As evidenced by a month of blogging about things I love in my field of librarianship and being a librarian, I clearly love talking about books.
Hit me up anytime to talk about books. I’ll be here waiting.
Love, Alicia
Each work day includes literary lunch. It’s simple: I sit alone in the workroom and eat my lunch while reading.
Boom. Literary lunch.
I have been doing this for years. It A) gives me quiet time without human interaction to recharge and reset for the second half of the day, and B) builds a regular opportunity to read each day that I can look forward to, C) helps reduce my TBR pile.
A handful of years ago, a librarian friend invited me to the movie theater to see the Oscar-nominated animated shorts. She likes weird. The shorts are generally always weird. She knew I’d probably appreciate the weird as well. And thus a tradition was born of seeing them every year.

We went the other day to see them. Yes there were some very weird ones, but we spend a lot time afterward analyzing the message, the visuals, and the storytelling in general. It got me think about short stories– short form writing that can pack a lot or so little that a reader must fill in the blanks with their own experiences to fill out the story. And that’s a magic all its own.
Do you have a favorite short story?
These are the best conversations especially among those whose reading recommendations you trust. My sister in law is one of those people. My old neighbor was another. As a librarian, I love being asked the question. As a fellow reader, I love asking the question.
Plus, it is the perfect opening question to a stranger you want to meet.
Today begins winter break which generally means I will try to cram as much reading as I can into each 24-hour day while tidying up around the house, visiting friends, and driving my boys to their job and hangouts with friends. It also means bottomless cups of tea thanks to my Breville teamaker.
I have a few professional titles to read including Jarred Amato’s Just Read It: Unlocking the Magic of Independent Reading in Middle and High School Classrooms and Ashley Hawkins, Emily Ratica, Julie Stivers, Sybil “Mouna” Toure, and Sara Smith’s Manga Goes to School: Cultivating Engagement and Inclusion in K-12 Settings.
And plenty of YA and middle grade titles especially that have started piling up on my Netgalley shelf as I prepare for a new set of presentations with my amazing colleague and presenter, Stacey.
Where will you find me? At home bouncing between the couch with a book or tablet or bouncing around the house with my Shokz headphones listening to an audiobook getting chores done.