All posts by Mary Jordan

Celebrate Today! National Lost Socks Memorial Day

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That’s right: every week we are going to celebrate some small holiday! We want you to join us in celebrating every week – because really, everyone needs a little more happiness in their lives.

Join us in celebrating the holiday just yourself, and take some small quiet time to enjoy it. Or, take our book and program ideas, and celebrate in a larger way in your library. Take a small, goofy opportunity to have a little more fun today! (We celebrate you in doing this!)

I love this kind of holiday! No big message, nothing to learn from it – just a time for having some silly fun. Everyone has a pile of socks that have mysteriously lost their mates somewhere in the laundry process. Why? How? Who knows? It’s a mystery! An easy program would be to have everyone bring in single socks to display. Maybe they could be turned into art projects. Maybe wall hangings. Maybe people could write stories about the exploits of those missing socks. Celebrate this very silly mystery, and encourage everyone to have a chuckle over the foolishness of it all!

Try a few books:

Join us in celebrating the holiday just yourself, and take some small quiet time to enjoy it. Or, take our book and program ideas, and celebrate in a larger way in your library. Take a small, goofy opportunity to have a little more fun today!

Browsing Books: Oliver Kelley Farm

logo for browsing books: historical sites of Minnesota

Experience the story of farming, food and agriculture — past and present! Explore the original 1860s working farm, and get an up close view of the animals and gardens. Celebrate this farm by reading a book about farming plants or animals.

In our show notes for this episode, we link each book to a couple of our state’s great independent bookstores: Drury Lane Bookstore in Grand Marais. It gives you a description, so you can get more information about the book to help you make a decision about your reading or recommendations.

Happiness in the Library: Do What Joyful People Do

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It’s a tough time for libraries, and people in customer service. And while we don’t want to veer into any toxic positivity, it is good to spend a little time focused on building your happiness level. We are not going to solve people’s serious mental issues here. But bringing some happiness skills to your week can be helpful to everyone!

Mondays can be a little hard, even when things are going fine. Use this small injection of a happiness skill to your week. We are here to support you, and to help you to be a little happier in the library.

The idea to “act as if” is a good one. Looking to see what people are doing to be happy, then doing those things, may help you to build some happiness pathways in your brain until you feel that happiness as a real thing. Check out this article excerpt from Happiness habits: 9 daily practices of joyful people:

  • They notice and appreciate the little things
  • They create purpose in their life
  • They release negative thoughts and emotions
  • They take care of their body
  • They look for the good in life to cultivate a more joyful mindset
  • They don’t neglect the present moment and try to cultivate greater awareness of it
  • They stay in their own lane and avoid comparison
  • They only focus on what they can control
  • They don’t make their life all about themselves, they focus on others

You can read the whole article here, with discussion of all the tips.

CMLE can be part of your support network; we are here for you, and support you in your library work. Take a nice deep breath in, and whoosh it out; it’s going to be okay today.

A short farewell

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I just wanted to take a short moment here to let you know that I’m leaving CMLE as of today. The past several years of work with you all has been wonderful, and I’m so fortunate to have had this opportunity! Thank you to everyone, across our membership and across the state, who has done so much to support libraries, and to serve your communities.

You will have many opportunities to do some great work here with CMLE, so stay tuned! And I have several podcasts dropping for the next few weeks – and you don’t want to miss that, or any of the articles still dropping here.

If you want to talk with me about doing some training for your library, you can find me at LibraryDrPod@gmail.com!

Libraries are the jewels of a community. You are part of an amazing system to provide information and entertainment, and I hope you always feel proud of the work you do – because it is amazing and important and valuable.

Keep doing the good work you do for your library!

Behind the Scenes of Barack Obama’s Reading Lists

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“Does the president really read all those books? The answer might surprise you.

I usually have anonymous sources falling all over themselves to spill industry secrets, so you can imagine that when I was assigned to investigate the methodology behind Barack Obama’s annual lists of book recommendations, I set out to expose a secret apparatus of industry shenanigans. What I found was much more shocking.


President Barack Obama released his first official list of book recommendations in summer 2009, a few months after taking office. He continued to share summer reading recommendations throughout his presidency, with the exception of 2012 and 2013, when one can imagine he was swept up in his day job. In 2017, after leaving office and undoubtedly regaining some free time for leisure reading, the former president also began releasing a best-books-of-the-year list, alongside similar roundups for movies, television, and music.

For some, Obama’s recommendations have become highly anticipated. Julianne Buonocore, founder of the book and lifestyle blog The Literary Lifestyle, said that she and her 800,000+ monthly readers eagerly await Obama’s book list each year. “First, it’s exciting to see which books you’ve read that a former president has read too, and second, he always offers an array of diverse reads, so you know you’re also bound to find something new and impactful to read next,” Buonocore said.”

According to Schultz, the richness of Obama’s reading recommendations are a reflection of the man himself and his community. You don’t need The New York Times Book Review or Susie from book club to get recommendations when you’re constantly surrounded by some of the most interesting people in the world. As Schultz pointed out, “Being a former president, one of the perks is access to people and communities and stories from every corner of the planet, in every industry, in every sector, in every vector… Whether it’s people in business or sports or his daughter or other friends, these are all people that he hears about books from.”

The titles that Obama selects are incredibly diverse both in subjects and in authors, varying widely from the boring political tomes written by old white men that you might imagine dwelling on the nightstands of former presidents. Of the 13 titles included in Obama’s Favorite Books of 2022, there are nine works of fiction and four works of nonfiction, including books by eight women and eight BIPOC authors. There’s a novel about a dystopian school for mothers; a graphic novel about labor and survival in Canada; a journey through the history, rituals, and landscapes of the American South; and a beautifully crafted short-story collection. As someone who spent the better part of a decade working in Big Five book publishing (the five largest publishing houses: Penguin Random House, HarperCollins, Simon & Schuster, Macmillan, and Hachette), I can tell you that the former president has impeccable taste.”

The feeling of connection between two people who love the same book is not one often felt between ordinary citizens and high-ranking government officials, but I can honestly say that when Obama announced Lauren Groff’s achingly beautiful novel Fates and Furies—my favorite book of 2015—as his favorite book of 2015, I felt I learned more about him as a person than I had from any profile, speech, or campaign ad.

Imagining that a political consultant might have picked that book for him broke my heart, but it turns out I didn’t need to worry. After weeks of reaching out to publishers, authors, and book insiders, I could not find a single source with knowledge that the former president’s book recommendations are engineered by anyone other than himself. I may have set out to write an exposé, but what I found was so much more shocking: a positive publishing story filled with authenticity.

For one moment, I give you permission to forget about book bans, unlivable industry salaries, and diversity problems. For one minute, I give you permission to be grateful that one of the most influential people on the planet makes it a priority not just to promote books but to be personally moved by them.

I, for one, can’t wait to find out what he’s reading this summer.”

You can read the whole article here!