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July 30, 2019
Macmillan Macmillan Announces Two-Month Embargo on Library Ebooks
By Matt Enis
Following a year-long test with its Tor imprint, Macmillan last week announced a two-month embargo on sales of new ebook titles to libraries across all of its imprints. Under the new terms, libraries will be able to purchase only a single one-user/one-ebook perpetual license upon publication, and will then have to wait eight weeks to purchase additional metered licenses.
The Leander Public Library Changes to Leander PL Policies Spark Controversy
By Lisa Peet
The Leander Public Library, TX, has drawn criticism for proposed changes to meeting room and speaker policies—instituted not by the library, but by city government of this suburb north of Austin.
Lynda.com Criticism of LinkedIn Learning’s Policies Grows
By Matt Enis
LinkedIn Learning, which acquired Lynda.com in 2015, recently announced that all users of the platform’s online training programs will be required to create or log into a LinkedIn account to access the content.
MIT Libraries MIT Libraries Launches Center for Research in Equitable and Open Scholarship
By Lisa Peet
At the end of June, MIT Libraries launched the Center for Research on Equitable and Open Scholarship, which will conduct and consolidate “collaborative evidence-based research about the best ways disparate communities can participate in scholarship with minimal bias or barriers.”
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Mission By Design Mission By Design | Design Institute Columbia, SC
By Lisa Peet
LJ’s Design Institute: Columbia, SC served as a shining—and welcoming—example of how a library can define its community vision with the help of great design.

 

"The city’s policy is effectively 'saying if we can't control the content of your speech, then nobody gets to rent the room.'"
4 Design Challenges from Richland Four Design Challenges from Richland | Design Institute Columbia, SC
By LJ
Breakout sessions at LJ's Design Institute in Columbia, SC, featured on-the-ground brainstorming for real-life library design challenges.
Steven Bell Academic Librarians’ C-Word Problem | From the Bell Tower
By Steven Bell
Why do many academic librarians have a problem referring to their students, faculty, and staff as customers? Public librarians are so over that, and they are benefitting from it.
Labyrinth, by Catherine Coulter, leads holds as the week begins. Seven LibraryReads and Indie Next titles publish this week. True crime gets attention. The Washington Post's best-seller lists contained errors.
Pat Scales A Parent Says No to 'Malala' | Scales on Censorship
By Pat Scales
A seventh-grade social studies teacher in my school used I Am Malala when her class was studying Pakistan. A parent complained that she didn't want her daughter reading anything about the Pakistani culture. What should the teacher do?
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Ask Again, Yes Page to Screen | Book Pulse
By Neal Wyatt
Mary Beth Keane’s Ask Again, Yes is voted The Tonight Show Summer Reads choice. The Millions selects “Ten Writers to Watch in 2019.” The Center for Fiction announces the First Novel Prize Longlist. The adaptation of Three Women, by Lisa Taddeo, is going to Showtime. The Goldfinch gets another trailer.
 Reviews
WEB-FIRST REVIEWS OF BOOKS AND MEDIA
Curious Toys In fiction, "[Elizabeth] Hand is a mage of the page" with the starred mystery Curious Toys. "The gritty mise-en-scène and realistically portrayed characters in her novel will enchant those who like tough-girl protagonists and antiheroes, as well as fans of historical crime fiction." Your House Will Pay, a starred mystery by Steph Cha, "unflinchingly and compassionately examines issues of race, family, generational violence, and the transformative power of forgiveness in this unforgettable novel." In nonfiction, A Castle in Wartime: One Family, Their Missing Sons, and the Fight To Defeat the Nazis is one of this week's starred selections. "An incredibly sweeping and readable tale, this excellent history is for readers interested in World War II and personal narratives." In this week's starred graphic novel selection, Chris Ware's Rusty Brown is "masterfully illustrated, brilliantly designed, and bursting with compassion for characters united by time and space who nonetheless feel isolated owing to fear and shame.... This is without a doubt one of the most exciting releases of the year." A Better Man, the latest entry in Louise Penny's "Chief Inspector Gamache" series, is another one of this week's starred fiction selections. "This title brings several character arcs to a close while resetting others to make this psychological mystery serve both as a beginning for new readers and a satisfying continuation for series fans."

See All Reviews›››
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JOB OF THE WEEK
University of California, Davis seeks a Digital Project & Systematic Search Librarian

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