Bauder Lecture Series with Elizabeth Acevedo

The author, dressed in a v-neck white top with her curly hair loose, looks over her right shoulder out a window.

Thursday, September 19
6 – 7 pm
Monteabaro Recital Hall, Howard Community College
For teens and adults.
Registration and information.

National Book Award for Young People’s Literature winner Elizabeth Acevedo is the guest author for the 2024 Bauder Lecture, which is a free event. Acevedo is The New York Times-bestselling author of The Poet X, which also won the Michael L. Printz Award, the Pura Belpré Award, the Carnegie Medal, the Boston Globe–Horn Book Award, and the Walter Award.

The colorfully illustrated cover shows two girls faces, with the black silhouettes of two planes nose-to-nose between them.

Clap When You Land, a novel-in-verse, brims with grief and love, as Acevedo writes about the devastation of loss, the difficulty of forgiveness, and the bittersweet bonds that shape our lives. It was selected as the Howard County Book Connection title, in partnership with Howard Community College, Howard County Poetry and Literature Society, and Howard County Library System.

From Publisher’s Weekly:
At nearly 17, Camino Rios lives in the Dominican Republic with her aunt, where she dreams of attending medical school at Columbia University, near her father, whom she only sees for a few months each year. Skilled chess player Yahaira Rios, 16, lives with her Dominican parents in New York City, next door to her girlfriend, Dre. When Yahaira’s father leaves for his annual summer trip to the D.R., the plane crashes, leaving no survivors and upending the lives of Yahaira and his other daughter, Camino. In the months following the crash, the girls, previously unknown to each other, discover their sisterhood—and their father’s double life—and must come to terms with difficult truths about their parents. Returning to verse, Acevedo subtly, skillfully uses language and rhythm to give voice to the sisters’ grief, anger, and uncertainty; Camino’s introspective openness; and Yahaira’s tendency toward order and leadership. Raw and emotional, Acevedo’s exploration of loss packs an effective double punch, unraveling the aftermath of losing a parent alongside the realities of familial inheritance.

The Bauder Lecture by Howard Community College is made possible by a generous grant from Dr. Lillian Bauder, a community leader and Columbia resident.

Also by the author:

With the Fire on High by Elizabeth Acevedo

From The Poet X author, Elizabeth Acevedo presents a story about 17-year-old Emoni Santiago, Puerto Rican-raised in Philly. She’s a high school senior figuring out her next move in life. In ninth grade she got pregnant and had her daughter Emma and together she and her baby’s father are figuring out what it means to co-parent with the support of his parents and her Abuela with whom she lives.

Emoni loves to cook and wants to be a chef in her own restaurant someday. When she gets involved in a culinary arts class whose end-of-year field trip is an apprenticeship trip to Spain will she dazzle or disappoint? And when things heat up between her and her classmate Malachi, will she allow herself to find love that is real? With family drama, romance and the value of friendship, Acevedo presents a book you will find savoring to the very last bite. 

Reviewed by Carmen J.

Carmen J. is a teen instructor at HCLS East Columbia Branch. Among her favorite things are great books, all things 80s, shamelessly watching The Bachelor, gardening, and drinking anything that tastes like coffee.

The Longest Table 2024

A photo of a large room with a wall of windows filled with tables of people enjoying dinner and good conversation.
The Longest Table 2023 event held at Howard Community College.

The Longest Table 2024
Friday, September 27
5 pm: social hour
6 pm: dinner
Howard Community College | Rouse Company Foundation Building
Purchase tickets

Everyone is welcome at our table.

Since 2017, Howard County Library System, in partnership with Howard Community College, has produced this event bringing people together for dinner and powerful conversations about our community. Through the support of sponsors, a number of free tickets* are available for high school and college students.

The Longest Table is a communal meal designed to build new relationships, encourage conversations, and increase civic engagement. It begins with a social hour, then guests are asked to sit at a table with people they don’t already know, helping to create a wide variety of experiences and ideas at each table. Using provided discussion questions, table hosts facilitate conversations around substantive issues and community building. 

Gathering for meals is a beloved custom around the world. And no matter our differences – where we grew up, how much money we have, or the color of our skin – we all need to feel welcome and included. When we eat together, we connect and share in the joy of being. Our need to be seen, known, and belong is satisfied. In a world of disconnection, there is no more powerful place than the shared meal.

Everyone, high school age and up, is welcome.

LOCATION

  • The dinner will be held inside the Rouse Company Foundation (RCF) building in the cafe on the first floor. Social hour will be held on the patio outside the cafe, weather permitting (indoors in case of inclement weather).
  • Free parking is available on campus.

MENU (forthcoming)

SPONSORS

  • Platinum: Friends & Foundation of Howard County Library System
  • Gold: Columbia Association
  • Silver: Howard Hughes Corporation
  • In-Kind: Howard Community College

*Want to join but that’s not in the budget right now? Email communityengagement@hclibrary.org to get free tickets.

Summer Olympics Challenge

Prize basket wrapped in cellophane with a big blue bow.

The Olympics start this week, and we’re excited! We’ve got several Olympics-themed classes on our schedule, and we’re playing along with our own game. Stop by any branch to get a Connect 3 gameboard. Read any three Olympic-themed challenges in row, then bring the sheet back for a prize. You receive a sticker and a chance to win a larger prize basket with a picnic blanket, a water bottle, a $10 gift card to Rita’s Italian Ice, and more.  

Check out some of these Summer Olympics and sports themed titles, too, and start borrowing!

For children and teens 
Adult nonfiction 
Adult fiction

Reading always counts toward your summer reading goals, too. You can start collecting prizes on Thursday, August 1. Stop by any branch with your finished gameboard.

Summer Meals and Snacks

A bright red apple sits on the corner of a plain wooden crate filled with apples.

Paradoxically, summer is a season of bounty but also hunger for families who rely on meals provided at school. In partnership with the school system and The Roving Radish, the library offers several sites for daily meals and snacks throughout the season.

HCPSS Summer Food Sites
www.hcpss.org/food-services/summer-meals
To continue meeting the need to feed hungry children and families and fill the nutritional gap over the summer months, the Howard County Public School System continues its free summer meal program, which includes two library locations.
Lunch served at East Columbia and Elkridge Branches:
Monday – Friday
June 24 – Aug 2
12:30 – 2 pm

Library Snacks
Children and teens (ages 18 and under) receive a free snack every afternoon.
Sponsored by Good Harvest.
Mon – Fri
June 3 – August 30
Central Branch: 2 – 3 pm
East Columbia Branch: 3:30 – 4:30 pm

Howard County’s Roving Radish Mobile Market
For information about being a member: rovingradish.com/pages/mobile-marketplace
Roving Radish introduces a new Mobile Market, featuring affordable, healthy, farm fresh food for everyone. The mobile Marketplace visit 12 stops weekly, including Howard County Library System branches. Look for them in our parking lots.
East Columbia Branch
Mondays: 2:30 – 4:30 pm

Elkridge Branch
Wednesdays: 2:30 – 4:30 pm

HiTech classes return!

A teens with curly dark hair in red goggles, blue gloves, and a white jacket mixes a sustance in a beaker. A graduated cylinder holds multi-colored fluid.

Teens, you can have a summer adventure at the library. Running through August 9, the HiTech summer program offers hands-on STEAM (science, technology, engineering, art, math) classes to boost your skills, explore your interests, and create cool projects. Check out these tracks and choose one (or more than one!) that’s right for you.

  • HiTech classes run through August 9.
  • Individual classes can run for one to three weeks.
  • Monday – Friday, 9 am to 4 pm.
  • Classes are held at our East Columbia, Elkridge, and Savage branches.
  • Ages 11 – 18
  • Sign up begins three weeks prior to the first day of class at bit.ly/hitech-2024

STEAM Leadership Academy: Over two weeks, explore opportunities and skills for STEAM leadership. Interact with leaders in the field and apply what you learn to hands-on projects. Learn leadership skills that will be useful at school and throughout life.

Go Green: Dig deep into the world of horticulture as you explore hydroponics, green gardening, and the construction of living wells.

Underwater Science and Engineering: Dive in with the SeaPerch submersibles and marine science classes. SeaPerch is a remotely operated vehicle built by students to accomplish underwater competitions. Learn about the different living organisms, creatures, conditions, and aspects of underwater living.

Tech Foundations and Robotics: Learn and practice coding in Python, Java, CSS, Arduino, and other languages. Practice your programming skills as you make a humanoid robot move, customize a Ten80 race car, implement Generative AI to make a robotic arm play a game, or work on LEGO Mindstorms.

Engineering Your Way: Project-based engineering classes not only teach engineering principles but also create fun things people can use. Classes include civil engineering, aerospace engineering, and mechanical and electrical engineering, which work toward building carnival games or vacuum-formed objects. Practice the basics with mousetrap cars and compete in Rube Goldberg competitions.

Artistic Impressions: Use paints, computers, laser cutting, 3D printing, and other mediums to explore your artistic side. New this year: Interior design and architecture class.

Mathematically Speaking: “Short take” math classes introduce math concepts or help you refresh concepts from the past school year. Classes include games of probability and chance, computational thinking, algebra 1 & 2, geometry, and SAT math.

Scientific Perspectives: Geek out in this science track featuring physics, chemistry, biology, genetics, or nanomedicine. Build a weather balloon or conduct messy experiments.

Happy Reading this Summer!

Booker, the library's mascot owl, strides out from a spinning globe while carrying a suitcase.

Dear Parents of HCPSS students,

Summer is almost here! In addition to fireworks, family time, and barbecues, I’m looking forward to tackling my summer reading list.

I’m proud that the Howard County Public School System and Howard County Library System are again partnering to present a fun and engaging summer reading experience for our community. I hope this letter encourages your child – and your whole family – to participate.

Here’s why:
There are games (and prizes!) for each age group, including an attractive reading journal for adults. Begin your summer reading adventure on June 1. The children and teens games celebrate reading (including graphic novels, comic books, and audiobooks) and activities.

Summer reading helps connect your family to the library this summer. That includes six celebrations, hundreds of free summer classes and activities for all ages, and STEAM classes for middle and high school students. HCLS has an amazing collection, and staff that love helping your child select a book they’ll love. Learn about it all at hclibrary.org/summer.

Just like a dessert with secret veggies in it, this fun is good for you! Reading all summer has been shown not just to eliminate slide in reading but also to help students advance their skills.

Get started! Every elementary school student will receive a gameboard at their school. Middle and high school students can pick up gameboards at their school media centers. Additional copies may be picked up at any Howard County Library System branch. I know that library staff are ready to answer questions and get you started!

New this year: When your elementary student finishes summer reading and submits a ticket to the library to receive their prize, please check the box authorizing the library to share their success with their school so we can continue to celebrate them when they return to school in the fall.

Happy reading!

Sincerely,
William J. Barnes
HCPSS Superintendent

The Artist and the Astronaut

An image of the space station with Earth below

By Nancy T.

Sun, May 5 | 2 – 4:15 pm
Miller Branch
For adults.
Register here.

Spend an unforgettable afternoon at the Maryland premiere of the award-winning film, The Artist & The Astronaut. This cinematic journey delves into the remarkable love story between artist Pat Musick, a civil rights activist, and Apollo astronaut Jerry Carr.

Witness their captivating tale unfold against the backdrop of some of humanity’s most historic moments. Filled with never-before-seen footage of early space exploration and featuring interviews with key figures from that era, this film chronicles the vastly different paths of Pat and Jerry as they navigate uncertain times, ultimately coming together to render some of America’s most enduring art. The Artist & the Astronaut is a testament to the power of curiosity, perseverance, and empathy as agents of change and love.

After the screening, delve deeper into the film’s creation through a Q&A session with the writer and director, Bill Muench. Explore the compelling backstory behind the documentary’s creation, catalyzed by the encouragement of Bill’s wife. Her inspiration ignited his passion to embark on this remarkable endeavor.

Beginning from humble origins with no plan or budget, Bill Muench, a full-time teacher and basketball coach, undertook a six-year odyssey spanning nine states and two continents. His determination to share the untold story of a local Vermont couple led him to interview Apollo astronauts, their spouses, award-winning authors, artists, art historians, and even NASA directors of mission control.
With the collaboration of music legend Todd Hobin, they produced a story that might otherwise have remained untold. Join us as we uncover the extraordinary journey behind the lens, a testament to the power of determination, inspiration, and collaboration.

Interview with Director Bill Muench

How did you manage your time being a teacher and also filming?
Not very well… Ha ha. I never missed a day of school, even though I had to travel to many different states and even make a trip to England. I was really excited to share the process of documentary filmmaking with my students during my last six years of teaching high school.

What was your favorite part of filming/the whole process?
Getting to meet and interview amazing people who had lived fascinating lives—they inspired me to be a better filmmaker as I went on because they deserved to have their story captured in a professional way.

How did you come up with this idea? Did you have a connection with these people? What was your inspiration?
I went to Arkansas with my wife to celebrate Pat’s 90th birthday in 2016… I have been friends with Jerry, the astronaut, and Pat, the artist, since they moved to Manchester, VT in 2007… I knew many of their stories. When we got on the plane to come back to Vermont I said to my wife, “somebody should make a documentary about these two.” She said, “you should do it,” and that is how I got the inspiration to do the film.

Are you proud of how the documentary came out?
When I started working on the documentary, I did it for my own enjoyment—I never dreamed in a million years that it would win awards and I would be able to travel the country and screen the film. It is not about what I did but the stories that the film captures. This was the last interview for many of the participants of this film. I am especially proud of the musical score by Todd Hobin…83 different music drops — all of them original.

Nancy T. is an instructor and research specialist and the display coordinator at Miller Branch. When she’s not in the branch, you’ll find her in the swimming pool, sitting with her cat, or out walking in the fresh air.

National Library Week: A Message of Gratitude

Pink text reads community is the heart of our, above blue text that says Library

As we wrap up National Library Week, I express my profound gratitude to our community, our team, our volunteers, and our funders. Thank you for your support, your time, and your dedication to our county’s residents and visitors, which helps Howard County Library System center the community in all that we do. 

This week we celebrated Maryland’s Freedom to Read Act (currently awaiting the Governor’s signature) on Right to Read Day, which protects libraries and our staff as we curate collections that enable everyone to see themselves in our books and materials. On Tuesday we celebrated our dedicated staff on National Library Workers Day, and on Wednesday we celebrated National Library Outreach Day, highlighting the On the Road to Kindergarten mobile unit and STEAM Machine which take hands-on classes and books to students across the county. Yesterday, we celebrated our Friends and Foundation, who raise funds to support programs and initiatives that fall outside of our operating budget. 

Throughout National Library Week we celebrated all the ways we work with and for our community. 

Over the last year, we actively engaged more than 3,100 stakeholders and residents as we updated our strategic plan to reflect and activate our belief that community is the heart of our library. Through that process we heard how much you love and value your library – and how much you need the library to provide early learning spaces, resources and instruction for preschoolers and their caregivers; space for teens to come together, discover opportunities, and explore new experiences; and a sense of belonging and inclusion for all ages. 

As a result, we updated our mission, vision, and core values to reflect the words and voices of our community. We invite you to read our strategic plan on our website, and we look forward to working with you as we roll out the new plan. 

Together, we can help everyone to learn, connect, and grow. 

Tonya Aikens
President & CEO
Howard County Library System

Plant a Book, Grow a Reader: Friends and Foundation of HCLS Spring Fundraiser

A brightly colored illustration of piles of books with flowers mixed in. The lettering in dark pink reads Plant a Book (above), Grow a Reader (below)

Friends & Foundation of Howard County Library System is blooming with opportunities for you to help us raise funds to support literacy for youth in Howard County. We hope to increase the library’s selection and quantity of young adult books chosen for teens and by teens at local high schools. With this fund, HCLS piloted the teen-led book selection project last year at three high schools and saw an increase in participation and excitement at these book clubs that reach 50-60 teens monthly. The Spring fundraiser runs through May 11 – donate now!

$40 donation
You receive a big thank you from the Friends, along with an amazing 12″ hanging basket bursting with spring flowers, ready for you in early May – just before Mother’s Day. These donations support early literacy classes, outreach, and initiatives offered by the library. All the baskets are claimed each year, so don’t miss out on these beautiful thank-you gifts!

+$25 contribution
For an additional $25, the Kathleen Glascock Tribute Fund will match up to $750 to purchase books for teen-led book clubs.

The Kathleen S. Glascock Tribute Fund for Children/Youth Literacy & Education was established in 2016 in honor of Kathleen S. Glascock, who worked for the Howard County Public School System as a media specialist at Clarksville Middle School. According to her husband Robert, “Kathy was an avid reader her entire life who found joy in sharing her love of books with her students and encouraging their growth through reading.” This fund has raised more than $23,000 to support literacy programming for the library, including special author events such as an appearance by Jason Reynolds, the partnership the library has with Head Start, and Summer Reading materials and activities.

Library Card Design Contest

A child's drawing of three pink and yellow flowers, with green grass and a blue sky. The middle, large flower has "hi" in its center.

We need your creativity!
For National Library Week, we’re introducing a new art contest to design library cards that debut in September for National Library Card Sign-up Month.

THEME: The library is your place to Learn, Connect, and Grow.
Forms available at all HCLS branches and at hclibrary.org.
Contest runs April 8 – May 31.

All children in grades K – 12 and adults who live, work, or attend school in Howard County may enter.
One winner for each category will be chosen. Please circle the appropriate age group for your entry:
Kindergarten & Grade 1
Grades 2 & 3
Grades 4 & 5
Grades 6 – 8
Grades 9 – 12
Adults (18+ years)

Entries judged on originality, design, theme expression, and reproducibility.
Tips:

  • All entries must be clear and reproducible.
  • Consider what medium works best for you. Sparkle crayons, gel pens, and neon colors do not reproduce well.
  • Do not use trademarked or copyrighted images from TV shows, movies, or books or include computer or AI generated art.
  • If you include words, check for correct spelling and legibility. Keep text away from edge. In fact, keep all important design details away from the edges.