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Queens Library at Steinway invited children to decorate their own keepsake boxes, re-purposing discarded ones that had been donated to the Materials for the Arts. Recycled materials, also from Materials for the Arts, were used to adorn and design the boxes. What do you think of the results of our eco-arts project?

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To learn about and celebrate the Lunar New Year, Queens Library at Steinway invited children to make Chinese lanterns by upcycling paper from a Chinese calendar. Using a simple paper fold, some cutting here and there, and pasting techniques, children ended up with unique lanterns to take home. 

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To celebrate Carnival, Queens Library at Astoria invited our young customers to make masks out of recycled materials. We got into the spirit of the festive occasion by decorating our masks with glitter, ribbons, feathers and stickers. We even made a handy handle out of straws.  We're grateful to Materials for the Arts for providing our supplies.

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“How important it is for us to recognize and celebrate our heroes and she-roes!” –Maya Angelou

This Women's History Month, we're offering plenty of opportunities to recognize and celebrate she-roes!

Women's History Month Quiz and Raffle, all month, Queens Library at Ridgewood

Find the Women's History Month "Question of the Day" located on the Children's Reference Desk, answer it correctly, and get a chance to win free tickets to the American Museum of Natural History. Drawings will be held Fridays at 4:30 p.m. in March. You must be present at the raffle drawing to win. See the Children's Librarian for details.

Women's History Month Game, 3/4 and 3/11, Queens Library at McGoldrick

Test your knowledge of famous women in our who's who game!

Forgotten Pioneers: Women of Rockaway Beach, 3/4, Queens Library at Peninsula

Join Vivian Rattay Carter for an illustrated talk about the women of Rockaway Beach who were instrumental in establishing hospitals, churches and schools and operated hotels, rooming houses and restaurants dating back to the 1850s. Space is limited. Preregistration is required.

Women’s History Month Activity, 3/7, Queens Library at Hollis

Children will create a rocket from construction paper and learn about astronauts Ellen Ochoa, Mae Jemison and Sally Ride.

Women's History Month, 3/8, Queens Library at Central

Learn about famous, creative and talented women while enjoying games, crafts and stories for children ages 6-12 years.

Hands on the Freedom Plow, 3/16, Queens Library at Central

Meet three Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee women: Dr. A. Leonara Taitt-Magubane, Muriel Tillinghast and Angeline Butler; the latter two are part of the 52 women whose personal stories are documented in Hands on the Freedom Plow, which documents the pivotal role women played early in the Civil Rights Movement.

The Other Black New Yorkers: New Stories of Exceptional Women, 3/16, Queens Library at Langston Hughes

This illustrated talk will feature the African-American history of New York City from Dutch colonialism to the present. We will highlight African-American women to the sound of a century of great music!

Great Ladies of Jazz, 3/19, Queens Library at Lefrak City

This is a tribute to Billie Holiday, Ella Fitzgerald, Lena Horne, Sarah Vaughn, Carmen McRae, Dinah Washington, Betty Carter and Nancy Wilson, trailblazers and ambassadors of jazz, the great American art form.

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Children at Queens Library at Woodside got into the spirit of celebrating Valentine's Day by combining heart shapes cut from recycled pink paper and googily eyes to create their own unique Valentine's Day buddies.

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In honor of the Lunar New Year, Queens Library at Sunnyside introduced children and their caregivers to Chinese culture through the art of making environmentally-friendly dragon puppets out of recycled paper, popsicle sticks and streamers. As the Lunar New Year's custom goes, two people get inside of a huge lion or dragon costume and perform a dance. The craft we made for the holiday is a tiny paper version of this traditional puppet. Happy Chinese New Year, or Gung Hay Fat Choy, to you. All the best to you in the year of the Snake! 

 

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To help celebrate American Heart Month and raise awareness of heart disease, children and their caregivers made 3-D hanging-heart crafts at Queens Library at Woodside. See the end result--made using red recycled postcards, red string and glittery stickers--pictured here.

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To celebrate the holiday, Queens Library at Woodside invited children and their caregivers to make their own Valentine’s Day roses out of recycled materials, crepe paper and straws. Using an upward wrapping technique participants made roses like the lovely ones pictured here. Eco-arts fans: The leaves are made from recycled paper. Streamers and tissue paper can also be used for the petals, if crepe paper is not available.

Pluto


February 18 marks the “birthday” of Pluto, a celestial body that has given astronomers great difficulty over the past 83 years.


A nameless mystery planet emerged as a theory in the 19th century, after astronomers discovered the planet Neptune, based on irregularities in the orbit of Uranus. Based on their mass estimates for Neptune, they decided that these irregularities had to be partially caused by gravitational interference from yet another celestial body.


This hypothetical celestial body was dubbed “Planet X” by Percival Lowell, a wealthy Boston man who established an observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona to search for it. The first 15 years of the 20th century were spent searching in vain. When Lowell died, a legal struggle tied up the observatory’s funding. On February 18, 1930, nearly a year after they began operating again, a young man named Clyde Tombaugh discovered the object.


The name “Pluto” was chosen in May 1930 by members of the observatory, inspiring the name of a new element, plutonium, and, possibly, the newly created canine companion to Walt Disney’s Mickey Mouse.


But since that auspicious start, the stature of this dark ball of rock, ice and frozen nitrogen has fallen steadily. In 1931, astronomers estimated it had the same mass as Earth. By 1948, that figure had been whittled down to one-tenth Earth’s mass. Another three decades and Pluto was one-100th the mass of Earth. Two years later, it was one-500th the mass. In the late 1980s, a NASA probe produced data on Neptune and its gravitational effect on Uranus that actually invalidated the theoretical need for a Planet X. Pluto’s discovery turned out to be, more or less, a fluke.


Most recently, Pluto lost its status as an official planet. Another celestial body was discovered in 2005 within our solar system, named Eris, that turned out to be slightly larger than Pluto. The debate over whether to call Eris a planet resulted in the drafting of a stricter definition for “planet” and the reclassification of Pluto as a “dwarf planet.”


In the U.S., the popular backlash to this decision was a bit of a shock. Astronomy is not typically the most celebrated of subjects in American popular culture. But some part of the national identity seemed to be bound up in Pluto. After all, hadn’t it been discovered by an American, in an American observatory? It’s a fascinating discussion, and Queens Library has accounts by both the astronomer whose discovery doomed Pluto to demotion, and by Neil DeGrasse Tyson, the witty astrophysicist and bestselling author who frequently breaks down the big questions of the universe for the common man.

 

So wish the solar system’s favorite dwarf planet a happy birthday. Who knows what the next decade will bring?

hand in hand

Caldecott Winner and Honors

Queens Library proudly carries all of the Caldecott Winner and Honor titles:

2013 Caldecott Medal winner: This Is Not My Hat, written and illustrated by Jon Klassen

2013 Caldecott Honor: Creepy Carrots!, illustrated by Peter Brown, written by Aaron Reynolds

2013 Caldecott Honor: Extra Yarn, illustrated by Jon Klassen, written by Mac Barnett

2013 Caldecott Honor: Green, illustrated and written by Laura Vaccaro Seeger

2013 Caldecott Honor: One Cool Friend, illustrated by David Small, written by Toni Buzzeo

2013 Caldecott Honor: Sleep Like a Tiger, illustrated by Pamela Zagarenski, written by Mary Logue

 

Coretta Scott King Winners and Honors

Queens Library proudly carries all of the Coretta Scott King Winners and Honors:

2013 Coretta Scott King Author Award Winner: Andrea Davis Pinkney, author of Hand in Hand: Ten Black Men Who Changed America

2013 Coretta Scott King Illustrator Award Winner: Bryan Collier, illustrator of I, Too, Am America

2013 Coretta Scott King Author Honor: Jacqueline Woodson, author of Each Kindness, illustrated by E. B. Lewis

2013 Coretta Scott King Author Honor: Vaunda Micheaux Nelson, author of No Crystal Stair: A Documentary Novel of the Life and Work of Lewis Micheaux, Harlem Bookseller

2013 Coretta Scott King Illustrator Honor: Daniel Minter, illustrator of Ellen’s Broom, written by Kelly Starling Lyons

2013 Coretta Scott King Illustrator Honor: Christopher Myers, illustrator and author of H. O. R. S. E.

2013 Coretta Scott King Illustrator Honor: Kadir Nelson, illustrator of I Have a Dream: Martin Luther King, Jr., written by Martin Luther King, Jr.

 

2013 Newbery Winner and Honors

Queens Library proudly carries all of the Newbery Winner and Honor titles:

2013 Newbery Medal Winner: The One and Only Ivan by Katherine Applegate

2013 Newbery Honor: Splendors and Glooms by Laura Amy Schlitz

2013 Newbery Honor: Bomb: The Race to Build—and Steal—the World’s Most Dangerous Weapon by Steve Sheinkin

2013 Newbery Honor: Three Times Lucky by Sheila Turnage

 

2013 Michael L. Printz Winner and Honors:

Queens Library proudly carries the following Michael L. Printz Winner and Honor titles:

2013 Michael L. Printz Winner: In Darkness by Nick Lake

2013 Michael L. Printz Honor: Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe by Benjamin Alire Sáenz

2013 Michael L. Printz Honor: Code Name Verity by Elizabeth Wein

2013 Michael L. Printz Honor: Dodger by Terry Pratchett

*2013 Michael L. Printz Honor: The White Bicycle by Beverley Brenna is on back order from the publisher.

 

Have you read any of the award winners? Share your thoughts and reviews by adding a comment to this blog.