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Why I Give: Amanda Vega-Mavec

I donate and volunteer for the Johnson County Library Foundation because libraries and books have always played an important role in my life. I want to help provide that opportunity for others. My first memory of a library is of the one from my grade school, where the librarian, Mrs. Sanchez, nurtured my love of reading and learning. She and my teachers realized that as long as I had a book in my hand, I was less likely to cause trouble. So, I always had a book in my hand. (And I was even allowed to shelve books as a reward!)

Those educators along with my parents also nurtured my desire to learn about all types of topics. No topic was off limits, but they created a safe opportunity for me to ask questions about and discuss any topic. This directly impacted my analytical and critical thinking skills. And, my ability to think for myself. I am so grateful they gave me these opportunities and think they should be available to every child.

Libraries serve many roles; I feel like I am always learning new things. For me, at this stage of my life, it’s about being a meeting place for the community. I go to the library for meetings for other groups I am involved with almost as much as I go to pick up books. Not too long ago we invited some family friends to join us for a library event. They ran into several friends, including a beloved staff member I also know well. In that moment the library was the mutual friend that brought us all together.

I am currently finishing Radical Candor: Be a Kick-Ass Boss Without Losing Your Mind and on deck are Entre Guadalupe and Malinche: Tejanas in Literature and Art and Book Collecting Now: The Value of Print in a Digital Age. I always have a “next up” pile of books going. I will even start carrying around my next book before I finish the one I’m reading.

Photo from the early 20th century of the Missouri Pacific Railroad depot in Stilwell. Johnson County Museum

Photo from the early 20th century of the Missouri Pacific Railroad depot in Stilwell. Johnson County Museum

New JoCoHistory Blog Story on Trains has Arrived at the Station

Railroad-Inspired Johnson County Placenames

For anyone who hasn’t had the chance to visit the Johnson County Museum’s special exhibit, TRAINS: Transportation and the Transformation of Johnson County, you might be thinking: how much change did railroads really bring to a county that today has a modern, suburban, automobile-centered landscape? The TRAINS exhibit makes it clear that railroads transformed elements of Johnson County’s landscape, economy, society, and population. Access to the railroads held the fate of whole towns – including town names. Here are five examples of Johnson County, Kansas towns (past and present) named as a direct result of the railroads.

Read the full story on the JoCoHistory blog »

No Wait Wednesday: Where the Dead Sleep by Joshua Moehling

Hello and welcome to #NoWaitWednesday, where we turn the spotlight on a book on the New Release shelf that's hot, available, and ready for a lucky patron to check it out. No one likes waiting in line for the newest bestseller, but there's always quality authors that are lurking just under your nose at your local Library. 

Patrons love a good police procedural, and patrons really love a good rural police procedural, where the action is taken out of a big city with all of the security cameras and state-of-the-art forensic equipment and into a more rural setting, where resources are scarce and law enforcement cover a larger area with little help, armed only with their own skills, their knowledge of the community, and a deep sense of right and wrong. It's a situation rife with storytelling potential, and fans of C.J. Box's Joe Pickett novels, Craig Johnson's Longmire series, or Jane Harper's excellent Aaron Falk novels know that small towns often hide big secrets.

Joshua Moehling's novel Where the Dead Sleep features small-town Minnesota sheriff Ben Packard. Correction - make that acting sheriff, as Packard is really a deputy who is elevated to the top spot when the sheriff of the small town of Sandy Lake falls ill. Packard grew up in the community and is familiar with many of the local players, but left when he was younger and is now back after a personal tragedy, bringing a bit of an outsider's perspective to his job. The novel begins with an early-morning call when a local man, Bill Sanderson, is found shot while in his bed. Even though Bill is a respected, high-profile banker known by pretty much everyone in the community, he's also the sort of person who always has drama swirling around him: he's a known gambler who's previously stolen from a business partner, and he is also recently divorced - and then turned around and married his ex-wife's sister directly afterward. Not to mention his poker buddies who all say the right things to the police but seem to be hiding something. We quickly learn that plenty of locals have some sort of grudge against Bill, but clear and definitive evidence is hard to find, and Packard must sort through the different levels of lies, secrets, and cover-ups to find the real story, which spans generations of greed and corruption, rotting the community from both above and below.

Also, Packard must decide his own career path - does he fade into the background, continuing on as a local deputy, or does he run for sheriff himself, potentially opening up his personal life as a gay man in a very traditional small town, but also giving him the ability to find out what happened to his missing brother from long ago? Moehling shines when balancing the procedural part of the novel where we follow Packard's investigation and unraveling of Sanderson's death with Packard's interior thoughts as he considers revealing more of himself to those around him. The novel, like all great mysteries, jumps between the technical and the personal, and the small-town Minnesota setting with its sprawling cast of (sometimes) eccentric locals and tourists is fuel for a nice long series of novels.

Where the Dead Sleep is technically the second book in this series, but can easily be read as a stand-alone. (Curious readers can check out 2021's And There He Kept Her as a proper introduction.) Thanks for reading, and we'll see you next week!

This Week at the Library

This week at the Library, you can join us at: 

Poetry Walk at Strang Park – Daily, Nov. 1 – Nov. 30, All Day

Meander through Strang Park while you enjoy poetry by Traci Brimhall, Poet Laureate of Kansas, on the theme of Memory Palace. Poetry boards with accompanying artwork by Kelly Yarbrough will be placed throughout the park. The poetry walk is a perfect way to get a sneak peek into Brimhall's and Yarbrough's work before the 2023 Writers Conference, where they will be in conversation about their collaboration. 

Writers Conference Kickoff – Thursday, Nov. 2, 6:30 – 8 p.m.

You’re invited to join us at Central Resource Library. With equal parts poems, storytelling, and Q&A, Dallas’ inaugural poet laureate will share how he found poetry as a child. In our kickoff event, Joaquín Zihuatanejo will take us on a poetic journey from barrio boy to teacher to poet to World Champion and eventually poet laureate.

For more information and updates about the conference, check our Writers Conference website

2023 Writers Conference – Friday, Nov. 3 – Saturday, Nov. 4, 9:30 a.m. – 4 p.m.

2023 is the year of the workshop at our annual Writers Conference at Central Resource Library! Bring your pen. Bring your laptop. Bring your creativity and your drive. Be ready to write, revise, and critique. We’ll still have lectures on editing, grand openings, playwriting, classroom takeovers and many more. We’re also taking over all the free space with drop-in activities!

Teen Book Club – Monthly, times and location vary

Antioch Library – First Saturdays, 2-3 p.m., Nov. 4 book is “Ravensong” by Cayla Fay, Dec. 2 book is “Always the Almost” by Edward Underhill.       

Blue Valley – First Thursdays, 6-7 p.m., Nov. 2 book is “Nothing More to Tell” by Karen McManus, Dec. 7 book is “The Girl Who Fell Beneath the Sea” by Axie Oh. 

Lenexa – Second Thursdays, 5-6 p.m., Nov. 9, 6-7 p.m., Nov. 9 book is “Instructions for Dancing” by Nicola Yoon, Dec. 14 book is “Clap When You Land” by Elizabeth Acedevo.  

We are proud to present the Library’s first ever Teen Book Club at three locations! Let’s get together to share our love of reading and chat about each month’s books. No registration necessary. Come join us at Antioch, Blue Valley, and Lenexa — or mix and match! Bring your own book or check out the month’s book ahead of time from the Library — each title is offered in the catalog as a physical copy and eBook.

And there’s much more happening this week … 

Already have a busy week? Remember, you can watch recordings of many of our programs at your convenience with Library OnDemand

Join us for a Night of Fright

Dark nights. Abandoned cabins. Eerie noises. What restless spirits will be brought to life in these spooky stories?

Winners of our kids and teen Night of Fright spooky story contests will have the opportunity to read their stories aloud at this event. This is also your chance to collect winning stickers from the Night of Fright teen sticker contest. Feel free to wear a costume to this celebration! 

Night of Fright is Monday, Oct. 30, 6-7:30 p.m. Register now for a treat - or trick!

Local History Librarian Amanda Wahlmeier displays the title page to the Literature section in the 1923 yearbook for Shawnee Mission Rural High School.

Local History Librarian Amanda Wahlmeier displays the title page to the Literature section in the 1923 yearbook for Shawnee Mission Rural High School.

Donated Yearbooks Serve as Unsung Reference Materials

Perhaps it was the big hair. Or the wide-collared shirt. Or the sideburns. If it’s finally time to discard that old high school yearbook — the one with the picture you have despised all these years — the Johnson County Library has a message for you: Don’t pitch it!

“We are happy to take them,” said Local History Librarian Amanda Wahlmeier.

The Library is always looking to add to its collection of nearly 520 high school yearbooks from districts within Johnson County.

The oldest one in the collection is the 1923 yearbook from Shawnee Mission Rural High, the precursor to what is now Shawnee Mission North. And yes, you can also find the high school photos of local kids who made it big, such as Shawnee Mission West graduates Paul Rudd and Jason Sudeikis.

The yearbooks are available in print on about 10 shelves in the northwest corner of the Central Resource Library. Included in the regional reference section, the yearbooks sit among a lot of technical documents on topics like sanitary sewer regulations and city code regulations.

Even the most arcane publications help researchers, and Wahlmeier said yearbooks might be an overlooked historical reference.

For instance, Wahlmeier said, yearbooks can help genealogists track down birth years for relatives by working backward from their class years. The Library also sometimes fields calls from school staff themselves wanting to track down some school history.

More generally, she said, the yearbooks are “a reflection of the community to see what the school activities were and what the kids were up to any given year.”

The yearbooks serve as year-by-year time capsules to chronicle broader trends, such as the popularity of different names to the changing nature of school activities.

That old Shawnee Mission North yearbook, for instance, featured a literature section where students submitted poems and other writings.

Sports have always garnered significant coverage, but more recent yearbooks also capture the emergence of more diverse clubs and activities. The homecoming parade has stood the test of time.

“It’s interesting to see what stays around and what doesn’t,” Wahlmeier said.

Notes inside donated yearbooks can also add a lighthearted view of student life, as in one missive written by a student in a yearbook apparently donated by a teacher.

“Even though I didn’t make a very good grade,” the student wrote, “I feel like I have learned something this year. I enjoyed your jokes. Have a spectacular summer.”

One caveat, however: If you don’t want that love note from an old flame or that reference to idiotic high school behavior out there for the world to see, you will probably want to review written messages from classmates before donating the yearbooks.

Residents interested in donating to the Library collection can email Wahlmeier at wahlmeiera@jocolibrary.org or call her at 913.826.4402. You can also browse digitized yearbooks from the Shawnee Mission School district through JoCoHistory.

Bird's-Eye Views of Johnson County

It’s another grand Throwback Thursday where we encourage you to time travel through Johnson County's history. JoCoHistory is a collaborative presentation of the history from the Johnson County Museum, Johnson County Library and many JoCoHistory partners. Explore historical photographs and documents about the people, places and organizations of Johnson County, Kansas, from the 19th century to the present.

Collection spotlight: Johnson County Museum Aerial Photographs

About this collection: More than 8,000 color slide transparencies that are aerial views of Johnson County. The collection consists of 45 dated sets. The sets range in quantity from just a few transparencies to several hundred, dating from April 1980 to July 2002, and each set systematically documents the county from west to east. The sets were typically taken twice a year, in the spring and fall, to document agricultural land-use. Each transparency centers on two square miles.

No Wait Wednesday: The Looking Glass Sound by Catriona Ward

With the climax of the spooky season just around the corner, we thought it might be fun to spotlight a spooky read here at #NoWaitWednesday. For that, there were some recent horror novels that were excellent contenders for the spotlight, but Looking Glass Sound by Catriona Ward really jumped off the shelf, primarily because it isn't, technically, a horror novel - it's more of a dark, atmospheric psychological thriller with some horror elements lurking around the edges. Which makes it a great gateway read for those patrons who might like the idea of a horror novel this time of year but are scared away (ha!) by the more grisly or extreme elements that the genre can offer. Ward is a bit more thoughtful, a bit more old-school, focused on twisty plots and disquieting tension between interesting and flawed characters. If that sounds more like your jam, then allow me to introduce you to Catriona Ward, one of the most dynamic and critically acclaimed novelists working in this space in recent years. She won the Shirley Jackson Award in 2019 with Little Eve, and 2021's breakout hit The Last House on Needless Street was praised by everyone from Sarah Pinborough to the New York Times to Stephen King himself. With all those voices - and more - praising her novels, you know you're in for a spooky ride. 

With her latest, Looking Glass Sound, the novel begins in a remote seaside cottage off the coast of Maine with a young boy, Wilder, who's uncle has recently passed away and left the cottage to Wilder's parents, who are in the middle of a very shaky marriage. Wilder finds some local friends, Nathaniel and Harper, and they explore the local area and become obsessed with the whispers of a figure, called the Dagger Man, allegedly responsible for leaving Polaroid photos of sleeping children near his victims that the police are still puzzled by. Is the Dagger Man still at large? Is he connected with one of Wilder's friends? This coming-of-age story then switches gears to Wilder's college years where he meets an outlandish aspiring author who is constantly questioning Wilder about those Maine summers long ago, and eventually publishes a novel based on Wilder's memories.

Ward's delightfully unsettling novel is almost origami-like in its ability to fold a plot twist into another plot twist into still yet another plot twist that readers will never see coming. While at the same time, she excels at character work that turns her characters on the page into fully three-dimensional beings, each with their hopes, dreams, and (sometimes eerie) desires lurking underneath. All of Ward's novels are worth a look, of course, but be sure to check out Looking Glass Sound for an excellent example of what she can bring to the table - and a novel that fits neatly (if unsettlingly) into the spooky season. Place your holds, and we hope you enjoy!