Trouble view the email?  Click here to see the online version
calendarJan 2019 issueIssue 1901
image
image
 

The Library Will Be Closed
1/1/19-New Years Day
1/21/19-Martin Luther King Day

 

button

 

 
image
 

Saturday, January 5th at 9:15 am  Rose Pruning Workshop (meet at Library’s Harlow Rose Garden)

The Coronado Library invites you to bring your own pruners and gloves to our annual hands-on rose pruning workshop.  Join us on Saturday, January 5th  in front of the Coronado Public Library starting at 9:15am. We will start at the Harlow Rose Garden and finish with the Rosy the Riveter Roses at the Spreckels Center. You will learn how and why to prune your roses, what to feed your roses and how to manage pests and fungal diseases sustainably.
 
The free workshop will be headed by Rita Perwich, Maria Mata and Carvill Veech, all Master Gardeners and Rosarians who have been sharing their expertise at the library for years. This workshop will teach you how to grow healthy roses with abundant blooms. You will be encouraged and receive tips on how to enter your roses in the annual Coronado Flower Show which will be held on April 13-14th, 2019.

 
image
 

Anime Club: Fooly Cooly
Saturday, January 5, 2:30 pm

Naota Nandaba is an ordinary sixth grader living in a city where nothing amazing ever seems to happen. After his brother Tasuku leaves town to play baseball in America, Naota takes it upon himself to look after everything Tasuku left behind—from his top bunk bed to his ex-girlfriend Mamimi Samejima, who hasn't stopped clinging to Naota since Tasuku left. 
Little does Naota know, however, that his mundane existence is on the verge of being changed forever: enter Haruko Haruhara, a Vespa-riding, bass guitar-wielding, pink-haired psychopath whose first encounter with Naota leaves him with tire tracks on his back and a giant horn on his head. Though all he wants is some peace and quiet, when Haruko takes up residence at his parents' home, Naota finds himself dragged into the heart of the greatest battle for supremacy that Earth—and quite possibly the entire universe—has ever seen.

 

Do you love anime?

Come meet other fans and watch anime.

Free snacks provided!
button  
 
image
 

Library App Workshop

The Library has a number of apps you can use to get eBooks, eAudiobooks, eMagazines, eComics, and even an app to learn a new language.  Join us to find out how they work and don’t forget to bring your device!

No sign up required, just drop in and get some help.

Monday, January 7 11 am

Thursday, January 17 6:30 pm
image
 

POV Film & Discussion: The Apology

Tuesday, January 8, 6 pm
(80 mins)
The Apology follows three former "comfort women" who were among the 200,000 girls and young women kidnapped and forced into military sexual slavery by the Imperial Japanese Army during World War II. Seventy years after their imprisonment and after decades of living in silence and shame, the survivors give their first-hand accounts of the truth for the record, seeking apology and the hope that this horrific chapter of history not be forgotten.

button  
 
image

Digital Media Lab Workshops 

1/9/19 2pm
Scanning slides

 

 

1/24/19 6:30pm
Graphics Tablet

 

 

1/31/19 6:30pm
Voice recording and podcasting

 

Space is limited. Please sign-up at the reference desk or by calling
619-522-7390.

 

.

image
 

Friday, January 11th at 1pm
Lecture:  The Clash of Fundamentalism and Spirituality

Join us for this two-hour, multimedia lecture presentation. There is a growing schism forming in the world’s religious landscape, a split between two powerful perspectives, fundamentalism and spirituality. “Fundamentalism” is the term commonly applied to conservative religious movements that seek a return to “fundamentals,” such as Fundamentalist Christianity or Wahhabi Islam. Three key components of fundamentalism are scriptural literalism, rigid adherence to ancient codes, and a longing to return to an idealized past where everything was better and purer than it is now. “Spirituality” on the other hand is commonly used to describe a mode of being where the sacred or the divine speaks to each of us individually through the authority of our own inner experience, here and now. These two perspectives are clashing as never-before, and the project of coming to a deeper understanding of both is growing more urgent by the day. Until we better understand the underlying principles of these two positions, any talk of healing this rift if futile. Presented by Peter Balland, BA in Religious Studies from University of California at Santa Barbara, MA in philosophy San Diego State.  Has been a professor at Southwestern. 

button  
 
image
 

Saturday Book Club: Where the Water Goes by David Owen
Saturday, January 12, 1 pm

An eye-opening account of where our water comes from and where it all goes.
The Colorado River is an essential resource for a surprisingly large part of the United States, and every gallon that flows down it is owned or claimed by someone. David Owen traces all that water from the Colorado’s headwaters to its parched terminus, once a verdant wetland but now a million-acre desert. He takes readers on an adventure downriver, along a labyrinth of waterways, reservoirs, power plants, farms, fracking sites, ghost towns, and RV parks, to the spot near the U.S.–Mexico border where the river runs dry. 

button
 
image

Saturday, January 12th 9-1  Difficult Conversations:  The Art and Science of Living Together (advanced registration)

In today’s political climate, people are concerned about negative consequences if they speak their minds.  They are worried how others might react or not like them when they share their concerns.  Some say that our nation is fractured and this strain has spilled over onto our dinner tables.  If we don’t attempt to talk about tough topics, the nation will not change or the division could become worse. 
As a remedy, the Coronado Library is hosting a workshop:  Difficult Conversations:  The Art and Science of Living Together.  It will be held on Saturday, January 12th from 9am-1pm.  Facilitated by Kern Beare, founder of Pop the Bubble, a non-profit initiative to help heal our national and global divide.
If you would like to attend, please send an email to ehauser@coronado.lib.ca.us so we know how many participants we will have.  The workshop is free and open to the public—we just need you to sign up ahead of time.  
 The 4-hour workshop will be held in the Winn Room.  Refreshments will be served.  This important workshop is sponsored by the Friends of the Coronado Library. To learn more, visit www.popthebubble.org or call the library at 619-522-7390.

 

button
image
 

Mystery Book Club: The Cold Dish by Craig Johnson
Monday, January 14, 2 pm

Fans of Ace Atkins, Nevada Barr and Robert B. Parker will love this outstanding first novel, in which  New York Times  bestselling author Craig Johnson introduces Sheriff Walt Longmire of Wyoming’s Absaroka County. Johnson draws on his deep attachment to the American West to produce a literary mystery of stunning authenticity, and full of memorable characters. After twenty-five years as sheriff of Absaroka County, Walt Longmire’s hopes of finishing out his tenure in peace are dashed when Cody Pritchard is found dead near the Northern Cheyenne Reservation. Two years earlier, Cody has been one of four high school boys given suspended sentences for raping a local Cheyenne girl. Somebody, it would seem, is seeking vengeance, and Longmire might be the only thing standing between the three remaining boys and a Sharps .45-70 rifle.

button
 
image

Wednesday, January16th -Feb20th at 11am  Poetry for the People:  A six week poetry discussion. (drop in)

Poetry for the People will feature poets from the American West.  Does geography inform the poetry of these men and women, some of whom are state poet laureates? Please join our discussion on the work of poets from states such as Alaska, Colorado, California, Montana and more. Participants are encouraged to share his or her insights into the works of these poets. Your views are a significant part of this class’s experience.
Teacher: Chuck Kamar received his bachelor’s from Boston State and his master’s from Boston University. He taught for 34 years in the Newton Public Schools, the last 20 of which at Newton North High School. In 1998 he won the Paul E. Elicker Award for Excellence in Teaching

 

image
 

Wednesday, January 16th at 6:30pm Remembering Before they Forget

Are you caring for someone in the mid-stage of dementia and wondering how you can help with memory issues? Learn a unique way to connect with your loved one using reminiscing and reading. Evoke memories, build a bond, and leave a lasting legacy. Perfect for anyone in the family.  Patricia Benesh, Ed.D will be the instructor. 

   
   
image
 

Spoiler’s Book Club: The Maltese Falcon by Dashiell Hammett
Saturday, January 19, 2:30 pm

A treasure worth killing for. Sam Spade, a slightly shopworn private eye with his own solitary code of ethics. A perfumed grafter named Joel Cairo, a fat man name Gutman, and Brigid O’Shaughnessy, a beautiful and treacherous woman whose loyalties shift at the drop of a dime. These are the ingredients of Dashiell Hammett's iconic, influential, and beloved The Maltese Falcon.

button
 
image
 

WordPress Workshop
Tuesday, January 22,
2 pm

Interested in creating your own blog or website? Learn how to design one using WordPress.com. This workshop will cover the basics such as making pages and posts, adding photos and customizing website appearances.   
Web coding experience not required. 
Space is limited to 10 patrons. 
Sign-up at the Reference Desk .

 

 

   
 
image
 

Intro to Microsoft Word
Wednesday, January 23rd at 6:30 pm.

Want to make your documents look more professional?  Learn how to create documents and do basic editing in Microsoft Word.  Topics will cover changing fonts, formatting paragraphs. and understanding some of the different features found on Microsoft Word.  Workshop on January 23rd at 6:30 pm.  Sign up is required.  Space is limited.  .

 
image

Friday, January 25th at 1pm  Quartet Luminoso 

Quartet Luminoso will play a strings concert from composers  Respighi, Glière, Kodály, Krommer.  Instruments include Clarinet/Violin/viola/cello 

image

January 31st at 10am Organizing Life and Legacy

Beyond wills and Trusts:  The essential steps everyone should take to organize their life and legacy.  Anthony Richards, a financial service professional with over 23 years of investment experience will guide you in formulating a detailed road maps of your legal, financial, healthcare and digital life for the benefit of your family and heirs.    

image
 

Feb 1, Pianist- Judy Carmichael at 5pm

 

button  
 
Search:   search box