READING CHALLENGE FOR ADULTS SUMMER ACTIVITIES ADULTS
HOW OFTEN SHOULD WE SEND OUT OUR NEWSLETTER?
I WOULD LOVE TO RECEIVE THE TUCKER FREE LIBRARY NEWSLETTER… Please check only one box WEEKLY TWICE A MONTH ONCE A MONTH PUSH TO VOTE!
ACTIVITIES FOR ADULTS
Who can participate? Teen and adult Tucker Free Library patrons. Don’t have a library card? Stop in or sign up here. How long does it run? June 21st through July 31st How do I enter the raffle? Once you finish a bingo (five squares in a row down, across, or diagonal lines), stop by the library or email a picture
MONDAY STORIES AS SELECTED BY MISS ERIN!
VIRTUAL STORYTIME AS SELECTED BY MISS ERIN… The good egg by Jory John and Pete Oswald (4:41) The very bad bunny by Marilyn Sadler and Roger Bollen (4:54) Corduroy by Don Freeman (5:31) Alan’s big, scary teeth by Jarvis (5:10)
Sundays at the Library — March 6, 2016 @2PM
Kevin Gardner is a lifelong resident of Hopkinton, NH. Like a lot of independent rural Yankees, he’s been a jack of many trades, a builder, logger, writer, teacher, radio voice, even an actor and director.For more than forty years he has been a stone wall builder in a family business widely known for traditional New England stonework, particularly for historic
Kevin Gardner
Kevin Gardner is a lifelong resident of Hopkinton, NH. Like a lot of independent rural Yankees, he’s been a jack of many trades, a builder, logger, writer, teacher, radio voice, even an actor and director. For more than forty years he has been a stone wall builder in a family business widely known for traditional New England stonework, particularly for
State Dog
Chinooks: A Northern New England Breed by Bob Cottrell Did you know that a rare and famous dog breed was established right here in northern New England? Who are these dogs and why are they famous? They are called Chinooks after the original Great Chinook, the first of his breed. While they were originally developed as sled dogs, they make
History of Skiing
Take Scandinavian and Austrian immigrants, the Dartmouth Outing Club, the Cannon Mountain Tramway, amateur tinkers and Professor E. John B. Allen. Cover it with snow and shake and you have all the makings of a unique New Hampshire history. Tucker Free Library in Henniker is pleased to host E. John Allen and his Humanities to Go program “New Hampshire on