Idaho Commission for Libraries
Address: 325 W State St., Boise, ID 83702Phone: (208) 334-2150 | In-State Toll Free: (800) 458-3271
Printed from the Idaho Commission for Libraries website: http://libraries.idaho.gov
Let's Talk About It
American Characters Publicity Materials
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- Continue Reading
Not for Children Only Publicity Materials
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Autobiographies
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Autobiographies
Theme information
This theme was adapted from several theme created for Let's Talk About It programs, including: "Women's Autobiography," developed by the American Library Association;
Books in this series include:
Maya Angelou I Know Why a Caged Bird Sings
Benjamin Franklin Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin
Growing Older, Growing Wiser
Insert your own information into the bookmark and flier. You'll need to have your program dates and times and titles and authors (along with two to three lines of descriptive text for each one) ready to cut and paste into the existing word text boxes. You'll also find clip art designed for this series.
Our Earth, Our Ethics
In the 21st century, we are challenged by momentous environmental issues. Serious interest not only in the natural environment, but also in our proper relationship to it, has long antedated our present anxiety over greenhouse gas emissions, the hole in the ozone layer, and global warming. We may find ourselves dismayed as much as we are enlightened by what we read here.
We Are What We Eat
Food is one of human beings’ favorite obsessions. Most people spend a great deal of time physically and mentally preoccupied with food: we organize and prepare meals, we daydream about what’s for lunch or dinner; we eat. Beyond simply an enjoyable, necessary human pastime, though, eating has important implications for how we think of ourselves, and how we relate to the larger culture.
Living in the Modern Rural West
The contemporary western writers featured in this theme have a variety of perspectives on rural life in the modern West. Ranging in location across the northern rural West from Washington, to various regions of Idaho (the largest cluster), to Montana, their books present a realistic portrait of the West, admitting to difficulties and divisions and misery, both personal and familial.
Across Continents and Cultures
The term "global village" appears to have been coined by Wyndham Lewis in his book America and Cosmic Man in 1948. As intelligent and concerned citizens of Western nations, we are increasingly being called upon to expand our cultural horizons.


