Library Blogs

Showing 1241 - 1250 of 1860 items
  • Val Waldron
This month has been the month of tours, families, and people of all ages coming to check out what the archive has to offer and playing games. As such, we see a lot more Nintendo games on the list than usual, including a Super Nintendo game. Way to go, Mario.
We have one more month of unrestricted Smash, so get your games in before the Fall semester begins!
Cover of Shroud for a Nightingale by P.D. James
  • Vicki J Kondelik
In Shroud for a Nightingale, by the late P.D. James, one of the greatest mystery authors of all time, detective Adam Dalgliesh investigates the murders of two student nurses.
Dustjacket illustrated by a boat on a lake surrounded by trees.
  • Juli McLoone
"The Light Princess" by Victorian writer George MacDonald plays on the many meanings of lightness and weightiness. A parody of Sleeping Beauty that delights in puns and word play, this 19th century literary fairy tale also has a more serious side as a reflection on the role of sorrow and grief in emotional maturity.
Impact/complexity matrix for use in rating requests.
  • Meghan JK Musolff
In the Fall of 2014, the University of Michigan Library IT unit launched a new initiative called the “Front Door process.” The name resulted from our desire to create a centralized space or “Front Door” through which Library colleagues can submit project requests. With an eye towards increasing transparency, LIT developed this new process with three goals in mind: gather IT project requests into a centralized space, provide a space for a simplified IT project queue or workflow, and have both spaces accessible to everyone in the Library.
Lion passant guardant watermark in Isl. Ms. 337 p.12
  • Evyn Kropf
This Wednesday's watermark feature: lion motifs in watermarked papers from the Islamic Manuscripts Collection.
Words Onscreen Cover
  • Pam MacKintosh
Naomi Baron, Professor of Linguistics and Executive Director of the Center for Teaching, Research & Learning at American University in Washington, DC., discusses reading and how it has changed in the age of digital content.
Brewing tanks at the Bergner & Engel Brewing Co., Philadelphia, 1880's
  • Jacqueline L Jacobson
The University of Michigan presents a new online exhibit: The Reflection of Technology in Brewing. This exhibit focuses on the swift changes that the brewing industry underwent from the late eighteenth century to the mid-twentieth century.
Screenshot of University of Michigan Online Exhibits Homepage
  • Nancy Moussa
Omeka is a content management systems (CMS) that facilitates the creation of online exhibits. Traditionally, exhibit creators needed to have web design skills to create a webpage. Using Omeka, the process for creating exhibits websites is simpler, which allows exhibit creators to easily extend the presence of our physical objects.
Cover of The Course of Honour by Lindsey Davis
  • Vicki J Kondelik
Author Lindsey Davis, best known for her Marcus Didius Falco mysteries, tells a compelling love story set in ancient Rome, from a slave's point of view.
Incun. 321 contains a series of treatises printed in the fifteenth century, each of which had been published separately (Special Collections Library).
  • Pablo Alvarez
'Sammelband' is a German term meaning 'anthology', which, in a general sense, bibliographers often employ to describe a bound volume that contains a group of separately published works. Our featured sammelband volume also includes handwritten inscriptions revealing a fascinating provenance story.