Monthly Archives: July 2015


Minecraft Mania

minecraft_logoIf you’ve come into the Tech Room lately, you’ve probably noticed the handful of kids playing a computer game with mediocre graphics and no clear objective. The game is called Minecraft, and you may have friends and family who are completely obsessed with the game. I first heard of Minecraft a couple of years ago when a few kids I know started showing off castles and mines they had constructed in the game. They showed me something new they had done in their game worlds literally every time we saw each other. Two years later, and they’re still going strong.

So what’s the big deal? As I mentioned, the graphics are nothing amazing. There isn’t really a clear objective or end-goal to the game (although slaying the Ender-Dragon can provide a sort of “end” to those players who’d like one). The game only costs about $30, and after that every upgrade is free. And yet, I’ve encountered individuals with seemingly nothing else in common who love Minecraft and can spend hours talking about their recent escapades in the game. In an effort to understand, I read articles and blog posts galore. Finally, I decided to just start playing the game demo. And I’m completely hooked.

Minecraft isn’t like any other game I’ve ever played. It requires a different kind of thinking, as you do everything from collect resources to create huge structures (a scale model of the U.S.S. Enterprise, anyone?) to planning your farm layout so you have a steady food supply. It’s not really violent, and it certainly isn’t graphically so. It can be played by a single player in a different world each time, or in the same world, or on a multiplayer server–the options are really endless. Teachers can use the game to teach different concepts or connect with students if school has to be canceled, and players typically have no problem focusing on their own, self-created objectives for long periods of time. steve_minecraft

For parents, siblings, and others who don’t play but live or work with someone who does, the obsession with Minecraft can be baffling and even concerning. Fortunately, we have a couple of tech programs coming up for players and non-players alike:

First up is a special after-hours Minecraft playing party for kids ages 8-18. This program will run from 5:30 to 7:30 on Saturday, July 25, and pizza and pop will be provided! Parental permission is required to confirm program registration.

Just a few days later, we’ll be hosting Minecraft for Parents. This tech class will be Tuesday, July 28 from 6:30 to 7:30, and will include information about the game, including essentials for safe game play. Just curious about the game? In spite of its title, you need not be a parent to take this class! Call 330-343-6123 for more information and to register.

-Kathryn Green, Technology Manager


Growing up with Mia

Meg Cabot's Royal WeddingIn 2001, I saw The Princess Diaries in the theater with my best friend and my mom. It was awesome! I left the theater really wanting a scooter…  Being the total geek that I am, I wasted no time in purchasing the book by Meg Cabot. (I probably even bought it the same day we saw the movie) To say I enjoyed the book would be an understatement. I loved it. I had to keep reading. I bought every Princess Diaries book that came out through my high school graduation. The rest I checked out from the library, because I was a broke college student, after all. And that’s what libraries are for.

The Princess Diaries  follows Mia through her high school career. She writes down anything that comes into her head and everything that happens to her. Frequently, she writes in bathrooms. She writes about Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Princess Leia, Lifetime movies and her fellow royals. And, of course, she writes about her crushes, her friends, and her enemies. These are her diaries, after all, and in a diary, you don’t have a filter.

In college, I learned about “stream of consciousness” while reading The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner, and since then it’s how I describe The Princess Diaries. It’s GOOD stream of consciousness. It still makes sense, but you learn how Mia thinks. And she thinks like a teenager. Worrying about homework, worrying about her mom dating her algebra teacher, worrying about her best friend’s brother and how good his neck smells.

It’s hilarious and unique. Just like Meg Cabot, who I got to meet in person three years ago.

Last month, I was elated to find a new Princess Diaries book, this time written for adults. Liz and Meg Cabot

Now, Mia’s all grown up. Recent drama has brought her back to writing in her diary to relieve stress. She writes the same way she always has: no filter, lots of pop culture references, a laugh on every page. Her friends and enemies from previous books are back, Grandmere is still around with her crazy dog and tattooed-on eyeliner, and readers will not be disappointed to find out who Mia is marrying.

Reading Royal Wedding was like catching up with an old friend I haven’t spoken to in a while. I had no idea how much I missed her, and even though I can’t find anything about a Volume 12, I’ll still cross my fingers that this still isn’t the last I’ll hear from my friend Mia.

– Liz Strauss, Teen Librarian

PS: Meg Cabot can write anything, and pretty much has. Aside from The Princess Diaries, she’s written a mystery series (Size 12 is Not Fat), several adult books including a paranormal romance (Insatiable) and even has a few children’s series (Allie Finkle’s Rules for Girls). A new middle-grade spin-off of The Princess Diaries also began this year with From the Notebooks of a Middle-School Princess. Check out the Meg Cabot books available at the library!


After the Storm Launch Party with Linda Castillo

Linda CastilloAfter the Storm Launch Party

with Linda Castillo

Tuesday, July 14 at 6:30 PM

Join us for an evening with our friend, New York Times Bestselling author Linda Castillo, as she discusses her writing life and launches the latest novel in her Kate Burkholder series, After the Storm.

When a tornado tears through Painters Mill and unearths human remains, Chief of Police Kate Burkholder finds herself tasked with the responsibility of identifying the bones and notifying the family. Evidence quickly emerges that the death was no accident, and Kate finds herself plunged into a thirty-year-old case that takes her deep into the Amish community to which she once belonged. After the Storm

Linda Castillo knew from an early age that she wanted to be a writer—and penned her first novel at the age of thirteen.  She’s published thirty books for three New York publishing houses and won numerous industry awards, including a nomination by the International Thriller Writers for Best Hardcover, the Golden Heart, the Daphne du Maurier Award of Excellence, and a nomination for the prestigious Rita.

A book signing will follow this free event. Call the library at 330-343-6123 to register or for more information.

Books in the Kate Burkholder Series: Sworn to Silence, Pray for Silence, Breaking Silence, Gone Missing, Long Lost (Kindle only), Her Last Breath, The Dead Will Tell, and After the Storm.

Linda’s books at Dover Public Library