October 2018 Library News Open: M & Th 1-7Pm ; T & W 1-5Pm ; Sat

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October 2018 Library News Open: M & Th 1-7Pm ; T & W 1-5Pm ; Sat October 2018 Library News http://drummondlibrary.org Open: M & Th 1-7pm ; T & W 1-5pm ; Sat. 10 - 4pm Night @ the Library: Tuesday, October 2 at 7pm. The Big Read! Author in Residence Talk: Jess E. Owen: influence of fantasy. Missoula Public Library has invited our patrons to participate in a One Read event. Stop by the library and pick up a free copy of the A Wizard of Earthsea by Ursula K. Le Guin. The Little Read title is Catwings also by Ursula K. Le Guin. Be sure to attend Night @ the Library on October 2nd and participate in the book discussion on October 30th. You’ll also want to check out the events around the Missoula area thanks to Missoula Public Library and their generous sponsors! Learn more at www.readmissoula.org. Story Hour! Wednesdays at 11:00 am Beginning October 3rd! Bring your preschooler or Kindergartener for and hour of stories, activities, crafts and fun - every Wednesday at 11:00am! Nancy Moore will be reading a delightful story followed by a super cute craft! The following week, October 10th, Megan Miller will return to lead with stories, crafts snacks and fun every Wednesday at 11am! Lego Club! Tuesdays at 3:30. Join us for new challenges every week! Mindfulness, stress release, Gentle yoga stretch: Wednesday, October 10th at noon. Join Kappy Strahan during the noon hour to stretch and refresh with gentle yoga Community Conversations about Alzheimer’s: October 29th at 1:30pm at the library. Between the Covers: Last Tuesday at 7pm: October 30th Wizard of Earthsea by Ursula K. Le Guin. Get your free copy and join the discussion. Feed n’ Read: October 10th at 2pm Bring a snack to share and your list of good reads Friends of the Library: Annual Book Sale! October 18-22 Buy a bag of Books! National Friends of Libraries Week is October 14-24 Support our library! Join Friends of the Drummond Library October 17th at 2pm. Blackfoot Easy Access Computer Classes: October 30th. Call 541-5000 to register. Level 1 9-12 noon; Level 2 1-4pm at the library. Thank you Blackfoot! Blackfoot awarded the library $500 toward the purchase of a KIC Knowledge Imaging Center. Soon patrons will be able to scan photos, documents, and images to create print on demand books, albums, and even cookbooks! Missoulian Online! The Missoulian is now available online. Read the Missourian on the computers in the library at your convenience. Learning Activity Backpacks: Thanks to a grant from Blackfoot and 21st Century, 3rd Graders in Mrs. Graybeal’s class will enjoy taking home LAB backpacks each weekend. Students take a backpack home on Friday and bring it back on Monday. Each backpack contains a fiction book, a nonfiction book along with an activity guide, a puzzle and a game. AWE Computer:Thanks to Blackfoot Telecommunications, preschoolers and elementary children will enjoy our new AWE computer. The new computer is loaded with learning games and fun activities. The best part is that it is super easy to use! Visit our homepage at http://drummondlibrary.org and Like us on FaceBook! .
Recommended publications
  • From Master to Brother: Shifting the Balance of Authority in Ursula K. Le Guin's Farthest Shore and Tehanu
    From Master to Brother: Shifting the Balance of Authority in Ursula K. Le Guin's Farthest Shore and Tehanu Len Hatfield Children's Literature, Volume 21, 1993 , pp. 43-65 (Article) Published by The Johns Hopkins University Press DOI: 10.1353/chl.0.0516 For additional information about this article http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/chl/summary/v021/21.hatfield.html Access provided by Virginia Polytechnic Inst. __ACCESS_STATEMENT__ St.University __ACCESS_STATEMENT__ (Viva) (7 Feb 2014 09:28 GMT) From Master to Brother: Shifting the Balance of Authority in Ursula K. Le Guin's Farthest Shore and Tehanu Len Hatfield In literature as in "real life," women, children, and animals are the obscure matter upon which Civilization erects itself, phallologically. That they are Other is (vide Lacan et al.) the foundation of language, the Father Tongue. By climbing up into his head and shutting out every voice but his own, "Civilized Man" has gone deaf. He can't hear the wolf calling him brother—not Master, but brother. He can't hear the earth calling him child—not Father, but son. He hears only his own words making up the world. He can't hear the animals, they have nothing to say. Children babble, and have to be taught how to climb up into their heads and shut the doors of perception. No use teaching woman at all, they talk all the time, of course, but never say anything. This is the myth of Civilization, embodied in monotheisms which assign soul to Man alone. [Le Guin, Buffalo Gab 9-10] In recent years Ursula K.
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  • The Search for Self in Ursula K. Le Guin's Wizard of Earthsea
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  • A Taoist Study of Magic in the Earthsea Cycle
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  • The Interview
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