STUDY GUIDES NEW!

The Santa Clara County Office of Education has developed this curriculum guide for use by teachers.


Books for Children

There are many books for children that touch on the themes and events featured in our Silicon Valley Reads selections. This list includes fiction, non-fiction and even picture books.


Bulk Book Orders

Teachers, schools, libraries, retailers and others who want to buy sets of either or both of the Silicon Valley Reads 2006 books may purchase them locally for a discount [minimum of five copies each].

For information on wholesale copies, contact Milligan News Co. Inc. at (408) 286-7604 or tollfree at 800-873-2387. Email address is ed-dept@milligannews.com.

Wartime Memories


2+2 = 1
Silicon Valley Reads Month Features Two Authors Discussing the Effects of War

Two authors. Two books. One theme relevant to anyone who has been effected by war, either personally or through family and friends.

Silicon Valley Reads will kick off a month of events focused on the two books selected for 2006 – "When The Emperor Was Divine" by Julie Otsuka and "The Souvenir: A Daughter Discovers Her Father’s War" by Louise Steinman – with a unique program on Wednesday, Feb. 1. Both authors will participate in a joint, on-stage interview with Mercury News columnist Mike Cassidy at the Heritage Theatre in Campbell. The free event begins at 7 p.m.

This is the fourth year of Silicon Valley Reads which asks everyone in Santa Clara County to read the same book, at the same time, and discuss with family, friends, co-workers and community. Both of this year’s selections discuss the long-lasting effects of World War II on California families.

Otsuka’s novel tells the story of a Japanese American family that is forced to leave their Berkeley home for an internment camp in Utah during World War II. Otsuka was born in Palo Alto and her mother, uncle and grandparents experienced internment during the war.

Steinman’s book is a combination memoir, biography and history lesson. After her parents’ death, Steinman finds hundreds of letters written by her father while he was in the Pacific during World War II. She also discovers a Japanese flag with the name of a Japanese soldier, and travels from California to Japan to return the flag to his family.

More than 30 public events are scheduled in February at locations throughout Silicon Valley. Detailed information is posted on the website www.siliconvalleyreads.org.

The public is also invited to participate in an online discussion forum and to share their own wartime memories in a writing program that will continue at four local libraries into the spring.

Silicon Valley Reads is presented by the Santa Clara County Office of Education, Santa Clara County Library, and the San Jose Public Library Foundation. Major sponsors include Knight Ridder, the City of San Jose, Adobe Systems, Intel, Applied Materials, the Silicon Valley Library System, the Mercury News, NBC11, KLIV and KRTY.

Co-sponsors of the February 1 kick-off event include Commonwealth Club Silicon Valley, Campbell Library, Campbell Union High School District, Campbell Historical Museum, the Japanese American Museum of San Jose, and the Office of Assemblywoman Rebecca Cohn.

For more information, visit the website www.siliconvalleyreads.org or call (408) 354-1242.

 

PREVIOUS NEWS RELEASES
- "Silicon Valley Reads" Books for 2006 Announced
- Program Features two Authors Discussing the Effects of War

 

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