Thursday, February 28, 2013
Never Leave Home Without Your Library Card
Never leave home without your library card. I was leaving home to escape my own half-century mark, rather to fly cross-country to celebrate it with my brothers and sisters and have the dessert of my choice, rhubarb cobbler, three nights in a row in three different houses, with three different sets of nephews and a niece.
My father offered to take me to the airport and I accepted. It was daylight and noontime. As he dropped me off, my 89-year old father said to me, "Now, I think I know my way home..." Both our spouses had been away for several days already and we'd been keeping each other company.
I'd packed my bags for early May, lots of clothes for each day they might get soaked in Seattle, ten pairs of everything I needed for ten days away. I had a purse, a backpack, a small dufflebag, and a too-large suitcase on wheels. I was prepared for anything. Or so I thought.
"License, please", said the clerk behind the airline counter. I opened up my wallet and found everything but. I double-checked. Embarrassed and unnerved, my eyes began to flood with tears. I was turning fifty and my eighty-nine year old father was driving across the state of Rhode Island towards home.
"We need an ID; a passport will work." Mine was at home. I hadn't planned to leave the country.
"Do you have a library card?"
Oh, yes, I had my library card! I was good to go. Only in Rhode Island could this ever happen...
Never leave home without your library card.
Rowena Burke
February 25, 2013
Saturday, February 16, 2013
Thursday, February 14, 2013
Girl with a Pearl Earring
2 down, 2 across, click for my entry in the Guardian's contest!
http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/interactive/2013/feb/01/vermeer-girl-with-pearl-earring-your-stories
Wednesday, December 26, 2012
Robert E. Barry, Author and Illustrator
October 7, 1931- November 18, 2012
Born in Newport, and a graduate of Rhode Island School of Design, author and illustrator Robert E. Barry was a beloved and most modest man-about-town who loved libraries and often shared his favorite articles, stories, and drawings with lucky librarians. My personal favorite—after his own drawings and notes—was the December 28, 2007 New York Times article entitled “The Library’s Helpful Sage of the Stacks,” about the New York Public Library librarian, David Smith, whose business card reads “Librarian to the Stars.” Robert Barry was one of Newport’s stars. One of his earlier books, Faint George, was selected by the New York Times as one of the Ten Best Illustrated Books of the Year in 1957. His book Mr. Willowby’s Christmas Tree was originally published in 1963 by Doubleday. In the year 2000, Doubleday requested new color illustrations and published a new edition of the book. It became a New York Times bestseller.
Throughout his career as a writer, illustrator, and teacher, Mr. Barry lived in Germany, Switzerland, and the Caribbean. He taught in the design department at the University of Massachusetts- Dartmouth. He lived in Newport for many years and was a longtime member of the Redwood Library and Athenaeum.
The following books by Robert E. Barry are found in the Redwood Library’s collections:
Mr. Willowby’s Christmas Tree
Snowman’s Secret
Next Please
Ramon and the Pirate Gull
The Musical Palm Tree
This is the Story of Faint George Who Wanted to be a Knight
Rowena Dunlap Burke
Redwood Library and Athenaeum
December 13, 2012
Labels:
Children's Books,
Christmas,
Libraries,
Robert E. Barry
Monday, December 3, 2012
Always Carry a Pen & Pad
September 5, 2012
I've learned many things from my father: foremost is to never leave the house without a pen and a small pocket-size notebook. Since age seven, I've rarely left the house unarmed.
It's handy for jotting down the big ideas and the small details that might escape one at a moment's notice.
The autumn that I was twenty-one, I decided to go to sea as a cook. My culinary skills were rudimentary. My wanderlust was legendary. I signed on for a journey from Newport, Rhode Island to Bermuda to deliver a wealthy man's yacht to warmer climes.
My father gave me a ride to the dock and escorted me to the boat. He hung out and chatted with the guys for about twenty minutes and then he was off to his own endeavors. It was, on the surface, all friendly banter, but I knew that he'd already written down all the basic details about these fellows. And I'd heard it all first hand.
So the second night out, when I felt a large beast crawl into my berth in the middle of the night, I told him in no uncertain terms that my father would contact his Methodist minister father in upstate New York pronto. And, alas, what a swift retreat!
Always carry a pen and pad. And ask the right questions in a superfluous manner.
I've learned many things from my father: foremost is to never leave the house without a pen and a small pocket-size notebook. Since age seven, I've rarely left the house unarmed.
It's handy for jotting down the big ideas and the small details that might escape one at a moment's notice.
The autumn that I was twenty-one, I decided to go to sea as a cook. My culinary skills were rudimentary. My wanderlust was legendary. I signed on for a journey from Newport, Rhode Island to Bermuda to deliver a wealthy man's yacht to warmer climes.
My father gave me a ride to the dock and escorted me to the boat. He hung out and chatted with the guys for about twenty minutes and then he was off to his own endeavors. It was, on the surface, all friendly banter, but I knew that he'd already written down all the basic details about these fellows. And I'd heard it all first hand.
So the second night out, when I felt a large beast crawl into my berth in the middle of the night, I told him in no uncertain terms that my father would contact his Methodist minister father in upstate New York pronto. And, alas, what a swift retreat!
Always carry a pen and pad. And ask the right questions in a superfluous manner.
Saturday, June 9, 2012
WorldCat
http://www.worldcat.org/profiles/RowenaDBurke/lists
Adrift in a sea of books here...WorldCat is a great way to keep track of what books I've read & to scope out more good books to read!
Adrift in a sea of books here...WorldCat is a great way to keep track of what books I've read & to scope out more good books to read!
Friday, June 8, 2012
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