Archive for the ‘Jun09’ Category

2009 Kansas Notable Books List Announced

Monday, June 1st, 2009

On May 28, State Librarian Christie Brandau and Roy Bird, Director of the Kansas Center for the Book (KCFB) at the State Library of Kansas, unveiled the 2009 Kansas Notable Books List.  This fourth annual roll of honor includes fiction, nonfiction, adult and children’s books, each of which was published during 2008 and identified as outstanding for different reasons.

A committee of the KCFB identified the titles and submitted them to State Librarian Christie Brandau for the final decision.  The 2009 Kansas Notable Book advisory committee included representatives from academic, public and school libraries, authors, booksellers, publishers, and the media.  Press releases were sent out across the state to daily and weekly newspapers on May 28.  The authors of the 15 Kansas Notable Books will be honored at a reception hosted by the State Library of Kansas later this summer.

Begun in 2005, with the first titles announced in 2006, the Kansas Notable Books List has quickly become a highly respected honor among the state’s writers.  The project was singled out along with others in the citation for the Kansas Center’s 2008 Boorstin Center for the Book Award, the highest accolade a state center for the book can receive.  Authors, booksellers, publishers and librarians have featured Notable Books in presentations, displays, and literary events around the state.  Authors have appeared at many venues in the state as well.  The summer 2009 issue of Kansas! magazine listed Kansas Notable Books as number 12 in their list of “13 Reasons We Love Kansas.”

The 2009 Notable Books List continues to raise awareness of writing by Kansans and about Kansas.

More about the Notable Books project can be viewed at http://www.kcfb.info.

ameliaearhartsmallAmelia Earhart: The Legend of the Lost Aviator by Shelley Tanaka, illustrated by David Craig

Richly illustrated with family photos, this children’s book is an amazing look at Amelia Earhart’s life.

 Artfully Done Across Generations: An Art Cookbook by Friends of the Wichita Art Museum
This over-sized book includes time-tested recipes along with informative sidebars and sumptuous artwork from the museum’s collection.

Burn by Kathleen Johnson

Kansas poet Kathleen Johnson’s collection ranges from life on the frontier to memories at her parent’s home to tornadoes.

Charlatan: America’s Most Dangerous Huckster, the Man Who Pursued Him, and the Age of Flimflam by Pope Brock

Brock’s colorful account of the infamous 1930s goat-gland doctor John Brinkley matches his out-sized subject.

A Curse Dark As Gold by Elizabeth C. Bunce

A spellbinding fairy tale spun with mystery and a shot of romance, this first novel by a Lenexa, Kansas writer is an innovative interpretation of Rumpelstiltskin. (Young adult)

guidetokansasbirdssmallThe Guide to Kansas Birds and Birding Hot Spots by Bob Gress and Pete Janzen

 Occasional day-trippers or back yard observers will be able to identify and learn about birds that regularly occur in Kansas, with stunning photos and tips on where to search.

Hometown Appetites: The Story of Clementine Paddleford, the Forgotten Food Writer Who Chronicled How America Ate by Kelly Alexander and Cynthia Harris 

Syndicated food columnist, New York Herald Tribune writer, and Kansan, Clementine Paddleford’s papers at KSU are the basis for this book about the first celebrity food writer who defined America’s cuisine.

Kansas Opera Houses: Actors and Community Events 1855-1925 by Jane Glotfelty Rhoads

From the communities, to the buildings, to the performers, this book highlights historic opera houses with fine writing and organizational reference material.

makinghistoryquiltssmallMaking History: Quilts & Fabric From 1890-1970 by Barbara Brackman

Noted quilting authority Brackman has packed her book with historic photos, stories, and insights into the role of fabrics in everyday life.

 Marco Polo Didn’t Go There: Stories and Revelations From One Decade As A Postmodern Travel Writer by Rolf Potts

Potts has taken his keen postmodern travel sensibility into the far reaches of five continents, but his chapter on Minneapolis, Kansas shows that surprises can be found in the most unlikely places.

The Nature of Kansas Lands by Beverley Worster (ed.)

A visually stimulating masterpiece designed to encourage Kansas residents to look beyond their back yards and fences. 

A Passion for Nature: The Life of John Muir by Donald Worster

An extensive and well researched biography on the great conservationist uses his personal correspondence and journals to place him in the political context of his times.

pizzahutstorysmallThe Pizza Hut Story by Robert Spector

On the eve of its golden anniversary, this book looks at Pizza Hut and how the Wichita founders turned “pizza” into a household word.

Seeding Civil War: Kansas in the National News, 1854-1858 by Craig Miner

A study of how 1850s newspapers played a critical role in turning Bleeding Kansas into an out of control inferno.

Survival of Rural America: Small Victories and Bitter Harvests by Richard E. Wood

Wood takes a close look at what has happened in several Kansas farming towns and shows that there is much more depth and diversity to rural life than meets the eye.

State Library Librarians and the Legislature

Monday, June 1st, 2009

By Kim Harp, Legislative Reference Librarian

The State Library of Kansas (SLK) is a hoppin’ place during the legislative session. On any given day during the months between January and May, you’ll find the Statehouse halls teeming with Kansas constituents of all walks of life; the State Library can be a refuge and a resource during the hectic legislative process. Patrons stop in the State Library to write up testimony for bill hearings, to shoot emails off to clients, to utilize the collection for researching public policy, to learn bill status or legislative history, and to seek a few quiet minutes to read the news between committee meetings.

The front desk staff and the reference staff of the State Library prepare for the session months ahead, and keep working on legislative matters long after the Senators and Representatives leave the building. Amongst other duties, staff at the front desk greet patrons, help orient them to the library, and check out patrons’ selections. There are three staff members that make up the reference department. Throughout the year, the reference department functions like any other reference department. During session, extra duties are added: the reference department staffs the legislative hotline, tracks legislation, and indexes bills for posterity. There are four session staff that return just for the session every year to help things run smoothly. The session staff index, file, and input data so that the reference staff can pull up accurate information on bills, legislative members, and legislative history, in a heartbeat. The librarians and staff at SLK work hard to serve the legislature and all those who track and follow the actions of the legislature.

The reference department at the State Library helps Kansans contact legislators through a toll-free phone service called the “Legislative Hotline.” The legislative hotline operates year round to provide Kansans a way to find the names of their legislators, contact their Senator or Representative, learn about the status of a bill as it goes through the legislative process, learn more about state government, or leave a message for their legislator. During interim, or the months between June and December, the hotline receives about 350 calls a month. During session, the hotline rings steadily and the volume of calls nearly triples. In the month of April alone, the reference department received and relayed nearly 1800 messages to legislators from constituents statewide.  The picture below shows the messages taken by the reference librarians during the last two weeks of the legislative session.

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When the legislature adjourns each May, the reference department switches gears. Interim is a time for the reference department and front desk staff to work on projects for the following session, to track interim committees, to work on continuing education, to assist with statewide projects, and to continue general reference work. The State Library’s librarians and staff work hard to ensure that Kansans have clear access to state government year round!

Digital Bookmobile Coming to Kansas

Monday, June 1st, 2009

digital-bookmobileWe here at the State Library of Kansas (SLK) are thrilled that OverDrive’s Digital Bookmobile will make two stops in Kansas in June.  The first stop is at the Wichita Public Library on Friday, June 26.  It will then travel to Topeka, where it will set up at the Topeka and Shawnee County Public Library on Saturday, June 27.  Both events are open to the public, and run from 10 a.m. – 4 p.m.

The Digital Bookmobile is designed as a community outreach vehicle for public libraries to promote downloadable eBooks, audiobooks, music and video.  Developed inside a 74-foot, 18-wheel tractor trailer, the nationally touring vehicle is a high-tech update of the traditional bookmobile. 

Equipped with broadband Internet-connected PCs, high-definition monitors, premium sound systems, and a variety of portable media players, it gives visitors an opportunity to search the digital media collection, try out mobile devices, and sample eBooks, audiobooks, music and video.  Volunteers will be on hand at both libraries to assist with tours, library card sign up, and answer questions about “how all this works.”  The State Library of Kansas will also host a booth at the Topeka location to promote the Kansas Center for the Book

SLK partners with over 100 Kansas libraries to provide downloadable materials of all types through the Audiobooks, Music & More website.  During the past year, customers have checked out over 150,000 items from the collection.  Nearly 3,000 individual customers use the service each month.  The collection boasts nearly 11,000 unique items, ranging from downloadable music, to audiobooks and ebooks.  For more information, contact Eric Gustafson (egustafson@kslib.info, 785-296-8152) or Patti Butcher (pattib@kslib.info, 785-296-3875).  If your library would like to participate in this statewide resource, Eric or Patti can help you get started.

Talking Books Digital Player Debut

Monday, June 1st, 2009

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They are finally here!  All the service centers of Kansas Talking Books have received two new digital players for demonstration purposes.  This means the players are one step closer to being in the hands of Talking Book patrons across Kansas.  Although there is no specific date, the players are projected to arrive in Kansas this fall, possibly as early as mid-August. 

Here’s a sneak preview of what’s to come…

There is a standard version and an advanced version of the player that will be offered to the patrons.  The new players weigh about two pounds.  They have excellent sound quality as well as some additional buttons not found on the currently used cassette players.  The player has the capability of speeding up or slowing down the tempo of the narrator without distorting the speech.  Chipmunk voices and the sounds of narrators sipping on helium will become a distant memory. 

For those who like to read before bedtime or on a lazy afternoon when a nap is inevitable, a sleep button has been added.  The sleep button will turn off the player according to the time you set it – set in 15 minutes increments.  No more waking up and finding out the story went on without you and spending great amounts of time trying to find your place again.  On the advanced model, there are many ways to mark the place you left off and to navigate the book. 

While they might sound highfalutin, these players do not require prior knowledge of technology.  When a cartridge is not in the slot, a person can press any button and find out its function.  The player also has the ability to play books downloaded from the NLS site onto a memory stick. 

All books will come on cartridges with a USB port hooked to the end.  It is estimated that 98 percent of the books produced by the National Library Service (NLS) will fit on one cartridge.  This little detail will please many patrons.  For users, this means they will no longer have to flip tapes over, remember to hit the toggle switch or ever rewind a cassette tape again.  

As cassette tapes are becoming a thing of the past, this format switch is certainly a timely transition.  The NLS previously considered compact discs, but the format was not deemed durable.  After many years of vacillating about formats and whether or not federal funding would be available for the transition, they discovered a durable format in the USB port.  NLS has delivered greater accessibility, cutting edge technology and a whole new outlook for the future of Talking Books.  These are exciting times with limitless possibilities.   

ENJOY the reading experience!

Administrative Training Programs are Going Well

Monday, June 1st, 2009

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In the spring and summer of 2009, the State Library staff is pursuing the first Administrative Training Package, which blends ELMeR workshops, Wimba presentations, participant projects and a special website on WebJunction Kansas. The theme for this first package is Collection Marketing and Merchandising and it has been very successful.

On Thursday, May 7, and again on Friday, May 8, Michele Leininger presented a video training workshop on “Connecting Communities and Collections” to a total of five ELMeR network locations across the state. Michele had worked with the topic with many Iowa libraries while she was with the State Library of Iowa and then got an added dimension of field experience when she became the Information Experience Director at the Pierce County Library in Tacoma.

Michele’s natural friendliness, broad background and wealth of experience made for an enjoyable workshop, very interactive in spite of the distributed environment. The workshop participants discussed community analysis, patterns of library use, the marketing of collections, including many of the concepts presented in the Long Tail philosophy, weeding, Readers Advisory and many ideas from the newer field of collection merchandising.

Michele emphasized that librarians need to talk with library users in the library and in social networking environments. At the same time, they need to make library users as independent as possible. The goal is to help library users who are approaching the library in a wide variety of ways and with many different needs.

The first of two Wimba presentations was held on the morning of May 27. In “Why do we Dewey? Redesigning for the Customer Centered Experience,” Thad Hartman and Renee Patzer of the Topeka and Shawnee County Public Library discussed the benefits of collection neighborhoods, collection bookbags, collection stickers, special displays and the thoughtful reorganization of Dewey within a collection. They were candid about the staff time involved, but documented the increased circulation and customer satisfaction that have resulted from these fresh approaches. Their PowerPoint is available on the Marketing and Merchandising page of the Continuing Education tab on WebJunction Kansas. 

The second Wimba presentation will also be exciting. Leah Krotz, director of the Belleville Public Library, will present on “Dazzling Displays and Rave Reviews,” which should be fun and also a rich source of project ideas. That Wimba presentation will be on June 24 at 2:00 p.m. 

The Wimba presentations are open to everyone, as are the resources that will be posted on the Marketing and Merchandising web page on the Continuing Education tab of WebJunction Kansas throughout the summer. We are looking forward to seeing the marketing and merchandising projects that will be tried in Kansas libraries.

Word of Mouth Advocacy

Monday, June 1st, 2009

 

Are you telling your story?

 

Many of you are actively telling your story, but some of you may not have jumped on the bandwagon yet.

 

This is not a new tip, but helpful just the same. Add a “tell your story” link on your library’s home page. The link brings up a form where your patrons can submit testimonies of what your library means to them, or how it has helped them help themselves or change their lives. Voters respond to stories about how the library transforms lives, and public officials respond to stories of how libraries help solve community issues.

 

So, start collecting stories right now. Keep a file so you’ll have ready anecdotal information when you need to justify your budget. Another possibility is that once your patron has hit the submit button on his/her story, a second form comes up asking for donations, or a form allowing for bequests to the library. 

 

We would like for you to share your stories as well on the State Library’s Thriving in Tough Times site. 

Catalog 2.0: Your Library Catalog in a Global Environment

Monday, June 1st, 2009

Great Bend Kansas in the early 1900s
Images of Kansas Towns and Cities 

The Internet has been touted as the window to the future by its proponents for years, but historians and genealogists have come to see it as a wonderful means of sharing and viewing the past as well.  Historic photographs, maps, charts and art held within a museum or library can be displayed for viewing by people all over the world.  Teachers, students and researchers can sit at a computer and view a world that their grandparents and great grandparents walked through daily.  The possibilities are endless as are the seekers of these resources.

As Kansas librarians we can provide easy access to online collections about our state’s history through online indexes, web pages and our catalogs.  Your catalog can be not just a directional tool to books on your shelves, but a gateway to resources on Kansas history, culture and genealogy.

Recently, the State Library of Kansas cataloged about 475 entries within the Wichita State University (WSU) Libraries’ online Images of Kansas Towns and Cities.  This collection, a part of the Libraries’ Special Collections and University Archives website, offers a look at Kansas at the turn of the last century.  Viewers can virtually thumb through photographs of towns, agricultural and social activities, religious and educational events and a host of other representations of a time period that is hard for many to imagine now.

Bibliographic records to this collection provide title and subject access to the photos and an easier route than hunt and peck on an Internet search engine.  A sample record for Mahaska, Kansas, in Washington County, can be viewed here on the ATLAS Catalog.  Clear, clean, simple cataloging records can open your local catalog to your library community’s history with visual collections such as this.

The Images of Kansas Towns and Cities MARC cataloging records are available for download from the Kansas Library Catalog (KLC).  Contact Rhonda Machlan at the State Library to find out how your library can do this.

To locate records within the KLC from the WSU photo collection, do the following search:

Do a search within the KLC using the BROWSE option and search for the title, Images of Kansas towns and cities.  This should bring up all the records within the collection.  Having records for each of the communities within the photo archive allows libraries the option of downloading just those communities within their service area.

 by Bill Sowers
Cataloging and Kansas Documents Librarian
State Library of Kansas

Book Review – Outliers: The Story of Success

Monday, June 1st, 2009

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If I told you that –

  – Extremely successful people are usually very gifted.

  – Chance opportunities have a lot to do with success in life.

  – Extremely high intelligence is not a reliable predictor of success.

  – Upper middle class children have a greater sense of entitlement than poor ones.

  – Children who spend more hours in tougher schools are more successful.

  - Children who start school at six rather than barely five are often better students and athletes.

your response would probably be, “DUH! I don’t need to read a book that makes THOSE points.”

But Outliers, Malcolm Gladwell’s book on what goes into success, is not simpleminded and it is a lot of fun to read. Opportunities that lead to success are not always obvious:

  – The Italian peasants who settled Roseto, Pennsylvania, were not intending to create an earthly paradise.

  – The Beatles probably didn’t think that having to play eight hour gigs in Hamburg was going to result in fame and fortune.

  – Bill Gates didn’t know that the accidental purchase of a time-sharing computer in 1968 was going to jump-tart his amazing career.

  – Jews from Nineteenth Century Eurrope had little reason to believe that they were very prepared to succeed in 1890s New York.

  – Asians engaged in rice farming didn’t know that they were preparing their descendents for the famous Asian academic success.

  – Parents who had children between 1912 and 1917 didn’t know that their children would be much more successful than those born between 1903 and 1911. Success would have a lot to do with WHEN you hit the Depression and World War II.

Outliers, like Malcolm Gladwell’s previous books, The Tipping Point and Blink, is fun and it gives the reader a lot to think about. It is not a serious piece of scientific research. One reviewer said bluntly, “He’s cherrypicking.”  This book is for readers who regard interesting ideas as brightly colored toys and entertaining stories as intellectual ice cream. It is not for those who want only carefully documented and clearly established evidence.

Libraries should have Gladwell’s books because he has a talent for reaching the popular culture and affecting the way it thinks. Whether he will still be read fifty years from now is another question.

Notable Book Review – Can I Keep My Jersey?

Monday, June 1st, 2009

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Can I Keep My Jersey?: 11Teams, 5 Countries and 4 Years in My Life as a Basketball Vagabond
By Paul Shirley

Shirley, who grew up on a farm near Meriden, had a standout basketball career at Iowa State but was not drafted by the NBA. Told frankly by his agent that “life as a white professional basketball player would be a constant struggle,” Shirley decided to struggle.

For four years he bounced around the world, playing in low-rent minor leagues in the U.S. as well as Spain, Greece and a part of Russia where Stalin used to send the condemned. All the while, Shirley dreamed of getting that fabled NBA contract — and he wrote down his cynical, self-deprecating and often hilarious observations in a journal, sharing entries with friends and family. Ultimately, he would sign a one-season deal with the Phoenix Suns and go public, writing about life as a bench warmer for a blog on NBA.com. 

Can I Keep My Jersey? is more than a brilliant travelogue of travel nightmares and cultural observations seen through the eyes of a mercenary hoopster. As Chuck Klosterman, who wrote the foreword notes, stated, “this is a unique report from an ‘embed’ placed deep inside the ranks of professional athletes.” Shirley is one of them and yet, not one of them, and without fear or favor, he tells us what he sees. His impressions recorded during brief stints with NBA clubs are especially valuable, as they show a universe of overpaid stars completely out of touch with reality. Also compelling are the gut-checks Shirley routinely performs on himself, as he struggles to make sense of a surreal world of pro ball that both attracts and repulses him.

The result is a memoir that The Kansas City Star called “one of the most important insider books about pro sports” ever written. The Onion said it belonged on the shelf of sports classics alongside Ball Four.

Consult the Cat – On Males and Libraries

Monday, June 1st, 2009

 Consult the Cat

This spring, the Administrative Training Package is on Marketing and Merchandising Collections. The Cat is tolerated at all programs by the State Library staff, since she is a heavy library user. One of the topics focused on in Marketing and Merchandising is Readers Advisory. Resources for men and boys came up for special discussion since those users need conscious attention in many public libraries.

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With male cats, the Cat comments, it very much depends on which population you are talking about. Tomcats are tomcats. They are more capable of analytic thinking and strategic planning than they are given credit for, but they are hardly homebodies and they are pragmatic to the max. Timcats are timcats. They are more placid, more affectionate and more playful. On the whole, the Cat prefers them. She wasn’t planning on having kittens anyway.

With human males, matters are rather more complicated. Since both sexes are still trying to figure out what makes human males tick, it is hardly a subject that can be addressed here. But librarians have come to realize that there is an unintentional neglect of library materials for males in many public libraries.

The problem isn’t that hard to solve, once it is addressed. But it isn’t enough to start buying with men and boys in mind. They tend to like convenience. Special displays, targeted to their needs and clearly labeled, would often be much to their taste.

There are some obvious candidates: lifeskills, how-to books, political topics, history, nonfiction that reads like fiction, hardboiled mysteries, science fiction, speculative fiction, westerns. Healthcare and financial advice are of equal interest to both sexes but both do well in displays.

In a small library, which is strained financially just keeping up with current offerings, it is mostly a matter of adjusted vision. Reviewing booklists really helps to develop the change in perspective.

Readers Advisory has become such a broad field that the Cat has an uneasy feeling that she could be missing the obvious. But several sites have recently been recommended. Booksforboys.com (http:www.booksforboys.com) is very usable. It has links that are clearly divided by both age and topic.

One administrative training classmate recommended Guys Read, maintained by Jon Scieszka. It is a very usable site, if not very deep. The participant commented that the search function appears to be broken. It still is.

If you are bored and restless and in the mood for a deep site, GuysLitWire is really worth exploring. It is not that easy to use but wandering around in it can give a broad idea of what appeals to men and turn up some fresh ideas for purchase. Also, it is not limited to books.

Simply googling Nonfiction that Reads Like Fiction always turns up some great resources. The Cat is very fond of the Palm Beach County Library System’s website. She has raved about it before. Lists of “Bests” and “Overbooked” also offer some good sources.

The Austin Public Library’s Teen Book Lists (http:www.connectedyouth.org/books) is a wonderful and comprehensive list.

Much more specialized, but quite interesting, is the Michigan City Public Library’s War Booklists (http:www.mclib.org/booklistswar.htm). It covers the subject war by war and force by force.

The best resource for boys can also be the most elusive. Boys that read, whatever they read, and are willing to help are a priceless resource. The same is true of teens in general. The same is true of men.

If you have resources you especially like, please post a response to this column. That would certainly earn a purr from the

Cat.