Monday Night Music – Wooden Ships

This trio performs a variety of folk related styles. Help kick off their annual one-day concert tour. Bring a blanket or camp chair and a friend. We move inside for rain. Sponsored by Friends of Tilton Library, Inc. Free and open to all.

Monday Night Music – Jennie McAvoy

Jenny picked up the acoustic guitar in her mid-teens and immediately began learning and playing songs from the traditional folk songbook. Her music now includes the magic of the traditional ballad singer.

Mystery Book Discussion – Burial Rites by Hannah Kent

Mystery and suspense readers are invited to the library on the first Thursday of the month for a lively discussion of the monthly title. Open to all. Reserve your book online or pick up a copy at the adult circulation desk.

Third Thursday Book Discussion – Perfect by Rachel Joyce

A spellbinding novel that will resonate with readers of Mark Haddon, Louise Erdrich, and John Irving, Perfect tells the story of a young boy who is thrown into the murky, difficult realities of the adult world with far-reaching consequences. Byron Hemmings wakes to a morning that looks like any other: his school uniform draped over his wooden desk chair, his sister arguing over the breakfast cereal, the click of his mother’s heels as she crosses the kitchen. But when the three of them leave home, driving into a dense summer fog, the morning takes an unmistakable turn. In one terrible moment, something happens, something completely unexpected and at odds with life as Byron understands it. While his mother seems not to have noticed, eleven-year-old Byron understands that from now on nothing can be the same. What happened and who is to blame? Over the days and weeks that follow, Byron’s perfect world is shattered. Unable to trust his parents, he confides in his best friend, James, and together they concoct a plan. . . . As she did in her debut, The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, Rachel Joyce has imagined bewitching characters who find their ordinary lives unexpectedly thrown into chaos, who learn that there are times when children must become parents to their parents, and who discover that in confronting the hard truths about their pasts, they will forge unexpected relationships that have profound and surprising impacts. Brimming with love, forgiveness, and redemption, Perfect will cement Rachel Joyce’s reputation as one of fiction’s brightest talents.

Tilton Library Summer Program Last Blast!

Cheese pizza, henna body art, balloon man Ed Popielarczyk, Hoopiverse hula hooping, yo-yo guy - all free for all ages. Awards for reading challenges with surprises! Sponsored by Tilton Library, Friends of Tilton and other generous donors. (Please sign up at the adult circulation desk for the henna art program.)

September is National Library Card Sign Up Month

Sign up for a library card, or update your old card and receive a cool Stan Lee bookmark. You can use your card to borrow books,DVDs,audio books, download ebooks, movies and audiobooks, use an iPad to check your email or play Minecraft, read back issues of local newspapers, research your homework online, borrow a pass for free or reduced admission to local museums and much more. Come see us today!

Mystery Book Discussion – Purple Cane Road by James Lee Burke

Dave Robicheaux has spent his life confronting the age-old adage that the sins of the father pass on to the son. But what was his mother's legacy? Dead to him since his youth, Mae Guillory has been shuttered away in the deep recesses of Robicheaux's mind. He's lived with the fact that he would never really know what happened to the woman who left him to the devices of a whiskey-driven father. But deep down, Dave still feels the loss of his mother and knows that the infinite series of disappointments in her life could not have come to a good end. While helping out an old friend, Dave is stunned when a pimp looks at him sideways and asks if he is the son of Mae Guillory, the whore a bunch of cops murdered thirty years ago. Her body was dumped in the bayou bordering Purple Cane Road, and the cops who left her there are still on the job. Dave's search for his mother's killers leads him to the darker places in his past, and solving this case teaches him what it means to be his mother's son. (from the publisher)