Friday, March 29, 2013

Bib List for Adult Classics

Well, I certainly am not an expert in the classics. I studied drawing and painting. But when a patron recently came up to the desk and asked for a list of literature he should read before going to college, being a librarian I realized there must be a list somewhere. Below are a few that I found:

Online
 In the collection (searched under "literature bibliography NOT children" in subject search)
  • Genrefied classics : a guide to reading interests in classic literature 016.8093 FRO (SGB reference)
  • Accessing the classics : great reads for adults, teens, and English language learners  011.73 ROS (Central)
  • American writers classics  810.9 AME V 1& 2 (Central reference)
  • The A-Z of great writers 809.003 PAY (Central)
  • 501 great writers 808.8 FIV (Central)
  • The literature teacher's book of lists 809 STR 
There are of course lists for American, Native American, Latin American, Black American (pre and post Harlem renaissance), German, Russian, English writers, Poets and so on. Simply do the search described above and a little reference interview to see what "type" of literature the person is seeking.

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

The Class I Didn't Take in Grad School

Of course I didn't take a reader's advisory class in grad school! I already worked at a public library. I already read lots of books, watched lots of movies, listened to various CDs in the collection. Didn't I already know it all?

Pride cometh before the fall.

In my interview for my current position, I was surprised to be asked what was the last book I read (Atlas Shrugged. Hunger Games.) and what my thoughts were on trends in the reading public (50 Shades of Gray). Perhaps if I had taken a reader's advisory course, or even any course in public librarianship, I'd have been better prepared. I wrote a thank you letter to my interviewer and let him know that I realized I wasn't strong in this area of library service and that I would resolve to improve that skill. (see Monday, June 11, 2012 entry "so I want to be a Readers' Advisory Librarian (wait... I do?)" and Thursday, June 21, 2012's "Juliet, Naked")

I thought that reading Moyer's 2010 Reader's Advisory Handbook would teach me all that I need to know, namely, the chapter on reading a book in 10 minutes, because obviously what I need to do is expand my exposure to a greater quantity of books and just write those amazingly long write-ups, right? (see Wednesday, June 20, 2012's entry: Moyer's Eight Steps to Reader's Advisory.)

goodreads Hipster Reader's Advisory infographic courtesy http://www.earlyword.com/category/readers-advisory/
If this is getting too deep... click on the image.
Wrong. I'm in book (and movie) overdose and I need a new strategy. I decided to take a stroll through our professional journals collection and came upon Reference and User's Services Quarterly (RUSQ), a RUSA publication and found some excellent articles (with references pointing to more excellent articles down the rabbit hole) listed in the Bibliography below. This post details some of the things I learned (here is your warning to either stop reading, print this out to take home, or lean back with your tablet and get comfortable.):

The one thing that has come to me through these readings is the concept of advising not just on fiction and not just on books. Williamson's Materials Matchmaking advocated librarians become familiar with all the materials in their collection as well as the resources that support them. Which means, if you want to recommend films, get to know the Internet Movie Database and Rotten Tomatoes (already signed into Facebook? RT automatically sets up an account for you and connects you to your FB friends using RT.) I'm not strong in music, so it would behoove me to spend some time on TuneGlue, All Media Guide's All Music section and SongLyrics.com, and as a corollary to sound resources, using the Audie Awards to recommend good productions of audiobooks would be one way to explore the audiobook collection as a production to enjoy and not necessarily as just a different format of an author's work. Williamson ends her article with an example of creating checkouts pairing a book, DVD and music CD around a theme, such as the TV show Lost (with music by Weaver and the book Bad Twin, which may or may not grab Lost fans: (see the Amazon reviews).

What Williamson sees as "cross promotion" of materials based on interests, Wyatt (Reading Maps) sees as an opportunity to explore the "universe" of a library patron's most recently experienced (read, watched, heard) work. Wyatt's proposal certainly is a bit daunting what with mapping out elements of interest in a particular material based on appeal factors (character, story line, setting, and "detail" (think all the stuff you learn when playing a video game and how it develops your learning interests)) and various associations suggested through annotations, discussion questions, reviews and interviews. However, I find it very exciting and much like the goal of creating ontologies or webs of entities of what exists within the world of the work and links out from that world to related possibilities of interest. Wyatt proposes librarians create these maps with the ultimate end goal of maps linking to each other, possibly through catalogs and regular web links. As he states, it would make an excellent project for staff (perhaps across systems?) to share.

So these are ways of looking at and promoting the whole collection at a particular library (though, with ILL and library consortium, is it really so hard to imagine that a collection can be beyond the walls of your branch and system and encompass anything the library is willing to get its hands on for its patrons?), but there's still the issue of what sort of language to use when speaking to patrons about why they liked something. Wyatt's An RA Big Think provides just those sorts of "feeling taxonomy" words with the goal to "make connections among [materials] that [patrons] may not have thought of... to cross genres and to go between fiction and non-fiction [and between books and A/V and more] and to link [creators] in novel and interesting ways."

I am appreciative that Wyatt (Exploring Non-Fiction, An RA Big Think) mentions the traditional entry ways to talking about works with patrons:
  • pacing, character, story line (plot), and frame (tone) for fiction, 
  • and narrative (does the author create characters, have a story plot, create a setting and employ scene and dialog to build the non-fiction world?), appeal (specifically detail, subject and type), and tone (argumentative, investigative, journalistic, popular or scholarly, etc) for non-fiction
because, as I mentioned before, I didn't take a class on this in school. He is also good with expanding on the "new" entries (refined entry points) for talking with patrons about materials (both fiction and non-fiction):
  • assessing the reading experience through an analysis of language, learning/experiencing, and style; 
  • thinking further about how content, subject, theme, type (biography, memoir, essay, investigation, explanation), and "sliding" genres (many genres share the elements of adrenaline, intellect, emotion or landscape) affect a work.

As a reader, I already recognize these entries inherently because it is rarely a plot that drives me to experience a fictional work and it is usually a curiosity to learn something that motivates me to pick up an informational work. To get me to pick up an audiobook? I have to be making a long drive or doing a lot of housework with no kids around, but yes, the production quality can make or break the experience. However, I hadn't thought of exploring an audiobook collection based on who narrates the work, even though I enjoy listening to Bill Bryson and David Sedaris narrate their own works and I love Tim Curry reading the Series of Unfortunate Events, and oh, yes, that lady who read all the Jane Austen books on playaway at the Sacramento Public Library, she was great! (As it turns out there were several, but I seem to recall the name Nadia May as being good.) Anyway, this totally illustrates the point that enjoying a work could be based on the director, or the screenwriter or the individual performers and so a patron may want other movies written by the same screenwriter which in some cases is also the director and the performer (hello, Simon Pegg, you are a genius.)

Final take-aways?
  • Walk your stacks and find stuff that is in that you liked so that should someone ask for a spur of the moment recommendation, you've got one. 
  • Use social networking sites to read how other people write about why they liked a work and use that language to engage with your patrons on their interests and why they like them.
  • Don't be afraid of non-fiction or music or the children's collection or...
  • Build universes! Make maps!
  • Keep reading (viewing, listening, etc): both the books and materials in the collection and books about how to perform RA (webinars, etc)

Bibliography

Materials Matchmaking: Articulating Whole Library Advisory. Williamson. (2011, Spring) RUSQ 50:3 p230.
Booktalking for Adult Audiences. Baker. (2010, Spring) RUSQ 49:3 p234.
Stalking the Wild Appeal Factor: Readers' Advisory and Social Networking Sites. Stover. (2009, Spring) RUSQ 48:3 p243.
An RA Big Think. Wyatt. (2007, July 1) Library Journal (LJ) 132:12 p40.
Exploring Non-Fiction. Wyatt. (2007, February 15) LJ 132:3 p32.
Reading Maps Remake RA. Wyatt. (2006, November 1) LJ 131:18 p38.

Blogs on Books 
RA for All: RA blog by an author on RA Guide to Horror.
Early Word: Info for librarians about publishing brought to me by an editor of Publisher's Weekly and LJ
Stacked Books: blogging about being librarians... and RA stuff too.

Tools:
Reader's Advisory Genre Map image courtesy http://pinterest.com/pin/223772675206210987/
Reader's Advisory Genre Map
Book Country Genre Map
Sample Reading Map for Jonathan Strange...


Update 2015_01_22: The Neal Wyatt reading map page is no longer active. Instead check out the article by Spratford and Hawn titled Reading Maps Made Easy for more tips and a great Reading Map example for the Hunger Games.

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Blay Blay books?

A soft spoken young boy comes to visit me at the reference desk. We've interacted before. I put a Diary of a Wimpy kid audiobook in his hands not too much earlier in the day. So the same kid returns to my desk and asks, " you have any blay blay books?"

"I am not familiar with those books; let's take a look."

I then bring up Google images and thank god for Google and the way they index words. Because among a ton of pictures of people and statues was this one with the three whurlygigs.  However, the page was of no use to provide me the keywords I needed, but Google in its quest for ease of user access, provided me with a selection of images similar to the one my young patron identified as being "it":
I clicked on the second image on the top row and it brought me to a really strange site (couldn't tell if it was a forum or a commercial site), but that didn't matter because I found out what my patron wanted: "BeyBlade."

Y-e-a spells yea!

Wait! Don't celebrate too soon. It's spring break. All copies are checked out. wamp, wamp, waaaaamp.

Saturday, March 9, 2013

Video Librarian

Have I talked about this great review magazine before? (A quick check says, no.) Video Librarian has reviews for upcoming "fiction" and "non-fiction" movies, separating them out much like a book review magazine does into age groups and genres. There's even a "Books Into Movies" section, which is handy for librarians tracking them for bib lists. Handy indexes including a title index and distributor address list are included for those trying to track down titles a vendor may not carry.

I just want to take a moment and list some titles I'm interested in:
  • For a Good Time, Call...
  • Robot and Frank
  • Pixar Short Films Collection (vol 1 & 2)
  • Guilty Pleasures (documentary about romance books)
From the 2012 Best Documentaries List:
  • Bobby Fischer Against the World
  • Hot Coffee
  • The Invisible War
  • The Other F Word
  • The Pruitt-Igoe Myth
  • Racing Dreams
  • Ready Set Bag!
  • Something from Nothing: the Art of Rap

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

ALA Library Code Year Interest Group

The Digital Shift has an article about librarians learning to code to improve their skills to fix interfaces and so forth. The concept it nothing new, but I wanted to throw their list of online tutorials here for future reference:

learning the RC: Free to Read and Organizing Info

Someone doing research on why libraries are important to America and to democracy? Need some professional jargon on the confidentiality of patron records, responding to challenged material or need to explore how technology and RFID undermine privacy policy? Keep handy the Office for Intellectual Freedom of the American Library Association's Intellectual Freedom Manual (025.213 INT 2010). (Shouldn't there be a reverb to such a spectacular intro?) The Manual has three parts: an overview or history of the issue, a step by step breakdown of the sections of the Library Bill of Rights with an interpretation and history for each section, a discussion of policies as related to access to materials and confidentiality, a part on the ALA's Code of Ethics, and finally an action plan part on to prepare librarians entering into the political fray.

I would like to state for the record that I did not graduate MLIS school without having taken a cataloging course like all old timers seem to think. In fact, I took two. But they were on metadata schema such as Dublin Core and controlled vocabularies such as the Getty Vocabularies. No, I did not learn about MARC because we're heading toward RDA anyway and besides, I learned how to follow rules rather than memorize rules that were slated to be changed anyway. With that huff and puff said, I bring you the Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules 2nd ed 1988 revision (025.32 ANG) (which RDA is based on anyway (note, I said "based" and not "copied"), but with updates to support the online environment). This thing is like a MLA or APA handbook, but for describing works instead of citing papers. Part I instructs the cataloguer what information to include when describing the works (how to describe a map being much different from how to describe a sound recording) and Part II instructs you on the formatting of those descriptions. See? Not rocket science. Just requiring a lot of attention to detail. Next!

Next being the much coveted four volume, wait, five volume 26th Edition Library of Congress Subject Headings (025.33 LIB 2003 v1-5). This is the sort of book you could just jump right in to begin browsing to see how the LC assigns subject headings. And this book is a real thesaurus in that it lists the Used For and Broader Term and Narrower Term entries! I would probably learn a lot by reading through the introductory material that discusses things like pattern headings and free-floating sub-divisions. Yes, I'm a nerd. Drool!

Monday, March 4, 2013

learning the RC: Dewey 020 (You mean the dewey has a section on Library Science?!?)

Here's meta for me: Library science includes a category about library science!

I wish I had known about Information Today's Library and Book Trade Almanac (formerly The Bowker Annual): Facts, Figures, and Reports (020.5 LIB 2012 /57th Edition) back when I was in grad school learning about the profession. This book would be what you would read when you don't have time to read all the stuff from the scholarly journals to keep you abreast of the major trends in the field. However, you would be about a year behind. Still, info on legislation, statistics, bibliographies, federal agencies and so forth. This is for the librarian to get a better idea of what s/he's getting in for by working in the field.

Scenario: I'm going to start a library. I need to know what are the informational books I should have in my collection so that it is worthy of my patrons and provides them a starting point for their research needs. I turn to the Public Library Core Collection: Nonfiction tome and it's various supplements (025.2 PUB 2008 13TH ED. and Supplement 2011) to keep me abreast of what I should have. Keep in mind, this is published by EBSCO and non ALA, but whatever. Those good folks have got me started and I'll turn to Publisher's Weekly and Library Journal and all the rest after I have a core collection.

Learning the RC: Texas History and Census Searching

Of all the Texas history bibliographies, the most straight forward is the Texas Bibliography: a Manual on History Research Materials edited by Cruz and Irby (016.9764 CRU 1983). This is a wonderful place to get started on research when there is perhaps no pre-existing knowledge on the researcher's part. It is divided into 20 chapters and the first is itself a list of other Texas history bibliographies (or a list of lists). The other chapters are organized around historical periods, types of materials, and subjects of interest, such as "folklore of Texas," racial and ethnic groups, art and children's literature. Each chapter begins with a brief introduction and then jumps straight into the lists. Truly a handy guide. I would buy it for my home collection.

Published in 1965, the Cracker Barrel Chronicles: a Bibliography of Texas Town and County Histories by Jenkins (016.9176 JEN) is a five thousand and forty entry list of the books and other materials written on Texas history, divided into the 254 counties of Texas and sorted in alphabetical order by author (or title where there is no attributed author). If you know the town, but not the county, Appendix II will direct you. If you know the title, but need other to locate its entry in the bib list, Appendix III provides page numbers (though perhaps entry numbers would have been better. Finally an author index is included to locate all works by one author.

For genealogy researchers, there are other resources than the US Census (presumably the Ancestry: Library Edition also indexes many of the resources listed in this book, but you know, in case we lose that resource or the computer dies...) to learn names, vital statistics, residence, etc. The Census Substitutes & State Census Records by Dollarhide (016.9293 DOL v. 1 & 2, 2008) compiles a list by state of those extra records. Some entries begin from before the state was a state, with territory listings and records from other countries. Websites are listed as available.

Need to do some Texas history research? Want to know about women in Texas history? A Guide to the History of Texas edited by Cummins and Bailey Jr., published by the Greenwood Press (016.9764 GUI) and part of the Reference Guides to State History and Research series may be just the thing. The book is divided into two parts: the first in chapters around broad subjects of Texas history, the second describes the collections of historic archives. Rather than lists, the individual chapters are written in narrative style, so it may be tedious to locate a specific title and the citation information, but there is a subject and author index in the back for cross referencing. Appendix I is a chronology of TX history from 1519 to 1987.

We have in the collection a booklet titled Imprints on Texas History: 1975-1976: An Annotated Bibliography of General Land Office Publications (1836-1975) (016.9764 NEW). I think the title pretty much sums it up. What is significant about it is that it is handy to remember that government offices can also have lots of primary and secondary resources that they have generated and while we don't have an updated list in the collection, it is worth it to contact the local offices for their research.