NCompass Live: Engaging New Voices in Advocacy: Youth, Trustees, and Everyday Patrons

Hear about ‘Engaging New Voices in Advocacy: Youth, Trustees, and Everyday Patrons’ on next week’s NCompass Live webinar on Wednesday, May 20 at 10am CT.

As a member of the Illinois Library Association’s Advocacy Committee, I’ve seen how impactful it is when advocacy goes beyond directors and staff. For small libraries, advocacy can feel daunting – but it doesn’t have to be.

This session will showcase practical models for engaging youth, trustees, and patrons as your partners in advocacy. We’ll share examples of storytelling, everyday conversations, and grassroots efforts that build trust and visibility without requiring extra staff or budgets. Small libraries are uniquely positioned to connect personally with their communities – let’s harness that strength to keep our voices strong.

Presenter: Dana K. Fanslow, Library Director, Nippersink Public Library District, Richmond, IL.

Upcoming NCompass Live shows:

  • May 27 – Pretty Sweet Tech: Preparing Tech Ready Librarians: A Statewide Initiative
  • June 3 – Connected America 2026
  • June 10 – Law for Librarians
  • June 17 – Unlocking Nebraska’s Stories: Introducing the Nebraska Literary & History Escape Room Kits
  • June 24 – Pretty Sweet Tech
  • July 8 – Library Compliance with the ADA Title II Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) Rule
  • July 15 – Community Literacy Treasure Hunt: The Fun Way to Increase Literacy!

To register for an NCompass Live show, or to listen to recordings of past shows, go to the NCompass Live webpage.

NCompass Live is broadcast live every Wednesday from 10am – 11am Central Time. Convert to your time zone on the Official U.S. Time website.

The show is presented online using the GoTo Webinar online meeting service. Before you attend a session, please see the NLC Online Sessions webpage for detailed information about GoTo Webinar, including system requirements, firewall permissions, and equipment requirements for computer speakers and microphones.

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Friday Reads & BookFace Friday: “Starter Villain” by John Scalzi

In a dog-eat-dog world…be a #BookFace.

How can you be a successful villain, with no experience and no one to train you? You just have to depend on your talking spy cats and unionized dolphins to help you learn the ropes. And trust that they aren’t planning to stab you in the back. It’s all in a day’s work for a Starter Villain.

After being laid off from his job as a reporter at a Chicago newspaper, Charlie moved back into his childhood home to care for his ailing father, and lives there now after his father’s death.

He is trying to secure a bank loan to purchase a local pub when his plans are derailed by his billionaire Uncle Jake passing away and leaving Charlie his business, the third-largest chain of parking structures in North America. Good news, right? With this windfall, Charlie can finally realize his dream of owning the pub.

But, things aren’t what them seem. It turns out the parking garages are actually a front for his uncle’s real business. He is a supervillain, complete with James Bond-style over the top enemies and a volcano island lair. Charlie must learn to navigate this new-to-him underworld, surviving elaborate plots to take him out and steal his uncle’s empire. It’s a wild, imaginative ride with great characters and clever world-building, full of sarcastic humor and insightful storytelling.

Starter Villain is another fun novel by one of my favorite authors, John Scalzi. Like one of his previous books, The Kaiju Preservation Society, it was written during the height of COVID-19 pandemic, when we all needed something to get us through the days. Escapist fiction at its finest.

“In this clever, fast-paced thriller, Hugo Award winner subverts classic supervillain tropes with equal measures of tongue-in-cheek humor and common sense… The result is a breezy and highly entertaining genre send-up.”

Publishers Weekly

Love this #BookFace & reading? We suggest checking out all the titles available in our Book Club collectionpermanent collection, and Nebraska OverDrive Libraries. Check out our past #BookFaceFriday photos on the Nebraska Library Commission’s Facebook page!

Scalzi, John. Starter Villain. Tor Books, 2023.

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Throwback Thursday: August Molzer, Violinist

Listen to some music this #ThrowbackThursday!

This week’s highlight is a promotional piece that describes August Molzer’s musical education and experience in performing for audiences; provides reviews of performances; and, outlines sample concert programs. Photographs of Molzer and two of his professors, Otokar Sevik and Stefan Suchy, have been glued to the item.

August Molzer moved to Wilber, Nebraska, with his family as a boy and studied violin at the Prague Conservatory in Bohemia (Czech Republic) and performed concerts in Europe before returning to Lincoln to teach at both Nebraska Wesleyan University and the University School of Music. Molzer also composed several pieces of music. This piece advertised his performance availability in Nebraska and the area, and Molzer did perform at such places as the Shelby Opera House and the Kerr Opera House in Hastings.

This image is published and owned by the Nebraska Library Commission. The collections include material on the history of libraries in the state of Nebraska, items from the 1930s related to the Nebraska Public Library Commission bookmobile, as well as items showcasing the history of Nebraska’s state institutions.

See this collection and many more on the Nebraska Memories archive!

The Nebraska Memories archive is brought to you by the Nebraska Library Commission. If your institution is interested in participating in Nebraska Memories, see http://nlc.nebraska.gov/nebraskamemories/participation.aspx for more information.

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NCompass Live: Play, Explore, Learn: Building Early Literacy Through Station-Based Programs

Looking for ways to go beyond traditional storytime? Check out ‘Play, Explore, Learn: Building Early Literacy Through Station-Based Programs’ on next week’s NCompass Live webinar on Wednesday, May 13 at 10am CT.

Discover how to create an interactive, play-based early literacy program built around themed learning stations that encourage exploration and engagement. This session shares how one library developed a successful station-based model that promotes early learning through activities tied to the five early literacy practices: Read, Write, Talk, Sing, and Play.

Using simple materials and creative themes, the program provides families with a flexible, hands-on experience that supports key developmental skills such as language, fine motor coordination, and social-emotional growth. Attendees will learn practical tips for setup, rotating themes, and caregiver involvement. Walk away with ideas and inspiration to make early literacy come alive in your library – one playful station at a time!

Presenter: Kendra Brewer, Youth Services Librarian, Edith B. Siegrist Vermillion Public Library, Vermillion, SD.

Upcoming NCompass Live shows:

  • May 20 – Engaging New Voices in Advocacy: Youth, Trustees, and Everyday Patrons
  • May 27 – Pretty Sweet Tech: Preparing Tech Ready Librarians: A Statewide Initiative
  • June 3 – Libraries and Friends of the Library: How to Stay Friends
  • June 10 – Law for Librarians
  • June 24 – Pretty Sweet Tech
  • July 8 – Connected America 2026
  • July 15 – Community Literacy Treasure Hunt: The Fun Way to Increase Literacy!

To register for an NCompass Live show, or to listen to recordings of past shows, go to the NCompass Live webpage.

NCompass Live is broadcast live every Wednesday from 10am – 11am Central Time. Convert to your time zone on the Official U.S. Time website.

The show is presented online using the GoTo Webinar online meeting service. Before you attend a session, please see the NLC Online Sessions webpage for detailed information about GoTo Webinar, including system requirements, firewall permissions, and equipment requirements for computer speakers and microphones.

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#BookFaceFriday “¿Eres tú mi mamá?” by P.D. Eastman

¡Feliz Día de la Madre de parte de #BookFaceFriday!

You don’t have to go looking for this #BookFaceFriday! We’re celebrating Mother’s Day like we do every holiday, with a good book. In this case one of the Spanish language titles in our Book Club Kit Collection, “¿Eres tú mi mamá?” by P.D. Eastman (‎ Random House Books for Young Readers, 2016). Browse all available titles using the keyword “Spanish” in the keyword search field. For kits that were already available in English, the title will be shown in English; for titles only available in Spanish, the Spanish title will be shown. For both types of kits, the number of Spanish copies is listed at the bottom of the title’s record. At the present time, most of our new Spanish-language kits are geared towards younger readers, but we hope to expand this selection in the future.

Un pajarito que va en busca de su mamá es el argumento de esta divertida adaptación del clásico de P. D. Eastman, ahora en un nuevo formato de libro cartón más grande, perfecto para bebés y niños pequeños.

A baby bird goes in search of his mother in this hilarious Board Book adaptation of P.D. Eastman’s classic story, perfect for babies and toddlers.

– Back cover

Book Club Kits Rules for Use

  1. These kits can be checked out by the librarians of Nebraska libraries and media centers.
  2. Circulation times are flexible and will be based upon availability. There is no standard check-out time for book club kits.
  3. Please search the collection to select items you wish to borrow and use the REQUEST THIS KIT icon to borrow items.
  4. Contact the Information Desk at the Library Commission if you have any questions: by phone: 800/307-2665, or by email: Information Services Team

Love this #BookFace & reading? Check out our past #BookFaceFriday photos on the Nebraska Library Commission’s Facebook page!

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Friday Reads: Man-Eaters of Kumaon by Jim Corbett

My father was born on May 1st, now just 100 years ago.  He passed in 1999 and is still missed.  One of many things he introduced me to was the writings of Jim Corbett.

First published in 1944, this is one of the memoirs of the India-born Englishman, Jim Corbett.  He loved nature and the jungle, spending all the time he could there.  He would listen to different animal calls – monkeys, deer, and others – and calculate where a predator was by these calls and their locations.  He loved all animals and over time became concerned about the possible extinction of tigers, advocating for the first reserve for them.

There are ten stories in this title, one each about his efforts to find and kill a tiger or leopard who had turned to killing people.  Often this was due to an injury that made hunting its regular prey nearly impossible. 

There have been criticisms of Corbett’s writing, such as the fact that he wrote about these exploits years later, and we all know memory can be misleading.  Others, that he always seemed to have only four bullets and usually used the last one to kill the beast.  Doesn’t that make for a more exciting story?  I do not know the answer to these criticisms, but no one disputes the fact that he went into the jungle (most often on foot), alone, with his rifle, and killed the mankillers.

Other titles by the author:

The Man-eating Leopard of Rudraprayag, 1948
Jungle Lore, 1953
The Temple Tiger and more Man-eaters of Kumaon, 1954
Tree Tops, 1955

Man-Eaters of Kumaon, by Jim Corbett, 1944.

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Throwback Thursday: Samuel W. Rising and Polly Rising

We’re looking back on family #ThrowbackThursday!

This week’s highlight is a 4 1/2″ x 3 1/2″ black and white photograph that is a composite of two portraits, one of a man and one of a woman. The man wears a white shirt and a dark coat; he has a long bushy beard. The woman wears a blouse with a bow at the neck and a dark jacket; she also wears eyeglasses and a hat. The two portraits are oval shaped, surrounded by a white borders. At the bottom of the photograph, “Grandfather Samuel W. Rising” and “Grandmother Polly Rising” is written.

This image is owned and published by the Rising City Community Library. The collection of photographs are currently displayed at the library. These images include photographs of businesses on Main Street, the depot, church, post office, a major fire, and portraits of the Rising family.

See this collection and many more on the Nebraska Memories archive!

The Nebraska Memories archive is brought to you by the Nebraska Library Commission. If your institution is interested in participating in Nebraska Memories, see http://nlc.nebraska.gov/nebraskamemories/participation.aspx for more information.

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Book Club Spotlight – Bee Season

cover for Bee Season by Myla Goldberg.  Designed to look like a tattered Merriam-Webster Dictionary, the title "Bee Season, a Novel" stands in place of the dictionaries title

In 1908, The United States was at war with itself. The standardization of American English was torn between the language you’re reading now, and the Roosevelt/Carnegie-backed Simplified Spelling Board. The Spelling Board fought hard to “simplify” the written word, while the rest of the country scratched their heads at this new “fonetic” spelling. Then, from the depths of battle came the first ever National Spelling Bee Competition, and its use of standard English spelling began the death knell of simplified English. Burgeoning out of our cultural emphasis on a unified language, spelling, education system, and its opportunity as a class equalizer, spelling bees provide a unique look into Americana. Myla Goldberg’s 2000 debut novel Bee Season, uses this seemingly-squeaky clean All-American pastime to look at a modern family whose obsession to rise above banality ends up tearing them apart

Eleven years old and unimpressive by all accounts, Eliza feels dull compared to her gifted and successful family. Until she hits a stroke of luck and surprisingly wins her school’s spelling bee, and then the district spelling bee after that. What follows is the portrait of a Pennsylvanian family at the turn of the century as they encourage Eliza in her spelling pursuits while facing internal inadequacies and jealousies through religiosity, obsessiveness, and the pressures they put on themselves and each other. Eliza finds herself stuck in a dizzying world of ritualism, reaching out for her family who are lost in the realm of greater ascendancy. 

“Eliza begins to look at life in alphabetical terms. School is consonantal in its unchanging status. God, full of possibility, is a vowel. Death: the ultimate consonant.”

Myla Goldberg

Perfection! Perfectimundo! Enlightenment! The “True Self”! Tikkun Olam. Each member of Eliza’s family is seeking some sort of divine wholeness through ritualistic obsession. They forgo their familial connections in search of this supernatural belonging, ostracizing and distancing themselves from each other in the process. While reading this book for Jewish Heritage Month, I was surprised at the depths of religious mysticism discussed in Bee Season. Eliza’s father, Saul, studies Kabbalah, and believes that through Eliza’s new gift for spelling, she can heal the world, placing the broken shards back together to make everything whole and Divine. Eliza’s brother and mother in turn, are also caught up in their own searching for this Divine. Aaron, chasing after the strong otherworldly presence he felt during his Bar Mitzvah, finds it in the intense Hare Krishna Movement. And Miriam obsessively surrounds herself with (stolen) perfect objects to reach a sense of wholeness, while risking herself. Each family member quietly leading to their own destruction. For Adult Book Club Groups, Bee Season will surprise readers with the lengths the Naumann family goes to achieve satisfaction and maintain family order. Discussions around literary foils, perfectionism, self-doubt, and our own search for that completed wholeness can be paired with a viewing of the 2005 movie adaptation starring Richard Gere and Juliette Binoche. 

Further Resources:

If you’re interested in requesting Bee Season for your book club, you can find the Request Form here. There are 11 copies. (A librarian must request items)

Goldberg, Myla. Bee Season. Knopf Doubleday. 2001.

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Public Library Accreditation 2026 Workshops Scheduled

‘Public Library Accreditation 2026’ workshops are now open for registration!

To register for a session, go to the Nebraska Library Commission’s Training & Events Calendar and search for ‘accreditation 2026’. All workshops will be held online only, via GoTo Webinar.

NOTE: This online workshop is being offered on several days and at varied times, to give attendees multiple opportunities to find a convenient time to attend. The same information will be provided at each workshop, so you only need to register for one session. A recorded version will be available after all of the live sessions have been held.

What is Nebraska Public Library Accreditation? What are the benefits of accreditation? How does my library become accredited? What’s a Community Needs Response Plan? Why does my library need one?

The purpose of Nebraska Public Library Accreditation is to encourage excellent library service in Nebraska communities. The guidelines used to evaluate libraries and their services are community-based, so libraries need to know their communities’ needs in order to provide appropriate library services that meet those unique needs. That’s where Community Needs Response Planning comes in!

In this workshop, Christa Porter, NLC’s Library Development Director, will guide you through Community Needs Response Planning and applying for Public Library Accreditation.

Public Library Directors, Staff, and Library Board Members are encouraged to attend.

Dates and times:

  • June 2 – 1:00-4:00pm Central / 12:00noon-3pm Mountain
  • June 4 – 9:30am-12:30pm Central / 8:30-11:30am Mountain
  • June 9 – 9:30am-12:30pm Central / 8:30-11:30am Mountain
  • June 10 – 1:00-4:00pm Central / 12:00noon-3pm Mountain
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Book Briefs: New University of Nebraska Press Books at the Nebraska Publications Clearinghouse

The Nebraska Publications Clearinghouse receives documents every month from all Nebraska state agencies, including the University of Nebraska Press (UNP).  UNP books, as well as all Nebraska state documents, are available for checkout by libraries and librarians for their patrons.

Here are the UNP books the Clearinghouse received in March and April, 2026:

Agents of Survivance: Indigenous Women Teachers in the Boarding School Era, by Anne Ruggles Gere. Series: Indigenous Education.

In Agents of Survivance Anne Ruggles Gere complicates and enriches established accounts of the Indian boarding school era and what preceded it by looking closely at the largely ignored Indigenous women teachers in these schools. Focusing on Sarah Winnemucca, S. Alice Callahan, Angel DeCora, and Ella Deloria, Gere shows how these and many other Indian women teachers subversively resisted assimilation with tribal presence, relationality, connection to land, rejection of victimhood, and maintenance of cultural traditions, art, and languages. Their vulnerable positions in schools directed by Euro-Americans necessitated that their contributions be subversive, nearly invisible. Despite this, they developed policies and practices that were passed to Indian students who in turn became teachers of the next generation of Indian students, and many of their innovations inform contemporary movements toward sovereignty for Indian education.

The Missouri River is one of the most dangerous rivers in the United States—and one of the most economically important. Even as prolonged drought in the Midwest has imperiled urban drinking water and agricultural water supplies, parched regions in the basin far from the river have proposed piping water from the Missouri to alleviate their own water shortages.

Indispensable for future research, Agents of Survivance includes two appendixes drawn from Bureau of Indian Affairs records documenting dozens of Native women teachers, as well as Native women who worked in boarding schools doing laundry, kitchen work, dormitory cleaning, and sewing.

Around the Bend: Floating Down the Missouri River, by Lisa G. Dill. Series: Bison Books.

In an attempt to better understand the river and its place in the American imagination, Lisa G. Dill set out with four of her mother’s cousins on a forty-year-old pontoon boat on a modern voyage of discovery. The hope was to sail nearly 750 river miles from Sioux City, Iowa, to St. Louis, Missouri, a goal whose success was by no means assured, given the rickety state of the family vessel. From departure—a day late, because the motor wouldn’t start—until she got off the boat, Dill bears witness to the river, its flora and fauna, the efforts to control it, and its history, along with the misadventures of a crew of “relative strangers” and the boat’s tenuous viability on one of the world’s most powerful rivers.

In Around the Bend Dill teases out the cultural and environmental history of the Missouri and urges readers to change the way they think about America’s rivers and the landscapes through which they flow.

Confronting Water Insecurity: Global Institutions and the Transformation of Water Science, Policy, and Practice, by Roberto L. Lenton.

Confronting Water Insecurity provides an account of the role of multilateral cooperation and global institutions in transforming science, policy, and practice for water security from 1945 to 2024, a period characterized by significant disparities in water security between low- and high-income countries, ever-rising water use, and growing concerns about the harms of climate change and other disturbances on the global water cycle.

Roberto L. Lenton tells how the scientific and policy response to these new challenges has become more global and integrated, and describes the role of global institutions in addressing fundamental global water issues with long-term implications for sustainability. Following the quest for water security as it transformed from an issue driven primarily by local or national interests into one of global concern, Lenton offers lessons from the successes and failures from 1945 to 2024 that will help us imagine the new approaches we need to ensure that the world can meet the next generation of water challenges. Beyond the world of water, he provides insights into how we can better address the global challenges that arise from humanity’s complex relationships with the natural world.

Northern Slave, Black Dakota: The Life and Times of Joseph Godfrey, by Walt Bachman. Series: Bison Books.

Born into slavery in free territory, Joseph Godfrey died widely reviled for his controversial role in the U.S.-Dakota War of 1862. Separated from his mother at age five when his enslaver sold her, Godfrey sought refuge in his teens among the Dakota people he had befriended as a child. Godfrey married a Dakota woman and was living with his family on the Lower Sioux Reservation in 1862, when the U.S.-Dakota War broke out. Pressured to join Dakota warriors in the war’s opening days, when the six-week conflict ended, he became the first of hundreds of men tried by a military court created by Commander Henry Sibley. Sibley, who was one of Godfrey’s former enslavers, approved death sentences for Godfrey and 302 other Dakota soldiers.

In this riveting biography, Walt Bachman untangles the thorny questions that haunt Godfrey’s story: How was he enslaved in a free state? Did he murder the frontier settlers for which the Dakota dubbed him Otakle (“Many Kills”)? Did he turn traitor to save his own life? Did Godfrey’s testimony send thirty-eight Dakota men, including his father-in-law, to the gallows? In this carefully researched book, Bachman argues that the 1862 war trials, which ended with the largest mass execution in U.S. history, were both more just and more unfair than we have ever understood.

Ravelings: Essays on Love, Loss, and Wonder, by Lisa Knopp. Series: American Lives.

In Ravelings, Lisa Knopp takes up an older, opposing meaning of the verb “ravel”—“to entangle”—as she explores the deaths and departures of loved ones and the rituals by which we mourn and honor them, while contemplating her relationships with writing, spirituality, sense of home, aging, desire, and the relationship between body and mind. Entangled in these losses and changes, Knopp experiences wonder, joy, connectivity, and wholeness.

In these nimble and companionable essays, Knopp considers hunger and fullness through ethical, disordered, and mindful eating; awakens to common magic through two chance encounters with a magician; and finds humility and empowerment as an unpartnered sixty-year-old woman in a ballroom dance class filled with young couples. Knopp comprehends her experiences with nuance, revealing time and again that the same ravel of text can encompass the blending in a single moment of the exotic and mundane, of fullness and want, of love and abhorrence, of desire and contentment, of freedom and bondage, of severance and connection, and of the creative act as both an evocation and an imposition.

Theodore Roosevelt and the Tennis Cabinet, by Michael Patrick Cullinane. Imprint: Potomac Books.

In his final days in office in 1909, Theodore Roosevelt invited dozens of friends to the White House for lunch. They had never met as a group, but they had one thing in common: Each played tennis with the president and advised on policy matters. Roosevelt half-joked that the public would never know how much these tennis partners did to make his administration a success. Journalists dismissively called them the “Tennis Cabinet,” making light of their contribution, but Roosevelt knew otherwise.

This inner circle led the administration’s campaigns against corporate greed, investigated public health violations, and formulated consumer protections. They founded environmental conservation policies, prosecuted civil rights violations, and implemented bureaucratic efficiencies that saved the government billions. Roosevelt’s tennis mates shaped the nation’s diplomacy, ending wars and promoting American interests abroad.

Never had a more eclectic group advised a U.S. president. The Tennis Cabinet included legendary frontier lawman Seth Bullock and the starched-shirt corporate lawyer Henry Stimson, who served in five presidential administrations. Texas wolf wrangler Jack Abernathy played with stuffy bureaucrats like Labor Commissioner Charles Patrick Neill and social activist James Bronson Reynolds. The French ambassador Jean Jules Jusserand spun yarns with football hero George Washington Woodruff and Roosevelt’s college friend and banker Robert Bacon. James Garfield, namesake son of a martyred president, sipped mint juleps with Supreme Court Justice William Henry Moody. And J. P. Morgan’s silver-spooned son-in-law Herbert Satterlee kept company with rugged soldier Luther “Yellowstone” Kelly.

For all their differences, these men shared a desire to help the president transform the nation from a parochial nineteenth-century republic into an imperial and industrial global power. They have escaped the attention of reporters and historians only because of Roosevelt’s towering celebrity. Turning away from Roosevelt as the singular force behind his administration, it is possible to see how the contributions of his Tennis Cabinet quietly sowed the seeds of the American Century.

**Pictures and Synopses courtesy of University of Nebraska Press.

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What’s Up Doc? New State Agency Publications at the Nebraska Library Commission

New state agency publications have been received at the Nebraska Library Commission for March and April, 2026.  Included are reports from the Nebraska Racing and Gaming Commission, Nebraska Auditor of Public Accounts, the Nebraska Investment Council, the Nebraska Department of Water, Energy, and Environment, and titles from University of Nebraska Press, to name a few.

With the exception of the University of Nebraska Press titles, items are available for immediate viewing and printing by clicking directly in the .pdf below. The University of Nebraska Press titles can be checked out by librarians for their patrons here: Online Catalog.

The Nebraska Legislature created the Nebraska Publications Clearinghouse in 1972 as a service of the Nebraska Library Commission. Its purpose is to collect, preserve, and provide access to all public information published by Nebraska state agencies.  By law (State Statutes 51-411 to 51-413) all Nebraska state agencies are required to submit their published documents to the Clearinghouse.  For more information, visit the Nebraska Publications Clearinghouse page, contact Aimee Owen, Government Information Services Librarian; or contact Bonnie Henzel, State Documents Staff Assistant.

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#BookFaceFriday – Nebraska Book Awards Submissions Open

These #BookFace‘s are all winners!

What do all of these #BookFace picks have in common? They’ve all received a Nebraska Book Award! You could join this excellent group of authors, publishers, and illustrators, but you have to submit your book for consideration. You’ll have to act fast because the deadline for entries is May 31, 2026. The Nebraska Book Awards recognize and honor books that are written by Nebraska authors and illustrators, published by Nebraska publishers, set in Nebraska, or relate to Nebraska. Books published in 2025, as indicated by the copyright date, are eligible for nomination. They must be professionally published, have an International Standard Book Number (ISBN), and be bound. Books may be entered in one or more of the following categories: Nonfiction, Fiction, Children/Young Adult, Cover/Design/Illustration, and Poetry. The entry fee is $40 per book and per category entered.

Winners of the 2026 Nebraska Book Awards will be featured at the Nebraska Celebration of Books (NCOB) Literary Festival. Held on Saturday, November 14th, from 10:00am-5:30pm, this literary event will be on the second floor of the UNL City Campus Union and Jackie Gaughan Multicultural Center in downtown Lincoln. For more information about the Nebraska Book Awards visit centerforthebook.nebraska.gov/awards/nebookawards.html .

Love this #BookFace & reading? Check out our past #BookFaceFriday photos on the Nebraska Library Commission’s Facebook page!

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Friday Reads: Walden; or, A Life in the Woods by Henry David Thoreau

Earlier this month, Dermot Kennedy (a new-to-me artist whose music I’ve been enjoying) released an album called The Weight of the Woods. I’ve had the titular song and its reprise on repeat quite a few times since then.  

If I should fall down / under stars I can’t call out / get me back to my homeground / let me add to the weight of the woods // Tether my bones tight / in view of that coastline / and bury this soul of mine / give it back to the weight of the woods.  

An ever-increasing amount of years ago, like all good English Literature students, I was assigned to read Walden; or, a Life in the Woods by Henry David Thoreau as part of my American Literature studies. Something in those pages caught to the quick of me. And it wasn’t just the cabin he built for 28 (19th century) dollars. Home ownership! Imagine! (Though he did not own the land).  

Anyways, “The Weight of the Woods” reminded me of Walden, as did the advent of spring, as did the itch of having no dirt under my fingernails. “The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation,” indeed.  

I would imagine (or would like to believe, or even hope) that nearly every educated person  recognizes the name Walden and understands, at least in broad strokes, the themes associated with it: nature, simplicity, contemplation, and living deliberately. Most ought to recognize the iconic, oft-quoted line, oft-plastered-on-outdoor-outlet-store-walls, I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived”  (Chapter 2: Where I Lived, and What I Lived For).  

Walden is, however, to my reading, more than a rote lesson. In fact, I think Thoreau himself would be remiss if his work was used as blueprint or gospel;  

I would not have any one adopt my mode of living on any account; for, beside that before he has fairly learned it I may have found out another for myself, I desire that there may be as many different person in the world as possible; but I would have each one be very careful to find out and pursue his own way, and not his father’s or his mother’s or his neighbor’s instead (Chapter 1: Economy).  

I suspect that it is not purely an interest in diversity of life and observation that guides Thoreau to this conclusion, but rather a self-preserved reflex of we surely cannot all live in the woods and crowd that space — he remarks in Chapter 6, Visitors, that “These are the folks that worry the man / That lives in the house that I built. I did not fear the hen-harriers, for I kept no chickens; but I feared the men-harriers rather.” The use of the word “worry” in this instance refers to its meaning of “irritate.” This vexation is primarily caused by the “self-styled reformers, the greatest bores of all” and not the “honest pilgrims, who came out to the woods for freedom’s sake.”  

But the cut of what Thoreau cautions against is living a life uncontemplated, of following in another’s path just because the way already-tread is always easier than the uncharted path. Life is about simplicity, not ease; though Walden argues that simplicity eases the toils required to live. Don’t go off to live in the woods because you can’t think of anything else you’d rather do – go off to live in the woods because you think that there is nothing else that you can do, no other way that you can live. It’s true that Thoreau’s Walden experience only lasted a little over two years. It’s true that he was not the first or only to live in those Walden woods. But he did it, didn’t he?  

During my first reading of Walden — more than a decade ago now — my favorite chapter was Chapter 9: The Ponds. I was struck by Thoreau’s description of the pond. How could one not fall in love with such a place? It seems perfection; it seems ideal; it seems heavenly – ah, but Thoreau chides, “Talk of heaven! ye disgrace earth.”  

During this reading, it was Chapter 7: The Bean-Field that was dearest to me. There is something worthwhile and necessary in the soil, something worthwhile and necessary in the work of one’s hands, something necessary and worthwhile in birdsong and the woodchuck and the weeds. And how true it still rings today that, “ancient poetry and mythology suggest, at least, that husbandry was once a sacred art; but it is pursued with irreverent haste and heedlessness by us, our object being to have large farms and large crops merely.” 

Anyways, let me add to the weight of the woods and the beanfield – let me add some measure of my soul back to the work that I do, deliberately, turning the good earth in my hands wherever I can. 

Thoreau, Henry David. Walden. ‎ Tantor Media Inc, 2008. Narrated by Mel Foster.  

Thoreau, Henry David. Walden: A Fluid-Text Edition. Digital Thoreau. https://digitalthoreau.org/fluid-text-toc. Accessed 2026-04-30. 

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Throwback Thursday: Burlington Depot, Fairmont, Neb.

Catch a train along with this #ThrowbackThursday!

This week’s highlight is a 5-1/4″ x 3-1/4″ black and white postcard featuring men and women stand outside the Burlington Depot waiting for the train. Railroad tracks run next to a one-story brick building. On the left side of the picture are a large pile of boxes and a wagon with milk jugs on it. Printed on the postcard is: 15, Burlington Depot, Fairmont, Neb. The Burlington Depot in Fairmont was built in 1885 and acclaimed as the best depot west of Lincoln in 1886. In 1887, the Burlington Railroad put on a fast train from Chicago to Denver, and Fairmont was selected as the only stopping point between Lincoln and Hastings. Twenty-nine trains ran through Fairmont every 24 hours.

This image is owned and published by the Fairmont Public Library. In partnership with the Fillmore County Historical Society, they’ve digitized photographs from their collections depicting the history of Fillmore County. The photographs in this collection include images of local businesses, schools, and churches, as well as the Fairmont Army Airfield, which was used during World War II.

See this collection and many more on the Nebraska Memories archive!

The Nebraska Memories archive is brought to you by the Nebraska Library Commission. If your institution is interested in participating in Nebraska Memories, see http://nlc.nebraska.gov/nebraskamemories/participation.aspx for more information.

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Rob-See-Co Announces 2026 Rural Library Grants

For more grants like this one, check out the NLC’s Grant Opportunities for Nebraska Libraries at http://nlc.nebraska.gov/grants/index.aspx

Rob-See-Co, an independent seed company located in Elkhorn, Neb. is proud to announce the continuation of its Rural Library Grant program.

Applications are due June 30, 2026.

Originally launched in 2023 to commemorate the company’s 10th anniversary and honor Agnes Robinson’s dedication to the rural library in Waterloo, NE, the program continues to hold special meaning. Agnes, great-grandmother of Jim Robinson, CEO of Rob-See-Co, was a passionate advocate for rural libraries. Today, the program extends support to libraries across rural communities within the company’s footprint.

Previous grant recipients have used funding to expand book collections, digitize local newspapers, enhance children’s programming, and develop makerspaces.

“The grant funding we received made it possible for us to create a ‘pop-up town,’ a versatile resource we’ve already planned to use in multiple ways,” said Mandy Cook, Marysville Public Library Director. “Encouraging children to engage in imaginative play is incredibly important—it supports speech, overall development, and even early literacy skills. We are truly grateful to Rob-See-Co for providing us with the opportunity to make a meaningful impact through outreach in our small town.”

In 2026, Rob-See-Co will award ten $500 grants for a total of $5,000 to selected rural libraries across CO, IA, KS, MD, MI, MN, ND, NE, OH, OK, PA, SD, TX and WI. Funds may be used for core educational, preservation and interpretive purposes, including collection development, facility improvements, traveling exhibits, guest speakers, staff training, programming, and publications.

“These grants reflect our ongoing commitment to the dealers, distributors, growers, and communities we serve, while honoring my family’s legacy and the history of Rob-See-Co,” said Robinson. “We’re proud to continue investing in rural libraries that play such an important role in our communities.”

Libraries can visit https://rsclibrarygrant.com/ to apply. Applications are due by June 30. Grant recipients will be announced on October 1, 2026.

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NCompass Live: Pretty Sweet Tech: Computers in Libraries 2026 Highlights & Trends

Highlights & Trends from Computers in Libraries 2026 will be shared on next week’s NCompass Live webinar on Wednesday, April 29 at 10am CT.

Special monthly episodes of NCompass Live! Join the NLC’s Technology Innovation Librarian, Amanda Sweet, as she guides us through the world of library-related Pretty Sweet Tech.

Computers in Libraries is the world’s leading technology and innovation conference for librarians! In this session I will cover come of the awesome ideas, tools, tips and tricks of the trade I picked up while in D.C. this year.

I hope to see you there! As a side note, if you’re looking for more emerging tech trends in the library, check out Computers in Libraries magazine.

Upcoming NCompass Live shows:

  • May 6 – The 2026 Public Library Accreditation Process
  • May 13 – Play, Explore, Learn: Building Early Literacy Through Station-Based Programs
  • May 20 – Engaging New Voices in Advocacy: Youth, Trustees, and Everyday Patrons
  • May 27 – Pretty Sweet Tech
  • June 3 – Libraries and Friends of the Library: How to Stay Friends
  • June 10 – Law for Librarians

To register for an NCompass Live show, or to listen to recordings of past shows, go to the NCompass Live webpage.

NCompass Live is broadcast live every Wednesday from 10am – 11am Central Time. Convert to your time zone on the Official U.S. Time website.

The show is presented online using the GoTo Webinar online meeting service. Before you attend a session, please see the NLC Online Sessions webpage for detailed information about GoTo Webinar, including system requirements, firewall permissions, and equipment requirements for computer speakers and microphones.

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#BookFaceFriday “Now Is the Time for Trees” by the Arbor Day Foundation’s Dan Lambe and Lorene Edwards Forkner

Branch out with this week’s #BookFaceFriday!

It’s every Nebraskan’s favorite holiday, Arbor Day! Celebrating the trees shouldn’t just be for one day out of the year. Here at the library, you can explore Arbor Day any time with a wide variety of great books! Like “Now is the Time for Trees” written by the Arbor Day Foundation’s Dan Lambe and Lorene Edwards Forkner (Timber Press, 2022). From advice on choosing the right size and type of tree to tried-and-true tips for planting success, this book will help you plant a tree today and leave your own legacy of hope. You can find this title as and eBook on Nebraska OverDrive Libraries, it has a huge collection of nonfiction, fiction, and children’s books, including biographies and autobiographies, memoirs, self-help books, study-aids and workbooks, reference titles, travel books, and so much more.

“Celebrates the power of trees to oxygenate the planet, purify water and air, lower city temperatures, provide habitat, nurture the soul, and provide essential food sources.”

— Booklist

Find this title and many more through Nebraska OverDrive! Libraries participating in the Nebraska OverDrive Libraries Group currently have access to a shared and growing collection of digital downloadable audiobooks and eBooks. 188 libraries across the state share the Nebraska OverDrive collection of 21,696 audiobooks, 35,200 eBooks, and 3,964 magazines. As an added bonus it includes 130 podcasts that are always available with simultaneous use (SU), as well as SU ebooks and audiobook titles that publishers have made available for a limited time. If you’re a part of it, let your users know about this great title, and if you’re not a member yet, find more information about participating in Nebraska Overdrive Libraries!

Love this #BookFace & reading? Check out our past #BookFaceFriday photos on the Nebraska Library Commission’s Facebook page!

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Friday Reads: Emily Wilde’s Encyclopaedia of Faeries, by Heather Fawcett

I’ve read fantasy from Tolkien to Jim Butcher. But lately I’ve been reading romantasy and cozy fantasy, and Emily Wilde’s Encyclopaedia of Faeries, isn’t either really. It combines some of the “usual tropes” in some very different ways. This curmudgeonly scholar, in an unfamiliar setting, is female. The gorgeous love interest is male, and not entirely what he seems, although totally taken with the scholar. Its set in historical time period roughly early 1900s. The Fae, low and high, are both more dangerous, exotic, earthy, than usually portrayed. Definitely with agendas that don’t remotely line up with human agendas or logic. Not to mention, the setting. Its set on an island far north of England, in winter with Scandinavian type inhabitants.

Emily Wilde researches the Fae, both the folklore, and the actual, dangerous entities. She’s a Cambridge professor of Dryodology—The Fae/Faery. She’s introverted, and by a guess, Neurodivergent, far more comfortable with reading books, interacting with her dog, Shadow, and the dangerous Fae she has met, than with human beings, no matter where she meets them. Her hair is dark, always escaping whatever confinement it is put into. She cares nothing about her clothes, as long as she is covered.

Wendell Bambleby is a colleague of hers who has gotten into some scholarly hot water in his last expedition. And is smitten with Emily. So, he follows Emily to Hrafnsvik, Ljosland, to see if he can, um, aid with her research for the encyclopedia. He is tall, gorgeous, charismatic, Dressed to perfection even in the North, every hair in place, with a faint Irish accent. He’s Emily’s friend, and her only friend, although she thinks of him as a rival.

The journal entries do help give a sense of place, not only of the village, her cottage, but the terrain, which is steep, rocky, mountainous, with wetlands. It also gives a clear insight into how her mind works, which is methodical. And it would have remained dry, and descriptive, except that she has to interact with the villagers. Not only are they human, they have a few stressing things going on, and are trying to understand her. Unfortunately, they don’t. Things get difficult for city born Emily—sheep are let into the cottage and destroy provisions while she’s out. At the same time Wendell arrives, with his two graduate students. They set about tidying up the cabin, eventually working out the difficulties with villagers. Emily and Wendell learn that children and young people have been kidnapped from the local villages very regularly, and returned mindless or dead, or not at all, by the local High Fae. They learn this may be because the former High King of Winter has been imprisoned in a tree, and his queen murdered, and his vengeful ex-wife has taken the throne.

While Emily Wilde’s Encyclopedia of Faeries is a fun read, and generated a lot of snickering, both over Emily’s asides, and the banter between Emily and Wendell. I enjoyed it, especially after having gone through several cozy fantasy books, this was worth reading twice. The Booklist review stated: “The full cast of characters, well-developed faerie lore, and pervasive sense of cold add depth to the delightful proceedings, which include scholarship, yes, but also danger and a hint of romance.”—Booklist (starred review).

Emily Wilde’s Encyclopaedia of Faeries, by Heather Fawcett, 2023, Del Rey, 9780593724729, Trade paperback. Rest of the series, Emily Wilde’s Map of the Otherlands, and Emily Wilde’s Compendium of Lost Tales.

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Throwback Thursday: Omaha Public Library

We’re celebrating #NationalLibraryWeek this #ThrowbackThursday!

With the opening of Omaha’s new Central Library earlier this week, we thought it would be fun to take a look back! This black and white lantern slide shows the Omaha Public Library in 1898, located on the southeast corner of 19th and Harney Streets. The library is a two-story stone building, with decorative stonework at the top. There are some people on the sidewalk in front of the building and some horses and carriages in the street. The library was designed by architect Thomas R. Kimball. Its construction was completed in 1894. The building was used as Omaha’s main public library until 1977.

This image is owned and published by the Omaha Public Library. The items on the Nebraska Memories archive include early Omaha-related maps dating from 1925 to 1922, as well as over 1,000 postcards and photographs of the Omaha area.

See this collection and many more on the Nebraska Memories archive!

The Nebraska Memories archive is brought to you by the Nebraska Library Commission. If your institution is interested in participating in Nebraska Memories, see http://nlc.nebraska.gov/nebraskamemories/participation.aspx for more information.

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Book Club Spotlight – Song of the Trees

Cover for Song of the Trees by Mildred D. Taylor, illustrated by Jerry Pinkney. A young Black girl in overalls, stands with her back against a tree, peeking out at two young boys who are searching for her.

We are celebrating both Earth Day and Arbor Day this week! It’s a time to encourage stewardship of the land as we look forward to a future of a cleaner, healthier Earth. Arbor Day, a Nebraska-born holiday, specifically celebrates the partnership and history we share with our arboreal comrades that goes back beyond human memory. For today’s Book Club Spotlight, we will be exploring our connection with trees and nature through Mildred D. Taylor’s first book, The Song of the Trees. This novella features illustrations by the legendary Jerry Pinkney, winner of the Boston Globe-Horn Book Award and five Coretta Scott King Awards for illustration. Both Taylor and Pinkney have also  received the Coretta Scott-King-Virginia Hamilton award, which is named after a recent Book Club Spotlight Alumnus. Together, they brought Taylor’s family’s stories to life with both beautiful language and artwork.

Cassie Logan and her brothers race through forest. Their laughter and jokes fill the air, high up into the lush canopies above as their house fades into the distance of the early morning light. Cassie pauses, the cool earth beneath her feet… something is wrong. The trees, always stoic but welcoming, are quiet, as if they are frightened. That’s when she hears them. There are lumbermen in the forest- their forest! With her father away for work, only her mother, her grandmother, and siblings are left to stand against Mr. Anderson and his lumbermen forcing their way onto Big Ma’s land. The Logans must stand up for themselves and what is theirs, even if it frightens them.

“Around shaggy-bark hickories and sharp-needled pines, past blue-gray beeches and sturdy black walnuts I sailed while my laughter resounded through the ancient forest, filling every chink.

– Mildred D. Taylor

While it was the first published, The Song of the Trees is chronologically the third book in the “Logan Family” series, followed by her Newbery Medal Award winning novel Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry. This novella can be used as a teaching tool and a stepping stone to introduce readers to the Logan family, their love for their land, family pride, and the time period the series takes place in. Based on her family stories about growing up African American in the deep south, Taylor’s writing is accessible for ages 9 and up. The novellas short pages are filled with beautiful prose and insight that will brighten your heart and leave you wanting more.  While her characters face obstacles, the story reaffirms the necessity to have pride in oneself, in your dignity, and to stand up for what’s right, even when it’s hard. 

“Throughout my childhood he [my father] impressed upon my sister and me that we were somebody, that we were important and could do anything we set our minds to do or be. He was not the kind of father who demanded A’s on report cards. He was more concerned about how we carried ourselves, how we respected ourselves and others, and how we pursued the principles upon which he hoped we would build our lives. He was constantly reminding us that how we saw ourselves was far more important than how others saw us” 

– Mildred T. Taylor’s Newbery Award Acceptance Speech (1977)

If you’re interested in requesting Song of the Trees for your book club, you can find the Request Form here. There are 15 copies. (A librarian must request items)

Taylor, Mildred D. Song of the Trees. Dial Press. 1975.

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