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April 13, 2023

EBSCO

Going for Gold, Deep in the Red

By Stephen Bosch, Siôn Romaine, Barbara Albee, and Cynthia M. Elliott 

Can libraries afford open access? LJ’s latest Periodicals Price Survey examines the state of the market. 

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LJ Talks with Award-Winning Poet and Professor Camille T. Dungy

By Rebekah Kati 

In her latest book, Soil: The Story of a Black Mother’s Garden, Camille T. Dungy interweaves the themes of history, memory, motherhood, environment, and culture with the experience of planting a garden. She talked with LJ about those intersections and their impact. 

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SPONSORED BY PLUTO PRESS

 

An Innovative Theory of State Intelligence


Repeated intelligence failures in the Middle East and North Africa have left many critics searching for answers. A fundamental truth goes unaddressed: western state agencies do not understand the world. Drawing on recently declassified materials, Kearns shows how mistakes are forged in the crucible of the Cold War-era colonial retreat.

 

Read More>>>

The Covert Colour Line

One Last Chance | Sustainability

By Rebekkah Smith Aldrich 

Public and academic libraries should be leaders in moving away from fossil fuels, prioritizing investments in net-zero energy construction, renewable energy, and electric vehicles. Library administration and governing boards of trustees need to step up to prioritize greenhouse gas emission reduction in their strategic and operational planning. 

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LGBTQIA+ Pride Month | 10 Books To Add to the Collection and Share With Readers

By JoAnne E. Lehman 

LGBTQIA+ Pride Month marks the 1969 Stonewall Uprising in Manhattan and celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community. The titles on this list range from short stories to a dystopian novel and from a graphic memoir to social sciences.  

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SPONSORED BY THE MIT PRESS

 

Direct to Open: A Bold Experiment in Open Access

 

The MIT Press’s Direct to Open (D2O) harnesses the collective power of libraries to support open and equitable access to vital, leading scholarship. Using the collective action model, participating libraries share the lift of opening access to scholarly books by funding D2O together, making knowledge open and accessible to everyone.

 

Learn more>>>

The MIT Press

Six Big Biographies: Oct. 2023, Pt. 4 | Prepub Alert

By Barbara Hoffert 

From George Washington to Medgar and Myrlie Evers. 

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“As more publishers successfully transition their revenue streams from annual or multiyear subscriptions to transformative OA agreements, some librarians wonder if academia will remain locked in a ‘different lipstick, same pig’ model that does nothing to fundamentally change the way scholarly communications is dominated by a few large publishers.” 

 

—From “Going for Gold, Deep in the Red”  

Kimberly Unger Wins the Philip K. Dick Award for The Extractionist | Book Pulse

By Kate Merlene  

Kimberly Unger wins the Philip K. Dick Award for The Extractionist. The British Science Fiction Association Awards have also been announced. The Rumpus celebrates National Poetry Month with new featured poems daily.  

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From LJ Reviews:

HISTORY 

You Have To Be Prepared To Die Before You Can Begin To Live: Ten Weeks in Birmingham That Changed America

By Paul Kix 

Focused exclusively on the 10-week civil rights campaign in Birmingham, AL, this essential book will appeal to readers interested in American civil rights history and the 1960s.  

 

PREMIUM  

Clean Sweep: VIII Fighter Command Against the Luftwaffe, 1942–45

By Thomas McKelvey Cleaver 

A well-focused history of the costly U.S. Air Force campaign over Europe that fatally degraded the Nazi war machine.  

 

The Middle Kingdoms: A New History of Central Europe

By Martyn Rady 

This is an unparalleled resource for anyone concerned about the future of Europe and the history of its nations. 

PRO MEDIA 

PREMIUM  

Reference and Information Services: An Introduction, 5th Ed

By Kay Ann Cassell & Uma Hiremath  

This wide-ranging and informative book is essential for library schools and valuable for academic libraries and larger public ones. A handy reference tool for citing research and helping users find answers to their reference questions. 

REFERENCE 

PREMIUM  

Ithra, A Home for the World: The King Abdulaziz Center for World Culture

By Mashary Al-Naim & James Steele  

Visually documents and details the history of a complex and visionary work of architecture. 

 

PREMIUM  

Justice Statistics: An Extended Look at Crime in the United States 2022

Ed. by Shana Hertz Hattis 

A gold mine for researchers seeking data on crimes. The price should not deter libraries that have strong criminal justice and sociology collections as well as legal libraries. For those libraries that have the previous editions, this update is a must.  

 

PREMIUM  

Beyond Fitting In: Rethinking First-Generation Writing and Literacy Education

Ed. by Kelly Ritter 

Will be of interest to graduate students, teaching graduate assistants, researchers, and faculty. Due to its lack of an index, traditional nonfiction and professional collections might benefit more than a traditional reference section. 

TLA Coupon Booklet

World History: Oct. 2023, Pt. 4 | Prepub Alert

By Barbara Hoffert 

The world, often at war. 

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U.S. History: Oct. 2023, Pt. 4 | Prepub Alert

By Barbara Hoffert 

The visions, dreams, and realities of U.S. history. 

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The National Book Foundation Announces 2023 5 Under 35 Honorees | Book Pulse

By Anita Mechler  

There are awards announcements for the 2023 Carol Shields Prize shortlist and the National Book Foundation’s 5 Under 35 honorees. 

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From the Pages of infoDOCKET...

  • cOAlition S Responds to NIH Regarding its Public Access Plan

  • Cindy Hohl Wins 2024-2025 American Library Association (ALA) Presidency

  • The Gagarin Center at Bard College and PEN America Establish Russian Independent Media Archive

  • Preprints: arXiv, bioRxiv, and medRxiv Respond to the Nelson Memo

  • Cambridge University Press: Open Access Fees Waived For Over 100 Countries 

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JOB OF THE WEEK

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