While it may seem counterintuitive for an event that asks participants to leave no trace to maintain an archive, the Burning Man Archive’s development grew out of the event’s core principle of gifting. People have given artwork, photographs, and more to the archive, housed in the offices of the nonprofit Burning Man Project in San Francisco, California.
The Civic Data Education Series is an educational program for library workers to better support their civic data literacy and participation in their civic data ecosystems.
Our subscription-based platform offers a collection of over 13,000 books and journals covering topics like human rights, sustainable development, and climate change. Our user-friendly search tools make accessing authoritative content across 20 subject categories easy. Join today to gain valuable insights to inform policy and academic research.
This lively mix of big names and new discoveries offers quickly engaging plots and summery settings whether readers are miles from the beach, atop a city skyscraper, at a lake house, or on the sidelines of a Little League game. Get ready to dive into the deep end. Summer will go swimmingly with these 19 selections.
While Open Access has been a frequent topic of discussion in academic libraries for more than a decade, Open Access materials can play a role in public libraries. The challenge is to curate the ones patrons need and make them findable. Through panel discussions with public library staff who are developing OA collections, this series provides an overview of the current OA landscape and offers advice for implementing an OA strategy.
Library Journal and Gale are pleased to announce the inaugural Libraries Defying the Odds award, created to help address the needs of public libraries in a continuously changing landscape. As libraries confront obstacles that range from natural disasters to inadequate infrastructure to intellectual freedom challenges, many have used creative problem solving, activated community support, forged strong partnerships, and otherwise found new ways to overcome these barriers and meet the needs of the people they serve. The 2023 Libraries Defying the Odds award will provide $10,000 to a U.S. public library that is stepping up for its community and staff in the face of adversity—and to celebrate library workers providing services, programming, and collections for those who need them most. Nomination deadline: May 19, 2023.
With “any huge cultural movement, people in the future…want to know what it was, and they want to see videos and photos and articles and material culture.”
From a nonfiction work about the gentle giants gliding through the deep and vast seas to a speculative fiction book, imagining getting swallowed alive by one of these goliaths, LJ's May issue offers readers of many interests a whale of a story.
The True Love Experiment by Christina Lauren leads library holds this week. The Fortnum & Mason Food and Drink Award winners are announced. The 2022 Nebula Awards Winners are announced, including R.F. Kuang for her novel Babel. Kuang’s new novel Yellowface arrives this week with reviews and lots of buzz. Charles E. Stanley Jr. wins the 2023 William E. Colby Military Writers’ Award for Lost Airmen. Entertainment Weekly releases its 2023 Summer Preview, including the 27 best books of the summer.
Arinze Ifeakandu wins the 2023 Dylan Thomas Prize with God’s Children Are Little Broken Things: Stories. The Women’s Prize for Fiction shortlist is announced. Chris Turner wins the 2023 Shaughnessy Cohen Prize for Political Writing with How To Be a Climate Optimist: Blueprints for a Better World. Other awards announcements include the 2023 Wilbur Smith Adventure Writing Prize longlist and the 2023 Orwell Prizes shortlists. Urban historian Fred Siegel is remembered upon his death at 78.
Ali Hazelwood's Love, Theoretically is a starred romance. "This banter-filled opposites-attract romance from Hazelwood (Loathe To Love You) is upbeat and realistic, with instant chemistry between the protagonists and an intricate plot. Highly recommended." Nilima Rao's debut novel, A Disappearance in Fiji, is a starred mystery. "The Punjabi Sikh Akal Singh and the mystery of colonial Fiji will appeal to fans of Abir Mukherjee’s mysteries set in India." How Can I Help You, by librarian Laura Sims, is another starred mystery. "Librarians especially will enjoy this unique take on the psychological thriller. Give this unputdownable title to readers who revel in messy and complicated characters." And Whalefall, by Daniel Kraus, is a starred SFF selection. "This hard sci-fi thriller is full of cinematic and wild suspense and would be great for fans of Andy Weir, although the tone is far more austere."
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