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Queens

When I was attending night classes in Flushing and working in Bay Ridge, I did not have good feelings about the Borough. It was so far. Now I like it. It is still far, but worth the trip. And not just for the Spa Castle. So very much to explore.
Posted in found
All About My Mother
Please visit The Desk Set to read my essay about children’s librarianship.
(Dad, don’t feel left out, I have a whole book to write. Remember how when I was a kid and you kept saying it would all be good material for my novel?)
Posted in found
Tagged brooklyn public library, children's librarians, children's literature, library, mother
Let’s get Liminal
Ha! I kill me. What I mean is that in reviewing 2009 I can’t think of a lot of events or discoveries to list, like I did last year. It was an in between sort of year, changeable. So very many fried clams. Although last year’s list is most notable for the things I didn’t say, so maybe I can first revise 2008 for your reading pleasure.
In 2008 I quit my job and left my home for a town that I had never heard of before. Riding wave of freedom and panic I wrote an entire novel my second month in this town.
2009 was more of a clean up job. There was a lot of overstuffed emotional baggage that had to be unpacked now that I had time and space and perspective. Some friendships grew much stronger and more honest, while others fell away. I lost twenty-five pounds by catching up on ten years’ sleep and laying off the beer. I reconnected with my family. I wrote this blog steadily and joyfully and people read it (600 unique visitors a month!)
2010 promises both more drastic change and more focus.
In January I am kicking of the year blogging for the desk set about children’s librarianship and the differences I’ve found working in Brooklyn and working in Beverly. I am excited and terrified to broaden my readership and also share my perspective on my library career. To this end, I’ve joined a writing group, which will meet once a month and provide a supportive flexible forum for me to improve my work. Will this turn into a full scale memoir about my years at BPL? I hope so.
I am also organizing the Museum Club in a coherent way: I plan to visit one museum in NY and one in New England every month this year and write essays about them that are entertaining in their own right and also encourage people to get out and support the amazing cultural resources that surround us. You, yes, YOU, are invited to join me. I am setting up another blog for museum club and will add folks as contributors if they are interested. If people enjoy the online magazine maybe we will print up a physical magazine and send it to Museum Club members. Sounds fun, right? And maybe, just maybe, we can get someone to pay for a trip to Venice where we write all about it.
My third creative goal is creating some short films. Will these be travel, comedy or female buddy pictures? Hopefully all three. Stay tuned.
Dedication
My writing is dedicated to my mother and father.
with thanks to my two favorite teachers, Glenn Ridler and Ernest Benz.
Salem Post Office
Built in 1932 in the Colonial Revival style, the Salem Post Office is about as far as you can get from a FedEx Kinko’s. All this grandeur and craftsmanship for folks who are paying three cents. It reminds me of… The library. All this marble and brass and polished woodwork for everyone, not just the wealthy. (American flag unfurls behind my head, horns blaring, Kate Smith starts singing.)
You get my point. Send some New Year’s and Christmas cards this year, ok?
Posted in arts and crafts, found
Tagged massachusetts, post office, postcard, salem, usps






