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Meet Ryan

Ryan Fucs, BookMARK Driver

We are excited to introduce Ryan Fucs as the new BookMARK driver! We look forward to seeing what his attention to detail and willingness to jump right in and help will do for the Outreach Team.

How long have you worked with the County?
I just started working for the county close to a month and a half ago

Where are you from originally?
Sioux Falls, South Dakota

What are you most passionate about?
Learning, literacy, and humanism. And East European filmmaking, especially from the Czech Republic, Romania, and Hungary.

Do you have a hobby?
Early last year I was awarded an artist microgrant, which has enabled me to learn all the ins and outs of film photography and film development. I enjoy shooting a variety of subjects, but I am especially drawn to street photography and candid portraiture.

When you were little, what was your dream job?
Detective. There’s still time.

What was the best part of your week/weekend?
Dancing with my girlfriend.

If your life was a song, what would the title be?
“(What a) Wonderful World” by Sam Cooke.

What is the weirdest thing you’ve ever eaten?
Grilled nopales (cactus paddles) or Tatarský Biftek (raw ground beef and raw egg on toast).

What’s your favorite TV Show?
Twin Peaks. Oh, and just one more thing: Columbo.

What is your favorite thing to spend money on?
Film and books. Lots and lots and lots of books. I like to read a lot of different non-fiction, especially philosophy and sociology, but my fixation lately has been, fittingly, the relationship between money/credit/debt/commercialization and philosophy. And yet, it can’t seem to explain why I spend so much money on books.

What’s the most interesting thing you’ve learned recently?
The German word for “debt” (Schulden) is derived from the German root Schuld, meaning “guilt.”  

New Easy Readers Bring Joy to Kids!

New Easy Readers Bring Joy to Kids!

If your child is a beginning reader, you know the joy of finding easy readers that get them excited. We have a lot of new options, and are highlighting six of them!

The Fix-Its: Nail Need Help by Sarah Lynne Reul

Cover of The Fix-Its Nail Needs Help. Cartoon tools and wood are on set on a blue background.

Have a kid who loves science and engineering? This STEM-based easy reader introduces kids to Nail and Hammer. Nail is stuck, and Hammer wants to help, but he seems to only make things worse!


Ayudo by Joe Cepeda

Cover of Ayudo. Boy in center of cover, skipping on green grass, with a canteen slung over his body.

Ayudo finds a canteen, and finds out his superpower is helping everyone he meets! This Spanish-language easy reader is perfect for Spanish-speaking families and for those learning Spanish.

LEGO© City: Meet the Astronaut by Steve Foxe

Cover of LEGO City Meet the Astronaut. LEGO minifigure astronaut, standing on planet, with satellite floating by him.

Kids love LEGO©, and an easy reader featuring their favorite building blocks is always fun to read! Friends Madison and Billy interview astronaut Captain Momentous and learn all about careers in space exploration.

On wheels! by Ethan Long

Cover of Horse and Buggy On Wheels! Orange background, Horse and Buggy riding on skateboard, wearing helmets and pads.

Horse and Buggy is a great series with laugh-out-loud stories and pictures. In this book, Horse and Buggy get all of their safety equipment on and try out a skateboard, with hilarious results.

Words are magic!  by Zaila Avant-garde

Cover of Words are Magic! Young black girl waving a magic wand, with a background of stars and rainbows.

Zaila Avant-garde is a former winner of the Scripps Spelling Bee, who has written a book about the joys of letters and words. This is perfect for kids just learning to read, with rhyming text and pictures that help them decode the story.

This is Hulk by Anthony J. Lee

Cover of This Is Hulk. The Hulk dominates the cover, running towards you with brings and rocks flying behind him.

Who doesn’t love the Hulk? This easy reader shares Bruce Banner’s early years as a scientist and how he became the Hulk. Reluctant readers and Marvel lovers alike will devour this book!

If none of these appeal to your child, don’t worry! We have more (a lot more). Visit your favorite library branch today to check out easy readers.

Mary Beth Adams is the Community Engagement Librarian for Alamance County Public Libraries. She can be reached at madams@alamancelibraries.org.

Women’s History Month Picks

Since March is Women’s History Month, we’re sharing some of the Historical Fiction books that were published in the last year by women, about women in history!

Becoming Madame Secretary cover. Back of woman walking down a sidewalk/street, with the Capitol building in the distance, and a black car with a chauffeur in front of her.

Becoming Madam Secretary by Stephanie Dray

Frances Perkins arrived in New York in the early 1900s with the conviction that she could make a difference for women and children working in horrible conditions in factories. She ultimately was named Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Secretary of Labor, and was instrumental in establishing many New Deal policies, including the 40-hour work week, minimum wage, and an end of child labor. This book chronicles both her professional life and her personal life, including the difficulties of balancing them in front of the world that doesn’t want a woman to succeed.

The painter’s daughters by Emily Howes

Cover of The Painter's Daughters. Painting in gold oval frame of woman looking straight at you.

What lengths will you go to in life to protect your sister? Peggy Gainsborough (daughter of the famous painter Thomas Gainsborough) knows her sister Molly would be put in an asylum if the world saw her during one of her bouts of mental confusion. She does all she can to hide her sister’s slips into mental illness, until she falls in love and everything goes wrong. While Gainsborough’s daughters were only famous through his portraits of them, this examination of how mental illness, especially in women, was treated in the 1700s is fascinating.

A woman of pleasure : a novel by Kiyoko Murata

Cover of A Woman of Pleasure. Woman in traditional Japanese garb on a red and cream cover.

In the early 1900s in Japan, girls were sold to brothels when their families couldn’t support them. Aoi Chi came from a modest background, but became the protégé of an oiran, which was the highest-rank courtesan in the brothel. Being sold to a brothel meant she was well-educated, fed and clothed, and the patronage of the oiran brought her even more power and knowledge. Ultimately, she led a strike of courtesans and brought about change in the red-light districts of Japan. This book is based on the real-life courtesan strike in Meiji-era Japan in the early 1900s.

Cover of The American Queen. Silhouette of black woman with a flower crown and white blouse.

The American queen : a novel by Vanessa Miller

Louella begins this book as a slave on a plantation, with hate in her heart. As she and all of the slaves are freed, and decide to travel to the Carolinas, she begins to hope that perhaps she and her husband William can build a new kind of place, where all people can be treated with respect. This book is based on the real-life settlement of the Kingdom of Happy Land, on the border of North and South Carolina. Louella and William were the queen and king, but everyone worked and their goods were shared communally.

No better time : a novel of the spirited women of the Six Triple Eight Central Postal Directory Battalion by Sheila Williams

Cover of No Better Time. Back of black woman with an army uniform, looking over her shoulder to the left, standing in a field with a city in the far horizon.

In a time of segregation and war, women of all ages, races and economic levels served in the Women’s Auxiliary Corps in the 1940s. A group of Black WACs were sent abroad to sort and handle the mail to GIs, which numbered more than 17 million pieces of mail, and which had been housed in warehouses and airplane hangars, in far-than-pristine conditions. After the war, these women came back to the United States and fought for their right to be treated as equals. Williams illuminates these women, whose sacrifices and contributions to the war have been unknown until now.

The Queen of Sugar Hill by Reshonda Tate Billingsley

Cover of The Queen of Sugar Hill. Turquoise car, driving on winding road, with the Hollywood sign in the background.

Hattie McDaniel should be on the top of the world, after being the first African to win an Academy Award. But many White people hate her for “not knowing her place” and many Black people hate her for “selling out” by portraying the typical slave in the antebellum South. But McDaniel forged on, leading the way for other African American actors, fighting against discrimination in housing, and navigating a difficult personal life with four failed marriages. Billingsley took historical data and created a wonderful portrait of McDaniel that brims with life.

Finding Margaret Fuller by Allison Pataki

Cover of Finding Margaret Fuller. Woman facing the right, in a white hat, white blouse and green skirt, standing in a strong wind.

Margaret Fuller led a full, rich life as a journalist, crusader, patron of the arts, muse and revolutionary leader. Ralph Waldo Emerson invited her to spend time with his friends, where she influenced Louisa May Alcott, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Henry David Thoreau, as well as Emerson himself. She co-founded a magazine, served as the first female foreign news correspondent, was the first woman admitted to the library at Harvard University, and had many other accomplishments in her life, including marrying a count in Italy and working for Italy’s unification. This is a sweeping epic of a novel that just happens to be based on real life events!

Mary Beth Adams is the Community Engagement Librarian for Alamance County Public Libraries. She can be reached at madams@alamancelibraries.org.

Great Books to Read as a Family

Cover of The Hobbit. A Hobbit in a desolate landscape, in front of a giant door.

Parents and caregivers know the best way to help their child become a strong reader and successful at school is to read to them! But as kids get older, they may not embrace reading time as much as they did when they were younger. Reading to an older child/tween/teen can lead to great discussions, serve as an introduction to books you loved as a child, and allow a child to fully enjoy a book that is at or above their current reading level. It also can introduce you to newer releases that you would never have gotten to enjoy if you didn’t read them to your kid(s)!

Here are some of my suggestions for great family reads – let us know which ones you tried and if you and your kids enjoyed it!

Books to Read to Tweens

Cover of Because of Winn-Dixie. Painting of a white dog smiling, sitting on a sandy spot with some sea grass behind it.
Cover of Ghost. Yellow background, young man barely in the frame, running off the page to the right.
Cover of Slacker. Graphic of beaver, drinking soda, eating chips and holding a video game controller.
Cover of The Mysterious Benedict Society. Graphic of a whimsical house that looks a little like a castle.

Because of Winn-Dixie by Kate DiCamillo – DiCamillo’s books are well-loved by children and adults alike. Because of Winn-Dixie features Opal, her preacher father, the ugly but sweet dog she found in the parking lot of the Winn-Dixie (and thusly named after the store), and the people of Naomi, Florida, who tell Winn-Dixie and Opal their stories and begin to heal her heart.

The Track series by Jason Reynolds – Four kids, chosen for an elite middle school track team, have to find a way through their own challenges to become a team and support each other. Each book isn’t too long, which makes this a good choice for kids who want some variety in what they read! They also serve as a great gateway to Reynolds’ other books for tweens and teens.

Slacker by Gordon Korman – This book is especially good for those kids who spend all of their time on video games, because they’ll definitely relate to Cameron Boxer, who invents an imaginary club at school that supposedly does good deeds (but really allows Cameron and his friends to slack off). But when other people join the club and actually want to do good things, like rescue a beaver named Elvis, Cameron ends up way more involved than he ever wanted to be. There’s a sequel as well called Level 13.

The Mysterious Benedict Society series by Trenton Lee Stewart – These are big thick books that might be overwhelming for a child to tackle on their own, and it is a series that adults will enjoy as much as their children! Reynie is an orphan, and answers an ad for gifted children in the paper. He and three other kids (Kate, Sticky and Constance) are chosen for a special mission that only they can do. You will love these characters so much, and enjoy reading about their impossible missions with your children.

Cover of Inkheart. Red cover, with an square insert in the middle, with a hand coming out of the insert. Insert is a painting of a fantastical scene.
Cover of Tristan Strong Punches a Hole in the Sky. Graphic of young man in fighting stance, with John Henry and his hammer behind him, and a creature made of chain behind him as well.
Cover of Where the Red Fern Grows. Sunset picture, with two dogs and a boy silhouetted as they run across the cover toward the forest.

The Inkheart series by Cornelia Funke – Meggie’s father accidentally read an evil villain from the book Inkheart into the real world, and only Meggie can put him back and save the world. Kids will love thinking about the possibility of fictional characters crossing into the real world, and there are several other books and series about book jumping (The Land of Stories, Story Thieves, The Book Jumper, Storybound) to read as well!

Tristan Strong series by Kwame Mbalia (or any other Rick Riordan Presents series) – Action, sword battles, and strong heroes and heroines populate the books published by Riordan’s imprint at Disney-Hyperion. We love them because they introduce families to different religions, cultures, and folk tales/legends from our own country and the entire world. The Tristan Strong series is based on African American folklore, like Brer Rabbit and John Henry, and is perfect for a read-aloud.

Where the Red Fern Grows by Wilson Rawls – This story about Billy and his two dogs, Old Dan and Little Ann, has brought children to tears for more than 80 years now. While adults will gulp as they consider that this book is probably now considered historical fiction, kids will love the timeless story of a young boy who saves up to buy hunting dogs and finds that they are his truest friends.

Books to Read to Teens

Cover of The Hobbit. A Hobbit in a desolate landscape, in front of a giant door.
Cover of We Have Always Lived In The Castle. Drawing of woman and daughter, with other people behind them, all looking scared.
Cover of Ink and Bone. Bottom third of cover shows a shelf of books. Middle and top shows a dark landscape.
Cover of The Belles. Young woman looking over her shoulder, with flowers in her hair, in a white dress. She's not smiling.

The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings series by J.R.R. Tolkien –Kids might be scared off by the length of these books, which is why they are a perfect pick for a family read. Even reluctant readers won’t be able to resist the sword fights, the fantastical creatures and the comradery of the questers. You also can watch the wonderful movies after reading each one and discussing it.

We Have Always Lived In the Castle by Shirley Jackson – Gothic, creepy, yet also darkly humorous, this is one of Jackson’s best-known books, and a good introduction for a younger teen to adult horror novels. This is also a short novel, so a reluctant listener might be willing to give you the few weeks it will take to read this, a bit each night.

The Great Library series by Rachel Caine – This dystopian series of novels is based on an alternate history where the printing press was never invented, and people use a Kindle-like device to read. Paper books are rare and outlawed, making them a favorite on the black market. Jess is part of a family of black-market book dealers, and has been sent to the Great Library as a spy. You will have great discussions about powerful people controlling the narrative and the world when reading this series!

The Belles series by Dhonielle Clayton – this series, too, is dystopian in nature. Women born with gifts to grant beauty to other women are cultivated in Orléans to be Belles. Camellia wants to be the best Belle and get the most prized assignment, to tend to the royal family. But the more she learns about beauty, about the royal family, the more she questions the system and whether her abilities are a gift or a curse. This can be a great springboard to talking about what beauty means to them, and who gets to name them beautiful or ugly. Another similar series is Uglies by Scott Westerfeld.

Mary Beth Adams is the Community Engagement Librarian for Alamance County Public Libraries. She can be reached at madams@alamancelibraries.org.

Meet Michael

Congratulations Michael! For his recent promotion into a full-time Library Assistant position at the May Memorial Public Services department. We look forward to seeing the new ideas and creativity you will bring to May Memorial Library!

Library Assistant Michael Farrar

How long have you worked with the County?

Almost 2 years now.

Where are you from originally?

I was born in Guilford, and raised here in Elon.

What are you most passionate about?

I am passionate about music, when I can I always have an earbud in. 

Do you have a hobby?

I love reading and gaming.

When you were little, what was your dream job?

Growing up I always wanted to be a veterinarian.

What was the best part of your week/weekend?

Upon receiving a raise this week, I treated myself to some delicious quesabirria tacos.

If your life was a song, what would the title be?

Landslide by Fleetwood Mac.

Are you involved in any community projects or organizations?

Not at the moment, outside of work I’m primarily focused on completing my bachelors.

What is the weirdest thing you’ve ever eaten?

On a trip to Peru I tried Cuy; roasted guinea pig. The dish is considered a delicacy and sign of abundance and good fortune.

What’s your favorite TV Show?

While I have quite a few favorite shows, my current favorite is Breaking Bad or The Office.

What is your favorite thing to spend money on?

Traveling, or a new toy for my pet ferrets.

What’s the most interesting thing you’ve learned recently?

Ferrets are one of the few animals that can contract covid.

The Bandit Queens

Cover of The Bandit Queens. Black cover, multicolored letters spell out the title. There are two sets of stylized eyes on the cover, one with a nose ring and one with a bindi.

The Bandit Queens. Shroff, Parini. New York : Ballantine Books, [2023].

Content warnings: misogyny, classism, body shaming, rape and attempted rape, sexual assault, domestic violence, alcoholism, acid attacks, murder.

Sometimes you pick up a book, expecting one thing, but get something else entirely. I picked up The Bandit Queens, expecting something similar to the Finlay Donovan and Aunties series. As you can see from the content warnings, this book (at least in some ways) is much deeper than those series, and deals with some pretty heavy topics. But it still made me laugh and cheer these women on as they deal with their no-good husbands!

Everyone in the village believes Geeta killed her husband. He disappeared several years ago, leaving her not all that upset, considering he abused her, and blamed her for their childlessness. Geeta is a loner, but (she thinks) she’s happy that way. She is feuding with her childhood best friend, Saloni, whom she sees every week at their microloan group meeting. Also part of their microloan group are twins Priya and Preity, and Farah. When Farah doesn’t show one week, Geeta pays her share of the loan. She visits Farah and finds out her husband beats her. Farah begs her to help kill her husband, and when Geeta hears him threaten to beat her up, too, and steal her hard-earned money, Geeta agrees.

Of course, once the others hear, Preity decides her husband has to go, too (after all, he threw acid at her before they got married and ruined her face). Geeta is horrified. She feels extreme guilt after helping Farah, and she certainly doesn’t want to help Preity as well. She thinks, why does everyone jump to the conclusion that their husbands have to die? When Farah decides to blackmail her for her involvement, Geeta really regrets starting down this path!

There are many laugh out loud parts of this book. Geeta begins the book as a loner and ends it with a wonderful group of friends, a dog, and a romantic partner as well. The deaths are original and interesting, and the characters pop off the page. The book pokes fun at how women complain about their offspring, but always follow it up with how blessed they are to be mothers and how it is so rewarding.

On the serious side, this book discusses caste in a way that is at least in part educational for someone outside the system, as well as poverty, spousal abuse, honor killings/acid attacks, rape, and other indignities women face in India as well as all over the world. The women discuss why women are blamed when men can’t control themselves, and why it is okay to rape a woman if she is your wife. I thought Shroff did an excellent job of integrating these issues into the story so it feels natural for the characters to discuss them.

Because I am not from India, I cannot address the concerns some readers have about the stereotypes her story may perpetuate, except to say that I see their point. You could read this book and picture the entirety of India as a poor place with bad sanitation, extreme poverty and backwards people who believe someone’s caste and/or religion makes them untouchable. However, I will acknowledge this deficiency and still say I really enjoyed this book! I will look for other books set in and written by people from India to further my knowledge.

Mary Beth Adams is the Community Engagement Librarian for Alamance County Public Libraries. She can be reached at madams@alamancelibraries.org.

North Carolina Novels

Photo of NC Flag - Photo by Mark Stebnicki: https://www.pexels.com/photo/north-carolina-flag-on-a-pole-under-blue-sky-9407524/

There’s some sort of thrill when you read a book that is set in a familiar place, either where you live now, or a place you used to live. Luckily, there are hundreds of books set in North Carolina for you to enjoy! Here are some of our favorites:

Garden Spells by Sarah Addison Allen

Cover of Garden Spells. Young woman, back to you, squatted down looking at roots of apple tree, apples surround her figure.

Other books by Allen: The Sugar Queen, The Girl Who Chased the Moon, The Peach Keeper, Lost Lake, First Frost, Other Birds

If you want a book that has a touch of magic and set in a small Southern town, Sarah Addison Allen’s books are for you! In Garden Spells, you meet the Waverley family, of Bascom, North Carolina, who have always been a little odd. They each have special gifts, as does their garden, with a tree that tells the future, and flowers that can heal or hurt. While most of Allen’s books are set in fictional towns, you’ll feel right at home with her descriptions of North Carolina flora and fauna, and the charm that our state’s small towns have.

In West Mills and Decent People by De’Shawn Charles Winslow

Cover of In West Mills. Black woman in yellow dress, old fashioned, looking off to the side. Cover is turquoise.

These books also are set in a fictional North Carolina town, West Mills, which is based on South Mills, NC, near Elizabeth City. In West Mills tells the story of Azalea “Knot” Centre, who finds herself pregnant, friendless, and alienated from her family. But she finds kinship with Otis Lee Loving, her neighbor, who hopes he can redeem his failures with his family by helping Knot. Decent People revisits West Mills, and tells the story of three slain siblings who live on the “wrong” side of the canal for the white police to want to solve the crime. But Jo Wright has retired, moved back to West Mills, and is going to marry her childhood sweetheart, “Lymp” Seymore. The victims are his half-siblings, and he’s the main suspect in their killing, so Jo must solve the crime and clear his name.

The Kudzu Queen by Mimi Herman

Cover of The Kudzu Queen. Black background, graphics in green, young woman sitting in forest, surrounded by trees and plants.

North Carolina in 1941 – Mattie Lee Watson is 15 going on 30, and is captivated by the arrival of the Kudzu King. This historical novel introduces readers to the failed experiment of using kudzu to improve the soil and solve all ills in the South, and tells the personal story of a young woman growing up and discovering that not everyone has good intentions. The story is set in fictional Cooper County, NC, but it could have been set in any farming town in rural North Carolina in the 1940s.

The Fool Dies Last and Death Rides a Pony by Carol Miller

Cover of The Fool DIes Last. White background with cooking utensils, peppers, seeds, etc., and a tarot card around the edges of the cover.

This cozy mystery series is set in Asheville, NC, where sisters Hope and Summer Bailey run a mystic shop called Bailey’s Boutique. Anyone who has been to Asheville knows that would fit right in with this metropolitan but mystical town! In The Fool Dies Last, Hope is accused by a local doctor of trying to kill one of his patients with a tincture, while their grandmother’s friends are dying suddenly, with the Fool tarot card placed near their bodies. Hope and Summer have to get to the bottom of all of this before their grandmother is next! In Death Rides a Pony, Hope and Summer are roped into reading tarot cards for the annual charity festival. But when Summer’s realtor is found dead after Summer gets a bad tarot reading, they need to find out if the cards can help them solve the murder.

Last Girl Gone and What Lies Beneath by J. G. Hetherton

Cover of Last Girl Gone. Dark cover, foggy night with bare trees and the silhouette of a person.

This series of murder mysteries are set in Hillsborough, NC (just down the road from Alamance County!). In Last Girl Gone, Laura Chambers reluctantly has returned to her hometown. Fired from the Boston Globe, she takes a job at the local paper, and thinks her life will be boring from now on. But then there’s a murder, a young girl killed, cleaned and dressed up, and Laura is pulled back into investigative journalism and finding the murderer. In What Lies Beneath, Laura is called to the scene of a horrible accident. A woman ran out in front of truck on the highway. She had just called Laura, and carried a photo of Laura, her father, and her best friend, who moved away when they were 8, after her family was brutally murdered in their home. Now Laura has to mine the depths of her memory of that time, and find out what her father might have had to do with her friend’s family’s murder twenty years ago.

The Magnolia Sisters by Michelle Major

Cover of The Magnolia Sisters. Outdoor deck umbrella, chairs and table, facing the water.

Other books by Major: A Carolina Christmas, A Carolina Valentine, The Merriest Magnolia, The Road to Magnolia, A Magnolia Reunion, The Last Carolina Sister, A Lot Like Christmas, The Wish List, The Front Porch Club, Springtime in Carolina, A Carolina Dance, A Carolina Promise, Wildflower Season, Magnolia Season.

Michelle Major has written several romances set in fictional Magnolia, North Carolina. If you’re looking for something lighthearted and heartwarming, these are the books for you! In The Magnolia Sisters, you meet Avery, whose father didn’t acknowledge her when he was alive. Avery hopes to collect her inheritance and leave Magnolia behind, but she didn’t count on falling in love with the town, her half-sisters, and the cute firefighter next door. Each book focuses on another resident of Magnolia – some are full novels and others are novellas.

If you’d like more North Carolina novels, you can search in our catalog, then choose Fiction from the Collection menu on the left hand side, or you can ask any library employee to help you!

Mary Beth Adams is the Community Engagement Librarian for Alamance County Public Libraries. She can be reached at madams@alamancelibraries.org.

Meet Sharada

We are excited to welcome Sharada as a Library Assistant on the Children’s team at Graham. We look forward to seeing the impact her enthusiasm and personality will bring to the Graham Library.

Sharada, new Library Assistant for the Children's Team at the Graham Library

How long have you worked with the County?

It has been almost a full month, not including holidays.

Where are you from originally?

Durham, North Carolina

What are you most passionate about?

Art of any form. Art and creativity can change how we see the world and lift our spirits.

Do you have a hobby?

I am passionate about printmaking, which involves creating images on paper, fabric, or other surfaces. I also enjoy jigsaw puzzles, specifically those with 2000 pieces.

When you were little, what was your dream job?

When I was a child, my dream job was to become a marine biologist, with a particular fascination for dolphins. I always hoped that one day I could swim with them.

What was the best part of your week/weekend?

My mom is returning from Berlin, Germany this week after spending time with my older sister, 8-year-old nephew, and my brand new baby twin niece and nephew (names Idris and Sakia). I am eagerly waiting to see her and “steal” the pictures she took during her visit to Germany.

If your life was a song, what would the title be?

There is a song called “Sharada” by Skye Sweetnam, which ironically seems to be about me if you ever play it while working with me.

Are you involved in any community projects or organizations?

I am currently involved with the Durham Awesome Foundation, which is a new organization that supports innovative and impactful projects that have a positive effect on Durham. The foundation donates $1,000 to the chosen organization each month, making it an excellent opportunity to give back to the community and support local organizations in Durham.

What is the weirdest thing you’ve ever eaten?

I had an ostrich burger at the NC State Fair.

What’s your favorite TV Show?

Stargate SG-1

What is your favorite thing to spend money on?

Food

What’s the most interesting thing you’ve learned recently?

I am learning different techniques for manifesting and meditating. It’s a great practice to stay positive and think about personal goals and how to achieve them.

Lovingkindness Meditation

Lovingkindness Meditation by Sharon Salzberg

Lovingkindness Meditation by Sharon Salzberg - Audiobook

On this Valentine’s Day, I’d like to share a resource that has been proven to increase people’s sense of well-being called lovingkindness meditation.  On Hoopla*, you can find guided meditations and writings from the well-known meditation teacher Sharon Salzberg, who is credited with increasing awareness about lovingkindness meditation in the United States.  The audiobooks titled Lovingkindness Meditation give readers insight into this practice, and the author offers listeners the opportunity to participate through guided meditations.

In recent decades, scientific studies have been conducted on the benefits of lovingkindness meditation.  Some of those benefits include decreases in chronic pain, depression, and anxiety and increases in positive emotions and feelings of social connectedness. 

Valentine’s Day is a day to celebrate the different types of love, not just romantic, and so I end my review by sharing the lovingkindness phrases that have enhanced the lives of so many…

May you be happy,

May you be healthy,

May you be safe,

May you live with ease.

Amy Kendrick is the Branch Manager for May Memorial Library. You can reach her at akendrick@alamancelibraries.org.

*To download Hoopla, visit our website or download it on the Apple Store or Google Play Store.