September 2011

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Top Tweets of the Week

Holy Hannah this has been a long week.  I am looking forward to some R&R this weekend…kickball, brunch, getting together my Halloween costume.  Hope you guys enjoy some down time too!

 

* CuyahogaLibrary We recommend this article by Plain Dealer reporter John Caniglia on how libraries are evolving to meet the needs… fb.me/WT8gfDsV

*ALALibrary Visibility @ your library: ALA President encourages us to celebrate Banned Books Week in letter to USA Today http://ow.ly/6EZKU

* LibraryJournal 10 Steps to a Better Library Interior: Tips That Don't Have To Cost a Lot http://ow.ly/6Fr14 inexpensive steps to reinvigorate your library

* ShelfAwareness 50 Addictive Twitter Feeds for Bookworms–authors, booksellers, publishers, media &more (lots of you are on this list!) t.co/aEISRDE8

* TheLiB Some excellent questions from @infodocket about Amazon/Overdrive lending in libraries. eBooks, Privacy, & the Library – t.co/qS0M4yMH

* MacmillanLib Join us for the Librarians' Sneak Peek Book Preview (Oct 19 at @RHLibrary's pad)! We'll have lunch & talk books! RSVP: bit.ly/neKJS5

* Heelslibrarian Banned Books Week Reminds Us That Censorship Is Alive and Well in the Internet Age huff.to/qggCG2 via @huffingtonpost

* PublishersWkly NPR's Top 100 Sci-Fi/Fantasy Books bit.ly/rmZM1h

* davidleeking Guess what? Tomorrow is #followalibrary day! tweet ur favorite book w #myfavoritebook – more info here – bit.ly/mWJYpQ

* LibraryJournal Is Your Library Accessible? http://ow.ly/6JWk1 Providing equal access to your historic building can spur other crucial updates.

 

 - Annie

 

 

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We Are Not in Kansas Anymore…

OutofOzHC_c Thanks to Gregory Maguire who has spirited us away to his magical version of the Land of Oz.  Out of Oz, the final installment in the Wicked Years series, comes out November 1, and there are some fun features on Facebook to get you all excited.

If you like Gregory Maguire's FB page you will get to watch a beautiful book trailer, and enter the sweepstakes to win one of six pairs of tickets to various performances of Wicked around the country.

So Like his page and don't miss the opportunity!

– Annie

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Fun at Work

There are ups and downs with every job.  But one of the perks for me is having co-workers who are not only smart, but smarty pants!

Exhibit A:
Kayleigh George posing as Jackie O just because. (Well, just because it’s her Halloween costume)

KG1
Exhibit B: 
Annie Mazes having fun with ear pens.

Ears
Not only are these guys great at their jobs, they also keep me thoroughly entertained – which is a requirement to work in the HarperCollins Library Marketing Dept.  Makes for a nice day at the office!

-Virginia

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Jackie O(MG)

You guys….this is uncanny!  Can we talk about how Ms. Kayleigh George is Jacqueline Kennedy reincarnated?

KG1
This is just a preview to Halloween where she will be decked out in full Jackie O regalia, complete with spot-on accent. 

Are you dressing up for the holiday?  What costume ideas are floating around those clever minds of yours? Do tell!

– Annie

 

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And the Award(s) Go To….

Secret notebooks Woodcutter

Congratulations to John Curran and Reginald Hill! Curran’s book, Agatha Christie’s Secret Notebooks, has won the Macavity and Anthony Awards for Best Non-Fiction. Hill’s novel, The Woodcutter, has won the Barry Award for Best British Novel. For more information, including a complete list of winning titles, please see the following sites:

 

Macavity Award: http://www.mysteryreaders.org/macavity.html

Anthony Award: http://www.bouchercon2011.com/awards.php

Barry Award: http://www.deadlypleasures.com/barry.html

– Annie

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Trifecta of Terrific Talent

 ***UPDATE***
Supplies have now run out.  Thank you to all who participated.

OMG this is so exciting I can barely contain myself…we have some huge books coming out this Fall and now I get to give away three of them!  I love my job.  While supplies last anyone who emails us here at LLF can choose one of the three following titles:

Micro Micro by Michael Crichton and Richard Preston (On sale 11.22.11)
This boundary-pushing thriller melds scientific fact with pulse-pounding fiction to create yet another masterpiece of sophisticated, cutting-edge entertainment.

 

 

Out of Oz Out of Oz by Gregory Maguire (On sale 11.1.11)
The final volume in The Wicked Years series finds the Land of Oz enmeshed in a civil war.  Rain, Elphaba's granddaughter, must find a way to settle the unrest with help from a familiar cast of characters and some latent inherited gifts.

 

Falling Together Falling Together by Marisa de los Santos (On sale 10.4.11)
Old friends are reunited in this story that uncovers hidden truths, confronts long-ignored realities, and ultimately leads on a journey that will make each character stronger as they try to rebuild their relationship.

I will send the books out as soon as they are on sale (I know it requires a little patience, but totally worth it).  So which one do you want??

– Annie

 ***UPDATE***
Supplies have now run out.  Thank you to all who participated.

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Top Tweets of the Week

OMGloomy….what a gross day.  Here are some tweets to brighten your day (yeaaahhh….humor me, please?)

* PublishersWkly Peter Brantley’s first column: In the digital age, libraries and publishers face a social reconstruction bit.ly/o8tkuf

* LibraryJournal Guest Post by Lauren Gilbert (@Uffish_L): A Librarian’s Brooklyn Book Festival Takeaways | In the Bookroom http://ow.ly/6yHtf #bkbf

* helgagrace  Check out this post by @Tuphlos in which she discusses starting a digital collection: cdstacked.blogspot.com/2011/09/outtak… #collectiondevelopment #ebooks

* ALALibrary RT @gslisdom: Virtual read-out of banned books is launched with videos from Judy Blume and Lauren Myracle http://ow.ly/6uIUK #bannedbooks

* ShelfAwareness Seattle libraries begin testing Kindle lending is.gd/28tWL8

* ALA_Booklist Are you a fan of the #booklistwebinar? Well, we've got weeks of them: http://j.mp/pzByZM!

* LibraryJournal Amazon and OverDrive Roll Out Kindle Books to Libraries http://ow.ly/6APLD

* bookbench Will libraries be a “space for playing with and reconstructing the pasts that the library has served served to codify”? bit.ly/oWsoYo

* PublishersWkly Podcast: PW’s Week Ahead for Friday, Sept. 23. Andrew Albanese on Kindle library lending and Rose Fox with PW Reviews bit.ly/rlW1Gm

* librarylovefest This is incredible. Chekhov's is my favorite: buzzfeed.com/mikehayes/the-…

 - Annie

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Starred Review for A Train in Winter

Train in Winter Caroline Moorehead's moving non-fiction book, A Train in Winter, has been garnering a lot of praise including from Kayleigh who talked about it at our book buzz in New Orleans.  Recently Booklist hopped on the train (unintentional pun that I've decided not to edit) with a starred review:

* A Train in Winter: An Extraordinary Story of Women, Friendship, and Resistance in Occupied France.

They came from all walks of life, and from all over France. Professionals and housewives, grandmothers and teenagers, they were drawn to or drawn into the Resistance, perhaps by a heightened sense of moral outrage, or just because their husbands, lovers, brothers needed their assistance. Ultimately, they would all come together in Nazi concentration camps, where the petty harassment they once endured as furtive members of undercover cells would wither in comparison to unimaginable horrors. As the war escalated, so did the savagery of their captors. Two hundred and thirty women began the journey into Hitler’s hell at the death camps at Birkenau and Auschwitz; by the time the Allies arrived to liberate them at Mauthausen, only 49 were left. Through primary interviews with the seven survivorsand other groundbreaking  research, distinguished English journalist and biographer Moorehead (Martha Gellhorn, Lucie de la Tour du Pin) potently demonstrates how this disparate group of valiant women withstood the atrocities of the Nazi regime through their abiding devotion to each other. Heightened by electrifying and staggering detail, Moorehead’s riveting history stands as a luminous testament to the indomitable will to survive, and the unbreakable bonds of friendship. — Carol Haggas

We here in libraryland definitely recommend checking it out.

– Annie

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In Romance News…

                         Call me Irrisistable  Lord Langley

Booklist has just put together a Top 10 list of Romance Fiction for 2011, and there are two familiar titles among them.  Elizabeth Boyle's Lord Langley is Back in Town and Susan Elizabeth Phillips' Call Me Irresistible are hot, hot, hot and you should definitely check them out.  And for all you SEPPIES out there, the sequel to Call Me Irresistible comes out in July 2012.  The Great Escape follows the path of runaway bride Lucy Jorik after her ill-fated wedding, and will be just as irresistible as it's predecessor. Ok, ok twist my arm…I'll do a giveaway. First 10 commentors who tell me their fave romance of 2011 get a copy of Call Me Irresistible.

Annie

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Top Tweets of the Week

Happy Friday, what plans do you guys have for this weekend?  I'm headed upstate for an eagerly anticipated camping trip.  S'mores, campfires, sweater weather…win!  Hope you guys all enjoy your weekends!

LibraryJournal WSJ: Amazon To Roll Out Netflix-like Ebook Lending Service? | LJ Insider http://ow.ly/6sbYA

Nancy_Pearl ✔ out Lucette Lagnado's memoir The Arrogant Years, the story of her Sephardic Jewish family's move from Cairo to the US in the '50s.

GalleyCat Librarian Who! RT @HuffPostBooks: Have you met America's Littlest Library? mbist.ro/qMn40U

davidleeking New blog post: : Turning Strangers into Friends bit.ly/nzZgZ8

alscblog It’s like Christmas: When people who don’t know what a librarian does ask me if I get to sit and read all day, I… bit.ly/qrNw4t

PublishersWkly Digital bookmobile spreads word of e-books in libraries bit.ly/qrcc2e

book_chatter Check out the "K.I.S.S. & Teal" @avonbooks bundle to benefit Ovarian Cancer National Alliance @Bookperk: ow.ly/6veDE!!

librarylovefest RT @galleycat: Book recommendation tool at @goodreads analyzes 20 billion data points to find you books: mbist.ro/pQuthi

willywaldo Goodreads Launches Book Recommendation Feature: bit.ly/mVPxZk via @AddThis The Netflix for books?Still prefer human kind: librarians!

columbuslibrary Interesting article on libraries from @columbusmonthly. What do you think of their vision of a library? http://ow.ly/6wtfv

– Annie

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Happy Birthday, Aggie!

Agatha_christieIn honor of the Queen of Mystery's birthday yesterday, I'm giving you presents!  This is not a Strange Jest, the first 6 people to comment with their favorite Agatha Christie book get a prize package…what are you waiting for…The Clocks ticking.

– Annie

PS: Can we talk about how glamourous pictures used to be?  I want to be photographed with whatever technique made famous people look gauzy and dreamy.  Examples here, here and here (yes, I know it helps if you are naturally gorgeous).

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The New Voices of Fiction

***UPDATE: This giveaway is now closed

VoicesOh hey book lovers…how's it going?  You know that feeling you get when you discover a new author?  It's like kittens and hot chocolate wrapped up in a down comforter…no? just me?

Anyway, here is the chance to discover 10 new talents!  We have some amazing debut novels coming out in the coming months, and we want you to FALL (get it? Cause it's autumn…yeaaaah) in love with them.  

To facilitate the love, I am giving away Displaced Persons by Ghita Schwarz to the first 15 people who email me their fave debut novel.  

– Annie

PS: Be sure to sign up for our Newsletter (Top left button)….lots more autumnal puns to come.

 

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Virtual read-out of banned books is launched

BBWReadout_virtual11_lores ALA has posted the following article on their website regarding banned book week.  Are you going to participate??

***

Readers from across the United States and around the world are demonstrating their support for free speech by participating in a virtual read-out of banned and challenged books that will culminate during the 30th annual Banned Books Week (Sept. 24-Oct. 1), the only national celebration of the freedom to read.  Individuals, libraries and bookstores are uploading videos to a special channel on YouTube, submitting either a reading of up to two minutes or a description of a local book challenge of up to three minutes.

The virtual read-out is the centerpiece of an expanded Banned Books Week, which focuses attention on the censorship of books in schools and libraries.  The American Library Association reported 348 challenges and bans in 2010.  The most challenged book was "And Tango Makes Three," an award-winning children’s picture book, based on an actual incident, that tells the story of two male penguins who hatch an abandoned egg and parent the chick.  The book has been on the list of most frequently challenged books for five years. Other titles frequently challenged last year include Sherman Alexie’s "The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian,"  Aldous Huxley’s "Brave New World" and books in Stephenie Meyer’s "Twilight" series.  ALA publishes a Top Ten Banned Books list annually.

The authors of challenged books are also participating in the read-out.  Videos of frequently censored authors Judy Blume and Lauren Myracle have recently been posted.  Other highly acclaimed and/or frequently challenged authors, including Chris Crutcher, Paolo Bacigalupi, Sarah Dessen, William Joyce, Andrea Davis Pinkney, Jay Asher, Justin Richardson and Peter Parnell, have also recorded videos that will be posted in coming days.  Check the Banned Books Week YouTube Channel daily for new videos. 

To support an expanded Banned Books Week, the sponsors have launched a redesigned website, www.bannedbooksweek.org.  In addition to providing information about the virtual read-out, it includes an interactive map that shows the location of book challenges in recent years as well as a listing of featured events and a state-by-state listing of libraries, bookstores and other groups that are participating in Banned Books Week.

One Banned Books Week event is an eBay auction of more 70 pieces by leading artists in the children’s book industry, including Peter Brown, Susan Jeffers, Wendell Minor, Adam Rex and Paul O. Zelinsky.  Proceeds from the auction will help support efforts to defend the First Amendment rights of young readers, including the Kids Right to Read Project, which is co-sponsored by the American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression (ABFFE) and the National Coalition Against Censorship (NCAC).  Items can be located on ABFFE’s eBay page

To provide additional organizational support for Banned Books Week, the current sponsors–the ALA, ABFFE, the American Society of Journalists and Authors (ASJA), the Association of American Publishers (AAP), and the National Association of College Stores (NACS)—recruited several new sponsors this year: NCAC, the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund (CBLDF), the National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE) and PEN American Center (PEN).  Project Censored has joined the Center for the Book in the Library of Congress as an endorser of Banned Books Week.

Publishers have increased their support as well.  A number of AAP member publishers, including Hachette, Penguin, Random House, Scholastic, HarperCollins and Simon & Schuster are providing guidance for the observance through an AAP Banned Books Week Publisher Task Force.

Contact:

Chris Finan
American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression
(212) 587-4025, ext. 4

Barbara Jones
American Library Association
(312) 280-4222

Judith Platt
Association of American Publishers
(202) 220-4551

 - Annie

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Kenneth C. Davis on 9/11

9780061118210_0_14413_Author One thing I've always loved about Ken Davis is the fact that any time an American milestone or current event crops up, he can be relied upon to have an educated opinion about it–one that he is always willing to share.  As we approach the tenth anniversary of September 11th, Americans are left with memories of that day as well as questions about our future.  Ken recently did an interview in honor of the anniversary, and it is definitely worth a listen.  For more on Ken, and the Don't Know Much About(c) series, check out his blog.  

-Kayleigh  

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L is for Librarian

The Atlantic posted an article today entitled, "What People Don't Get About My Job: From A(rmy Soldier) to Z(ookeeper)."  Here's their choice pick for librarians:

L is for Librarian:  "We are not mere cart pushers. This job requires a Masters degree for a reason."

People have made an extremely strong link between librarians, libraries and books. This is only natural, but it really sells short the full value of libraries and the full scope of librarian work. Libraries offer so much more than moldy old books. There's also music, movies, TV shows, video games, and electronic databases that span a whole galaxy of scholarly and practical information unavailable to any level of googling. Additionally, libraries offer free internet access that is utterly vital in many poor and rural communities. As government services migrate online, good citizenship almost requires an internet connection. Libraries also provide a free space for local groups and communities and have been at the forefront of job search training and computer instruction. Coordinating all of this are the humble librarians. We are not mere cart pushers, let me assure you. This job requires a Masters degree for a reason.

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Top Tweets of the Week

This is mildly cheating because these tweets cover the last week and a half.  Between being out and being very busy, I apologize for slacking off.  Have a great long weekend!

BooksTellYouWhy RT @harvf: On why we need public #libraries, and why we must continue to support them: Free entertainment, for life – bit.ly/pmZ3JG

ALALibrary We need libraries most during recessions | Davis Enterprise http://ow.ly/6bBUC

HarperCollins Bookperk: insider access to the world of books: http://ow.ly/6bv9w @Bookperk

christhebookie Public library will lend out people as ‘living books’ | Springwise springwise.com/lifestyle_leis… via @springwise

davidleeking RT @theREALwikiman: Three simple rules that should inform library marketing – does yours get these right or wrong? bit.ly/nyAKkZ

ALALibrary Future of Libraries from CQ Researcher (pdf) http://ow.ly/6cOAL

TheLiB 10 Great Ways to Create Library Videos socialnetworkinglibrarian.com/2011/08/27/10-…

infotweets libguides: springshare.com/libguides/ #cefjm2011

statelibohio RT @theREALwikiman: Three simple marketing rules all libraries should live by… bit.ly/nyAKkZ

younglibrarian i'm liking this philosophy of librarianship: bit.ly/o3qVFZ

alaannual Bundle registration for Midwinter in Dallas + Annual in Anaheim is open! ow.ly/1wvm5H #alamw12 #ala12

– Annie

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Surrender to the Awesomeness of Tessa Dare’s Latest

9780062049834_0_Cover A Night to Surrender (see what I did with the post title??) just went on sale, and it's garnering stellar reviews.  Publishers Weekly and Booklist both love it:

"Dare… soars to new heights of literary excellence with the first entry in a new Regency-set trilogy.”   — Booklist starred review 

"Enticing romantic encounters are matched by witty conversations that slowly and seamlessly reveal deep truths about Dare's endearing one-of-a-kind characters.”   – Publishers Weekly starred review

AND RT Book Reviews made it a Top Pick:

“[Dare’s] light yet fascinating plots, disarming characters, sense of humor and sensuality enthrall.”  – RT Book Reviews 4 ½ stars, Top Pick!

The best part is that if you buy it, you are helping the  K.I.S.S & Teal campaign  to support The National Ovarian Cancer Alliance.

So basically, the romance gods are telling you to get your hands on a copy of this book. And while I don't want to brag, I just so happen to have connections with said gods (Tangent: I am reading The Song of Achilles and it.is.amazing!).  The first 10 commenters who post a brief synopsis of their own romance novel, get a copy.  Get creative!

– Annie 

 

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