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review 2019-02-12 16:06
The Little Free Library Book - Margret A... The Little Free Library Book - Margret Aldrich
For more reviews, check out my blog: Craft-Cycle

Such a fascinating and beautiful book. 

Wonder about the origin story of all of those Little Free Libraries you see everywhere? Want to be part of the movement and install your own? This book has you covered. Complete with gorgeous pictures of various LFLs around the world, this is a fantastic book for everything Little Free Library. 

This book includes how LFL got started as well as many heartwarming stories about stewards from around the world. There are also sections with tips on how to make your own library, how to get the community involved, how to make the library a success, and how to do more with your library. 

At the end of the book in the appendix are construction plans, installation instructions, and lots of tips on the actual physical library construction. Great resource for people who want to build their own library. 

And throughout it all are wonderful pictures of various LFLs, from simple to extravagant, from traditional to creative. It was so fun to look at the pictures and all of the creative ways people made their libraries their own. 

Excellent read.
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text 2016-09-22 14:01
Jeremy Scahill at the Free Library of Philadelphia
Dirty Wars: The World is a Battlefield - Jeremy Scahill
Blackwater: The Rise of the World's Most Powerful Mercenary Army - Jeremy Scahill
The Assassination Complex: Inside the Go... The Assassination Complex: Inside the Government's Secret Drone Warfare Program - Jeremy Scahill,The Staff of The Intercept

We live in a political world and I am a political girl (or boy).

 

Jeremy Scahill, investigative journalist and author of books about the expanding boundaries of the war on terror (Dirty Wars) and the outsourcing of the military operations (Blackwater) faces a problem when speaking about his new book, The Assassination Complex: how to speak to people about a VERY political problem that doesn't stick to party lines in an election year.

 

Scahill, to his credit, didn't try to be apolitical in his appearance Wednesday at the Free Library of Philadelphia. He didn't avoid the subject and he certainly was not tousling either candidates hair. He has serious issues to bring up about both the major candidates, either of whom will continue many of the military malpractices he has spent his career exposing. But he doesn't make a false equivalency either: One is a professional, the other a clown. That doesn't mean one gets a free pass on important issues (he would like to see more voices featured on the national stage, not you Jeb!).

 

Knowing this, Scahill speaks with the patience of people that focus on intractable issues. When you are working on poverty or healthcare reform or the military, you know progress comes slowly through many channels and it seems to take some of the panic out of presidential races. January 20 there will be a new leader and the effort will continue.

 

The focus of the evening was his latest book, The Assassination Complex: Inside the Government's Secret Drone Warfare Program, which, as the library employee who introduced him pointed out, pretty much tells you what you need to know about the book. Since the very program which he spoke on is predicated on the authority of the president to carry out what he describes as assassinations, the election did come up and the candidates. 

 

For dark and potentially divisive material, Scahill was an affable presenter and willing to take any questions. He invited anyone, book handy or not, to go through the signing and ask him a question after he ran out of time in the presentation. At times, the talk was a bit conspiratorial, he frames the problem as pressure from the defense department when I think there is plenty of pressure from the electorate before a candidate ever gets a briefing. No one had to tell Trump that there are people we should bomb. But it's not tin foil-hat stuff, it's documented and obvious influence by donors and agencies, so it is bound to sound a bit paranoid, but as we learned in the last few years, it's not paranoia if the government is tracking your phone calls.

 

Scahill spoke about some of the history that brought us here and the process by which targets are chosen and some of the legal acrobatics that allow it. He doesn't lay blame on wholly on one side: While Republicans get the war reputation, having someone like President Barack Obama carry on this policy of firing bombs at target persons has legitimized it for much of the country. But there was so much to cover. Like why this is such a bad policy. There are the easy answers killing is bad and the legal justifications do sound very strained, but they come kind of cheap in war, for both sides. Fighting and killing, even for good reasons, is ugly business, but that doesn't justify everything.

 

I guess I will just have to read the book to learn more!

 

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text 2014-10-17 16:22
The Little Free Library Movement Gains Momentum

Little Free Libraries are popping up in towns and cities across America. Often built and assembled or sponsored by local book lovers, the mini-library offers patrons to take a free book in exchange for putting another one back on the shelf. No library card is required. So far, there have been no reports of anyone trying to abuse the library boxes.

 

For more info on the Little Free Library movement, check out the website http://littlefreelibrary.org/getinvolved/. Also, If you spot any Little Free Libraries in your area, please take a photo and share it with all of us here at Booklikes! 

 

This Little Free Library was just spotted in the Asheville, NC, area by local photographer Sam Ganly.

 

 

 

This "Little Free Library" pre-dates today's models by about 80 years. This is from London during the 1930s. 

 

Source: www.facebook.com/rltownley?ref=hl
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review 2013-07-21 20:58
The Gluten-free Cookbook (Healthy Eating Library)
The Gluten-free Cookbook (Healthy Eating Library) - Anne Sheasby A great resource for the Coeliac or Gluten intolerant.
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review 2013-03-27 00:00
Amos Fortune, Free Man - Elizabeth Yates,Nora S. Unwin I read this with my son for his 8th grade history class. It starts out similar to Roots with At-mun (later Americanized to Amos) a proud, thoughtful prince of his tribe in Africa. Through good fortune, gaining him his last name, he is sold to kind families, learns a trade, and becomes a Christian. Amos has a positive attitude and strong faith that keeps him thankful and content through his long life as a slave and later as a free black man in early America. Though his lot is certainly easier than that of many kidnapped Africans in the 1700s, this book is an excellent introduction of the subject for kids. In my opinion this book would be appropriate for children as early as 5th grade with a story enjoyable enough that I finished it in one day.
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