Email not displaying properly? View it in your web browser.
 
Your Home Librarian

Dear Librarians: This special newsletter is designed to help you share resources with your patrons at home. Send it along or share the elements with the community you serve.

Like it but not a subscriber? Sign up here

Not interested? Opt out here

image City Soundscapes & Imagine-You're-on-the-Beach Reads
By  LJ and SLJ  Staff
Those working from home in need of the productivity-inducing ambient background noise typically found in coffee shops and libraries will want to check out the digital albums produced by the New York Public Library and other institutions. Meanwhile, those of us with furry new office assistants will appreciate this list of cat-related titles.
 
Parents, caregivers, and educators continue to seek resources and distractions for kids and teens. A recent slate of kid-friendly podcasts may help, too.
 
For adults seeking escape into a great book or film, there are a bevy of new beach reads, mysteries, and revealing biographies out this week, plus our picks for the best new magazines. Our own staffers also offer up what we're reading and watching to battle cabin fever this week.
image Ambient Pleasures and More: 9 Sound Libraries To Whisk You Away
By Meredith Schwartz
If it’s just too quiet for you nowadays, libraries have your hookup. Part of the reason many remote workers used to prefer a coffee shop—or the library!—to working from home was the right kind and amount of sound—enough to be companionable but not distractingly too much.
AD: COVID LJ banner
image Cats: The True Stars of #StayingHome
By Mahnaz Dar
Whether you’re curious about what makes your cat tick or interested in adopting a cat of your own, our list of books, comics, and DVDs has you covered—all available digitally.
A bevy of new books, including an illuminating biography of the Speaker of the House, an investigation into the Paradise fires in California, and several breezy summer reads, come out this week.
image What Are Kids Reading Now? The Top Ebook and Audiobook Checkouts.
By Kathy Ishizuka
With schools shuttered due to the pandemic, are kids still reading? They are, according to data from Follett, a leading school library management system used by more than 60,000 schools. 
image 12 Essential Nonfiction Graphic Novels for Kids and Teens
By Paula Willey
Graphic novels often have the advantage of brevity. Students will brag, “I read this book in an hour!” Books that are this accessible, and contain art as visual markers, also make discussion more fruitful. Kids are more likely to find the passage they’re talking about and more likely to reread important sections, or even the whole book.
AD: Infobase_FlippedWebinar banner
image The Best New Magazines
By Peter Koonz
Though it's been a tough decade for print publishing, particularly consumer magazines, creative approaches are reaching niche readerships. Here are the 10 best new magazines launched last year.
image Helping Students Through Pandemic Grief and Trauma
By Kara Yorio
Kids often share in pieces and need time before they are ready to discuss a trauma, says Kristen Jezior, a clinical psychologist and assistant clinical professor in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of California, San Diego. Don’t ask students to talk about what they are going through, “but still make space for them to share” when ready, she says.
image Nine Podcasts About COVID-19 for Children Ages Five to 12
By Anne Bensfield & Pamela Rogers
In these COVID-19–related episodes, kids lead many of the conversations by asking questions. That includes, for example, questions about new words and phrases we’re all learning, like social distancing and flattening the curve, and queries about where the virus came from and how we can all help our communities stay safe.
image Cabin Fever Dreams | What Our Editors and Staffers Are Reading & Watching
By Liz French
We’re dreaming of freedom to travel, dine out again, see live performances, read physical books, go to museum exhibitions, discuss favorite TV shows face-to-face, visit far-flung relatives, and witness the “new normal” someday. In the meantime, we experience these “before-times” in books, movies, TV series, web novels, and even a podcast.

Did you receive this newsletter from a friend? Sign up here to get Your Home Librarian.

This message was sent to newsletter@newslettercollector.com by LibraryJournal.com

Library Journal
(a MSI Information Services company), 123 William Street, Suite 802, New York, NY 10038

Privacy Policy | Unsubscribe | Manage Newsletters

Media Source Inc. Library Journal School Library Journal The Horn Book Junior Library Guild AKJ