• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Menu
Community Library Logo
Search
  • Search the CATALOG for books and more
  • Search the CALENDAR for programs and events
  • Search the WEBSITE for general information
  • I Want To
    • Use My Library Account
    • Get a Library Card
    • Reserve a Room
    • Find Books and More
    • Renew or Place a Hold
    • Request an Item
    • Digital Collections
    • Computers and Printing
    • Ask a Librarian
  • Visit
  • Use the Library
    • Books, eBooks, and More
    • Children’s and Young Adult Library
    • Research and Learn
    • Center for Regional History
    • Reserve a Room
    • Library Policies
    • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Programs
    • Calendar of Events
    • Adult Summer Reads
    • Event Archive
    • 2025 Community Speaker Series
    • Library Book Club
    • Hemingway Distinguished Lecture
    • Sun Valley Early Literacy Summit
    • To Taste Life Twice 2025 Seminar
  • Wood River Museum
    • Wood River Museum Current Exhibits
    • Online Collections Database
    • Exhibition History
    • Museum History
  • Hemingway
    • Hemingway House and Preserve
    • Writer-in-Residence Program
    • Ernest Hemingway Seminar
    • Hemingway House Online Collection
  • Our Story
    • Staff and Board of Trustees
    • Library Blog
    • Newsletters and Reports
    • Employment & Volunteer Opportunities
Give and Support
  • The Community Library
  • Gold Mine Stores
  • Center for Regional History
    • Wood River Museum of History + Culture
    • Regional History Reading Room
    • Historic Photographs
The Community Library Association
  • The Community Library
  • Gold Mine Stores
  • Center for Regional History
  • Get a library card
  • I want to
    I Want To
    • Use My Library Account
    • Reserve a Room
    • Find Books and More
    More
    • Renew or Place a Hold
    • Request an Item
    • Use Our Digital Collections
    • Use a Computer/Print/Scan
    • Ask a Librarian
Community Library Logo
  • I Want To
    • Use My Library Account
    • Get a Library Card
    • Reserve a Room
    • Find Books and More
    • Renew or Place a Hold
    • Request an Item
    • Digital Collections
    • Computers and Printing
    • Ask a Librarian
  • Visit
  • Use the Library
    • Books, eBooks, and More
    • Children’s and Young Adult Library
    • Research and Learn
    • Center for Regional History
    • Reserve a Room
    • Library Policies
    • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Programs
    • Calendar of Events
    • Adult Summer Reads
    • Event Archive
    • 2025 Community Speaker Series
    • Library Book Club
    • Hemingway Distinguished Lecture
    • Sun Valley Early Literacy Summit
    • To Taste Life Twice 2025 Seminar
  • Wood River Museum
    • Wood River Museum Current Exhibits
    • Online Collections Database
    • Exhibition History
    • Museum History
  • Hemingway
    • Hemingway House and Preserve
    • Writer-in-Residence Program
    • Ernest Hemingway Seminar
    • Hemingway House Online Collection
  • Our Story
    • Staff and Board of Trustees
    • Library Blog
    • Newsletters and Reports
    • Employment & Volunteer Opportunities
Search
  • Search the CATALOG for books and more
  • Search the CALENDAR for programs and events
  • Search the WEBSITE for general information
Give & Support

Library Blog

Major Hong King Wash House

January 10, 2024 by Liam Guthrie

Mary Tyson, Director of the Jeanne Rodger Lane Center for Regional History

A very rustic cabin with a sign reading Major Hong King Wash House
Unknown photographer, circa 1916, Mary Lemon Brown Collection (F 00689)

In the late 1800s, Idaho was home to a substantial Chinese community, drawn by the allure of gold and opportunities in railroad construction. While the written history of mining companies and early prospectors is well-documented in the Wood River Valley, details about the Chinese community remain scarce because anti-Chinese sentiment eventually drove them out. A poignant glimpse into this history comes from this photo of an abandoned log building bearing a sign for Major Hong King Wash House—a modest shed that once housed a laundry business.

This tangible link to the past is especially moving, shedding light on the Chinese residents of Ketchum and Major Hong King’s business. The laundry’s unassuming structure contrasts with grander narratives of the silver mining era, offering concrete evidence of a community history largely missing historical records.

A court case from 1897 adds another layer to Major Hong King’s story, involving a dispute with Quong Que Hing over money owed for work and a potato trade. This court case shows that Major Hong King grew potatoes as well. Idaho’s early Chinese immigrants played a role in potato farming—a legacy the state is renowned for today.

As we approach the Lunar New Year on January 22, marking the Year of the Dragon in the Chinese Zodiac, the Wood River Valley commemorates its rich history. Take a moment to look at the public art piece, Prosperity Mountain by Gemma Daggatt, installed last October on Walnut and Main St. in Hailey. It pays tribute to the Chinese community that once flourished here.

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

Filed Under: "Rear View" from Regional History

A Little Book of BIG Stories 2024

January 10, 2024 by kmerwin

… a story of Idaho, as lived through its well-loved libraries …

Little Book BIG Stories 2024

Like the Armed Services Editions, millions of which were distributed to U.S. soldiers serving in WWII, this small book celebrates the right to read freely and the power of stories to expand our humanity, even in, especially in, trying times. The testimonials in this book provide a glimpse into the big work of libraries across Idaho: More than 150 local libraries serve the people of this state, from Sandpoint to Twin Falls, Downey to Emmett. Hundreds of thousands of people depend on these libraries not only to check out books, but for the quality of their lives. Like the great Idaho landscape itself, Idaho libraries inspire a love of freedom and a humility that accompanies wonder.  

The testimonials in this book describe the delight of Story Times and game nights, chess clubs and craft nights. They describe parents reading to children, a widow making new friends, people paying bills, veterans getting together. They describe people finding comfort through reading. They demonstrate the brave and generous capacity of Idahoans to talk to each other, learn from each other, and show empathy toward each other.  

This is a story of Idaho, as lived through its well-loved libraries. 

~Jenny Emery Davidson, Executive Director, The Community Library


Sample of Testimonials

“This is a library. This is love.”

The Craigmont Community Library is just that: a community library. The space is already quietly teeming with school age kids who have taken refuge for this no-school day. The hubbub briefly increases as the littlest ones excitedly greet friends they only get to see once a week—friends they never would have met without Story Time. A hushed anticipation, punctuated with questions about the book the librarian is holding, indicates Story Time has started. We sip coffee and enjoy the respite, watching our little charges soak in the story. After the formal story time is over, the librarian kindly agrees to read favorite stories brought to her from the shelf. With a contented smile I think, “This. This is a community. This is a library. This is love.” And I am grateful. ~Karista Bradley, Craigmont Community Library, Craigmont


“I Dreamed About Someday Publishing a Book“

Every day I rode a bicycle to the Boise Public Library. I read. I used the bathroom. I dreamed of someday publishing a book that might wind up on the shelves around me… what if I use the story to explore the longings inside each of us to both escape home and to do right by the people we love? It was the first story I ever wrote that I was proud of. I could not have written it without a place to think, work, and dream…A public library is more than a storehouse of books. It is a safe public indoor space where every citizen is welcome to chase dreams. ~Anthony Doerr, Pulitzer Prize-Winning Author, Boise Public Library, Boise


“The Library Can Help You” 

We were forced to move to the USA because a bloody war began in our country. We weren’t prepared for a new life, language, and different cultures. Someone said to me, “The library can help you.” I am very grateful to everyone at the library. I would like to see a similar library program for kids and adults in my city of Dnipro, Ukraine. ~Mariia, East Bonner County Library District, Sandpoint 


Want More?

Click here to download a PDF of A Little Book of BIG Stories.


Add Your Voice to the BIG Stories of Idaho Libraries!

Contact your state legislators with your own library story.

Idaho State Senate
P.O. Box 83720, Boise, ID 83720-0081
208-332-1000

Idaho House of Representatives
P.O. Box 83720
Boise, ID 83720-0038
208-332-1000

Find your legislator here.

Filed Under: Fresh from the Stacks

The Community Library’s Best of 2023 

January 8, 2024 by kmerwin

Curated by our librarians, this ‘Best of 2023’ list includes some of the worthiest books published this past year. Included are well-known favorites, yet we also strived to include some surprises, both locally and internationally. 

We considered a variety of factors, including our staff’s favorite books of the year as well as titles that have met with critical acclaim and literary awards. We also looked to bookstores, book clubs, podcasts and magazines for recommendations.  

Pam and Andrea Best of 2023 LR

Our sources include: New York Times, National Book Awards, NPR, Kirkus Reviews, Barnes & Noble, Library Journal, Lit Hub, The Economist, Booker Prize, Pacific Northwest Book Awards, Publisher’s Weekly, Reader’s Corner and others.  

Download a copy here.


Fiction 

Absolution by Alice McDermott | FICTION McDermott 
American Mermaid by Jenifer Langbein | FICTION Langbein 
The Bee Sting by Paul Murray | FICTION Murray 
The Berry Pickers by Amanda Peters | FICTION Peters 
The Better Half by Alli Frank | FICTION Frank 
Chain-Gang All-Stars by Nana Kwane Adjei-Brenyah | FICTION Adjei-Brenyah 
The Covenant of Water by Abraham Verghese | FICTION Verghese 
Crook Manifesto by Colson Whitehead | FICTION Whitehead 
Cross-Stitch by Jazmina Barrera | FICTION Barrera 
The Dog of the North by Elizabeth McKenzie | FICTION McKenzie 
Eastbound by Maylis de Kerangal | FICTION Kerangal 
Family Lore | Sabiduría Familiar by Elizabeth Acevedo [English | Español] 
The Fraud by Zadie Smith 
Good Night, Irene by Luis Alberto Urrea | FICTION Urrea 
The Great Reclamation by Rachel Heng | FICTION Heng 
Happy Place by Emily Henry | FICTION Henry 
The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store by James McBride | FICTION McBride 
Hello Beautiful by Ann Napolitano | FICTION Napolitano 
Land of Milk and Honey by C Pam Zhang | FICTION Zhang 
Let Us Descend by Jesmyn Ward | FICTION Ward 
North Woods by Daniel Mason | FICTION Mason 
This Other Eden by Paul Harding | FICTION Harding 
Prophet Song by Paul Lynch | FICTION Lynch 
The Rachel Incident by Caroline O’Donoghue | FICTION O’Donoghue 
Rouge by Mona Awad | FICTION Awad 
Sam by Allegra Goodman | FICTION Goodman 
Still Born by Guadalupe Nettel | FICTION Nettel 
Temple Folk by Aaliya Bilal | FICTION Bilal 
Tom Lake by Ann Patchett | FICTION Patchett 
The Wildest Sun by Asha Lemmie | FICTION Lemmie 
Yellowface by R.F. Kuang | FICTION Kuang 

Nonfiction 

The Art Thief by Michael Finkel | 364.162 FIN  
The Best Minds by Jonathan Rosen | 616.898 ROS 
The Best Strangers in the World by Ari Shapiro | 070.43 SHA 
Bottoms Up and The Devil Laughs by Kerry Howley | 352.379 HOW 
The Country of the Blind by Andrew Leland | 323.41 LEL 
Dinners with Ruth by Nina Totenberg | 791.44 TOT 
Doppelganger by Naomi Kline | 302.23 KLE 
A Fever in the Heartland by Timothy Egan | 322.42 EGA 
Fire Weather by John Vaillant | 363.379 VAI 
I’m Glad My Mom Died by Jennette McCurdy | 731.45 MCC 
In Sardinia by Jeff Biggers | TRAVEL 914.59 BIG 
El Invencible Verano de Liliana by Cristina Rivera Garza [Español] | SPA 364.15 RIV 
King: A Life by Johathan Eig | BIOGRAPHY 920 King 
The Last Honest Man by James Risen | 973.92 RIS 
Master Slave Husband Wife by Ilyon Woo | 3063362 WOO 
My Name is Barbra by Barbra Streisand | BIOGRAPHY 920 Streisand 
Ordinary Notes by Christina Elizabeth Sharpe | 305.896 SHA 
Places We Left Behind by Jennifer Lang | 306.81 LAN 
Poverty, by America by Matthew Desmond | 362.509 DES 
The Quickening by Elizabeth A. Rush | 998.9 RUS 
Red Memory by Tania Branigan | 951.056 BRA 
The Rediscovery of America by Ned Blackhawk | 970.004 BLA 
Right Kind of Wrong by Amy C. Edmondson | 158.1 EDM 
Some People Need Killing by Patricia Evangelista | 364.409 EVA 
Sure, I’ll Join Your Cult by Maria Bamford | 792.7 BAM 
The Talk by Darrin Bell | GRAPHIC NOVEL 920 Bell 
True West by Betsy Gaines Quammen | 973.933 QUA 
Unruly by David Mitchell | 941 MIT 
The Wager by David Grann | 910.916 GRA 
Wolfish by Erica Berry | 152.46 BER 
Women We Buried, Women We Burned by Rachel Louise Snyder | BIOGRAPHY 920 Snyder 

Filed Under: Fresh from the Stacks

Review: Sherman Alexie

January 3, 2024 by kmerwin

Maintenance Manager Jerry McDonald recommends works by author Sherman Alexie.

Jerry McDonald recommends Sherman Alexie

When I first heard of Sherman Alexie, I was telling a friend and his wife that I had just received a letter from the Department of Indian Affairs. My mother had passed away about four years ago and the Department was notifying me of an upcoming hearing in Spokane about her estate. My friend’s wife asked if I’ve ever heard of Sherman Alexie. She went on to tell me that Alexie is a writer and a poet, and made a movie about growing up on the same Spokane Indian Reservation where my mother was born. The movie, she said, is called, Smoke Signals.

I later Googled Sherman Alexie and ordered his book, The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian. Alexie is quoted as saying this semi-autobiographical book it’s about 78% true.                                          

This past summer Sherman Alexie came to The Community Library for the annual Ernest Hemingway Seminar, this year themed, “Fathers and Sons”. Alexie spoke to a packed audience of 200 and introduced the Smoke Signals film he wrote the script for in 1998. Smoke Signals is funny yet very serious. It starts with the Reservation radio announcer talking about a car going by on the highway and how this event affects the doldrums of the day.

It’s a good day to be Indigenous!

You can’t help but enjoy this laid back vibe of life on the Rez, but the movie quickly changes to some serious flashbacks of a house on  fire after a Fourth of July party, and the two main characters, Victor and Thomas when they were kids. Victor’s father, Arnold, rescues Thomas from the fire and Thomas is forever grateful to him. But Victor’s experience with his father is mostly negative. His father has a drinking problem and becomes violent with Victor and his mother and eventually abandons them and moves to Phoenix.

Then the story changes back to the present and Victor’s mom tells him that his father has died. The relationship between Victor and Thomas becomes the center point as Thomas offers to give Victor the money to go to Phoenix with his father’s ashes. But Thomas says that he wants to go as part of the deal. Victor finally allows Thomas to go even though Thomas is not well liked by Victor.

So off they go on a bus trip with a jar of money and a jar of ashes.

They laugh and argue and sing a song about John Wayne’s teeth. It is a movie without special effects and a large cast of actors. It is simple yet compelling, but never predictable. I thoroughly enjoyed the surprise ending, as it gave me a look into my mother’s past and reminded me of the rocky relationship I had with my own father. I have forgiven him for not being around me when I needed him. His father died when he was 14, so like he said, he didn’t know how to be one.

After the movie Sherman had a informative Q & A and mentioned his newsletter on Substack Reads, which I highly recommend. I look forward to reading it just about every day. He writes poems and about things like “Pretendians,” who are depicted in movies but are not real Indians. The newsletter also allows the reader to like the poem or fiction or whatever the author enters, and you can comment on it and then the author can also like your comment and say, Thank You, which I really enjoy.

Find titles by Sherman Alexie here.

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

Book Review: The Woman in Me

December 26, 2023 by kmerwin

Gold Mine Consign Associate Spencer Kaufman recommends The Woman in Me by Britney Spears

The Woman in Me is a memoir by American pop icon Britney Spears. It tells the incredible story of one of the greatest performers in music history and the battles that she faced through her faith … and faith alone at times.

I participated in a book club discussing Britney Spears’s memoir and I’m so glad I did. I decided to listen to the audiobook since Michelle Williams narrates it. I grew up listening to Britney Spears and have remained a big fan to this day.

Being a force of nature aside, she has always seemed like a truly kind and highly sensitive human being.

Listening to her personal experience of being treated so unfairly by the media, paparazzi, and those closest to her, also made me reflect on how I could have participated as a person being entertained by her struggles.

Such a massive star’s freedom being taken away via a conservatorship by her own family, while working nonstop, is something that continues to baffle me. I think it was convenient for her to be written off as simply crazy..

…which is how the abusive treatment towards her was accepted for so long.

My greatest takeaway from this book was that we need to continue to create spaces where mental health is at the forefront of the conversation.

Find The Woman in Me in print, ebook, and eaudiobook here.

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

Film Review: Barbie

December 19, 2023 by kmerwin

Collections Manager Aly Wepplo recommends the film, Barbie, from Warner Bros. Pictures.

This holiday season, I want to recommend the Barbie movie. Maybe you haven’t seen it yet. Maybe you got it the day it came out and have watched it every day since.  Either way, or any way in between, you can check out Barbie from The Community Library. 

Barbie celebrates the magic of play. It opens with a funny, moving scene of kids playing with dolls before Barbie. These dolls were something to care for, to feed and change and parent. And then…

Barbie changed everything. Kids stood in Barbie’s shoes, and they imagined what they could be – a veterinarian, a big sister, an astronaut…

Barbie gave kids confidence and ambition to reach for their dreams. 

Barbie speaks to adults’ dreams, too. In the movie, America Ferrera (of TV’s Superstore) plays a mom who grew up with Barbie and longs for the sense of possibility it once gave her. She begins sketching ideas for the Barbie hero she needs now, and Barbie Land and the “real” world collide. 

The supporting characters in this story are wonderful. I loved Kate McKinnon as Weird Barbie, whose playmates cut her hair and drew on her face. Weird Barbie embraces being different, and her unique thinking helps save the day. 

Costume designer Ann Roth makes a cameo as an older woman Barbie meets at a real-world bus stop. Barbie tells her she’s beautiful, and the woman replies…

…“I know it!” 

I hope your holiday season is full of gifting and playing and spending time together. I will watch this movie with my family and fondly remember my toys and the time I spent with them. I will marvel at the whimsy and color of Barbie Land realized on screen.

And then maybe I’ll watch it again.

Find the DVD here.

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

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 16
  • Page 17
  • Page 18
  • Page 19
  • Page 20
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 43
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

  • Staff and Board of Trustees
    • Board of Trustees Meeting Schedule
  • Library Blog
    • Collection Highlights-History
    • Fresh from the Stacks
    • Foyer Exhibits
    • Liaison-Senior Staff Essays
    • Library Book Club Reviews
    • “Rear View” from Regional History
    • Staff Recommendations
  • Newsletters and Reports
    • Annual Reports
    • Library Dispatch
    • Programs Postcard
    • Liaison: Stories from the Stacks
    • Library Program eNews
  • Employment & Volunteer Opportunities
Comlib

Support the Library

The Community Library’s free resources and services reflect the generosity of community members like you!
Donate
Gold Mine Stores
Volunteer

The Community Library

Location

415 Spruce Ave. North
PO Box 2168
Ketchum, ID 83340

Hours

Sunday
closed
Monday
10:00am - 6:00pm
Tuesday
10:00am - 8:00pm
Wednesday
10:00am - 8:00pm
Thursday
10:00am - 8:00pm
Friday
10:00am - 6:00pm
Saturday
10:00am - 6:00pm
Sunday
closed
Monday
10:00am - 6:00pm
Tuesday
10:00am - 8:00pm
Wednesday
10:00am - 8:00pm
Thursday
10:00am - 8:00pm
Friday
10:00am - 6:00pm
Saturday
10:00am - 6:00pm

Contact

208.726.3493
info@comlib.org

About us

  • Our Story
  • Staff and Board
  • Give & Support
  • Volunteer

Site Map

  • Home
  • Visit The Community Library Association
  • Events
  • Events and Programs
  • Use the Library
  • Catalog
Got a question? Ask Us

THE COMMUNITY LIBRARY ASSOCIATION

  • The Community Library
  • The Jeanne Rodger Lane Center for Regional History
  • The Gold Mine Stores

MAILING ADDRESS

PO Box 2168
Ketchum, ID 83340
  • Instagram
  • Facebook
2025 © The Community Library Association, Inc. All Rights Reserved | The Community Library is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt nonprofit organization | Federal Tax ID 82-0290944