Thursday, August 30, 2012

Broken Shells at the Dali Museum

Posing with my photograph on display at The Dali Museum.

Two of my hobbies I have yet to turn into careers are collecting seashells and taking photographs.  I would come to guess that very few people know that I am happiest combing the shore at sunset looking for whelks, shark eyes, tulips and conch shells.  Then photographing them and throwing them back into the sea because most of the beautiful shells are still living and deserve to keep living.  My name in Hawaiian means ‘Defender of the Sea,’ so that is what I try to do - preserve our beaches and sea life.

It is therefore such a thrill that I am able to share with all of you that one of my photographs is on display as part of the “Treasures of Your Town” exhibit at The Dali Museum here in St. Petersburg, FL.  The Dali!  I spent a lot of my childhood at the Dali Museum staring at ‘The Hallucinogenic Toreador’ trying to see all of the double images within the main image.  Are those just flies or a bull drinking water?  I always liked Salvador Dali as a painter because he combined his technical skills with such a vivid imagination that no matter how many times you might see the work, you would still find more discoveries.  I learned the lesson of perspective from Dali because everybody sees different things in the same painting.

For my photograph, entitled ‘Broken Shells at the Long Pier,’ I wanted to show the beauty in broken things.  Most of the time when I am on one of my sunset beach walks looking for shells, I am also looking for something else.  Peace within myself.  I usually approach the beach angry, frustrated, and heartbroken, but it is there on the shore within minutes of hearing the waves crash, seeing the birds fly, and feeling the cool water on my feet where I am reminded that being broken doesn’t mean you are beyond repair.

When I first found the scallop shell that is featured in the photo, I thought it was cute, even though it was broken, not perfect.  Then when I held it up to the sunset, I realized the broken piece actually resembled a palm tree.  It was through that bright light that another image began to grow!  If I had to explain the image further, I would say that the seashell represents the human shell and how so many of us have been broken due to unemployment, relationships, and life in general just not working out like we expected it to. 

Like Dali, I think this image is also about perspective.  Do you see a broken shell or do you see the bright light within?  Personally, I may have a broken shell but no matter what, I will always let my inner light shine.  So the next time you feel down, lost or broken, take a walk on the beach or go to an art museum.  Life is full of broken things…but that is where the true beauty is.

Should anybody want to see my photograph & the rest of the "Treasures of Your Town" exhibit at The Dali Museum, it will be on display in the Raymond James room August 24th - Sept 9th.  It is free to see this exhibit.  

For more information on The Dali, visit http://thedali.org/


Part of my 'dead' shell collection on display in my home.

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Happy Birthday Madonna!


My show art from 2003 spoofing the Like a Virgin album cover.
If there is one birthday I celebrate more than my own, it is Madonna.  She's inspired me in so many ways over the years, and continues to do so. "Don't go for second best, baby....Express Yourself."  It began with a performance of "Papa Don't Preach" in Girl Scouts to doing "Vogue" in high school to eventually building a whole one-woman show around her in 2003.  My latest, the "Girl Gone Wild" librarian parody in 2012, was probably my favorite of them all.  An example that age most certainly does not slow us down, it makes us better.  Maybe one of these days I'll actually meet her so I can thank her in person for being the soundtrack of my life.

Happy Birthday Madonna! 


And once again, here are those "Girl Gone Wild" parody videos:



Monday, August 13, 2012

Back to School with Olympic Spirit

Just a few of the awards I won in high school that now collect dust in a storage unit. It's your spirit that moves you forward in life, not the awards.

The kids start going back to school this week so I guess that means I should finally return to this blog.  It has been a nice month and a half off.  Sort of. 

As a former athlete, I have been consumed with the Olympics and like a lot of you, been inspired by the dedication, determination, and discipline of these remarkable people representing our country – especially the ones that don’t get a chance to stand on that medal podium.  It is a constant reminder to me that there is no guarantee that any of our hard work will pay off with awards and “Today Show” interviews.  However, even with the small goals I have set and some later accomplished, I know firsthand that if you are doing what you love and giving it your best, it will most certainly reflect in your heart.

It will hurt often.  The fact that it continues to beat means you are still in the game.  Congrats.  My heart was just broken again.  A lesson that I should stop writing ‘Celebration’ blog posts because it seems the party only lasts so long in my world. 

Yep, I was fired again.  This time the job lasted a whole three weeks.

What did I do? 

I left a job off of my resume.  If you follow my adventures, I’m sure you can guess which one.  I wanted a fresh start and thought my references and numerous other jobs would be enough to get me the job.  And you know what?  It was.  Until somebody thought they were uncovering a huge mystery in finding that LA Times article.  You mean the one linked here on my blog?  Yep, the woman firing me actually handed me a print out of the article as proof of my employment there and asked if I had seen it.  This being the same woman who asked me on my first day of work if I would tell her a joke while I was getting a glass of water in the kitchen.  I guess she didn’t like the punch line.

I cried for a couple of hours afterwards, mostly out of the frustration and exhaustion at my own life, (and having to tell my parents the news.  Isn’t that always the hardest part?  Feeling like you are disappointing…them?)  I thought about how stupid so many of my firings have been over the years (because there have been more than just two.)  Then I got angry about the seven years I have invested in this library field and the things I gave up for it, the friends I didn’t listen to, the money that has been spent.  It also irritated me that on the day that everyone else across the country was mourning the lives lost at a movie theater in Aurora, I was being fired for not mentioning I had a part-time job pushing a book cart for a couple of weeks.  I had left off my valet attendant job too.  And my job serving sushi.  Oh, and my appearance on “Californication” as a hooker.

I stopped being angry because I was laughing so damn hard at just how many jobs I had forgotten to put on that application!  All the adventures I’d had and people I have met.  The lessons I had learned.  The research skills I had acquired in order to do all of those things, not to mention my love for sharing those experiences online in blog essays, videos, and comedy bits - which also meant those jobs weren’t exactly a secret. 

But not a single librarian or HR representative at that library knew about them before they hired me?  And they were firing ME?  Had I known they were so bad at their jobs as information specialists, I would have applied at Google. 

What a waste of time. 

And that’s what it is really about, right?  We don’t want to waste our time without getting something for it.  My time was wasted working for people who can’t see the bigger picture of life and that interesting, fun people usually have more than one job on their resumes; and now they have to waste their time (and tax dollars) in finding someone else to scan those books into the library every morning.  I wasn’t even a librarian, folks, I was a part-time library assistant.  I actually made more money on unemployment than I did in this position, but I loved the library, so I felt it was worth my time.  I just wasn’t worth theirs.

However, unlike those killed so horrifically in Aurora, I still have more time.  So do any of those Olympic athletes who didn’t get medals in London this year.  Then why are we crying, Lolo?  There will be other races, other jobs!  And it wasn't like they were questioning my strong work ethic and passion about libraries, so why am I sad?  Instead it was yet another reminder that my time is better spent other places, doing other things.  Maybe bigger things that are going to make a real difference in this field…in this world…or even to just a few people who appreciate who I am and what I bring to the table.

This experience was also an example of how truly special I am. 

I did leave that job off the application, in addition to numerous other positions and titles I have held over the past fifteen years, (which is the time period I was supposed to showcase on this application), and shame on me for doing so.  I should shout those job experiences from the mountain tops because I survived them!  Because it wasn't always easy.  While I am not always proud of how certain jobs ended, I sure am thankful for learning where NOT to spend another moment of life’s precious time.  So thank you Debra, thank you Margaret.  I’ve also learned what NOT to do with my life because if success makes you this miserable Nancy, I should rethink that whole career in PR.  And how NOT to treat the people that work beneath you, right John?  And finally, how when you give up on your dreams, you can always fall back on being a restaurant manager and hate it every single day like Joe and Gina. 

So I'm done complaining about how much time I have wasted and instead focusing on how much time I have saved.  If you look at it that way, being fired is more of a compliment than a put down.  It's like those people mentioned above cared enough about me to give me an out so I could have a better life than the ones they had chosen for themselves and clearly given up on.  Each in their own way showed me that what I thought I wanted in working with them wasn’t what I actually needed to succeed. 

And I have succeeded in so many ways - especially in having patience with these job applications - but let’s be honest, my skills and experiences are never going to fit in the confining boxes of a few sheets of paper.  Nor will interviews, background and reference checks ever truly offer anybody insight into the person I am and whether I am a good candidate for a company, and certainly not that LA Times article, that yes, lady, I have read.  Once.

But you know what will?  My book.

I may have taken some time away from this blog to think about how I wanted to move forward, but I have never stopped writing.  Like an Olympic athlete, I have been in training as a writer and trying to finish the book I started years ago.  Every single day, I get up at dawn to sit in front of my computer to live my life again, from the beginning.  I try to do at least a couple of hours each day but hope to eventually get up to eight hours but have found I need to pace myself so I don’t quit or give up when certain topics get tough.  Like the moments in life when I did do things wrong and deserved to be fired.  Like the time I walked out of that restaurant still in my apron to apply at a better restaurant across the street that had actual people dining in it.  Or being fired for eating too many sundaes at that frozen yogurt shop.  

I am also so thankful to have an old writer friend back in my life, offering me encouragement via helpful and insightful emails that assure me that I am on the right path and not alone in this difficult process of writing one’s life.  I am also grateful to Stephen King and Augusten Burroughs, who thanks to their books On Writing (King) and This is How (Burroughs), I have a firm grasp on the therapy of writing and the importance of telling the truth in it.

I may not get a gold medal or guaranteed a publishing deal when I finish this race (or another job offer for that matter), but you can bet your ass I will reach the finish line because my heart is still beating and my spirit free.  Now that should be on a job application!

For three weeks, I spent my time working the circulation desk...
...and emptying the book drop.
A patron's message to library staff left in the book drop.
Ironically, this DVD was overdue.





Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Celebrating MY Independence Day!


Happy Fourth of July everyone! 

Striking my Rosie the Riveter pose...
I DID Do It!
I have so many fireworks going on around me that for once it is hard for me to write because all I want to do is celebrate, celebrate, CELEBRATE!

The biggest thing I am celebrating is something few people know.  It was just one year ago today that I chose to quit drinking in the efforts to focus on what was most important in my life without the distractions that alcohol often brings.  Too many times in the past I allowed alcohol to play a factor in my choices and the consequences of those choices.  I was curious to see what would happen if I eliminated it from my life completely.  Would I finally get a job that I wanted?  Friends that I could count on?  Performances I would be proud of?

Yes, yes, and YES!!!

It was certainly not the easiest year to attempt such an endeavor, which of course, often made my journey that much more difficult and challenging (feel free to read old blog posts if you need to get caught up because I am done talking about them.)  However overcoming those obstacles is what makes the celebrations today that much grander!  I never allowed the bad things that happened to me prevent me from keeping the promises I made to myself.  In the end, I learned I was stronger than I thought and faced the problems with a clear head instead of numbing the pain with avoidance and anger.  I came to understand that the “bad things” or "bad luck" were simply the means to get me out of those unhealthy situations I had somehow got myself in and wouldn’t leave on my own as a result of not being a quitter.  I learned to accept and trust that my new unpaved road with no GPS to guide me was eventually going to take me some place far greater.  And boy, did it ever!

In my time of sobriety from July 4, 2011 – July 4, 2012, I have:

1. Smiled more than ever before knowing that I am finally the person I want to be.

2. Written more regularly on StandUpLibrarian.com than ever before, which means I am ready to finish my book later this year!

3. Performed more comedy shows in 1 year than the prior 9 years combined & was paid for the majority of those shows, wearing clothes I made.

4. Re-launched my purse business & have sold more in the last three months without any promotion than in 2004 – 2005 (even when I was on the cover of the newspaper!?!)

5. Finally attended an Oprah show after 25 years of ticket requests…then met her!

6. Performed a literary comedy show at the ALA national conference.

7. Seen some friends come and go, but now know that it is the very best ones who have stayed & been there during the tougher times.

8. Seen StandUpLibrarian.com go from an idea & blog to a nationally recognized & industry promoted, paid program for libraries.

9. Learned to let go of the past – who I was, who I knew, what I didn’t get.

10. And as of Monday, July 2nd (just in time to make this list), finally offered a library job with health benefits after two years of applying & interviewing.

People say that, “timing is everything,” “things take time” or “time heals old wounds.”  I don’t know what I believe.  I just know I have always been obsessed with time and dates.  For example, July 4th was also the anniversary of when I fell in love.  Well, when that relationship ended, I needed to accept it and move on.  He had, so why shouldn’t I? 

So last year while valet parking cars in Malibu wondering why my life was still in the crapper, I decided to apply new meaning to that July 4th date with one simple decision that would have the potential to both better my professional life & repair my heart at the same time: I declared my independence from alcohol. 

Instead of drowning my sorrows in a glass of wine after not getting a job or going to a bar to throw back a few cocktails with buddies to avoid being alone on a Friday night, I would work on StandUpLibrarian.com or apply for library jobs.  Anytime I felt the need to drink, I would work, volunteer, or write.  

Looking back, it seems to have made all of the difference.

I cannot thank you enough for joining me on this journey.  I am at this point undecided if I will continue with my sobriety experiment or in sharing my personal life on this blog.  All I do know is that I am thankful to have a library job to go with people that I like and respect.  I also really want to finish the book I have been writing on and off for the past couple of years...and do some more library performances…and sell some purses…and record that comedy cd…oh, who am I fooling, I can’t start drinking again; I have too much work to do.

Today, we celebrate this great country we live in because it allows us to be whatever we want to be…then gives us numerous chances to be it!

Happy Independence Day America!

My last drink - a port from a local winery in Temecula, CA.
July 3, 2011

Thursday, June 28, 2012

The 817s in American Libraries & ALA Direct!


Thanks to the American Library Association & George Eberhart at American Libraries magazine for their support and coverage of the 817s performance at ALA Anaheim.  The following is reprinted with their permission:

Girl Gone Wild @ ALA

Submitted by George Eberhart on Tue, 06/26/2012 - 10:26
One highlight at the ALA PopTop Stage on Monday was the debut performance of the 817’s (for you Dewey-challenged folk, that’s “American humor and satire”), a comedy troupe consisting of Stand-Up Librarian Meredith Myers, MLIS of Fortune (and singer) Danica Sheridan, and RUSA’s own Mr. Reference, Dave Tyckoson.
In addition to the finale song, a karaoke version of Madonna’s “Girl Gone Wild” (be sure to watch the amazing video, 4:54), the 817’s performed stand-up, improv, an “Occupy ALA” skit, “Guess the Celebrity Authors,” and a “Librarians in the Movies” skit. They also showed videos: “Library Avengers,” which featured some scenes from the exhibit floor, and a hilarious Dos Equis spoof, “The Most Interesting Librarian in the World,” featuring none other than formerALA President Michael Gorman, produced by Tyckoson.

The 817s perform "CHILDREN'S LIBRARIAN Gone Wild" at ALA:


The 817s are..."The LIBRARY Avengers":



Danica Sheridan, MLIS of Fortune, on the PopTop Stage.
Meredith Myers, the Stand-Up Librarian, on the PopTop Stage.
Dave Tyckoson, RUSA's own Mr. Reference, on the PopTop Stage.
The 817s.
Direct link to George's coverage:
http://americanlibrariesmagazine.org/annual-conference/girl-gone-wild-ala


Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Yorba Linda Public Library Performance!


Boy, am I going places! It’s like that John Candy movie “Planes, Trains, and Automobiles,” only with libraries.  On Friday, June 8th, I had a long flight to Ontario, CA after a delay due to thunderstorms in FL, then a bumpy train ride to Los Angeles after a weekend spent in Riverside for my show at the Yorba Linda Public Library, and finally yesterday I rented a car to drive to San Diego before heading up to Anaheim for the library conference on Friday! 


I feel exhausted but also on top of the world.  Did I mention I finally got a library job offer as well?  What a great trip this is turning out to be!  Gosh, it has been a dream of mine since 2006 to do a comedy show at the library…and it finally came true…and I was paid to do it!  I was booked for the performance after meeting Ozgun Turner of the Yorba Linda Public Library back in November at the California Library Association’s annual conference.  He was quick to support me when everyone else was not.  I was still dealing with the after-math of being in the LA Times where most librarians still weren’t sure what to think of me…so they avoided me entirely.

I was nervous about returning to California so soon after just moving away in January, plus putting together a show seemed like a huge task in what was supposed to be time spent looking for a work & not spending money on trips.  Besides, I was booked to perform for two hours!!!!  I hadn’t done a two-hour show since 2003 with my off-off Broadway show “Like a Publicist.”  I knew I could do it but I also knew how much energy and effort it took.

I was also writing material for another show with my comedy troupe ‘The 817’s,’ another blessing that came out of me and that LA Times article.  Two other creative and kind librarians had reached out to me and wanted to do a comedy show at the American Library Association’s national conference in Anaheim.  I had trained at The Second City and loved performing both scripted and improvised comedy, so I was thrilled to partner with them.  I just knew our diversity would also make the show that much better.

When it came time for my show at Yorba Linda Public Library, I decided to do what I do best – everything.  I incorporated my literary stand-up with improv games, audience interactions, video & images, my favorite songs, parody musical performances, and lots of my literary fashions!  Unlike my show in 2003 where I just had the idea for the costumes and someone else made them, this time I designed and sewed all of my outfits myself.  Everything from the skirt to the hat, to the bracelets and purses - what a moment to celebrate how nothing you ever work on is a waste of time!

I was also so happy that my fellow 817’s (Danica and Dave) would also join me at the show.  The day leading up to the performance was full of funny rehearsals and sharing in the laughter that I knew was possible when working with people who also understand how fun and comical libraries can be.

In the end, the show was probably my proudest artistic moment yet.  I had created something that was positive and promoted the thing I loved the most – libraries and literacy, and as a result, I wasn’t nervous or aggressive in my delivery of the material.  I was 100% myself – a first in my ten-year comedy career because the real me isn’t ‘cool’ or confident all the time, she is actually really goofy!

In celebrating two years of StandUpLibrarian.com the other week, it was wonderful to see that if you truly believe in something and work very hard at it, eventually the right people will come into your life and assist you in realizing your dreams.  I cannot thank Ozgun Turner, Danica Sheridan, and Dave Tykoson enough for standing-up for this Stand-Up Librarian with their never-ending support and encouragement.  I also want to thank the audience for their energy and excitement before, during, and after the show.  Never have I had such an interactive show with an audience feeling the fun I feel on stage.  This is why I like performing in libraries – people who love libraries and love books really get excited about them and can’t contain it.  The performer I am now does not get offended or upset when the show goes off script or out of order. I have learned to enjoy the journey wherever it takes me, and usually it goes in a more comical direction anyway.

Finally, my favorite moment of the show was doing “Librarian Gone Wild” live on stage at the library.  I had previously shared the video I created and edited on You Tube, which is a parody of Madonna’s controversial “Girl Gone Wild.”  That video was a sexier version since I was replicating her dance moves and outfits in the video with live footage from a night club, but it wasn’t what I really envisioned for the song.  I wanted to save that idea for my 817s…and we nailed it!  I cannot wait to perform it again at ALA on the 25th.

Please join us!



Thanks again to: Ozgun Turner & Yorba Linda Public Library, Danica Sheridan and Dave Tyckoson.








Tuesday, June 12, 2012

The 817s Inaugural Performance at ALA Anaheim!



The theme for the American Library Association’s 2012 Annual Conference & Exhibition in Anaheim is “Transforming Our Libraries, Ourselves.”  So it seems fitting that my new library comedy group – THE 817s – are making our inaugural performance at ALA Anaheim on the Pop Top stage Monday, June 25th from 10 – 11am.  

Besides, if you really want to transform anything, isn’t humor a great way to start?

Seriously, this performance is going to be the must-see library event of the year.  Literary stand-up comedy, library-themed improv and sketches, musical parodies, videos, plus, the 817’s are doing the only book cart drill at the entire conference and it is going to be hilarious!  Not to knock the other talent attending the conference, but nobody is going to dance with books but the 817s and do you really want to miss that?

No you don’t...I also give out free bookmarks.  Yes, FREE BOOKMARKS!  See you there…


The 817’s are:
Stand-Up Librarian Meredith Myers
Danica Sheridan, MLS of Fortune
RUSA's own Mr. Reference, Dave Tyckoson



***Here's a sneak peek at the show:


For more information on ALA Anaheim, please visit:

For the Pop Top stage schedule, visit:
http://www.alaannual.org/content/poptop-stage-popular-topics-every-day


To book Stand-Up Meredith Myers and The 817s, write an email to:
StandUpLibrarianMM@gmail.com or visit:
www.StandUpLibrarian.com

Friday, June 1, 2012

Happy 2nd Anniversary StandUpLibrarian.com!



Today I celebrate 2 years of StandUpLibrarian.com.  A lot has happened since my first post on June 1st, 2010 (read that here: http://stand-uplibrarian.blogspot.com/2010/06/welcome-to-standuplibrariancom.html), where my only intention after graduating with my Masters degree was to be an advocate for libraries while looking for a job to hopefully work in one.  My mission was simply to show how fun & educational they are – for all ages, for all types of people.  I thought a blog would keep me busy while filling out those job applications and would show those I was interviewing with that I was not sitting by the phone but an active member of the library field with numerous talents and skills to offer my employers. 

On a personal note, I was trying to distract myself from a broken heart and hoping to overcome writer’s block.  In committing to this blog, I was ultimately putting myself first again and trying to find my voice as a writer.  I was forcing myself to write on a weekly basis while showing my strength and vulnerability during life’s crazy experiences.  I hoped to entertain people with my sense of humor but my focus was less on being funny and more on just being myself…a person that does the best she can but never gives up.

It’s odd to me that now 2 years later with endless hours of filming & editing videos, interviewing & interacting with a variety of experts in the field, writing passionate blog posts and jokes that promoted the library (not made fun of it), that I am still unemployed!  How could a person work so hard and not get the one thing she did all of it for?     

Because if there is one person who understands & identifies with the patrons at a library, it is me!  How to file for unemployment?  Done. Start a new business? Done. Living with a crazy roommate and need a quiet place to go?  Done.  I could go on and on with scenarios here but I have to wonder if any of it was worth it.  Or if all that I created was just a huge mistake and actually hurt my chances at getting a job due to the conservative folks out there that just didn’t understand me at all.  My parents are some of those people constantly worried that I am offending someone in HR.

Then I look at what I have experienced over the last 2 years.  What I have learned.  Where I have been.  Who I have met.  I look at the person I was when I began this journey and then at the one in the mirror today.  In actuality she probably accomplished far more than she set out to.  Does it always make sense?  No. Does she ever make mistakes? Yes. Does she have more fun at the library than most people?  Probably.  And isn’t that what it’s all about?

If anybody goes to the library because of something I said or did, MISSION ACCOMPLISHED.  It doesn’t matter to me if you think I am hilarious or talented or smart or qualified.  What matters to me is that you USE THE LIBRARY!  And if you have fun while you are there, well then I’m really doing something special.  Oh and the words “Stand-Up” in Stand-Up Librarian may have hinted at stand-up comedy, but it actually refers to standing up for libraries and for yourself.  In my opinion, you cannot have one without the other. If you utilize the vast knowledge available to you at the library, you will always have the means to stand up to any curve balls life throws at you.  Think of me as the catcher.  I’m behind you the whole way…if only to remind you that your butt looks great in those pants!  OK, maybe I should turn off the baseball game while I am writing this.  Anyway, thanks for joining me in what has been the greatest adventure of my life.  Support your libraries but have fun doing it!

*In honor of my 2-year anniversary, I have created a special video that incorporates my love for libraries & Madonna.  Like a lot of girls growing up in the 80’s, I have been influenced by her artistry in more ways than even I realized.  While some are quick to judge her often-controversial choices, I have always respected her work ethic and passion.  Madonna has dedicated her life to the art of performance and how it can influence people, making them think and question things.  I don’t always agree with all of her decisions but I will always respect her for being fearless and an incredible entertainer.

I would suggest watching Madonna’s very erotic “Girl Gone Wild” video before watching my "Librarian Gone Wild" so you can understand the parody where I incorporate her books (I feature her Sex book from 1992 and her line of children's books.)  I have posted both videos below for your convenience.  Enjoy!



Thursday, May 24, 2012

Memorial Day Library Materials!




With the three-day weekend approaching, why not celebrate Memorial Day by going to your local public library and checking out some books about the holiday we are celebrating.  Sure, going to the beach and grilling hot dogs is always fun, but before you later up the sun block and pass out those Capri Suns, let us never forget the brave men and women who have served this great nation!  And no, I don’t mean those idiots on “The Jersey Shore.”  Sure, Snooki has a book out too but hopefully that one is still being processed by the library staff and not in circulation yet.

Here are some of my Memorial Day book suggestions, which are currently on the display table at the Gulf Beaches Public Library (so obviously the list is based on the materials currently on the shelves of that specific library.)  I have included both fiction and non-fiction titles in a variety of Memorial Day related topics to appeal to all of your reading interests and weekend activities.  Since most of you aren’t able to visit that library in person, I have also provided some search terms for you and the call numbers so you can find them easily at your own library.  And don't forget that libraries will be closed on Monday, so go today!

Happy Memorial Day to each and every one of you!  May you and your families & friends be safe…and well-read this holiday weekend!


Search topics: Memorial Day aka Decoration Day; veterans; wars remembered: Civil War,WW1, WW2, Vietnam, military service, National cemeteries, American flag, picnics, barbecue 

1. Memorial Day / Vince Flynn FIC FLYNN OR LP FIC FLYNN
2. The widow of the south / Robert Hicks FIC HICKS
3. The leper / Steve Thayer FIC THAYER
4. The ha-ha : a novel / Dave King FIC KING
5. Rules for old men waiting : a novel / Peter Pouncey FIC POUNCEY
6. The lost city / by Henry Shukman. FIC SHUKMAN
7. The valley of light : a novel / Terry Kay FIC KAY
8. The soldier's return / Melvyn Bragg FIC BRAGG
9. The things we do to make it home : a novel / Beverly Gologorsky FIC GOLOGORSKY
10. The year of Jubilo : a novel of the Civil War / Howard Bahr FIC BAHR
11. Moon's crossing / Barbara Croft FIC CROFT
12. An echo of hope [text (large print)] / by Dianna Crawford LP FIC CRAWFORD
13. Pay the devil [text (large print)] / Jack Higgins LP FIC HIGGINS
14. In the fall / Jeffrey Lent FIC LENT
15. The war at home : a memoir-novel Nora Eisenberg FIC EISENBERG
16. Rocket science / Jay Lake SF LAKE
17. The Civil War : a narrative / by Shelby Foote 973.7 FOOTE
18. Battle cry of freedom : the Civil War era / James McPherson 973.7 MCPHERSON
19. The assassins' gate : America in Iraq / George Packer 956.70443 PACKER
20. The wounded warrior handbook : a resource guide for returning veterans / Don Philpott and Janelle Hill 362.1086 PHILPOTT
21. Chicken soup for the Veteran's soul : stories to stir the pride and honor the courage of our veterans 355.0092 CHICKEN
22. The GI bill : the law that changed America / Milton Greenberg 306.0973 GREENBERG
23. Forever a soldier : unforgettable stories of wartime service / [edited by] Tom Wiener 355.0092 FOREVER
24. Voices of war [sound recording] : stories of service from the home ront and the front lines CD BK 355.0092 VOICES
25. The Wall : images and offerings from the Vietnam Veterans Memorial 959.7 WALL
26. Chickenhawk, back in the world : life after vietnam / Robert Mason 959.704 MASON
27. Falcon's cry : a Desert Storm memoir / Michael Donnelly 956.7044 DONNELLY
28. Flashback : post-tramatic stress disorder, suicide, and the lessons of war / Penny Coleman. 616.8521 COLEMAN
29. Charlie Company : what Vietnam did to us / Peter Goldman 959.7 GOLDMAN
30. The father of all things : a Marine, his son, and the legacy of Vietnam / Tom Bissell 959.7043 BISSELL
31. Dear America : letters home from Vietnam 959.7 DEAR
32. Under fire [sound recording] / by W.E.B. Griffin AUDIO FIC GRIFFIN
33. Bitterroot [sound recording] / by James Lee Burke. AUDIO MYS BURKE
34. Maya Lin [videorecording] DVD 1340 DOCUMENTARY
35. The best years of our lives [videorecording] DVD 2156 CLASSIC
36. The classic barbecue and grill cookbook / by Marlena Spieler 641.5784 SPIELER
37. Finger lickin', rib stickin', great tastin', hot & spicy barbecue / by Jane Butel 641.5 BUTEL
38. Weight watchers slim ways grilling 641.5635 WEIGHT
39. Indoor grilling 641.76 INDOOR Weber's big book of grilling / by Jamie Purviance and Sandra S. McRae 641.5784 PURVIANCE