Library Blogs

Showing 1 - 10 of 11 items
Results for Date: December 2014
Image of Eve picking an apple from a Jell-O advertisement
  • Jacqueline L Jacobson
Early 20th century advertising materials for Jell-O contain striking representations of age, race, class, gender, nationality, regionality, and other vectors of identity; whether self-defined or other-imposed. In January, we’ll unveil a digital exhibit, guest curated by Dr. Nicole Tarulevicz, on depictions of the exotic in early 20th century Jell-O advertising. There will be an exhibit opening and reception, with a talk by Dr. Tarulevicz, January 12th, 4:30-6pm, in the Hatcher Gallery
Cover of Stitches: a memoir by David Small
  • Emily Anne Hamstra
The Browsing Collection is the library's leisure reading collection. Check out the Browsing Collection's top 10 books of the fall semester.
Angel watermark in Isl. Ms. 647
  • Evyn Kropf
This Wednesday's watermarks feature: angel motifs in one of the papers of a 16th century Turkish manuscript from the Islamic Manuscripts Collection.
  • Kat Hagedorn
Relevance is a complex concept which reflects aspects of a query, a document, and the user as well as contextual factors. Relevance involves many factors such as the user's preferences, task, stage in their information-seeking, domain knowledge, intent, and the context of a particular search. This post is the third in a series by Tom Burton-West, one of the HathiTrust developers, who has been working on practical relevance ranking for all the volumes in HathiTrust for a number of years.
Photo of Josephy McElory.
  • Ian Demsky
Joseph McElroy may be the best postmodern writer you've never heard of. And the U-M Library has many of his patient, ponderous books.
Photo of chess board.
  • Ian Demsky
The U-M Library has some great chess books for beginners and enthusiasts.
Vicious book cover
  • Emily Anne Hamstra
An undergraduate science experiment gone wrong turns two roommates into enemies in this fast-paced fantasy novel.
Five seventeenth-century miniature books with texts by Jeremias Drexel (1581-1638)
  • Pablo Alvarez
We may sound playful by making a skeleton pop out from a book, but for centuries images like this one, as found in the printed page, were a serious warning of the imminence of death. For instance, these frightening illustrations were common in the published works of the seventeenth-century Jesuit preacher Jeremias Drexel.
Honeybee on honeycomb
  • Margaret B Kelly
Datamart was designed to be an option for Library staff to get reports of Aleph catalog data in an easy, self-serve way. But how much are we really using it?
Samurai Warriors 4 box art
  • Val Waldron
Here is our listed of most frequently played games in the CVGA during the month of November. FIFA dominates the list once again, with Call of Duty and Mario Kart both making a dual presence on the list. The XBOX One is getting ever more popular, mostly amongst the sports and first-person shooter crowd.