Yearly Archives: 2021


Paint Night is Back!

Last Saturday, we had our first Paint Night in over a year and a half.

When I heard we could do in-person programming again, I knew I had to find some paint brushes, dust off the easels, and make sure the paints had not dried up during the pandemic.

I chose an easy and adaptable painting project for our first post-pandemic paint night: a tropical sunset. This painting features a gradient background and a silhouette foreground with white highlights.

I use a gradient background in a lot of our Paint Night projects. For this look, you paint quickly, with a big brush, and blend the colors directly on the canvas board as you go.

The next step is to wait for the background paint to dry. It doesn’t take long, as we use acrylic paint.

Then, you can add your island and your palm trees and birds with black paint. Don’t like palm trees? Go off-book and paint your own scene.

When the black paint is dry, you add the white highlights.

And that’s it! You have a finished painting!

I think of this painting as our beginner class. It’s easy to adapt to any kind of theme and has some very popular techniques. It’s a great place to start to learn how to use acrylics.

I look forward to building on the techniques in Tropical Sunset in future in-person Paint Nights! See you then!

-Liz Strauss, Teen/Outreach Services Manager


Notaries at the Library

In April, I passed my Notary Exam! I had already taken the class in 2020 and then the state of Ohio shut down.

I decided to take the class again to refresh my memory and voila! I passed again! And this time I submitted all of my information to the Ohio Secretary of State and was awarded my official license.

Becoming a Notary was not an easy feat. You need to call the law library and set up a day and time for you to take the 3 hour class and exam. And it’s also a huge responsibility.

Since becoming a notary, I have notarized at least 11 documents with help from four library colleagues who are notaries.

Notary Public sign outside the library

Dover Public Library has five notaries that can help you with your notary needs at no cost to you!  There is usually always a notary here. Feel free to call and ask if we are available at 330-343-6123!

-Ellen Lint, Library Assistant


Summer is Here 1

"One benefit of summer was that each day  we had more light to read by."  -Jeannette Walls

Summer 2021 is here and the craziness of 2020 is becoming a distant memory. At times last summer, we lived in fear of the unknown. We may have grieved the loss of loved ones, or we may have faced financial or employment challenges. We may have wondered what was becoming of our world, and faced the regret of all that was taken from us. From family gatherings to parades to festivals to graduation parties, 2020 was a summer like no other when you measure what we lost. As you read this, I hope you are doing well.

This summer, I challenge you to embrace a summer of no regrets. We all know how life can turn on a dime. As for me, I plan to play whiffle ball in the back yard with our boys, spend time with family, and READ. My goal is to finish the 100 Book Club challenge that the library offers by Labor Day. I have forty-eight books to go as of this writing!

One of my favorite places in all the world is our front porch on Main Street. Shaded by leafy green Buckeye trees and maples, surrounded by hanging ferns and flowering plants, we like to lounge on the porch, books and iced tea in hand. The best time of the day is when evening falls – eventide. The town quiets down, fireflies begin their evening dance, and you can hear the gentle thwack of a screen door slamming somewhere down the street. I don’t need Vegas. I don’t need Paris or the beach. Give me my front porch, a good book, and some good company. In the end, 2020 reminded us what is important and how little we actually need to be happy.

This summer, I invite you to find your own happiness and encourage you to make the Dover Public Library a part of it. Our theme for our annual summer reading program is Super Heroes, Super Readers. We have reading challenges for kids, teens, and adults, and a variety of prizes and fun programs and activities along the way. See you on the front porch!

-Jim Gill, Library Director


Just Because

When was the last time that you picked up a piece of trash in a parking lot, just because?

When was the last time you let someone go ahead of you at the check-out counter, just because?

When was the last time you gave someone some words of encouragement, just because?

When was the last time you let someone else have the close parking spot, just because?

When was the last time you gave another family a meal, just because?

When was the last time you picked up groceries for an elderly person, just because?

When was the last time you gave someone a compliment, just because?

It doesn’t have to be “Say Something Nice Day”, (which happens to be June 1st) to do or say something nice. You could do or “Say Something Nice” any day, just because!

-Linda Toohey, Outreach Librarian


Fear Street: The Cure to the Reading Rut

These past few months I have been in a reading rut! I have tried to reread my favorite novels, listen to the latest audiobook or even my HGTV magazine. Nothing helped!

Fear Street: The New Girl by R.L. Stine

Low and behold my mom saved, or I secretly did, all of my teenage R.L. Stine young adult books! I recently got the box of books, along with some childhood puzzles, and started reading. It flowed so easily into reading the first book of a series of three. And I got through all of them in about a week! I really enjoyed going back in time and rereading some of my favorite books from when I was a teenager.

So if you are ever in a reading rut, go back to where you found your love of reading. Whether it be a children’s book, a non-fiction book about a project you’d like to start or just a favorite novel you couldn’t put down the first time and now maybe the second time! Sometimes your mind just needs a break. Be kind to yourself and don’t give up!

-Ellen Lint, Library Assistant & R.L. Stine Fan


Free Seeds at the Library!

Ripe red tomatoes, crisp lettuce, and fried eggplant. I love all of the tasty fresh garden veggies. My mouth is watering just thinking about them.

The library has a whole wheelbarrow full of seed packets that you can take home to grow in your garden, and it is all free. There are beans, onions, pumpkins, cantaloupe, peas and peppers to name a few. Some of the seed packets have a picture of the veggie they grow on the outside, but a lot of them have a picture of soup beans and you have to check the label to see what kind of seeds are actually inside. There are quite a few delightful surprises in those packets.

So grab your gardening gloves and pick up some free seeds at the Dover Public Library!

-Mallory Thompson, Librarian


National Children’s Book Week

May 3-9 & November 8-14

Spider-Man at the Dover Public Library

Children’s Book Week started in 1919 is the longest national literacy initiative in the country. In 1913, Franklin K. Matthiews who was the librarian of the Boy Scouts of America, began traveling the U.S. to promote higher standards in children’s books. He proposed creating Children’s Book Week, which would be supported by publishers, book vendors and librarians. In 1916, Matthiews with the help of Publishers Weekly and American Library Association sponsored a Good Book Week along with the Boy Scouts of America. In 1944, Children’s Book Council was formed, and they took over creating Children’s Book Week.

This years theme is “Reading is a Superpower,” which coincidentally is similar to the Dover Public Library’s summer reading theme, “Superhero Super Reader.” The Children’s Department will celebrate book week by giving away a book a day plus free stickers, bookmarks, coloring sheets and crafts.

Come visit to celebrate National Children’s Book Week!

-Jen Gardner, Children’s Room Manager