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June 25, 2024

ALA Coupon Booklet 2024
ALA 2024 Galley Guide | Books To Pick Up and Have Signed
By LJ Reviews
Library Journal’s galley guide for the 2024 American Library Association conference is now available. Get a jump on reader demand and get in the know; sign up to get a PDF download now.
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Reproductive Health Information in Your Library’s Collection
By Barbara Alvarez
June 24 marks two years since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, making abortion a state’s issue. As of this writing, abortion is banned or severely restricted in 21 states. However, abortion is just one part of the larger landscape of Reproductive Justice and reproductive health. Whether you are providing reproductive health information, especially abortion information, in your collections, at the reference desk, or through programming, consult with a legal expert about your options. This may include what type of information you can provide and where in your collection it’s located.
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SPONSORED BY EX LIBRIS, PART OF CLARIVATE

 

Resource Sharing Leaders on Creating a Borderless Community


Resource sharing between libraries is nothing new, of course — but what is new is the ease with which potential resource-sharing partners can find each other. We spoke with three librarians who play leading roles in the Rapido/RapidILL resource-sharing community.

 

Read more>>>

Ex Libris, part of Clarivate
LJ Talks with Debut Horror Writer Donyae Coles
By Becky Spratford
Debut novelist Donyae Coles has written short work for publications such as Nightmare Magazine, Pseudopod, and All These Sunken Souls. In her first full-length novel, Midnight Rooms (Amistad: HarperCollins), she experiments with a key tradition of the horror genre: creating a story that challenges previous conceptions of the gothic. Coles talks with LJ about horror’s emotional resonance, the roles of Black characters in the genre, and her other creative outlets (she is also a painter and hopes to one day make a comic).
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Call for Nominations: Best Small Library in America
Library Journal's annual award for the Best Small Library in America was founded in 2005 to encourage and showcase the exemplary work of these libraries. It honors the U.S. public library that most profoundly demonstrates outstanding service to populations of 25,000 or less. The winner will be announced at the 2024 Association for Rural & Small Libraries conference and will have the opportunity to speak. The winning library will also receive a $5,000 cash award, and two finalist libraries will receive $1,000 each, courtesy of Ingram. The deadline for nominations is tomorrow, Wednesday, June 26.
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SPONSORED CONTENT

 

Looking for the latest technology products @ ALA?

Streamline and enhance your processes with these cutting-edge solutions: Smart Library Lockers@D-Tech, Content and Discovery Services Platform@SirsiDynix, EV Cart@Kingsley, Payment Solutions@Comprise.

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New Tech Tools
Display Shelf | LGBTQIA+ Fiction
By Melissa DeWild
Celebrate Pride Month with these fiction titles spanning several genres and featuring LGBTQIA+ characters. Find a list of more titles here.
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“Whether you are providing reproductive health information, especially abortion information, in your collections, at the reference desk, or through programming, consult with a legal expert about your options.”

 

–From: Reproductive Health Information in Your Library’s Collection

All the Colors of the Dark by Chris Whitaker Tops Holds Lists | Book Pulse
By Kate Merlene
All the Colors of the Dark by Chris Whitaker leads holds this week. Also getting buzz are titles by Ashley Poston, Danielle Steel, Kristy Woodson Harvey, and Beatriz Williams. Five LibraryReads and four Indie Next picks publish this week. People’s book of the week is Bear by Julia Phillips. The Glass Bell Award longlist is announced. NYT profiles physician Freida McFadden’s rise as the fastest-selling thriller writer in the U.S. Plus, Washington Post celebrates audio narrators for Audiobook Appreciation Month.
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Ex Libris, part of Clarivate
Calls for Nominations: Upcoming Award Submission Deadlines
Best Small Library - June 26
Marketer of the Year - July 19
Kline Community Impact Prize - July 31*
 *The next Kline Community Impact Prize winner will be announced in Library Journal's February 2025 issue, so the deadline for nominations has been extended to July 31, 2024.
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R.F. Kuang & Katherine Rundell Win Britain’s Indie Book Awards | Book Pulse
By Sarah Wolberg
R.F. Kuang’s Yellowface and Katherine Rundell’s Vanishing Treasures: A Bestiary of Extraordinary Endangered Creatures have won Britain’s Indie Book Awards. Isabella Hammad’s Enter Ghost wins the Royal Society of Literature Encore Award for best second novel. Winners of Britain’s Society of Authors Awards and the shortlist for the Waterstones Debut Fiction Prize are also announced. Plus, new title bestsellers.
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SPONSORED CONTENT

 

Are You Going to ALA Annual in San Diego?

The Aisle-by-Aisle Exhibitor Guide & Coupon Booklet is now available for download. Get an early look at the Exhibitors and what’s happening on the show floor: book signings, show specials, prize drawings, booth giveaways.

Download the booklet>>>

 

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Sarah Beth Durst’s The Spellshop Tops July LibraryReads List | Book Pulse
By Kate Merlene
LibraryReads’ top pick for July is The Spellshop by Sarah Beth Durst. In the fall, Macmillan will launch Saturday Books, an imprint with a new adult focus. B&N is buying Denver’s storied Tattered Cover bookstore. Amazon announces its Best Books of 2024 So Far, including Percival Everett’s James, the #1 book so far. The Taste Canada Awards shortlist is announced. Author Yulin Kuang suggests book and wine pairings for the summer. Anthony Bourdain’s graphic novel series Get Jiro! will be adapted for TV.
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Call for Info: Library Renovation/Construction Projects Completed Since Last July
Library Journal is collecting information about library projects completed over the last year for our annual Year in Architecture feature. If your institution completed a library construction or renovation project between July 1, 2023 and June 30, 2024, please tell us about it! The links below will direct you to download a pdf of the form before filling out your responses online. We have separate links for public and college/university library projects. The deadline for submissions is Friday, July 26. If you are unsure of the specifics for the form, please ask your architect. They will receive free inclusion in our architect listing. Submission of high-resolution images of your completed project is encouraged and you will find digital specs and instructions in the gray box on the form. 
 
Public libraries: www.LibraryJournal.com/PublicArch2024
Academic libraries: www.LibraryJournal.com/AcademicArch2024
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Bloomsbury Visual Arts | eReviews
By Gricel Dominguez
Bloomsbury Visual Arts hub is a comprehensive resource covering all aspects of the visual arts, from the art to the artist to the industry. It is an essential, top-tier resource for the study and practice of the visual arts across all areas.
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From the Pages of infoDOCKET..

  • A New Position Paper From OCLC: “Linked Data: The Future of Library Cataloging”
  • New Data Resource: Digital Science Releases the Altmetric 500
  • Research Article (Preprint): “ChatGPT as Research Scientist: Probing GPT’s Capabilities as a Research Librarian, Research Ethicist, Data Generator and Data Predictor”

REVIEWS 

WEB-FIRST REVIEWS OF BOOKS AND MEDIA

Pages of Mourning, by Diego Gerard Morrison, is a starred fiction selection. "Riveting, gripping, and atmospheric, the latest from award-winning, Mexico City-based Morrison (The Wait) takes readers on a whirlwind trip across his homeland. Macondo, the magical utopia of One Hundred Years of Solitude, is an object of desire that remains elusive in Morrison’s gritty tale of violence and love." Cara Hunter's Hope To Die is a starred mystery. Inspired by a real-life crime in Australia, the sixth DI Fawley novel (following The Whole Truth) is an intricate, carefully plotted police procedural comparable to the best of Ann Cleeves’s Vera novels or Louise Penny’s mysteries. The mixed media used in the book adds to its appeal." And Business Casual, by B.K Borison, is a starred romance. "This final and fourth book in the “Lovelight” series, after Mixed Signals, is a knockout. Keep the entire series stocked to keep up with demand."

 

See All Reviews›››

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