Elyse Draper's Blog
June 2, 2025
Scrubbing the Walls of Catharsis
March 21, 2025
Support Your Local Shelter
July 1, 2024
Pride in Love, Support, and Survival
Pride in Love, Support, and Survival
To finish Pride Month 2024, where should we start? The Stonewall Uprising against oppression and homophobia? On June 28, 1970, marking the first anniversary of the Stonewall Uprising, the inaugural Pride marches took place in New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago. Thousands of LGBT+ individuals gathered to honor the Stonewall legacy and advocate for equal rights. The community didn’t know what was coming in the next decade… yet they would prove again, sometimes with their lives, that supporting each other and fighting for survival takes perseverance and love in the face of hate.
June 10, 2024
Celebrate Reading!
June 25, 2023
Recommended Reads

The Book of Bob by Gary Edwards
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
A fascinating mix of humor, quantum physics, and psychological tomfoolery. It is a highly recommended read for lovers looking for dry wit in their big balls of wibbly wobbly… time-y, wimey… stuff.
View all my reviews
May 30, 2023
We have Reached the End of Another Mental Health Awareness Month, and We have Some Questions.
by Elyse Draper, Jennifer Wyman, and Kathleen Leaf
Did you know that Mental Health Awareness Month started in 1949? No? Have you ever wondered why Americans are so apathetic toward mental health? Have you ever thought to yourself, “The younger generation needs to toughen up. When I was a kid…”?
Why do we think such things? For older generations, why is it a point of pride to hide our emotions and ridicule those who broadcast them? We now know that the brain balances hormones, directly affected by our emotions, affecting our overall health. If there is no separation between mind and body, isn’t it logical to conclude that depression and anxiety are physical manifestations that are just as valid as a heart attack or broken bone? Yet, we have compassion for the heart attack or the broken bone, and we make sure they are…
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April 8, 2023
A Lost Generation
An iPub Perspective EditorialTouching article, felt by one raised by the “Lost Generation.”
By Rabbi James Rudin
“You are all a lost generation.”
When Gertrude Stein said those now-famous words to Ernest Hemingway in 1923, she had in mind the writers and artists who came of age during World War I and the “Roaring Twenties” decade that followed. Besides Hemingway, they included F. Scott Fitzgerald, James Joyce, William Faulkner, and Isadora Duncan.
Of course, Stein’s use of “lost” did not mean the war-shattered generation had physically disappeared. Rather, its members were psychologically and emotionally adrift, without purpose or direction. But for me, her description is also a lament for members of my own American generation who were born between 1930 and 1939.

We were too young to fight in World War II, so we could never be members of Tom Brokaw’s celebrated “Greatest Generation.” The unpopular Korean and Vietnam conflicts were our fights…
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March 29, 2023
“The Wonderful Tale of Donkey Skin” A Review
By Kathleen Leaf
Author Dr. Fawzia Mai Tung kicks off her May Fairy series with The Wonderful Tale of Donkey Skin. As discussed in a previous post, Dr. Tung started this series with the aim of attracting reluctant readers (those who have the skill to read but are hesitant to) at the middle-grade level (between the ages of 8 and 12). As a librarian, Kathleen knows how important it is for children to develop positive reading habits. The Wonderful Tale of Donkey Skin—the first in the May Fairy series—appeals to these ambivalent readers by deftly blending oral storytelling with a pseudo-graphic novel format.
The book recounts Charles Perrault’s tale, Donkey Skin. This is no mere retelling, however. The story of Princess Gomikky and her adventure is told as a dialogue between the main characters, Grandma Nainai, and her grandson, Zakiyy. A comic…
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February 8, 2023
The Book
By Ann Marie B. Bahr

As I left, boxes and boxes of new books were being unloaded in the restaurant’s entryway. It seemed an odd place to put books. Each was individually wrapped in cellophane and had hardcover binding. They looked expensive. Why drop them where they could easily be stolen?
“What are these?” I asked.
“A photographer took pictures of ordinary people during the pandemic,” someone answered. “He wanted to document what we were like at that time.”
“Pictures of local folks?”
“Yup.”
I dove back inside and quickly cornered the restaurant owner. “How much for the books?” “Nothing,” he said. “They’re free—take one.” Amazed and curious, I did.
Back home, I unwrapped my mysterious treasure. It contained 266 pages of black and white photos. Most were taken where the subjects lived since that is where we were asked to stay during the pandemic. Many…
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January 27, 2023
Libraries: Creative and Intellectual Learning
By Kathleen Leaf
A Publisher’s Weekly article titled “Exploring the Innovative Community Libraries of Korea” was recently shared with me. The author, Professor R. David Lankes, recounts a recent trip to Korea, touring community libraries and speaking about the future of libraries. Below is the abstract of his presentation:
There is no future for libraries. There are, instead, as many futures as there are libraries. And that means we need to rethink everything from networks to certification to who we call librarians.
Lankes, R. David. “Future of Libraries.” National Library of Korea 77th Anniversary Conference. Seoul, Korea.
And, indeed, the article for PW outlining his experiences with different Korean libraries emphasizes rethinking what libraries are, what they do, and what resources they provide for their communities.

No two libraries are alike. They are wholly dependent on the communities –…
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