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Library Blog

Book Review: Tenía Que Sobrevivir

March 12, 2024 by kmerwin

Gold Mine Processing Associate, Ingrid Roman, recommends Tenía Que Sobrevivir (I had to Survive) by Roberto Canessa and Pablo Vierci

Ingrid Roman tenía que sobrevivir LR

Tenía Que Sobrevivir is a narrative based on a real-life event of an airplane crash in the Andes mountains. In 1972, a Uruguayan rugby team was traveling to Chile with forty-five passengers aboard when an aviation error changed the fate of the whole team.

Many died, but the remaining survivors were in the midst of nowhere with limited to no resources. To survive, they worked together and developed a society of the snow.

At the same time, their desire to live and to reunite with their families left them no other option than to seek help on their own. Among all the survivors, only Canessa and Parrado had the condition to journey out through the unknown lands of the Andes. Canessa gives his point of view of his experience in the mountains and how this influenced his future.

This book easily captures the reader’s attention because Roberto Canessa has no filters when going through his memoirs. He can engage the reader by giving great detail about the encounters he faced while he was trying to survive.

What Canessa and his friends went through pushed the limits of the human condition to unimaginable levels.

They had to readjust physically and mentally to survive. The human body demonstrates its adaptability to harsh environments even in places where life wouldn’t exist. In addition, they also had to undergo a psychological change if they wanted to make it out of the Andes mountains alive. I think this is a key element because although everything was against them they didn’t lose hope that they would return home. Even if they had doubts and fear, their willingness to live was greater.

Find it in SPA 363.12 CAN.

Filed Under: Staff Reviews: Books, Films, Music, and More

The 1910 Ketchum Women’s Baseball Team

March 10, 2024 by Liam Guthrie

By Brigid Miller, Museum Community Engagement Manager

Six women pose in baseball uniforms in front of a house in 1910.
Unknown photographer, 1910, Leslie Benoit Collection, (F 00069)

In the US, the month of March is celebrated as Women’s History Month, and International Women’s Day is recognized on the 8th of March this year. The Wood River Valley has been shaped by incredible women past and present, and in this feature, I wanted to highlight a group of women from our collection.

Also occurring in March is the start of baseball season, from the MLB to little leagues across the country. Pictured here is the Ketchum women’s baseball team in front of the Dollarhide House in 1910. The women in the photograph are believed to be Frances Wilson, Delia Rogers (or Olive Clark), Annie Lombardina, Kate Lombardina Bonning, Chic Reid, and Roxie Rummel Hansen. Although the women are holding a football, based on their uniforms and another photo from our collection in which they are holding baseball bats, this group can be identified as a women’s baseball team.

As highlighted by the movie “A League of Their Own,” during WWII the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League was started since a majority of men were away at war. This professional league operated from 1943-1954 and was built off decades of women’s teams and leagues across the US. Women, like those pictured here, had been playing baseball since the 1800s. Women’s colleges, like Vassar College in New York, were known for organizing baseball teams as early as 1866.

While we do not know much about the Ketchum women’s baseball team in 1910, it is clear that they were a part of a larger movement of women playing the sport. As we celebrate women throughout history this month, as well as the start of baseball season, it is fun to think about the inspiring and impactful women in the Wood River Valley area.

Note this story was originally published in March of 2024 in the Idaho Mountain Express.

Filed Under: "Rear View" from Regional History

Book Review: The Story of Art without Men

March 5, 2024 by kmerwin

Director of the Center for Regional History, Mary Tyson, recommends The Story of Art without Men by Katy Hessel.

I first became aware of Katy Hessel’s work as an art historian through her podcast. The Great Women Artists Podcast sprung to life in 2019. it grew out of Hessel’s Instagram account with a similar name, “Great Women Artists.” Since 2015, Hessel has celebrated female artists daily, by sharing images of artwork from old masters to young graduate students. Her podcast is one of my favorites. Hessel has introduced me to so many artists that I didn’t know about and so many great art historians and critics who share her passion for making society aware of them. Her passion is contagious.

Hessel’s book, The Story of Art Without Men, came out in 2023, and I was so excited to see it at the Library! A rich resource covering a survey of art with a Western perspective, Hessel’s title comes from its predecessor, The Story of Art, by E. H. Gombrich, which, by its eighteenth edition, included only one female artist!

I think if you are a budding art historian, an artist, an emerging artist, an art lover, you would find this a great resource and you would discover, like I have, many artists that you will want to know more about.

The book is divided into five sections. Four of the five sections cover Modern, Post-Modern, and contemporary art. To state the obvious, there are many more women artists to help tell a story in the last 150 years than in the previous four centuries.

Hessel begins in the first section, “Paving the Way,” with the Italians in the early 1500s, specifically in Bologna. Bologna at the time was supportive of women in professions. Women were supported to go to the university there. One sculptor, Properzia De’ Rossi, had patrons, and created a marble relief, Joseph and Potiphar’s Wife, for the front of one of the largest churches at the time. Women in Bologna were encouraged to sign their work and to paint self-portraits to help make themselves known. Art historians have been able to study “a staggering sixty-eight women artists” working there between the 15th and 18th Centuries.

Some of my favorites that she included are painter, Agnes Martin, who lived a monk-like existence in remote New Mexico. She painted large mystical abstractions of the human condition, with titles like “Friendship” and “Happy Holiday.” Another is Nicole Eisenman, a painter of sympathetic figures, often grotesquely exaggerated to reflect our anxieties. Another favorite is Tracy Emin, a British artist, famous for shocking the public in the 90s by making the political personal and the personal public with an installation of her actual slept-in, unmade bed with empty vodka bottles and cigarette butts narrating her actual breakdown experience.

As Hessel writes, “Artists pinpoint moments of history in a uniquely expressive medium and allow us to make sense of a time. If we aren’t seeing art by a wide range of people, we aren’t really seeing society, history, or culture, as a whole…” More than any other art book in the Library, this one helps me to relax. I think it’s because of the feeling that someone has my artistic back and it’s Katy Hessel.

Find The Story of Art without Men here.

Filed Under: Staff Reviews: Books, Films, Music, and More

Book Review: Rich Dad Poor Dad

February 27, 2024 by kmerwin

Gold Mine Product Quality Manager Daniel Velasco recommends Rich Dad Poor Dad by Robert Kiyosaki.

Daniel Velasco Rich Dad Poor Dad

Rich Dad Poor Dad by Robert Kiyosaki challenges conventional beliefs about money and wealth. The author shares insights from two fathers, his own “poor dad” a well-educated but financially struggling government worker and his friend’s “rich dad,” a successful businessman and real estate  investor. 

Throughout the stories of his two father figures, Kiyosaki highlights the importance of financial literacy and smart investing.

What I appreciate most about this book is its importance in developing a financial mindset that goes beyond just saving and budgeting. Kiyosaki encourages readers to think creatively about generating income and building assets and inspires us to take control of our financial futures. While some may find the book’s ideas uncommon, I believe they are precisely what young adults need to hear in order to break free from limiting beliefs about money and build a brighter financial future.

Find Rich Dad Poor Dad in print, ebook, and on CD here.

Filed Under: Staff Reviews: Books, Films, Music, and More

StoryWalk® on the Wood River Trail

February 23, 2024 by kmerwin

Every year, The Community Library collaborates with the Blaine County Recreation District (BCRD) and the Hailey Public Library to bring StoryWalk® to the Wood River Trail. This unique activity merges the joy of reading with the beauty of the outdoors, providing a delightful experience for families and individuals alike.

StoryWalk Just One Flake 2024

The 2024 StoryWalk® in Ketchum featured Just One Flake by Travis Jonker and could be viewed between 6th Street and Wood River Drive. Each page was presented in both English and Spanish, offering an inclusive reading experience.

StoryWalk 2024 Morgan Buckert

While the 2024 StoryWalk® wrapped up on February 22, we have this wonderful note from Morgan Buckert, Director of Development and Communications for the BCRD:

For the first time, our StoryWalk® made it through the week without being ripped apart by the weather!  As I was picking it up last night, I ran into a bilingual after school program at Hemingway with K and 1st graders who were enjoying the book. I walked with them, pulled their wagon, let them play with my sled, and made a lot of new friends.  It was fantastic, and exactly what I wanted to see from this project!  Thank you!

Filed Under: Fresh from the Stacks

Elizabeth “Posey” Gruener

February 21, 2024 by kmerwin

A retrospective curated by Jenny Meese

Elizabeth "Posey" Gruener

On display through Winter/Spring 2024
Betty Olsen Carr Reading Room

Born in 1909 in Cuyahoga, Ohio, Posey attended private schools, including a boarding school in Italy, before attending Bryn Mawr College. She married Theodore Gruener in 1933 and together they created a home with their two children, Rika and Danny, in Ketchum Idaho. Posey was a mix of complexity and kindness. Like everyone, she had her share of tribulation and sorrow, yet she left an indelible mark on her community. She loved the people of Ketchum. A new display in The Community Library aims to share part of Posey’s story with a hope that her love will be remembered.

It was said that Posey knew the names of every young person in town and was interested in each of them.
When she heard a family was having a difficult time, she’d add them to her account at the grocery store so they could get the food they needed. When a school activity didn’t have enough funding, Posey would make sure there was a donation with enough for what they needed.

Many residents confirm that she paid to have the Presbyterian Church of the Big Wood built as well as awing of the Moritz Hospital. Although both have since been remade, it is undeniable that she wanted the community in Ketchum to thrive.

Canyon Run

In the 1950s Posey and Ted built a home on a large parcel of land that spanned from Warm Springs Road up to Canyon Run, which at the time was open green space. She was originally neighbor’s with Henry J. “Bob” Topping, Jr. and eventually with Mary and Ernest Hemingway.

Canyon Run Posey Gruener

Mary Hemingway hoped to buy a couple of acres from Posey, to which they agreed. However, as a lawyer was drafting the agreement, Mary asked them to add an additional parcel. When Posey noticed the addition she explained that the extra land would cost a bit more. Mary protested and their disagreement eventually needed the Idaho Supreme Court to settle the matter. Since an agreement could not be made and both ladies refused to give way, the court returned Mary’s money and the land remained Posey’s. The suit was nothing scandalous but does show the grit of these two powerful women.

Chalet Vengreen Gruener

Chalet Vengreen

In December of 1949, before Sun Valley reopened, the Shah of Iran came to ski, inspired by Sun Valley Serenade, Otto Lang took him to an abandoned mining community in Boulder Basin north of Ketchum where an old cabin was fixed up, two new outhouses were built, and they skied using a snowcat. The Shah was a good skier and returned several times.

Posey and Ted owned and operated their beloved Chalet Vengreen. Many community events were held here, including a wedding at one point. They made brochures offering lodging as well as snowcat trips from the Chalet.

They may have been among the first private lodging and tour companies in Ketchum. The family hosted many guests, including the Shah of Iran when he came to ski.

Wagon Days

Wagon Days Gruener

The Wagon Days committee needed a place they could safely keep and restore the wagons used in the parade each year. Posey happily offered her big red barn to house and care for the wagons until the committee was able to raise the funds to build the Ore Wagon Museum, where the wagons reside today.

The Alpine Club

Posey was an owner of the Alpine Club alongside other notable Ketchum families for years before eventually becoming the sole owner.

During those last years she had matchbooks made with ‘Posey’s Alpine Place’ printed on them, but even then it was always called The Alpine.

The Alpine Gruener

People say that Posey had a special spot inside where you could find her most days. She would tap her cane to get people’s attention and give instructions to young couples to get out on the dance floor. In the same manner you could also get a smack from her cane for nearly anything (not saying hello, sending a late thank you card, etc.).

Posey was a character and part of a wonderful mix of people who created a place in time that we still long for and love to remember.

Download the curator’s PDF here.

Filed Under: Fresh from the Stacks

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