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Express Library Fayetteville St. |
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336 Fayetteville St Raleigh, NC 27601
(inside the Wake County Office Building)
Monday - Friday 8:30am - 5:30pm Saturday & Sunday Closed
LIBRARY STAFF: Katie Knight Eric Smith Christie Starnes
(919) 856-6868 |
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| Did You Know About...
Meeting your patrons' pleasure reading needs is of critical importance. But it could take a lifetime of experience and study to become familiar with all of the genres, authors and subjects your library has to offer, not to mention appeal factors such as pacing, characterization, frame and story line. Fortunately, NoveList® Plus is here to help libraries and their patrons find that next great read. With well over 200,000 fiction and readable nonfiction titles included, plus feature content including lists of award-winning books, Book Discussion Guides, BookTalks, Recommended Reads and more, NoveList Plus is a complete readers' resource. |
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| Senior Events |
Reading Allowed Storytime for adults Katie reads short stories, essays and book chapters out loud!
For more information: Katie Knight (856-6865)
2:00 - 3:00 p.m.
Electronic Information Center, Downtown Raleigh Library
Sir Walter Book Club
Every third Tuesday @ 3:00 p.m.
This book club is for residents of the Sir Walter Apartments.
Please call the library for more information!
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Participate in a library event or program at one of our branches!
Select a branch
for events HERE!
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| New Book Arrivals |
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FICTION
NON-FICTION
Click on titles to request these new books from our online catalog
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 A Quick Read August 2009
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Greetings!
Our library now has a new name! We will now be recognized as Express Library Fayetteville St. We are the first Express Library in the Wake County Public Library system.
Also, Wake County Public Libraries is preparing new bookmarks and brochures to reflect our new operating hours. Take a look below to get a better idea of where our libraries are located.
Regional Libraries:
Community Branches:
Speciality:
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The Centennial Hall of Fame
Exhibit on Display in the Express Library Fayetteville St.
July - August 2009
If you have not had the chance to stop by and check out The Centenial exhibit, you still have time!
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Once Upon a Thursday...

Join Katie for story time! Every third Thursday @
Marbles Kids Museum
201 East Hargett Street
FREE passes only available at the Express Library Fayetteville St., so stop by or call today! |
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COFFEE SHOP BOOK CLUBS
Classics Book Club Every Third Tuesday at Morning Times
Tuesday, August 18 @ 7:00 PM
Light in August by William Faulkner
Magill Book Review: Each of these characters has embarked on a quest. Lena seeks the father of her soon-to-be-born child; Joe Christmas seeks his identity; Hightower attempts to escape the past. Lena's trusting nature allows her to become a part of the community, and she finds a worthy husband. Joe Christmas rejects both the black world and the white and can find peace only in death. Hightower, too, fails to free himself from the burden of the past, though he delivers Lena's baby and makes a gallant but unsuccessful effort to save Joe Christmas.The lives of these three characters reveal a number of themes. Joe Christmas has been reared in a sterile, Calvinistic environment that Faulkner contrasts with the fertility and naturalness of Lena Grove. In part, Joe Christmas' plight results from his uncertainty of his racial identity, a matter of importance, Faulkner indicates, only in a racist society.Hightower provides a warning against another aspect of the South: its worship of a dead past that bars it from facing the present. Hightower is so caught up in the Civil War exploits of his grandfather that he cannot attend to the needs of his wife or his congregation.Like Christmas and Hightower, Lena is an outsider, but she is not fundamentally alienated from the natural order. Hence, only she succeeds in her quest. Interweaving the tragedies of Joe Christmas and Gail Hightower with the comedy of Lena Grove, LIGHT IN AUGUST reveals the complexity of life. It also shows that compassion, community, and a love of the natural rhythms of life are essential if mankind is to endure and prevail. |
Downtown Raleigh Readers Every Fourth Monday at Morning Times
Monday, August 24 @ 7:00 PM Moon Tiger by Penelope Lively
Kirkus Review: Winner of the 1987 Booker Prize in England, this novel has at its center historian and journalist Claudia Hampton, a woman who lies in a hospital bed dying of old age but who uses the immobility to stratify, like an outcropping, all the layers of her life. In many of her fine works, Lively has written about history, its jokes and permutations, with the consistent knack of keeping personal scale while destiny goes blithely on--and Claudia is a good vehicle for this. Her incestuous relationship with brilliant brother Gordon, her marriage to shallow businessman Jasper, the mothering of her daughter (ambivalent at best), the great central affair of her life (with a British tank commander in North Africa during WW II)--they all illustrate the relative insignificance yet enormous pleasure of living consciously within time. Yet this isn't Lively's best work. Though rich and varied, it's a little too much the tone poem, too much the elegiac, rueful, amused retrospective. Claudia in the hospital is a flashback machine (multiplied by small additional flashbacks that narrate an incident in the voices and heads of its participants). A certain innocence born of forward-facing narrative (what'll happen next?) is thus lost to the reader; the book is frozen motionless by the snows of yesteryear. Textured and artful, but a touch too portentous also. |
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