Programs - Adults

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May

The Missing Man Table will be on display in the Reference Room for May.
This table is reserved to honor our brave and selfless American military members who have perished on the battlefield, those who have not been returned to us after being taken prisoner on foreign soil, and those who went missing and have not found their way back home.

Frank Gorga photography exhibit, brought to you by the Friends of the James A. Tuttle Library.

Adult coloring in the reference room.  Everyday.

Saturdays
Tech Help 11:00 - 2:00  (registration required) 
Click here to select the date and time.

Antrim's Eclectic Book Club 
Thursday, May 16 at 2:15
The Ocean at the End of the Lane by Neil Gaiman

The Antrim Eclectic Book Club meets at the James A Tuttle Library on the third Thursday of each month between 2:15 PM and 3:15 PM. Free copies of the book described above will be available for loan at the Library. For further information, please email Steve Ullman at stephenhullman@gmail.com. We warmly welcome newcomers to our book lovers’ group.

New Hampshire Wildflowers
Saturday, May 4 at 10:30
Presented by Bob Holmes


This presentation will run approximately 50 minutes and is in two sections.  The first section will deal with Wildflowers (more than just a pretty face). We will discuss the important role they play for pollinators and beyond.  The second half of the presentation will focus on the wildflowers we can find in our backyards, fields, roadside, and forests. We will focus on identifying them and tie this into the scavenger hunt for wildflowers, which will run concurrently with the talk.

Film Series - Moving Towards Healing, Exploring Social Concerns Through Film
January - May
The second Saturday of the month at 10:30

Fostering Community Conversations on Racial Justice group and the James A. Tuttle Library in Antrim are sponsoring a monthly in-person film series beginning January 2024. Films will be shown at the library at 10:30 a.m. on the second Saturday of the month; each will be followed by a community

conversation.

May 11
Traces of the Trade
Filmmaker Katrina Browne discovers that her ancestors, residents of New England, were the largest slave-trading family in United States history, operating their business from 1769 to 1820. Browne and nine of her relatives explore the history of their family and slavery in this documentary, traveling to Rhode Island, Ghana, and Cuba. The film asks the question: what would repair for slavery, both spiritual and material, look like?