Wallowing in books...
Sep. 22nd, 2007 03:03 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
What a lovely morning!
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The other books I got were:
- Winnie Ille Pu by A.A.Milne (Winnie the Pooh in Latin. I have it in hardcover, but it's easier to carry around in paperback.)
- Crackdown by Val McDermid
- Poisoned Cherries by Quintin Jardine
- The Owls of Gloucester by Edward Marston
- The Distant Echo by Val McDermid
- Where Evil Sleeps by Valerie Wilson Wesley
- Hello Bunny Alice by Laura Wilson
- Ladies' Man by John Ramster
- Death's Own Door by Andrew Taylor
- The Sparrow by Mary Doria Russell. I've read this one twice, but I didn't own a copy. Now I do. Too bad they didn't have A Thread of Grace.
- The Lover's Tongue: A Merry Romp Through the Language of Love and Sex by Mark Morton
- The Age of Chivalry by the National Geographic Society (pretty, pretty picures)
- Illuminated Manuscripts: Medieval Hunting Scenes - "the Hunting Book" by Gaston Phoebus by Gabriel Bise (more pretty, pretty pictures)
Now... to get ready for Beulah's 75th birthday party.
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Date: 2007-09-22 09:26 pm (UTC)*sob*
I wish to blazes some people I am acquainted with would even think in that direction. I have had some... interesting correspondence with someone who has plonked a post Crusader bloody castle in the middle of mid 11th century Rouen when the Bayeux Tapestry makes it abundantly clear that what William the Bastard resided in was a bog standard basilica with clerestory. The person appears to reason: 11th century = Middle Ages = old stone castles with keeps and curtain walls.
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Date: 2007-09-25 02:37 pm (UTC)The more I read about the 12th century, the more it surprises me, and the more it surprises me, the more I love it.
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Date: 2007-09-23 01:55 am (UTC)I've had a hard time buying books since I started working at a library. Unless it's something collectible to me (like HP or LotR or Dunnett) I end up figuring I can always check it out.
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Date: 2007-09-24 03:07 pm (UTC)Isn't it wonderful? I want to get A Thread of Grace, too. I love Russell's writing. It is - in its style, pacing and emotive power - just wonderful. Her Dorothy Dunnett inspiration really shows.
I use libraries so much it's easier than it used to be to avoid buying books, and goodness knows I don't have a lot of space for them. But so many of the books I want aren't in libraries - I appreciate a book-buying spree now and again.
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Date: 2007-09-24 05:37 pm (UTC)Remind me to read it.
I emailed Russell via her site to tell her Sparrow was great and she emailed back! We talked a bit about Dunnett. I thought that was super nice of her to do.
True, when you find a rare book, buy it, and libraries don't have everything. I guess most things I've wanted I've managed to find via interloan or our collection (we do have a decent collection).
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Date: 2007-09-25 02:05 pm (UTC)I should send Russell e-mail or a letter, I really should.
I think all our libraries should have much bigger medieval collections.
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Date: 2007-09-25 02:16 pm (UTC)haha, well most of those go to university libraries, as do books I look for on Eden's era.
Public libraries, at least in the States, cater to the demand of the community, and that tends to not be medieval or English Civil War books so much. :(
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Date: 2007-09-25 02:40 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-09-25 05:04 pm (UTC)I am planning on taking a collection development class soon so I'm sure I'll learn more. :)
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Date: 2007-09-25 05:30 pm (UTC)So - do different communities really have different needs? Different tastes? Is it a matter of demographics?
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Date: 2007-09-25 05:48 pm (UTC)Yep, as would make sense if you have a community more business based or more rural, one more family orientated or mostly senior.
My childhood library went through a big change from when I was young to now. When I was a kid, the community was largely corporate and it reflected in their collection (they had big reading rooms and mostly business related databases). Now the community is more multi-cultural and very family orientated, so they've had to change accordingly. Most libraries can't afford to provide it all so they look at who their audience is.
In the community where I work, it's very hard to get school based milleges passed because there's a higher senior population, whereas it may be easier in another community. This sort of reflects how the community might react to what's in their library.
Some things in the collection come directly via patron personal requests. Since the library is funded by patron taxes, that makes sense. Yet the library still has a responsibility to provide variety of information, so there are things we purchase that may not be requested, because it should be available. This is where librarians make judgement calls, and that's going to depend on the librarian.
And of course all of this depends on your budget and space (do you have room for X or Y? can you afford it? how much?), both of which are directly related to your community's budget and how much they pay towards taxes. Our collection is big and we have a big library because we have a rich community and they pay a lot in taxes! Many neighboring libraries have had to shut down databases or collections that we still run because they can not fund it based on what their community gives them.
My salary is higher than someone of my same position in another community because the community I work for is richer.
Other kinds of libraries (special, medical, school) of course work differently, and some public libraries might work differently outside of Michigan. I don't know. :)
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Date: 2007-09-26 01:57 pm (UTC)So in your area, what constitutes a 'community'? Are you talking about branch libraries or library systems, or is it a different concept altogether? I noticed people on the LMB list talking about county libraries - is that the kind of thing you mean?
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Date: 2007-09-26 03:54 pm (UTC)We also are on a system for interloan in the state.
Whether or not you can (or will) contract with said systems is often up to the board. But most local libraries are on some kind of system.
There are county libraries too. My county library is a law library w/ a special collection that covers mostly the history of the county. You would be hard pressed to find a bestseller there. It's next door to the county courts.
Then there are state libraries, funded mostly by state, and then there are district libraries (which work nearly independently from their city).
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Date: 2007-09-26 04:03 pm (UTC)Which I suppose is more or less true here, though I really haven't looked closely at the way the OPL is set up, and I should. I bet there's information on their web pages, which I look at daily - but not for that kind of information, it's to look for books and (often) renew the ones I have already.
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Date: 2007-09-26 07:48 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-09-26 08:37 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-09-23 06:49 pm (UTC)I have the lovely picture-book of Gislebertus (Gilbert) of Autun, which I used as a student on the Pilgrims, Patrons & Artists Junior Honours course which Lorna Walker taught. I have a Gaston Phébus picture book as a birthday prezzie from
Did you see my post re: the Barral i Altet Romanesque architecture book on
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Date: 2007-09-24 02:54 pm (UTC)I love Romanesque architecture - but I guess that comes as no surprise?