In my library news streams was an article : Oakmont Regional High librarian eyes ditching Dewey Decimal System for new classification – Sentinel & Enterprise. The librarian at Oakmont points out that the Dewey Decimal system isn’t giving the right message to the kids. Examples: Homer’s ILLiad in nonfiction and books on homosexuality next to those on incest and prostitution. I had never thought about it before and am surprised at myself. Also impressed when people don’t simply accept something because it is custom, traditional, or whatever.
Posts tagged librarians
Public Domain treasures
Did you know that the Internet Archive has digitized wonderful wagon loads of interesting odds and ends? Check it out:
Did you know that one of my characters, soon to appear in “Levi Levi and the Time Machine,” develops a quirk where he only speaks in outdated slang?
Well, he does. I gotta study up.
super librarian
Shamelessly cliche. I know, but I had to do it.
More mapping?
I’m trying some new stuff because I had an idea that ‘The Brain’ would be good for encapsulating and displaying a concept that is as web like as I have found interlibrary loan to be (yeah, this is library stuff). But ‘The Brain’ is not so accessible when you’re traveling from computer to computer. So, I wanted to scope out some other ways of concept mapping. I found bubbl.us. It’s pretty good and a free account gets three maps worth of storage that you can share and link to. (Yes, this is all about Interlibrary Loan – it’s what I do)
What I’m really after, now that I’ve been shopping around, is a way to insert the finished mind map into my web site. There I could host and share it forever (even password protect it if I wanted). Unfortunately bubbl.us ‘s HTML export just looks like a colorful list with anchor tags:
So I am still looking. Though, to be completely on the up and up I have to admit that a pro version of the brain offers an HTML export that creates a working online brain when loaded into a web server. It might very well be what I am looking for if I could just be satisfied with what I’ve already found.
Smelling books
Allow me to preface this little trip to information you most likely have no use for with an explanation of how it came about. Theseus by Jake Wyatt swaggered into my feed reader for free comics day (it’s been a while I know) and I had to follow it to The Anthology Project where it was included in volume 2. While there, hitting the ‘add to cart’ button, I felt compelled to add volume 1 as well and possess both. I highly recommend these books, they are beautiful and chock full of fabulous talent. The books arrived a few days ago and while I was thumbing through volume 1 I noticed that it smelled amazing. Now I’m not a book sniffer normally. I appreciate pleasant inky/papery smells that make it to my nose, while reading, drawing, and whatnot, but I’ve never sought them out. I work in a library – believe me, the smells that end up on the books I most come to contact with are not the kind I want any where near my face. This is why volume 1’s scent took me by surprise and why I then proceeded to smell every book in my to-read stack. Volume 1 of the Anthology Project was definitely the best smelling one. Volume 2 couldn’t even stand up to it. I began wondering if paper, in the book printing industry, was marketed with any reference to smell. This is how it began.
I can’t say I was really surprised to find a whole host of people talking about their love for the smell of the printed book. Many people have asked the question: why do books smell in the particular way that they smell? The answer varies from book to book and printing process to printing process. For old books, decay of the organic components, especially the lignin (related to vanillin) creates a sweet musky scent many have fallen in love with. That is, of course, if the book hasn’t molded or mildewed or been in a house with a smoker or a cat.
I was surprised to find that part of the great e-book debate, among consumers at least, was directed towards the fact that e-books didn’t smell like books. This brings us to book perfumes. I’ve run into them before. Specifically, I’d run into CB I Hate Perfume‘s In the Library before. New Book Smell from Smell of Books seems created specifically for scenting your e-reader. Other scents are available: Classic Musty Smell, Scent of Sensibility, Eau You have Cats, and Crunchy Bacon Scent. Steidl‘s Paper Passion, is by far the poshest of all bookish scents and made quite a few waves when it was created.
However, book perfumes weren’t going to answer my question about the book printing industry’s awareness or use of scent. I have to admit, I have only searched enough to get a larger picture of the components of a new book’s smell. I would not term my search exhaustive. It was more of a lark, really. I’m not even sure if I’ve managed or can answer my question. Here is what I found.
Paper itself doesn’t seem to be marketed in regards to smell at all, but their are plenty of reasons why the smell of any paper would vary. First is most likely the type of wood used in making the paper. There are a handful of pulpwoods (that is, woods often used in making paper): acacia, aspen, birch, eucalyptus, maple, pacific albus, pine, and spruce. Balsam fir has been a large supplier of pulpwood for paper in U.S. and aspen is heavily used in Canada.
Canada, thanks to the Swedish Forest Industries Facts and Figures 2010 (http://www.forestindustries.se/facts_and_figures), is one of the world’s largest exporters of pulp and paper. So aspen woodpulp is most likely found in much of the paper floating around the world. But paper makers are pretty crafty when it comes to getting raw materials. Pulp and chips from construction byproduct, recycling, forest thinning, and fire damage can all be present in paper woodpulp.
Of course, after the tree is chosen and felled there are a variety of ways to pulp it. High quality papers are most often chemically pulped – a process that removes the lignin from the wood fiber. After this the fibers are bleached. Without as much lignin content, I am guessing that our industrial aged paper books are not going to smell the same as those faintly vanilla antiquarian books. By the by, chemical pulping is why paper mills often smell like rotten eggs – a sulfur like gas is created as a byproduct.
But then, the paper itself is only part of what makes a new book smell. There is ink as well, and, as I am a long time collector of pens and user of paints and pigments, I am very familiar with how varieties of ink smell very differently from each other. I found a few mentions of ink that were specifically marketed with scent in mind. Most of these, or I should say all of these, were devoted to children’s books. I found smells of rose and citrus first and then I found Smellessence books for children. Smellessence is creating characters and stories with the intention of weaving together the smell of the story into a child’s reading experience. This is where my information trip ends.
Basically, I don’t think there is any special reason why Volume 1 of the Anthology project smells so good. It is a combination of ingredients and timing that sometimes makes for a fantastic olfactory experience in a book. I did learn a whole lot more about an industry I’ve taken for granted. Verdict: learning done for now.
Mentioned in the search:
In-Library eBook Lending Program Expands to 1,000 Libraries | Internet Archive Blogs
The internet archive finally did it – or did it while I wasn’t looking. If you are not aware of the internet archive then I suggest checking it out. There are tons of public domain books, recordings, and videos there as well as the way-back machine. Ever wonder what a website used to look like years ago? The way-back machine has got you covered. Well, as long as the images still exist – but the code is saved.
Anyway, e-books aren’t as easy for libraries as you might think and there haven’t been many lending platforms that make library lending possible and easy with e-books. This one is awesome and promising: In-Library eBook Lending Program Expands to 1,000 Libraries | Internet Archive Blogs.
How to solve impossible problems: Daniel Russell’s awesome Google search techniques
How to solve impossible problems: Daniel Russell’s awesome Google search techniques is the most fantastic thing I have read in a while. I am often swimming in search results pages, looking for something that other people can’t find and just when I’ve got a whole list of tips and tricks – I don’t know what to search for first.
But I just like this so much
I must talk some shop here ’cause Ask a Librarian (that is a library chat service/community in Florida) has launched an ad campaign that I find absolutely scrumptious.
Your brain on your computer
How did I not know about this? Years moaning over the inability to affix tags and notes to word and excel documents to make file browsing more coherent. Years of making lists and documenting and organizing my creative pursuits in unwieldy Microsoft folder systems. How did I not know or even consider that someone with more code intelligence than I had already tackled the problem? HOW?
Can you tell I’m broken up about this? I am both frustrated and excited. So this is how it works. Somehow, in the midst of looking for something else I found code {4} lib. And I thought, ‘Wow, this is a fabulous online journal on stuff I’m professionally interested in, in speak that’s a little over my head’ – which translates to: learn new things LeEtta, go go go! code {4} lib is also a blog, conference, community and listserv. I promptly subscribed to the listserv because I could find no other way to feed information from code {4} lib into my head and I didn’t want it to be forgotten in my plethora of bookmarks.
The listserv lead me to The Brain -a mind mapping software that allows for mapping and organizing files and thoughts, interrelating those thoughts, adding notes and tags to those thoughts, and finally, making everything searchable. It’s fabulous. The introductory webinar recording (oh, and they have live webinar question/answer sessions weekly), mentioned a few other products. One of these was FreeMind – an open source and free mind mapping software. FreeMind is also nice enough to list out alternatives so I’m not going to go into them here.
I’m thinking of trying out The Brain‘s free version/trial. It looks a little more like what I wanted to do with my filing system to make it more navigable. But I’m kind of inspired by FreeMind‘s 2D-ness. It would’ve been indispensable when I was trying to map out a choose your own adventure story. That was a clunky challenge. I’ve got another one in the works, so…I will explore. And, I’ll probably report back.
Email from my sofa
So…remember when I said I’d be updating all my comics (that’s three + the drawing board, so four technically) once a week? I suppose you noticed that I failed big time on that goal this month. I have been away from my sofa, the place where I do all my drawings, sitting cross legged with a stack of sketchbooks on my lap and NCIS playing on the TV. Instead, I have been spreading the good message of longer resource sharing due dates. And yeah, I know that makes no sense to people not in the business. But I gave 1/3 of a presentation at an international conference! I manned poster session at another conference! I made great improvements to my resume! I’ve been traveling way too much!
But enough excuses! This past weekend I was able to spend some quality time with my sofa. I have finished the first chapter of No Evil. I will scan this and get it running here for your pleasure and then I will concoct the next chapter with the story telling help of doomedmoviethon Richard. I have made great headway on the story of Ramone, Joy, and Gee (that’s Flip Side to you) as well as Levi Levi (which is also winding up a chapter). They will be back in force. And I finished a sketchbook. That means that I’ve got a whole bunch of newly scanned artwork just dying to worm it’s way into your eyeballs. Are you ready for all of this? Well?
Dickens World – Dickens’ Birthday
So, the Google banner tells me it’s Dickens’ birthday today. Back in ’07 I was dreaming about visiting Dickens World. All my previous writing may be stripped from the web, but I still have copies of it. Allow me to resurrect:
“Maybe one of the most innovative ideas for a theme park is opening May 2007 just outside of London in Dicken’s childhood home of Chatham. Dickens World is based wholly on the stories and characters of Charles Dickens. Costumed characters will walk among the park goers to populate the fantasy city. Rides, themed restaurants, and cinemas will entertain during the day with a burlesque show at night offering naughtier entertainment.”
I have both been terribly bored and amused by Dickens; regardless of my literary experiences, a park built on classic literature is like a happy dream.
Hey! speaking of Dickens World there’s also Dickens World! Wiley Blackwell publishers are putting on a free online conference March 7th and 8th to celebrate Dickens. If Dickens scholarship is up your alley then go! Go and enjoy!
Dallas Travel Map
I just finished a kind of map/diary of my trip to Dallas for ALA midwinter (and a little field trip through my childhood). Each highlighted location will open pictures from the trip. It has it’s own page on the machine so check it out and then come back and tell me how much you like it. 🙂
Global Chokepoints | Global Censorship Chokepoints
Did you know that one of the original purpose for copyright was to safeguard the users right to use material in order to encourage creativity and scholarship? I think a lot of people are forgetting this now a days. So we have and need organizations like this: Global Chokepoints | Global Censorship Chokepoints.
A little bit of working professional
Yo,allow me to insert a little horn blowing and ‘serious job’ stuff here. I am now the Assistant Editor of the Journal of Interlibrary Lending, Document Delivery & Electronic Reserve. If you just happen to career along the same lines I do and you have an article or article idea on the subject, you can find instructions for authors here: http://www.tandfonline.com/action/authorSubmission?journalCode=wild20&page=instructions.
Reflections on Dallas
Yo kiddies. I was up in Dallas for the ALA midwinter convention. Whenever I travel I notice the weird little things that are totally different from my home city. Well, Dallas was my home once too and I got to stew in some memories while I was there. Here are just a few little observations (comic to the right from the Drawing Board – just a little peek into my ALA experience).
- Everything’s bigger in Texas – yup they say it ’cause it’s true. For example, in Tampa you can go into a CVS and get a 3 Liter bottle of Carlo Rossi wine; in Dallas you get a 4 Liter. Everything’s bigger except for the traffic lanes and parking spaces, that is.
- The coffee downtown is too expensive. I know this may be just a downtown phenomenon shared by cities all over the world–but hey, I don’t get out much.
- Either people in Dallas have more common sense/the courts just don’t entertain stupid law suits or they’d never put such dangerous looking cactus on the sidewalk.
- Dallas is always under construction. When I lived there we used to make a joke that the Texas state bird was the Crane. One tiny problem with this is that signs you would normally rely on while driving aren’t necessarily there for you. Yeah, I drove past the airport. On the other hand, the exits were labeled much more clearly from the other direction.
- This signage thing, and the narrow traffic lanes thing would’ve been a lot more scary if Dallas people weren’t such great drivers. I mean, they know how to merge (one car from each side like a zipper), they let you in the lane when you have your signal on, they slow down and stop when the light turns yellow and red. It made not knowing where I was driving a lot easier. I didn’t even witness any jaywalking that wasn’t perpetrated by my librarian brethren (aka not Texans). I mourn for the Texan who drives in Tampa, I apologize for all of us.
- Of course you know I would go out of my way to visit some of the food establishments that were treats in my childhood. So, what do you suppose would happen if you baked some biscuits, real buttery ones, and while those were in the oven, you fried up an egg in a plain old fry pan next to some bacon and then combined all those things with a square of processed cheese? You’d have a Grandy’s breakfast sandwich is what would happen. There is no standardized shape or pre-assembled/most likely frozen business going on here, it was like it came out of my kitchen–except for the cheese. Why oh why are Grandy’s not all over this country?
- Does anyone else have a cemetery in front of their convention center? — really, I’m asking ’cause it seemed both weird and wonderful to me.
- And finally, Dallas is big on big sculpture–which made getting lost downtown kind of nice, until I started running out of time before my meeting.
That’s all I got. I’m sure there’s more that I took for granted, ’cause I used to live there too. Dallas, I enjoyed you big bunches. Thank you, LeE.