Monday, November 28, 2011

EASEL Exhibit by S.E. Mn Artists

The Kasson Public Libray is very excited about the EASEL (Experience Art in Southeastern Libraries) Visual Art Exhibit at the Kasson Public Library. Kasson Library was chosen as one of 17 libraries to host this exhibit int he last 15 months.

EASEl's inaugural 2010-2011 tour consists of pieces that correspond with the artist's interpretation of a book, letter or letters, reading, authors or the library. The exhibit includes 31 original works of art created by artists living in the 11 southeastern counties.

The Friends of the Library are hosting a Hot Reads for Cold Nights Program on Monday, December 12 at 7 pm.
Several artist from the EASEL project will be on hand to discuss their experience with this project.This exhibit will be at the Kasson Library from Tuesday, November 29-Thursday, December 22.

Works of art from the EASEL project may be for sale to interested buyers. SELCO makes final arrangements for the delivery to the buyer at the conclusion of the exhibit in January 2012.

Richard Hutton , SEMVA Past President and SELCO staff member Sara Berquam display the art for it's 6 weeks at the Library. Stop by the library and see the 22 pictures and 9 3D piece of art.





























This exhibit was made possible through SELCO ,Minnesota Library Legacy and Clean Water and Land Act.









Wednesday, November 23, 2011

New Books for December


The Drop by Michael Conelly 11/28


Harry Bosch has been given three years before he must retire from the LAPD, and he wants cases more fiercely than ever. In one morning, he gets two.DNA from a 1989 rape and murder matches a 29-year-old convicted rapist. Was he an eight-year-old killer or has something gone terribly wrong in the new Regional Crime Lab? The latter possibility could compromise all of the lab's DNA cases currently in court.


Then Bosch and his partner are called to a death scene fraught with internal politics. Councilman Irvin Irving's son jumped or was pushed from a window at the Chateau Marmont. Irving, Bosch's longtime nemesis, has demanded that Harry handle the investigation.Relentlessly pursuing both cases, Bosch makes two chilling discoveries: a killer operating unknown in the city for as many as three decades, and a political conspiracy that goes back into the dark history of the police department.


Explosive 18 by Janet Evanovich 11/22 Before Stephanie can even step foot off Flight 127 Hawaii to Newark, she’s knee deep in trouble. Her dream vacation turned into a nightmare, and she’s flying back to New Jersey solo. Worse still, her seatmate never returned to the plane after the L.A. layover. Now he’s dead, in a garbage can, waiting for curbside pickup. His killer could be anyone. And a ragtag collection of thugs and psychos, not to mention the FBI, are all looking for a photograph the dead man was supposed to be carrying.

Only one other person has seen the missing photo—Stephanie Plum. Now she’s the target, and she doesn’t intend to end up in a garbage can. With the help of an FBI sketch artist Stephanie re-creates the person in the photo. Unfortunately the first sketch turns out to look like Tom Cruise, and the second sketch like Ashton Kutcher. Until Stephanie can improve her descriptive skills, she’ll need to watch her back. Over at the bail bonds agency things are going from bad to worse. The bonds bus serving as Vinnie’s temporary HQ goes up in smoke. Stephanie’s wheelman, Lula, falls in love with their largest skip yet. Lifetime arch nemesis Joyce Barnhardt moves into Stephanie’s apartment. And everyone wants to know what happened in Hawaii? Morelli, Trenton’s hottest cop, isn’t talking about Hawaii. Ranger, the man of mystery, isn’t talking about Hawaii. And all Stephanie is willing to say about her Hawaiian vacation is . . . It’s complicated.The hardcover edition of Explosive Eighteen contains a tear-out calendar inside!

Locked On by Tom Clancy 12/13
Jack Ryan, Sr. has made a momentous choice. He's running for President of the United States again and thus giving up a peaceful retirement to help his country in its darkest hour. But he doesn't anticipate the treachery of his opponent, who uses trumped up charges to attack one of Ryan's closest comrades, John Clark.

Now, Clark is in a race against time and must travel the world, staying one step ahead of his adversaries, including a shadowy organization tasked to bring him in, all while trying to find who is behind this.

Meanwhile, Jack Ryan, Jr., Ding Chavez, Dominick Caruso and other members of the Campus-the top secret off-the-books intelligence agency founded by Jack Ryan during his first term in the White House-deal with a question of their own: Why is a Pakistani military officer meeting with Dagestani terrorists? The answer will ultimately lead to a desperate struggle, with nothing short of the fate of the world at stake.



Death Benefit by Robin Cook 12/27
Pia Grazdani is an exceptional yet aloof medical student working closely with Columbia University Medical Center's premier scientist on cutting edge research that could revolutionize health care by creating replacement organs for critically-ill patients. Thorough her work with the brilliant molecular geneticist Dr. Tobias Rothman, Pia knows she will be given the chance to fulfill her ambition to participate in medical discoveries that can help millions while bringing her a measure of personal peace that might once and for all push aside memories of her difficult and abusive childhood.

But when tragedy strikes in the lab, Pia, with the help of infatuated classmate George Wilson, launches an investigation into the unforeseen calamity in the hospital's supposedly secure biosafety lab.

Meanwhile, two ex-Wall Street whiz-kids think they have found another loadstone in the nation's multi-trillion dollar life insurance industry, and race to find ways to control actuarial data and securitize the policies of the aged and infirm to make another killing.
As Pia and George dig deeper into the events at the lab one question remains unanswered: is someone attempting to manipulate private insurance information to allow investors to benefit from the deaths of others?



Red Mist by Patricia Cornwell 12/6
Determined to find out what happened to her former deputy chief, Jack Fielding, murdered six months earlier, Kay Scarpetta travels to the Georgia Prison for Women, where an inmate has information not only on Fielding, but also on a string of grisly killings. The murder of an Atlanta family years ago, a young woman on death row, and the inexplicable deaths of homeless people as far away as California seem unrelated. But Scarpetta discovers connections that compel her to conclude that what she thought ended with Fielding's death and an attempt on her own life is only the beginning of something far more destructive: a terrifying terrain of conspiracy and potential terrorism on an international scale. And she is the only one who can stop it.



Threadbare by Monica Ferris 12/6
When an elderly homeless woman is found dead on the shore of Lake Minnetonka, she's wearing something that holds the key to her identity but also opens up a mystery. Embroidered on her blouse is her will, in which she bequeaths everything she owns to her niece-Emily Hame, a member of the Monday Bunch at Betsy Devonshire's Crewel World needlework shop!

Emily's aunt turns out to be the second homeless woman to be found dead under mysterious circumstances. It's up to Betsy to discover the common thread between the deaths-and to determine if a murderer may strike again...



Down the Darkest Road by Tami Hoag 12/27
Oak Knoll, a small California town that, in the mid-eighties, seemed as idyllic as any . . . until the See-No-Evil killer shattered that notion. It took FBI agent Vince Leone and a new technique called "profiling" to put an end to the trauma.
Secrets to the Grave brought Leone's teacher-turned-child- advocate wife, Anne, into a central role. Together with Vince and local sheriff 's deputy Tony Mendez, she solved an Oak Knoll murder with a particularly challenging mystery: The victim never existed.

And now Hoag returns once more to Oak Knoll for the third installment of this bestselling series. Through Leone's pioneering, science-based investigatory skills, Hoag explores the early days of forensic police work.


Death Comes to Pemberly by P.D. James 12/6
A rare meeting of literary genius: P. D. James, long among the most admired mystery writers of our time, draws the characters of Jane Austen’s beloved novel Pride and Prejudice into a tale of murder and emotional mayhem.

It is 1803, six years since Elizabeth and Darcy embarked on their life together at Pemberley, Darcy’s magnificent estate. Their peaceful, orderly world seems almost unassailable. Elizabeth has found her footing as the chatelaine of the great house. They have two fine sons, Fitzwilliam and Charles. Elizabeth’s sister Jane and her husband, Bingley, live nearby; her father visits often; there is optimistic talk about the prospects of marriage for Darcy’s sister Georgiana. And preparations are under way for their much-anticipated annual autumn ball.

Then, on the eve of the ball, the patrician idyll is shattered. A coach careens up the drive carrying Lydia, Elizabeth’s disgraced sister, who with her husband, the very dubious Wickham, has been banned from Pemberley. She stumbles out of the carriage, hysterical, shrieking that Wickham has been murdered. With shocking suddenness, Pemberley is plunged into a frightening mystery.


The Devil's Elixir by Raymond Khoury 12/22
FBI agent Sean Reilly and his girlfriend, archaeologist Tess Chaykin, heroes of Raymond Khoury's bestselling Templar novels, return in another edge-of-your-seat thriller that reaches from present day back to 1700s Mexico-and possibly beyond.

What if there was a drug, previously lost to history in the jungles of Central America, capable of inducing an experience so momentous-and so unsettling-that it might shake the very foundations of Western civilization?

What if powerful forces on both sides of the law got wind of that drug and launched a vicious, uncompromising pursuit to possess it?



77 Shadow Street by Dean Koontz 12/27
I am the One, the all and the only. I live in the Pendleton as surely as I live everywhere. I am the Pendleton's history and its destiny. The building is my place of conception, my monument, my killing ground. . . .

The Pendleton stands on the summit of Shadow Hill at the highest point of an old heartland city, a Gilded Age palace built in the late 1800s as a tycoon’s dream home. Almost from the beginning, its grandeur has been scarred by episodes of madness, suicide, mass murder, and whispers of things far worse. But since its rechristening in the 1970s as a luxury apartment building, the Pendleton has been at peace. For its fortunate residents—among them a successful songwriter and her young son, a disgraced ex-senator, a widowed attorney, and a driven money manager—the Pendleton’s magnificent quarters are a sanctuary, its dark past all but forgotten.

But now inexplicable shadows caper across walls, security cameras relay impossible images, phantom voices mutter in strange tongues, not-quite-human figures lurk in the basement, elevators plunge into unknown depths. With each passing hour, a terrifying certainty grows: Whatever drove the Pendleton’s past occupants to their unspeakable fates is at work again. Soon, all those within its boundaries will be engulfed by a dark tide from which few have escaped.


The Forgotten Affairs of Youth by Alexander McCall Smith 12/6
Isabel helps a woman given up for adoption find her biological father. Isabel is everything you’d want in a philosopher, but she is also quirky and witty and made more human by the longing she still sometimes feels for a beautiful but bad love in her past.





Sleepwalker by Karen Robards 12/27
It’s not that Micayla Lange is afraid of the clinking she hears coming from the first floor of the empty McMansion she’s housesitting for her uncle Nicco. She’s a cop, after all. It’s just that finding out her boyfriend was cheating on her was enough drama for one night. Now she’s alone on New Year’s Eve, wearing flannel pajamas and wielding a Glock 22 as she zeroes in on the unmistakable source of the sound: Uncle Nicco’s private office. Jason Davis steals things for a living, so unexpected developments are a natural part of the job. Getting caught red-handed by a hot, pigtail-sporting police officer in what is supposed to be a gangster’s deserted house is just one more twist in the game. Kind of like finding incriminating photos in Nicco Marino’s safe, only to discover the cop — and the security cameras — have gotten a real good look at his face. Unfortunately for Mick, she also got a good look at the damned pictures. Her “uncle” might love her like family, but if he knows she’s seen evidence that implicates him in the murder of a city councilman, she doesn’t like her chances. Which is why she’s having a hard time reconciling her professional instincts with what she is rapidly concluding is an inescapable fact: She’s about to help a criminal get away with a suitcase full of stolen money. And she’s going with him. Mick and Jason’s race for their lives hurtles them through the dangerous Michigan wilderness on speedboat and snowmobile. As their adventure heats up and their enemies close in, Mick is torn between her duty to the force and the combustible passion engulfing her and her unlikely partner in crime. She’ll have to turn Jason in sooner or later . . . if they survive. But will they ever get a second chance at love?



The Richest Hill on Earth by Richard S. Wheeler 12/6
The city of Butte looks like a cancerous mélange of smoky mine boilers and rudely constructed sheds when newspaperman John Fellowes Hall arrives on a cold spring day in 1892. Butte may be ugly, but it’s the place to get rich. It’s also a city full of stories—perfect for a journalist looking to make a name for himself. As an employee of mining titan William Andrews Clark, Hall becomes a part of the best story of them all: the fight among the Copper Kings.
Butte’s three founding fathers were remarkable men with little in common other than ambition. Marcus Daly, a humble Irish immigrant, led the Anaconda Copper Mining Company. His political rival, the formidable William Andrews Clark, a brilliant but vain businessman, bought himself a United States Senate seat. And Augustus Heinze tried to steal the mines, using lawyers and bribed judges, only to be crushed by the Rockefellers. The Richest Hill on Earth captures their struggle as well as the stories of the ordinary people—the miners, their wives and children, the journalists, and even the psychics—trying to make their fortunes in the rapidly-changing West.





D.C. Dead by Stuart Woods 12/22
After a shocking loss, Stone Barrington is at loose ends, unsure if he wants to stay in New York and continue his work as a partner at Woodman & Weld. It comes as a welcome relief when he's summoned to Washington, D.C., by President Will Lee. The president has a special operation that calls for Stone's unique skill set, and it's a mission that will reunite him with his former partner in crime and in bed, Holly Barker.


















The Library will be closed for
Thanksgiving Holiday
November 24-25, 2011

Friday, November 18, 2011

Friends of the Library Hot Reads Event






The Friends of the Library hosted their monthly Hot Reads for Cold Nights program on Tuesday, November 14th at 7 pm in the Kasson Library. This month's topic dealt with the 150th anniversary of the Civil War and information on events held around S.E. Minnesota. Picture:Library Director Bonnie Adams, Michaek Eckers, Friends President John Talcott)

Michael Eckers arrived at the Friends of the Library Hot Reads program dressed as "Brigadier General Henry Sibley." as he was at the Smithsonian Exhibit on Native American treaties at Riverland in Austin. There was standing room only at the library with the crowd thoroughly engaged with Mr. Eckers and his information on the Civil War. "Brigadier General Henry Sibley" also brought rifles, revolvers and other memorabilia used by officers and enlisted men. He also touched on the Dakota Wars along the Minnesota River celebrating its 150th anniversary in 2012.

Michael has studied American military history for more than 40 years. He is currently writing a series of novels following one family through the twelve generations of our country; from the Revolution through today's War on Terror, the Weldon family has offered sons and daughters to fight to secure our freedoms.

The Friends of the Library will have Mr. Eckers back in August 2012 to talk about 150th anniversary of the Dakota Wars along the Minnesota River.












Thursday, November 10, 2011

E-Readers at the Kasson Library

Library Director Bonnie Adams formed a partnership with Rochester's Best Buy North, Barnes & Noble at the Chateau downtown location and Apache Mall, Jonya from Selco Regional Library. Kasson Library staff recognized after last year's holiday season many people received e-Readers as gifts and did not know how they worked or how to download books from the area libraries, Barnes & Noble or Amazon. This year the Kasson Library decided to be proactive in helping educate patrons on e-Readers and which of these e-readers would best fit their lifestyles.

Managers at all locations agreed to have staff come to the library for seven informational and educational classes that were held during the day and evening. We have had 32 people attend 4 of the 7 classes about Nooks, Kindles, iPads, hotspots, routers etc. All were all excited to see, touch and hear of the new products available. After listening to the presentations it did not matter whether you already had a reader or not you learned helpful additional information. Many changed their minds after the information they received from these classes. After one classes a patron went right to the store and purchased a Nook tablet for her husband and a Simple Touch reader for her.



What participants really enjoyed was the one-on-one service
of answering questions and learning about extra features available on their device that they had not tried. All who attended want to thank Christine, Heather and John from the downtown Barnes & Noble store, Janice from the Apache Mall store and Gerrad and Colin from the North Best Buy store for their generosity, knowledge and helpfulness in selecting what e-Reader would work best for them and their families.


Left: Christine and John (far right) from downtown Barnes & Noble from downtown Barnes & Noble

Right: Colin & Gerrad from North Best Buy





















Monday, November 7, 2011

Veteran's Day Library Closed

















The Kasson Public Library will be closed

Friday, November 11th.

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

FREE e-Reader Classes at the Library




NOOK KINDLE IPAD What are they all about???



The library will be hosting seven FREE classes on e-readers during the month of November. You can discover the differences between the major e-readers on the market, how to purchase e-books, and how you can download e-books for free from your library. Current owners of e-readers are also welcome, as experts from Best Buy, Barnes & Noble, or SELCO will be present to answer any questions or help you discover features of your e-reader you never knew about. Please contact the Kasson Public Library at 634-7615 to register or for any questions.



E-reader class Schedule:


Monday, Nov 7th 10 am (NOOK/Barnes & Noble presenter)


Tuesday Nov 8th 10 am & 6:30 pm (NOOK/Barnes & Noble presenter)


Wednesday, Nov 9th 10 am (Kindle/Best Buy presenter)


Thursday, Nov 10th 6:30 pm (NOOK/Barnes & Noble presenter)


Tuesday, Nov 15th 10 am (Kindle/Best Buy presenter) & 6:30 pm

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Senses Storytime Week of Oct 31-Nov 3

This week's storytime was about our five senses. Ingvild our children's librarian read books about eyes, noses, ears. The craft was to chose items that matched the words smooth, soft, rough, and bumpy. Additional pictures may be found at: http://www.flickr.com/photos/kassonlibrary/