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Library and Archives Canada has entered a hush-hush deal with a private high-tech consortium that would hand over exclusive rights to publicly owned books and artifacts for 10 years. -Chris Cobb
The art of biography involves sleuthing, historical fluency, captivating storytelling, critical acumen, and empathy, qualities on full display in the best 10 biographies reviewed in Booklist from July 2012 through June 2013, whether the authors are resurrecting the forgotten or bringing a unique perspective to the oft-celebrated.
The popularity of Bookstagram, the book community on Instagram, is raging right now. Here’s the scoop on all the hottest bookish hashtags for your viewing pleasure. Some people do actually post beach reads under #readingforfun, but I found out it’s also a great hashtag for intellectual showoffs who want to brag about their reading conquests. #readingbuddy: the unofficial Instagram hashtag for posting photos of your adorable pet posing with a book. Prepare for cuteness overload... -Kate Scott
Compatible with iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad. Requires iOS 4.0 or later. Designed by a speech-language pathologist, Articulate It! has over 1,000 different images covering all sounds of the English language to help children improve their speech. (many more listed)
Via Jim Harmon
With bookstores in Japan overflowing with manga, novels and non-fiction, it takes a lot to stand out and get noticed.
Libraire jeunesse depuis maintenant quelques années, je me permets de vous soumettre ma maigre expérience quant à une pratique courante et un poil agaçante : celle de l’édition genrée.
La bibliothèque de l'université de Princeton aux États-Unis vient de mettre en ligne une version numérisée du texte original du célèbre roman de Francis Scott Fitzgerald.
Are LGBT families are requesting storytimes representative of their families? I recently conducted a survey of public libraries in communities with large populations of same-sex families with children to determine how they were serving LGBTQ families. The responses I received from the librarians were candid and quite illuminating. For the most part, the librarians did not want to plan exclusive LGBTQ-themed storytimes but chose to plan programs inclusive of multiple family types. Librarians did note that when they planned inclusive programs they might have a LGBTQ caregiver come up after the program to thank them. It does seem that more and more librarians are becoming aware of serving LGBT families but the families are not necessarily demanding to be included. Rather, it is a nice surprise if they see representations of their families in the storytime.
A search of the Google Play Store will find many downloadable apps labeled as “genealogy.” However, many of them are simple ebooks or very simplistic programs that will not appeal to most genealogists. Here are the more robust available apps that allow you to store and retrieve your family tree information.
La bibliothèque publique, de par son rôle et sa place dans la société a toujours avancé et accompagné les évolutions de celle-ci. Loin de l’image du sanctuaire de livres (ce qu’elle est aussi d’une certaine façon), la bibliothèque s’est toujours renouvelée, s’adaptant et adoptant les technologies de l’heure. Ainsi CD, DVD, Blu-ray, jeux vidéo sont entrés dans ses collections. Ordinateurs et internet ont aussi leur place dans ces lieux publics d’information. Les formations et les activités proposées aux usagers se sont aussi diversifiées, et si l’on y raconte toujours des histoires aux plus jeunes, on y trouve maintenant des soirées jeux vidéo, des initiations à Internet et aux réseaux sociaux. Mais comme l’ont souligné plusieurs auteurs et professionnels du monde des sciences de l’information, la bibliothèque du 21e siècle entre dans une nouvelle ère, qui, de consultation et utilisation, devient participation et création. -Gaëlle Bergougnoux
The Seattle Public Library launched the 2013 Summer Reading Program by setting a new world record for the longest book domino chain!
Les éditions Au Diable Vauvert innovent. Elles adaptent le concept de la saga de l’été au livre numérique. Du 24 juin au 13 septembre, l’éditeur va publier sous forme de feuilleton numérique le prochain livre de Pierre Bordage. C’est un véritable événement et un acte audacieux « Chroniques des Ombres » sortira en numérique avant la parution du livre papier, prévue pour le 19 septembre. Ce livre post-apocalyptique sera découpé en 36 épisodes. Durant tout l’été, trois feuilletons seront publiés chaque semaine.
While first-year university students quickly become immersed in required reading, it's not often than an award-winning novel finds its way into the pile of academic texts.
Via Gerard Beirne
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For even the most seasoned of book nerds, a trip to the beach can raise some difficult questions. After all, you don’t want to waste your precious vacation minutes reading something you’ll forget by the time your suntan fades, but a beach towel is also (probably) not the ideal location to tackleUlysses. With this weekend marking the unofficial start of summer, Flavorwire has you covered with a list of twenty decidedly highbrow but still totally beach-appropriate books, all of which have come out in the months since last summer (or are about to hit shelves). Check out the list after the jump, and add your own favorite highbrow beach-reads in the comments. -Emily Temple
Pierce County Library System officials are saying "brown is the new green" as they plan to not water the lawn at 12 of its locations this summer. Of the 19 library properties (18 libraries and the main processing and administrative center), the library will not water the lawn this summer at 12 locations that have grass. -Akiko Oda
Jbrary. "...tune in for Storytime success"
Every year, The Next Chapter's mystery panel gathers together to determine the "must read mysteries" of the summer. J.D. Singh, the co-owner of Sleuth of Baker Street bookstore, Margaret Cannon, the mystery book columnist for the Globe and Mail, and P.K. Rangachari, a mystery lover and professor at the University of Toronto, are responsible for the picks this year. If you like a good thriller or whodunit to read while basking in the sun, then this roundup of books is for you! Check out their picks in the slideshow below.
Jeffrey Schnapp is on a mission to save our libraries. In a rapidly digitizing world, he is asking what will become of physical libraries — and their material soul, books. To answer the looming questions, Schnapp started an experiment called the Library Test Kitchen. It’s a laboratory class in Harvard’s Graduate School of Design, and this fall will mark its third year in operation. Dedicated to rescuing physical, book-dense libraries from obsolescence, the team of students and instructors dream up designs that, as Schnapp says, “create a hybrid space where analog and digital coexist.” -Anne Gray Fischer
Organizers in Hobbema are learning that collecting books alone does not make a library -- they must also cut through plenty of red tape.
Via Patricia_Kn
I'd bet dollars to doughnuts that you have local talent that would put original, interesting, local images on your walls that would get kids excited about reading and respect copyright laws. -Doug Johnson
Architect Lyn Rice says the design challenged library norms in some important ways. "There's a calm that descends on most reading rooms," he says. "The expectation is that people will physically behave." The teen floor turns that expectation on its head. Instead of siphoning teens off into different rooms (and locking away noisy activities), the space is airy and completely open. The openness means, among other things, that it only takes one or two librarians to monitor the entire space. -Amanda Erickson
Children's librarian Mara Alpert recommends 10 titles that will send youngsters off on brand-new adventures. (audio)
Jimmy offers up some books you should avoid, including "Dating For Under a Dollar."
New Brunswick Public Library Service Summer Reading Club 2013 launch video / Vidéo pour le lancement du Club de lecture d'été 2013 du Service des bibliothèqu...
A classic fairy tale of receives an invigorating update in Nosy Crow’s splendid Little Red Riding Hood. ($5.99; PreS-Gr 4). While the narrative remains the same—a little girl must avoid falling into the clutches of the Big Bad Wolf and save her grandparent—the reading experience is amplified by seamless interactivity and nonlinear storytelling. -Daryl Grabarek
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Another seed lending library is featured. Especially love the quote from a parent,
"[Stephanie] Syson says the library has always been a place for her daughter to learn. The seeds just add another lesson.
"For her to see a little pot of dirt and to plant a seed into it, and then 30 days later being able to eat something from it is really exciting for her," she says. "She really enjoys seeing that whole process."
A process that now includes a trip to the local library."