Main

April 30, 2008

Hypotheticals.

Let's say you have recently, as in three days ago, completed your masters degree in library science after one-point-five fast-paced yet laborious years.

And let's say you are about to become the children's librarian at a well-loved, well-funded urban neighborhood library.

And let us also imagine that you are realizing how little you actually know about children's literature, even though you like it in general. (Let us say, in fact, that you are far more well-versed in teenage vampire fiction than is healthy for any person, but especially for someone who needs to recommend books to people under four feet tall.)

Meanwhile, let's imagine that you have always wanted to read all the Newbery Medal-winning books for children, dating back to 1922, fully realizing that some of them might be dull.

And let's say you have recently been obsessed with Jezebel.com's trip down memory lane into juvenile fiction of the 1980s.

Also, you are addicted to serial YouTube collaborations by nerdy literate people.

Let's say you're considering joining their ranks and vlogging through the Newberys, two at a time, one from the recent past, one from the distant past. There would be field trips to your library's incredible Children's Literature collection, and possibly interviews with children you have wrangled into reading these books with you. Not to mention humor.

Would you be crazy?

Would you have collaborators, and who would they be?

And what would you call such an endeavor?

(FYI, Newbery Project is already taken. Newbery Experiment is a bit too clinical. Newbery Pie is too cutesy, although I am not averse to puns. I mean, YOU are not averse to puns. All hypothetical.)

March 3, 2008

Adults say the darndest things.

In libraries, adult reference work is very different from services to children. I generally prefer the latter, because the clientele is cuter and more huggable. But I've discovered that grown-ups are just as likely as kids to provide me with some memorable, entertaining dialogue.

Here are a few of my favorites since I've begun working at my current library (very different from the one I chronicled in Day in the Life):

> From my gaggle of harmless but nevertheless creepy stalkers, mostly white, male senior citizens who wander over from the McDonalds next door after breakfast: "Where do you go to school? ... Oh, that's the bad girls school." Also, "What do you think of Britney Spears? You're about her age, right?"

> On an author whom the patron had seen interviewed on television: "I can't remember his name. He's from San Francisco and he's gay. He didn't look gay, though. He just looked like a regular person."

> When I presented a very proper woman in her 80s with yesterday's newspaper, which we didn't have and which I'd run down the street to purchase: "Oh my! Such service! I feel like Mrs. Clinton!"

February 22, 2008

Day in the life.

[Note: I started writing this entry in dribs and drabs a few weeks ago, jotting down small moments and bits of dialogue as they occurred. At the time, I was working at a library a few blocks from my house. I was transferred to another library in a different neighborhood very suddenly, so the following no longer reflects the reality of my daily routine. But it was an important period that I'd like to remember, especially career-wise, so that's why I'm posting it even though it's outdated. I plan to follow up with some information about my new job in a few days.]

It's been said about blogging that nobody cares what you had for lunch, but I'm not always sure that's true. I'm out of touch with so many of you, and I'm in a place and career so different from what I've done in the past, that I feel like I owe it to you to catch you up. I mean, I have a cat, for God's sake.

It's not that my life is terribly interesting. The routine rarely varies, restricted as it is by my school responsibilities and the fact that, the older I get, the more I crave small rituals. I do wish I had more time to be spontaneous with friends, to explore my neighborhood without an agenda, to work on a sewing project that I haven't touched in a year, or to go see a movie with my husband and not worry about unfinished homework.

But we do all right. Things have improved vastly now that we have actual friends, people who live a few blocks away, who we can call on relatively short notice to make dinner or go to the pub or take a hike. Since we moved to Philadelphia, and especially since we bought our house, we have a constant stream of out of town visitors and overnight guests, which we love. It forces us to get out into the city, to alter our routine in a way that's healthy. (Incidentally, if you haven't come to stay with us yet, you should.)

But usually, here's what it looks like. A handful of impressions from my daily routine. And for those of you curious what children's librarians actually do ... this is it.

7:30am - Alarm goes off. My husband gets out of bed. The cat resettles next to my head, purring like a machine. We both fall back to sleep.

7:50am - Nathan sits down on the bed to put on his socks and shoes, jostling me and the cat. Then he leans over till he's laying across the bed and into my face. Kisses. Goodbye. Be careful. I love you.

8am - I manage to put my feet on the floor, then shower, dress, primp half-assedly, and find something portable to eat. Most days, I wear jeans, a colorful top, and interesting earrings. I am partial to Nutri-Grain bars.

8:30am - I walk down the street, greeting neighbors who haven't yet departed for work. At the corner, I turn left to get a coffee at the Urban Cafe, a local joint renowned for its gruff but kind owner Tom and its made-to-order menu. Recently, the cafe had a bad electrical fire, so until they rebuild, I'm stuck with the Dunkin' Donuts further up the block.

8:45am - After a five minute walk east, I'm at work. I will probably never have a commute this easy again, so I try to be thankful for it every morning. As I round the corner to the library's back entrance, an older guy who hangs out by the bus stop greets me. We have this exchange almost every day. He tells me that I dropped a piece of his heart, I roll my eyes, and we both smile.

Inside the building, I say hi to the ladies in the circulation department. My favorite security guard waves and spouts his usual greeting, "Hey, it's Cool Kate!" He asks if I remembered to see about jobs at my husband's social service agency for his friend. I forgot, of course, and apologize.

9am - My co-workers in the children's department have trickled in, and we assemble in the basement workroom. We shoot the shit for awhile, neighborhood gossip and television shows. My supervisor describes the dressing-down she gave a woman in another branch who spoke rudely to her, intimating that she knows this woman used to do cocaine and could ruin her. I decide once again never to get on her bad side.

Down to business: we look at the schedule to see which day cares and school groups are coming in for storytimes. Usually there are three storytimes for a variety of age groups. We each take one, but some are more desirable than others. Certain elementary school classes are better behaved, while some of the day care kids can't keep their eyes open or act like they've never sung "The Itsy-Bitsy Spider" before. Maybe they haven't.

9:30am - I get the 11 o'clock group, so I take my time checking my email. Then I look at my collection of picture books and try to match up a relevant theme with the age group. This morning I have 3-5 year olds, my favorites. They're old enough to be comfortable doing group activities, but still young enough to be game for anything. I decide on Crazy Pets, a storytime I could do in my sleep by now.

I have time, so I start looking for other books, songs, and rhymes to do with a kindergarten group later in the week. Slowly a theme emerges: Crazy Food. I guess I'm into Crazy lately. I'm excited because I'll get to teach the kids one of my favorite camp songs, "Fried Ham."

11:10am - The day care kids file down the stairs in their brightly colored and hilariously bulky winter attire. The teachers wave, and the kids greet me too. Somewhere along the way they have gotten the idea that my name is Miss Cake. Kate is foreign to them, but cake is a known quantity. I like to think of Miss Cake as my fabulous children's librarian alter ego.

11:20am - After I finish reading Please, Puppy, Please by Spike Lee and Tonya Lewis Lee, which has great illustrations and a catchy rhythm, half a dozen kids shriek, "READ IT AGAIN!" This is the highlight of my day.

11:40am - We sing our last song, "Down By the Bay," and then I read Going on a Bear Hunt by Michael Rosen, which the kids can participate in. They all scream in mock horror and total delight when we find the bear in the cave. Sometimes I feel guilty because I am getting paid good money to do something so fun.

11:45am - The kids are out on the library floor, sitting at knee-high tables and flipping through books. Most of these children can't read yet, but that doesn't stop them from making up the story as they go along (an important pre-literacy skill).

Today a little girl with braids and plastic barrettes that go clack-clack-clack wants to "read" to me. She licks her finger carefully before turning every page. This is how I know she's being read to at home, because the affectation is clearly an imitation of someone else, her grandmother, maybe. I see another kid sitting in the corner, holding up a picture book the way I do during storytime, reading to a collection of bedraggled stuffed animals she has seated on a bench. This is the other best part of my day.

12pm - I walk home for lunch. I wash my hands twice before I prepare my food; kid germs are killer, and my hands always feel coated by this time of the day. The cat sits on my lap while I eat reheated red beans and rice and surf mindlessly on Facebook or read a book for class.

1pm - I retrieve our newly processed books from the shelf in circ and roll them downstairs on a cart. They're all shiny and tight in their cellophane covers, but the children will destroy them soon enough, as they should. I'm glad to see that we finally got a new book on AIDS. Some kid asked for stuff last week and the two books we had were from the eighties.

I settle at the front desk with my cart and start applying genre labels to the new book spines - fantasy, historical fiction, African American. I'm interrupted every few minutes by the phone, a question from a co-worker, the arrival of a group of students for our late-afternoon storytime, a request for a book with science experiments from a parent.

Queen, a teenager from the homeless shelter around the corner, drops in to see if she can use the piano in the meeting room. Word has spread that we let kids fiddle around on it when nobody's using the room. I don't know why piano is suddenly all the rage, but we get at least three teenagers a day who want to pound the keys. Queen puts on headphones while she plays by ear, and we're treated to a very serviceable medley of Alicia Keys and "Heart and Soul."

3:30pm - School's out, and the children's room is in full swing. Our after-school assistants help kids with their homework and do the general wrangling required to keep 50 kids under the age of 12 from causing total destruction. In the meantime, I answer reference questions and enjoy their company.

My Rastababy, a six-year-old with dreds stuffed into a hat, hovers around the desk. He needs ideas on how he can raise two dollars to replace the library card he's lost for the millionth time. He is smacking his gum loudly, and my supervisor tells him it's disgusting, that it looks like he's chewing a monkey's head. He looks deeply offended and says that he's a vegetarian. Then he swallows the gum and bounces away doing Soulja Boy moves.

Miles, inspired by a classroom assignment about Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., asks me what religion I am. I pause, unsure how to answer, and tell him I'm unaffiliated. That seems to satisfy him, even though I doubt he knows what the word means. I spend the rest of the afternoon wondering why I didn't say I was a Christian.

A middle-aged women with a New York accent asks me if I've seen her son, "the white kid." I point. He's the only one down here.

A shy boy I haven't seen before is looking for science fiction, "the outer space kind." He's read everything I hand him. Finally I retrieve a dog-eared paperback copy of Ender's Game from the teen department. He looks awed when I hand it to him. "Oh, I've heard about this," he whispers reverently. I crack up internally. Future nerdfighter.

Tiffany comes in, looking bored and too sophisticated for a fifth-grader, her lips shiny with pink gloss. She has to do a report on which presidential candidate she would vote in 2008, but she doesn't know anything about them. "And I don't care," she announces. "This stuff dumb." I can't say I disagree, Tiff. I start looking for a kid-friendly guide that lays out all the positions by candidate, but have no luck, so I ask Tiffany a few questions about election issues. When we get to the war, she suddenly lights up like I've brought up a new Hannah Montana episode. "That war CRAZY," she proclaims, working her neck. "I will vote for someone who can do something about that war." She eventually settles on Barack Obama. I am secretly pleased.

5pm - Closing time. I say goodbye to everybody and walk home in the gathering twilight. The Jones kids, who are at the library everyday after school, yell to me from the corner where they're waiting for their mom to pick them up. "See you tomorrow, Miss Cake!"

Nathan is already home when I arrive, working on a project in the basement. Today it's racking his latest batch of wine (cabernet sauvignon), tomorrow it might be installing a utility sink or soldering something just for kicks. All of these things improve his happiness quotient by about a bazillion.

I hang out with him downstairs for awhile, then sit down in the living room with my laptop and surf mindlessly for a few minutes. Finally I can put it off no longer, and get to work on a paper that's due for my management class. Procrastination is less of an option now that I'm working full time and taking three classes.

7pm - We have a standing dinner date with our friends Matt and Lisa once a week. We trade off weeks hosting and cooking, then watch LOST together after we eat and chat. Tonight we pick up a bottle of wine at the state store and head down to their place for the most amazing butternut squash risotto I've ever tasted.

9pm - LOST is actually pretty good this season. We drink tea and gasp at all the right places and speculate during the commercial breaks. Lisa guesses correctly about the revelation in the episode's last moments. Props, girl, because I did not see that coming.

10:30pm - I'm in bed, reading myself to sleep with my latest book club pick. The cat is curled up on my feet and Nathan is brushing his teeth in the bathroom, doing his usual humorous Tourette's-like nonsense-squawking routine.

It's a little life, but it's mine.

January 27, 2008

Earthly delights, v. 1

In the process of updating the links that appear in the right-hand sidebar of this blog, I came across the following information, products, recipes, videos, and other assorted delights:

>> "I want to Barack your world" valentines from an Etsy.com seller. Topical!

>> Butternut squash macaroni and cheese recipe. I can't emphasize enough how much you won't regret this.

>> Watch this Philadelphia lady make her awesome block print shirts on MARTHA! If you're having a baby you're getting one of these.

>> Five Awesome Girls is an offshoot of my favorite YouTube project of 2008, Brotherhood 2.0. Harry Potter references abound (and go over my head), but these are the kind of teenagers you're relieved to find out exist.

>> "When you look at the enormous communal plate you feel you the luckiest motherfucker of all time." Let Mindy Kaling - better known as Kelly Kapoor on NBC's The Office - take you on a tour of everything you should buy even if you can't afford it, including the Ethiopian food she's describing in the above quote.

While I'm at it, I also have to give kudos to Facebook. Never have I loved a social networking website so deeply for its ability to connect me with people I like on an informal, low-pressure basis. I mean, I just became friends with my dad's former boss-slash-mentor's wife, who is at least 60 years old, and who used to send me awesome Mac-based computer game prototypes on floppy disk when I was just a wee baby geek in grade school. This is so cool, is it not?

February 14, 2007

Internet kismet.

This entry was written on Valentine's day, but blog support went down and then I forgot about it. Better late than never?

A single rose for my small circle of readers, on Valentine's day. Sweets for the sweet and all that!

arena_strikeprose_edit.jpg

My longtime girlcrush and lexicographical heroine Erin McKean recently gave a delightful talk on language at the Free Library of Philadelphia, and I've since been obsessed with her blog on quite a different subject: dresses, both vintage and modern. Ms. McKean makes a lot of her own clothing, including the cheerful Valentine confection at left (click on the photo to see the whole thing), and displays her projects and eBay conquests at Dress A Day. But my favorite part of her website is a fictional series she calls "The Secret Life of Dresses," sad little vignettes written from the point of view of garments that ultimately tell the story of their human wearers. As old-fashioned as the garb that illustrates them, the stories are heartbreaking and sentimental - perfect for Valentine's Day.

January 15, 2007

One foot in front of the other.

Hi, everyone. Welcome to my new home, a little corner of the web graciously provided and appointed by my friends at *cino. I haven't gotten around to finding throw pillows for the sofas or Christmas lights for low-budget ambience, but I hope you'll make yourself comfortable regardless. This blog is all about doing the best with what you've got, after all.

I'm calling it The Curved Path in honor of a return to my roots. I adopted the pseudonym online about four years ago, while I was an intern at Sojourners magazine. Perhaps the most important truth I took away from that formative year was that everything about life was messier and more complex than I could possibly imagine. That realization was encapsulated for me one day at a retreat center, when I walked a labyrinth, a spiritual metaphor for life on - you guessed it - the curved path.

You can read about that experience in my most recent column for catapult magazine. If you want the condensed version of this blog's m.o., however, look no further than the pithy prayer I read before setting foot to ground in the labyrinth:

O God of many paths, I stand before this labyrinth today, metaphor of my journey to you. In the Western world I have been taught that "the shortest distance between two points is a straight line," and being an impatient person, I am uncomfortable with waiting. I have often modeled my journey to you on the straight line. But you, God of infinite patience, have shown me that there is another path: the curved path.

Whether by choice or by necessity, this path is the one I've been taking lately. It's full of detours, but those are usually the most interesting part of the journey, even though they're often the most irritating in the moment. (Just ask my roadtrip buddy/sparring partner/lifelong fling Nathan.)

My former blog was about the journey itself, the Big Picture and its corresponding Big Questions. But this one is for the detours, which is to say: the recipes, the television programs, the terrifying but surprisingly alluring prospect of having children, the satisfying yet difficult new career, the half-assed sewing projects, the neighborhood gossip, the daily sadnesses and outrages, the good things my friends are doing, and the photos that document all of the above. (Well, except for the third item down the list - I'll spare you that.)

In short, the curved path is made up of what Kathleen Norris calls "the quotidian mysteries." She subtitled her little book on the subject "Laundry, Liturgy, and 'Women's Work,'" which might be suitably applied to this blog as well. Ordinary time, ordinary life, is sanctifying. The mundane is where the holiness happens, when it happens at all. I try to keep my eyes open so I'll know it when I see it - and I'll try to write it down here when I do.