Wednesday, June 6, 2018

Summer Hours:

This summer, the College of the Redwoods Library in Del Norte will be open Monday through Thursday from 8 am to 5 pm. 

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

New Logo for our 50th anniversary!

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

New Books




We received seven new books on local subjects through a generous donation from the Associated Students of College of the Redwoods Senate. Here is a description of each one beginning at the top:
 Medicine Trails: a Life in Many Worlds by Mavis McCovey and John F. Salter: an autobiography of a medicine woman of the Karuk Tribe. “If you want to understand the enduring, ancient life of one of California’s original people, this is the book, and these two are the guides.  Read this book and see what you have missed” Peter Coyote says of this book.
Sandspit: Book II A Redwood Northcoast Notebook by Francesca Fryer. This fascinating history of the Yurok, Tolowa, Hupa and Karok peoples and their intersections with Spanish and American influences in the northcoast. It is also about the terrain and history, salmon and redwood.
Lighthouses of the Golden State: California’s Shining Beacons by Kent Weymouth is the history of the lighthouse from the southern-most Old Point Loma to the Northern-most Point Saint George. Historic black and white images of the structures and major people illustrate this well-researched history.
Treasure at Battery Point by Helen Corbin is a novel about Brother Jonathan, a famous paddle wheeler which sunk while carrying a fortune in gold and the people who tried to find it.  Described as both a thriller and a dangerous love triangle, this novel has something for everyone.
Shadows in the Rain: A Tale of Old Klamath, California by R. Joe King was a 2008 Spur Award Finalist and tells the story of Klamath in 1964: right before the floods that almost destroyed it.
Indian Lore of the North California Coast by Austen D. Warburton and Joseph F. Endert  is a collection of stories, myths, historic images and anecdotes centered on the Tolowa, Yurok and their neighbors. Few of the photos are dated, unfortunately, but the memories and photographs are excellent.
Women who Kept the Lights: An Illustrated History of Female Lighthouse Keepers by Mary Louise Clifford and J. Candace Clifford tells the stories of 32 of the hundreds of women who have been lighthouse keepers. From the Atlantic to the Pacific, from maids to mothers, their stories come alive with photographs and first-person accounts.

Monday, September 23, 2013

New DVDs! It is too exciting to not post about. We got (in order from the photo) Pearl Harbor, The Great Gatsby (with Robert Redford), Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, Casablanca,
Persepolis, Their Eyes were Watching God, Phantom of the Opera (with Gerard Butler), Glory, A River Runs Through it, The Last of the Mohicans, The Crucible (with Winona Ryder), Schindler's List, Sicko, Whale Rider, and The Hunt for Red October.


I know they are not exactly new releases, but they are all interesting, or literary, or educational and worth a watch!

Thursday, March 28, 2013

I have been thinking a lot about internet privacy recently and ran accross this useful video:

http://www.commoncraft.com/video/protecting-reputations-online

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

The ultimate classic, The Hobbit’ by J. R. R. Tolkien, is the perfect book for reading for pleasure or aloud to the kids.  Tolkien is a gifted author who can use words to paint wonderful scenes inside your imagination.

‘The Hobbit’  is the prequel to ‘The Lord of the Rings’  trilogy. ‘Nuff said’  

The Library also recently acquired the Lord of the Rings Trilogy.

Friday, April 6, 2012

New books

The Library has received some new books which delve deeper into some prevalent cultures here in Del Norte County. A lot of the residents in our city were raised in cultures that emphasize balance with nature, self-sufficiency and delicious food. These books will help each of us learn more about the Hmong culture and Local Native American cultures.

The History of the Hmong by Thomas S. Vang, attempts to relate the history of a people whose culture and traditions are primarily oral. The Hmong name and history have been ignored by the majority population in China and Laos since 2300 BC. This history, written by and about the Hmong, puts this right, recording as much history as he could find and when you are done reading the more than 400 pages and well researched history, you will know why he felt this history was so important.

Ya Po Cha introduces us to the traditional and changing cultural elements of the Hmong people in An Introduction to Hmong Culture. With chapters on children, weddings, politics and funerals, you will find interesting elements of this fascinating culture on every page.

Finally, Cooking from the Heart: the Hmong Kitchen in America, is a cookbook that teaches how to make things, but also when. Different events and seasons call for different recipes and the fact that this book was written by two women living in America, means the ingredients can be found in your local markets, with name variations when appropriate. There are explanations and definitions of certain ingredients as well.

The Hmong escaped war and settled here in Del Norte County, but there is another group who has been here for centuries, a group for whom war was brought to them.

In To the American Indian: Reminiscences of a Yurok Woman, we are able to get inside the mind of Lucy Thompson, a woman who realized the history of her people was not being written, so she wrote it.

We also have Flutes of Fire, a book describing and cataloguing Native American Languages in California, Native American Clothing, a photo book by Theodore Brasser and Folk-Tales of the Coast Salish by Thelma Adamson.

Finally, we are also adding Dancing Between Two Worlds to our collection. This psychology book explores the interactions between Jung and his ideas and "the Native American soul." It is by Fred R. Gustafson.