Saturday, October 18, 2025

Two Special Family Events this Month: Pitter Patter Puppets, and the Poop Museum!

 Special Event! The Poop Museum, Friday, October 24th at 3:30 pm

Grace Church, 34 Woodlawn Avenue 
The Poop Museum is coming! Join us for a very special experience with international presenter Susie Maguire, founder of the Poop Museum. Learn lots of fun and fabulous facts about poop, and even taste poop honey! Kids say, "I give this 5000 stars out of 5!" Parents say, "This was pooopmazing! My preschooler and first grader both loved it!Sponsored by Friends of the Vineyard Haven and Oak Bluffs Libraries.




Special Event! Puppet Variety Show, Monday, October 27th at 10:15 am
Grace Church, 34 Woodlawn Avenue 

Join us for a special interactive puppet show with Mary Wilson from Pitter Patter Puppets! Enjoy songs, silly stories, and audience participation, enjoyable for all ages!

Programs are subject to change, please check our online calendar and Facebook page for updates. 

Thank you to the Friends of the Library for sponsoring our Children's programs!

Monday, October 13, 2025

Fall Schedule Changes, Including Sunday Hours


Sunday, October 19th will be the first Sunday of the season that the library will be open. The library will be open from 1pm-5pm most Sundays throughout the winter.

The Church Street library building will close early at 4pm on Friday October 31st. Stop by after the Parade on Mainstreet for Trick-or-Treating on the front porch from 4:30 to 6:30pm!

The library will be closed for Veterans Day on Tuesday November 11th. For Thanksgiving, the library will close early at 1pm on Wednesday November 26th, and remain closed on Thursday November 27th and Friday November 28th. The library will be open regular hours on Saturday and Sunday of Thanksgiving weekend.

Saturday, October 11, 2025

Author Talk: “Time’s Bounty: Rethinking Aging,” by Philip Weinstein

The Vineyard Haven Library is pleased to celebrate the release of Professor Philip Weinstein’s new book of essays, “Time’s Bounty: Rethinking Aging,” with a reading and reception at 5:00 pm on Thursday, November 13th. This event will be held at the Martha’s Vineyard Hebrew Center, located at 130 Center Street in Vineyard Haven. Refreshments will be provided by the Friends of the Library, and books available for onsite purchase through Bunch of Grapes Bookstore. Free and open to the public. No registration required. 

Our culture isn’t kind towards age. The dominant drive is to celebrate youth, striving for more and more of everything, while age, we’re told, brings only depletion and loss. Even as Americans live longer, most consider old age with dread. It’s time to challenge these assumptions. “Time’s Bounty” is a bracing view of the surprises that lie ahead, as age enkindles in us new expressions of life. 

“Old-age situations, assumed to announce the end-of-the-road, actually generate fresh life-moves,” writes author Philip Weinstein. “As we age, we tend to become ‘lighter’ in more senses than one....Indeed, we may find ourselves catapulted into late-stage ‘adventures’ the young never dream of.”

“Time’s Bounty” offers a view of age that differs greatly from our preconceptions—surprising, emancipating, sometimes even joyful. In five brief chapters, the author takes us from the generative discoveries that age occasions to the freedom that comes in life’s late chapters, when no company or institution or cause any longer owns us. At last, we are our own, in ways we could not imagine when younger.

Weinstein, a retired professor of English, draws not only on his own insights but on the insights found in writers he taught for decades: Shakespeare, Yeats, Proust, Faulkner, Eliot, Beckett, and others. Brief forays into their imaginative works add further illumination to the author’s own discoveries regarding the dramas—both the trials and the gifts—of old age.

Philip Weinstein earned his PhD in English from Harvard University, staying on to teach at Harvard for the next 3 years. He then accepted a position at Swarthmore, where he remained for over 40 years, becoming Alexander Griswold Cummins Professor of English. He has written several books of literary criticism, many focused on Faulkner, including “Becoming Faulkner: The Art and Life of William Faulkner,” which won the Hugh Holman Award for the best book of literary scholarship or literary criticism in the field of southern literature published in 2010. In 2015, Weinstein retired from Swarthmore and moved to Martha’s Vineyard full-time. Since then, he’s gone on to write three more books and to continue teaching adults through the Vineyard Haven Library, Swarthmore Lifelong Learning, and the 92nd Street Y in New York.

For more information, please contact the library at vhpl_programs@clamsnet.org or (508) 696-4211.


Thursday, October 9, 2025

Spinnaker: An Entanglement Story, presented by Jesse Mechling of the Center for Coastal Studies

The Vineyard Haven Public Library is pleased to welcome Jesse Mechling, Director of Marine Education at the Center for Coastal Studies in Provincetown, for a presentation on Spinnaker–an 11-year-old humpback whale, whose skeleton provides important lessons for marine conservation. This event will be held at 6:00 PM on Tuesday, November 4th at the Katharine Cornell Theatre, located at 51 Spring Street in Vineyard Haven (above Tisbury Town Hall). Free and open to the public. No registration required.

Spinnaker is a 36-foot humpback whale skeleton installed at the Center for Coastal Studies in Provincetown in 2017. Spinnaker was an 11-year-old humpback, known to the Center since she was a calf, who tragically died after suffering many fishing-gear entanglements throughout her short life. Hear her story and marvel at images of the only large whale skeleton on Cape Cod, and the only whale skeleton in the world with the entanglement that led to her death still lodged in her bones. This program is suitable for all ages and tells the important message of long-term scientific studies and conservation efforts, as well as serious threats marine animals still face today. 

Jesse Mechling is the Director of Marine Education at the Center for Coastal Studies in Provincetown. The ocean and ocean life are among his great passions, and he relishes his role of introducing new generations to the wonders of the ocean. A lifelong visitor to Cape Cod and permanent resident since 2008, he received a masters from the University of Rhode Island in Marine Affairs and was a 2005 John Knauss Marine Policy Fellow in Washington DC, working for the National Ocean Service. He has over two decades of experience in marine policy and education, and has been with the Center since 2009. He lives in Eastham with his family.

For more information, please contact the library at vhpl_programs@clamsnet.org or (508) 696-4211.


Tuesday, October 7, 2025

Author Talk: “Stateless in Paradise: A Stranded Soul's Fight for Freedom"

The Vineyard Haven Public Library is pleased to welcome local author Mikael (Misha) Okuns for a conversation about his extraordinary journey from statelessness to citizenship, as described in his new book, Stateless in Paradise: A Stranded Soul's Fight for Freedom. This event will be held at 6:00 PM on Tuesday, October 28th at the Katharine Cornell Theatre, located at 51 Spring Street in Vineyard Haven (above Tisbury Town Hall). Free and open to the public. No registration required.

About the book: 

Stateless in Paradise: A Stranded Soul's Fight for Freedom recounts the agonizing true story of a stateless individual, and his desperate fight to return to the United States. After living and working in the U.S. for 16 years, Mikael becomes stranded in American Samoa for over a year and five months, barred from re-entry due to a flawed immigration system and misunderstanding of his international passport and status.

Mikael's planned four-day New Year's Eve getaway to American Samoa in December 2011 quickly transforms into an unexpected ordeal, as he becomes ensnared by the island's harsh realities. Between the oppressive heat and humidity, which particularly affect the heat-sensitive Mikael, and frustrating bureaucratic challenges, he finds himself longing for the familiar comforts of Los Angeles – its fresh produce, juice bars, and vibrant coffee scene.

Desperate for a connection to the outside world, Mikael frequents the local McDonald's to use their free Wi-Fi and to email friends and advocates, seeking help for his case. He blogs about his experiences, sharing his struggles with the world and in the process, shedding light on the plight of the 4,000 stateless individuals living in the United States.

The book explores Mikael's family history, uncovering the events that resulted in his stateless status. Born to an Armenian family in Azerbaijan during the Soviet era, Mikael and his family were displaced by the war between Azerbaijan and Armenia. Tragically, his aunt was stoned to death by local Muslim Azeris, and his family's subsequent attempts to seek asylum in other republics were thwarted by discrimination stemming from their Armenian ethnicity and his sexual orientation.

About the author:

Mikael Sebastian Okunuga (aka Misha Okuns) is a multifaceted professional and creative entrepreneur with a diverse international background. Originally from the former Soviet Union (Azerbaijan SSR), he lived in the United States as a stateless person for over 16 years before becoming a U.S. citizen. A passionate world traveler, he has visited over 77 countries across Europe, Africa, Asia, Latin America, and Cuba. Mikael is married to Quadri Okunuga, and the couple divides their time between the United States and Latvia. In the United States, Mikael lives on the island of Martha’s Vineyard, where he runs the popular Edgartown cafe, Behind the Bookstore.

For more information, please contact the library at vhpl_programs@clamsnet.org or (508) 696-4211.