Don’t forget to come to the Pine Bush Library Community Center and get your discounted tickets!
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Stop by and Say Hi this Saturday
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We Still Have a Few Spots Left!
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Looking for something fun to this fall in the Hudson Valley?
Look no further!
Before it was a federal holiday, Labor Day was recognized by labor activists and individual states. After municipal ordinances were passed in 1885 and 1886, a movement developed to secure state legislation. New York was the first state to introduce a bill, but Oregon was the first to pass a law recognizing Labor Day, on February 21, 1887. During 1887, four more states – Colorado, Massachusetts, New Jersey and New York – passed laws creating a Labor Day holiday. By the end of the decade Connecticut, Nebraska and Pennsylvania had followed suit. By 1894, 23 more states had adopted the holiday, and on June 28, 1894, Congress passed an act making the first Monday in September of each year a legal holiday.
The staff of the Pine Bush Library would like to wish all of you a happy and safe Labor Day.
September Newsletter
The latest edition of our newsletter has been published!
To read it, click the link below:
If you would like a copy of our newsletter delivered to your inbox twice a month, send us a message on Facebook, email us PBL@rcls.org or sign up in person the next time you visit.
Rave Reviews by Jean E. Eustance
I am really enjoying wandering through life. No, I mean I am enjoying Donna Leon’s short book, a memoir, called Wandering Through Life. It’s in the biography section of the Pine Bush Area Public Library. It is not a big, thick book like most biographies. It is Donna Leon’s second book of musings about her life and it’s a thin book with very small pages. In the non-fiction section, in
history about various countries, you will find her other book of musings, My Venice and Other Essays. I tell you now, you must read them both.
It sounds like she is talking to herself, and very interesting she is, too. I especially liked her chapter about her mother, called “Moo.” Her mother was named Mildred, and a compassionate cousin changed it to “Aunt Moo” and that was who she was, ever after.
Moo loved flowers. “Then there were the gardens, which she created anywhere we lived…She wanted to see an ocean of flowers from every window of every house we ever lived in, and she
managed it.”
Donna Leon’s parents also both loved books, and there is a chapter called “Reading.” In her murder mysteries, set in modern-day Venice, Paola and Guido Brunetti are both avid readers. Paola can disappear so completely into the book she is reading that it is hard for her to surface to do mundane things, like remember to cook supper. Leon’s latest murder mystery, A Refiner’s
Fire, is on Pine Bush Library’s New Book Shelf.
Another chapter of “Wandering” is “Gotthard” in which Leon is on a train from Italy to Switzerland, and is approaching the Gotthard Tunnel. She always expects something awful to happen, mid-tunnel, and it never does. “I do read about the cinema, and thus am familiar with the burning buildings, the sinking ships, the giant crabs that will inherit the earth after some sort of nuclear disaster… There is always something nasty lurking in the woodshed. Or the tunnel.”
I like Donna Leon’s sense of humor, and her writing style. She is fun to read, whether she is writing a murder mystery or she is just Wandering Through Life.



















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