Library of Things Online Catalog Browse through the items in our Library of Things on our website. In addition to the different categories of things and loan rules, you can also check the availability of lawn games and library equipment. When you have figured out what item you would like and when, give the Reference Desk a call at 631-581-9200 x5 to make a reservation.
For more information visit:
Adult programs for the week of September 19, 2021:
In-person, online, and telephone registration for September and October Adult and Young Adult programs is ongoing. Programs with a fee are non-refundable and must be registered in-person.
We have begun to return to in-person programming. Only those otherwise noted will be virtual.
September 20, 27, October 4, 18 & 25, 9:30 a.m.
Fee: $15
Jamie helps you start off the week with meditation breath work and gentle yoga postures and stretches.
September 20, 27, October 4, 18, 25, November 1, 5:30 p.m.
Fee: $18
Kim guides you through this traditional yoga practice. Please bring a mat or towel.
Tuesday, September 21, 7:00 p.m.
NOW ON ZOOM
Want more beautiful flowers and vegetables in your garden? Learn how and when to collect seeds for planting next year. Proper labeling and storage methods are essential. Once you learn the more reliable techniques, heirlooms, and open pollinated seeds will grace your garden for many years.
September 22, 29, October 6, 13, 20 & 27, 10:00 a.m.
Fee: $18
Join Adrienne in experiencing the benefits of yoga. Improve flexibility, strength and posture.
Wednesdays, 1 p.m. - 3 p.m.
Stop by the library to join others that share your passion while you work on your current sewing project. Please bring your own supplies. Instructors may be available. Registration is not required.
Wednesday, September 22, 7:00 p.m.
Hawks, eagles, falcons, oh my! Long Island has a wide variety of raptors; some just visit and pass through and some raise families here. Dianne Taggert, a long time Long Island birder, will talk about, and show photos of these wonderful birds.
Thursdays, 10:30 a.m. - 2:30 p.m.
We provide the room, you provide the game: canasta, mah jongg, bridge or any game you love to play!
September 23, 30, October 7, 14, 21 & 28, 6:00 p.m.
Fee: $18
For those of you who cannot make our daytime yoga classes, we are now offering another evening class with Jamie. If you have always wanted to experience the benefits of yoga, give this class a try.
Friday, September 24, 2:00 p.m.
Nobody
A bystander who intervenes to help a woman being harassed by a group of men becomes the target of a drug lord.
Rated: R; 92 min.; 2021
Starring: Bob Odenkirk
Friday, September 24, 3:00 p.m.
Via Online Video
Fee: $5.00
Join Jenny Lemons for a guided video. Kits include precut macrame cord and wooden ring. Kits can be purchased at the Circulation Desk for $5, You must be an EIPL cardholder for this program. Kits will be available at the Reference Desk on Monday, September 20 and the tutorial will be emailed on Friday, September 24 by 3:00 p.m.
Do you like to knit or crochet? Whatever your passion, gather and socialize with others who share your interest, and perhaps pick up a few tips and tricks as you work on your own creations! Please bring your own supplies. Instructors may be available. Registration is not required.
Saturday, September 25, 3:00 p.m.
Via Facebook Live
Join Chef Rob in making fuji apple and cinnamon baked French toast casserole. Followed by apple, arugula, and walnut salad and lastly autumn apple pie donut muffins. Recipes will be emailed in advance so be sure to register!
A Long Petal of the Sea by Isabel Allende
Sponsored by the poet Pablo Neruda to flee the violence of the Spanish Civil War, a pregnant widow and an army doctor unite in an arranged marriage, only to be swept up by the early days of World War II.
Access:
Borrow or place a hold online for the book, large print book, or audiobook or call the Reference Desk at 631-581-9200 x 5 to place a hold for you.
Afterlife by Julia Alvarez
Reeling from her beloved husband's sudden death in the wake of her retirement, an immigrant writer is further derailed by the reappearance of her unstable sister and an entreaty for help by a pregnant undocumented teen.
Access:
Borrow or place a hold online for the book or call the Reference Desk at 631-581-9200 x 5 to place a hold for you.
Dominicana by Angie Cruz
Draws on the author's mother's story in a tale set in a turbulent 1960s Dominican Republic, where a young teen agrees to marry a man twice her age to help her family's immigration to America.
Access:
Borrow or place a hold online for the book or call the Reference Desk at 631-581-9200 x 5 to place a hold for you.
Of Women and Salt by Gabriela Garcia
A sweeping, masterful debut about a daughter's fateful choice, a mother motivated by her own past, and a family legacy that begins in Cuba before either of them were born.
Access:
Borrow or place a hold online for the book or large print book or call the Reference Desk at 631-581-9200 x 5 to place a hold for you.
Hades, Argentina by Daniel Loedel
A medical student in 1970s Buenos Aires must decide how far he's willing to go for his childhood crush and the group of insurgents she's joined as more and more people like her are disappeared by an oppressive military junta.
Access:
Borrow or place a hold online for the book or call the Reference Desk at 631-581-9200 x 5 to place a hold for you.
In the Dream House by Carmen Maria Machado
Shares the story of the author's relationship with an abusive partner and how it was shaped by her religious upbringing, her sexual orientation and inaccurate cultural beliefs about psychological trauma.
Access:
Borrow or place a hold online for the book or call the Reference Desk at 631-581-9200 x 5 to place a hold for you.
Daytripper by Fabio Moon & Gabriel Ba
Presents key moments in the life of Bras de Oliva Domingos, a Brazilian writer and sometime journalist, and the son of a prominent author, as if each episode would turn out to be the day in which he was about to die.
Access:
Borrow or place a hold online for the book or call the Reference Desk at 631-581-9200 x 5 to place a hold for you.
Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
A reimagining of the classic gothic suspense novel follows the experiences of a courageous socialite in 1950s Mexico who is drawn into the treacherous secrets of an isolated mansion.
Access:
Borrow or place a hold online for the book or call the Reference Desk at 631-581-9200 x 5 to place a hold for you.
The Book of Lost Saints by Daniel Jose Older
Visited by an ancestral spirit who would have him unearth family secrets from the Cuban Revolution, a young Cuban-American embarks on an investigation marked by ghostly helpers, a new love, a murderous gangster and changes in his sense of identity.
Access:
Live-brary.com has an eBook. Borrow or place a hold online for the book, or call the Reference Desk at 631-581-9200 x 5 to place a hold for you.
Undocumented by Dan-el Padilla Peralta
A Princeton University salutatorian describes his experiences as an undocumented immigrant youth in New York City, relating his efforts as a scholarship student in a private school that sharply contrasted with his street life in East Harlem.
Access:
Live-brary.com has an eBook. Borrow or place a hold online for the book or call the Reference Desk at 631-581-9200 x 5 to place a hold for you.
Fruit of the Drunken Tea by Ingrid Rojas Contreras
Follows a sheltered girl and a teen maid, who forge an unlikely friendship that threatens to undo them both amid the violence of 1990s Columbia.
Access:
Borrow or place a hold online for the book or call the Reference Desk at 631-581-9200 x 5 to place a hold for you.
The Worst Best Man by Mia Sosa
A wedding planner left at the altar? Yeah, the irony isn't lost on Carolina Santos, either. But despite that embarrassing blip from her past, Lina's offered an opportunity that could change her life. There's just one hitch: she has to collaborate with the best (make that worst) man from her own failed nuptials.
Access:
Borrow or place a hold online for the book or call the Reference Desk at 631-581-9200 x 5 to place a hold for you.
My Beloved World by Sonia Sotomayor
Appointed to the Supreme Court in 2009, Sonia Sotomayor became the first Latina to achieve this high judicial office. My Beloved World offers a moving portrait of her gritty South Bronx neighborhood and her extended Puerto Rican family, as well as details of the many challenges she has faced during her formative years and early career.
Access:
Borrow or place a hold online for the book or large print book or call the Reference Desk at 631-581-9200 x 5 to place a hold for you.
The Sound of Things Falling by Juan Gabriel Vasquez
Bogota resident Antonio Yammara reflects on a mid-20th-century uprising between Pablo Escobar's drug cartel and government forces that trapped Pablo's community in a nightmarish existence and culminated in a friend's murder.
Access:
Live-brary.com has an eBook. Borrow or place a hold online for the book or call the Reference Desk at 631-581-9200 x 5 to place a hold for you.
JobNow provides various tools to help with every step of the job search including live resume assistance, career planning, live career coaching, live interview preparation, and free live workshops.
VetNow supports veterans and their families with navigating the VA bureaucracy, providing academic tutoring, and assisting with employment transition.
To access JobNow and/or VetNow services:
- Visit livebrary.com and click on Jobs & Careers
- Select Jobs & Careers once more and then choose from JobNow or VetNow
- Sign in with your library card
Live online help for both JobNow and HelpNow is available every day
from 2:00 - 11:00 p.m.
Remote Printing at East Islip Public Library
You can use your personal computer (laptop or desktop), tablet and smartphone to print to the library's printer from anywhere. Visit www.eipl.org/print for instructions on how to upload or email your documents. Once received, we will hold on to the print job for 72 hours for you to come in at your convenience.
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Town of Islip Recycling Calendar?
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Project Hope Crisis Counselors will help you with anything from economic hardships to behavioral health issues. They understand there are a whole range of emotions you might be feeling and they will work through it with you. A Crisis Counselor will give you self-help tips and come up with a plan for you to be your own advocate. They have a multitude of resources available to you and would love to be the shoulder you lean on. After all, New Yorkers are in this together.
Emotional Support Helpline: 1-855-818-4673
projecthope@nhcc.us
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