Southeast Steuben County Library June 2026 Book Club Reminder

Southeast Steuben County Library June 2026 Book Club Reminder

Hi everyone, just a quick reminder; the June Book Club for Adults gathering is this Friday, June 12, 2026, start time 3:00 p.m.

We’ll be discussing the book “My Name Is Emilia del Valle” by Isabel Allende. The novel is set in the mid-nineteenth century and tells the story of the character of the title, Emilia del Valle. Emilia is born in San Francisco in 1866 the out-of-wedlock daughter of an Irish nun and a Chilean aristocrat. She is raised by her supportive stepfather and grows into a strong willed, independent woman with a passion for writing. As an adult, she finds love and encounters her father while perusing her calling to write. The novel unfolds during the Chilean Civil War. Copies of the back are still available at the Circulation Desk.

Zoom link available upon request; you can request the link by sending an email to: reimerl@stls.org  

Looking forward, our July read is “The Antidote” by Karen Russell. The Antidote is a critically acclaimed novel, which has a bit of everything. It unfolds in the small town of Uz, Nebraska during the Great Depression, during a dust storm, and follows an ensemble cast of characters including prairie witch Antonina Rossi who is something of a counselor for local residents, Harp Oletsky a  man who stood with his parents as Pawnee people were driven from their land – the land his family was settling, Dell Oletsky a 15-year-old basketball prodigy whose mother Lada was just murdered, hobo Clemson Louis Dew who has falsely been convicted of Lada’s murder and Cleo Allfrey, a black New Deal photographer, who doesn’t believe Clemson Dew is guilty.

And looking backwards to our May; in May we read and discussed “Travels With George” by Nathaniel Philbrick. The book was inspired by John Steinbeck’s famous 1962 travelogue “Travels With Charley” which chronicled Steinbeck’s cross-country trip from Maine to California with his wife’s dog Charley. Steinbeck, who was in shaky health, wanted to see America, and what Americans were like; one last time before he passed. Taking a page out of Steinbeck’s book, Nathaiel Philbrick’s goal was to travel the roads George Washington traveled in 1780, to meet and greet Americans and see what their thought and concerns were about the state of the word; after he was elected President and before he settled down to govern. Two hundred and twenty-nine years after Washington made that trip,  Philbrick, accompanied by his wife Melissa and their dog Dora, followed in his footsteps, traveling the same roads and reflecting on the history of the United States, with a strong emphasis on George Washington and the formative years of the country, and pondering the ways that, that history is important today and reflects who we are as a nation.

Have a great day!

Linda Reimer

Southeast Steuben County Library

Southeast Steuben County Library Book Club for Adults May 2026 Gathering

Southeast Steuben County Library Book Club for Adults May 2026 Gathering

Hi everyone, the May book club for adults gathering is this Friday, May 8, 2026.

We’ll be meeting at the library at 3:00 p.m. and discussing the book Travels With George by Nathaniel Philbrick; copies of the book are available at the Circulation Desk if anyone needs a copy. If you’d like to attend the gathering from home, let me know and I’ll send you the Zoom link.

And looking forward to June, as usual we’ll be meeting the second Friday of the month – in June that is Friday, June 12, from 3:00 – 4:00 p.m.

And our June Reads is My Name Is Emilia del Valle: A Novel by Isabel Allende and Frances Riddle; and here the Booklist review of the novel:

Allende has created many addictive sagas about the extended del Valle family and their intersections with history and one another. The eponymous Emilia, Allende’s addition to this notable clan, is one adventurous, gutsy woman. The illegitimate daughter of a Chilean aristocrat and the Irish novice nun he seduced, Emilia grows up in San Francisco with her loving stepfather’s support, intrepidly working around gender restrictions. After penning dime novels pseudonymously, she becomes a human-interest columnist for the Daily Examiner and wangles an assignment as international correspondent for the impending Chilean Civil War of 1891, under her own byline. Emilia’s first meeting with her long-lost father in Santiago is quite moving, and her time with the canteen girls who accompany President Balmaceda’s army echoes with their unsung courage. Allende expertly navigates through the violent chaos of battle and how it affects Emilia, whose romantic relationships also showcase her character growth. Fans of Allende’s now-classic Daughter of Fortune (1999) and Portrait in Sepia (2000) will particularly welcome this offering, which is replete with Allende’s customary poetic storytelling.

HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Allende fans are legion and her continuation the del Valle family saga will inspire many requests.

Copies of our June read may also be picked up at the Circulation Desk at any time. 

Have a great day!

Linda Reimer, SSCL