Libraries

American Library Association, Books, Libraries, Today Show

The Today Show profile: Libraries

Yesterday morning (June 11th) the Today Show ran a segment on the important role libraries play during the recession, using data and resources provided by the ALA and public libraries.

Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy

The ALA Public Information Office worked with the Today Show on this segment and has followed up to encourage NBC affiliates to take up the story locally. But you can help extend the reach of this positive story in several ways:

1)      Include the Today Show link on your library Web site

2)      Reach out to your local media this week with your local story (particularly NBC affiliates), complemented by national data from the ALA. Two key data points from the Today Show were: 73% of public libraries report they provide the only free access to the Internet in their communities. This rises to 83 percent for rural libraries: http://tinyurl.com/mupmzd and www.ala.org/plinternetfunding . Also, 68 percent of Americans have a library card: http://tinyurl.com/9ewpcc.

3)      Take advantage of free ALA resources to help tell your story to media, elected officials and funders. 

And here's some more information of interest:

Job-Seeking in U.S. Public Libraries
Using data from the Public Library Funding & Technology Access Study, the issues brief discusses the range of library resources available to job seekers and the challenges to maintaining these services. Additional briefing reports are at the following link.  Get a free copy of the PDF by emailing Larra Clark at lclark@ala.org.

Advocating in a Tough Economy Toolkit
Get tips, tools and messages that work.

Get the word out!

For questions or support around media outreach, please contact Macey Morales, mmorales@ala.org, or Jennifer Petersen, jpetersen@ala.org, in the ALA Public Information Office.
For questions or support around advocacy tools, please contact Marci Merola, mmerola@ala.org, or Jaclyn Finneke, jfinneke@ala.org.
For questions or support around statistics and research, please contact Denise Davis, dmdavis@ala.org, or Larra Clark at lclark@ala.org.

Books, Collection Development, Libraries

Introducing our latest feature: Shelf Help

In case you missed it, we've got a brand-new collection development tool on our blog called Shelf-Help, which is located in the top of the right sidebar on our homepage. 

Everyone loves a short cut. We know librarians have a bazillion titles to wade through so we thought it might be helpful if we provided you with a short list of our books which are due out in the next few months. We’ve provided the basics: pub date, price, ISBN, genre as well as a link to the book’s page on our site. We’ll update this information regularly. Let us know if you find this helpful or if you’d like to see additional information on the grid.  Check it out now!

Anne Frank, Books, Current Affairs, Francine Prose, Kenneth C. Davis, Libraries

Anne Frank

AnneFrank hc c As we've mentioned, Ken Davis has a feature on his blog called "This Day in History." Here's a quote from today's post, as well as some exciting information on the forthcoming Anne Frank by Francine Prose.

"Anne Frank would have been eighty years old today. This anniversary of her birthday seems especially poignant in light of the deadly shooting of a security guard at the Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C. on June 10, 2009."

Here you'll read in Anne Frank's words her feeling about her writing ability:

“I know I can write. A few of my stories are good, my descriptions of the Secret Annex are humorous, much of my diary is vivid and alive, but… it remains to be seen whether I really have talent.” (April 5, 1945)

This September HarperCollins will publish Anne Frank: The Book, the Life, the Afterlife by Francine Prose. The diary of Anne Frank, argues Francine Prose, is as much a work of art as an historical record. Through close reading, she marvels at the teenaged Frank’s skillfully natural narrative voice, at her finely tuned dialogue and ability to turn living people into characters. And Prose addresses what few of the diary’s millions of readers may know: this book is a deliberate work of art. During her last months in hiding, Anne Frank furiously revised and edited her work, crafting a piece of literature that she hoped would be read by the public after the war. The book unravels the complex, fascinating story of the diary, its composition and revisions, and effectively makes the case for it being a work of art-and the teenaged Anne Frank, a precociously gifted writer.

The book includes the historical background and context necessary to understand the importance of the diary, and is the only volume that offers such a rich and well-researched account of this enormously influential memoir.

Francine Prose has secured the approval and support of the Anne Frank House Foundation in Amsterdam for Anne Frank: The Book, the Life, the Afterlife.

-Virginia

American Library Association, Books, Claire Shipman, Dennis Cooper, Film, Guillermo Del Toro, Jewish Interest, Judaica, Katty Kay, Libraries, The Colbert Report, The Roaring 20s, The Strain, Ugly Man, Womenomics

Meanwhile, on The Roaring 20s…

…I'm blogging about some big-name, buzz-worthy titles.  Check out my posts on:

  • Guillermo Del Toro and Chuck Hogan's The Strain (complete with terrifying book trailers)
  • Womenomics (including a great Colbert Report clip)
  • a scandalous book trailer for Dennis Cooper's Ugly Man
  • the religious controversy sure to be stirred up by debut novel You or Someone Like You 

And for those of you who are coming to ALA, there's a new headshot up, in the hopes that you'll recognize me at our booth.  Happy Friday!

-Kayleigh

 

Barbara Genco, BEA, Books, HarperCollins Publishers, Libraries, Library Journal

BEA

Shout700 

Book Expo America was held this past weekend in New York.  For those of you unfamiliar with BEA, it’s basically a book blitz – an unveiling of titles due out this Fall from publishers.  It’s a wonderful opportunity to meet authors and ‘catch the buzz’ about forthcoming titles.  Librarians make it their business to get to BEA and we’re all the better for it.  They speak on panels, share their wealth of knowledge and offer great opportunities for authors to speak at library events. They also have an uncanny knack for finding books that might otherwise fly a little under the radar.  They get behind those books with an inspiring force of energy and enthusiasm and spread the word to colleagues and patrons.  I’ve said it before:  A librarian is a book’s best friend.

One of the many programs dedicated to librarians at BEA was the “Shout and Share” hosted by the AAP.  This was a panel moderated by Barbara Genco, Coordinator, Special Projects and Strategic Planning at Brooklyn Public Library. It featured seven prominent librarians who gave their ‘picks’ for hot books coming out this Fall.  The entire list has been posted on www.earlyword.com – a fabulous website for collection development librarians.)  Just go to Early Word and scroll down–on the right-hand tab is a list that says "BEA '09–Picks of the Lists."

And here’s an article Library Journal ran about the event.  Happy reading!

-Virginia

Books, Celebrities, Current Affairs, Libraries, Twitter, Twitter Wit, Web/Tech, Weblogs

Twitter Wit Update

TwitterWit PB c Remember our last post on Twitter Wit? Here's an update! The on sale date is now September 8, 2009, and we're pleased to give you a quick list of our star-studded contributors, who include:

Ashton Kutcher, Jimmy Fallon, Stephen Colbert, Margaret Cho, Stephen Fry, Rainn Wilson, Penn Jillette, Diablo Cody, Neil Gaiman, Michael Ian Black, Paula Poundstone, Eugene Mirman, Russell Brand, Aziz Ansari, Lisa Lampanelli, John Hodgman, Susan Orlean, Judah Friedlander, Scott Aukerman, Paul Scheer, Graham Linehan, Peter Serafinowicz, Michael Showalter, Kevin Rose,Ana Marie Cox, Doug Benson, Warren Ellis, David Wain, Felicia Day, Joel McHale, Sasha Frere-Jones, Jonathan Coulton, Bill Corbett, James Urbaniak, Leo Laporte, Will Durst.

If you're on Twitter, be sure to become a follower at http://twitter.com/harperlibrary— we're almost up to 700!

Books, Kenneth C. Davis, Libraries, Library Journal

LJ Loves Ken Davis

DKMALiterature pb c Library Journal has written a glowing review of Don't Know Much About Literature, the latest book in the Don't Know Much About series.  As you might remember from this post, the affection is mutual–Ken is a vocal advocate for libraries.  Check out an excerpt from the review below:

In this latest addition to Kenneth Davis’s popular “Don’t Know Much About” series, he and daughter Jenny quiz readers about writers, books, Nobel and Pulitzer Prize winners, famous first and last lines, and other literary trivia. The book’s scope is broad, with selections ranging from “Children’s Classics” to “Beowulf” and “Fictional First Ladies.” The Davises provide questions, answers, and a summary paragraph for each category but don’t order the material in any predictable way, sandwiching Agatha Christie between Kafka and Melville, a technique that forces each entry to stand in isolation. Some of the questions are true or false; others ask readers to identify a character, book, play, poem, or movie. Meant to make learning about literature entertaining, this guide should refresh memories and may entice readers into exploring some of the books they always meant to check out…—Nancy R. Ives, SUNY at Geneseo

Books, Family, Libraries, The Enthusiast, Charlie Haas, Weblogs

Guest Blog from Charlie Haas

The Enthusiast pb c Today Charlie Haas, author of The Enthusiast, is guest blogging for us.  Here's what he wrote:

"I grew up in a town where a bookish family stuck out like a page-turning thumb. My dad made things worse: he became president of the public library board, and fought the local establishment for money to keep our one-branch library going. My sister worked there through high school and into college. My brother and I hung out there and campaigned for permission slips that would let us take out books that were too “mature” for us.

The head librarian was a world-weary guy with hair flopping over his eyes and a cigarette permanently dangling from his mouth (yes, in the library — I go back a ways). He issued me an adult-book permission slip, but also warned me, as he squinted through his smokescreen, that it was possible for a person to be too smart. It would be a long time before I had any idea what he was talking about.

1970s, Books, Family, Indiana, Libraries, Memoir, Philip Gulley

Philip Gulley

I Love You Miss Huddleston hc cOne of my favorite books to come out of HarperCollins this year is Philip Gulley’s memoir, I Love You, Miss Huddleston.

Mr. Gulley is the bestselling author of the Front Porch Tales and the equally charming Harmony series.
In his latest book (which has one of the best jackets EVER) he delights us with tales of growing up in Indiana in the 1970s.  Think THE WONDER YEARS.  It’s one of the sweetest, funniest books I have read in a long time.

Here’s just one little snippet from the book.  Who wouldn’t want to read more?

“My early Halloweens were perilous affairs. I dressed as a ghost, a bed sheet draped over me. We were too poor to waste a sheet, so my mother never cut holes for my eyes. My brother Glenn was supposed to hold my hand and guide me from house to house, but as soon as we turned the corner and were out of my parents’ eyesight, he would launch out on his own and leave me to my own devices. I would stumble from house to house, tripping over curbs, running into cars, and spilling my candy. The other children would swarm over me, like hyenas on a downed gazelle, fighting over my Tootsie Rolls and Smarties.”   – From I Love You, Miss Huddleston

Do yourself a favor and check out this book.

In the meantime here’s a great video with a voice-over of the author reading an excerpt from the book:

-Virginia

American Library Association, Books, HarperCollins Publishers, Libraries

What’s New For Fall 2009? Find Out Now!

Harper 1

The HarperCollins Library Marketing Team
cordially invites you to attend our

FALL 2009 TITLE PRESENTATION
at
The American Library Association's Annual Conference

Saturday, July 11, 2009
10:30 AM – 12:00 PM
McCormick Place South
Room S101a
Chicago, Illinois

(Please note that we will be presenting adult titles only…no children’s books)

Get the inside track on your favorite authors and discover a few new ones along the way!

Seating is limited, so RSVP your attendance to:
Bobby.Brinson@harpercollins.com

Light refreshments will be served.  We hope to see you in Chicago!

-Bobby

Books, Current Affairs, Family, Family Lineage, Inspiration, Libraries, Memoir, Race, Racial Identity

W. Ralph Eubanks Speaks…

House at the end hc c In March, I wrote about the House at the End of the Road, written by W. Ralph Eubanks, Director of Publishing at the Library of Congress and his search to find the truth about his maternal grandparents; Jim Richardson, a white man and Edna Richardson, a light-skinned black woman.  W. Ralph Eubanks will be interviewed by NPR’s Talk of the Nation scheduled for Tuesday, May 19th.  Listen in as he discusses the House at the End of the Road and the fascinating journey of discovering his unique racial and cultural identity.  For more information, visit:
 
http://www.npr.org/

-Bobby

Books, Daniel James Brown, Libraries, Life Lessons, New York Times, The Indifferent Stars Above

A Guest Blog from Daniel James Brown

Today we have a guest blog from Daniel James Brown, author of The Indifferent Stars Above, which just received a great review in the New York Times.  Dan writes: "Recently, almost forty years after the fact, I came back to the library that changed my life, perhaps even saved my life, in 1969…"

   

Books, Current Affairs, Good Morning America, Inspiration, Libraries, Michael J. Fox

Michael J. Fox…a True Champion

Fox3 In March, Virginia gave us a preview of Michael J. Fox’s new book, Always Looking Up: The Adventures of an Incurable Optimist.  If you want to see just how he remains optimistic in the face of adversity, check out this clip of Michael on Good Morning America, where he discusses his upcoming ABC-TV special with Diane Sawyer.  He also mentions his new book, Always Looking Up, on sale now.

On Thursday, May 7th, watch ABC-TV’s The View (check your local listings for times) where Michael will be interviewed about the special and his book, Always Looking Up.  Finally, later that evening keep your television on ABC-TV to watch his special, Michael J. Fox: Adventures of an Incurable Optimist.  Michael J. Fox hosted and produced the piece.

Watching Michael J. Fox in action gives me motivation and inspiration.  If he can stay optimistic no matter the circumstances, so can I…and so can you!  Enjoy!

-Bobby

Book Amnesty, Books, Chelsey "Sully" Sullenberger, Inspiration, Late Fees, Libraries

Sully Talks About Book Amnesty at Library

Images I just had to share this.  Yesterday Gawker posted a video of Captain Chelsey "Sully" Sullenberger talking about book amnesty at the San Francisco Public Library.  They wrote: "In case there was any doubt he's a walking angel among us, Chesley Sullenberger has done penance for being overdue on a library book stuck in that plane he safely landed on the Hudson River." That same angel is, as you know, publishing two books with William Morrow.  Check out the video and get ready for Sully's publishing debut!

-Kayleigh

Books, Chris Gardner, Family, Happiness, Inspiration, Libraries, Life Lessons

Chris Gardner Speaks…

StartWhereYouAre hc c Last month, I wrote about Chris Gardner’s amazing follow up to his New York Times bestseller, The Pursuit of HappynessStart Where You Are: Life Lessons in the Pursuit of Happyness, on sale in May of 2009 gives over forty lessons on how to not only make your dreams reality, but help you navigate on this crazy road we call “life”.  After each lesson there are “assignments” or exercises that you can do to fully understand that lesson and make it a part of your life.   Check out Chris Gardner’s video where he talks about the motivation behind Start Where You Are and how you can gain that needed push to start your life anew.  Enjoy!

-Bobby

Books, Current Affairs, Guillermo Del Toro, Libraries, The Strain, Vampires

Buzzing about Guillermo Del Toro’s ‘The Strain’

9780061558238 Over on Roaring I'm blogging about Guillermo Del Toro and Chuck Hogan's thriller, The Strain— a chilling, epic novel that centers around a battle between man and vampire that threatens all humanity. It is the first installment in a trilogy, as well as an international publishing event. Put a heavy-reserve alert on this one! Now, I may be blogging on The Roaring 20s, but The Strain is not just a book for 20somethings.  Thriller fans, vampire lovers, even cinema geeks (you can vividly picture it as a movie) will love this book.  Head to Roaring for an interview with Guillermo Del Toro, and more information on The Strain.

-Kayleigh  

Books, Death Row, Family, Foster Care System, Inspiration, Jarvis Jay Masters, Libraries, Memoir, Prison

What’s on Bobby’s Bookshelf?

While I am so excited that the weather in New York will actually reach (dare I say it) 80 degrees, I am still taking in a good book.  I am reading a fascinating, yet heart-breaking autobiography.  That Bird Has My Wings: the Autobiography of an Innocent Man on Death Row, written by Jarvis Jay Masters is a compelling memoir that talks about all that he went through and what he continues to discover about himself.

That Bird has my Wings hc c That Bird Has My Wings, on sale in September of 2009, chronicles his early life, growing up with his four siblings and being surrounded by drugs at the hands of his mother and stepfather.  He also shares how he survived violence at the hands of his biological father.  They were left home alone days and weeks at a time, with no food or even the proper basic care.  After he and his siblings were taken out of the home by social services, they were put in the foster care system where his life became extremely unstable.  He was sentenced to prison at 19 for armed robbery and was put on death row at age 23 for being named an accessory in the death of a prison guard.  Since being in prison, he has written one book and several articles.  He also won a PEN Award for one of his poems.  What is even more amazing is that he does all of his writing with ball point pen filler, as that is the only writing instrument available to those in maximum security prison.

Currently there is a campaign where the goal is to get his sentence overturned.  There are those that believe he is innocent and the California Supreme Court is investigating new evidence that could lead to his release.  More information can be found on www.freejarvis.org.

Books, Current Affairs, Libraries, Life Lessons, Shakespeare

Wishing Shakespeare a Happy Birthday

9780061493515

Though April 23rd is not historically-proven to be Shakespeare's birthday, we can be sure he was christened around this time, hence naming April 23rd his official birthday.  I know die-hard fans (myself included) will cherish any excuse to celebrate the man, the bard, the genius.  Proving my point is 'Talk Like Shakespeare Day' in Chicago, an official city-wide holiday in which people can quote the bard to their heart's content.  With that in mind, the perfect book to recommend to your patrons today is, unsurprisingly, Barry Edelstein's Bardisms: a collection of Shakespearean bon mots for all occasions.  Edelstein has quotes for everything–from global warming to break-ups, and everything in between.  Bardisms is a wonderfully compact look at some of Shakespeare's greatest lines, all of which can fit to accommodate occasions or life events in 2009.  The section on wedding toasts is particularly helpful– especially if you're sick of hearing people read from Corinthians.  Now, fly hence, and browse inside.

-Kayleigh

Books, Dorothea Benton Frank, Return to Sullivan's Island, Libraries, New York Times

Return to Sullivan’s Island

In a few months we’ll publish the much-anticipated Return to Sullivan's Island by the wildly funny, Southern and sassy Dorothea (’Dot’) Benton Frank.  Dot’s star shot through the sky with the publication of Sullivan's Island, her debut novel which was set in South Carolina's steamy low country.  That book went on to become a New York Times bestseller – with over a million copies in print today.  Fans will be thrilled to learn that a sequel is on the horizon.  In Return to Sullivan's Island, Dot takes us back to South Carolina and catches up with the wonderful characters she’d brought us to nine years ago – and introduces us to the next generation as well.  The book goes on sale June 30, 2009. 

Here’s a clip of Dot talking about her hometown library.  Enjoy!

-Virginia

Current Affairs, Global Digital Library, Libraries

Global Digital Library

A globe-spanning digital library was launched today in Paris.  Visitors to the site will be given access to some of the rarest and most protected cultural texts in existence.  Items can be browsed by place, time, topic, type of item, and institution.  The site currently has over 1,200 documents (photographs, movies, charts, texts) and explanations are available in seven different languages.  This was the dreamchild of James H. Billington, the librarian of Congress who launched the project four years ago.  Check it out.  It's pretty amazing.

-Virginia

Africa, Books, Libraries, Mystery/Suspense

Discover a Fugitive…

Action…Adventure…International Intrigue…Murder…Escape.  This is what you will find and more when you read Fugitive by Phillip MargolinFugitive, on sale in June of 2009 is a fascinating book that will leave you breathless from beginning to end.

Fugitive int c Fugitive, brings back the character of stellar defense attorney Amanda Jaffe, as she tries to keep her client Charlie Marsh out of danger.  Danger seems to be coming at him from all angles.  Charlie, who is by no means a saint, redeems himself after saving the warden of the state penitentiary during a prison riot.  However he finds himself once again in hot water after being named the prime suspect in the death of a U.S. Congressman. 

Charlie leaves America and makes his home in Africa, to avoid murder charges.  As expected, he finds himself in trouble yet again, and has to flee after the country’s dictator discovers Charlie has been having an affair with one of his wives. Now Charlie finds himself running from the American authorities as well as the African dictator’s secret killers.  All of this puts Amanda in a bind.  How can Amanda help him?  Does Charlie get away?  Can Amanda save him before it’s too late?  What does she discover along the way?

What a great read!  I was so overwhelmed with excitement and suspense throughout the whole book.  Fugitive will leave you wanting more!  Phillip Margolin truly has a winner on his hands!  I hope you discover how wonderful Fugitive is.  Get ready for an amazing ride!

-Bobby

Books, Civil War, Current Affairs, Late Fees, Libraries

Better Late than Never!

PH2009041502062This might be, quite possibly, the latest book to be returned to a US library.  A book that was missing since the Civil War was finally returned to the college to which it belonged.  Check out the incredible story here. I can’t even imagine the late fees on this one…
-Virginia

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