The CQ Library Annex is a full-service library providing important resources and services to the San Jose Neighborhood of Bisbee. The Annex is also home to the Copper Queen Tool Library, as well as our preschool art gallery, sensory garden, magnetic word wall, and LiteZilla-our interactive light-up pegboard. Come check us out!
Scrabble Club meets today and every Thursday from 1 - 3 PM at the Copper Queen Library. Come meet fellow wordsmiths, make new friends, and nail that triple word score!
Zinesters who participated in April’s Zine Fest at the Copper Queen Library donated copies of some of their zines for our circulating collection. Zines can be checked out just like books. Stop by and discover the art of self-publishing!
The Copper Queen Library's Tool Library which is located at the CQ Library Annex offers free checkout of home and garden tools and more with your Copper Queen Library Card. This program eliminates cost-related barriers to home improvements and encourages community sharing.
Check out Giant Jenga from the Copper Queen Library and turn any backyard, party, or family night into a crowd-pleasing challenge. Stack it high, pull a block, and hold your breath—because this classic game is even more exciting when it’s supersized!
Can’t figure out which book comes first in a series? Do you have a few favorite authors and wish you could find more just like them? Want to know who's won Pulitzers, Nobels, Booker Prizes, or Seuss/Geisel
illustrator awards? Looking for a good mystery, fantasy, or romance read? If so, try NoveList, a Readers' Advisory resource of 150,000+ fiction titles & over 4,000 custom-created articles & lists. To access this and other useful databases with your Cochise County Library Card, please click here : /client/en_US/ccld?rm=RESEARCH+DATAB1%7C%7C%7C1%7C%7C%7C0%7C%7C%7Ctrue&dt=list
Throwback Thursday : Bisbee, 1885. By 1885, the Copper Queen Library had its first building. A white two-story wood-framed structure (visible in this photograph) housed the library and the post office on the lower floor. The second floor was used for lodge meetings, church services, dances, and other social gatherings.