moralistic poem 1860s kids were required to memorize at school called “Against Idleness and Mischief”, which begins with the line “How doth the little busy bee”. 

People think the dude was just writing stuff while high as a kite because all those popular references which everyone knew and instantly recognized are now largely forgotten by the public and no one cares about them anymore other than for the fact they’re the source for Carrol’s work.



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Tuesday 12 September 2017

Signal boost, please.

paddysnuffles:

paddysnuffles:

For those of you who aren’t aware, there’s a massive wildfire bigger than Prince Edward Island that’s crossed over from BC into Southern Alberta.

The area’s mainly comprised of villages and small towns (mine has 3,000 people) and there’s a lot of confusion and stress going on about how to keep up with evacuation notices for different communities, so please spread this around in case anyone from the Crowsnest area happens to come across this.


How to keep up-to-date on the Kenow Wildfire

Alberta Wildfire

Alberta Government Emergency Updates

Parks Canada

Alberta Emergency Alert System

How to sign up for Alberta Emergency Alerts: click here

How to sign up for Canadian Wildland Fire Information System: click here


Preparing in case your area gets an evacuation notice: 

Get Prepared

Last Minute steps to prepare your property


Be aware that the time you are given to get your things can be anywhere from 10 minutes to 1 hour depending on the speed and distance of the fire.

Get your stuff ready in advance so you’re not scrambling in a panic last minute, because the evacuation folks don’t joke around and will not give you extra time.

@allthecanadianpolitics , if you could pass this on that’d be great. :)

An update on Pincher Creek:

This morning someone told me they could see the fire from the ridge by their house.

I was also told that today’s wind was helping to push the fire back a little (but you know how quick that can change…).

3 teachers at the school I work at had to live in the middle of the day because the area they live in got an evacuation notice.

One of the school’s bus routes was cancelled and parents had to pick up their kids because their area had been evacuated.

All the kids are super stressed, even the little ones. As I worked in the library I heard quite a few “I’m stressed and I don’t know how to handle it” tantrums  from the younger kids today out in the hallway.

The smoke wasn’t as bad today due to the wind, but it was pretty smoky whenever the wind died down



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itsbio: nightshadeis: 4sistar: 12drakon: hackmydungeon: somethingdnd: niteling: i just found...

Heeey, fellow librarians, what’s the size of the labels used for book spines? It’s 1-inch x 1...

Heeey, fellow librarians, what’s the size of the labels used for book spines? 

It’s 1-inch x 1 ½, right? (I used to know this but I’m completely blanking right now and I need to request some for when I finally get to cataloguing the piles and piles of new books). :p



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libraryland, librarylife, libraries, book labels, Quick Question, just wondering

Sunday 10 September 2017

I’m having the best problem a librarian for a school/small library can have: people keep dropping by...

I’m having the best problem a librarian for a school/small library can have: people keep dropping by with book donations, and they’re all new and good quality!

I already have boxes and boxes of books to catalogue, as well as the books stored in the cubbies behind my desk (which run the entire length of the desk!), and a few more boxes on top of the cubbies.

I’m certainly not complaining! xD



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libraryland, librarylife, school library, I like it, pincher creek, aw yiss, best problem ever, canada, alberta

advice for college freshmen:

thecottonproject:

tolkien your essays; hemingway your emails

essays are tangents and rabbit holes and diversions, woven together with lots of unnecessary descriptive words to demonstrate a proficient understanding of a subject you were meant to research in more depth but did not, in place of other pursuits, or could not, because you chose your subject poorly, and so now you must flesh out an arduous ten-page research paper and convince your scrutinizing instructor that you are well-versed in the topic at hand.

emails are blunt. say what you mean. be specific. end it quickly.



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Saturday 9 September 2017

bklynlibrary: A reminder that libraries are a refuge for...



bklynlibrary:

A reminder that libraries are a refuge for learning and civic engagement. We’re here to provide you with resources, community, and of course, books to keep you informed and active.



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Thursday 7 September 2017

dianatsukos: hedaclara: hedaclara: hedaclara: Guys, the first images of Irma’s level of...

dianatsukos:

hedaclara:

hedaclara:

hedaclara:

Guys, the first images of Irma’s level of devastation are coming out of Barbuda and it’s heartbreaking. The President of Barbuda says that 90% of the island is uninhabitable, upwards of 60% of the TOTAL population are now homeless because the hurricane destroyed virtually every building and home on the island, and that the estimated damage is valued at no less than $200 million dollars. That’s money a small island like that doesn’t have. They’re saying it’s going to take years to rebuild and Hurricane Jose is right behind Irma on the same path which means they could be hit twice. This is just one of the islands being affected.

Please, show up for the Caribbean like you did for Houston. There is no safety net for any of these islands including mine. They’ll rely entirely on foreign aid. Find local charities or global trustworthy charities (NOT the Red Cross) and make a donation asking them to aid the Caribbean. There’s whole countries being turned into rubble with no financial means to repair their infrastructures. They’re going to need help.

For the hundreds of people replying or in my inbox asking “Why not the Red Cross?!”:

  1. Google is free.
  2. Why The Red Cross Faces Backlash on Harvey Relief Efforts [Washington Post]
  3. Red Cross Built Exactly 6 Homes For Haiti With Nearly Half A Billion Dollars In Donations [Huffington Post]
  4. Red Cross Exec Doesn’t Know What Portion Of Donations Go To Harvey Relief [NPR]
  5. Report: Red Cross Spent 25 Percent Of Haiti Donations On Internal Expenses [NPR]
  6. Seriously, guess where I found all of those in two solid minutes of searching? Google. Even better, they didn’t charge me a penny for it. 

Stop wanting things to be spoonfed to you. While you waited for someone to link you to sources, you could’ve done it yourself and already donated to people who desperately need it. 

Because people are also asking where to donate instead of the Red Cross:

  1. MercyCorps [89% rating on Charity Navigator]
  2. Heart To Heart International [97% rating on Charity Navigator]
  3. Direct Relief [100% rating on Charity Navigator]
  4. Habitat For Humanity [83% rating on Charity Navigator // Because with islands like Barbuda 90% destroyed and French St. Martin said to be 95% destroyed then people are going to need homes built]
  5. Catholic Relief Services [90% rating on Charity Navigator // For those who would want to donate to a religious organization]

If there is a note or comments section on their donation page please do let them know that you would want your money to go to their Caribbean relief efforts. Houston and Florida have the US government backing them in whatever they will need but these islands will have very little except for these charities to fall back if they have any hope of rebuilding what seems to be entire countries in some cases. For the people who lost everything even a few bucks will go a long way. 

For the most part I would suggest staying away from privately launched GoFundMes unless you know the person directly. Ultimately, you just never know where those funds are going to end up and if your money will be used wisely. Sure, the same can be said for charity organizations but at least there is a better shot at possibly helping through them. The five listed above are world known and have been studied by charity oversight organizations. It’s as close to perfect as we’re going to get.

Please donate if you can! [ Here’s ] a list of essentials to donate.

This’ll be queued on repeat for the next few hours.



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mx-indie: @EVERYONE IN ORANGE PARK, MIDDLEBURG AND FLEMING ISLAND, FLORIDA IF YOU DON’T HAVE WATER,...

Wednesday 6 September 2017

Today I was once again helped by Janine and the lovely Grade 7 girls who helped me yesterday.Lia,...

Today I was once again helped by Janine and the lovely Grade 7 girls who helped me yesterday.

Lia, one of the girls was extremely concerned about having time to go to the learning commons to get books.

Lia: *anxiously* Do the Grade 7s have library period this year? Because I didn’t see it on my schedule.

Me: I’m not sure, I haven’t gotten my schedule yet.

Lia: Oh, okay. *pause* …Will you be open after school?

Me: Yes.

Lia: *sagging in relief* Oh, good! You’ll see me and Marcy all the time after school, then. I love to read! I read all the time!

Marcy: *somewhere behind a pile of books* ME TOO!



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learning commons, libraryland, librarylife, canada, canadian libraries, school library

Tuesday 5 September 2017

"This ENTIRE pile is either about mermaids or fairies. *pause* I used to read these a lot when I was..."

“This ENTIRE pile is either about mermaids or fairies. *pause* I used to read these a lot when I was younger. I think I still have some of them, unless I donated them all to the library already.”

- One of the Grade 7 girls who were helping me sort through the books for the school learning commons

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learning commons, libraryland, librarylife, canada, canadian libraries, alberta, pincher creek

A tired but satisfied ramble about my day

Today I had three helpers with getting the learning commons set up:

Janine, an Educator Assistant and fellow Brazilian, who scanned the books as they were sorted into piles

And two thirteen-year-old girls whose moms are teachers at the school.

Good god, those girls worked hard! They sorted through not one, not two, not three, but 13 boxes. Hot damn.

On retrospect, I think it’s kinda great to have some of the kids help decide what’s in good condition, what needs repair, and what should be weeded out. Sometimes we adults can be overly picky about aspects of a damaged book that kids couldn’t care less about while not notice something they’d consider major. Different priorities, I guess. 

And this way they also get a say in what might be a bit mangled but they really love and think we should keep until we have a replacement, and ultimately they get a say on their library’s collection.



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mlis, school library, learning commons, pincher creek, canada, canadian libraries, alberta

lesbiantwinpeaks:

Monday 4 September 2017

paddysnuffles: oshkeet: writer-robin: Christopher Tolkien...



paddysnuffles:

oshkeet:

writer-robin:

Christopher Tolkien explains why his father, JRR Tolkien, wrote down “The Hobbit” in the first place, when it was originally intended to be an oral bedtime story for his children.

(found in the forward to The Hobbit Fiftieth Anniversary Edition, 1987)

‘Damn the boy’

when the fanbase is being mouthy

kids are the most brutal critics. lol



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cancerously: alright but what if every single one of the harry potter main characters eventually...

cancerously:

alright but what if every single one of the harry potter main characters eventually have a kid that they name “Fred” without knowing anyone else also did this (so now there’s fred potter, fred weasley, fred longbottom, etc) except they’re friends so all their kids are friends and as soon as one of them gets in trouble someone’s yelling “FRED” and 3-6 kids are turning around going “WHAT DID I DO” and I think that’s exactly the kind of chaotic legacy Fred would’ve liked to leave



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thelibraryperson: diebrarian: sepulchrally-handsome: microaffec...







thelibraryperson:

diebrarian:

sepulchrally-handsome:

microaffections:

This our library here in Spring, Texas, in the aftermath of Hurricane Harvey. When I think of people who have lost everything, I hate how sad I feel about a library. But this is where I’ve taken my kids for story time since they were infants. It’s where I’ve met my closest mom friends. It’s a place that means the world to me.
But beyond that, this is a place that my community needs. It offers free educational programming, resources, information, language classes, Internet, human connection, a place that is clean and safe, free lunches for kids in the summer when school is out. It’s not just a bunch of books. For some people, the library is their only access to these things.

You can donate to the Texas Library Association’s disaster recovery fund here:

http://ift.tt/2xGuqwE

This may not be as pressing a need as shelter and food right now, but in the coming future, libraries will be critical centers of information-sharing to their communities.  They will help people connect to all the resources they need to rebuild their lives.  

Thank you! Reblogging with the link.

Texas Library Association’s Disaster Relief and Support for Libraries  



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Saturday 2 September 2017

accio-shitpost: it’s september the first, 2017 somewhere out there in king’s cross today, harry...

accio-shitpost:

it’s september the first, 2017

somewhere out there in king’s cross today, harry potter will tell albus severus potter that it’s okay to be a slytherin if that’s what the hat sorts him as

later today, albus will bump into a kid in an empty compartment that he’ll end up sharing his hogwarts life with, and his life after that

teddy lupin and victorie weasley will kiss on the station platform and be interrupted by james potter. hugo granger-weasley and lily luna potter will chat about what will happen when they get to go to hogwarts. rose granger-weasley is starting her first year too, ready to beat albus in every subject

it’s been nineteen years (and a bit) since the battle of hogwarts

the next generation is going to hogwarts to make their own stories



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Borrower returns library book 67 years late – but escapes $24,000 fine

Borrower returns library book 67 years late – but escapes $24,000 fine

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new zealand, libraries, asia pacific, books, world news