to Support The Community Library
Sip, shop, and celebrate summer at J. McLaughlin. 15% of all sales during this event will benefit The Community Library.
See you at 540 E 4th Street in Ketchum!
by kmerwin
Sip, shop, and celebrate summer at J. McLaughlin. 15% of all sales during this event will benefit The Community Library.
See you at 540 E 4th Street in Ketchum!
by kmerwin
Thursday, July 13, 2023
6:00pm – 7:30pm
John A. and Carole O. Moran Lecture Hall
The Idaho Centennial Trail is a nearly 1,000-mile-long trail spanning the length of Idaho, extending from the Idaho-Nevada border to the Canadian border, encompassing all the variety that the state has to offer. It was recognized as the state trail in 1990, when Idaho was celebrating its 100-year benchmark after becoming a state. The ICT travels through some of the most rugged and remote country in the Lower 48, including three designated wilderness areas, one proposed wilderness area, and several roadless areas. As long trails go, it’s regarded as one of the most difficult in the nation.
Come hear from four Idahoans—John Lloyd, Lisa and Jeremy Johnson, and Dan Noakes—who have hiked the trail in its entirety! This panel, facilitated by the Selway Bitterroot Frank Church Foundation, will give attendees an inside perspective on hiking the trail from both thru-hikers and a section-hiker. You’re sure to leave inspired for your next adventure!
In partnership with the Selway Bitterroot Frank Church Foundation. This program will be livestreamed and recorded for later viewing.
Lisa and Jeremy Johnson’s new book, The Hiker’s Guide: Idaho Centennial Trail, will be available for sale from Chapter One at the event.
by kmerwin
I invite you to enter and deeply feel Solito. Javier Zamora, who will be a guest at The Community Library July 19, 2023, is a writer of authentic magnitude and epistemic experiences. A special man, a poet and an activist; Javier a boy alone. “Solito” journeyed from El Salvador to the US to be united with his parents in Los Angeles. This beautifully written memoir is a testimony filled with compassion, trust, and a deep belief in the human spirit. It offers the intimate account of a young boy’s treacherous journey through Guatemala, Mexico and across the US Border.
Can you remember when you first learned to tie your shoes? Javier at nine years learned. During this time, practicing with laces he could hear whispers “La USA” and a forthcoming trip-trip-trip. His parents had crossed years prior with a coyote. He was left in his loving grandparents’ care until the early dawn of the day that was to arrive soon. “Listo nieto.” The 3,000-mile journey was to begin.
“He writes in the pitch-perfect voice of that child as he makes his perilous way, on foot, by boat, bus, and truck, recalling moments of true terror and unexpected tenderness.” – Mitchell Kaplan interview
The “trip” in 1999 from Herradura, El Salvador, to Los Angeles took Javier on a courageous journey. A trip that was to take two weeks, took two months. Reading or listening to this story that he narrates, you will experience Solito’s crawling and groveling atop dust, prickly cacti, snagging barbed wire—surviving the sizzling and freezing desert temperatures. But underneath whirling helicopter blades, Solito searches for his Cadejo. He developed idioma skills when in Mexico. He used popote NOT pajilla as a Salvadoran would verbalize. He must hide his identity in route.
Aubade from Shakespear means; How we deal with death’s inescapability. In the pre-dawn darkness. Solito’s Cadejo was with him.
I’ll be back soon mijo – But in our windows still no glass,
When raindrops hit the sill they touch my skin like her eyes did
That morning she said I’ll be back soon mijo.
I touch the larvae growing in old tires in our backyard, I know she won’t return.
Aubade – poem from Unaccompanied 811.6 ZAM (2017)
Javier had an intuitive sense of character at an early age. He knows it might have been the gifted amulet, a Cadejo that his grandfather told him would protect him on his journey. The Cadejo, is a Salvadoran legend about a dog-wolf like creature with red eyes and goat hooves that protects those who believe.
As a note: Javier & Francisco Cantú are the best of friends. As a border patrol officer, Cantú resigned his position and authored the book: The Line Becomes a River: Dispatches from the Border. Both books hold close in my heart and hands.
Find Solito: A Memoir in 92 ZAM, SPA 920 ZAM, Axis360 E-book & E-Audiobook. Javier Zamora holds a BA Alma mater from Berkeley, MFA from NYU, is a Wallace Stegner Fellow, has a Radcliff Fellow at Harvard.
Note: Javier Zamora will be speaking at The Community Library at 6:00 p.m. on July 19, in partnership with the Sun Valley Writers’ Conference. More/register here.
by kmerwin
It was true when Carl Sagan said, “we are made of star-stuff,” but we contain far more—a universe, in fact!
Come spend the evening with visiting Astronomer-in-Residence Dr. Lindsay DeMarchi. Relax as we unwind into dazzling mixtures of nebulae and galaxies, with commentary from history’s great poets and writers alike. We will reminisce with stars about the end of their lives, and how their cosmic legacy has been handed down to us on our humble Earth.
Presented in partnership with the Central Idaho Dark Sky Reserve Astronomer-in-Residence Program.
Registration is recommended to save a seat. This program will also be livestreamed and available to watch later.
More/register here.
by kmerwin
All the exhibits at the Wood River Museum include interactive elements, where visitors are encouraged to write, type, talk, and remember – because we all are part of history! For example, in the Hemingway exhibit, individuals can sit at a typewriter like the one that Hemingway used and try typing their own true sentences. The Museum also includes a small gift shop with unique gifts that relate to the exhibits and regional history.
The Tribal Room honors the history and present-day of the Shoshone and Bannock Tribes, which have inhabited the lands of Central Idaho since time immemorial.
This exhibit explores the many reasons and ways that people have come to this hard-to-reach area over time. It is not easy to find Sun Valley and Central Idaho in general, here in the high desert mountains of the American West, but a wide range of people have done so…
This exhibit examines who Hemingway was when he arrived in 1939: a writer at his peak, a globetrotter drawn to remote places, a rugged outdoor enthusiast, and a man with complicated personal relationships.
The Cabinet of Wonders invites visitors to discover history by opening the doors and drawers of a fanciful cabinet that holds a great variety of regional history artifacts – from a telegraph key to vintage skis and sheep shears.
by kmerwin
We have games. If you bring your laptop to our Wi-Fi, you can play our games, for free. We are, in fact, a Steam PC Café. As a PC Café, we license specific Steam games, and anyone connected to our Wi-Fi can play them. Oh, you’ll need your own Steam account, but those are free! On the positive side, your Steam games will follow you here, and you can use our Wi-Fi to play with your friends or with people you meet here.
For those over 18, you’ll need to bring your own gaming laptop. You can sit outside under an umbrella, or inside by the fireplace—with headphones please. Nobody needs to hear you stomping aliens or blowing up WWII Destroyers. You can even sit in your car and play, because our Wi-Fi has you covered outside the building.
For teens, we have gaming computers available in our Juice Box. Sorry ages under 9 or over 18, the Juice Box is for teens only. But these computers are smoking-hot gaming machines. Gaming Keyboards. Gaming Mice. Gaming monitors. Headphones. Everything you need to bring the heat. Every Tuesday morning, I update them with the latest from Minecraft, Roblox, Fortnite, and all the games from the Library’s PC Café.
For kids under the age of nine, the Children’s Library has Nintendo Switches with games to check out. Play Super Smash Bros., Splatoon 2, Mariokart 8 Deluxe, and more games here at the Library—free with your library card.
So, swing on in and check out our technology. All the savvy kids are doing it.
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If you’re not a gamer, we have you covered with computers with Office on them in the Learning Commons. We also have two Spanish computers/keyboards. Need to print? We’ve got you covered there, too, with a high-capacity laser printer, copier, and scanner. We even have laptops you can check out at the front desk.
We keep everything up-to-date, safe, and secure for you. At the end of every session, these computers reboot and wipe themselves clean.
If you need specialized tech help, the Library offers a free Tech Help Desk with Paul Zimmerman in the Learning Commons twice a month. Drop in between 5:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. on the first and third Wednesdays of the month. Check our online calendar in advance to confirm dates and times, because sometimes they vary.