AD: LJ DOD 2021
Frights and Delights Frights and Delights: 60 Horror Titles To Thrill Readers | Horror Preview 2021
By Becky Spratford
Upcoming releases in the hottest genre of the moment feature exciting debuts, new work from established authors, and more women authors, editors, and publishers than ever.
Woodruff Library “Slavery and the Archive” Course at Emory Encourages Deeper Dives Into Sources
By Lisa Peet
At Emory University, Atlanta, students in Assistant Professor Maria Montalvo’s U.S. History Seminar class “Slavery and the Archive” learn how to excavate historical sources: making connections between disparate sources and questioning not only what they find, but what they don’t.
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QUIPO GROUP Make your library safer with PITS patron incident reports

PITS allows libraries to track patron incidents to ensure greater security and safety for their staff and patrons. PITS maintains all of the information from the time the incident occurs to the time of full resolution. A simple dashboard allows for an at-a-glance view of current reports, perpetrators, and suspensions.

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Meredith Schwartz Counting on Equity | Editorial
By Meredith Schwartz
The 2021 ParkScore rankings, conducted annually by the Trust for Public Land, show a significant shakeup. It’s not because of major changes to the parks in the past year, but to the scoring: this year the Trust added equity to its decision matrix, which includes access, investment, amenities, and acreage. The resulting change in the lineup of top-scoring park systems shows how inadequate measuring overall access is for learning whether everyone is well served.
image Council Makes Cautious Progress | ALA Annual 2021
By Meredith Schwartz
The Council of the American Library Association (ALA), meeting virtually at the Annual Conference, chose to take more time to consider several key proposals. Most notably, while the resolution to review the core values and one to require round tables to have at least 150 members both passed, the more ambitious of the Forward Together Resolutions Working Group’s outputs, which would restructure the committees and Council itself, were not voted on.
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The Jerry Kline Community Impact Prize The Jerry Kline Community Impact Prize | Call for Nominations (Deadline next Monday)
The Jerry Kline Community Impact Prize, developed in partnership between the Gerald M. Kline Family Foundation and Library Journal, was created in 2019 to recognize the public library as a vital community asset. When libraries, civic entities, organizations, and the people they serve become close partners, their communities thrive. One winning library will receive $250,000 in unfettered grant monies from the Gerald M. Kline Family Foundation. The deadline for nominations is next Monday, July 19, 2021.
"Publishing had a reckoning in summer 2020 that is still reverberating throughout the BIPOC and larger marginalized literary community, and horror has been a major part of it."
ALA Annual New Technologies of the Fourth Industrial Revolution | ALA Annual 2021
By Matt Enis
“New digital technologies are bringing changes that are much more rapid and comprehensive than in the past to the way we live, work, and interact with one another. The idea that the recent advancement in digital technologies has reached qualitatively distinct stage of digital revolution is becoming more widely accepted,” explained Bohyun Kim, chief technology officer and professor for the University of Rhode Island Libraries, Kingston, during the "New Technologies of the Fourth Industrial Revolution: AI, IoT, Robotics, and Beyond” on demand presentation at the American Library Association's 2021 Annual Conference.
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Adam Matthew Digital ILS Insights in One Easy-to-Use Dashboard

Analyzing and using ILS data is difficult. Not anymore. Meet LibraryIQ - your new operations manager. LibraryIQ seamlessly integrates with and analyzes your ILS data. Uncover insights into collection budget, circulation, acquisitions, cataloging, patron engagement and programming.

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Nikole-Hannah-Jones, top, and Barack Obama and Lonnie Bunch III, ALA Featured Speakers Talk of Equity, Change, Hope| ALA Annual 2021
By Lisa Peet
The all-virtual format of the American Library Association (ALA) 2021 Annual conference, held June 23–29, meant new options for attendees who previously hadn’t been able to travel to the event, and also allowed ALA to put together an impressive roster of speakers. In between Nikole Hannah-Jones’s Opening Session and Barack Obama’s closer, a lineup of dynamic guests attracted thousands of viewers apiece.
image Barack Obama Releases Annual Summer Reading List | Book Pulse
By Kate Merlene
Barack Obama releases his annual Summer Music and Reading Lists. Raven Leilani wins the VCU Cabell First Novelist Award for Luster. The International Association of Culinary Professionals announces the finalists for the 2021 IACP awards. The 2021 Prometheus Awards Winners are also announced. 
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Adam Matthew Digital A New Resource Helps Students Learn How to Use Primary Sources Effectively

Instructors and librarians don’t have to look very far to find examples of how college students often struggle to use primary sources effectively in their research. Now, a new resource from academic publisher Adam Matthew Digital aims to fill this essential need.

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Alexandra and Asa, with pets, working together on American history The Home Team: How the Pandemic Changed Homeschooling for the Better
By Wayne D'Orio
In the first research on the issue, a survey from the U.S. Census Bureau shows that those who consider themselves taking part in homeschooling have more than doubled from spring 2020 to fall.
LJ Call for Information: Completed library renovation or new construction projects
Library Journal is collecting information about recently completed library construction projects for inclusion in our upcoming architecture issue. If your library completed a library construction or renovation project between July 1, 2020 and June 30, 2021, please tell us about it! We are especially interested in any special features or design elements of your project (e.g., green, flexible design, etc.). Submitting high quality images of completed projects is encouraged. If you have questions, please email Laura Girmscheid at [email protected]. The deadline for submissions is Friday, August 27, 2021. There are separate links for public and college/university library projects:

Public libraries: www.LibraryJournal.com/PublicArch2021
Academic libraries: www.LibraryJournal.com/AcademicArch2021
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TODAY’S MLIS TODAY’S MLIS: Prepared for Change

This year’s featured MLIS programs trained numerous library leaders honored by Library Journal as Movers & Shakers. Read more to find out which programs helped launch these talented members of the library community.

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 Citrus Yuri, Yaoi, and Everything in Between
By Anja Webb
Even after Pride month, it's important to ensure that your library’s collection includes titles that feature LGBTQ characters. Additionally, as manga’s popularity skyrockets and demand increases, so too will the need for inclusive books in the genre. Here are six manga that star characters of diverse sexualities.
Three YA Romantic Comedies Three YA Romantic Comedies That Are Perfect Beach Reads
By SLJ Reviews
These rom-com–loving characters offer a meta-spin on the genre and push the boundaries of familiar tropes as they star in their own love stories—with others and with themselves.
SPONSORED CONTENT In Defense of Liberal Democracy
21st Century Libraries: Changing from the Ground Up

Libraries have been reinventing themselves for well over a decade, as the emergence of smartphones and ubiquitous connectivity has put access to information into nearly everyone’s hands. No longer just repositories of information, libraries have morphed into full-service community centers that aim to meet a wide variety of civic and social needs.

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 Reviews
WEB-FIRST REVIEWS OF BOOKS AND MEDIA
Palace of the Drowned Palace of the Drowned, by Christine Mangan, is one of this week's starred mysteries. "Mangan’s excellent sophomore effort feels like an homage to Hitchcock and Highsmith both." Eric LaRocca's Things Have Gotten Worse Since We Last Spoke is one of this week's starred horror selections. "A must-read for fans of body horror, epistolary novels, and depravity, this pulse-pounding novella is one that readers will surely devour in one sitting." Miranda James's What the Cat Dragged In is another starred mystery. "The 14th 'Cat in the Stacks' mystery, with its family stories, descriptions of meals, and two cats, might be the most satisfying in the series for regular readers." The Book of Accidents, by Chuck Wendig, is another starred horror selection. "Wendig blends horror, fantasy, and small-town family drama in an ambitious epic that spans both a multitude of worlds and the interior expanse of the human heart. This one’s essential." And Karin Slaughter's False Witness is another starred mystery. "Slaughter skillfully and assuredly relates the violence of a sociopath, while creating an emotional connection to lives touched by tragedy and addressing current events. Her latest will be a favorite for thriller lovers, as well as fans of Jennifer Hillier, Michael Koryta, and Alafair Burke."

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JOB OF THE WEEK
Prince George's Community College (MD) seeks a Director, Library and Learning Resources

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