We have libraries in Abbotsford, Carlton North, Fitzroy, North Fitzroy and Richmond. All of our libraries offer a wide range of collections, programs and services to suit your recreational and educational needs, including free study spaces, home delivery service and free Wi-Fi. On our channel you'…
If you would like to follow this tour using the locations talked about, then please make your way to where the tour starts - at 214 Argyle Street, Fitzroy. Melbourne's first suburb, is full of stories old and new. The Fitzroy Walking tours podcast series makes Fitzroy history easily accessible to the public. Download the podcast, go to the starting point, and start your walk around the streets of Fitzroy. Visit 5-6 places of interest on your journey, taking things at your own pace. Or listen at anytime, anywhere. This very special episode focusses on Macrobertson's Chocolates. The company was founded by Sir MacPherson Robertson in 1880. It was based in Fitzroy for over 100 years, before moving to Ringwood. MacRobertson's created numerous famous confections including Freddo Frog, Cherry Ripe, and Old Gold Chocolates. This walking tour was produced by The Fitzroy Historical Society and Yarra Libraries with the support of The Ewing Trust. Background Music: Playground Pigeon, By Broke for Free.
TW: This podcast contains discussion of suicide. This is a challenging topic, and we would like listeners to know that there is help available if this is triggering for you. You can call Lifeline on 13 11 14, and the suicide call back service on 1300 659 467. Beyond Blue also offers support on 1300 224 636. Episode title: Overdue: Yarra libraries Community Outreach (English) Presenters: Quinn, Kylie & Dylan During the first 2020 Covid lockdown Yarra Libraries found ourselves shut down as a non essential service, despite that many people in the community rely on us for basic access to the internet/information and other vital services. Yarra Libraries management decided to ‘bring the library to the community' by dramatically expanding our community outreach and partnerships with food programs, supporting residents with digital literacy/vaccine certificates, and by sharing books, toys, Covid information updates and anything else that people needed. In this episode Yarra resident and Yarra council access worker Quinn speaks with Yarra Library Community Engagement, Outreach & Partnerships team Dylan and Kylie about how he got involved with Yarra Libraries through the food program, and how working with the libraries during the pandemic has changed his life over the last 2 years. *** The Yarra Libraries Overdue podcast is produced by and for culturally and linguistically diverse communities in the City of Yarra in multiple languages. The Covid-19 pandemic has kickstarted many overdue conversations. This podcast makes space for community members to share their personal insights and experiences. The pandemic has shown us that a one size fits all approach doesn't work, and exposed a lack of culturally appropriate government support for these communities. The Yarra Libraries Overdue podcast calls for more support to help determine and co-create community based solutions to ongoing challenges. This podcast is co-produced by community members from different Yarra projects and organisations working with Yarra Libraries to raise awareness around covid messaging and community-based responses. Overdue is facilitated and produced by Yarra Libraries, and supported by the Victorian Government through the Priority Response to Multicultural Communities during Coronavirus (PRMC) program. #yarralibraries #librarieschangelives #podcast #cityofYarra #CALDcommunities #coronavirus #COVID19 #COVID19vaccines #COVID19VicData Thumbnail image: Quinn, Kylie & Dylan at Fitzroy Library Image Description: Mid shot of a woman standing between two men. They are all wearing black t-shirts printed with the message "Libraries change lives", and smiling happily. There is a microphone on a stand in the foreground. Music: Maarten Schellekens, Will they find us? & Scott Holmes, Another Rainy Day CC BY-NC creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
Transcript: https://bit.ly/3RPaP70 Episode title: Overdue: Tammy (English) Presenter/Co-producer: Tammy This episode features proud Fitzroy resident and Greek Bicultural Liaison Officer for the City of Yarra, Tammy Iliou. She reflects on her experience helping Greek speaking residents navigate through a difficult time with the vaccination program and COVID-19, and forming close bonds that she hopes to continue to strengthen. Tammy welcomes any Greek speaking residents to contact her. * Whilst recording this episode in the studio Tammy received a message to say she had been included in this year's Victorian Government Honour Roll Multicultural List in recognition of her years of community work! *** The Yarra Libraries Overdue podcast is produced by and for culturally and linguistically diverse communities in the City of Yarra in multiple languages. The Covid-19 pandemic has kickstarted many overdue conversations. This podcast makes space for community members to share their personal insights and experiences. The pandemic has shown us that a one size fits all approach doesn't work, and exposed a lack of culturally appropriate government support for these communities. The Yarra Libraries Overdue podcast calls for more support to help determine and co-create community based solutions to ongoing challenges. This podcast is co-produced by community members from different Yarra projects and organisations working with Yarra Libraries to raise awareness around covid messaging and community-based responses. Overdue is facilitated and produced by Yarra Libraries, and supported by the Victorian Government through the Priority Response to Multicultural Communities during Coronavirus (PRMC) program. #yarralibraries #librarieschangelives #podcast #cityofYarra #CALDcommunities #coronavirus #COVID19 #COVID19vaccines #COVID19VicData Thumbnail Image: Tammy in the makerspace studio at Richmond Library Image description: A woman is seated at a sound desk in front of a microphone in a recording studio wearing headphones and smiling happily at the camera. music: Maarten Schellekens, Will they find us? & Scott Holmes, Green Fields CC BY-NC creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
μεταγραφής: https://bit.ly/3aneHeQ Επεισόδιο: Overdue: Τάμμυ (ελληνική) Παραγωγός: Τάμμυ Ηλιού Σε αυτό το επισόδιο, η Τάμμυ Ηλιού που ζεί στην περιοχή του Yarra μας μιλάει για τις εμπειρίες της με το θέμα του COVID-19 και πως μέσα από τα προγράμματα που δημιούργησε ο Δήμος βοήθησε άτομα να καταλάβουν για τα εμβόλια και άλλες δυσκολίες που πέρασαν σ'αυτο το διάστημα. Κατάφερε να δημιουργήσει σχέσεις με πολλά άτομα Ελληνικής καταγωγής και ελπίζει να συνεχιστούν αυτά τα προγράμματα και οι σχέσεις με την Ελληνική παροικία του Υαrra και στο μελλον. *** Η Σειρά Podcast Overdue των Βιβλιοθηκών Yarra Το podcast (Διαδικτυακή Ραδιοφωνική Μετάδοση-Ηχητικό Ντοκουμέντο) Overdue (Εκπρόθεσμa/Καθυστερημένa) των Βιβλιοθηκών Γιάρρα (Yarra Libraries) παράγεται από και για τις πολιτισμικά και γλωσσικά ποικιλόμορφες κοινότητες του Δήμου Yarra σε πολλές γλώσσες. Η πανδημία του Covid-19 έχει δώσει το έναυσμα για πολλές συζητήσεις σχετικά με πολλές εκπρόθεσμες/καθυστερημένες συζητήσεις. Αυτό το podcast δίνει χώρο στα μέλη της κοινότητας να μοιραστούν τις προσωπικές τους ιδέες και εμπειρίες. Η πανδημία μάς έδειξε ότι η προσέγγιση του ενός μεγέθους για όλους δεν λειτουργεί και αποκάλυψε την έλλειψη πολιτισμικά κατάλληλης κυβερνητικής υποστήριξης γι' αυτές τις κοινότητες. Το podcast Overdue των Βιβλιοθηκών Yarra ζητά περισσότερη υποστήριξη για να βοηθηθεί ο καθορισμός και η συνδημιουργία λύσεων με βάση την κοινότητα στις τρέχουσες προκλήσεις. Αυτό το podcast είναι συμπαραγωγή μελών της κοινότητας από διάφορα έργα και οργανώσεις του Δήμου Yarra που συνεργάζονται με τις Βιβλιοθήκες Yarra για την ευαισθητοποίηση γύρω από τα μηνύματα της συνείδησης και τις απαντήσεις που βασίζονται στην κοινότητα. #yarralibraries #librarieschangelives #podcast #cityofYarra #CALDcommunities #coronavirus #COVID19 #COVID19vaccines #COVID19VicData φωτογραφία: Τάμμυ Ηλιού ΜΟΥΣΙΚΗ: Maarten Schellekens, Will they find us? & Scott Holmes, Green Fields CC BY-NC creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
[Transcript coming] Episode title: Overdue: Tam & Vinh (English subs) Presenters/ Co-producers: Tam Le and Vinh Nguyen Guests: Phan Vi and Vin Thy Hi Vietnamese Bicultural Liaison workers Vinh Nguyen and Tam Le in conversation with older Richmond residents Phan Vi and Vin Thy Hi at North Richmond public housing estate about their roles in the community, pop-up vaccination clinics and community stories from lockdown, including assisting in outreach with Yarra Libraries. *** The Yarra Libraries Overdue podcast is produced by and for culturally and linguistically diverse communities in the City of Yarra in multiple languages. The Covid-19 pandemic has kickstarted many overdue conversations. This podcast makes space for community members to share their personal insights and experiences. The pandemic has shown us that a one size fits all approach doesn't work, and exposed a lack of culturally appropriate government support for these communities. The Yarra Libraries Overdue podcast calls for more support to help determine and co-create community based solutions to ongoing challenges. This podcast is co-produced by community members from different Yarra projects and organisations working with Yarra Libraries to raise awareness around covid messaging and community-based responses. Overdue is facilitated and produced by Yarra Libraries, and supported by the Victorian Government through the Priority Response to Multicultural Communities during Coronavirus (PRMC) program. #yarralibraries #librarieschangelives #podcast #cityofYarra #CALDcommunities #coronavirus #COVID19 #COVID19vaccines #COVID19VicData Thumbnail Image: Vinh Nguyen, Vin Thy Hi, Phan Vi and Tam Le at Richmond public housing estate. Image Description: Long shot of 3 men and a woman standing in front of trees and a tall apartment block smiling at camera. Music: Maarten Schellekens, Will they find us? & Scott Holmes, Longest Year CC BY-NC creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
Phiên âm có sẵn ở đây: https://bit.ly/3ulNgZJ Tiêu đề tập: Overdue: Tâm & Vinh (Tiếng Việt) Người trình bày / Đồng sản xuất: Tâm Lê và Vinh Nguyễn Khách mời: Phan Vi và Vin Thy Hi Được dịch bởi : Linh Nguyen Nhân viên điều hợp văn hoá Việt Nam: Vinh Nguyễn và Tâm Lê trong cuộc trò chuyện với các cư dân lớn tuổi vùng Richmond, Phan Vi và Vin Thy Hi tại khu nhà ở chính phủ North Richmond về vai trò của họ trong cộng đồng, các phòng khám tiêm chủng được dựng lên và những câu chuyện cộng đồng khi phong toả, bao gồm sự hỗ trợ để tiếp cận với Thư viện Yarra. *** Chương trình Overdue podcast của Thư viện Yarra được sản xuất và dành cho các cộng đồng đa dạng về văn hóa và ngôn ngữ ở thành phố Yarra bằng nhiều ngôn ngữ. Đại dịch Covid-19 đã bắt đầu nhiều cuộc tranh luận quan trọng Podcast này tạo không gian cho các thành viên cộng đồng chia sẻ những hiểu biết và kinh nghiệm cá nhân của họ. Đại dịch đã cho chúng ta thấy rằng một cách tiếp cận không hiệu quả với tất cả mọi người và cho thấy sự thiếu hỗ trợ phù hợp về mặt văn hóa của chính phủ đối với các cộng đồng này. Chương trình Overdue podcast của thư viện Yarra kêu gọi hỗ trợ nhiều hơn để giúp xác định và đồng sáng tạo ra các giải pháp dựa vào những thách thức đang diễn ra trên cộng đồng. Podcast này được đồng sản xuất bởi các thành viên cộng đồng từ các dự án và tổ chức Yarra khác nhau làm việc với Thư viện Yarra để nâng cao nhận thức về thông điệp Covid và phản hồi dựa trên cộng đồng. Overdue được sản xuất bởi thư viện Yarra, và được hỗ trợ bởi Chính phủ Victoria thông qua chương trình Ưu tiên ứng phó cho các Cộng đồng đa văn hóa trong chương trình Coronavirus (PRMC) #Thư viện Yarra #Thư viện thay đổi cuộc sống #podcast #Thành phố Yarra #Cộng đồng CALD #Virus Corona #COVID 19 #Vắc-xin phòng ngừa Covid-19 #Dữ liệu COVID19 Vic ảnh chụp: Vinh Nguyễn, Vin Thy Hi, Phan Vi và Tâm Lê Âm nhạc: Maarten Schellekens, Will they find us? & Scott Holmes, Longest Year CC BY-NC creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
Transcript available here: https://bit.ly/3I11VPu Episode title: Overdue: Valeria (Italian) Presenter/Co-producer: Valeria In this episode, Italian born language teacher and international student Valeria speaks about the interesting reactions she has gotten whilst trying to create a network with the established Italian community here in Melbourne. She reflects with fondness on the people her work as the Italian speaking team member of the Yarra Council Bicultural Liaison project has introduced her to, especially the nonnos and nonnas at the Willowview Aged Care Centre. *** The Yarra Libraries Overdue podcast is produced by and for culturally and linguistically diverse communities in the City of Yarra in multiple languages. The Covid-19 pandemic has kickstarted many overdue conversations. This podcast makes space for community members to share their personal insights and experiences. The pandemic has shown us that a one size fits all approach doesn't work, and exposed a lack of culturally appropriate government support for these communities. The Yarra Libraries Overdue podcast calls for more support to help determine and co-create community based solutions to ongoing challenges. This podcast is co-produced by community members from different Yarra projects and organisations working with Yarra Libraries to raise awareness around covid messaging and community-based responses. Overdue is facilitated and produced by Yarra Libraries, and supported by the Victorian Government through the Priority Response to Multicultural Communities during Coronavirus (PRMC) program. #yarralibraries #librarieschangelives #podcast #cityofYarra #CALDcommunities #coronavirus #COVID19 #COVID19vaccines #COVID19VicData Thumbnail image: Valeria in Richmond Library makerspace studio Image Description: Mid shot of a woman wearing headphones, smiling happily in a recording studio Music: Maarten Schellekens, Will they find us? & Scott Holmes, Make your dream reality CC BY-NC creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
Trascrizione disponibile qui: https://bit.ly/3NthkcC Titolo dell'episodio: Overdue: Valeria (Italiano) Presentatrice / co-produttrice: Valeria In questo episodio Valeria, un'insegnante di lingue e studentessa internazionale nata in Italia, ci parla delle interessanti reazioni che ha raccolto, cercando di creare un network nella ben assestata comunità italiana qui a Melbourne. Ripensa con simpatia alle persone con cui ha avuto modo di collaborare in quanto nativa italiana nella squadra del comune di Yarra per il progetto di Mediazione Biculturale (Bicultural Liaison), specialmente con le nonne e i nonni del centro di assistenza agli anziani di Willowview. *** Il podcast Overdue di Yarra Library è prodotto da e per le comunità culturalmente e linguisticamente diverse della città di Yarra in servizi multilingue. La pandemia del COVID-19 ha fatto scaturire molte conversazioni, necessarie da tempo. Questo podcast dà spazio ai membri della comunità affinché condividano i loro punti di vista personali ed esperienze. La pandemia ci ha mostrato che il metodo universale non funziona, e ha messo in evidenza la mancanza culturale di un appropriato supporto da parte del governo per queste comunità. Il podcast Overdue delle biblioteche di Yarra richiama a più supporto per aiutare a determinare e cooperare per trovare soluzioni nella comunità riguardanti le sfide che l'attendono. Il podcast è facilitato e prodotto dalle biblioteche di Yarra, e supportato dal Dipartimento per la Famiglia, Equità e Alloggi con la task force per le comunità multiculturali. #bibliotecheyarra #labibliotecasalvavite #podcast #cittàdiYarra #comunitàlinguisticamenteculturalmentediverse #comunitàCALD #coronavirus #COVID19 #vacciniCOVID19 #COVID19VicDati #comunitàitaliane #italianiamelbourne Immagine in miniatura: Valeria nello studio della biblioteca di Richmond Descrizione dell'immagine: foto a mezzo busto di una donna che indossa le cuffie, sorridendo felicemente in uno studio di registrazione Music: Maarten Schellekens, Will they find us? & Scott Holmes, Make your dream reality CC BY-NC creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
Transcript available here: https://bit.ly/3A8CcTj Episode title: Overdue: Jean (English) Presenter/Co-producer: Jean Jean is a Mandarin bicultural liaison officer for Yarra City Council and a fitness instructor with Yarra Leisure Centres where movement and communal activities have been vital during the pandemic. Jean explains how relationships, trust, and rapport with elderly speakers of various Chinese languages in exercise classes allowed her to have less judgemental conversations around health and the vaccine, as well as helping to bridge the digital divide. *** The Yarra Libraries Overdue podcast is produced by and for culturally and linguistically diverse communities in the City of Yarra in multiple languages. The Covid-19 pandemic has kickstarted many overdue conversations. This podcast makes space for community members to share their personal insights and experiences. The pandemic has shown us that a one size fits all approach doesn't work, and exposed a lack of culturally appropriate government support for these communities. The Yarra Libraries Overdue podcast calls for more support to help determine and co-create community based solutions to ongoing challenges. This podcast is co-produced by community members from different Yarra projects and organisations working with Yarra Libraries to raise awareness around covid messaging and community-based responses. Overdue is facilitated and produced by Yarra Libraries, and supported by the Victorian Government through the Priority Response to Multicultural Communities during Coronavirus (PRMC) program. #yarralibraries #librarieschangelives #podcast #cityofYarra #CALDcommunities #coronavirus #COVID19 #COVID19vaccines #COVID19VicData Thumbnail image: Jean in Richmond Library makerspace studio Image Description: Mid shot of a woman wearing headphones, smiling happily in a recording studio Music: Maarten Schellekens, Will they find us? & Scott Holmes, Make your dream reality CC BY-NC creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
可在此处获取记录副本:https://bit.ly/3y3eRj4 节目/剧集名称:逾期: Jean(普通话) 主持人/联合制片人:Jean 是雅拉市议会的普通话双文化联络官,也是雅拉休闲中心的健身教练,在大流行期间,运动和社区活动至关重要。 Jean 解释了与不同中国背景的老年人的关系、信任和融洽关系如何让她减少围绕健康和疫苗的判断性对话,并帮助弥合语言障碍和数字鸿沟。 Yarra Libraries Overdue (雅拉图书馆逾期) 播客由 Yarra 市的文化和语言多元化社区以多种语言制作并为之服务。 Covid-19 大流行引发了许多迟来的对话。 该播客为社区成员提供了分享个人见解和经验的空间。 大流行向我们表明,一刀切的方法是行不通的,并暴露出政府对这些社区缺乏文化上适当的支持。 Yarra Libraries Overdue (雅拉图书馆逾期) 播客呼吁提供更多支持,以帮助确定和共同创建基于社区的解决方案,以应对持续的挑战。 该播客由来自不同 Yarra 项目的社区成员和与 Yarra 图书馆合作的组织共同制作,以提高人们对 covid 消息传递和基于社区的响应的认识。 该播客由 Yarra 图书馆推动和制作,并得到家庭、公平和住房多元文化社区工作组的支持。 #yarralibraries #librarieschangelives #podcast #cityofYarra #CALDcommunities #coronavirus #COVID19 #COVID19vaccines #COVID19VicData Thumbnail image: Jean in Richmond Library makerspace studio Image Description: Mid shot of a woman wearing headphones, smiling happily in a recording studio Music: Maarten Schellekens, Will they find us? & Scott Holmes, Make your dream reality CC BY-NC creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
Transcript available soon Program/Episode title: Overdue: Milan, Savka & Smilja (English subs) Presenters: Milan, Savka & Smilja In this episode we listen in on three generations of a Serbian Australian family reflecting on how Serbian dance and folklore was a way for Savka's students to maintain culture, morale and connection, locally and internationally during the pandemic. We also hear about grandmother Smilja's experience accessing vaccination services, and about Milan's role as a Yarra Bicultural Liaison Officer in the Serbian community. *** The Yarra Libraries Overdue podcast is produced by and for culturally and linguistically diverse communities in the City of Yarra in multiple languages. The Covid-19 pandemic has kickstarted many overdue conversations. This podcast makes space for community members to share their personal insights and experiences. The pandemic has shown us that a one size fits all approach doesn't work, and exposed a lack of culturally appropriate government support for these communities. The Yarra Libraries Overdue podcast calls for more support to help determine and co-create community based solutions to ongoing challenges. This podcast is co-produced by community members from different Yarra projects and organisations working with Yarra Libraries to raise awareness around covid messaging and community-based responses. Overdue is facilitated and produced by Yarra Libraries, and supported by the Victorian Government through the Priority Response to Multicultural Communities during Coronavirus (PRMC) program. #yarralibraries #librarieschangelives #podcast #cityofYarra #CALDcommunities #coronavirus #COVID19 #COVID19vaccines #COVID19VicData Thumbnail image: Savka, Milan, baby Milo & Smilja Image Description: Long shot of three generations of a Serbian family in their Melbourne living room. Two women are seated and a man is kneeling in the centre holding a small Australian flag. A baby is sleeping under a blanket beside them on the couch. In the foreground a coffee table is beautifully arranged with traditional Serbian treats, coffee, brandy and biscuits. Music: Maarten Schellekens, Will they find us? & Scott Holmes, Storybook CC BY-NC creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
препис: https://bit.ly/3nhw8A7 Program/Episode title: Overdue: Milan, Savka & Smilja (Serbian & English) Presenters/co-producers: Milan, Savka & Smilja У овој епизоди слушамо три генерације српскo аустралијске породице како размишљају о томе како су српски плес и фолклор били начин да Савкини ђаци одрже културу, морал и повезаност на локалном и међународном нивоу током пандемије. Такође слушамо о искуству баке Смиље у приступу услугама вакцинацији и о Милановој улози као службеника за корона висур у српској заједници. *** Подкаст библиотеке Месне Заједнице Јаре је направљен за културолошку и језичку различитост заједнице у МЗ Јара на више језика. Пандемија короне вируса је успорила комуникацију. Овај подкаст даје простор члановима заједнице да поделе своје личне увиде и искуства. Пандемија нам је показала да приступ који одговара свима не функционише и разоткрила недостатак културолошки одговарајуће подршке владе за ову заједницу. Подкаст библиотеке МЗ Јаре позива на додатну подршку како би се помогло у одређивању и заједничком креирању решења заснованих на заједници за текуће изазове. Овај подкаст копродуцирају чланови заједнице из различитих МЗ Јара пројеката и организација које ради са Јара библиотеком на подизању свести о размени података о ковид-у и одговорима у заједници. Овај подкаст објављује и продуцира библиотека Јара, а подржава га Радна група Одељења за породице, праведност и смештај мултикултуралних заједница. #yarralibraries #librarieschangelives #podcast #cityofYarra #CALDcommunities #coronavirus #COVID19 #COVID19vaccines #COVID19VicData фотографија: Savka, Milan, Smilja музика: Maarten Schellekens, Will they find us? & Scott Holmes, Storybook CC BY-NC creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
Transcript coming soon Program/Episode title: Overdue: Deniz and Asmida (English subs) Presenters/co-producers: Deniz and Asmida Fourteen year old Asmida chats with her mother Deniz about becoming a teenager in the pandemic. Asmida talks about home school and student life in all the lockdowns and being separated from family overseas. As the Turkish Bicultural Liaison officer at City of Yarra, Deniz discusses the changing face of the Turkish community in Yarra, and the relief at finally being able to attend “births, deaths and celebrations” again. *** The Yarra Libraries Overdue podcast is produced by and for culturally and linguistically diverse communities in the City of Yarra in multiple languages. The Covid-19 pandemic has kickstarted many overdue conversations. This podcast makes space for community members to share their personal insights and experiences. The pandemic has shown us that a one size fits all approach doesn't work, and exposed a lack of culturally appropriate government support for these communities. The Yarra Libraries Overdue podcast calls for more support to help determine and co-create community based solutions to ongoing challenges. This podcast is co-produced by community members from different Yarra projects and organisations working with Yarra Libraries to raise awareness around covid messaging and community-based responses. Overdue is facilitated and produced by Yarra Libraries, and supported by the Victorian Government through the Priority Response to Multicultural Communities during Coronavirus (PRMC) program. #yarralibraries #librarieschangelives #podcast #cityofYarra #CALDcommunities #coronavirus #COVID19 #COVID19vaccines #COVID19VicData Thumbnail image: Deniz and Asmida in Richmond Library makerspace studio Image Description: Long shot of a younger woman and a little bit older woman seated together in a recording studio next to microphones. They are facing each other and deep in conversation. They are wearing casual clothes. They seem very comfortable and happy to be together. Music: Maarten Schellekens, Will they find us? & Scott Holmes, Another Rainy Day CC BY-NC creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
Türkçe metin çok yakında yayında Program/Bölüm başlığı: Overdue: Deniz ve Asmida (Türkçe) Sunucular / Ortak yapımcılar: Deniz ve Asmida On dört yaşındaki Asmida, annesi Deniz ile pandemi döneminde ergen olmak üzerine sohbet ediyor. Asmida, kapanma doneminde okumanın, yurtdışındaki ailesinden ayrı kalmanın nasıl bir şey olduğunu hatırlıyor. Yarra'da Türk Kültürel İrtibat Görevlisi olan Deniz, Yarra'daki Türk toplumunun değişen yüzünü ve nihayet "doğumlara, cenazelere ve kutlamalara" katılabilmenin rahatlığını anlatıyor. *** Bu podcast, Yarra Kütüphaneleri ile birlikte çalışan farklı Yarra projelerinden ve kuruluşlarından topluluk üyeleri tarafından, covid mesajlar ve topluluk temelli yanıtlar konusunda farkındalık yaratmak için ortaklaşa üretilmiştir. Bu podcast, Yarra Kütüphaneleri tarafından kolaylaştırılmış ve üretilmiş olup, Aile, Adalet ve Konut Bakanlığı Çok Kültürlü Topluluklar Görev Gücü tarafından desteklenmektedir. #yarralibraries #librarieschangelives #podcast #cityofYarra #CALDcommunities #coronavirus #COVID19 #COVID19vaccines #COVID19VicData Fotoğraf: Asmida ve Deniz müzik: Maarten Schellekens, Will they find us? & Scott Holmes, Another Rainy Day CC BY-NC creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
[Transcript coming] Episode title: Overdue: Covid Myth Busters Q&A (English) Presenters: Eden, Aisha, Jekang & Anon. Guests: Dr Ambereen Farouque, Omar Elmi and Imogen Jordan; with invaluable contributions from Faiza Mahat Producer: Rahel Negash This episode of Overdue is hosted by children and younger people from Fitzroy Learning Network and Yarra Youth Services asking important covid health questions with special guests Dr Ambereen Farouque from North Richmond Centre for Culture, Ethnicity and Health; and Omar Elmi & Imogen Jordan from North Richmond Community Health centre. *** The Yarra Libraries Overdue podcast is produced by and for culturally and linguistically diverse communities in the City of Yarra in multiple languages. The Covid-19 pandemic has kickstarted many overdue conversations. This podcast makes space for community members to share their personal insights and experiences. The pandemic has shown us that a one size fits all approach doesn't work, and exposed a lack of culturally appropriate government support for these communities. The Yarra Libraries Overdue podcast calls for more support to help determine and co-create community based solutions to ongoing challenges. This podcast is co-produced by community members from different Yarra projects and organisations working with Yarra Libraries to raise awareness around covid messaging and community-based responses. Overdue is facilitated and produced by Yarra Libraries, and supported by the Victorian Government through the Priority Response to Multicultural Communities during Coronavirus (PRMC) program. #yarralibraries #librarieschangelives #podcast #cityofYarra #CALDcommunities #coronavirus #COVID19 #COVID19vaccines #COVID19VicData Thumbnail image: Eden Image Description: Midshot of a young woman seated on a couch wearing headphones and a black jacket with a colourful shirt underneath. The headphones are plugged into a portable digital recorder, which the young woman is holding while smiling quizzically at the camera. Music: Maarten Schellekens: Will they find us?& Scott Holmes Inspiring Corporate CC BY-NC https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
Program/Episode title: Overdue: Yarra Youth Workers (English) Presenter: Agum Guests: Alfia and Eyerusalem Language: English How do you support members of multicultural communities who speak English as an additional language (or not at all) during a pandemic? It's a question many of us may wonder. And it's a question we try to get answers to. Alfia speaks Oromo, Arabic, French and English; and Eyerusalem speaks Amharic, Tigrinya, and English. They both started working as City of Yarra Bicultural Liaison Officers (BLOs) last year with Yarra Libraries outreach and other local services, helping out with food programs, vaccine certificates, and vaccine pop-up clinics. Join them in conversation with Agum as they share what they learned about the importance of community representation, and how their skills have led to further employment opportunities with Yarra Youth Services and beyond. *** The Yarra Libraries Overdue podcast is produced by and for culturally and linguistically diverse communities in the City of Yarra in multiple languages. The Covid-19 pandemic has kickstarted many overdue conversations. This podcast makes space for community members to share their personal insights and experiences. The pandemic has shown us that a one size fits all approach doesn't work, and exposed a lack of culturally appropriate government support for these communities. The Yarra Libraries Overdue podcast calls for more support to help determine and co-create community based solutions to ongoing challenges. This podcast is co-produced by community members from different Yarra projects and organisations working with Yarra Libraries to raise awareness around covid messaging and community-based responses. Overdue is facilitated and produced by Yarra Libraries, and supported by the Victorian Government through the Priority Response to Multicultural Communities during Coronavirus (PRMC) program. #yarralibraries #librarieschangelives #podcast #cityofYarra #CALDcommunities #coronavirus #COVID19 #COVID19vaccines #COVID19VicData #YarraYouthServices Music by: Maarten Schellekens: Will they find us? creativecommons.org: licensed under a Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. Thumbnail image: Alfia Image Description: Headshot of a young muslim woman wearing a white scarf with a patterned band. She is located inside a car, and is smiling sweetly at the camera. [Transcript link coming]
"The purest way that I could write about being trans was to make it a bit magic. Because I think when you find understanding of yourself and also see that reflected in others, that is just really special, so comforting and really necessary. I think when you're a trans person existing in this world you have to have people who understand who you are, otherwise it can make you feel like you're not real." - Alison Evans In this Trans Day of Remembrance episode of the Yarra Libraries podcast, Alison Evans discusses writing their book Euphoria Kids with Librarian Aandi, before recommending their favourite representations of gender euphoria and trans identity in fiction and non-fiction from the Yarra Libraries Collection. Alison Evans is the award-winning author of the queer YA books Ida, Highway Bodies, and Euphoria Kids. Alison is a contributor in Kindred: 12 Queer #LoveOzYA Stories, co-edits the zine Concrete Queers and is the fiction editor for #enbylife. They are based on Wurundjeri Land/Melbourne, Australia. You can find Alison Evans' work at branches of Yarra Libraries as well as in our digital collections. You can also find lists of some of our favourite stories from trans and gender diverse authors through our list in the Yarra Libraries catalogue and our shelves in Cloud Library and Borrowbox. Yarra Libraries and Alison Evans Recommend Euphoria Kids – Alison Evans Ida – Alison Evans (also on Cloud Library) Highway Bodies – Alison Evans (also on Cloud Library) Kindred: 12 queer #loveozya stories – Michael Earp (ed.) What's the T – Juno Dawson DeadEndia: The Watcher's Test – Hamish Steele DeadEndia: The Broken Halo – Hamish Steele Vanilla – Billy Merrell Cemetary Boys – Aiden Thomas Theme is Add And by Broke for Free
“Realistic fiction, set in the present, that ignores climate is like ignoring the internet. It's no longer realistic.” – Briohny Doyle In this podcast, Briohny Doyle, her writing career, living in the age of climate catastrophe and her latest novel, Echolalia. Briohny Doyle's debut novel, The Island Will Sink, was set in a not-too-distant future on the brink of collapse, where catastrophe is the most popular form of entertainment. Briohny then followed this up with her second book, Adult Fantasy, a personal essay and cultural critique about turning 30 in a world of economic uncertainty, political conservatism, and precarious employment conditions. Her latest book, Echolalia is about a family in the lead up to and aftermath of a tragedy. It's a literary novel that experiments with the tropes and pacing of a domestic thriller. Set in the fictionalised rural centre of Shorehaven, and focalised through characters at crossroads and thresholds, the story poses complex questions about the roles of women, particularly mothers, about class and status, about environmental degradation, responsibility, and legacy. And it's one of the best books by an Australian author this year. This podcast was supported by The Ewing Trust. Echolalia is able to be borrowed from Yarra Libraries, as well as being available to buy at all good book stores. Yarra Libraries Recommends Echolalia - Briohny Doyle The Island Will Sink - Briohny Doyle Adult Fantasy - Briohny Doyle Deliverance - James Dickey The Glad Shout - Alice Robinson A Couple of Things Before the End - Sean O'Beirne After Australia - Michael Mohamed Ahmad (ed) Real Estate - Deborah Levy Things I don't Want to Know - Deborah Levy Love Objects - Emily Maguire Luster - Raven Leilani The Magpie Wing - Max Easton
Join us today for a walk from Brunswick Street to Nicholson Street in Fitzroy. Make your way to the All Saints Parish on King William Street in Fitzroy and press play. With you on your walk today are five members of the Fitzroy Historical society – Simon Armstrong, Jennifer McKeagney, Meg Lee, Peter Woods and Mike Moore. “The residence soon acquired a reputation amongst students as being a place of wild debauchery. several of its inmates drunken at 7pm, and a place of riotous parties and various lewd amateurish adventures.” Peter Woods Fitzroy, Melbourne's first suburb, is full of stories both old and new. The Fitzroy Walking tours podcast series makes Fitzroy history easily accessible to the public. Each podcast features local experts talking about a particular topic. Simply download the podcast, go to the starting point, and start your walk around the streets of Fitzroy. Visit places of interest on your journey, taking things at your own pace. Or listen at anytime, anywhere! This podcast is bought to you by Yarra Libraries and the Ewing Trust. Music is Better Days by Ketsa
“Forty years into the future there’s going to be this idea of a groundswell of books emerging about this time that were all about this topic that got us all talking” – Khalid Warsame on the hoped-for impact of climate change in fiction As part of The Fitzroy Writers Festival we were thrilled to welcome Khalid Warsame, Alice Robinson and Sean O’Beirne for a discussion about one of the most pressing issues of our time, climate change, and how it’s addressed in fiction. This is an edited recording of the session held earlier this year. You can find work from Khalid, Alice and Sean in the Yarra Libraries collection, both in branch and online through e-resources like Cloud Library. Khalid Warsame is a writer whose essays, fiction, and criticism have appeared in numerous publications, including The Lifted Brow, The Saturday Paper, Overland, The Big Issue, Cordite Poetry Review, and Meanjin. Khalid also contributed a piece to the anthology After Australia. His story, List of Known Remedies, is a slice of life of young Melbournians – working in cafes, talking with friends, and tending to ill pets, set against a backdrop of extreme weather and increasingly authoritarian government rule. Sean O’Beirne is the author of the short story collection A Couple of things before the End, a funny, bitingly satirical and outstandingly original debut told in a range of voices and styles. Alice Robinson is the author of two novels. Her debut, Anchor Point, was longlisted for the Stella Prize and the Indie Book Awards. Her latest novel, The Glad Shout, is a stunning novel set in a Melbourne that has been destroyed by a catastrophic storm. Told in a starkly visual and compelling narrative, the book is a deeply moving homage to motherhood and the struggles faced by women in difficult times. Yarra Libraries Recommends The Glad Shout- Alice Robinson Anchor Point - Alice Robinson A Couple of Things Before the End- Sean O’Beirne After Australia Anthology The Rain Heron – Robbie Arnott Our theme is Add And by Broke for Free
//CW: sexism, online abuse, bulling, divorce, eating disorders, strong language// “There are so many women walking around who feel completely duped by what it is they were taught to aspire to.” – Clementine Ford Yarra Libraries and The Ewing Trust are pleased to present Clementine Ford and Alice Robinson, in conversation as part of the Fitzroy Writers Festival. This was a memorable, booked out event where the acclaimed authors discussed their friendship, writing, feminism, sexism, parenting and their goals for the future. “I feel like the power that I hold as a woman in our culture is the power to disarm people because the expectations, they have of me when they meet me is very low. And at some point the truth comes out, and then I have power. And that’s such a depressing power to have.” – Alice Robinson This is a live recording, and there is a short stretch at the beginning where the microphone doesn’t sound great. Stay with us, it gets better very quickly. Yarra Libraries Recommends Fight Like a Girl - Clementine Ford Boys will be Boys – Clementine Ford The Glad Shout – Alice Robinson Anchor Point – Alice Robinson Our theme is Add And by Broke For Free
Daphne Du Maurier’s short story The Birds is a classic of horror and short fiction, made most famous by Alfred Hitchcock’s adaptation for the big screen. After reading and discussing the story with attendees of The Short Story Club, Meaghan and Nell share their thoughts about this thrilling tale while touching on the life of this fascinating author. You can book in for meetings of The Short Story Club via the Yarra Libraries website – we always welcome new members. You can find The Birds in The Birds And Other Stories by Daphne Du Maurier, as well as in a few places online using your preferred search engine. Yarra Libraries Recommends Novels Rebecca – Daphne Du Maurier My Cousin Rachael – Daphne Du Maurier (also available as an audiobook through borrowbox) Short Stories The Birds and Other Stories – Daphne Du Maurier Don’t Look Now and Other Stories – Daphne Du Maurier The Doll: short stories – Daphne Du Maurier The Breakthrough – Daphne Du Maurier (available as an ebook through Cloud Library) Non-Fiction Vanishing Cornwall - Daphne Du Maurier Biographies Manderlay Forever - Tatiana de Rosnay, Daphne Du Maurier and her Sisters – Jane Dunn Films The Birds – Alfred Hitchcock – contained in this Alfred Hitchcock Collection Rebecca – Alfred Hitchcock A few more disasters I am Legend - Richard Matheson Day of the Triffids - John Wyndam Persuasion by Jane Austen Girl Woman Other by Bernadine Evaristo White Space Series by Elizabeth Bear Ancestral Night by Elizabeth Bear Machine by Elizabeth Bear Neapolitan Series by Elene Ferrante The Expanse (TV series) 2012 – Film Our theme is Add And by Broke for Free
“There’s nothing holy about Australian history – it’s all just haunted” – Evelyn Araluen The Kill Your Darlings First Book Club celebrates debut Australian authors every month. In March, we partnered with them to bring you Evelyn Araluen discussing her debut collection of essay, poetry and prose; Dropbear. With Brunswick Bound’s Ellen Cregan, Evelyn discusses family, rage, May Gibbs and turning one poem into a book. You can find out about the next Kill Your Darlings First Book Club book, as well as more great Australian writing, on the Kill Your Darlings website. You can find Dropbear at Yarra Libraries, on Cloud Library, and at local bookstores like Brunswick Bound. Yarra Libraries Recommends Dropbear – Evelyn Araluen (also available on Cloud Library) New Australian Fiction 2020 – Rebecca Starford (ed.) Blakwork – Alison Whittaker Fire front : First Nations poetry and power today (ed. Alison Whittaker, also available on Cloud Library) Born Into This – Adam Thompson (also available on Cloud Library) A History of My Brief Body - Billy-Ray Belcourt Slowlier - Ella O’Keefe Admit the Joyous Passion of Revolt - Elena Gomez Our theme is Add And by Broke for Free
Yarra Libraries, the Ewing Trust and Fitzroy Legal Service are pleased to present Eleni Hale, author of Stone Girl, a powerful and moving novel about a young girl who becomes a ward of the state. Eleni is joined in conversation by Anna Spargo-Ryan, author of novels The Gulf and The Paper House. In 2016, Anna received the Horne prize, and award for long form non-fiction writing, for The Suicide Gene. Stone Girl is available at all good bookstores, as well as available to borrow via Yarra Libraries. Yarra Libraries Recommends Eleni Hale: Stone Girl Anna Spargo-Ryan: The Gulf Anna Spargo-Ryan: The Paper House Anna Spargo-Ryan: The Suicide Gene (online) https://www.thehorneprize.com.au/2016-winner Praise for Stone Girl: A heartbreaking novel of raw survival and hope, and the children society likes to forget. A stunning and unforgettable debut YA novel for mature readers. - Justkidslit.com Eleni Hale’s prose is stunning, her analogies fresh, her writing raw and uncensored. This is an honest story that doesn’t shy away from the harsh realities facing kids on the fringes. Very few writers are capable of telling this story. - Hayley, goodreads.com Hale has written a novel that is so much more than just a fantastic book. This is a book that gives a voice to the forgotten ones, the kind of book a child stuck in the system might pick up and feel some hope after reading it. And maybe, just maybe some real change will occur. - L J Lacey, owner of Three Four Knock on the Door Bookshop This podcast is bought to you by Yarra Libraries, the Ewing Trust and Fitzroy Legal Service, as part of Fitzroy Writers Festival 2021. Fitzroy Legal Service is a community legal centre covering the Cities of Yarra and Darebin. It was established in 1972 and is one of the oldest legal centres in Australia. Fitzroy Legal Service provides criminal, family, family violence, and generalist legal services to socially and economically disadvantaged clients with a particular focus on people stigmatised and criminalised due to poverty, homelessness, childhood abuse, family violence, trauma, drug-use, mental health, contact with the criminal legal system and incarceration. Our theme is Add And by Broke For Free
Joining us on this Fitzroy Writers Festival podcast are two contributors to the Liminal Anthology Collisions: Fictions from the Future. The collection asks the question: What does the future hold? Featuring both emerging and established writers of colour, this collection showcases some of the best work that Australian literature has to offer. The stories are sites for collisions: against Eurocentric ideals, against narrow concepts of excellence, against stagnant ideas of the world to come. But collisions also manifest in the way our lives come into contact with others, how our pasts shift against the present, and how our imaginations sit against our realities. Bryant Apollonio is a Filipino-Australian writer and lawyer. He came to Sydney with his family when he was three and he currently lives in Darwin. In 2017, he won the Overland prize for fiction. Mykaela Saunders is a writer, teacher, and community researcher of Koori and Lebanese descent who has won prizes for fiction, poetry, creative non-fiction, and research. Mykaela was born on Dharug ancestors’ lands in Western Sydney, growing up between there and in Tweed Heads. Collisions: Fictions from the Future is available to buy now at all good bookstores and available to borrow at Yarra Libraries. Yarra Libraries Recommends The Swan Book – Alexis Wright Heat and Light – Ellen van Neervan Land of the Golden Clouds – Archie Weller Born into This – Adam Thompson Where the Fruit Falls – Karyn Wilde After Australia – Anthology 2666 – Roberto Bolano Fictions – Jorge Lius Borges Mona – Pola Oloixarac Blueberries – Elena Savage Don Quixote – Miguel de Cervantes “Collisions felt like speed dating, and that peculiar anxiety of finding myself falling in love with almost every new stranger I meet. Almost every writer in this anthology deserves their own book.” —Jessie Tu, The Age/SMH “In the wake of conversations around racial justice and representation entering the wider public consciousness this year [...] Let us urge you to put Collisions next on your list.” —Monisha Rudhran, Marie Claire “Collisions is full of humour, pathos, anger, warmth, and compassion. Above all, it is full of outstanding writing.” —Tracey Korsten, GLAM Adelaide Our theme is Add And by Broke for Free
“It’s very much a celebration of Melbourne… a love letter to the city, and to partying in the city.” - Madeleine Ryan A young woman gets ready to go to a party. She arrives, feels overwhelmed, leaves, and then returns. Minutely attuned to the people who come into her view, and alternating between alienation and profound connection, she is hilarious, self-aware, sometimes acerbic, and always honest. ‘A Room Called Earth’ is a brilliant debut from a neurodiverse author that explores a young woman's magical, sensitive, and passionate inner world. In this Fitzroy Writers Festival podcast Madeleine discusses this debut novel. Madeleine is also currently working on the screen adaptation of ‘A Room Called Earth’ with her collaborator, Hector H. Mackenzie. ‘A Room Called Earth’ is available to buy now at all good bookstores and available to borrow at Yarra Libraries. Madeleine Ryan is an Australian writer, director & author. Her articles & essays have appeared in SBS, The Daily Telegraph, The Sydney Morning Herald, Vice, Bustle, Lena Dunham’s publication Lenny & The New York Times. She is currently working on the screen adaptation of A Room Called Earth with her collaborator, Hector H. Mackenzie. Madeleine lives in rural Victoria. Yarra Libraries Recommends Madeleine Ryan: A Room Called Earth Lisa Bellear: Aboriginal Country J.D Salinger: A Catcher in the Rye Andy Warhol: The Philosophy of Andy Warhol Jane Austen: Emma Frances Hodgson Burnett: The Secret Garden The Brothers Grimm: Sleeping Beauty This is a Fitzroy Writers Festival Podcast presented with thanks to Yarra Libraries and The Ewing Trust. Our theme song is Add And by Broke for Free.
New releases are so exciting! In this Kids Shelf Episode of The Yarra Libraries Podcast Children’s Librarian Bridget asks Leesa from The Little Bookroom for some of her favourite new books for kids, from picture books right up to upper junior fiction. The best part? They’re almost all from local authors! So place a hold at Yarra Libraries or pop in to The Little Bookroom to support these fabulous new titles. Leesa and The Little Bookroom Recommend Don’t Forget – Jane Godwin and Anna Walker Mary has the Best Pet (School of Monsters #1) – Sally Rippin Séance Tea Party – Reimena Yee Huda and Me – H. Hayek The Edge of Thirteen – Nova Weetman Tales from the Bush Mob – Helen Milroy Yarra Libraries also recommends All The Ways To Be Smart – Davina Bell and Allison Colpoys Under The Love Umbrella - Davina Bell and Allison Colpoys The Secrets We Share – Nova Weetman The Secrets We Keep – Nova Weetman Elsewhere Girls – Emily Gale and Nova Weetman Music is Add And by Broke for Free
Join us today for a walk around Fitzroy Town Hall. To take this walk start outside the Fitzroy Town Hall on the corner of Napier and Condell Streets and pressing play. With you on your walk are three members of the Fitzroy Historical society – Simon Armstrong, Jennifer McKeagney, and Peter Woods. "The origin of the Fitzroy name is very interesting. ‘Roy’ means King, ‘Fitz’ means illegitimate, so Fitzroy is ‘The illegitimate son of the King.’" – Simon Armstrong "Town Halls are impressive monuments to fierce local pride." – Jennifer McKeagney Fitzroy, Melbourne’s first suburb, is full of stories both old and new. The Fitzroy Walking tours podcast series makes Fitzroy history easily accessible to the public. Each podcast features local experts talking about a particular topic. Simply download the podcast, go to the starting point, and start your walk around the streets of Fitzroy. Visit places of interest on your journey, taking things at your own pace. Or listen at anytime, anywhere! This podcast is bought to you by Yarra Libraries and the Ewing Trust. Music is Better Days by Ketsa
The Short Story Club picks one short story to read and discuss every month. Back in August of 2020 it was Elizabeth Harrower’s “The City At Night”. Elizabeth Harrower is one of Australia’s most acclaimed mid-century authors who, during her lifetime, fell out of print for many years. Re-cently, she has enjoyed a revival and been celebrated internationally, and this story is a shining example of why. In this episode Yarra Libraries staff members Meaghan and Tegan dis-cuss The City at Night, a story which centers on the burgeoning friend-ship between two young women working at a telephone exchange in Sydney. You can attend The Short Story Club by booking in to our next meeting via our website. https://www.theguardian.com/books/2015/oct/21/the-city-at-night-read-a-short-story-by-elizabeth-harrower Yarra Libraries Recommends The City at Night - Elizabeth Harrower Neapolitan series - Elena Ferrante Looking for Alibrandi - Melina Marchetta A Harp in the South trilogy - Ruth Park The Man Who Loved Children - Christina Stead The Word for World is Forest - Ursula K Le Guin Red, White and Royal Blue - Casey McQuiston The Adversary - Ronnie Scott Throne of Glass series - Sarah J Maas Our theme is Add And by Broke for Free.
The Kill Your Darlings First Book Club celebrates debut Australian authors every month. In February, we partnered with them to bring you Sam Van Zweden discussing her debut, Eating With My Mouth Open, with Brunswick Bound’s Ellen Cregan. Sam and Ellen range from food memory to wellness culture, memoirs, routes to publication, pilates and disordered eating. If you need them at any point you can find the numbers for Lifeline and The Butterfly Foundation below. You can find Eating With My Mouth Open at Yarra Libraries and at local bookstores like Brunswick Bound. Our next event with the Kill Your Darlings First Book Club is Wednesday March 24th and will feature Evelyn Araluen’s debut, Dropbear. Lifeline: 13 11 14 The Butterfly Foundation: 1800 33 4673 Yarra Libraries Recommends Small Acts of Disappearance - Fiona Wright Eating With My Mouth Open - Sam Van Zweden First Bite – Bee Wilson Eat Up! – Ruby Tandoh With Bold Knife and Fork - MFK Fisher (CloudLibrary) Map of Another Town - MFK Fisher (CloudLibrary) The World Was Whole – Fiona Wright (also available on Cloud Library)
In this episode of the Yarra Libraries Podcast you’ll find our interview with Nina Pasqualini; a climate activist from School Strike for Climate. She chats with Nic, a poet, author and member of the Yarra Libraries team, about the climate emergency. Nina shares how she became involved in climate activism, what it means to be an activist during a global pandemic, and how we can be involved too. Schools Strike for Climate: WE ARE striking to tell our politicians to take our futures seriously and treat climate change for what it is: a crisis. They can show us that they care by taking urgent action to move Australia beyond fossil fuel projects, such as the Adani mega coal mine, and get the job done of moving to 100% renewable energy for all. For more information see https://www.schoolstrike4climate.com/about Yarra Council has committed to an ambitious climate emergency plan. We’re proud to be part of a growing movement - with over 1,400 jurisdictions across 30 countries that have declared a climate emergency – and we know that collective, global effort is needed across all levels of government, businesses and communities to address the climate crisis. We also recognise the interconnectedness of global warming, human health and environmental health. https://www.yarracity.vic.gov.au/news/2020/06/15/yarra-council-commits-to-ambitious-climate-emergency-plan In line with this initiative Yarra Libraries will roll out several climate related events in 2021. In addition to youth climate interviews like this one you’ll find events on sustainable food sources, how to reduce our carbon footprint, the “New Normal” and more. Please see the Yarra Libraries website for more details. Yarra Libraries Recommends Greta Thunberg, “No One Is Too Small to Make a Difference” Tim Flannery, “The Climate Cure: Solving the Climate Emergency in the Era of COVID-19” Michael Mann’s “The New Climate War: The Fight to take back our Planet” Marian Wilkinson, “The Carbon Club: How a network of influential climate sceptics, politicians and business leaders fought to control Australia's climate policy” Dr. Joelle Gergis, “Sunburnt Country: The History and Future of Climate Change in Australia” Bruce Pascoe’s “Dark Emu” Alice Zaslavsky, “In Praise of Veg: A modern kitchen companion” Shannon Martinez’s cookbook “Smith & Daughters: A Cookbook (That Happens to be Vegan)” Al Gore, “An Inconvenient Truth: The Planetary Emergency of Global Warming and What We Can Do About It” Our theme song is Add And by Broke For Free
The Yarra Libraries Podcast is back for 2021! Our librarians have been busy watching Bridgerton and remembering all the regency romances (and tortured dukes) they’ve loved over the years. With some time to go until the next Bridgerton series why not take some of Marcia, Melissa and Connor’s recommendations on the best of the best? Still not convinced? Have a listen to what they feel really appeals about romances set in this brief yet memorable period in history. You can find our curated shelf of regency romance ebooks on Cloud Library, and a list of the books mentioned in this discussion below. Yarra Libraries Recommends The Bridgerton series – Julia Quinn The Convenient Marriage - Georgette Heyer The Grand Sophy - Georgette Heyer Cotillion – Georgette Heyer The Temporary Wife - Mary Balogh Precious Pearl – Mary Balogh The Portrait – Joan Wolf Lord Richard’s Daughter – Joan Wolf Margarita and the Earl – Joan Wolf Miss Wonderful – Loretta Chase Bringing Down the Duke – Evie Dunmore The Society of Gentlemen - KJ Charles We’d also recommend these authors Ann Gracie Stephanie Laurens Elizabeth Rolls Cat Sebastian Carla Kelly Julianne Donaldson Evie Dunmore Wattpad and Archive Of Our Own Our theme song is Add And by Broke for Free
It Has Been A Year – but one in which one thing lifted our moods consistently. You guessed it – it’s books. Whether you’re gift shopping, planning books to entertain you during some much-deserved leave or planning your holds for 2021 we hope these recommendations from Yarra Libraries staff help you out. We couldn’t possibly list all the books we enjoyed this year, but in this podcast you’ll find some of our favourite non-fiction, fiction, junior fiction and YA from 2020. We hope whatever you do for the rest of the year it includes at least a small break with a book. Happy Reading! Yarra Libraries Recommends Eat A Peach – David Chang Say Nothing – Patrick Radden Keefe (available as an ebook through Cloud Library) The Crying Book – Heather Christle Boyfriend Material – Alexis Hall (available as an ebook through Cloud Library) Weather – Jenny Offill Smart Ovens for Lonely People – Elizabeth Tan The End – Karl Ove Knausgård (available as an ebook through Cloud Library) The Animals in that Country – Laura Jean McKay (available as an ebook through Cloud Library and an e-audiobook through RB Digital) The Rain Heron – Robbie Arnott (available as an e-audiobook through RB Digital) A Memory Called Empire – Arkady Martine (available as an ebook through Cloud Library) Parable of the Sower & Parable of the Talents – Octavia Butler The Pull of the Stars – Emma Donoghue (available as an ebook through Cloud Library and an e-audiobook through Borrowbox) Stepping Stones – Lucy Knisley The War That Saved My Life & The War That I Finally Won – Kimberly Brubaker-Bradley Loner – Georgina Young
On this episode, Chris Papachristos reads Fitzroy Blues, the winning piece in the English language category of the Ewing Trust Writers Prize: Seniors Edition. The judges of the prize admired Chris’s elegant writing style and string sense of time and place. The next edition of the Ewing Trust Writers Prize will be a poetry edition. It opens in early January 2020 and we encourage all poets to enter. Please check the Yarra Libraries website for more details. This episode of The Yarra Libraries Podcast is bought to you by Yarra Libraries and The Ewing Trust. Fitzroy Library is fortunate to have the continued support of the Ewing Trust, a fund that fosters literacy, libraries, and a lifelong love of learning in the historic Melbourne suburb of Fitzroy. Through the support of the Ewing Trust, Fitzroy library is able to run special events and programs, including the Fitzroy Writers festival, for the benefit of Fitzroy residents and visitors to the area.
Listen to the audio from our webinar recording to hear from speakers from Common Cause, Australian Conservation Foundation and Climate for Change about how to have effective conversations about the climate crisis to motivate others to take action.
In this webinar, Environment Victoria's Communications Coordinator will share his top tips to help you get your message right (what to say and how to say it!) and show you how to use social media platforms and other digital opportunities to increase people's awareness of the climate emergency and motivate them to take strong action.
Join us as Tammi Kirkness discusses her debut title, The Panic Button Book. Sudden changes and stress can exacerbate anxiety, and in 2020 most of us experienced more of both than we were expecting. While Melbourne’s restrictions are reducing by the day the resumption of ‘life as normal’ comes with stressors all of its own. With that in mind we thought it was the perfect time to revisit our September talk with an author whose new book, The Panic Button Book, is a practical step-by-step guide to help you through those moments when you feel overwhelmed, panicky or anxious. In the book, life coach and wellness expert Tammi Kirkness has distilled the best tried-and-tested techniques from her own experience and those used with her many clients. In this talk, she takes us through her 'first-aid kit' and answers questions from audience members with some very recognisable anxiety-inducing moments. We hope you finish this podcast feeling more equipped to move through the stressful moments life throws at you – and a little less alone when you face them. Tammi Kirkness is a life coach, corporate wellness speaker and presenter, who combines evidence-based psychology with eastern training. She specialises in helping people with high-functioning anxiety, which she experiences herself. She wrote this book for herself, for when she needs her rational mind to coach her in times of panic. Yarra Libraries Recommends The Panic Button Book - Tammi Kirkness (also available as an e-book on Cloud Library) The Power of Now - Eckhart Tolle
We're creating our very own community song to celebrate the silly season, and we need your help. With the help of Belgium Avenue Neighbourhood House and local artists Izzy Brown, Racerage, Laneous and Nick Martyn, we're celebrating the end of 2020 with a crowdsourced song. Local artist, Izzy Brown, has written a song for us to help celebrate the end of 2020 and we need your help bringing it to life. Second Chance celebrates a brighter future for next year and beyond. Find out how you can be part of our community song here: yarracity.vic.gov.au/song
“These are all really fascinating women – every single one of them.” In this Ewing Trust episode of The Yarra Libraries Podcast, Sam speaks to award-winning Brisbane author Laura Elvery about the inspiration for her latest short story collection, ‘Ordinary Matter’. Sparked by the 20 times women have won the Nobel Prize for science since 1901, ‘Ordinary Matter’ uses stories that span a century to explore the nuances of motherhood, legacy, ambition and identity. ‘Ordinary Matter’ is out now from QUP Yarra Libraries Recommends Ordinary Matter – Laura Elvery (also available as an e-book through Cloud Library) Trick of the Light – Laura Elvery New Australian Fiction 2019 – Rebecca Starford (ed.) The Love of a Bad Man - Laura Elizabeth Wollett (also available as an e-book through Cloud Library) Only the Animals – Ceridwen Dovey The Labyrinth: a pastoral – Amanda Lohrey The Mother Fault – Kate Mildenhall (also available as an e-book through Cloud Library and an e-audiobook through Borrowbox) Ducks, Newburyport – Lucy Ellmann (also available as an e-audiobook through RB Digital)
The Short Story Club discusses a short story every meeting, before moving on to other reading recommendations. In this episode, Nell and Todd discuss jazz, family and addiction in James Baldwin’s ‘Sonny’s Blues’, before moving on to their current restrictions reading. This discussion is best enjoyed after you've read ‘Sonny’s Blues’ so follow the link below before you listenif you haven’t read it before. If you’d like to join The Short Story Club (currently meeting online) then book in for the morning or evening meetings through our events page at library.yarracity.vic.gov.au, where you’ll also find information on how to access each week’s story. Otherwise, keep an eye on our podcast and our social media channels to follow along from home. You can access James Baldwin’s ‘Sonny’s Blues’ at https://genius.com/James-baldwin-sonnys-blues-annotated Yarra Libraries Recommends ‘The Fire Next Time’ - James Baldwin I Am Not Your Negro (film, available through Kanopy) ‘If Beale Street Could Talk’ – James Baldwin (also available as an ebook on Cloud Library) If Beale St Could Talk (film) – dvd available through collection ‘Between the World and Me’ - Ta-Nehisi Coates ‘We Were Eight Years in Power - Ta-Nehisi Coates (also available as an ebook on Cloud Library) ‘The fire this time : a new generation speaks about race’ – Jesmyn Ward (also available as an ebook on Cloud Library) ‘Among the Lost’ - Emiliano Monge ‘Grown Ups’ - Marian Keys (also available as an ebook on Cloud Library) ‘The Body Keeps the Score’ - Bessel van der Kolk (also available as an ebook on Cloud Library) ‘My Brilliant Friend’ - Elena Ferrante (available in many formats including e-audio and ebook through Borroxbox and Cloud Library respectively) ‘Bordertown’ – available on Netflix ‘Street Food: Latin America’ – available on Netflix
"Kids! Listen up! Authors are real! You are listening to one right now! And anyone can do it!” – Adrian Beck Adrian Beck writes funny, action-packed stories for kids. He is the author of the Derek Dool series, the Champion Charlies series and Alien Zoo 1 and 2. He’s the co-author of the Little Legends series with Nicole Hayes, plus the Kick it to Nick series with AFL hall-of-famer Shane Crawford. In this special Book Week episode of the Yarra Libraries Podcast, Yarra Libraries Children’s and Youth Librarian Lizzie Gilmour talks to Adrian about what he was like as a kid, where gets his ideas, hanging out with AFL stars, how to make it as an aspiring upcoming writer, robots, footy, and footy playing robots! A warning: this podcast contains some of Adrian’s Dad Jokes! Yarra Libraries Recommends Kick it to Nick series – Adrian Beck and Shane Crawford Derek Dool Supercool series – Adrian Beck Total Quack up! – Adrian Beck, Sally Rippin and James Foley Alien Zoo 1 and 2 – Adrian Beck Little Legends Series – Adrian Beck and Nicole Hayes
Brought to you by In My Nature, Victorian Aboriginal Health, Yarra Libraries and The Ewing Trust. As part of Mental Health Week, this episode gives the listener permission to slow down and immerse themselves in nature. Based on the Japanese well-being practice of "Shinrin Yoku" or "bathing" in the atmosphere of the forest, try this exercise to reduce stress and improve your mental health. The practice now recognised as "Forest Therapy," is well researched, with proven health benefits such as lowering cortisol levels, strengthening the immune system, stabilizing blood pressure, reducing stress and improving sleep. So press play and listen to Susan Joachim (INFTA) guide you into a deep and sensory connection to your surroundings which will help you to feel more relaxed, happier, confident, focused and even more creative. If you haven’t already, please prepare yourself for the session by finding a suitable spot where you can either be in or see nature without breaking whatever restrictions currently apply. Susan Joachim is the President of the INFTA headquartered in Melbourne, Australia. She is also a Certified Forest Therapy Guide and Mentor and spends most weekends leading bushwalks around Australia and New Zealand with her hiking club. You can hear Susan leading you in a sit spot mindfulness exercise in our earlier forest therapy episode – just scroll back in your podcast feed or search our soundcloud. You can find the International Nature and Forest Therapy Alliance (INFTA) at https://infta.net/ You can find their Australian accredited training provider, In My Nature, at https://inmynature.life/ Yarra Libraries Suggests: Into the forest : how trees can help you find health and happiness – Qing Li Shinrin-yoku : the art and science of forest bathing – Qing Li Shinrin-yoku : the Japanese way of forest bathing for health and relaxation - Yoshifumi Miyazaki The healing magic of forest bathing : finding calm, creativity, and connection in the natural world – Julia Plevin Music by Broke for Free
Studies have shown that volunteering helps people feel more socially connected and provides a sense of purpose, pride and accomplishment – all great protective factors for your mental health. On this Mental Health Week podcast, Elly Murrell (Community Project Officer, City of Yarra)talks to Sara Sterling (Sector Development Manager, Volunteering Victoria), Rosie Kelly (Manager of Volunteer Programs, FareShare and Dylan Oosterweghel (Volunteer Mentor for the City of Yarra L2P Learner Driver Mentor Program) about volunteering opportunities and the impact it has on their wellbeing. For more information on some of the volunteer organisations and resources mentioned on this podcast, please visit: Fareshare: www.Fareshare.net.au Go Volunteer: www.govolunteer.com.au Seek Volunteer: www.volunteer.com.au Zoos Victoria: www.zoo.org.au State Library: www.slv.vic.gov.au St Kilda Wildlife Park Penguin Watch: www.stkildapenguins.com.au This podcast produced with thanks to The Ewing Trust. Music by Broke for Free
“Who can go through life without some major changes happening to them? At the very least, we leave our youth behind.” Split: True Stories of Leaving, Loss and New Beginnings was longlisted for ABIA Awards 2020 in the category of Small Publisher’s Adult Book of the Year In this episode, editor Lee Kofman discusses transformation, loss and new beginnings with contributors Graeme Simsion (The Rosie Project) and Ramona Koval (By the Book: A Readers Guide to Life). While Graeme shares the loss of a past version of himself, Ramona Koval delves into the bittersweet end to her career at the ABC. This was an edited recording. Many thanks to The Ewing Trust for making this podcast possible. Our theme is Add And by Broke for Free Yarra Libraries Recommends Lee Kofman (ed): Split: True Stories of Leaving, Loss and New Beginnings Lee Kofman: Imperfect : how our bodies shape the people we become Lee Kofman: The dangerous bride : a memoir of love, gods and geography Graeme Simsion: The Rosie Project, The Rosie Effect and The Rosie Result (also available through Borrowbox) Graeme Simsion: The Best of Adam Sharp (also available through Borrowbox) Graeme Simsion and Anne Buist: Two Steps Forward Ramona Koval: Bloodhound: Searching for my Father Ramona Koval: By The Book: A Reader’s Guide to Life
On this episode of the Short Story Club, Meaghan and Connor discuss friendship, empathy, inner monologues and badminton in ‘The Embassy of Cambodia’, a 2013 short story from acclaimed writer Zadie Smith. This discussion is best enjoyed after you've read ‘The Embassy of Cambodia’ so follow the link below if you haven’t read it before. If you’d like to join The Short Story Club (currently meeting online) then book in for the morning or evening meetings through our events page at library.yarracity.vic.gov.au, where you’ll also find information on how to access each fortnight’s story. Otherwise, keep an eye on our podcast and our social media channels to follow along from home. You can read ‘The Embassy of Cambodia’ by Zadie Smith here: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2013/02/11/the-embassy-of-cambodia Meaghan & Connor Recommend The Embassy of Cambodia – Zadie Smith White Teeth – Zadie Smith (also available on Borrowbox) NW – Zadie Smith Swing Time – Zadie Smith (also available on Borrowbox and Cloud Library) Among Others - Jo Walton The Great Believers - Rebecca Makkai Red White and Royal Blue - Casey McQuiston Boyfriend Material - Alexis Hall (also available in Cloud Library) Girl, Woman, Other - Bernadine Evaristo (also available in Borrowbox, RB Digital and Cloud Library) The Adversary - Ronnie Scott (also available on Cloud Library) The Good Place (dvd set available through Yarra Libraries, also available through Netflix) The Great British Sewing Bee (available through Stan)
“As the reporter spoke, the news ticker updated the running tally of fatal accidents on the construction platforms, as well as providing updated figures for an air strike that had accidentally hit a school bus near Lahore, as well as showing the latest run tally from the cricket.” – Khalid Warsame On this Ewing episode of The Yarra Libraries Podcast, we were joined by writer Khalid Warsame, contributor to the recent anthology of stories ‘After Australia’. In this unflinching new anthology, twelve of Australia’s most daring Indigenous writers and writers of colour provide a glimpse of Australia as we head toward the year 2050. Climate catastrophe, police brutality, white genocide, totalitarian rule and the erasure of black history provide the backdrop for stories of love, courage and hope. On the podcast, Khalid reads his short story ‘List of Known Remedies’, before talking about his involvement in the anthology. ‘After Australia’ is published by Affirm Press in partnership with Diversity Arts Australia and Sweatshop Literacy Movement. This recording was made possible by the support of The Ewing Trust. Our theme song is Add And by Broke for Free. Yarra Libraries Recommends Michael Mohammed Ahmad (ed.): After Australia Dionne Brand: Inventory Gerald Murnane: The Plains Helen Garner: Monkey Grip (also available as an e-audiobook via Borrowbox) Eamonn Marra: 2,000 Feet Above Worry Level Philip Roth: Nemesis
I wanted to make the outsider, the other, three dimensional. I wanted to make them real.” – Christopher Raja Christopher Raja’s Into the Suburbs is the author’s first foray into memoir, and documents his migration from Calcutta to Australia in the 80s. Drawn by the glamorous Australia of tourism commercials, Raja’s parents envision the country as a ‘clean’ and ‘classless’ paradise. Yet upon arriving in Australia, their interactions expose the limitations and small-mindedness of their new society, especially its racism and classism. As their ideal unravels, Raja’s parents also realise that white Australia does not share the same community and family values that Indian culture upholds. Raja is trapped, throughout his youth, somewhere between the austere serenity of suburban Melbourne, the dingy club scene of St Kilda and the urbane inner city. This recording was made possible by the support of The Ewing Trust. Our theme song is Add And by Broke for Free. Yarra Libraries Recommends Christopher Raja: Into The Suburbs Christopher Raja: The Burning Elephant Christopher Raja and Natasha Raja: The First Garden Pete Handke: A Sorrow Beyond Dreams Karl Ove Knausgård: My Struggle (ebook available on Cloud Library) Emmanuel Carrère : The Kingdom Jasper Fforde: The Constant Rabbit Bryan Stevenson: Just Mercy (ebook available on Cloud Library) Ali Cobby Eckermann: Inside my Mother Thomas Bernhard: The Loser (ebook available to suggest for purchase through Cloud Library) Robert Musil: The Man Without Qualities (ebook available to suggest for purchase through Cloud Library)
Luke Horton’s ‘The Fogging’ follows a young academic couple who are caught in a spraying of pesticides known as “the fogging” during a trip to Bali, their first holiday in years. In the time that follows, their relationship slowly begins to disintegrate. Luke recently joined us to discuss his debut novel, the challenges of launching a book during lockdown and writing anxiety with Ellen Cregan for the Kill Your Darlings First Book Club. It made for a fascinating discussion and we hope you enjoy this recording. Kill Your Darlings is an online journal championing great Australian writing from emerging and established authors. You can find their work at https://www.killyourdarlings.com.au/ Luke Horton’s ‘The Fogging’ is out now from Scribe Publications. You can find it and the new Kill Your Darlings book “New Australian Fiction 2020” at all good bookstores, as well as finding ‘The Fogging’ in our e-book collection through Cloud Library. You can place both these items on hold through our website. This event was in partnership with Kill Your Darlings. This is an edited recording. Our theme song is Add And by Broke for Free. Yarra Libraries Recommends: The Fogging – Luke Horton (available on Cloud Library) New Australian Fiction 2019 – Kill Your Darlings New Australian Fiction 2020 – Kill Your Darlings Weather – Jenny Offill The Glad Shout – Alice Robinson My Struggle – Knausgaard (also available through Cloud Library) Leaving the Atocha Station - Ben Lerner (also available through Cloud Library) The Catcher in the Rye – J.D. Salinger The Life to Come – Michelle de Kretser (available through Cloud Library)
“The best thing about Kurt Vonnegut is that he never really gives us an answer – there are always lots of different layers, and it’s about us reading it from our own experiences to take from it what we will.” In this episode, Nell and Marcia discuss gender, nature, and the sometimes violent life of bees in Kurt Vonnegut’s ‘The Drone King’ before moving on to their current isolation reading. This discussion is best enjoyed after you've read ‘The Drone King’ so follow the link below if you haven’t read it before. If you’d like to join The Short Story Club (currently meeting online) then book in for the morning or evening meetings through our events page at library.yarracity.vic.gov.au, where you’ll also find information on how to access each fortnight’s story. Otherwise, keep an eye on our podcast and our social media channels to follow along from home. We have stories by Elizabeth Harrower and Celeste Ng coming up soon. You can access Kurt Vonnegut’s ‘The Drone King’ at https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2017/10/kurt-vonnegut-the-drone-king/537870/ Nell and Marcia Recommend: Maurice Maeterlinck – The Life of the Bee (available on Project Gutenberg) Kurt Vonnegut – A Man Without a Country Kurt Vonnegut – Miss Temptation (available online at The Saturday Evening Post) Siri Hustvedt – The Summer Without Men Martha Wells – All Systems Red (The Murderbot Series) Yarra Libraries Recommends: Kurt Vonnegut - We are what we pretend to be : the first and last works – Kurt Vonnegut Kurt Vonnegut – Slaughterhouse-five, or The children's crusade : a duty-dance with death
“She's not a black suit and pearls in a South Yarra gallery kind of art dealer, she’s a Blundstone boots and grubby jeans kind of girl.” — Katherine Kovacic on Alex Clayton Katherine Kovacic started out as a vet before making her way into the art world, where she discovered it wasn’t quite as safe and wholesome as it seemed. Her series of detective novels, starring the inimitable art dealer and sleuth Alex Clayton, have taken us from 1930s art scene Melbourne to mid-2000s sheep farming Hamilton, all with her Irish Wolfhound sidekick Hogarth at her side. She discussed her latest in the series, ‘The Shifting Landscape’ with Sisters in Crime’s Robyn Walton at a special after-hours Zoom author talk in June 2020. This is an edited recording. Katherine Kovacic is a former veterinarian turned art historian who works with a wide variety of museums, galleries, and historic houses. She lives in Melbourne with a Borzoi and a Scottish Deerhound. ‘The Portrait of Molly Dean’ was her debut novel and the first Alex Clayton art mystery. Robyn Walton is Vice-President of Sisters in Crime Australia, has a Ph.D. in English literature and cultural history, and has taught in universities in Melbourne and Sydney. She has had short fiction and essays published and is a past winner of The Australian/Vogel Literary Award. Robyn reviews crime and other books for The Weekend Australian Review, interviews authors for the Sisters in Crime website – the Q&As – and is a judge for two short story awards. Our theme is Add And by Broke for Free. Yarra Libraries Recommends ‘The Shifting Landscape’ - Katherine Kovacic (ebook on Cloud Library) ‘Cocaine Blues’ - Kerry Greenwood (ebook on Cloud Library, audiobook on Borrowbox) ‘Sisters in crime’: early detective and mystery stories by women - Michael Ashley ‘Intrepide: Australian women artists in early twentieth-century France’ - Clem Gorman ‘Murder in the Telephone Exchange’ - June Wright
Yarra Libraries has partnered with the Melbourne School of Philosophy to deliver a series of free Philosophy workshops for the Yarra Libraries community. In this discussion with Peter Farago from the School of Philosophy, we talk about everything from wonder, to meditation, to spirituality, and how practical philosophy can be constructive in everyday life. The Philosophy Begins in Wonder sessions at Yarra Libraries are currently booked out, but you can join the waitlist for any of the 6 sessions via our website. You can find out more about the Melbourne School of Philosophy at https://www.schoolofphilosophy.org.au/ Yarra Libraries Recommends ‘A good life : philosophy from cradle to grave’ – Mark Rowlands ‘How to teach philosophy to your dog : a quirky introduction to the big questions of philosophy’ – Anthony McGowan ‘Prime movers : the real stories of twelve great thinkers from Pericles to Gandhi’ - Ferdinand Mount ‘Get smart: philosophy : the big ideas you should know’ – Marcus Weeks Philosophy Now [magazine] Our theme song is ‘Add And’ by Broke for Free