Showing posts with label Patty Andersen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Patty Andersen. Show all posts

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Acceptance by Patty Andersen


Patty Andersen is Library Director at the Devereaux Library which is located on the campus of the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology in Rapid City, South Dakota



Kaye

I would like to thank you once again for inviting me to be a part of your blog.  Sometimes I wonder how I fit in here and then realize it is because Kaye has accepted me into her world.

So, I thought I would write a little bit about acceptance.  I’ve pretty much been a loner most of my life.  My siblings are 10 and 11 years older than me so statistically I’ve been classified as an only child.  I also discovered reading very early (think Dr. Seuss) and never cared as much for people my age as I did for the books.  As I progressed through school I was often an outcast because I didn’t care for “girly things” like makeup and fancy hair-do’s.  I never got the dress up bug, probably because of the private school restrictions, first “plain” dresses, later uniforms (god-awful, brown checked with a muted red, green, blue pattern as a jumper).  So, the first time someone told me they wouldn’t be my friend because I wore ankle socks instead of knee highs I was dumb founded and decided about then that teenagers are weird!  Since then I’ve marched to my own drum and stuck to one or two close friends, it’s easier that way.

Books have been a constant in my life from early reading to voracious reading through high school, a library science degree as an undergraduate and another as a graduate student.  Seems my path was set to work in libraries forever.  Now, as a library director of a university that focuses on science, engineering and technology I don’t get a lot of chances to share my love of reading, but I have managed to hold on to the practice of having best sellers in the building for those student who want to read something other than textbooks or journal articles on some deep and weighty subject.

So, when in the 1990’s along came the Internet, I jumped right into groups that talked about books.  The first two were both started by the amazing Diane Kovacs, DorothyL for mystery readers and RRA-L for romance readers.  I’ve pretty much dropped reading lots of romance but DorothyL still comes into my email every day.  It is there that I first heard of that upstart Kaye Barley – you know, the one who liked to respond to almost every post and got herself into trouble on more than one occasion for speaking her mind?  That lady I liked *a lot* and so I started responding to her emails “off list” and we connected. 

I still think the Internet is one of the greatest things to ever happen to readers like me who live fairly remotely from big population centers (Black Hills of South Dakota).  I’ve managed to “meet” and talk to a great many authors that I admire and find that most are just people, not remote images that don’t lead normal lives.  From DorothyL I’ve moved on to Goggle groups, Yahoo groups, blogs and Facebook.  BTW, just how addictive is Facebook?  I cut myself back to an hour a day and soon find myself back up to 2 or 3, oops.

To all the authors out there (including you Mrs. Barley) who have responded to messages I’ve sent, asked me to post my modest book reviews or just allowed me to “follow” you on Facebook.  THANK YOU, it is so nice to be included in a place where for so many years I just enjoyed your labors but didn’t have any person contact.

I always like to give a shout-out to the three authors I have “met in person”, Kathleen Taylor from central South Dakota, Lori Armstrong from the Black Hills area and Craig Johnson from Ucross Wyoming.  Meeting you in person has been an honor and I love all of your books.

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Just a Reader by Patty Andersen

Patty Andersen is Library Director at the Devereaux Library which is located on the campus of the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology in Rapid City, South Dakota



















Just A Reader
by Patty Andersen


Last year, when Kaye asked me to contribute to her blog, I took on the topic of “not fitting in” with many in my peer group. Now, this year I need to come up with a new topic. And, to add to the pressure she has me posting immediately behind one of my all-time favorite authors, Craig Johnson. Sheesh, talk about making things tough on a non-writer!

Because I am following a favorite author it got me thinking about what it means to be a fan (or author groupie). I’ve been reading since I was four or so and have had “favorite” authors at all the stages of my reading life (okay, getting close to 50 years). Until I started interacting with various authors I would always have referred to myself as “just a reader”, which I now understand boggles the authors mind. JUST a reader they say, no one is more important. I never in my life thought I would be chatting online with my heroes, let alone actually meeting any of them! I’ve not met many in person and the two that stand out both live close to me (by South Dakota and Wyoming standards), the aforementioned Craig Johnson and Kathleen Taylor. I invited Kathi to be a speaker at one of our SD Library Association meetings and she kindly agreed, thus I met her as professional to professional. We now share weather from the middle of the state, where she lives, to the western edge, where I live. My meeting with Craig was different, I entered a contest to try and win a t-shirt.  I won (and still own) a shirt that proclaims me Sheriff, Absaroka County, Wyoming. Not long after that Craig was going to be speaking at a small library about 50 miles from my home and I decided to attend, of course wearing my t-shirt. I forgot about the season in western SD – construction – so was a few minutes late. As I walked in the door he turned and interrupted his talk to say “nice shirt”. The crowd loved it and it put me instantly at ease and made me even more of a fan.

With all that, I still hold authors in high regard. I still consider myself just a reader, and it boggles my mind that they consider people like me so important. The brave new world of the Internet has bridged many gaps but I think the bridges that authors are making with their fans through social networking are the most impressive. I haven’t and probably never will meet Stephen King or Nora Roberts, but the authors who I read the most, those who are newly published, the mid-listers or those just above that have become “real people” to me and I’m loving’ it.

Many thanks, Kaye, for allowing those of us who read to share your playground with those who write. It is a great place to get to know each other.



and now - Patty's Pups!

Browser, miniature Schnauzer, rescue dog 


Kirby, Pembroke Welsh Corgi (our "troll")


Mocha, Havanese (King of the house at 9.3 lbs)


Orbit, standard Schnauzer, rescue dog



Spice, Pembroke Welsh Corgi mix (Spice Girl is busy, busy, busy), rescue dog



Trooper, standard Schnauzer, Cindy's Hearing Dog, (the family "boss" although Spice is trying to challenge him for the title)

Sunday, July 18, 2010

Peer Groups, and Not Fitting In by Patty Andersen

Patty Andersen is Library Director at the Devereaux Library which is located on the campus of the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology in Rapid City, South Dakota

































 
Peer Groups, and Not Fitting In
by Patty Andersen

Many thanks to Kaye for inviting me, I’m still not sure why but thanks anyway! I thought for a long time about a topic for this blog. Not being an author I had to wonder if I would have anything interesting to say but Kaye insists that I will do fine. You can be the judge.

So, my topic is – not fitting into the peer group. My peer group is other librarians, specifically other Library Directors although I can count all librarians as well. You see, I never feel like I fit in with these folks. No, it isn’t that I don’t have the correct education (M.L.I.S. from Louisiana State University) or the job (library director since 1996) the problem is –I don’t like the same thing that so many of the other librarians like; I don’t listen to classical music (I’m rock ‘n roll or country), I avoid NPR, I seldom watch PBS (History Detectives being a notable exception) and I can’t tell you the last time I read the latest “important book”. So, I tend to be really quiet in social situations around my peers. Oh, there are a few out there who read mysteries (often with the disclaimer that “I read the classics”. There are even some who read romance (ack, did I just admit that I also read romance, oh well, it is true, I used to read only romance, many of them being the series romance of Harlequin) but most often they talk about things heard on NPR, watched on PBS or books that I’ve seen talked about on TV but would never dream of reading. Can I admit that as far as I know I have never read an Oprah book club book? That the only classical music I know comes from TV or movies (Amadeus anyone)? That I would rather watch reruns of M*A*S*H* than some series on world peace that takes weeks to finish? Even in some of the places where I am comfortable, like DorothyL, threads will pop up that make me feel like an outsider. The one that started me thinking about this topic is one that shows up from time to time, the issue of “literature” vs. “popular fiction”. I’ve read a lot of literature; I love Shakespeare, hated Dante and got through lots of others on my way to a minor in English literature. My problem is, I don’t like critiquing what I read – I love to read but if I have to analyze it to death it takes away the joy of the story for me. I can do it but I don’t like it. To me when someone says LITERATURE they are looking down on me and what I read, they are dissing the things I love because it doesn’t fit some artificial standard that “they” (who ever “they” are) say is the only thing to read.

Thankfully I have found places where I’m comfortable. DorothyL for mysteries (most of the time), SoundsLikeAMystery for audiobooks, specifically mystery audiobooks, Facebook for general chatter about the fun things in life as well as the more serious and home for friends and family.

So, are there others of you out there who don’t feel like you fit in with your peer group? If so, let me know, I might feel less alone.