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The Price of a Pandemic The Price of a Pandemic | Budgets and Funding 2021
By Lisa Peet
Budgets, modestly up, reflect pre-COVID planning, but how they’re spent has changed drastically: Circ, hours, and staffing see major pandemic drops while tech, e-content, and safety spending rise.
Mystery Preview 2021 Crime and Comfort: 90 Mysteries for Our Times Promise Escape and Coziness | Mystery Preview 2021
By Melissa DeWild
In coming months, cozy mysteries will make room for millennial and Gen Z sleuths; travel on pause drives reader desire for far-off settings; and readers can revisit familiar favorites in new titles and formats.
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Child Bride Jennifer Smith Turner’s Debut Novel Wins BCALA Prize

Founded in 1970, the Black Caucus of the American Library Association (BCALA) is a leading advocate for libraries serving the nation’s African-American community. The BCALA has given awards for traditionally-published poetry and prose for twenty years. In 2016, the BCALA launched the Self-Publishing Literary Award in cooperation with BiblioLabs, a Charleston-based software/media company.

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Open Data Literacy Public Libraries and Open Government Data: Partnerships for Progress
By Carole L. Palmer, Nic Weber, Kaitlin Throgmorton, & Bree Norlander
University of Washington iSchool researchers present an overview of the Open Data Literacy project's work to date, and share highlights from a survey of the current landscape of open data in Washington State's public libraries.
Art of Science UC San Diego Library Launches Art of Science Contest To Highlight Researchers’ Most Beautiful Images
By Lisa Peet
On February 22, the University of California San Diego (UCSD) Library launched the inaugural Art of Science Contest, inviting UCSD researchers to submit the most beautiful image “that explains their work in a way that is both engaging and accessible to non-scientists.”
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Meredith Schwartz Science for Everyone | Editorial
By Meredith Schwartz
Much emphasis on STEM in libraries has focused on preparing patrons for careers in related fields, whether they are kids and teens or adults looking to retrain. But providing everyone with the tools necessary to grapple with the impact of STEM on their medical decisions, votes, and consumer choices, even if they never work in scientific fields, is just as crucial.
"We’re absolutely serving a smaller segment of the community while spending a whole lot more money, thanks to the astronomical prices for, and draconian lease limits on, e-content."
After-School Is an Equity Issue After-School Is an Equity Issue: With record need in communities of color, the time to partner is now
By Kathy Ishizuka
Satisfaction with after-school programs has reached an all-time high among parents, yet cost and limited access are keeping many kids from participating. The findings of a survey by the Afterschool Alliance also revealed serious inequities resulting in a huge, unmet demand for after-school, particularly in African American and Latinx communities.
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Spectrum Enterprise How Libraries Are Essential Broadband Partners in Their Communities

At a time when more students are learning remotely and many office spaces have remained closed, libraries have been instrumental in making sure that community members without home broadband access aren’t left behind.

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Kelvin Watson Article Changes at Las Vegas–Clark County, New Jersey State Library, University of Oklahoma, and More Library People News
By Lisa Peet
Kelvin Watson has moved to Las Vegas–Clark County, Jennifer Nelson is the new New Jersey State Librarian, Denise Stephens has been named University of Oklahoma Dean of Libraries, and more library people news for March 2, 2021.
At-Home Fitness Apps At-Home Fitness Apps
By Jennifer Dayton
Even though pandemic-related restrictions are relaxing a bit, leaving home to work out still might feel like something that isn't going to happen soon. But there are apps that can help keep your body and mind in shape. The following do not require equipment other than a mat, a chair, and a little dedication on your part.
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Tech Tools Tech Tools: Reopening and Beyond

Even before the pandemic emerged, libraries were investing in new technologies designed to save time and improve efficiency by supporting customer self-service, freeing up library staff to focus on more strategic work. COVID-19 has accelerated this trend and in the process, is transforming how libraries function in the 21st century.

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Caste Isabel Wilkerson, Les and Tamara Payne Shortlisted for 2021 Lukas Prizes | Book Pulse
By Mary Bakija
Caste by Isabel Wilkerson, The Dead Are Arising by Les Payne and Tamara Payne, and After the Last Border by Jessica Goudeau are among the books on the 2021 shortlists for the Lukas Prizes from the Columbia Journalism School and the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard University. Adaptations coming out this week include Cherry, based on the book by Nico Walker, Moxie, based on the book by Jennifer Mathieu, and The Mauritanian, based on Guantánamo Diary by Mohamedou Ould Salahi.
http://c0003264.cdn2.cloudfiles.rackspacecloud.com/tweens-activism-800px-credit.jpg Tweens Take Charge with Digital Activism
By Kelly Jensen
Young people make their voices heard on issues from the election to climate change, one click at a time.
Dark Sky Dark Sky by C.J. Box Leads Holds Lists | Book Pulse
By Mary Bakija
Dark Sky by C.J. Box leads library holds this week. Other titles in demand include Klara and the Sun by Kazuo Ishiguro, The Affair by Danielle Steel, and Later by Stephen King. New books out this week include the top LibraryReads pick of the month, The Lost Apothecary by Sarah Penner, and the top Indie Next choice, We Begin at the End by Chris Whitaker. 
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 Reviews
WEB-FIRST REVIEWS OF BOOKS AND MEDIA
The Ladies of the Secret Circus The Ladies of the Secret Circus, by Constance Sayers, is one of this week's starred SFF selections. "Highly recommended for lovers of timeslip fiction, readers who enjoy their genres very bent indeed, and those who have dreamed of running away to the circus." In fiction, Amanda Dennis's starred debut novel Her Here "confirms the value of living boldly even as we step back to frame our experiences. Highly recommended." Also in fiction, J. S. Dewes's starred debut novel The Last Watch "is an exciting, fast-paced ride around the edges of the universe, where those rejected by much of humanity are the only ones who can save it." Joshua Jelly-Schapiro's Names of New York: Discovering the City’s Past, Present, and Future Through Its Place-Names is this week's starred social sciences selection. "While toponymy, or the study of place-names, may appear to be an overwhelming topic, Jelly-Schapiro’s writing is informative, accessible, and entertaining." And Mia P. Manansala's debut, Arsenic and Adobo, is this week's starred mystery. "There are cozy tropes (the close-knit community, the food business), but the emphasis on the Tagalog language, the culture, and drug dealing in a small town add gravity and individuality to this outstanding series kick-off."

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JOB OF THE WEEK
Sonoma County Library seeks a Deputy Library Director

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