Have I already said how much I love the library? So much, that my library card is activated at 4 of the 8 library systems in the Twin Cities Metropolitan area. Our libraries have an awesome "exchange program" type thing here - first you need to obtain a card from your home county's library system, but you can have it activated at any or all of the other library systems. Since I work in one county, live in another, and regularly go to two other counties for various errands, this is very convenient because I can just stop at the library wherever I am at the moment. And because I'm such a nerd, I know which library has the best children's section, the best selection of audiobooks, and the nicest librarians. (Pssst, to my local friends - the librarians in the Anoka County library system are, in general, the crabbiest, most unhelpful librarians I've ever met. And I've met a lot.)
I'm subscribed to various newsletters from each of the library systems. One newsletter tells me about the new books the library has just added to their collection - which allows me to put my name on the wait list immediately, meaning I usually get to read the book within days of its release - without having to pay for a hardcover copy at the bookstore! Another newsletter, my most favoritest newsletter ever, is called "Birth to Six News", which comes from the Hennepin County library. It's a children's books newsletter that comes out once a month and includes fingerplays, new and notable books, and usually a section that highlights books on a certain topic.
Also, on Hennepin County Library's website is ELSIE (Early Literacy Storytime Ideas Exchange). You can search children's books based on a certain keyword, and limit your selection based on certain skill groups that you want to focus on, like Phonological Sensitivity, Letter Knowledge, and Vocabulary. You don't even have to have a library card to use this system - anyone can use it to create a book list!
Usually, the kids and I go to the library and choose books, willy-nilly, off the shelves. But sometimes I have an agenda, and this month's agenda is "gardening". Both kids have an intense interest in the garden, and have been helping me plant, water, and weed. So far, neither one of them has pulled up a desirable plant, either. But whether that speaks to their plant knowledge, or the weed/seeding ratio in my garden still remains to be seen. Honestly, I'm betting on the weed/seedling ratio.
Here's my "gardening" booklist for this week:
The Carrot Seed - Ruth Krauss
Growing Vegetable Soup - Lois Ehlert
Ten Red Apples - Virginia Miller
Two Old Potatoes and Me - John Coy
Carrot Soup - John Segal
The Enormous Carrot - Vladimir Vasilevich Vagin
First the Egg - Laura Vaccaro Seeger
Muncha Muncha Muncha - Candace Fleming
Farm-Fresh Cats - Scott Santoro
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