Film Screening: Are You There God? It's Me Margaret, Thursday August 10

2023. Rated PG-13. Runtime 106 minutes.

Eleven-year-old Margaret moves to a new town and starts to contemplate everything about life, friendship and adolescence. She relies on her mother, Barbara, who offers loving support, and her grandmother, Sylvia, who's coming to terms with finding happiness in the next phase of her life. Questions of identity, one's place in the world, and what brings meaning to life soon brings them closer together than ever before.

Jarrett Krosoczka Author Visit, Wednesday August 9

Join National Book Award finalist and author/illustrator of over FORTY books for children and teens, Jarrett J. Krosoczka for a special library visit!  Mr. Krosoczka will talk about how he creates comics, provide some cartooning tips and do some live drawing! He will also take questions and sign books for those in attendance! Mr. Krosoczka's published titles include picture books Punk Farm and Peanut Butter and Jellyfish, the Lunch Lady graphic novel series and graphic memoirs Hey, Kiddo and Sunshine.

Seaside Escapes: The Art and Architecture of the New England Coast, Tuesday August 8

Seaside Escapes: The Art & Architecture of the New England Coast

From artist colonies to robber baron “summer cottages,” the New England shoreline has inspired countless creative works. This program looks at seascapes by beloved American artists including Winslow Homer and Edward Hopper as well as the over-the-top elegance of Newport, RI summer homes designed for the titans of industry in the nineteenth century. Gloucester's eccentric summer retreat Beauport is also featured.

Exhibit — Mark Barnette: Wrong about everything. Images of Portsmouth’s North End on the brink of destruction, August 1-31

Wrong about everything: Images of Portsmouth’s North End on the brink of destruction 
Exhibit: August 1st –  August 31st
Artist presentation and reception: Saturday August 12 at 2 PM

This work addresses the impact of urban renewal on a cohesive and diverse working-class neighborhood in Portsmouth, NH and the damage to the cultural fabric of the colonial-era U.S. city in which it was once located.