Family Events & Programs at the Library

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Holiday Movie Matinees at Buena Vista Library!



Looking for fun, FREE holiday activities for the kids? Need a break from the shopping, decorating, and wrapping?
Then head on over to Buena Vista Library as they kick off their Holiday Movie Saturday Matinees starting the Saturday after Thanksgiving and continuing until December 31st.
Every Saturday at 11:00am in the Storytime Room will be a different holiday movie!
Here's the schedule: 11/26 - The Muppet Christmas Carol
12/3 - How the Grinch Stole Christmas & Merry Madagascar
12/10 - Polar Express
12/17 - Rugrat's Chanukah & Shrek the Halls
12/24 - Santa Claus is Comin' to Town
12/31 - Rudolph's Shiny New Year

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Teddy Bear Sleepover at the Library!

Wouldn't it be fun for your Teddy Bear to sleepover at the library? Just imagine all the fun they would have!

Just drop off your Teddy (or other stuffed animal friend) at your local Burbank Library the week of 11/7-11/10 and we'll make sure they have a rousing adventure!

After they have had their fun, you can pick them up at the Pajama Teddy Bear Storytime on Thursday, 11/17 at 6:30 at Central Library. We'll enjoy a teddy bear storytime then see a slideshow of all your friends' adventures at their library sleepover! What fun!!

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Friends of the Library Used Book Sale 10/24-29

Find a treasure and help support the library at the week-long Friends of the Burbank Public Library USED BOOK SALE, held in the auditorium at the Central Library. This is a great opportunity to load up on kids' books (most costing less than a $1).

All proceeds from book sales fund children's and adult programming throughout the year. Book sale hours are: Tuesday-Thursday 10-8, Friday 10-5, and Saturday 10-3.

Saturday, September 17, 2011

Pizza Party Family Storytime - Oct. 6 at Central Library

We're celebrating the return of Pajama Storytime with a pizza party! The whole family is invited to enjoy fun, silly books and watch a movie while enjoying a slice!

Pizza Party Family Storytime is Thurs. 10/6 at Central Library at 6:30pm.  Yum!

Puppy Tails Starts October 12th at Buena Vista

Did you know that reading to a therapy dog can increase an emerging reader's confidence and abilities?  Therapy dogs and their handlers are specially trained to provide young readers with a safe, supportive environment in which to practice their skills. 

Our own Puppy Tails program was a hit last year and we're happy to announce Bill and his therapy dog Annie are back! The program starts Wednesday, Oct. 12 at 4:00pm. Puppy Tails is open to emerging readers in K-3rd grade and meets every 2nd and 4th Wednesday of the month at 4:00pm in the Storytime Room at Buena Vista Library. To sign-up your child or for more information, please call 818-238-5630.

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

FREE Family Fun in the Area for Labor Day Weekend!

With a loooong, three-day weekend looming ahead what's a family to do?

Well you could...

...play with Legos at Lego Club on Saturday, 9/3 11-12:30 at the Central Library (open to kids ages 2-14, come play with the library's thousands of Legos)

...or you could explore modern art at MOCA's Family Day on Sunday, 9/4 1-3:30 (250 S. Grand Ave, LA)

...or you could transport yourself to the islands with an afternoon of Caribbean music, dancing, food and more at the California African American Museum and their Caribbean Fete on Sunday, 9/4 at 1:00pm

...or you could take a kid-geared hike, followed by an arts project at Sooky Goldman Nature Center in Franklin Canyon Park in Beverly Hills (open to kids ages 3-8) on Sunday 9/4 at 10:00am. Call 310-858-7272, ext. 131 for more info.

...or you could get ready for the Ethiopian New Year at the Little Ethiopia Cultural Street Festival in L.A. on Sunday, 9/4 12-8pm where you will find lots of FREE family fun and great food!

...or you could wander the galleries and groove to LIVE music at LACMA (the Los Angeles County Museum of Art) on Monday, 9/5 as part of their Target Free Holiday Mondays program!

With so much to see and do this holiday weekend, there is no end to the FREE fun a family can have in SoCal!  Happy Labor Day!

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Staff Pick: Junonia by Kevin Henkes

Junonia
by Kevin Henkes
Kevin Henkes is best known as the writer and illustrator of many popular children’s picture books.  Not too long ago he won the Caldecott award for Kitten’s First Full Moon, and his earlier group of books with loveable mouse characters, which includes Wemberly Worried, Owen, and Lilly’s Purple Plastic Purse, continue to be patron favorites.   Henkes is also, however, a very fine writer of fiction for older children.   Olive’s Ocean, a book written for junior high school level children, was a Newbery Honor Book.  Junonia is his most recent novel, and is most appropriate for a slightly younger readership.
Junonia narrates the story of ten-year-old Alice Rice during her family’s annual vacation to the beach in Florida.  Alice’s birthday always occurs during the family vacation, and Alice is looking forward to celebrating it with the friends who stay at other cottages on the beach, children and adults she sees every summer.  She is also hoping to find this year a junonia, a rare shell that she hopes to finally add to her collection.   But things don’t go as planned.  Several of the children and annual vacationers are not able to come this year, and what makes it worse, another annual visitor shows up with a new boyfriend and his very young daughter in tow, a girl who is troubled by her parents’ recent separation, mercurial in temperament, and seems to demand the spotlight in this small community of vacationers.  Alice must come to terms with her conflicted feelings and disappointments.  She comes to understand that life is more complex than she would have it be, and that always looking for things to be perfect is an expectation she must leave behind.  Sometimes the apparent imperfections, however, serve to deepen the value of the good things. The junonia shell becomes an expansive symbol for these themes.
As will be apparent from this synopsis, Henkes is not writing the kind of fast action fantasy adventure that dominates children’s literature these days.  On the surface, it would be difficult to say that in his novels very much happens, or that the events related are unusual or dramatic.  Henkes’ literary project is to record the psychological nuances of childhood, to give us a portrait of a child engaged in the act of growing up.  His fiction recognizes, understands, and honors the interior dramatic life of a child.  Certainly this is not the ambition of most contemporary children’s writers, and it might be difficult to say if Henkes is writing for children as much as he is writing about childhood, although I suspect a child reading him at this age might very well find his writing magical for its accuracy in articulating his or her own experience.  Whichever the case, his writing has a certain exquisite quality, the nuances of a child’s interaction with other children and adults are drawn with great insight and subtlety.  His writing style has a craftsman-like quality.  The reader feels that each word was weighed, each metaphor carefully chosen, and the whole reworked many times over in much the same fashion as a poem. He seems to have created literary novels for children, something unusual, quietly powerful, and altogether remarkable.