Showing posts with label cool blogs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cool blogs. Show all posts

Friday, July 10, 2009

Biblio-blogs

In the current Booklist Online Newsletter (sign up for free!), editor Keir Graff asks
"If a book is published, and no one blogs about it, does the book really exist?"
he's part of a group of bloggers speaking about blogging about books at ALA Annual (tomorrow - no help to those of us not at ALA). But, play along at home and check out some of these biblio-blogs:

  • Points of Reference (a Booklist blog) - " team of library reference experts talk about resources (books, databases, Web sites, e-books, and more) and publishing trends. We also take a look at what’s happening to reference collections, and what’s going on at the reference desk. "
  • Audiobooker (a Booklist blog) - All things audio books: reviews, awards, MP3 players, and more.
  • Book Group Buzz (a Booklist blog) - "We want to be a one-stop book group resource, and our corps of bloggers will be talking to you about books that worked well (or books that bombed) and providing organizational tips, read-alike comments along the lines of, “if this worked well with your book club, try this,” and more. We’ll also be pointing you to Web sites that offer book club ideas, reading guides, and other useful stuff."
  • EarlyWord - "EarlyWord’s goal is to help Collection Development and Readers Advisory librarians stay ahead of public demand and identify hidden gems."

Friday, June 12, 2009

The dark side of (not) weeding

I know it's hard to get rid of books and that there is a certain romantic attachment to the ideal of libraries as mysterious places full of hidden treasure (my home is a monument to wayward books - old, printed on real rag paper and crumbling tree pulp, interleaved with lavish lithograph illustrations or covered with lurid pop art, deliciously and ironically outdated...)

However, in the real world of libraries, used by people who are touchy about germs, irritated by outdated social mores, require current facts, prefer craft books with color images of the projects, and have stopped wearing frosty blue eye shadow looooong ago - well, some of our collections just don't quite cut it.

For an interesting new angle on the issue, check out my new favorite blog (Ellen Reynolds, resident Weeding Guru, is also a fan): Awful Library Books and get the real scoop on what people think about some of the "treasure" on our library shelves.

I did a quick search of our catalog for one of the titles they posted, Why Your Child is Hyperactive, Feingold, 1975. Two of our libraries still have this in their collections. Why? Read the comments - it's a great discussion of weeding old medical titles.

For more information about weeding non-fiction in particular and collection development, check some of our (internal only - login required) Weeding Recommendations and Non-fiction selection guidelines.