libraries

Nov 28 18:23

Cultivate Diversity database

The Cultivate Diversity database is a nifty tool from the Ocean County Public Library in New Jersey. You use it to find program and collection ideas for different service populations, by community, age group, or difficulty (amount of work it takes to produce).

Sep 01 14:50

CFP: National Diversity in Libraries Conference, 2010 - DEADLINE approaching!

The 2010 National Diversity in Libraries Conference, NDLC2010: From Groundwork to Action, will take place from July 14-16, 2010 in Princeton, NJ. The National Diversity in Libraries Conference (NDLC) is a biennial event that serves as a regional meeting for library staff members to discuss diversity issues, especially issues common to the host region's culture.

The 2010 NDLC Planning Committee invites you to submit a proposal for presentation at the conference.

Aug 19 14:13

You'll miss the Post Office

Sandy Berman sent me this news service article about the decline of the US Postal Service printed from his local paper. I agree with it when it comes to the USPS, but also think you could substitute the word "library" for "post office" and have it be equally true.

Jan 26 13:14

Parfait, 2 and 3

author: 
Larned, Emily K.

If you love books and/or zines and/or fashion analysis and/or fancy binding and/or letter press and/or library search results and/or math theory and/or French films and literature and/or Red Pandas and/or original illustrations and/or cookie recipes and/or whatever other crazy things are competing to get out of book artist Emily K. Larned's head and fingers, then you will find something to go gaga over in her zine series Parfait.

I must warn you that the following review is as gushy a thing as I have ever written. If the idea of my blasé self losing control like that makes you uncomfortable, do not read on!

Quotations: 

When we're not ambivalent, how staggeringly particular we can be. #2, 2005, p. 76.

At the very same booksale you also bought Madame Bovary. You love this book. It is due for a reread. But then upon close inspection later, you find that this edition was "edited" by the translator! Jesus. There's five critical essays tacked onto the end in addition to the lengthy introduction and yet the translator actually took AWAY from the original text? Oh, I'm sorry, did YOU Mr. Translator labour seven hours a day on one paragraph like our pal Gustave? You didn't? Then don't fucking EDIT his work.

You become really rather irrationally upset about this. Like it was morally wrong of these books to be donated to the library booksale so some poor soul such as yourself would buy these lousy editions, ignorant of their inauthenticity. Like, no doubt the person who originally owned these books was duped by them too, and so got rid of them by donation. When in fact you kind of feel like they should have been THROWN OUT. They're broken. They're malfunctioning books. So you're going to throw them out, right? If that is what you think their deserved fate to be? Trash? Book in trash? Um, gosh. Of course not. You'll just donate them... to the Salvation Army. What sort of horrible person would throw out a book? #3, 2007, p. 67

reviewdate: 
Jan 16 2009
Dec 07 17:46

Coming Soon: Zine Reviews in Library Journal

Basically I already wrote up the whole thing on Zine Librarians, but just in case you don't happen to already have that blog in your feed reader...Zine Reviews are coming to Library Journal! In March! Yay!!!!!!!! ...

Nov 13 11:46

Books on Rice: First Chapters

My friend Susan's friend Trong made an art project involving rice, mylar, gold, and first chapters of four books. ...

Sep 12 13:12

Librarians on the Future of Print Literary Magazines

Literary Magazines Go Electronic: Now Where’s the Print Edition in the Library? National Book Critics Circle panel at Housing Works Thursday, September 13 at 7p.
126 Crosby Street, between Houston & Prince.

Jul 31 15:58

Transgender Resource Collection

I got the print brochure for this collection in the mail from a friend and was glad to see that it's online, as well. It's the Transgender Resource Collection from the Oak Park Public Library in Illinois.

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Jul 19 10:28

Librarian 2.0 - Interviews of the future of librarians

Will Sherman of Degree Tutor (the same guy who wrote that 33 Reasons Libraries Are Still Important article) interviewed 27 library workers including me. I'm pretty happy with how mine came out--except for some grammar weirdness and missing links.