Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Fall into a book

This is the middle of my fifth year here, and this year I noticed that I had developed some comfortingly familiar habits: Banned Book week at the end of September and Halloween books for the month of October. Every November 1 I choose to highlight books about pilgrims and early colonists in America, the Native American tribes they may have encountered, books about winter holidays including Christmas and Hanukkah, and my favorite: our collection of cookbooks. We also have quite a selection of books about not just food, but nutrition, which is interesting reading at this time of year - Halloween candy is everywhere and the temptation of Thanksgiving is mere weeks away. Come on in and pick up something cozy, informative, or both.

Monday, November 5, 2012

New and improved


As you can see, there have been some changes. I am mostly recovered, physically speaking. Once upon a time I was asked if I had read every book in the library. I have not (yet!), but I have actually touched every single one during the packing and unpacking. There are fewer books, but it is true that sometimes we must prune old branches in order to stimulate new growth.

Friday, November 2, 2012

This post is very overdue – do I have to pay a fee?


I was told a few months ago that “no one reads blogs anymore.” Au contraire! There are people who make a living just on blogging alone, so someone must be reading them. I read them, certainly – I have a few favorites bookmarked so I can stay current: Swiss Army Librarian, Awful LibraryBooks, Ringling College’s Library Voices, to name a few.

Halloween, once upon a time, was the season when the peoples of Northern Europe marked the transition in the year from light to dark. It seems as good a time as any to set about revitalizing my blog – I enjoy writing, and I really enjoy sharing what’s new and exciting in the library and at Out-of-Door. So here’s to new beginnings, despite the falling leaves.

See you in the stacks.

Friday, September 2, 2011

Happy New Year!

Where did August go? Hey, where did SUMMER go? Here we are, back in the swing of things. It's a new and improved school year! Blue week only schedule, lots of new students (and faculty!), plenty of great classes to take and wonderful extracurriculars too.

And, of course, lots of new books and DVDs. I counted: last week alone I added 50 new DVD titles to our already-impressive collection, on everything from war to art to history and feature films too. Everything in the entire library except reference books can be checked out by anyone - students, faculty, staff - so come see what's new!

Realistically, however, you're probably here for a Mac charger. I have more of those too, so do stop by. And welcome back!

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Name that search!

I am about to roll out a fabulous new feature for the library, and I need your help. Early next week I hope to change the way you do research for your papers, homework, class discussions, even just to satisfy your curiosity. Instead of visiting four or five different databases on the library webpage, you will now be able to type your search term into one box, click a button, and as if by magic you will search every one of our electronic resources and the book catalog simultaneously. (Except Questia, and I'll say more about that later.)

Got that? Those of you researching Alexander the Great, Shakespeare, or the causes of the Great Depression - in the past you had to search the library catalog, then look for articles in Gale, then EBSCO, then Questia, and then some of you looked at Oxford Art Online and Bloom's too, returning to the library page every time. No more! Now you just type in "Alexander the Great," click the button, and wait for dozens of relevant resources to be returned, all in one spot. Except Questia. Why?

Because as you experienced paper-writers know, Questia keeps a digital bookshelf just for you, from which you can take notes, make a bibliography, and do other useful academic things. That requires an individual login and password, so a Questia search can't be jammed in there with the rest of the research materials.

It's still pretty revolutionary (some colleges are starting to do this, so you're ahead of the game!), still pretty exciting, and . . . you can do it from home, too. Ask me how!

So, why do I need your help? Because this fabulous new way to search needs a name. There will be a simple box in the library webpage and in it will be a single word that describes the wonder of this amazing new tool. Some obvious choices have already been taken: Searchasaurus is out, for example. I will award a small but very pleasant prize to he or she who thinks of the best, most exciting and appropriate name, with an extra prize for making it a cool acronym, like SCORE - Student Centered Online Research Experience. (No, that's not an option.) Open to students and faculty alike - time is running out, so get started!

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

The library wants your opinion!

Hello, readers! I've been away too long, but as you may know I was busy enjoying my chance to teach Issues in Contemporary Society to the senior class last semester and it diverted my attention a little, if pleasantly. It was wonderful getting to know our seniors better, but equally wonderful to have a bit more time to devote to library tasks.

One of which is exploring e-reader technology for the library! Many of you have e-readers already, and I'd like to hear about it. Come see me at the desk and sing the praises of your Nook, Kindle, Sony, whatever - convince me that's what I want to buy. Your opinion matters. Can't stop by? Email me. Thanks!

Friday, October 22, 2010

Home at last

This is Homecoming Weekend. Last night kicked things off with an epic bonfire and tonight is the all-school family picnic followed by what will be one of the most important games in Out-of-Door history: the first Homecoming football game at our very own field. At long last the Out-of-Door Thunder has a place to call its own: brand-new tennis courts, baseball fields, and a stadium for football and soccer complete with grandstand and concession area. It's been a hive of activity around here ever since I was hired on in August of '08: since then I have seen the Arts Building and Black Box theater, then some renovations on the Petrik Thunderdome gym, then the construction of the Gelbman Wellness Center, and now the Homecoming inauguration of Thunder Arena. Am I wearing my blue and white? You bet!

Saturday is the dance, and from the rumblings I've been hearing on campus all week it will no doubt prove historic in its own way . . . I'll be reporting on that next week. See you at the game!