April 2020

Titles for your next book club (bonus: they are available from OverDrive)

Shelley Gulley, circulation assistant at the Lanesville branch of HCPL, recommends the following titles for your next book club read.
In addition to these titles, OverDrive is holding the Big Library Read through April 13. Funny, You Don’t Look Autistic by Michael McCreary is available to download (with no wait list!) as an eBook and audio book, and you can participate in the online book discussion.
If you do not have an HCPL card, OverDrive offers you a free digital access card using your mobile number.

“So many books, so little time! As an avid reader, I enjoy a variety of genres from romance to mysteries to bestsellers to biographies and historical fiction. This list of books includes those I have enjoyed as well as my book club, hopefully you will too. Happy reading!”
– Shelley

Please click a title to view on OverDrive

1. The Silent Patient by Alex Michaelides (OverDrive eBook and audio book)

2. The 7 Husbands of Evelyn Hugo by Taylor Jenkins Reid (OverDrive eBook)

3. The Giver of Stars by Jojo Moyes (OverDrive eBook and audio book)

4. Educated by Tara Westover (OverDrive eBook and audio book)

5. Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman (OverDrive eBook and audio book)

6. We Were the Lucky Ones by Georgia Hunter (OverDrive eBook and audio book)

7. The Mother-in-Law by Sally Hepworth (OverDrive eBook)

8. Becoming by Michelle Obama (OverDrive eBook and audio book)

9. Still Alice by Lisa Genova (OverDrive eBook and audio book)

10. The Tattooist of Auschwitz by Heather Morris (OverDrive eBook and audio book)

11. Daisy Jones and The Six by Taylor Jenkins Reid (OverDrive eBook and audio book)

12. The Dutch House by Ann Patchet (OverDrive eBook and audio book)

13. Olive, Again by Elizabeth Strout (OverDrive eBook and audio book)

14. The Island of Sea Women by Lisa See (OverDrive eBook)

15. The Guest Book by Sarah Blake (OverDrive eBook)

Staff book review: “Curious Minds” by Janet Evanovich and Phoef Sutton

Bob Ohlrich, circulation associate at the Main branch of HCPL, offers the following review of Curious Minds, written by Janet Evanovich and Phoef Sutton.

Curious Minds is available in both eBook and audio book formats on OverDrive and Libby, and as an eBook on Axis360. If you do not yet have an HCPL card, OverDrive offers a free digital card using your mobile phone number.

Janet Evanovich
Phoef Sutton
Ms. Evanovich has, as usual, delivered yet another well-written book. There is a good blend of comedy and drama. The character of Emerson Knight appears to be a great combination of “Basil Fawlty” (from the British comedy, “Fawlty Towers,” starring John Clease) and Sherlock Holmes: Emerson Knight is very clever and a tad quirky…it makes for very fast and fun reading!

Staff book review: “Beartown” by Fredrik Backman

Chelsea Arnold, circulation assistant at the Palmyra branch of HCPL, penned the following review for your perusal.

Beartown is available as an eBook on OverDrive and Libby. If you do not have an HCPL card, OverDrive offers a free card using your mobile number.

 

Author Frederick Backman

On its face, Beartown is a book about a small town hockey team facing a scandal. However, at its core, Beartown is really about the inanimate things humans will prioritize over people and cling to fiercely when they represent meaning. Beartown doesn’t have much going for it. It’s a small, cold, close-knit mountain town. The opportunities are not plentiful—you either work at the school or you work at the one lone factory. What they do have, though, is one of the most skilled high school hockey teams in the area. Hockey is both this town’s pride and identity. Meaning the town’s source of meaning is placed solely on the backs of teenage boys. Sound like a recipe for disaster? It is. The responsibility of carrying the town brings immense pressure. It also breeds intense narcissism. These young men are hometown heroes. Many of them think they can do anything, because they know the town will in turn go to great lengths to protect them from the consequences of their sins. When the star player commits a heinous act, the town’s claim to fame slips out of grasp, and a team’s passion is upended. In the swirl of emotion, everyone in the town is faced with a moral dilemma: err on the side of justice and compassion, or become animalistic and emotionally unreachable over a high school sport. This book is well-written and held my attention. That said, the plot was predictable and read very much like a ripped from the headlines type of book (think Sandusky, Brock Turner, etc.). I don’t fault it for that because the story that Beartown tells is a story that is extremely prevalent in real life. And if a novel can make someone contemplate a problem that plagues our society, then purpose served. 

HCPL closure extended to comply with stay-at-home order

With the extension of Governor Eric Holcomb’s “stay at home” order for Hoosiers to slow the spread of COVID-19, Harrison County Public Library facilities will remain closed through Tuesday, April 21.

HCPL is always open 24 hours a day, seven days a week on the HCPL webpage with access to eBooks, eMagazines, downloadable audiobooks and other eResources. Find up-to-date, reliable COVID-19 information on the library public safety page.  A variety of original library content for youth as well as other awesome youth related services can be found on the Brain Booster Resource page.

To ensure library patrons have access to library eResources library card privileges have been renewed for all library cards that would have expired January 1 through June 30, 2020.  The new card expiration is now December 30, 2020.  Harrison County residents who do not currently have a library card can access library eResources by applying for a Digital Access Card at the bottom of the Library eResources page.

Material due dates have been extended until after May 3.  No library materials will be due during the March 17- April 21 closure.

Library Wi-Fi remains on at all library locations and can be accessed outside the buildings and in the back parking lot at the Main Branch in Corydon.

During the closure staff will monitor the website’s Ask a Librarian and Contact Us features.  Please click here to visit the library’s Public Safety page for up-to-date information from the library, or  visit the Harrison County Public Library’s Facebook page.

Please stay home and stay well.

2020 Census

Shape Your Future: Complete the 2020 Census

Your answers impact school lunches, plans for highways, support for firefighters, and families in need. Census results greatly affect your community, and the 2020 Census is happening right now.

You can submit your answers online or mail in your response at any time.

Follow these links for more information about the 2020 Census:

Shape Your Future: The 2020 Census

https://youtu.be/LXJz7ZfzAuM

2020 Census: What is the Census?

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