Monday, April 29, 2024

SETTLEMENT HOUSE GIRL Book Launch in Minneapolis and Camp Bovey 75th Celebration

Book launch of SETTLEMENT HOUSE GIRL at ESNS. Photo of Les Scheaffer, ESNS Director 1948-1966.

I was pleased to have a good crowd at my book launch of SETTLEMENT HOUSE GIRL a week ago Thursday (April 18th) at East Side Neighborhood Services in Minneapolis. Many thanks to everyone who came. And thanks to my husband Art for being my official photographer!

Gathering for the program at ESNS.

As people arrived I had the chance to chat and, in some cases, catch up on more than seventy years of memories! Some people there were connected to Camp Bovey, others from my grade schools (Holland and Windom) and junior high (Ramsey) and high school (Washburn.) Some of the attendees were from the surrounding Northeast neighborhood, including some from Margaret Barry House, the other settlement house in Northeast Minneapolis, started about the same time as North East Neighborhood House (1915). Margaret Barry House and North East Neighborhood House merged in 1963 under the direction of my father and became East Side Neighborhood Services.  Both the Margaret Barry building and the North East Neighborhood House building have now been converted to apartments and the ESNS programs have moved to a new building down the street at 1700 Second Street Northeast.

Books for sale.

The event was held in the large meeting room at ESNS where tables and chairs had been set up along with refreshments (cookies and cake), a table for book sales, another table for Camp Bovey special 75th anniversary t-shirts and sweatshirts, and a kids craft table.  

75th Camp Bovey anniversary t-shirts.

Many thanks to Mary Anstett, Lindsay Walz, Inge Melius, and Debi Krause for coordinating the book and shirt sales, and for making sure that everything ran smoothly. All proceeds from the sales went to support Camp Bovey. A reporter from the Northeaster Newspaper came to take notes and will include his report in the May 1 issue.  The April 17 issue of the paper featured an excellent article about the history of Camp Bovey and plans for the coming summer and anniversary celebration.

Presentation and reading of book.

I had created a rotating slide show depicting the 75 years of Camp Bovey’s history and that played on the screen while people gathered. Then, after introductions by Mary and Lindsay, I gave a talk (with more slides) about the creation of my book, followed by reading one of the Camp Bovey chapters from my book. I then opened it up to questions from the audience. I was glad to find people were so interested! And finally, as people lined up for their turn, I signed books that they had purchased.

Autographing books.

It was a very busy evening and I wish there had been more time to chat longer with each and every one of the people who came. 

At ESNS.
Since last Thursday, I have heard from numerous people, and they all say that my book has brought back many of their own memories.  I am glad. One of the reasons I wrote the book is to write those memories down and keep them from getting lost. They are my memories, but they are also part of Northeast Minneapolis history.

Display of Camp Bovey and Hodag memories.


 

Saturday, April 27, 2024

LIVING FOSSILS at The Center for the Collaborative Classroom


I am pleased to have my book LIVING FOSSILS: Clues to the Past included in the curriculum of the Center for the Collaborative Classroom, a nonprofit organization dedicated to students' growth as critical thinkers who learn from, care for, and respect one another.

Most living things differ greatly from their early ancestors. But not living fossils. A living fossil is a modern-day plant or animal that closely resembles its ancient relatives.

Coelacanths, horseshoe crabs, dragonflies, tuataras, nautiluses and the hula painted frog are living fossils. Living fossils are a mystery. Why did they change so little when the world around them changed so much?

Take a trip into the past and visit these amazing animals to see how they lived then. And have a look at how their descendants live now. How did these living fossils survive?



Wednesday, April 24, 2024

SCHOOL VISITS IN MINNEAPOLIS—5 Schools, 4 days!


I had a busy week in Minneapolis, April 16-19, while I was there to promote my new memoir SETTLEMENT HOUSE GIRL. That book, for adults, was celebrated at a program at East Side Neighborhood Services in Northeast Minneapolis, where I grew up, on Thursday evening, April 18th.  (Report in a coming post.) Meanwhile, I did a number of author visits to schools, including one of the schools I had attended as a child.

My first visit was at St. John Paul II Catholic School, in Northeast Minneapolis, where I spoke to all the students, kindergarten through eighth grade in four sessions. I thank Principal Tricia Menzhuber for coordinating and promoting my visit and for buying a copy of one of my books for each classroom. It was a pleasure to visit the school that many of my neighborhood friends attended when I was growing up. (I went to a nearby public school, Holland Elementary, now closed.)

On Wednesday I was at East Side Neighborhood Services where I spoke to children in the preschool and shared with them my new books and the story of the Hodag—the mascot of the ESNS camp, Camp Bovey. Many years ago I was a child at the ESNS nursery school, then in a different building down the street. I also spoke to a group of high school students at the Menlo High School, an alternative school at ESNS. I shared with them some of my background and the process of writing. I thank their teacher Cat Bonaventura for organizing the visit and for coming to my book signing Thursday evening with one of the students.

At Waite Park Elementary School

Thursday morning was a visit to two groups of enthusiastic kindergarten and first grade students at Waite Park School, another public school in Northeast Minneapolis. I thank librarian Erin Redlin for organizing the visit and for the great photos. 

At Windom School singing the Wiggle and Waggle song with Kindergarteners and First Graders.

And on my final day in Minneapolis I visited Windom Elementary, the school that I attended in 5th and 6th grade after my family moved from Northeast to South Minneapolis. Much of the school building is the same, but the library now is much bigger and is in what used to the gym. (Now there is a new gym added on to the school—taking up part of what used to be the playground where we went for recess.) I thank librarian Carey Cappuccio for organizing the visit and the tour of the school. It brought back many memories! I spoke to two groups of students, first K-1, and then 2-5. Before I left I signed the author chair, adding my signature to other authors that have visited the school.
Signing the Author Chair at Windom School.




 

Wednesday, April 17, 2024

LITLINKS GUEST POST: Our Warming Earth, Sea Ice and Krill

Lit Links: An Easy Way to Find Out How Baleen Whales Eat

This week at LitLinks you can find my article about how you can use my book A WARMER WORLD in connection with reading and STEAM activities. I am happy to contribute to Author/Speaker Patricia Newman's wonderful blog featuring ways to connect STEM and STEAM books with literature in the classroom. My article features hands-on activities and reading strategies for using my book with students, helping them understand the concepts in the book. It posted on April 17, 2024 , joining dozens of previous posts by other children's book science writers and illustrators.

Many thanks, Patricia, for the opportunity to contribute to your terrific site!





Wednesday, April 10, 2024

BOOK REVIEW of SETTLEMENT HOUSE GIRL in BlueInk Review


With thanks to BlueInk Review for the very nice review of my memoir SETTLEMENT HOUSE GIRL. (Reviewed in March 2024). 

From 1948 to 1966, Caroline Scheaffer Arnold's father served as director of the North East Neighborhood House (NENH), a settlement house offering a social center for students and the surrounding community. Here, Arnold recalls those years, encompassing the students, employees, and her friends, while also exploring NENH’s impact on her adult life. 

Arnold’s family lived in an apartment on the top floor of the NENH bordered by a long hallway. Across the hall was a kitchen, a community dining room where all residents and staff ate family style, and a resident living room. The lower floors housed dormitories for staff and other occupants (typically students from the nearby university), an auditorium, gym, and offices. NENH also served as a community hotspot hosting sports, clubs, and social resources. 

Pulled from her remarkable memory but supplemented by research, the book captures the unique settlement house lifestyle. Arnold recounts, with a dramatized but endearing voice, moments of heartwarming tenderness: a wedding where everyone chipped in, collecting popsicle wrappers to earn gifts for loved ones; her father's attempt to invest in stamps, only to wind up gifting her pages of below-value stamps and a note "hope your envelopes are large enough," and summers spent at NENH's project Camp Bovey. 

The book is episodic with each section acting almost like a short story, anchored by a clear emotional core. One of the more touching recollections is when Arnold returns home as an adult after her father's passing to discover letters and memos showcasing the joy he had running NENH and founding Camp Bovey, which became a beloved institution. The book captures life in colorful anecdotes, and Arnold draws the intriguing settlement house residents with a loving hand. 

Part memoir and part time capsule, the author's recollections are supplemented by photographs, letters, journal entries, and newspaper clippings. Endnotes provide even more personal insight, all resulting in an enjoyable encapsulation of one family's experiences as the settlement facility transitioned into modernity. 

Highly recommended for fans of Jennifer Worth's Call the Midwife trilogy.

Settlement House Girl: Growing Up in the 1950s at North East Neighborhood House, Minneapolis, Minnesota

By Caroline Scheaffer Arnold

Caroline Arnold, 208 pages, (paperback) $14.99, 9798864903285


Saturday, April 6, 2024

BOOK REVIEW of SETTLEMENT HOUSE GIRL in the Northeaster, Minneapolis, MN


I thank Cynthia Sowden, editor at the Northeaster newspaper in Minneapolis, Minnesota, for her nice review of SETTLEMENT HOUSE GIRL: Growing Up in the 1950s at North East Neighborhood House, Minneapolis, Minnesota and for publicizing my book signing April 18th at East Side Neighborhood Services. 

After highlighting major elements of the book, she writes: “Settlement House Girl” is an easy read. Arnold has authored books for children, and she writes in a clear, straightforward manner. If you’re a collector of Northeast history books, it’s a good one to put on your bookshelf.

You can read the whole article on Page 6 of the April 3, 2024 issue of the Northeaster.



Thursday, April 4, 2024

BOOK SIGNING in Minneapolis, April 18th, of SETTLEMENT HOUSE GIRL: SAVE THE DATE!


If you will be in Minneapolis on Thursday, April 18th, please join me from 6:30-8:00pm at East Side Neighborhood Services where I will be giving a program and signing my new memoir SETTLEMENT HOUSE GIRL: Growing Up in the 1950s at North East Neighborhood House

Find out what it was like to live at a working settlement house in the 1950s. Learn about the early days of Camp Bovey, the ESNS camp founded by my father Les Scheaffer, now celebrating its 75th year. Learn about the roots of my future career as a writer, and how these experiences shaped my view of the world.

Until I was ten I lived with my family at North East Neighborhood House, a settlement house in Northeast Minneapolis, now East Side Neighborhood Services. The 38 chapters of the book range from my first days at the NENH nursery school, to after school clubs and community holiday celebrations at the settlement house, to family and school life. Four of the chapters are about my summers at Camp Bovey and their connection to NENH. Few families lived in settlement houses as ours did. When my family moved out, it was the end of an era.

I hope you will be able to come!

East Side Neighborhood Services

1700 2nd Street NE

Minneapolis, Minnesota 54513

For more information, contact ESNS at 612-781-6011

SETTLEMENT HOUSE GIRL: Growing Up in the 1950s at North East Neighborhood House
is available at Amazon or to order at your favorite book store. 

Monday, April 1, 2024

SUN FUN: GET READY FOR THE ECLIPSE Coming On APRIL 8, 2024! 10 Projects for Kids



On Monday, April 8, 2024, a solar eclipse will be seen over North America. The path of the full eclipse will pass over 13 states and a partial eclipse will be seen in many more.

It is never safe to look at the sun directly. Here's how you can experience an eclipse safely. This project is in my book Sun Fun, originally published in 1981 by Franklin Watts, and now available as an e-book on Amazon or downloadable on Epic at your school or library.

Sun Fun includes 10  projects for primary school age children to learn about the sun-- a paper plate clock to tell time by the sun, how to make shadow puppets and solar art, creating a pin-hole card for watching an eclipse, and much more. You can preview the book in this video on YouTube about how to make a sun clock. (The illustrations in the book are my own, created in the days of pre-separated art. I had to make a separate drawing for each printed color!)
Enjoy learning about the sun and  watching the eclipse safely!