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Curating Creativity: Jessy Randall Finds Inspiration in the Archives | Peer to Peer Review 

By Dustin Fife 

Recently I became acquainted with the creative works of a colleague, Jessy Randall, and I am impressed by the reciprocity between her archival work as the Curator of Special Collections at Colorado College and her poetry. Her latest book, Mathematics for Ladies: Poems on Women in Science, is a union of research and creativity. 

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Living Our Values Out Loud | Sustainability

By Rebekkah Smith-Aldrich 

The New Canaan Library, CT, is leading the way to address human rights in the building product supply chain. 

sept2022newssustainability

SPONSORED BY PROJECT MUSE

 

Books Custom Collections - Your Titles. Your Budget. Your Choice.

MUSE Books Custom Collections offer libraries ultimate flexibility. Design a collection the easy way, filtering our 80,000+ available books by subject, publisher, and publication date. More closely curate your collection by selecting individual titles. All books are DRM-free, ideal for research and class use.

 

Get Started Now›››

project-muse

ALA: 2022 Likely to See More Books Than Ever Banned and Challenged

By Lisa Peet 

The American Library Association's Office of Intellectual Freedom tracked 729 attempts to ban or restrict library resources in K–12, higher ed, and public libraries in all of 2021, targeting 1,597 unique titles—itself the highest number of attempted book bans since ALA began keeping track of challenged books more than 20 years ago. 

Banned-Book-Week

New Research: Book Bans Are Political, but Most Voters Don’t Support Them

By Meredith Schwartz 

The EveryLibrary Institute, the companion organization of library advocacy group EveryLibrary, commissioned Embold Research, a nonpartisan research firm, to poll 1,223 U.S. voters on book banning. The survey found that nearly all (92 percent) have heard at least something about such censorship, and at least 75 percent will consider the issue of book banning when voting this November. Also in observance of Banned Books Week, intellectual freedom organization PEN America offered an update to its previous report, Banned in the USA: Rising School Book Bans Threaten Free Expression and Students’ First Amendment Rights, published in April. 

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CABI
 

Indigenous Peoples of North America, Part II: The Indian Rights Association, 1882–1986 | eReviews

By Michael Rodriguez 

Historians, political scientists, and advanced students will benefit from this collection’s significant and distinctive content as well as the platform’s powerful search and functional design. 

sept2022refreview2-1
 

“Maybe the draw of archival work is the same as the draw of creative work, for me. You get interested in something, curious about it, and so you read about it and watch films about it and write about it and talk about it with your friends. And sometimes the result is a poem, or maybe a whole lot of poems.” 

 

From “Curating Creativity: Jessy Randall Finds Inspiration in the Archives | Peer to Peer Review”

 

The 2022 American Poets Prizes Are Announced | Book Pulse

By Kate Merlene  

The 2022 American Poets Prizes are announced. The Atwood Gibson Writers’ Trust Fiction finalists and the German Book Prize shortlist are announced. The 7th edition of BookNet Canada’s State of Publishing report is released. 

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SPONSORED BY OCLC

 

How Do You Reach People on Nonlibrary Websites?

OCLC has reimagined how people find libraries online with a new WorldCat.org user experience, including more ways to engage. The completely updated site can help libraries connect with people who may not otherwise visit the library online or in person.

 

Discover what’s new›››

OCLC

From LJ Reviews:

PERFORMING ARTS 

PREMIUM  

Best Seat in the House: An Assistant Director Behind the Scenes of Feature Films

By David McGiffert  

This unpretentious memoir about filmmaking will appeal to anyone in love with the big screen. 

 

PREMIUM  

Invasion ’51: The Birth of Alien Cinema

By Sean Kotz  

Useful for film scholars or sociologists, yet still accessible for general sci-fi fans, Kotz’s book is a fascinating look at the debut of an extraterrestrial movie menace that’s still popular today. 

ECONOMICS  

Slouching Towards Utopia: An Economic History of the Twentieth Century

By J. Bradford DeLong  

This volume, partly an economic history but mostly a thorough record of the global economy’s connection with politics, is destined to become a classic in its category. Social sciences and history collections would benefit the most from this book. 

 

PREMIUM 

The Middle Out: The Rise of Progressive Economics and a Return to Shared Prosperity

By Michael Tomasky 

A thoughtful reflection on rebalancing democracy with capitalism to bring about a more compassionate United States; deserving of wide readership. 

 

PREMIUM  

Adam Smith’s America: How a Scottish Philosopher Became an Icon of American Capitalism

By Glory M. Liu 

This book should be part of library collections on economic and social thought. Liu’s recontextualization of Adam Smith will be of interest to scholars as well as general audiences. 

SOCIAL SCIENCES 

Liberated to the Bone: Histories. Bodies. Futures

By Susan Raffo   

Visceral and readable without ever feeling too steeped in theory or jargon, Raffo’s accessible book helps show that roots matter more than what many see and that change is impossible without a real weeding, a structural dismantling of what people prefer to simply cover up or look away from. 

 

PREMIUM  

Blunt Instruments: Recognizing Racist Cultural Infrastructure in Memorials, Museums, and Patriotic Practices 

By Kristin Hass  

Hass offers a powerful exposé of the persistence of race in the ongoing public dialogue about citizenship and belonging. 

 

PREMIUM  

Mardi Gras Indians

By Nikesha Elise Williams  

Williams’s concise book effectively synthesizes numeral primary and secondary sources into an excellent overview of the origins of Mardi Gras tribes and the reasons for their continued endurance. Particularly recommended for libraries looking to add to collections on Black American cultural traditions. 

SPONSORED BY EX LIBRIS, PART OF CLARIVATE

 

4 Ways to Use the Ex Libris CampusM App to Recruit New Students

 

Abstract: Librarians are feeling the squeeze. As they seek to meet changing patron expectations and a dynamic technological environment, they are often simultaneously faced with budget cuts and leadership looking over their shoulder for evidence of institutional value.

 

Read More

Ex Libris, Part of Clarivate

Cold Peace, Forgotten Girls, and Crack-Up Capitalism: Current Issues, Apr. 2023, Pt. 1 | Prepub Alert

By Barbara Hoffert 

Key issues today embracing politics, economics, and social science and sometimes told through memoir. 

frankopan

The 2022 National Book Awards for Nonfiction & Poetry Longlists Announced | Book Pulse

By Anita Mechler  

The 2022 National Book Awards for Nonfiction and Poetry longlists are out. The 2022 BBC National Short Story Award shortlist is also announced.  

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SPONSORED BY EX LIBRIS, PART OF CLARIVATE

 

Five Questions That Can Elevate Your Library - Part 2: Agility and Adaptation

Abstract: Many technological trends in library management were evident before the Covid-19 pandemic. However, the pandemic significantly accelerated the pace of those changes. To boost agility, libraries are turning to SaaS solutions, analytics, digital transformation, open applications and their community of peers.

 

Read More

Ex Libris, Part of Clarivate

ACADEMIC BESTSELLERS: History of Science

By LJ Reviews 

Plagues Upon the Earth, Maladies of Empire, Our History of Addiction, Secret of Life, and more in history of science titles: September 2021 to date as identified by GOBI Library Solutions from EBSCO. 

 

1. Plagues Upon the Earth: Disease and the Course of Human History.

Harper, Kyle
Princeton University Press
2021. ISBN 9780691192123 $35.00

 

2. Maladies of Empire: How Colonialism, Slavery, and War Transformed Medicine.
Downs, Jim
Belknap Harvard
2021. ISBN 9780674971721 $29.95 

 

3. Urge: Our History of Addiction.
Fisher, Carl Erik
Penguin Books
2022. ISBN 9780525561446 $30.00 
 

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From the Pages of infoDOCKET...

  • Association of University Presses (AUPresses) Releases Second Edition of “Best Practices for Peer Review of Scholarly Books” Handbook

  • Journal Article: “The Effects of Counterproductive Workplace Behaviors on Academic LIS Professionals’ Health and Well-Being”

  • New Video: Virtual Tour of the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) Heritage Science Research Lab

  • New Resource From LIBER: “A Practical Guide to FAIR Practices in Research Libraries”

  • Four Scholarly Publishing Organizations Release Revised Version of the “Principles of Transparency and Best Practice in Scholarly Publishing”

 
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