Museums and Libraries
When
museums and libraries collaborate, new viewpoints come to light. Our
city has been graced with a new museum: Museo Alameda del Smithsonian
(MAS), a new centerpiece for Latino culture and art. With 20,000 square
feet of exhibition space, the Museo Alameda is now the largest Latino
museum in the country. Several library staff volunteered during the
grand opening weekend, which included a luminaria procession and
mariachi music. Cynthia de León of the Central Reference staff had this
to say about the MAS opening: “I saw a giant Claes Oldenburg-type box of
yellow Q&Q vermicelli fideo. This made me yelp with laughter since
this type of vermicelli is used to make fideo, a pasta dish with onion,
pepper, ground beef, tomatoes and spices, that for me and many San
Antonians is the ultimate comfort food.” Even the architecture is a
“dish”: the upper part of the wall beside the entrance is peppered with molcajetes, a type of mortar and pestle often seen in Mexican kitchens.
For more on MAS, its mission and upcoming exhibits, check out
http://www.thealameda.org/
Due to the joint efforts of the Southwest School of Art & Craft, the San
Antonio Museum of Art, the San Antonio Public Library Foundation and
public television station KLRN-TV, the works of artist Fernando Botero
are coming to our city. Botero is a Colombian artist who is best known
for his exaggerated human and animal figures. His work is often
whimsical, and sometimes satirical and political in nature. Our library
collection has many books on Botero's paintings, sculptures and
drawings. More information about related exhibits and city-wide events
can be found at:
http://www.boterosa.org/
Central Library is fortunate to have a permanent gallery, where works
from notable artists are on exhibit. Past exhibits have included the
artwork of actor Sir Anthony Hopkins and local art from Say Sí and
Artpace. The Central Library even has permanent sculptures by internationally
known
artists, such as Dale Chihuly, Jesse Treviño and Sebastián. More information can be found
on the
library's website under “Exhibits.”
A yearly exhibit of staff artwork, called “Just for the Art of It,”
honors the many artists who work among the shelves. Art is abundant in
San Antonio, and the library is happy to color your paintbrush.
Whether you're learning to paint or trying to figure out how surreal
life can get, explore our art collection at the library.
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Downloadable Audiobooks
Are Here
As
library patrons spend increasing amounts of time on the Internet, it’s
vitally important that library resources are also there for them to
find. To that end, the San Antonio Public Library now offers
downloadable audiobooks for play in your PC or supported portable media
player.
In the collection of
almost 1,600 titles, to which more are added monthly, you’ll find:
- The Pimsleur
language series. Language courses offered are the usual suspects –
French, Italian, Chinese, etc. – to the more off-the-beaten-path
variety, such as
Ghanaian Twi and
Ojibwe.
English language courses for non-native speakers are also available.
- The Modern Scholar
series. If you’re interested in lectures by the nation’s top
academics, this series will introduce you to a broad range of
college course topics at an easily understood level.
- Your favorite
fiction. Classics are well represented, from such authors as Herman
Melville, Charles Dickens and Jane Austen, as are contemporary
mysteries, romance and science fiction.
- A wide array of
nonfiction titles. Subjects covered include business, self-help,
biographies and much more.
When you find a book
you’re interested in, you can view its details and hear audio samples,
but you’ll need an account to download the entire book. Visit our
website for
instructions for setting up a NetLibrary account.
Once they're
downloaded, NetLibrary’s audiobooks are playable for three weeks and can
be renewed once. There’s nothing to return once you’re finished
listening, so there’s no need to worry about fines. Just delete the
audiobook file. Because of the digital rights management used for these
files, they are not playable on Apple’s iPod players. Check out
NetLibrary’s
FAQs for information on supported media players and any other
questions you may have about the audiobooks.
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Books in
the Wild
Like
many library users, you are probably also a book buyer. Do
you have books you’ve read (sometimes even several times)
sitting at home on your shelves collecting dust? Does the
idea of sharing your books with the community and then
tracking their travels sound interesting? If so, then you
can help participate in making the whole world a library.
BookCrossing
proposes that once you've read a book, you register it at their
website (you can include comments and reviews), label it and then set it free. That’s right. Leave it. Place
your labeled book on a park bench, in a café, a hotel lobby
or on a bus, wherever it is sure to be found. Whoever picks
up the book will be instructed to visit the website and
enter in the unique book number to see who left it and
his/her
comments. The lucky book finder will then be encouraged to
read the book, post a comment and then leave it for someone
else to find.
BookCrossing
also provides book reviews, discussion groups and is an
interesting study in fate, karma and serendipity. San
Antonio BookCrossing members have also listed on the website
locations where they have left registered books, so you can
go hunting for a book that was left in the wild.
It is free to
join, so next time you buy a book, after you read it, set it
free!
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FEATURED
Event |
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Get Ready to Dance!

Join us in May as the San Antonio Public Library
joins the San Antonio Dance Umbrella
for a month-long celebration of dance.
Sat. May 12 · 2:00 p.m.
Pan American Library
San Antonio Tangueros
Tues. May 15 · 6:30 p.m.
Memorial Library
San Antonio Tangueros
Sat. May 19 · 11:00 a.m.
Westfall Library
Shandon School of Irish Dance
Sat. May 19 · 1:00 p.m.
McCreless Library
Karavan Dance Studios
Middle Eastern Dance
Sun. May 20 · 2:00 p.m.
Semmes Library
Kathy Marfin Dance School
Hip-Hop, Swing, Modern
Sat. May 26 · 2:00 p.m.
Semmes Library
Fire on the Mountain Cloggers
Sat. May 26 · 2:00 p.m.
Thousand Oaks Library
Hula Halau Ohana Elikapeka
Hawaiian Dance
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We urge you to call your library before heading out for a special
program. Although we verify all information, cancellations do
occasionally occur. |
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