AD: EBSCO
Nowviskie and Gabbin James Madison University’s Furious Flower Poetry Center Receives $2M from Mellon Foundation
By Lisa Peet 
With the help of a recent $2 million, four-and-a-half-year grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the Furious Flower Poetry Center’s collection of spoken word and performance videos will receive the necessary support to continue its mission of supporting Black poets in American letters and cultivating poetry appreciation among students of all levels. 
Eric Mlyn Our Long Strange Trip Through the Duke Archives | Peer to Peer Review
By Eric Mlyn & Amy McDonald 
The first-year seminar “Long Strange Trips: The Grateful Dead and American Cultural Change” is part of a series for incoming students designed to help them be successful and thrive at Duke. One of Eric Mlyn’s primary goals for the class, as course instructor, was to expose students to the rich resources of the university, and to work in the Duke University Archives to learn about the resources of its libraries. 
SPONSORED BY MIT PRESS MIT Press
Look under the Hood of Our Open Access Model

Our new white paper, The MIT Press Open Monograph Model: Direct to Open, describes a collective model for supporting the open dissemination of scholarly monographs. Explore the model and pledge your support for Direct to Open by June 30, 2022 to receive benefits including immediate access to backlist/archives and trade collection discounts.

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LibLearnX Debuts with Strong Attendance LibLearnX Debuts with Strong Attendance
By Meredith Schwartz & Lisa Peet 
The first iteration of the American Library Association’s new LibLearnX conference more than met its attendance goals despite having to debut virtually rather than, as originally intended, in person. Just shy of 2,183 people attended, 109 percent of the goal of 2,000. 
How-Tos at LibLearnX 2022 How-Tos at LibLearnX 2022 Tackle Cultural Change
By Lisa Peet 
Several sessions at the American Library Association's inaugural LibLearnX conference, which ran virtually January 21–24, offered practical, actionable approaches to complex situations. Two notables tackled issues of how to improve libraries’ internal culture to benefit their staff. 
SPONSORED BY OVERDRIVE
OverDrive UNC Libraries builds a diverse collection of books and audiobooks with help from OverDrive

Today’s college students want access to books and other materials in the format of their choice, and often that’s online in the palm of their hand. The University Libraries at the University of North Carolina (UNC) at Chapel Hill is using OverDrive Academic’s innovative digital reading platform to diversify its library collections.

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The Human Factor Top Docs: Adrenaline-Pumping Super Frenchie, The Human Factor, and More
By Joshua Blevins Peck 
LJ’s documentary film reviewer picks four gripping new works, now available on DVD/Blu-ray. 
“Archival research takes practice and attention to the process as much as to the content. Students tend to focus on what it will take to assemble a polished final product—they want a checklist to complete to get a good grade—and the idea of simply exploring a body of archival materials without knowing what might develop from the outset is often daunting.”
A Black History Trove A Black History Trove: Teaching with the #SchomburgSyllabus and Its Primary Sources
By Zakiya Collier 
The online resource from NYPL's Schomburg Center archives Black history, culture, movements, and experiences. 
SPONSORED BY OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS ** PLEASE DESCRIBE THIS IMAGE **
Here’s No Quick-Fix to Addressing the Digital Divide – but That Doesn’t Mean We Shouldn’t Try

OUP recently launched our latest research report – Addressing the Deepening Digital Divide. It drew on insights gathered from more than 1,500 teachers across 92 countries to explore the impact of the pandemic on the digital divide—the gap between those who have access to devices and connectivity, and those who do not—and its impact on learners.

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From LJ Reviews:
POLITICAL SCIENCE 
The White House Plumbers: The Seven Weeks That Led to Watergate and Doomed Nixon’s Presidency
By Egil “Bud” Krogh & Matthew Krogh  
General readers on both sides of the political aisle will welcome this instructional, conscience-stricken account and will want to compare the book to the five-part miniseries based on it (to appear on HBO in 2022).  
Smashing Statues: The Rise and Fall of America’s Public Monuments
By Erin L. Thompson 
Worthily preceded by Sanford Levinson’s Written in Stone and David Gobel and Daves Rossell’s Commemoration in America, Thompson’s book underlines the need to evaluate public monuments, murals, and exhibits, to make them nexuses of learning rather than reinforcers of past beliefs.
SOCIAL SCIENCES 
PREMIUM

The Black Agenda: Bold Solutions for a Broken System
Ed. by Anna Gifty Opoku-Agyeman  
An important volume for anyone involved in dismantling systemic racism through advocacy and public policy. 
PREMIUM
The Parent Trap: How To Stop Overloading Parents and Fix Our Inequality Crisis
By Nate Hilger 
This analytical tome may be better for those in public policy than for parents themselves; nonetheless Hilger makes a compelling argument for federal investment in child-rearing. 
PREMIUM
Bodies on the Line: At the Front Lines of the Fight To Protect Abortion in America
By Lauren Rankin 
This sweeping history will leave readers wanting to learn more. It is both a celebration of devoted volunteer clinic escorts and a call to action to improve the circumstances under which people seek health care.
LITERATURE 
PREMIUM

Women Talk Money: Breaking the Taboo
Ed. by Rebecca Walker
An eye-opening book with great insights drawn from individual experiences of money, with stories of success and less-than-success. These essays can start conversations going among women who wish to deal openly and honestly with money and finances. Highly recommended.  
The Baby on the Fire Escape: Creativity, Motherhood, and the Mind-Baby Problem
By Julie Phillips 
These constructions are far from new, yet Phillips’s powerfully researched, thoughtful, sensitive examinations will be of interest to literary scholars as well as to general readers grappling with their own oscillating creative and pragmatic selves.
Lorraine Hansberry: The Life Behind A Raisin in the Sun
By Charles J. Shields 
This biography substantiates Hansberry’s accomplishments, despite her short life. Recommended for all Hansberry enthusiasts and 20th-century literary scholars.
SPONSORED BY EX LIBRIS PART OF CLARIVATE ** PLEASE DESCRIBE THIS IMAGE **
Queensland Health Libraries Network: Bringing It All Together

Alma has provided a different vision of the future of health libraries, allowing the Queensland Health Libraries Network to explore services and functions beyond what they’d previously considered or been able to afford. digital objects and create collections not previously considered part of a health library’s role.

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Brown Girls 2022 PEN American Literary Award Finalists Announced | Book Pulse
By Anita Mechler  
The 2022 PEN American Literary Award finalists are announced. Interviews explore conversations from Daphne Palasi Andreades of Brown Girls, Imani Perry of South to America, David Sanchez of All Day Is a Long Time, and Dolly Parton, coauthor of Run, Rose, Run.  
Kiki Man Ray Arts & Literature, Aug. 2022, Pt. 2 | Prepub Alert
By Barbara Hoffert 
Literary biography, literary collections, Kiki de Montparnasse, and Edie Sedgwick. 
The Kids Hannah Lowe Wins Costa Book of the Year Award for ‘The Kids’ | Book Pulse
By Kate Merlene  
Hannah Lowe wins the Costa Book of the Year Award for The Kids. AudioFile announces the February 2022 Earphones Award winners. Honorée Fanonne Jeffers and Autumn M. Womack talk about Toni Morrison, and The Well-Read Black Girl podcast debuts. Plus, James Joyce’s Ulysses turns 100. 
Nomad Century Important Reading on the Environment, Aug. 2022, Pt. 1 | Prepub Alert
By Barbara Hoffert 
Environmental concerns past, present, and future. 
Wollstonecraft ACADEMIC BESTSELLERS: Literary Criticism
By LJ Reviews

Wollstonecraft, Wonderworks, Appropriate: A Provocation, Teaching Archive, and more in literary criticism titles: January 2021 to date as identified by GOBI Library Solutions from EBSCO. 

1. Wollstonecraft: Philosophy, Passion, and Politics.
Tomaselli, Sylvana
Princeton University Press
2021. ISBN 9780691169033. $29.95

2. Wonderworks: The 25 Most Powerful Inventions in the History of Literature.
Fletcher, Angus
Simon & Schuster
2021. ISBN 9781982135973. $30.00 

3. Appropriate: A Provocation.
Rekdal, Paisley
W. W. Norton
2021. ISBN 9781324003588. $15.95 

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