As I’m typing this, Pippa is trying to jump into my lap – not noticing that there is already a laptop in my lap.  So do forgive any typos. They’ll be purely cat-produced.
The summer is going well. Very well. Predictably, I’m exhausted, but that’s really my own fault: if I were less of a perfectionist my life would be simpler. But the summer really isn’t about me and how tired I am, it’s about how much fun the kids in town are having at the library, and how much they’re enjoying their summer reading. There have been so many happy kids coming in to collect prizes, enter raffles, and grin when I tell them that surely they’ll earn a bookplate this year (you have to read at least thirty hours to earn a bookplate in a library book). And lots and lots of happy kids and parents at library events.
Last Thursday night we had another family movie night, with Happy Feet as our feature presentation. 94 people were signed up (!), and 72 actually showed. Incredible. Unfortunately, I couldn’t stay for the whole movie, since the children’s room was unstaffed, and Roy was covering the movie staffing, but the bit that I stayed for was so much fun. These movie nights are a true community event, with dozens of kids clustered on carpet squares on the floor at the front of the room (by request – the kids prefer the floor to the chairs) and parents sitting in sociable groups in the comfortable chairs at the back of the room. No one stays truly quiet for these movies, which makes them a million times more enjoyable than watching a DVD with just a few people in your living room. The kids roar in abundant group laughter at the sight gags, and the parents gossip quietly and enjoy each other’s company while they delight in the fun that their children are having.Â
Today was the July meeting of the teen book group, and our discussion centered on Monsoon Summer by Mitali Perkins. We had a really productive discussion, and decided as a group that there are parts of the book that we all really liked, namely the portrayal of Indian culture, but those bits are negatively counter-balanced by the weaker aspects of the book, including the predictable plot and the lack of careful editing. The girls in the group noticed many instances where the book disagrees with itself, which made us all feel that the author didn’t take enough care to check her own work.  Personally, I feel that Mitali Perkins has an admirable goal in her writing – to address young readers who are “between cultures” – but that the goal does not a great book make. On her website and in interviews she comes across as erudite and lucid, but I just didn’t really enjoy the actual book. If I were to rank it on a scale of 1 to 5, I would give it a 3. And I think the teen book group members would probably agree with that ranking. For our next book, I chose one of my absolute favorite newish books, Elsewhere by Gabrielle Zevin. I hope the group loves it as much as I do, but if they don’t, I’ll be very interested to hear their opinions.
And that’s the news for now. Poor Jim just arrived home and showed me his battle scars from a nasty bike spill that he took on his way home from work tonight. Major wipe-out, major need for some TLC.