Showing posts with label books and reading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books and reading. Show all posts
Monday, December 1, 2008
I am a bad blogger!!
I don't really have any excuse for not blogging--I'm on line regularly! I will admit that I've been reading and getting ready for a meeting (actually 3 day long meetings!) in January to decide on the titles for the 2008 Notable Books List (American Library Association). It has been a wonderful experience, although so near to my planned retirement that I'm only able to be on it for one year.
Saturday, April 5, 2008
Libraries and Independent Publishing
On 3/20/08 at Melville House in New York there was a panel discussion held on The Future of Independent Publishing
The panel was shown on C-SPAN during BookTV this weekend (it will be shown again on Sunday at 11:15 AM).
During the Program Andre Schiffrin of Melville Books, talks to Jacob Stevens of Verso Books and Anthony Arnove of Haymarket Books about publishing contemporary political books and the future of independent publishing in general. The talk was hosted by Melville House in Brooklyn, NY.
Andre Schiffrin in particular commented on the failure of libraries (particularly academic libraries) to support the alternative/diverse/etc. publishing of books. This is happening at the same time that libraries are patting ourselves on the back that we are better serving the public (at any kind of library) by rapidly eliminating individual selection by subject specialists (part of the Library of Congress's recent plan of action for the future); buying materials in lots electronically and then blocking print purchase of the same items; etc.
Are these conflicting patterns really the way for libraries to fulfill our responsibility to not only preserve the past; serve the present and prepare for the future? What are we going to preserve if we ignore the present?
The panel was shown on C-SPAN during BookTV this weekend (it will be shown again on Sunday at 11:15 AM).
During the Program Andre Schiffrin of Melville Books, talks to Jacob Stevens of Verso Books and Anthony Arnove of Haymarket Books about publishing contemporary political books and the future of independent publishing in general. The talk was hosted by Melville House in Brooklyn, NY.
Andre Schiffrin in particular commented on the failure of libraries (particularly academic libraries) to support the alternative/diverse/etc. publishing of books. This is happening at the same time that libraries are patting ourselves on the back that we are better serving the public (at any kind of library) by rapidly eliminating individual selection by subject specialists (part of the Library of Congress's recent plan of action for the future); buying materials in lots electronically and then blocking print purchase of the same items; etc.
Are these conflicting patterns really the way for libraries to fulfill our responsibility to not only preserve the past; serve the present and prepare for the future? What are we going to preserve if we ignore the present?
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