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Volume 6, Issue 12 | December 2019
Arts & Crafts Exhibit & Sale in the Miller Library
Decem
ber 5-27 features local artisans

Dorothy Crandell stone bead necklaces in red and blackFind unique handmade gifts while supporting the Miller Library! We’ll have a selection of locally made arts and crafts available for purchase at the Miller Library beginning December 5.

Kathleen Atkins' knitwear and artist books
Jenny Craig's clever letterpress paper goods
Dorothy Crandell's natural stone bead necklaces (shown here)
Molly Hashimoto's prints, cards and watercolors

Join us for a reception on Friday, December 6, from 5 to 7 pm. The exhibit and sale start that evening and continue through Friday, December 27, during Library open hours.

Cash or check only, please. Some artists will be able to accept credit cards during the December 6 reception. 25% of proceeds benefit the Library. 
Emily Dickinson's Gardening Life by Marta McDowell
Reviewed by Priscilla Grundy

Whether or not you are a fan of Emily Dickinson’s poetry, you will find much to enjoy in this book. McDowell gives context to a number of the garden-themed poems. But she also gives a wonderful portrait of a nineteenth century woman’s relationship with her garden.

Every aspect of Emily Dickinson’s Gardening Life deserves praise. From sturdy paper quality to admirably painstaking research, with much in between, the book is a delight. 

In this revision of her 2005 book Emily Dickinson’s Gardens: A Celebration of a Poet and Gardener McDowell has organized the main body of the text around the seasons. Thus the opening section, “Early Spring,” includes background on the town of Amherst and the Dickinson family, plus description of early spring in Dickinson’s garden, with color plates and a page describing some spring bulbs. The well-written text is spare but sufficient on the poet’s life while lavish on her garden and her connections to it.

McDowell has mined multiple sources to get her telling details, such as noting in a thank-you letter to a friend who had sent Dickinson bulbs that she had “long been a Lunatic for bulbs.” Throughout, poems are included to expand a point and give context.

The color plates are by three contemporaries of Dickinson. One, Ora White Hitchcock, was a friend of the family, and another, Clarissa Munger Badger, published a folio of prints that Dickinson owned. McDowell includes, among many other photos, one showing the cover of the 1881 Bliss seed catalog, and the text quotes a Dickinson letter from January of that year that describes her sister Vinnie as “in Bliss catalog, prospecting for summer.”

After the final season section, “Winter: Requiem for a Gardener,” including Dickinson’s death, a last section, “A Poet’s Garden,” contains a marvelous 26-page list of plants: those in the garden, mentioned by Dickinson, or known to be local from other sources, plus notes describing the plant and/or noting how Dickinson used it in print or in the garden.

McDowell writes with clarity and elegance. I came away with a much broader sense of Dickinson’s life, seeing her as much more than a hermit who wrote great poems. Rather she was someone who lived a surprisingly varied life, enriched through her love for and labor with gardens. Don’t miss this book.
Youth Collection continues to grow under new name
Youth Collection displayOur carefully curated selection of books for young readers has a new name: the Youth Collection. Formerly called the Children's Collection, this treasure trove of resources for people from birth through age 18 will now be carrying the more inclusive Youth designation, letting everyone know that this collection is also for independent readers, including preteens, teens and young adults. Books for read-aloud listeners and beginning readers are marked with red dots. More advanced readers can find books color-coded blue (age 6 and up) and black (age 13 and up).

Our monthly Story Time for families, library programs for school groups, and book-sharing outreach at the Arboretum through UW Botanic Gardens Youth & Family programs will all continue.

Information Specialist Laura Blumhagen is eager to hear your ideas for maintaining and improving this beloved part of the library. Visit the Youth Collection and let us know what you think!
support the library
Thanks to community support, the Miller Library offers the best in horticultural reference assistance and the latest publications on plants and gardens in a welcoming library full of light and art. We appreciate your generosity!
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