$14K Funding To Help Hartford Public Library Support College-Bound Immigrant Women By Lisa Peet The Hartford Public Library, CT, recently received a $14,000 grant from the Aurora Foundation for Women and Girls toward a new program, Barriers Can’t Stop Us: Building Immigrant Women’s Success. The program will help 30 female students who immigrated to the United States while they were in high school access the resources they need to stay in school and complete their college degrees. | All Archivists Survey Details Employment, Education, and Demographics of Archives Field By Matt Enis In the archives profession, MLS/MLIS degrees are becoming more important; Black, Indigenous, and people of color continue to be underrepresented; and as many as 20 percent of workers are considering leaving the profession within the next five years. These are just a few of the findings in “A*CENSUS II All Archivists Survey Report” from Ithaka S+R and the Society of American Archivists. | SPONSORED BY EX LIBRIS, PART OF CLARIVATE 4 Ways to Use the Ex Libris CampusM App to Recruit New Students Abstract: Librarians are feeling the squeeze. As they seek to meet changing patron expectations and a dynamic technological environment, they are often simultaneously faced with budget cuts and leadership looking over their shoulder for evidence of institutional value. Read More | Proposed Penguin Random House, Simon & Schuster Megamerger Could Squeeze Libraries By Todd Leopold The proposed merger between Penguin Random House and Simon & Schuster has attracted the attention of the Justice Department, which is concerned that the $2.2 billion deal will shrink opportunities for writers, and hurt consumers, by turning the Big Five publishers (once the Big Six, until Penguin and Random House completed their merger in 2013) into the Big Four. | SPONSORED BY THE MIT PRESS Create an Open Knowledge Commons with Direct to Open
D2O from the MIT Press is a leading collective action open access model for scholarly books. Receive exclusive participation benefits and join the Big Ten Academic Alliance, Johns Hopkins University Libraries, University of Toronto Libraries, MIT Libraries, and many more by pledging your support by November 30, 2022. Read the Prospectus | REFERENCE PREMIUM The Afterlife in Popular Culture: Heaven, Hell, and the Underworld in the American Imagination By Kevin O’Neill O’Neill incorporates many examples from young-adult fiction as he provides clear, nonjudgmental evidence of the American fascination with, rather than fear of, life after death, focusing on the prevalent theme of optimism. PREMIUM Magill’s Literary Annual, 2022 Public and academic staff and patrons can benefit greatly from this quality annual. PREMIUM Latino Almanac: From Early Explorers to Corporate Leaders By Nicolás Kanellos Despite some flaws, this wide-ranging, clearly written volume will help researchers understand the past, present, and potential future of Latinos in the United States. | FINE ARTS PREMIUM What Is African Art? A Short History By Peter Probst While generously illustrated to elucidate the text, this is no coffee table book for casual readers. It’s a deeply researched, important contribution to the study of art history, with relevance to disciplines beyond the study of African art. PREMIUM Matisse: The Red Studio By Ann Temkin & Dorthe Aagesen A fascinating, well-documented study of Matisse’s artistic vision, and its introduction to popular audiences, via an iconic painting. | SPONSORED BY EX LIBRIS, PART OF CLARIVATE Five Questions That Can Elevate Your Library - Part 2: Agility and Adaptation
Abstract: Many technological trends in library management were evident before the Covid-19 pandemic. However, the pandemic significantly accelerated the pace of those changes. To boost agility, libraries are turning to SaaS solutions, analytics, digital transformation, open applications and their community of peers. Read More | International Latino Book Awards Announced | Book Pulse By Anita Mechler Awards announcements abound with the 24th International Latino Book Awards, the 2022 Dayne Ogilvie Prize finalists, the 2022 Brooklyn Public Library Book Prize longlist, and the Eugene and Marilyn Glick Indiana Authors Awards. | Bridging Income Inequity | Editorial By Meredith Schwartz A recent study shows truth in the saying, “It’s not what you know, it’s who you know.” Published in Nature, it examined Facebook relationships of 72 million people—84 percent of U.S. adults 25 to 44—and found that the biggest determining factor of a neighborhood’s less wealthy children obtaining positive economic mobility as adults was how much they connected with people outside their economic strata. | ACADEMIC BESTSELLERS: Business and Economics By LJ Reviews How COVID Shook the World Economy, Future of Money, Sanctions as a Tool of Modern War, and more in business and economics titles: August 2021 to date as identified by GOBI Library Solutions from EBSCO. 1. Shutdown: How COVID Shook the World's Economy. Tooze, Adam Viking 2021. ISBN 9780593297551 $28.00 2. Future of Money: How the Digital Revolution Is Transforming Currencies and Finance. Prasad, Eswar S. Belknap Harvard 2021. ISBN 9780674258440 $35.00 3. Economic Weapon: The Rise of Sanctions as a Tool of Modern War. Mulder, Nicholas Yale University Press 2022. ISBN 9780300259360 $32.50 | Job Zone utilizes unique job matching technology to help you find the perfect job (and employers find the perfect candidate), whether you’re actively seeking or just keeping an eye out for your possibilities. Log on today and check out our newest features, including automated job and candidate matches, and email alerts. JOB OF THE WEEK Midwest Tape is seeking a Cataloging Specialist. | |