AD: EBSCO/APA
Learning Project Analyzes State’s Jim Crow Laws UNC Libraries’ Machine Learning Project Analyzes State’s Jim Crow Laws
By Catherine Lundoff 
On the Books: Using Algorithms of Resistance to Expose North Carolina’s Jim Crow Laws is a machine learning and collections as data project of the University of North Carolina (UNC) at Chapel Hill Libraries. Since 2019, the project team has been building an algorithm and searchable database for Jim Crow legislation signed into law in North Carolina between 1866 and 1967. 
Metropolitan Camp Goods Company, 1928, Utah State Creates Outdoor Gear Ephemera Archive
By Elisa Shoenberger 
When people get catalogs from Patagonia or REI in the mail, most throw them out or recycle them. But Utah State University’s (USU) Special Collections wants to collect these catalogs, magazines, and other ephemera to preserve the history of outdoor gear. 
AD: EBSCO
ALA Annual in the Cloud ALA Annual in the Cloud | 2021 Preview
By LJ Staff 
For the second year, the American Library Association (ALA) takes to the web to host its annual conference safely during the COVID-19 pandemic, taking place June 23­­–29 on a monitor near you. Exhibits will be open June 23–26 and, much like their analog counterparts, will feature activities to keep things fun and lively, including yoga, a magic show, and a bunny break. 
Meredith Schwartz  Moving Examples | Editorial
By Meredith Schwartz 
I never imagined that we would find ourselves honoring a second class of Movers & Shakers at a distance owing to the pandemic—albeit now with an end, perhaps, in sight.

See all LJ’s academic Movers:

Emma Molls
Zeineb Yousif
Eileen Rhodes
Heather De Forest
Callan Bignoli
Shannon Jones
Stacy Collins
Christina Fuller-Gregory
SPONSORED BY EBSCO
EBSCO Complimentary Tool to Make Subscription Management Easier

With many features, such as a customer service portal and an easy-to-use cart interface, EBSCONET® organizes subscription-related tasks for your serials and simplifies the subscription management process — all within a single, intuitive online platform.

Read More›››
States Consider Legislation to Restrict Teaching About Racism As More States Consider Legislation to Restrict Teaching About Racism, Educators Are Fighting Back
By Christina Joseph 
A coordinated effort to limit what teachers can teach about history, racism, sexism, and systemic oppression throughout history has educators concerned about their students, the impact on the library, and civic life in general. 
"We're interested in building our collection and making it as robust as possible, but part of our mission too is just to bring attention to the need to preserve the legacy of the outdoor industry. We also want companies to think about their legacy and how they're going to preserve that, whether that’s hiring a dedicated archivist, or maybe assigning someone part-time to collect and organize things."
image Current Issues: Nonfiction Previews, Dec. 2021, Pt. 3 | Prepub Alert
By Barbara Hoffert 
Creating the Pfizer vaccine, learning to talk about race, and investigating contemporary U.S. debtors’ prisons. 
AD: EBSCO
From LJ Reviews:
HISTORY 
PREMIUM

Maiden Voyages: Magnificent Ocean Liners and the Women Who Traveled and Worked Aboard Them
By Siân Evans  
This fast-paced, well-written social history will appeal to fans of women’s history who enjoy reading interesting life stories.   
PREMIUM
The Artist and the Eternal City

By Loyd Grossman  
Some prior familiarity with Bernini and baroque Rome is helpful here. Still, many readers fond of European art and history will find this short volume worthwhile.
PREMIUM
By Water Beneath the Walls: The Rise of the Navy Seals

By Benjamin H. Milligan
Rich in action-packed narrative but light on analysis, this book is recommended for readers looking for a navy-focused popular history of special operations warfare.
SOCIAL SCIENCES 
PREMIUM

The Power of Strangers: The Benefits of Connecting in a Suspicious World
By Joe Keohane  
An eye-opening account blending sociology and self-help. After this enlightening and uplifting exploration, readers will undoubtedly view strangers in a different way.

PREMIUM
When the Stars Begin To Fall: Overcoming Racism and Renewing the Promise of America
By Theodore R. Johnson  
Johnson supports his argument with a mix of stories, both personal and historical, which brings a personal aspect to a work that can be academic at times. While the book covers the same territory as recent works by Isabel Wilkerson and Ibram X. Kendi, Johnson’s particular point-of-view makes his call to action feel like a patriotic duty.
BIOGRAPHY 
PREMIUM

The Passion of Anne Hutchinson: An Extraordinary Woman, the Puritan Patriarchs, and the World They Made and Lost
By Marilyn Westerkamp
In situating the Hutchinson controversy within the “religious heterodoxy, social volatility, and political instability” of the time, Westerkamp broadens our understanding of early American history, especially as it relates to women and the religious experience. A worthy addition to Perry Miller’s seminal works on the period. 
A Quantum Life: My Unlikely Journey from the Street to the Stars
By Hakeem Oluseyi & Joshua Horwitz  
Oluseyi’s skills as public speaker and motivator are on full display as he recalls his long road to personal and professional success. A great read for memoir fans, who will be drawn in from the first page.
PREMIUM
The Great Dissenter: The Story of John Marshall Harlan, America’s Judicial Hero
By Peter S. Canellos  
Canellos has written a skillful biography that illuminates the lives of both John Harlan and Robert Harlan. It will spark the interest of readers looking for more insight on the Reconstruction era. As in Canellos’s previous books, the life and times of his subjects come alive here.
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.

Read More›››
The Night Watchman Louise Erdrich’s The Night Watchman Wins Pulitzer Prize | Book Pulse
By Kate Merlene  
The 2021 Pulitzer Prizes are awarded, with The Night Watchman by Louise Erdrich winning the top prize for fiction. Wilmington's Lie: The Murderous Coup of 1898 and the Rise of White Supremacy by David Zucchino, The Dead Are Arising: The Life of Malcolm X by Les Payne and Tamara Payne, and Franchise: The Golden Arches in Black America by Marcia Chatelain are also winners. 
Garbo Four Key Arts Titles: Nonfiction Previews, Dec. 2021, Pt. 4 | Prepub Alert
By Barbara Hoffert 
Insights into opera, band music, TV, and film. 
SPONSORED BY IMAGINE PUBLISHING In Defense of Liberal Democracy
Manuel Hinds’ Urgent Case for Democratic Principles

Merging expert historical, political, and economic analysis, In Defense of Liberal Democracy, shows how our recent technological revolution has led to a crisis of social division. Hinds also describes how the traditions and institutions of liberal democracy healed previous national rifts.

Read More›››
Sea State Remembrance & Moving Forward: Memoir Previews, Dec. 2021, Pt. 4 | Prepub Alert
By Barbara Hoffert 
Recalling Cokie Roberts, learning to walk again with Ryan Shazier, and more. 
The Pegan Diet Health & Fitness Best-Sellers, June 2021 | The Most In-Demand in Libraries & Bookstores
By LJ Reviews 
The health and fitness books most in-demand with readers are about keto diets, veganism, herbal medicine, and health care advocacy. 
Taste Makers Cooking & Culture: Last of the Fall Titles for Foodies | Prepub Alert
By Barbara Hoffert 
Great recipes and great insight into the confluence of food and culture. 
White Too Long ACADEMIC BESTSELLERS: Religion
By LJ Reviews 

The Legacy of White Supremacy in American Christianity, Transcendent Kingdom, Secret Lives of Church Ladies and more in religion titles: June 2020 to date as identified by GOBI Library Solutions from EBSCO. 

1. White Too Long: The Legacy of White Supremacy in American Christianity.
Jones, Robert P.
Simon & Schuster
2020. ISBN 9781982122867. $28.00 

2. Transcendent Kingdom.
Gyasi, Yaa
Alfred A Knopf
2020. ISBN 9780525658184. $27.95 

3. Secret Lives of Church Ladies.
Philyaw, Deesha
West Virginia University Press
2020. ISBN 9781949199734. $18.99 

Job Zone Job Zone utilizes unique job matching technology to help you find the perfect job (and employers find the perfect candidate), whether you’re actively seeking or just keeping an eye out for your possibilities. Log on today and check out our newest features, including automated job and candidate matches, and email alerts.
JOB OF THE WEEK
Manhattan Public Library/North Central Kansas Libraries System seeks a Library Director

Did you receive this newsletter from a friend? Sign up here to get Academic Newswire

LINKS: LibraryJournal.com | News | Reviews+ | LJ Events and Webcasts

Connect with us on: TwitterFacebookInstagramLinkedIn

CONTACTS: Editorial: [email protected]; Advertising: [email protected]

This message was sent to [email protected] by LibraryJournal.com

Library Journal
(a MSI Information Services company), 123 William Street, Suite 802, New York, NY 10038

Privacy Policy | Unsubscribe | Manage Newsletters

Media Source Inc. Library Journal School Library Journal The Horn Book Junior Library Guild AKJ