One-on-one Technology Assistance
Come visit our technology intern, Chelsea Mondays and Tuesdays 11:30am-2:30pm for all your
technology questions!
Come visit our technology intern, Chelsea Mondays and Tuesdays 11:30am-2:30pm for all your
technology questions!
On June 1, we are moving to new summer hours. The biggest change is that we will open at 10 AM daily.
Monday & Wednesday, 10 AM to 9 PM; Tuesday, Thursday and Friday 10 AM to 5:30 PM; Saturday 10 AM to 5 PM. Closed Sunday.
The Rutland Historical Society and the library have partnered to make selected years of the Rutland High School Yearbook from 1930-1993 (more coming!) available. Check it out by clicking on the title!
Click on the Kids Space tab to access TumbleBooks!
Find animated, talking picture books with fiction, non-fiction and foreign language titles, and Read-Alongs (chapter books with sentence highlighting and narration.)
We now have a pass for 2 adults and 2 children for the Billings Farm and Museum! Call or swing by the library to borrow it.
Rutland Film Society and Rutland Free Library present a second year of outstanding films and panel discussion. Every 2nd Wednesday of the month at 7pm.
Sign up for Library Elf, a new service we subscribe to, and you can receive emails or text messages for holds and due dates on your library account.
Reader’s Corner (which you can find in the left-hand menu, and the top menu) features all the resources you need about books in our library. There are links to InterLibrary Loan and a request form for new books and dvds. Check it out today!
The Dirty Life: On Farming, Food, and Love, by Kristin Kimball (2010) – I expected a predictable romantic comedy story about a city girl who meets a farmer and leaves behind her old life behind for the life of a farm wife. I did not expect to laugh out loud but I did. When she gets into details about Amish auctions, rat infestations, dysentery, and various states of decomposition, I knew it was the real deal. Among several titles in recent years where the author leaves city life behind, this one rings of authenticity in describing the challenges of farm life and marriage. (EG)
630.92 KIM or try the library catalog
Walking to Gatlinburg: a Novel by Howard Frank Mosher (2010)
A Civil War odyssey in the tradition of Charles Frazier’s Cold Mountain and Robert Olmstead’s Coal Black Horse, Mosher’s latest (after On Kingdom Mountain), about a Vermont teenager’s harrowing journey south to find his missing-in-action brother, is old-fashioned in the best sense of the word. Seventeen-year-old Morgan Kinneson goes in search of his older brother, Pilgrim, a Union soldier reported MIA at Gettysburg. But first, Morgan accidentally causes the death of a runaway slave he was leading to safety in Canada. In the course of tracking down his missing brother, Morgan is pursued by slave catchers, accompanies an elephant on an Erie Canal showboat, visits the battlefield at Gettysburg, meets an escaped slave who turns out to be the dead slave’s granddaughter, and gets wounded during a mountain feud before learning of Pilgrim’s fate. Complicating matters is a rune stone the dead slave left to Morgan, which could compromise the security of the Underground Railroad if the slave catchers get their hands on it. The story of Morgan’s rite-of-passage through an American arcadia despoiled by war and slavery is an engrossing tale with mass appeal. (Booklist)
Find it in the catalog or under call number: FIC MOSHER