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Lake County Public Library

@lakecountylibrary / lakecountylibrary.tumblr.com

The one in Indiana. Need a reading suggestion? Ask us!

Sutro Library has an extremely rare copy of what's called a "pocket" Emancipation Proclamation. This small pamphlet was given out by Union Troops to enslaved people, showing in writing that they were free citizens. Juneteenth celebrates the arrival of 2,000 troops in Galveston Bay, Texas, to announce that 250,000 enslaved people in the state were free by executive order. The Emancipation Proclamation was read aloud so that those who couldn't read (slavery prohibited literacy) would understand the decree. 

Pride Month Read & To-Read

Two great Pride Month reads Kate recommends:

Georgia has parents who are still in love, two sets of grandparents that are still together, and a brother who married his girlfriend. But at eighteen she has never even kissed someone (not even her lesbian best friend, Felipa) or particularly even wanted to. In college she comes to understand herself as asexual/aromantic, and tries to capture the part of her identity that has always eluded her.

1987, New York City. C.J. isn't just out-- he's completely out there, and Micah can't help but be both attracted to and afraid of someone who travels so loudly and proudly through the night. As their lives become more and more entangled in the AIDS epidemic that's laying waste to their community, whatever Micah and C.J. have between them will be a bond that will determine the course of their futures.

And two (probably) great Pride Month reads Kate is looking forward to:

Imogen Scott maybe be hopelessly heterosexual, but while visiting her newly out best friend Lili at college, any support Lili needs, Imogen's all in. Even if that means bending the truth, just a little, when Lili drops a tiny queer bombshell: she's told all her college friends, including her new bestie Tessa, that Imogen and Lili used to date. And the more time Imogen spends with Tessa, the more she starts to wonder if her truth was ever all that straight to begin with.

Trans boy Miles Jacobson has two New Year's resolutions: win back his ex-boyfriend Shane, and finally beat his arch-nemesis at the Midwest's biggest classical piano competition. Miles hatches a fake-dating scheme with the new boy in town, Eric, a proudly queer cartoonist from Seattle who asks his pronouns and cares about art as much as he does. But the ruse turns real with a kiss, which throws all of Miles' plans - and feelings - into disarray.

(Summaries provided by publishers)

Read -> Reading -> To-Read

An inside look at what's on librarian Beth's shelf lately:

I'm at the point that Emily Henry is on my list of to-read anytime she has a new book come out! Full of sweet and hilarious scenarios, her books are must-reads for those enjoying a quirky romance with lots of feels. Happy Place did not let me down!

I just started this one which was recommended to me by a co-worker and is set in Tipperary, Ireland, so clearly it belonged on my TBR list!

I don't know anything about Representative Katie Porter but the title got me. As a minivan driver and someone who tries to be civically-minded, this seems like it will be a humorous but realistic look at what goes on in Congress by someone who is "one of us."

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Hey, this pride month (or literally any time of year), you wanna know something fairly easy and great you can do?

Contact your local library (or comment on their social media) positively for any pride/LGBTQIA+/queer-related displays or events they have going on.

Seriously.

What I’m seeing and hearing from the (mostly US-based) library workers in my groups and social circles is that the anti-queer (anti-gay, anti-trans, anti-drag queen story time, etc.) comments and complaints that have ramped up in the past year aren’t going away. Even library workers with supportive coworkers/bosses/boards are steeling themselves to deal with an avalanche of garbage, or are second-guessing their displays and events because the amount of vitriol can wear a person down so much. And the ones without supportive people or work environments? It’s worse.

Give the library something else: give them both the ammo (by being one of the numbers they can count worth the positive group) if they need to show their community isn’t wholly negative. Give them the compliment of knowing that their work got appreciated.

  • A comment like “I love this” or “Wow, that looks great!”
  • An email about how much you’re excited about X event
  • A call saying you wanted to let them know you appreciate this thing
  • Tagging them if you share a picture or positive comment on social media
  • “Cool shirt/pins/etc!” (Because people are also bring harassed about personally being queer, even if it’s not a library display)
  • Literally anything that would be positive for them to receive

@lakecountylibrary I THINK YOU'RE PRETTY COOL. HAVE A GAY DAY :D 🌈

DON'T MIND IF I DO

Hey, wanna see the Pride display we just made at Merrillville Branch?

A common question we get is, can we check out books from a display? YES. Feel free to pluck them right off the shelf and check them out and take them home.

That does not apply to the bracelets in the Help Yourself bin - you don't have to check those out, you can just have them :)

(ETA: The bracelets were donated by our local PFLAG chapter!)

It's my favorite time of year! Time to make my annual blog post about the best queer books I read in the last 12 months!

I've been doing this since 2017 so here, go back and see some trends: 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022

Now, you may look at the covers of this year's batch and think... Four out of five of those are... kind of intense looking. Are you okay. And the answer is no, but are any of us? These books will help! Probably!

The Traitor Baru Cormorant by Seth Dickinson (lesbian, gay, bisexual, poly characters)

Ok so this book comes with like. All of the trigger warnings. Government sanctioned homophobia, racism, eugenics, graphic depictions of violence... read this one when you're feeling strong. It's a fantasy novel about characters who fight against those things in a world colonized by a profit-driven (and often, too familiar) empire. Brilliantly written, but steel your heart.

Twelve Percent Dread by @emilyscartoons (nonbinary characters)

Let's lighten up a bit, shall we? This one's a graphic novel that, as promised on the back cover, is fast paced and action-packed. Follow the adventures of Katie and Nas as they navigate jobs, adulthood, and the whims of one eccentric tech CEO who's going to change the world, one way or another.

The World We Make by @nkjemisin (ace, gay, lesbian, trans characters)

This one's a sequel, so sorry (not sorry) you're going to have to read The City We Became first. You'll love it, and you'll love this sequel. It's about New York manifested in human avatars, and it's about home and the power of being where you belong. The characters deal with some very real, familiar problems - and then they STOMP ON THEM WITH AWESOME GIANT CITY POWERS. Very satisfying read, highly recommend.

Nona the Ninth by Tamsyn Muir (wlw characters & general gender shenanigans)

This one's the third in the series, also not sorry about this one, start with Gideon the Ninth. It's sci fi! It's necromancy! God is there and he's depressed. It's really hard to describe.

A Spindle Splintered by Alix E. Harrow (bisexual, lesbian characters)

A novella for when you are short on time or attention span and want a Sleeping Beauty remix told by an author who knows her folklore. Definitely have the second novella in the series, A Mirror Mended, on hand for when you finish - you'll want more.

I'm looking for adult fantasy novels inspired by non-Western historical settings. Think Amina Al-Sirafi or The Jasmine Throne (two recent reads I loved). Does anyone have any recommendations?

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I would also like recommendations pretty please

Oh! Yes! Give these a try. The Dreamblood Duology by @nkjemisin - A society where priests keep the peace using dream magic - until dreamers begin to die. If you can't find the omnibus, start with book 1, The Killing Moon. I stumbled across it in a secondhand bookshop over a decade ago and to this day I've not read anything like it.

Forest of a Thousand Lanterns by Julie C. Dao - A retelling of Snow White, but about the queen. Fairy tale retellings are a dime a dozen these days, but this one is memorable and worth a read.

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Black Horror Writers

Feeling a sudden desire, for whatever reason, to add some diversity to your bookshelf? Want to put a few bucks in the pockets of authors of color? Here’s a sampler platter to get you started. 

Tananarive Due A film historian and a hot name in horror fiction, Due is an outspoken academic and prolific author. Start with The Good House, a 2003 Gothic, if you’re a fan of haunted house stories.

Wrath James White A former athlete, White is a hugely prolific author of hardcore horror. You can start with The Resurrectionist, but honestly, with more than 35 books to choose from, you’ve got plenty of options.

Victor LaValle LaValle has only written four novels so far, but they’re well-regarded and rich narratives. The Changeling is the usual recommendation for a starting place.

Brandon Massey Southern Gothic themes woven through horror, suspense and urban themes - that’s Massey’s brand in a nutshell. He’s plenty prolific, so you’ve got a bunch to choose from. Maybe start with this year’s new release, The Quiet Ones.

Chesya Burke A prolific short story writer, Burke writes speculative fiction and comic books. If you’d like a collection of stories all in one place, try out Let’s Play White. If you’d rather do a novel, read The Strange Crimes of Little Africa.

Jemiah Jefferson Do you like pulpy erotic vampire horror? You don’t have to answer that. Just buy Jefferson’s books if you do. There’s a series, so you’ll want to start at the beginning with Voice of the Blood.

Michael Boatman An actor and screenwriter, Boatman is also a novelist. He writes splatterpunk that Joe Lansdale has praised, which is as fine an accolade as they come. The Revenant Road was his first novel. He also shows up in a ton of anthologies, so keep an eye out.

Helen Oyeyemi Oyeyemi is a rising star, Shirley Jackson Award finalist, scholar, a world traveler, among other things. Her most recent book, Gingerbread, came out in 2019. I think it would not be out of line to compare her to Angela Carter.

Maurice Carlos Ruffin A debut novelist, Ruffin’s work launched with a bang in February. His book We Cast a Shadow was long-listed for a stack of prizes, and as a scathing cultural sci-fi horror, it fits right in with the work of folks like Jordan Peele.

Nnedi Okorafor A Nigerian-American writer, Okorafor writes for both children and adults, and her stories have earned a whole stack of awards. She is, for the record, also disabled. She’s got a whole stack of YA and adult books to choose from, as well as comic books. Binti and its sequel are as good a place as any to start, though.

Jewelle Gomez Philanthropist, playwright, poet, author – Gomez dabbles in a lot of things, and she’s an outspoken voice for LGBTQ women of color. Check out The Gilda Stories if you’ve always wanted to read about a black lesbian vampire (and, let’s be honest, who hasn’t?)

PS: When you order, don’t waste your money on Amazon. Instead, use a service like https://bookshop.org/ that distributes your hard-earned cash to independent booksellers. Keep money in your community. 

PPS: I love Toni Morrison and Octavia Butler and also left them off the list because they’re well-known already and because I think it’s really important right now to support living artists, but you should check out their work too. 

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[id: Tweet by iconawrites, which reads: "I love public libraries because they are built on the principle that books are so important and so necessary to human flourishing that access to them cannot depend on your income." end id.]

I was a grown ass adult before I realized the library was free.  I went into the library and asked to join.  When they gave me the form to fill out for a library card, I asked if they took credit cards and the librarian had to explain to me that the library was free.  You did not pay to join it.

I cried.

ITS FREE?? YOU DONT EVEN HAVE TO PAY MONEY FOR THE CARD??? THATS AMAZING

I think some librsries might have you oay a small fee for the card but most dont.

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Most don't charge for the card as long as it's your first one. There may be a $5 fee to replace it if you lose it.

Or not. Depends on the local library's funds. But their budget generally includes free cards for users.

Libraries are free! We may charge if you don't live in our county/state/down/district, but that's because your taxes don't go toward paying for us. Many libraries are even going fine free for late materials, so if you're forgetful like me, it's okay! And we offer e-book and downloadable audiobook services, so you can get books for free even from home!

Use your local library, we're pretty cool!

so yes, free libraries are the default in the US, but not necessarily everywhere in the world. in NZ, for instance, most local libraries that i've encountered either charge a small fee to take out a book or have a membership fee, which is much more in line with how libraries operated historically.

the reason that the library system in philadelphia, for instance, is called "the free library of philadelphia" is that it was chartered in the 1890s as a library free to all, which was an idea that was still coming into vogue during that time period.

but yes! libraries are free here, and they're also one of the few spaces left in the US where you're allowed to exist in public without there being an expectation of spending money! so please! visit your local library! even going in the door helps libraries keep their funding a lot of the time!

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I got the Top 4.47% on this English Vocabulary test

I’m in the last 47.33% 

I shouldn’t have taken that test

Am I fucking stupid LMAO

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cool. cool cool cool.

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im- im an english major i hate it here

The only thing being a native English speaker has done for me: let me guess things accurately!

English is not my mother language so this is higher than I expected it to be already LMAO

This is so funny when you consider English isn’t my mother language either and I literally chose half of the words randomly😭

I are a riter

Like Cory I are also a riter. But I bet Cory dun it fasterer.

Librarian :3

We need a digital archive of LGBTQ+ works of art, science, and every other conceivable work we can share between each other because we are beyond the genocide warning level in most countries in the west and they're already trying to purge us from libraries.

If other people are interested I'll make this a priority

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Speaking as someone with a background in archives, stuff like this does already exist. No need to reinvent the wheel. Creating an archive and making sure it's accessible and searchable and actually preserves things for the long time (especially digital things) is actually a huge undertaking. Show some love to these already existing collections and maybe even consider contributing. There's the Digital Transgender Archive off the top of my head. I know more I just have to think.

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The History Project, based in Boston, is an LGBTQ+ community archive that's existed for decades. Many of their collections are digitized.

The Lesbian Herstory Archives, based in Brooklyn, is similar.

The Digital Public Library of America covers a great many topics, but they also have LGBTQ+ stuff.

I'd also recommend searching "lgbtq+" and "libguide" in your preferred search engine. Many universities list helpful resources and databases, some of which are freely accessible.

Many public and academic libraries in the US and Canada (not sure where you're writing from) subscribe to the Gale Archives of Sexuality and Gender. If you have a library card or are a student at a given library, you can access it for free.

In general, I'd really recommend searching around to see how you can support existing museums, community archives, college and university archives, etc that specialize in LGBTQ+ history and media local to you, whether that's in your same town or regionally.

You are not alone! People are working on this and some of them have institutional budgets!

But also kind of looping back to the first post: you personally might have relevant records. Photos of Pride or protests you've been to, journals, a blog full of trans headcanons even. That's all part of queer history and that's the stuff these archives and museums are made of.

Label your stuff carefully, make backup copies, and get to know your local organizations!

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We're also working on building an open access archive and actively looking for content contributions! https://about.jstor.org/revealdigital/hiv-aids-the-arts/

Book Review: The Neighbor Favor by Kristina Forest

Have you ever read a book and thought, this is lining up too perfectly? That was The Neighbor Favor. The almost fairy tale-like love story gave it a predictable tinge at times.

But, if you are a sucker for a good love story mixed with characters who love writing and books like I am, then this may be the perfect novel for you.

The underlying mystery takes a while to unfold, but when it does and everything is revealed, you are in for the sweetest read.

Book Rec: All the Dangerous Things by Stacy Willingham

Audiobook (10 hrs) narrated by Karissa Vacker

Isabelle Drake hasn't slept in 365 days. That's how long it's been since her son Mason vanished from his bed.

Isabelle is a realistic character who is conflicted about her past and the present, and her anguish really comes through in this novel. She is a desperate mother, willing to do just about anything to find out what happened to her child.

The novel does flash back to Isabelle's childhood, but the passages are not confusing. It's always very obvious if the character is remembering or in the present.

I was a little surprised at the ending. It challenges the reader to explore one's own morals. What would you do if your child went missing?

I liked this book. The writing is solid, and it the pace is just right. It's not high literature, but if you are a fan of domestic mystery/suspense then you may enjoy this novel, too!

The narrator is able to pull off a convincing male voice, but all the male characters sound the same to me. This did not take away from the story, because there are few instances of more than one male character speaking at the same time.

It's that time again friends! Here are my top 5 LGBTQ+ reads from the past 12 months. This year we've got some old, some new, some (all) borrowed, and at least one blue. Let's get to it!

(Here are past years' picks: 2021, 2020, 2019, 2018, 2017)

I Kissed Shara Wheeler by Casey McQuiston

You know that phenomenon where one person in a group is queer and then everyone else in the group kinda figures it out too? You'll find lots of that in this book - a YA rom-com featuring angry bisexual Chloe Green vs. her prom queen nemesis at a conservative Christian high school in Alabama.

The Telling by Ursula K. LeGuin

This installment in the Hainish Cycle (you don't need to read the others but do yourself a favor and grab at least The Left Hand of Darkness) tells the story of Sutty (wlw), a sort of anthropologist who travels to a planet ruled by the Corporation, which has outlawed all 'traditional' customs, culture, and beliefs.

This Is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone

An epistolary novel telling the story of two agents, Red and Blue, on opposite sides of a war spanning time. One leaves a letter for the other, and then we're off. This novel is a love letter to love letters; intense, lyrical, and not like anything else I've read. (wlw)

A Marvellous Light by Freya Marske

A m/m historical fantasy romance. If you are looking for a fun read about two nerds in Edwardian England who fall in love (and also there is some magic) then this is the novel for you!

Rebel Robin by A. R. Capetta

I know, I KNOW - it's a tie-in novel, and those are cheesy at best and, more commonly, just plain bad. Not this one. It was an excellent character study of Robin (yeah I like books where characters share my name WHAT OF IT) and the author's work with the side characters they created for the book was fantastic too - I wish we could see them in the show!
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Hello! Would you be up for explaining how licenses for digital media work from the librarian's end? More specifically, I've checked out the same digital audiobook like three times now, and have not managed to finish it yet. Am I better off buying my own copy of this book so I stop using up all the licenses? Or is it better to keep checking it out to show that there's interest? (Or is this one of those "it's highly specific and varies" things?)

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Hello! It is one of those "it's highly specific and varies" things, because it's gonna vary at least by which service you're checking the book out through, and possibly still your specific library. So I'll tell you what I know, and add an open request for other library folks to weigh if if they know anything!

My (academic) library has ProQuest Ebook Central, which has books we've bought through them, so number of checkouts shouldn't really affect anything else.

Hoopla is pay per use--most libraries I know of set limits of X number of checkouts per patron, per month because of this (budgeting how much the library will spend on Hoopla that month), and I've heard of libraries where sometimes they'll run out of checkouts if Hoopla got a lot of use (basically, more people than anticipated checked out Hoopla items, so they hit their max monthly budget before the month ended). But I don't think there are licenses, so you'd be fine in that situation.

Comics Plus is an annual subscription, apparently based on the library's number of cardholders, not based on checkouts. Continue without guilt.

Overdrive (you may be using their Libby app, but it's the same company/materials)...seems to vary. I've definitely seen librarians refer to books being available for a certain number of circs, and I know Overdrive also has a pay-per-circ option (though I've gotten the impression that's used less). It's possible they might also offer books that are available for X number of years instead of X number of circs. It's hard for me to find specific data, which makes me suspect it varies a good amount between libraries.

If it's another service/app, it'll vary.

While I understand the prospect of guilt (I knew exactly how Hoopla and Comics Plus worked without having to research them today because I've faced this exact dilemma as a patron of my public library), at an individual level, you're fine. Even if the book is licensed for X number of circs, it's one book, and you're one person reading a presumably-normal amount of stuff, so if a chunk of the licenses are used on you? That's ok! It's incredibly unlikely that you're impacting the library's budget or the book's availability to others, unless you read twenty thousand things a month and do it to all of them.

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I. Books and other library resources should be provided for the interest, information, and enlightenment of all people of the community the library serves. Materials should not be excluded because of the origin, background, or views of those contributing to their creation.
II. Libraries should provide materials and information presenting all points of view on current and historical issues. Materials should not be proscribed or removed because of partisan or doctrinal disapproval.
III. Libraries should challenge censorship in the fulfillment of their responsibility to provide information and enlightenment.
IV. Libraries should cooperate with all persons and groups concerned with resisting abridgment of free expression and free access to ideas.
V. A person’s right to use a library should not be denied or abridged because of origin, age, background, or views.
VI. Libraries which make exhibit spaces and meeting rooms available to the public they serve should make such facilities available on an equitable basis, regardless of the beliefs or affiliations of individuals or groups requesting their use.
VII. All people, regardless of origin, age, background, or views, possess a right to privacy and confidentiality in their library use. Libraries should advocate for, educate about, and protect people’s privacy, safeguarding all library use data, including personally identifiable information.

"Library Bill of Rights", American Library Association, June 30, 2006.

http://www.ala.org/advocacy/intfreedom/librarybill (Accessed May 10, 2023)