Programs in October

Join Miss Wendy for read alouds, singing, playing, dancing, and crafts! Tuesday and Thursday each week are the same theme. No registration required.

No experience or registration required!

Sign up for some one-on-one help with any tech topic! Call us at 625-3333 or stop by to sign up for an appointment.

Grab your yoga mat and join yoga instructor Sheehan Shotwell for an inspiring yoga practice each week. No registration required.

No experience or registration required.

Senior First Friday Program: Friday, October 3 @ 11am
Bunco and prizes with free lunch! Registration is required. Call us at 625-3333 or stop by to sign up!

Pokémon Club: Saturday, October 4 | 11am-1pm
Trade cards. Do battles. Eat snacks! No registration or experience necessary.

Evening Book Club: Thursday, October 9 @ 6:30pm
Take My Hand by Dolen Perkins-Valdez
No registration required. The November book will be decided soon.

Afternoon Book Club: Thursday, October 16 @ 1pm
Maisie Dobbs by Jacqueline Winspear
No registration required. The October book will be The Man Who Died Twice by Richard Osman.

Fall Fest: Saturday, October 18 | 11am-1pm
Drop by anytime for some delicious fall snacks, games, pumpkin painting, face painting, and a photo opportunity! The Green Sprouts of Hope nature school will be hosting a “Bats and Bugs” craft, and the Apalachin Lion’s Club will be popping up some popcorn. It’s not to be missed!

Jane Austen Movie Club — Becoming Jane: Monday, October 27 @ 4pm
Leading up to our December Jane Austen Birthday celebration, we’ll be screening a variety of Jane Austen-inspired movies… the second is Emma! No need to register.

Local Author Book Launch — Dry the Rain by Richard Leise: Thursday, October 30 @ 6pm
Dry The Rain is the hottest true crime series on MovieTrap, but the young woman whose life it’s based on never wanted it made. After years of brutal captivity, Mallory was able to kill her kidnapper and escape the basement where she’d been caged. Now, the whole world is watching a Hollywood recreation of her ordeal play out on television, week by week. In order to exert some level of control over her life, she decides to tell her story – from her perspective – and she knows that most of you will not be able to understand.
An indictment of exploitative media and the viewing public alike, Dry The Rain is a psychological labyrinth from start to finish. Told through the idiosyncratic voice of a young woman who chooses to write rather than speak, author Richard Leise charts a course across terrain that is at once horrific yet sober. Constructed with an incredible precision of language, Dry The Rain draws the reader into the fractured mind of a character with an unbreakable will.