Library Blogs

Showing 11 - 17 of 17 items
Results for Date: January 2015
Cover of O Juliet by Robin Maxwell
  • Vicki J Kondelik
O Juliet by Robin Maxwell is a great retelling of the Romeo and Juliet story—with a twist.
  • Val Waldron
Here is our list of most popular games in the archive during the month of December. The Xbox One has clearly become more popular with select titles, and we even have a soccer game from 2012 on the list. Probably because we don't have a more recent version of PES for PlayStation 3 in our collection at present. And fun fact: people seem to be requesting certain years of PES over others (2013 or 2015, not 2014), even at the expense of a more recent version. What was it about 2014 that kept people away, I wonder?
Front cover of Le Calcul Amusant. La table de Pythagore servie aux petits enfants. Paris: Librairie Hachette et Cie. Boulevard Saint-Germain, 79, ca. 1862
  • Pablo Alvarez
We are excited to report about a recent acquisition for our fast growing collection of Children's Literature. It is the first edition of Le calcul amusant (Paris, ca. 1862), a truly entertaining book designed to teach French kids multiplication through colored illustrations and rhyming couplets.
Book cover: The End of Absence
  • Pam MacKintosh
Michael Harris has written a well-researched but highly readable book that explores the differences in life before and after the Internet.
Three women sit on a carpet around a low table sharing Turkish coffee and pastries, The women form a circle, which is visually mirrored by the Chocolate Walnut Jell-O dessert below them
  • Jacqueline L Jacobson
Talk and reception to celebrate the upcoming online exhibit "Jell-O: America’s Most Famous Dessert At Home Everywhere." Dr. Nicole Tarulevicz of the School of Humanities at the University of Tasmania speaks at 5:00 p.m. Using materials drawn from the culinary ephemera holdings of the Janice Bluestein Longone Culinary Archive at U-M Library, the exhibit explores how the Jell-O company’s early 20th century advertising used depictions of the exotic to sell the product to Americans.
Screenshot of the DLPS web presence after the refresh.
  • John Weise
The Digital Library Production Service (DLPS) recently did a thoughtful and comprehensive update of its web presence on the University of Michigan Library website. This post summarizes the process and calls out the value of having a web content strategist in the mix.
Photo of Michael Peterson
  • Ian Demsky
If you're a fan of NPR's radio drama Serial, we think you'll dig The Staircase.