Friday, January 25, 2008

For Librarians Only

I'm sure by now you have seen my picture on this blog. (I've also added a few to my flickr site.) Slowly but surely, merely by reading instructions online, I continue to grow into both my profession and the world as it currently is and is becoming. (The implications are a bit disconcerting to someone in mid-life crisis like myself. Forced by circumstances to become hep, mod, groovy, and up-to-date, face-to-face contact is becoming so pre-21st century. Hey, the times they are a-changin', man. Location and proximity don't mean a thing anymore. Customs, cultures, traditions and distinctions of locale are doomed to become mere anthropological curiosities. Humans are no longer evolving in the direction of all that lovey-dovey, 60s-70s, human-rights, United Nations nonsense. We're evolving into machines. Personalism is dead, man! Oh, goody.) Let's just say I stopped by the site of my old library school http://www.si.umich.edu/ and discovered that the curriculum, except for one course, is of a completely different nature than when I was in school a mere twenty years ago. (What will another twenty years bring?) How will we ever keep up?

Fortunately, there is a solution! Library Success: A Best-Practices wiki. http://www.libsuccess.org/index.php?title=Main_Page Need to know the latest in collection development? What librarians need to know about Web 2.0, Library 2.0, all the other 2.0s? The latest in reader's advisory? How to market your library (which is more important than ever in today's economy)? Where to get training? How to train staff? Where to find jobs? What the latest trends are? How to be a 21st century librarian overall? What they're teaching in library schools these days? Look no further. Your one-stop shopping site is here, and boy am I glad I found it! Now we can all stay on top of the trends, no matter how old we are! (Now that, on top of being cool, is encouraging!)

Monday, January 14, 2008

A woman walks into a library...

...and she sees this really cool chart on the history room door. She comes to the desk and asks if she can have a copy of it. You notice that it is stuck on the door pretty good, and that you might not get it off without tearing it. You have no idea where it came from other than the fact that Mike found it somewhere in the building one day and decided it would do more good hanging up where someone could see it than hidden away in the back room. The poster has no statement of responsibility, address, or copyright statement of any sort anywhere. You just say "Nope," Right? Fortunately, this true story ended happily. A little conversation can go a long way in a reference interview. After chatting for a moment or two, she revealed that she only thought it would be nice to have the chart because it provided some good information on a line in her husband's background. I suggested that in that case she might be interested in looking through The Mammoth Book of British Kings & Queens. R 941.0099 MAM



There were lots of charts in that book that she could copy. It turned out to be exactly the kind of information she was looking for and more.



Every librarian should be familiar with it. It truly is, as its introduction claims, "the most complete record of the kings and queens of Britain ever compiled." Almost a thousand rulers are covered, covering not only England, Scotland and Wales, but also the earlier kingdoms that made up those areas in the early middle ages before they were conquered and consolidated. There are lists of rulers for Northern and Southern Powys in what is now Wales, in addition to Deheubarth, Gwynedd, Seisyllwg, Dyfed and Demetia. England grew out of Mercia, East Angliam, Essex, Kent, Wessex, Kernow (Cornwall), Dumnonia, and other small kingdoms. Scotland came out of Alba, Strathclyde, Caledonia, Fortriu, etc. And prior to the early middle ages the island was part of the Roman Empire for a few hundred years. Prior to that there were two dozen kingdoms on the island. All of the rulers of all of those kingdoms, some historical and some legendary or semi-legendary, are covered in this volume. And all of them are tied together in 57 genealogical charts. But that's not all. The legendary rulers in Geoffrey of Monmouth's History of the Kings of Britain (which we also own) are listed here as well, including the line of King Arthur. (Just who was King Arthur, anyway? Check this book for some in-depth speculation.) Also listed are the rulers of France, Brittany, Aquitaine, Anjou, Normandy, Dublin, Denmark, Norway, Hanover, and the High Kings of Ireland, all of whom had connections, genealogical and otherwise, with the British royal family. So dig in. If you ever get a similar question, you will now be aware of the perfect gateway to further information.

Librarians are now officially 'COOL'

Hey, listen up all you happy geeks out there in Libraryland. We are now officially cool. Yep, you read that correctly. According to The Grand Rapids Press, "As technology goes more and more mainstream, and librarians are being relied upon more and more to help navigate the crush of available information, the profession is rising on the cool-ometer."

They wouldn't print it if it wasn't true!