All posts by Angie

This Week: Coffee and Library Advocacy!

We hope you can join us!

Join us on Wednesday, Dec. 4th from 3-5pm to write your own messages of library support! We will be working at the Local Blend coffee shop in St. Joe (Postcards, postage, and sample text provided!)

CMLE works to support all of our library members and that means telling legislators, principals, School Board Members, and other important stakeholders about all the amazing work YOU are doing in your library!

Feel free to arrive and depart as your schedule allows, these are casual events! Come enjoy a warm beverage, chat with library fans, and send a few postcards sharing why all types of libraries are important and need funding and support!

Buying Gifts Through Amazon? You Can Support CMLE at the same time!

There are so many ways to support CMLE: apply for scholarships or mini grants, take advantage of our VR headset loan program, attend member events and postcard parties, join us on Patreon!

Another very easy way to support us is by making your Amazon purchases through this link! Amazon will not tell us who you are or what you buy, but they will give us a small percentage of the total profit they make on your purchase.

Click our links anywhere we have book information (like in our Book Bouquet articles) or just visit Amazon from our site. Anything you buy during that visit to Amazon will be counted toward our total.

We are so grateful for your support! Our work is to strengthen our library community and these funds earned allow us to continue doing just that!

AASL Recommended Apps: Stop Motion Studio

The American Association of School Librarians (AASL) announced their picks for Best Apps for Teaching & Learning 2019. “Apps recognized foster the qualities of innovation, creativity, active participation, and collaboration and are user friendly to encourage a community of learners to explore and discover. “

The app Stop Motion Studio “helps you to create terrific stop action movies with a whole host of unique features like the frame-by-frame editor, the never get lost timeline and the sound editor. Add backgrounds, foregrounds, sound effects, use paintbrushes, and more to make your stop motion video.”

Platform: iOS & Android
Cost: $4.99 (although it looks like there is a free version available)
Grades: All

Check out teacher reviews of this app on Common Sense Media. The site Educational Tech and Mobile Learning includes Stop Motion Studio in their list of recommended iPad apps for creating educational stop motion animation. The Techie Teacher discusses the app in this article sharing tips for creating stop motion animation in the classroom.

If you are interested in the best apps for your library, media center, or classroom, you can read our 2019 series here or find all past apps discussed in our archives.

Book Bouquet: Queens and Crowns

Each week we assemble a collection – a bouquet, if you will – of books you can read for yourself, or use to build into a display in your library. As always, the books we link to have info from Amazon.com. If you click a link and then buy anything at all from Amazon, we get a small percent of their profits from your sale. Yay!!! Thanks!!! We really appreciate the assistance! 💕😊

This week, we’re all about queens and crowns and royalty:

The Dead Queens Club by Hannah Capin
Mean Girls meets The Tudors in Hannah Capin’s The Dead Queens Club, a clever contemporary YA retelling of Henry VIII and his wives (or, in this case, his high school girlfriends). Told from the perspective of Annie Marck (“Cleves”), a 17-year-old aspiring journalist from Cleveland who meets Henry at summer camp, The Dead Queens Club is a fun, snarky read that provides great historical detail in an accessible way for teens while giving the infamous tale of Henry VIII its own unique spin.”

She Would Be King by Wayétu Moore
“Wayétu Moore’s powerful debut novel, She Would Be King, reimagines the dramatic story of Liberia’s early years through three unforgettable characters who share an uncommon bond. Gbessa, exiled from the West African village of Lai, is starved, bitten by a viper, and left for dead, but still she survives. June Dey, raised on a plantation in Virginia, hides his unusual strength until a confrontation with the overseer forces him to flee. Norman Aragon, the child of a white British colonizer and a Maroon slave from Jamaica, can fade from sight when the earth calls him. When the three meet in the settlement of Monrovia, their gifts help them salvage the tense relationship between the African American settlers and the indigenous tribes, as a new nation forms around them.”

Reign of the Fallen by Sarah Glenn Marsh
“Odessa is one of the kingdom’s beloved necromancers, responsible for safely raising the dead and preventing them from becoming dangerous, murderous Shades. Except suddenly there are more Shades than ever, and dealing with the fact that someone might be creating Shades on purpose isn’t something Odessa is currently prepared for—not while she’s grieving the loss of her former lover, Evander. Still, her burgeoning crush on Meredy, her childhood friend, might distract Odessa from the grief, if she can pull herself together long enough to save the kingdom.”

Sorcerer to the Crown by Zen Cho
“At his wit’s end, Zacharias Wythe, freed slave, eminently proficient magician, and Sorcerer Royal of the Unnatural Philosophers—one of the most respected organizations throughout all of Britain—ventures to the border of Fairyland to discover why England’s magical stocks are drying up.”

The Broken Crown by Michelle West
“The Dominion, once divided by savage clan wars, has kept an uneasy peace within its border since that long-ago time when the clan Leonne was gifted with the magic of the Sun Sword and was raised up to reign over the five noble clans. But now treachery strikes at the very heart of the Dominion as two never meant to rule–one a highly skilled General, the other a master of the magical arts–seek to seize the crown by slaughtering all of clan Leonne blood.”

The Girl of Fire and Thorns by Rae Carson
Once a century, one person is chosen for greatness.
Elisa is the chosen one. But she is also the younger of two princesses, the one who has never done anything remarkable. She can’t see how she ever will. Now, on her sixteenth birthday, she has become the secret wife of a handsome and worldly king—a king whose country is in turmoil. A king who needs the chosen one, not a failure of a princess. And he’s not the only one who seeks her. Savage enemies seething with dark magic are hunting her. A daring, determined revolutionary thinks she could be his people’s savior. And he looks at her in a way that no man has ever looked at her before. Soon it is not just her life, but her very heart that is at stake

Episode 412: Indigenous Representation

Hello! Thank you for joining us on Reading With Libraries! We’re so glad you could be here to enjoy our book group podcast.

Check out our full show notes here!

This week we’re discussing indigenous representation in literature and we are so excited to welcome Hannah Buckland to our show! Hannah is the State Library Program Specialist.

Become a full book group member on Patreon! Click here to be part of the “inner circle” of this book group, and get access to behind-the-scenes info and photos. Support levels start at $1/month – and you get a postcard from Official Office Dog Lady Grey! More swag is available at higher levels of support; check it all out today.

We love doing this, but podcasts aren’t free to create; so thank you so much to our book group members who have joined us. We love having you as part of the team.