Author: atwiford

  • Library kicks off summer reading with festival

    The end of the academic year signals the start of summer reading for students. Whether they choose an assigned book or a title of their choosing, reading is meant to prevent the “summer slide,” a significant decline in skills that can occur over the season.

    To kick off its summer reading program and mark 20 years in its present location, the township library held a Color Our World Art Festival on June 14 that emphasized why summer reading isn’t just for kids. Its reading program is broken down into four categories: early literacy for infants to children up to 4 years old; children from 5 to 11; teens and students in grades six through 12; and adults 18 or over.

    All four categories feature prizes that include gift baskets and cards, museum and amusement park passes and eReaders. 

    “It’s just getting more people aware that you can sign up and all the great prizes that we have at the end of the summer,” said PR and marketing coordinator Hope Holroyd.

    To further emphasize the reading program’s appeal to library patrons of all ages, the Color Our World Festival featured a variety of activities, crafts and food trucks aimed at different demographics. While rain meant the event didn’t go exactly as planned, the library team was able to make necessary changes so the rain or shine event could continue.

    “We were all set up outside, and it was great,” Holroyd noted. “And then it started to rain, so we moved the crafts inside, but left the food trucks and the performances outside. So we pivoted. But it’s great. I mean, seeing all the people do the bracelets and get the Henna art, it’s been a good day.”

    Stations in the library were used for creating friendship bracelets and decorating tote bags, and A Flick of the Wrist Splatter Paint mobile unit was set up outside the library entrance. A blackout poetry station was also set up on the library’s main floor. The activity has participants take a used book from a pile, choose an anchor word and others on one page and black out all other text on it. 

    Guests could also have caricatures of themselves drawn by artist Bruce Blitz.

    “The festival day was great,” he observed. “Even though it rained outside, we didn’t care about that, because we had a good time inside. I was drawing cartoon portraits and I had a great time doing it. The people have been sweeter and nicer and the kids were great, so I had a great time today.”

    Artist Bruce Blitz concentrates as he draws the caricature of a child at the festival.

    Henna hand art was also available from a professional, and those who wanted temporary tattoos could choose a design from a selection of templates. 

    Four food trucks were set up in the library’s parking lot. Dan’s Waffles sold a variety of both sweet and savory waffle-based dishes, the Food Bus sold classic festival foods like fries, chicken tenders and burgers, Kona Ice sold shaved ice that attendees could flavor themselves. Also on hand was the township’s Mechanical Brewery.

    “We’ve had a few people that were very engaging,” reported its brewer, Rick Vickers, “and it’s been a nice event, talking to people … We like the event and would be happy to do something like this again. Because we like to interact with the community in this way.” 

    Music was available throughout the festival at the back of the library building. Live performances included April Mae and the June Bugs, Mister Boom Boom Play Patrol Company and DJ Hunt.

    Photos by Abigail Twiford.
    Library patrons make their way around the Color Our World Art Festival, engaging with the several different activities and crafts.
  • Library kicks off summer reading with festival

    The end of the academic year signals the start of summer reading for students. Whether they choose an assigned book or a title of their choosing, reading is meant to prevent the “summer slide,” a significant decline in skills that can occur over the season.

    To kick off its summer reading program and mark 20 years in its present location, the township library held a Color Our World Art Festival on June 14 that emphasized why summer reading isn’t just for kids. Its reading program is broken down into four categories: early literacy for infants to children up to 4 years old; children from 5 to 11; teens and students in grades six through 12; and adults 18 or over.

    All four categories feature prizes that include gift baskets and cards, museum and amusement park passes and eReaders. 

    “It’s just getting more people aware that you can sign up and all the great prizes that we have at the end of the summer,” said PR and marketing coordinator Hope Holroyd.

    To further emphasize the reading program’s appeal to library patrons of all ages, the Color Our World Festival featured a variety of activities, crafts and food trucks aimed at different demographics. While rain meant the event didn’t go exactly as planned, the library team was able to make necessary changes so the rain or shine event could continue.

    “We were all set up outside, and it was great,” Holroyd noted. “And then it started to rain, so we moved the crafts inside, but left the food trucks and the performances outside. So we pivoted. But it’s great. I mean, seeing all the people do the bracelets and get the Henna art, it’s been a good day.”

    Stations in the library were used for creating friendship bracelets and decorating tote bags, and A Flick of the Wrist Splatter Paint mobile unit was set up outside the library entrance. A blackout poetry station was also set up on the library’s main floor. The activity has participants take a used book from a pile, choose an anchor word and others on one page and black out all other text on it. 

    Guests could also have caricatures of themselves drawn by artist Bruce Blitz.

    “The festival day was great,” he observed. “Even though it rained outside, we didn’t care about that, because we had a good time inside. I was drawing cartoon portraits and I had a great time doing it. The people have been sweeter and nicer and the kids were great, so I had a great time today.”

    Artist Bruce Blitz concentrates as he draws the caricature of a child at the festival.

    Henna hand art was also available from a professional, and those who wanted temporary tattoos could choose a design from a selection of templates. 

    Four food trucks were set up in the library’s parking lot. Dan’s Waffles sold a variety of both sweet and savory waffle-based dishes, the Food Bus sold classic festival foods like fries, chicken tenders and burgers, Kona Ice sold shaved ice that attendees could flavor themselves. Also on hand was the township’s Mechanical Brewery.

    “We’ve had a few people that were very engaging,” reported its brewer, Rick Vickers, “and it’s been a nice event, talking to people … We like the event and would be happy to do something like this again. Because we like to interact with the community in this way.” 

    Music was available throughout the festival at the back of the library building. Live performances included April Mae and the June Bugs, Mister Boom Boom Play Patrol Company and DJ Hunt.

    Photos by Abigail Twiford.
    Library patrons make their way around the Color Our World Art Festival, engaging with the several different activities and crafts.
  • Library speaker offers ‘tantalizing glimpses’ of queer history

    Abigail Twiford/ The Sun
    Em Ricciardi gives a presentation to celebrate Pride Month at the Cherry Hill library on June 11.

    June marks Pride Month for the LGBTQ community, and organizations around the area are honoring the occasion with a wide array of events and celebrations.

    The Cherry Hill library is one. It has organized a number of events throughout the month to honor the LGBTQ community and its history. In partnership with Jewish Family and Children’s Service and the township, it presented the talk “Uncovering Queer Figures with the Library Company of Philadelphia” on June 11.

    Em Ricciardi is the cataloger and LGBTQ+ subject specialist for the Library Company. They organize printed materials from throughout history, and curates the Library Company’s Queer History Collection, including printed materials and graphics or visuals. 

    Mayor Dave Fleisher started the event with a few words on Pride Month.

    “I believe that although it’s Pride Month, that the character of a community is defined by how people are treated 365 days a year,” he explained. “And I am very, very proud, not just of the library, but proud to be part of leading a community in a township like Cherry Hill, where people are welcome and treated with dignity and respect 365 days a year.” 

    Ricciardi highlighted historical figures during his talk, from the well-known to the unknown throughout the 18th and 19th centuries.

    “We were the Library of Congress when Congress was meeting in Philadelphia,” they noted. “And we’ve been around for about 300 years. So as you can imagine, a lot of our stuff is super old.”

    Ricciardi also went on to explain that the Library Company is unique in its collection of rare books, because it includes only printed materials, no manuscript or handwritten items.

    They began their discussion of queer history figures with actors and performers, including two female impersonators in an early form of what is now known as drag queens, Julian Elton and Richard Harlow. Though it’s not known for certain if the men were LGBTQ, their norm-breaking performances earned them a place in Ricciardi’s library talk. 

    “He was very aware of the way people would perceive him and judge him if they thought that he was purposefully transgressing those gender boundaries,” Ricciardi noted of Harlow. 

    Ricciardi told the story of Charlotte Cushman, a stage actress and lesbian known for her many affairs and documented relationships.

    “Charlotte Cushman was, in fact, as we can confirm, a lesbian and a messy lesbian at that,” Ricciardi acknowledged. “Cushman had a number of female lovers over her lifetime, and often overlapped them.”  

    The presentation also evoked the story of James How, an individual assigned female at birth. How dressed as a man to marry his wife of 34 years, but it is unknown if How was a lesbian dressing as a man to marry a woman, or a transgender man.

    “In some cases, it was certainly just two lesbians trying to be together,” they revealed. “In other cases, there might have been a trans identity going on. A lot of times, we don’t know exactly why one of the partners chose to dress as a man and the other didn’t.”

    Literature was also discussed as a place where queer figures often appear, specifically writers Fitz Greene Halleck and Sarah Orne Jewett. Neither of them is confirmed as queer, but the use of language and themes in their works is often interpreted through the use of literary analysis as reflecting a queer identity.

    Ricciardi also described how many of the accounts the Library Company has access to only feature white queer figures, since it was much more difficult for people of color to have access to printing throughout history.

    “It is obviously true that people of color throughout history were writing their own works and publishing them,” they observed. “However, it is also true that white people had a lot more access to traditional venues of printing and publishing.” 

    Ricciardi also said that many of the historical narratives the Library Company has access to on queer people of color are white people writing about people of color, instead of people of color writing about themselves.

    They also showed photos of figures from history who seemed to be in same-sex relationships, though none of their identities is known. That prompted Ricciardi to speak about how many queer figures from the past are unknown, only leaving small traces of their lives behind.

    “There are a lot of people out there who we just don’t have any information about …” they said. “We have a number of photographs that depict people crossing gender boundaries, sharing close relationships with people of the same sex or gender …

    “We just have these little tantalizing glimpses into a potential queer life that they might have been living.”