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The Wren, The Wren
The Wren, The Wren: A Novel | Anne Enright
32 posts | 26 read | 23 to read
From Booker-prize winning author Anne Enright, an astonishing novel about the love between mother and daughtersometimes fierce, often painful, but always transcendent. "Carmel had been alone all her life. She had been alone since she was twelve years old. The baby knew all this. They looked at each other; one life into another life, and the baby knew exactly how alone her mother had been." Nellfunny, brave and so much lovedis a young woman with adventure on her mind. As she sets out into the world, she finds her family history hard to escape. For her mother, Carmel, Nell's leaving home opens a space in her heart, where the turmoil of a lifetime begins to churn. And across the generations falls the long shadow of Carmel's famous father, an Irish poet of beautiful words and brutal actions. This is a meditation on love: spiritual, romantic, darkly sexual or genetic. A generational saga that traces the inheritance not just of trauma but also of wonder, it is a testament to the glorious resilience of women in the face of promises false and true. Above all, it is an exploration of the love between mother and daughter - sometimes fierce, often painful, but always transcendent.
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review
mjtwo
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Mehso-so

16-9 Aug 24 (audiobook)
I don‘t have much to say about this book and have delayed posting a review. Now, a week after finishing, I barely remember it.
The mother-daughter relationship was strained and uncomfortable, which left me hoping that my relationships with my daughters are not as difficult, although sometimes it can be hard to know.
I do enjoy the Irish voice and so was quite happy to listen along without being overly engaged.

review
LiteraryinPA
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Pickpick

I picked up this book on a whim when I walked by it at the library. It‘s more abstract and stream-of-consciousness than my usual fare. It‘s “about” the daughter and granddaughter of an Irish poet, and what they inherit from him (not in the literal sense). And there are lots of birds throughout. At times it felt profound and at others it felt nonsensical, but I was along for the ride and didn‘t try to force too much linear realism on the language.

cariashley 😻 5mo
dabbe I think da kitty is reading it as #tokillawren 🖤🐾🖤 5mo
76 likes1 stack add2 comments
review
vlwelser
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Pickpick

I enjoyed this but I don't think it's on the top of my Women's Prize list. Though the writing is quite beautiful.

#BookSpinBingo @TheAromaofBooks

TheAromaofBooks Woohoo!! 7mo
45 likes1 comment
review
Gissy
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Mehso-so

4th book read from the Women‘s Prize for fiction long list. Mixed feelings with this one. It was beautifully written but I didn‘t find a well integration in the story, specially the first parts. In some parts I just lost interest because I felt author was jumping from one topic to another🤷🏽‍♀️Let‘s see if it included in the short list. It didn‘t work for me as I expected 3⭐️

DieAReader 👋🏻👋🏻👋🏻 8mo
TheAromaofBooks Woohoo!! 8mo
44 likes3 comments
review
BarbaraBB
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Bailedbailed

Another bail.. I have a hard time concentrating on books (am very busy at work and a bit hyped about that #CampLitsy24 longlist) and this one just didn‘t make sense to me. Great writing, great scenes but they lacked connection I think and I had not really and idea what or whom I was reading about. Maybe I‘ll give it another try when I am a bit more relaxed.

#WomenPrize

sarahbarnes I have seen mixed reviews on this one and haven‘t been drawn to it yet. Although I really liked The Gathering. 8mo
TheKidUpstairs I've been on a run of bails, too. Can't seem to focus on anything long enough to get past the first 50 pages or so. 8mo
Cathythoughts I‘m bailing too , and not finishing , I‘m hoping to find ‘ the book ‘ soon now 🤞🏻🤞🏻🤞🏻 8mo
See All 22 Comments
LeahBergen Such a pretty photo for a bail. 😆 8mo
charl08 I liked this more than you did, but not enough to shortlist 🤷‍♀️ 8mo
squirrelbrain What @charl08 said. And also, gorgeous photo! 8mo
Tamra Love the blooms! 8mo
BarbaraBB @sarahbarnes I liked that one too. And I think this one‘s good too in its own way. Just not for me at the moment 8mo
BarbaraBB @TheKidUpstairs exactly. Me neither. Frustrating. 8mo
BarbaraBB @Cathythoughts This same book? Such a coincidence. I am thinking about another Marrs to break the bailings! 8mo
BarbaraBB @LeahBergen @Tamra @squirrelbrain Thank you. Tulips all over the place in the Netherlands right now 🌷 8mo
BarbaraBB @charl08 @squirrelbrain I haven‘t read any reviews who thought it shortlist worthy. We‘ll see next week! 8mo
Suet624 Bailing is a bummer but tulips are a joy. 😍 8mo
Cathythoughts No , not the same book. Just generally in an unsettled bailing frame of mind 🙄 it should end soon 👍🏻❤️ 8mo
BarbaraBB @Cathythoughts It should. I need my books to escape from reality but it‘s hard at the moment 8mo
Hooked_on_books I wasn‘t a fan of this one, so I don‘t blame you. 8mo
Centique I‘m in a bailing frame of mind too @Cathythoughts @TheKidUpstairs Cant handle reading anything tense at the moment. 💕 Had to give up on Prophet Song - for the time being anyway. 8mo
Centique Thats such a fabulous photo of the book and the tulips @BarbaraBB 😍 8mo
BarbaraBB @Centique I fortunately just finished a book. A good one. I hope that breaks the bailing mood! 8mo
jlhammar I started this on audio and wasn‘t feeling it. 8mo
BarbaraBB @jlhammar I started on audio too, then changed to print but it didn‘t help! 8mo
80 likes22 comments
review
AnneCecilie
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Pickpick

I‘m not sure how I feel about this book, soft pick, so-so.

About a mother and daughter, and their relationship to each other and the people around them.

I think this need to sit with me before I know how I feel about. I‘m not sure the author is trying to tell, that we‘re more similar to our parents than we think? What we‘re a product out past?

BarbaraBB This sounds difficult. I just picked it up. Let‘s see 🤞🏽 8mo
AnneCecilie @BarbaraBB Language wise it‘s an easy read, but I‘m not sure what the author was trying to say. Maybe that‘s obvious to you once you‘ve read it. 8mo
58 likes2 comments
blurb
Gissy
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#MotivationalMonday @Cupcake12

1. Busy week😳I confess, I was like @DebinHawaii and I was working in my taxes 🤦🏽‍♀️All done by now😃The rest of the week I feel like a medical appointment taxi driver, for my mother and other family members🤣Tomorrow, another day of medical appointments Drive
2. Coffee☕️ , tea 🫖 , cookies 🍪 , trail mix, pop corn 🍿
3. Tagged book
Thank you @TheSpineView 🥰♥️

TheSpineView You're welcome 8mo
DebinHawaii @Gissy The struggle is real! 😉😆 8mo
29 likes2 comments
quote
AnneCecilie
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Their mother, Terry, read books all day, even when she was well. She lay in bed in the morning, she came down and propped the book against the teapot, she moved to a deckchair in the garden with her feet akimbo, and one arm flung high. If you spoke to her while she was reading she would look at you from a lovely distance.

Pruzy Seems like a great life 8mo
Bookwomble "Even when she was well"? Is it weird, then, to read books all day unless you're sick? ? I must be very sick! ? 8mo
49 likes1 stack add2 comments
quote
AnneCecilie
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You can‘t tell Carmel you have a problem or she‘ll go out and beat someone up for you. My mother is the woman who goes over to the jetski-guy on the beach, when you are five years old, shouting, How dear you frighten my child with that stupid, horrible machine. She is the woman who phones the government when your Irish exam is too hard (no really), she is, bless her, a crusader and a fighter - if you get a grope from some old perv on the bus she

AnneCecilie will get that damn CCTV footage, she will sue the buses, ring the cops, put you into therapy and then go and burn his house down. 8mo
TheBookgeekFrau I love this! 😁 8mo
CatLass007 Sounds like someone who‘s good to have on your side. 8mo
AnneCecilie @CatLass007 @TheBookgeekFrau definitely, but I can also understand that as a teen it‘s probably not the funniest thing to have a mother who is so much on your side. (edited) 8mo
TheBookgeekFrau @AnneCecilie Oh agreed. For a teen this is the most embarrassing parent on the planet!! It was the wording that grabbed me and made me chuckle 8mo
45 likes5 comments
review
Hooked_on_books
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Mehso-so

#UnpopularOpinion; but I really didn‘t get on with this book at all. It starts with Nell and her section is so chaotically stream of consciousness that I thought my audiobook was glitching. She also didn‘t seem to have a character arc but rather was an embodiment of “self-destructive young person.” That really made me struggle with the book as a whole, though there were some moments that broke through.

BarbaraBB Interesting! Still need to read it. 9mo
squirrelbrain I didn‘t think I‘d like this due to the mixed reviews but, weirdly, I did. 🤔 9mo
Chelsea.Poole I started this on audio and felt the same as you. When I switched to print it really clicked for me. 9mo
Hooked_on_books @Chelsea.Poole I was thinking it‘s probably better in print. But I don‘t know if I would have liked it then. I would have responded a bit better for sure. 9mo
49 likes4 comments
review
squirrelbrain
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Pickpick

I chose to read this #womensprize nominee next as I didn‘t think I‘d like it, and I‘m saving the ‘better‘ books for later… 🤪

I haven‘t read any of Enright‘s other work, but I understand that women‘s intergenerational trauma is a theme in her writing. This book also includes a male POV as we hear from an impoverished poet who abandons his family, his daughter Carmel, and her daughter Nell.

Won‘t be my fave on the list but better than expected!

Hooked_on_books That‘s great! Sometimes it‘s good to have low expectations going in! 😉 9mo
Megabooks This was just okay for me. Maybe my expectations were too high! 😆 😆 9mo
76 likes2 stack adds2 comments
review
Chelsea.Poole
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Pickpick

Perfect St Patrick‘s Day reading: three generations of an Irish family share a connection but are largely absent from each other. There‘s famous poet Phil, the patriarch who leaves his family, his stalwart daughter Carmel, and her daughter Nell, a twenty-something trying to find herself. Nell feels a deep connection with her grandfather and his work. I started the audio but connected much easier on the page and ended up loving this.

willaful Huh, I hadn't thought about it but my book today is also perfect. 9mo
98 likes5 stack adds1 comment
blurb
Chelsea.Poole
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It‘s Friday and these are the books I brought home with me #libraryhaul 📚
The bottom two because I watched a YouTube video about the Carol Shields long list. I cannot be stopped 🤦‍♀️

AnnCrystal A Council of Dolls 👏🤩👍. I've read that it is a powerful story! 9mo
Hooked_on_books The bottom 2 were also longlisted for the National Book Award for 2023. Both are good reads! 9mo
sarahbarnes I haven‘t even HEARD of that list! Now I must look into it. 9mo
BarbaraBB Like @sarahbarnes I haven‘t heard of that list either (and I loved Carol Shields). I am forcing myself NOT to look it up 😂 9mo
Donna1980 Loot is on my list too. Sounds brilliant. 9mo
84 likes1 stack add5 comments
review
Leniverse
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Pickpick

Generational trauma, daddy issues, unsafe kink exploration and abuse, poetry, birds, flowers, mother-daughter POVs, gorgeous prose, slow, not the most accessible read. Soft pick.

#womensprize #longlist #womensprize2024

squirrelbrain Hmmm, I was going to take this one on holiday but it doesn‘t sound that interesting. I may read it next and save some others for our trip away. 9mo
Leniverse @squirrelbrain It's not a holiday read. It requires a lot of attention. I did like it. I think. It's the kind of book I need to look back on after a month and check if it has grown or shrunk in my mind. 9mo
Hooked_on_books I usually prefer the UK covers to the US ones, but not for this one. I think that cover is dreadful! 9mo
Leniverse @Hooked_on_books Haha, yes, but I think it fits the book better than the one that's just a room with a view and a table or whatever (I don't actually recall the details of that cover, it's so dull). But I like the cover that has just a bird (presumably a wren). 9mo
Hooked_on_books Yes, it‘s the green cover with just the bird on it that I‘ve seen here. Simple but very pretty colors. I‘ve seen the room/table one and I think it‘s a nice image but frustrating that it doesn‘t really fit the book. 9mo
57 likes5 comments
quote
Leniverse

Bali was ahead. Nell would not ring today. She was lying in the future darkness, sleeping through a night that was moving slowly towards Dublin, that was yet to arrive. Nell had been overtaken by the planet's turning, and Carmel wanted to reach through time itself, to pull her daughter home.

review
ChaoticMissAdventures
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Mehso-so

3⭐

I loved the writing but I can tell this is not a book that will stick with me. A character centric book looking at a mom, daughter, grandfather. But I would have a hard time telling you what exactly this was about. Possible that audio was not the way to go but all of the narrators had pleasant voices and I enjoyed them. But I am not going to remember I read this in 6 months.

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ChaoticMissAdventures
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"Men turn up on time because it's not that complicated, like fascism or the train."

Listening to this, one possible for the Women's Prize long list on my neighborhood walk.

lil1inblue Excellent quote. 😏 10mo
36 likes1 stack add1 comment
review
Kazzie
Pickpick

She‘s great. And this book was too. I liked the women - each creating their own path and identity. Family problems aren‘t sugar coated. But the importance of family is very clear

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SaraBeagle
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We don‘t walk down the same street as the person walking beside us. All we can do is tell the other person what we see. We can point at things and try to name them. If we do this well, our friend can look at the world in a new way. We can meet.

Jas16 I love that. 11mo
13 likes1 stack add1 comment
review
rmaclean4
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Pickpick

It is a quiet story of three generations of an Irish family. Love the writing. The plot was ok. Great to hear the author narrate part of the book. This will be my last read of 2023. Book # 87. Far less than the 100 book goal, but there is always next year. 3 🌟

blurb
CarolynM
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Thank you Liz! I‘m a fan of Anne Enright, this one sounds good! And I know that chocolate is delicious! Merry Christmas dear friend😘💕

Thanks for organising once again, Chelle😘

#Jolabokaflodswap

LeahBergen That‘s a great cover! 12mo
Lizpixie You‘re welcome gorgeous! Let me know what you got from Booktopia! Merry Xmas😘♥️💚♥️💚 12mo
47 likes2 comments
review
Lindy
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Pickpick

I was fussy about audiobooks during the most stressful part of moving house & almost abandoned this because of characters being self-destructive. The 4 audio narrators are excellent, however, and so is Enright‘s prose. That was enough for me to stick with it & I truly warmed to it by the end. Family trauma affecting subsequent generations of Irish women. Mother–daughter relationships. Alternating POV. All in all quite lovely.

37 likes4 stack adds
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Lindy
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Even the name—bullfinch—seems a form of littering, like a sticky label fixed to his feathers. One sunny Sunday in my mother‘s garden the bird looked at me, and I saw the bird, and I wanted to undo language and let him be. The bird just was.

charl08 Such a beautifully written book. 14mo
Lindy @charl08 It wasn‘t until near the end that I warmed to this story. If it hadn‘t been in Enright‘s beautiful prose, I would have abandoned it fairly early on. 14mo
32 likes2 comments
blurb
Lindy
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Only one of these covers appeals to me. How about you?

LeahBergen I like the diner one. 14mo
marleed Oh the diner, for sure! 14mo
Lindy @LeahBergen @marleed I‘m glad some people like the diner cover. I hate it! Hard to read the title and the scene is so boring. 🤷‍♀️ 14mo
See All 13 Comments
KathyWheeler I would like the diner one if they‘d done a good job with font choice and color, but it‘s terrible because they didn‘t. Therefore I like the green one. 14mo
Hooked_on_books I‘m with @KathyWheeler , the font color is all wrong. 14mo
LeahBergen That‘s true. You do have a point about that font, @KathyWheeler ! 14mo
Lindy @KathyWheeler I agree about the title font: it disappears. Maybe that‘s the effect the designer wanted? 14mo
Lindy @Hooked_on_books Maybe the idea is that Enright‘s name alone will sell this book? I don‘t know. I don‘t like it at all. 14mo
KathyWheeler @Lindy That could be but it would be really weird to want a book title to disappear. 14mo
Lindy @KathyWheeler Agreed 14mo
Avanders You know… they actually both do, to me. 🤓 14mo
Lindy @Avanders Your taste is versatile 😁 14mo
Avanders lol that‘s a true story 😏 14mo
27 likes1 stack add13 comments
quote
charl08
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Every Friday, I was to call to the parish house, go to his study, take a book from his desk and lay the book from the previous week down. If the room was empty, which it rarely was, it meant a parishioner was dying and he had been called to administer the last rites. So to my many other sins was now added the hope that some poor soul would make an exit on a Friday afternoon...

40 likes1 stack add
quote
charl08

Their mother, Terry, read books all day, even when she was well. She lay in bed in the morning, she came down and propped the book against the teapot, she moved to a deck- chair in the garden with her feet akimbo, and one arm flung high. If you spoke to her while she was reading she would look at you from a lovely distance.

37 likes1 stack add
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charl08
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I have started a book of wonders, starling murmurations, a mountain hovering over the sea. People find a cellar under their floor, an extra, derelict room behind a mirror on the bathroom wall. A man discovers a dishwasher in his flat, that he thought was a fake cupboard.

Photo by Caroline Legg (Flickr CC)
Cropped.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/128941223@N02/49980199147

quote
charl08
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You can't tell Carmel you have a problem or she'll and beat someone up for you. My mother is the woman who goes over to jetski-guy on the beach, when you are five years old, shouting, How dare you frighten my child with that stupid, horrible machine. She is the woman who phones the government when your Irish exam is too hard (no really), she is, bless her, a crusader and a fighter...

46 likes1 stack add
review
AllDebooks
Pickpick

Anne Enright has produced yet another magnificent story, of intergenerational women in Ireland. We see altering perspectives from Nell, the daughter, and Carmel, her mother, their lives entwined by echoes of their famous poet grandfather (Father). The language is poetic and moving at times, as Enright uses the plot to discover the meaning of our relationships with ourselves, relatives and others.

AllDebooks I am already a fan of Anne Enright's work but this may be my favourite yet.
Highly recommended.
1y
35 likes1 comment
review
Megabooks
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Pickpick

I didn‘t understand this book until I read the author‘s note at the end. It made sense that she developed these characters separately because they never felt linked by the familial bonds she wrote for them. Still a low pick.

An acclaimed Irish poet leaves his ill wife and runs to the arms of an American coed, leaving his two daughters to pick up the pieces. Later, his granddaughter reckons with his legacy while starting her own writing career.

Cinfhen First, STUNNING photo 🤩too bad it‘s a low pick because your review makes it sound like a good story 1y
Megabooks @Cinfhen thanks! Wild that it grew over the back of the trellis onto the deck without mom or me noticing! The book just didn‘t feel cohesive. I‘m not saying don‘t read it, but maybe read the author‘s note first. 🤔🤔 1y
80 likes2 comments
blurb
Megabooks
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#RecentAcquistions I had a couple of big library trips recently!! 👍🏻 I was reading the two on top at the time I took this, but I just finished Evil Eye. Just started the tagged book in its place. I‘m excited to reread Swimming Lessons since I‘m doing Fuller‘s full catalog this year. I also picked up a St James for next month‘s #AuthorAMonth. Otherwise, we‘ll see what my mood reader self actually gets to! 😂

TrishB Good selection there 👍🏻 1y
Prairiegirl_reading I‘m quite jealous of the selection at your library! This is not the first time I‘ve felt this way. 🤣 1y
Cinfhen Agreed @Prairiegirl_reading Meg has the BEST library system !!!! 1y
See All 19 Comments
Cinfhen I spy Lawn Boy!!! Loved it and was SHOCKED to discover it‘s a banned book 😡 1y
squirrelbrain I‘m jealous too! 1y
youneverarrived A couple here I really want to read. Swimming Lessons I really enjoyed 💕 1y
Megabooks @TrishB thanks! I really feel lucky to have such a great library @Prairiegirl_reading @Cinfhen especially since my town is not that big! 1y
Megabooks @Cinfhen I have LB on my TBR thanks to you! 1y
Megabooks @squirrelbrain I‘m really curious how the library system works in the UK. Ours are funded mostly by our local community with some additional funding from the state. I love my local library! 1y
Megabooks @youneverarrived yay! Looking forward to it! 1y
squirrelbrain Meg, our public libraries are funded by the government, and local councils (I think). However, some smaller libraries have been closed down and have reopened run by volunteers, but they‘re still part of the main library system so you can transfer books within your local library system. @rockpools would be much better at explaining than me! 😃 1y
Megabooks @squirrelbrain that‘s so sad. I couldn‘t image not having anything new in any library in Kentucky. Wow. The worst thing we have, especially in the South, is these ultra right community groups that try to ban books. Right now the people in charge and the majority of the involved community does not support banning, but there was a letter to the editor in the local newspaper asking logical, non banners to start attending meetings of the library board 1y
Megabooks @squirrelbrain I‘ll likely try to go to the next meeting. We are also very lucky to have a local paper that still engages in journalism. All in all as far as large towns go, I‘m pretty lucky, but sometimes I do wish I lived in Nashville! 1y
rockpools @Megabooks @squirrelbrain Hi both. Wow! I hadn‘t seen that news from NI - that‘s terrible. Not sure that I can add much to what Helen‘s said already really Meg. Libraries are mainly funded by the local authority (council) who have a ‘statutory obligation‘ to provide a ‘comprehensive and efficient‘ library service. What that means isn‘t really laid down anywhere, so library services can look quite different in different counties… 1y
rockpools Most places the service is run directly by the county or city council. We‘re a bit of an oddball set-up down here, and are run by a charity who the council commission to run libraries. That makes it a bit more flexible- we can raise money and apply for grants and stuff that council-run libraries couldn‘t. It‘s worked well until now, but all the councils are struggling right now, so we are looking at cut-backs and the likes. 1y
rockpools At a community level, we also have ‘friends of x library‘ groups who can fundraise for an individual library, and help out with particular projects. Ours put in towards a lovely refurb of the children‘s library a few years back, and support things like ‘Warm Spaces‘ - free hot drinks through the winter for those in need. 1y
marleed Last winter there was some kind of ultra-right conservative push to defund Missouri libraries. My go to library is on the MO side of Kansas City even though I live on the KS side. I was worried it would effect the purchase of new books. Somehow the funding of libraries is written into the state constitution. I found it fascinating and don‘t believe the threat made progress. But every time I get a new release from the library I appreciate it. 1y
BarbaraBB So many books and I don‘t know most of them!! 1y
83 likes19 comments