Sandra Novacek

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Sandra Novacek

Goodreads Author


Born
The United States
Member Since
April 2012


Sandra Novacek is a librarian, writer, editor, publisher, former teacher, community activist and member of SCBWI. She has spent her life promoting reading, books, and libraries. She received the American Library Association’s (ALA) John Cotton Dana Award for excellence in library public relations and served in leadership positions including President of the Michigan Library Association. Sandra has also volunteered and served on community cultural and professional boards since high school and is a graduate of Michigan State University and Wayne State University with a Masters in Library Science. She edited a community newspaper for 20 years and three books on library public relations and library Friends groups for ALA and Friends of Michigan ...more

Average rating: 4.43 · 7 ratings · 3 reviews · 1 distinct work
Charles's Bridge

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4.43 avg rating — 7 ratings2 editions
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Charles's Bridge by Sandra Novacek
Charles's Bridge
by Sandra Novacek (Goodreads Author)
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More of Sandra's books…
Charles Novacek
“Why should I be frightened of dying? I did not know what death truly was; no one did. Who had made dying a bad word? Yes, it was universally considered awful—unwanted, painful, feared—because when it happened it stopped us from moving and being, and we interpreted that as if something had ended. But what if it were actually a beautiful experience? What if, with death, something actually began instead?”
Charles Novacek, Border Crossings: Coming of Age in the Czech Resistance

Eric Klinenberg
“In a world where we spend ever more of our time staring at screens, blocking out even our most intimate and proximate human contacts, public institutions with open-door policies compel us to pay close attention to people nearby. After all, places like libraries are saturated with strangers, people whose bodies are different, whose styles are different, who make different sounds, speak different languages, give off different, sometimes noxious, smells. Spending time in public social infrastructures requires learning to deal with these differences in a civil manner.”
Eric Klinenberg, Palaces for the People: How Social Infrastructure Can Help Fight Inequality, Polarization, and the Decline of Civic Life

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