Craters of the Moon: Celebrate the Centennial

The Community Library

Join us for a journey into Craters of the Moon National Monument’s history. Explore its geological formation with Josh Johnson, Idaho Conservation League’s Central Idaho Director, before hearing from Ted Stout, who served as Chief of Interpretation and Education at Craters of the Moon for 17 years. With Ted, we will explore the last 100+ years of human interaction with the volcanic landscape. Don’t miss this chance to celebrate a century of discovery in this iconic, enigmatic Idahoan landscape! Presented in partnership with the Idaho Conservation League.

Free

Sun Valley Early Literacy Learning Summit

The Community Library

June 12-14, 2024, The Community Library invites Kindergarten through Grade 3 educators – who open the world of words to children – from around southern Idaho to come to Ketchum/Sun Valley for three days of lively conversation and learning with preeminent literacy scholars and colleagues. We’ll dig into reading research and discuss: how reading happens in the brain, the components of structured literacy, the impact of phonemic awareness on literacy, the principles of spelling, informed teaching strategies for multilingual language learners, informed teaching strategies for students with dyslexia, social-emotional learning, and more. There is no cost for the Early Literacy Summit. An honorarium of $200 will be provided to teachers based in Blaine County, and $500 will be provided to instructors traveling from outside of Blaine County, to help cover travel and associated expenses. Breakfast, lunch, and snacks will be provided each day. Continuing education credit will be provided through Northwest Nazarene University. Registration is limited to approximately 36 instructors. The application period opens on February 1 and closes on March 1, 2024. For more information, contact Jenny Emery Davidson, executive director at The Community Library: jdavidson@comlib.org.

Free

Wood River Writers’ Critique Group

The Community Library

Work with a community of writers on the third Saturday of each month through critiques and craft discussions. Connect to other writers from the Wood River Valley and beyond! Read and critique pages from each participant and learn new aspects of the writing craft. All writing abilities and ages welcome! Join us in the library’s Idaho Room, or online via Zoom. Visit www.comlib.org for the Zoom link. Have no more than 500 words ready for critique. Instructions for the critiques will be provided on the day of. The Wood River Writers’ Groups are led by AJ Super, a local author with a trilogy of science fiction books published by a small traditional press. She is also a Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers’ Association (SFWA) member.

Free

“The Crick” with Jim Mangan and Judith Freeman

The Community Library

American photographer Jim Mangan began The Crick as a photographic survey of the unorthodox architecture of Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (FLDS) houses in the Utah-Arizona border town of Short Creek. He soon found that the bigger story lay in a group of teenage boys navigating their disintegrating community, fractured after leader Warren Jeffs was imprisoned in 2011. These subjects were children at the time of the fallout, who remained with their families in Short Creek as others elected to leave the town altogether. The Crick is a meditation on religious succession, patriarchal systems, zealotry and fraternity in the life built by these young men. Mangan’s pictures transport the reader into an alternate reality of the boys’ making: where they explore the rugged terrain of southern Utah, northern Arizona and southern Nevada on horseback, emulating old-time explorers of the Western frontier. His “ecological and sociological approach” to this series, spanning five years, depicts the playfulness of youth against the capricious landscape of the American West. In both their real and imaginary worlds, these subjects have gained a knowledge of and closeness to nature that has largely been lost in the conventions of modern life. Join us for ...

Free

Reading and Conversation with Brittany Perham and Peter Kline

The Community Library

Join us for an evening with Brittany Perham and Peter Kline, Writers-In-Residence with The Community Library at the historic Ernest and Mary Hemingway House. Brittany and Peter will share selected readings, engage in a conversation about their work, and take questions from the audience. Peter Kline is the author of two poetry collections, Mirrorforms (Parlor Press) and Deviants (SFASU Press). A former Wallace Stegner Fellow at Stanford University, he has also received residency fellowships from the Amy Clampitt House and James Merrill House, and he was has won the Morton Marr Prize from Southwest Review, the River Styx International Poetry Prize, and The Columbia Review Poetry Prize. His poems have appeared in Ploughshares, Poetry, Tin House, and many other journals, as well as the Best New Poets series, the Verse Daily website, the Random House anthology of metrical poetry, Measure for Measure, and the Persea anthology of self-portrait poems, More Truly and More Strange. Since 2012 he has directed the San Francisco literary reading series Bazaar Writers Salon. He teaches writing at the University of San Francisco and Stanford University, and can be found online at www.peterklinepoetry.com. Brittany Perham is the author of Double Portrait (W.W. Norton), which received the ...

Free

A Preview of the Sacajawea Opera

The Community Library

Join us for a conversation about Nu Nah-Hup: Sacajawea's Story, a new opera that reimagines the story of Sacajawea from her Indigenous perspective based upon the oral history and language of her familial descendants. Nu Nah-Hup: Sacajawea's Story is a historical epic infused with Native American language, oral history, music, culture, drawing upon verismo, bel canto, and American folk traditions. This conversation between Roseann Abrahamson, Hovia Edwards, and Justin Ralls will explore the origins of this production, preview the music and scenes, and examine the importance of language and oral history.  This event is supported by the Idaho Humanities Council's Gem State Grant.  Registration is required for the in-person event, this program will be livestreamed. Panelists include: - Rose Ann Abrahamson: Abrahamson is a recognized authority of the Agai’dika /Lemhi-Shoshone Cultural History and Language and is a great, great grandniece of Sacajawea. - Hovia Edwards: Edwards, of Shoshone-Navajo-Okanogan heritage is a flutist, composer, and cultural leader. - Justin Ralls, PhD: Ralls is an award-winning composer and conductor working in opera, film, concert, and multimedia.

Free

Saving Lives in Sub-Saharan Africa through Water Innovation

The Community Library

Join us for a conversation with Nigerian hydrologist and climate activist Ichor Joshua Keghnen, who at age 12 contracted typhoid fever, a water borne disease that nearly killed him and ultimately shaped the trajectory of his life. Learn about his quest to improve water access and quality for underserved communities in sub-Saharan Africa. At just 23 years of age, Joshua has been recognized with international awards and fellowships. He’s presented his water innovations at the United Nations Headquarters in New York, was chosen as one of 25 finalists for the first cohort of the Young Climate Prize in 2023, is a Because Accelerator alumni, a Swarovski Foundation Creative, a 776 Climate Fellow, and a scholar of the British Council. Joshua is committed to driving positive change at the nexus of water, climate, and technology. With a background in earth sciences, he has developed innovative technologies that are revolutionizing water infrastructure and management. His Geotek technology monitors water quality and checks for needed maintenance of wells in rural areas of Nigeria. With hardware sensors installed at water sources, the system can provide needed alerts when there is a mechanical fault, allowing for quick intervention to prevent water contamination and other health ...

SINK / RISE: A Conversation with Photographer Nick Brandt

The Community Library

Join The Community Library for a conversation with photographer Nick Brandt and local gallery owner L'Anne Gilman as they discuss Brandt's latest photographic series SINK / RISE. SINK / RISE is the third chapter of "The Day May Break," Brandt’s ongoing global series portraying those impacted by environmental destruction and climate change. This chapter focuses on South Pacific Islanders impacted by rising oceans from climate change. Photographed in-camera underwater in the ocean off the coast of the Fijian islands, the local people in these images are representatives of the many people whose homes, land and livelihoods will be lost in the coming decades as the water rises. "Although they are several meters below the surface, the subjects of Nick Brandt’s mesmerizing photographs do not float or swim. Incredibly, they sit on sofas, stand on chairs, use seesaws, and pose in ways they might on land. The effect is otherworldly, as though the familiar laws of physics have stalled in this strange, liminal zone between land and sea. Sit with these photographs and the others in the series, and the subject’s expressions will change like water. Stoicism becomes resignation. Frustration becomes resolve. In their pensive faces, we can read tenderness, grief, ...

Free

Panel and Discussion with Fred Hutch Leaders

The Community Library

We’re in an era of both amazing scientific breakthroughs and immense health care challenges and opportunities. Join us for a conversation about the newest advances in cancer research and care — and what’s on the horizon — with three leaders from Fred Hutch Cancer Center in Seattle who are making those leaps possible. Learn how discoveries are being transformed into ever-more personalized and effective cancer care as part of Fred Hutch’s pursuit of healthier lives for every person in every community. Come curious — there will be plenty of time for Q&A. Panelists will include Thomas J. Lynch Jr., MD, President and Director and Raisbeck Endowed Chair; Bruce Clurman, MD, PhD, Executive Vice President, Chief Scientific Officer and Deputy Director, and Rosput Reynolds Endowed Chair; and Sara Hurvitz, MD, Senior Vice President and Director of the Clinical Research Division.

Free

Hermoine: The Freedom Frigate

The Community Library

Marc Onetto will share the history of the 18th century French ship that brought Lafayette to America and aided in the fight for independence against the British. He'll also discuss the 2005 replica of the ship and current efforts to repair it and continue the Hermoine legacy in preparation for the 250th anniversary of U.S. independence in 2026. Visit www.comlib.org to learn more and register to attend.

Free

Preserving Family Recipes with Cynthia Nims

The Community Library

Preserving cherished recipes from family and friends is a meaningful way to keep traditions alive and to ensure associated memories remain vibrant. Join Seattle-based author Cynthia Nims for a writing workshop focused on the value of these most beloved recipes. Cynthia has been writing recipes for cookbooks and magazines for many years. Inspiration for those recipes comes from countless sources, among them are recipes that had a beginning in her mom’s kitchen. She’ll talk about the treasure that she considers her mother’s falling-apart recipe folder to be. And she’ll share examples of how recipes that may seem a bit dated can find a place in your kitchen today. Bring along a cherished family recipe or two, if you like. There will be time for an informal exercise to help capture the stories of these recipes. In partnership with the Sun Valley Culinary Institute. Register at www.comlib.org to attend.

Free

Hemingway Distinguished Lecture: JOY HARJO

The Community Library

The annual Hemingway Distinguished Lecture is presented each July by The Community Library, honoring the month of Ernest Hemingway’s birth and death. The event celebrates the power of words and the creative spirit in a landscape that Hemingway loved. This year, The Community Library welcomes JOY HARJO, who in 2019 was appointed the 23rd United States Poet Laureate: the first Native American to hold the position and only the second person to serve three terms in the role. Harjo’s ten books of poetry include Weaving Sundown in a Scarlett Light, An American Sunrise, Conflict Resolution for Holy Beings, How We Became Human: New and Selected Poems, and She Had Some Horses. She is also the author of two memoirs, Crazy Brave and Poet Warrior, which invites us to travel along the heartaches, losses, and humble realizations of her “poet-warrior” road. She has edited several anthologies of Native American writing including When the Light of the World was Subdued, Our Songs Came Through — A Norton Anthology of Native Nations Poetry, and Living Nations, Living Words, the companion anthology to her signature poet laureate project. Her many writing awards include the 2022 Ivan Sandrof Lifetime Achievement Award, the 2019 Jackson Prize from Poets ...

Free

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