PVLD Photos

  • Sylvia the Carpenter Ant
    Photos of PVLD people, places, and activities. Click on the photo to view all of the photos in the album!
My Photo

Censorship

September 17, 2007

The Hollywood Librarian

On Saturday, September 29th at 3PM t PVLD will be screening the new documentary The Hollywood Librarian at the Peninsula Center Library.  We are one of several dozen libraries across the country showing this film during its debut in honor of Banned Books Week - and as far as we know we are the only LA-area library that will be showing it! 

Want to see more?  Join us on the 29th!  Details can be found at http://www.pvld.org/events/hwlibrarian.html

There is a modest admission charge ($8 for adults age 12-60, $5 for kids age 6-12 and older adults over age 60, and free to librarians, library school students, PVLD volunteers, and kids 5 and under) - proceeds benefit the Peninsula Friends of the Library.

Space is limited and reservations are required - please call 310-33-9584 x601 to reserve your tickets.

Librarians and library school students who are interested in a tour of our Annex for teens (and now open for older adults) are welcome to meet at the entrance to the Peninsula Center Library Community Room  at 2:15PM on the 29th. 

February 28, 2007

Double-edged swords

As libraries wrestle with Internet filtering, whether to allow MySpace, and how to respond to concerna about award-winning kids books that contain a technically correct reference to a certain part of the male anatomy, I thought the following were timely:

1.  From the "Cool Cat Teacher Blog" http://coolcatteacher.blogspot.com/2007/02/including-classmate-with-leukemia.html (thanks to Stephen Abrams for the reference):

  • A hammer can kill someone but it can also build a house.
  • A nail can be driven through a hand but it can also hold the roof over your head.
  • A fist can hit but a fist can also be clasped in your hand in love.

We do not outlaw hammers, nails, or fists -- we teach people to use them properly.

2.  From Susan Patron, Los Angeles Public Librarian and author of this year's Newberry award-winning and unexpectedly controversial "The Power of Lucky":(apologies for the formatting glitches!)

'Scrotum' as a children's literary tool, Los Angeles Times, Feb 27, 2007

WHY HAS ONE WORD, "scrotum," generated such controversy and heated debate over my book, "The Higher Power of Lucky"? Lucky, the protagonist, overhears the word on the first page, doesn't know what it means, and wonders — but there's no one she can trust enough to ask about it. The tiny town of Hard Pan, Calif., hasn't many resources for a curious, vulnerable 10-year-old trying to figure out how the world works.

The problem with "scrotum," evidently, is discomfort among adults who do not wish to see references to body parts in children's literature. Also, fear of giggling. What if the teacher or librarian loses control of a class of kids, however briefly, while reading the book aloud? Even the (ludicrous) specter of a lawsuit over sexual harassment has been raised!

Ironically, my job as collection development manager (helping children's librarians in the Los Angeles Public Library's branches select, replace and weed their collections) includes responding to public objections to particular books. I also train new children's librarians in handling such complaints. We validate the parent who finds a particular book unsuitable for his child — parents should be involved in their children's (but only their children's) reading. We do not remove the title from our collection, but we do help the patron to find other, more appropriate books.

Our guiding principle is to offer a wide selection of books, magazines, DVDs and audio books. We buy popular, light reading; "literary" books; controversial materials such as "Harry Potter," "Lemony Snicket" and "Captain Underpants," and other materials compelling to kids. We want to lure them in.

Oh yes, we librarians are driven when it comes to reading. We entice kids with computer centers, reading incentives and free programs — magicians, storytellers and living, breathing authors. Once we have the children in our clutches, we cannot rest until they've joined the Summer Reading Club, registered for a library card and found some books we hope they'll love. We are relentless in this passionate goal of connecting kids
with books.

Of course, adults are right to fear a word in a book, although not, as in this instance, because it names a body part. They are right in the implied assumption that books have enormous power and influence. Children who read widely understand more about the world; they have a foundation for making better decisions. They think, and because of that, they may even challenge their parents' beliefs. For some, a scary idea, but isn't a thinking child preferable to one who accepts the world at face value and has no aim to change it for the better?

Fiction, especially, gives that reading child a tool to decipher the mysteries and paradoxes of being human. Give a child a nonfiction book explaining the cycle of life and death, and he may come to a cerebral understanding of the concepts. Give him "Charlotte's Web" and his heart will burst. He'll feel empathy in a deep and lasting way. That is what happened to me when it was read aloud to my third-grade class.

It was also in third grade at Van Ness
Avenue Elementary School that a public librarian visited our classroom. She was lugging an enormous and heavy sack. One by one, she showed us the books, holding them lovingly, opening them to run a finger over the paper and display the interior illustrations, hugging them to her body. I'd never seen anyone so demonstrably in love with books — both the physical books themselves and the stories they contained. She passed around "Rabbit Hill" and "Ginger Pye" and told us about the Newbery Medal, which both books had won. Before her visit, I'd never heard of the public library. Afterward, my branch became a second home.

I've been reading Newbery Award books ever since, and now, miraculously, I've even written one. Because I love survival, adventure and growing-up stories, some of my favorites are "Julie of the Wolves," "Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH" and "Bud, Not Buddy."

There are Newberys for every taste and for a range of reading ability and developmental levels. "Sarah, Plain and Tall" is easily accessible to most
third- and fourth-graders, while "The Giver" or "Criss Cross" may have more appeal for sixth- to eighth-graders. Certain winning titles introduce concepts such as child abuse, racism, animal neglect, the Holocaust, slavery, abandonment. Why burden children with these heavy subjects? Because they live in the same world we do. They perceive much more than we may want to recognize. Well-written books that respect a child's intelligence enable readers to identify with the protagonist's mental and physical struggles. This helps them to see different perspectives and shades of gray, rather than a world of absolutes.

Books that offer hope to tender and
impressionable readers (by which I mean all children) armor them against the confusing, frightening, numbing realities of life. My protagonist, Lucky, terrified that she'll be abandoned by her guardian, makes a desperate plan to run away with her beloved dog. I wanted to write an honest story that would fill readers with hope and let them see that even in a gravely flawed world, there are adults who will nurture them, adults — no matter how scruffy and unlikely — who have compassion and integrity. I wanted to give readers a book in which they, like Lucky, would find courage, love and empowerment.

And parents who worry about having to explain the meaning of "scrotum" can relax. Children who read the entire book will discover exactly what it means, in a context that is straightforward, reassuring and truthful.

AddThis Feed Button
AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Twitter Updates

    follow me on Twitter

    In the News

    Branches in Action!