From the New York Times bestselling author of Pete the Cat: I Love my White Shoes, this book is Everyone Poops and Once Upon a Potty with a sing-along twist.From bestselling author and musician Eric L
This slim, pocket-sized volume presents quotes about libraries and library-related subjects compiled from the electronic "pages" of the Library Juice 'zine and blog. Divided into sections covering top
Abendroth (social studies education, State U. of New York-Long Island Center of Empire State College) describes the massive effort to teach people to read that the Cuban government inaugurated in 1961
This slim volume explores the impermanence of Internet footnotes and the implications of their use on academic rigor and the longevity and value of modern, non-print research. The authors examine both
This work is characterized by the author as a series of personal reflections on the role of library and information science schools within the contemporary corporate university expressed in reaction t
This volume compiles 13 essays on the role of psychology in libraries and library work. Librarians from the US and Canada discuss the role of social psychology in information literacy, stereotypes in
Originally published in German in 2006 as Wo sind sie, die Inseln der Vernunft im Cyberstrom?, this volume features an interview with the late Weizenbaum, who was a computer scientist, professor at th
This collection of fifteen essays about archival research and studies, written by experts in the field, were first presented at the 2014 Archival Education and Research Institute conference. Essay tit
Just as the slow food movement rebels against the mediocrity and impersonal nature of fast food, Miedema (student, Master of Library and Information program, U. of Western Ontario) agues that speed re
A specialist in map cataloging, Ridener (Earth Sciences and Map Library, U. of California-Berkeley) traces the evolution of core ideas that have steered the archiving profession over the past century.
Cox, presumably a professional archivist in some capacity, does not join the vociferous lamentations that first camcorders and then digital cameras are making family records temporary, contingent on t
She Was a Book leggercollects recollections, essays, and obituaries, with photos and reprints of Celeste's own writings from Synergy, Booklegger, Lesbian Polyfidehity, and Revolting Librarians Redux.
Editor Rachel Waxelbaum presents students, academics, and researchers, and professionals working in a variety of contexts with a collection of academic essays and scholarly articles focused on an expl