Thursday, October 07, 2021

Rescheduled: National Parks Talks Series: Craters of the Moon National Monument (now Nov. 16)


The presentation scheduled for tonight at 4:45pm has been rescheduled until November 16.  We apologize for the need to make this change, and we hope you can join us on the new date.  

We will move the National Parks Talks Series session on Crater Lake (originally scheduled for November 16) into our schedule for the Spring semester.

The new date/time and the Zoom link is below:

Craters of the Moon National Monument

Tuesday, November 16

4:45-6:15 p.m.

Gardner-Harvey Library SPACE (GRD 014) and on Zoom at https://miamioh.zoom.us/j/82551718301?pwd=WDNyRDdsUjJCRm9LMTVwSUpqcjhYZz09

Tammie L. Gerke, Associate Teaching Professor in Geology at Miami University will share the geology and other interesting information about each national park, monument, or preserve. Get your questions answered and participate in a lively discussion on these national treasures.

Add this event to your Google Calendar!


"Craters of the Moon National Monument, ID" by Mark Kaletka is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0








Friday, October 01, 2021

New books (and more) added to the Gardner-Harvey Library in September!

 

We are adding many new items to the collection each month, and making sure that you can see them on display! Take a look at our New Books shelves or skim down our new materials list of items we added to the collection in September! We added 223 books, e-books, DVDs, and other items during that time, thanks to your selections and suggestions. The list can be sorted by call number, area of our collection, or by title. There is definitely something here for everyone!


Here are ten titles from the list, to give you an idea of what we've been buying: 

  • Ghosts and haunts of the Civil War : authentic accounts of the strange and unexplained / Christopher K. Coleman
  • On compromise : art, politics, and the fate of an American ideal / Rachel Greenwald Smith
  • Among the mosques : a journey across Muslim Britain / Ed Husain
  • Subpar parks : America's most extraordinary national parks & their least impressed visitors / Amber Share
  • Travels with George : in search of Washington and his legacy / Nathaniel Philbrick
  • The three box solution : a strategy for leading innovation / Vijay Govindarajan
  • Panics and persecutions : 20 tales of excommunication in the digital age / edited by Claire Lehmann, Colin Wright, Jamie Palmer, Jonathan Kay, Toby Young
  • The right to sex : feminism in the twenty-first century / Amia Srinivasan
  • A place so deep inside America it can't be seen : poems / Kari Gunter-Seymour
  • AI 2041 : ten visions for our future / by Kai-Fu Lee and Chen Qiufan
This tag will show you all of the prior lists of new materials, in reverse chronological order. We are eager to hear from you about individual items you would like us to buy, or types of items we should be on the look out for, or general subject areas we should build up in the collection.

If you have a suggestion of something to order, please use our "Tell GHL to Buy It" form, email John Burke (burkejj@miamioh.edu), or drop by the library with your request. And pass your general suggestions or comments about the collection to us in those same ways. 

Thanks again for keeping our collection vibrant and your information needs met!

Wednesday, September 29, 2021

October's Middletown Book for Discussion: Akin (Oct. 26)

 



The MUM Book Discussion group will next meet on Tuesday, October 26.  Our title is Emma Donoghue's Akin.  Here is a brief summary of this tale of unexpected family discoveries:

"Noah Selvaggio is a retired chemistry professor and widower who is days away from his first visit back to Nice since he was a child, bringing with him a handful of puzzling photos he's discovered from his mother's wartime years. But he receives a call from social services: Noah is the closest available relative of an eleven-year-old great-nephew he's never met, who urgently needs someone to look after him. Noah agrees to take Michael along on his trip. The two come to grasp the risks people in all eras have run for their loved ones, and find they are more akin than they knew. Akin is a funny, heart-wrenching tale of an old man and a boy, born two generations apart, who unpick their painful story and start to write a new one together."  

Here is where you can find the book (note: our delivery service among Ohio libraries is still slow at the moment, but appears to be improving.  Fortunately, the movement of books within the Miami system or within an individual public library's system appears to be moving as fast as normal):
  • There are several copies available through MiamiOhioLINK, and SearchOhio.  
  • Amazon has the paperback, Kindle, and audiobook available, and Bookshop.org has links to purchase the title from independent booksellers.
Our group is always finding interesting titles to share, and we look forward to the new things you'll bring to the table.  On September 28th the members of the group discussed Jane Eyre, and also shared these titles to add to your reading/viewing lists:
  • Anne of Green Gables, Lucy Maud Montgomery
  • Akin, Emma Donoghue
  • A Slow Fire Burning, Paula Hawkins
  • The Fault in our Stars, John Green
  • Marge Piercy's poetry
  • Emily Dickinson's poetry
  • The Ghosts of Eden Park, Karen Abbott
  • One Hundred Years of Solitude, Gabriel Garcia Marquez
  • The Fault in Our Stars, John Green
  • Dune, Frank Herbert
  • Muhammad Ali documentary by Ken Burns
  • Roadrunner: a Film About Anthony Bourdain
We will meet at 12 pm on the 26th both in Room 123 in the Library and in Zoom at 

You may also join by calling +1 253-215-8782‬
Passcode: 893374
Add this event to your Google Calendar!  (which includes the Zoom and calling information)

Please come along to our discussion to share what you've been reading/watching/listening to/experiencing!

If you're looking for something interesting to read, check out our page of past and future reads at http://www.mid.miamioh.edu/library/bookdiscussion.htm


Monday, September 27, 2021

Holograms and Lasers at the TEC Lab Makerspace! (Oct. 6)



Join us on Wednesday, October 6th for our TEC Lab workshop on holograms and lasers! You may stop in any time between 11am and 1pm, or between 4pm and 6pm to learn how to make items.

Check out our TEC Lab and all the equipment available to use. We will have materials and guidance ready for you to make items to take with you.  We'll show a way to record a video and then convert it into a hologram you can project from your phone.  We'll also show how you can engrave an image onto wood, clear plastic, or a coaster.

This workshop is free and open to the public.

The event will be held in the TEC Lab makerspace (Room 125) at the Gardner-Harvey Library on the MIddletown campus.

Tuesday, September 14, 2021

National Parks Talks Series: Valles Caldera National Preserve

 


Valles Caldera National Preserve

Tuesday, September 21

4:45-6:15 p.m.

Gardner-Harvey Library SPACE (GRD 014) and on Zoom at https://miamioh.zoom.us/j/81368711757?pwd=K2MwMnVHMW41anBqYXo5VFBzQVpMZz09

Tammie L. Gerke, Associate Teaching Professor in Geology at Miami University will share the geology and other interesting information about each national park, monument, or preserve. Get your questions answered and participate in a lively discussion on these national treasures. Light refreshments will be provided.

Add this event to your Google Calendar!


"East Fork of the Jemez River -- Valles Caldera National Preserve (NM) July 2013" by Ron Cogswell is licensed under CC BY 2.0

Tuesday, September 07, 2021

September 11, 2001: The Day That Changed the World poster exhibit at Gardner-Harvey Library


The Gardner-Harvey Library staff is excited to announce our participation in "September 11, 2001: The Day That Changed the World", a downloadable educational exhibition that presents the history of 9/11, its origins, and its ongoing implications through the personal stories of those who witnessed and survived the attacks. Told across 14 posters, this exhibition includes archival photographs and images of artifacts from the 9/11 Memorial & Museum’s permanent collection. It explores the consequences of terrorism on individual lives and communities at the local, national, and international levels, and encourages critical thinking about the legacies of 9/11.

The posters and some 9/11 related books from the library collection are on display on the main floor of the library.  We also have a whiteboard in place for participants to share how they will remember 9/11.  They are available for viewing at any time the library is open.  The exhibition will last through the end of September.

The poster exhibition was developed by the 9/11 Memorial & Museum and has been made possible in part by the National Endowment for the Humanities: Democracy Demands Wisdom. Any views, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this exhibition do not necessarily represent those of the National Endowment for the Humanities.

For questions or more information on this Exhibition, please visit the 9/11 Memorial & Museum website or contact them at: press@911memorial.org

Thursday, September 02, 2021

New books (and more) added to the Gardner-Harvey Library in August!

We are adding many new items to the collection each month, and making sure that you can see them on display! Take a look at our New Books shelves or skim down our new materials list of items we added to the collection in August! We added 151 books, e-books, DVDs, and other items during that time, thanks to your selections and suggestions. The list can be sorted by call number, area of our collection, or by title. There is definitely something here for everyone!


Here are ten titles from the list, to give you an idea of what we've been buying: 

  • Get real : 49 challenges confronting higher education / William G. Tierney
  • The art of the national parks / by Fifty-Nine Parks
  • The sacred band : three hundred Theban lovers fighting to save Greek freedom / James Romm
  • Pornography and public health / by Emily F. Rothman
  • Death of a traveller : a counter investigation / Didier Fassin
  • I live a life like yours : a memoir / Jan Grue
  • The woman from Uruguay / Pedro Mairal
  • Brotherhood / Mohamed Mbougar Sarr
  • Playlist for the Apocalypse : poems / Rita Dove
  • God, human, animal, machine : technology, metaphor, and the search for meaning / Meghan O'Gieblyn
This tag will show you all of the prior lists of new materials, in reverse chronological order. We are eager to hear from you about individual items you would like us to buy, or types of items we should be on the look out for, or general subject areas we should build up in the collection.

If you have a suggestion of something to order, please use our "Tell GHL to Buy It" form, email John Burke (burkejj@miamioh.edu), or drop by the library with your request. And pass your general suggestions or comments about the collection to us in those same ways. 

Thanks again for keeping our collection vibrant and your information needs met!

Wednesday, September 01, 2021

September's Middletown Book for Discussion: Jane Eyre (Sept. 28)

 


The MUM Book Discussion group will next meet on Tuesday, September 28.  Our title is Charlotte Bronte's classic Jane Eyre.  Here is a brief summary of this mid-19th century novel, published by Bronte under the pen name "Currer Bell":

"The story of a plain and penniless orphan who accepts a job as governess at Thornfield Hall and soon finds herself in love with her melancholy employer, Mr. Edward Rochester, a man with a terrible secret."  

Here is where you can find the book (note: our delivery service among Ohio libraries is extremely slow at the moment.  But, the movement of books within the Miami system or within an individual public library's system appears to be moving as fast as normal):
  • There are several copies available through MiamiOhioLINK, and SearchOhio.  
  • Amazon has the paperback, Kindle, and audiobook available, and Bookshop.org has links to purchase the title from independent booksellers.
Our group is always finding interesting titles to share, and we look forward to the new things you'll bring to the table.  On August 31st the members of the group discussed The Paris Library, and also shared these titles to add to your reading/viewing lists:
  • The Midnight Library, Matt Haig
  • One Hundred Years of Solitude, Gabriel Garcia Marquez
  • Where the Crawdads Sing, Delia Owens
  • The Fault in our Stars, John Green
  • The Dictionary of Lost Words, Pip Williams 
  • Fast Girls, Elise Hooper
  • The Lost Apothecary, Sarah Penner
  • Small Great Things, Jodi Picoult
  • Women in Sunlight, Frances Mayes
  • Mountain Time, Ivan Doig
  • The Art of Racing in the Rain, Garth Stein
  • Old in Art School, Nell Painter
  • Beneficence, Meredith Hall
  • A Very Punchable Face, Colin Jost
  • The Wide Sargasso Sea, Jean Rhys
We will meet at 12 pm on the 28th both in Room 123 in the Library and in Zoom at 

You may also join by calling +1 253-215-8782‬
Passcode: 893374
Add this event to your Google Calendar!  (which includes the Zoom and calling information)

Please come along to our discussion to share what you've been reading/watching/listening to/experiencing!

If you're looking for something interesting to read, check out our page of past and future reads at http://www.mid.miamioh.edu/library/bookdiscussion.htm





Monday, August 30, 2021

Delays in delivery of OhioLINK materials


Due to pandemic-induced shortages of delivery employees and supplies, many requested OhioLINK items are experiencing significant delays.

OhioLINK believes that this problem will persist into the fall semester, although they are seeing a pattern of gradual improvements. More info here.

For the time being, please expect longer-than-usual delivery times for items, and consider a plan B in case not all items arrive as soon as needed. Library staff are unable to track or estimate individual delivery times for individual items. Regionals Libraries staff are happy to help you locate alternative access or additional materials wherever possible.


Friday, August 27, 2021

Gardner-Harvey Library Newsletter: See what is happening in the library this Fall


Something old, something new, things that can always be borrowed, and things that have been updated to better suit your research needs, all can be found in our Fall newsletter. 



TEC Lab Mini-Maker Faire @ Gardner-Harvey Library (Sept. 1)

 



Join us on Wednesday, September 1st for our Mini Maker Faire! The Faire is open for you to stop in any time between 11am and 1pm, or between 4pm and 6pm.

Stop in to check out our TEC Lab and all the equipment available to use. We will have a variety of stations set up so you can make items to take with you. 

Have you wanted to try sublimation? Design your own tote with sublimation. Are you interested in 3D printing? Watch our printers in action and try your hand with a 3D pen. Did you know the library has a laser engraving machine? Create a drink coaster with your name engraved. 

Drop by during a session to try these maker projects and others. Attendees will have the opportunity to enter raffles and win their own maker supplies!

Friday, August 06, 2021

How was the Gardner-Harvey Library used in 2020/21?

 




Here are the full annual statistics from fiscal year 2021 (the 2020/21 academic year) for several of the Gardner-Harvey Library's (GHL) services. I hope you will find them useful to see how people use the library.

This was, of course, yet another crazy year, following the start of the COVID-19 pandemic during the
2019/20 academic year.  As we changed fiscal years at the end of June 2020, the library remained closed to the public through July and did not reopen until August 17 when Fall 2020 classes began.  We lost 34 scheduled days in the building (about 14% of our total open days for the year).  That did impact many of our library services, though during that time we managed to continue our services online alongside our Hamilton campus colleagues and in cooperation with our colleagues in Oxford.  We are grateful for everyone's patience with us as we continued to work from home through the middle of August and then work split schedules on site and from home for the rest of the academic year.  

These statistics reflect what happened between July 1, 2020 to June 30, 2021. Some stats we keep locally, others we pull from university-wide or OhioLINK-wide systems, and some are provided by database vendors.

Read on for full details on these and other activities.


On Average

Taking the statistics below and guesstimating a total Middletown community of 2000 students, faculty and staff members (and including community patrons), here's what can be said about the average person on campus. She:


- checks out one item from the library each year (reserves and local/MU/OhioLINK collection items)
- visits the library 4 times per year
- accesses the library web site nearly 7 times per year.
- participates in a library instruction session or an embedded librarian course once every two years (if she is a student).

Now on to the detailed analysis!


Both a Borrower and a Lender Be

- GHL patrons checked out 848 books and DVDs from us (509 from our local collection, 197 ordered from other MU libraries, and 142 items ordered from OhioLINK - that means that 40% of the items used by campus patrons came from libraries beyond GHL). That is a 45% decrease in total borrowing over 2019-2020.

- The GHL collection registered 2,557 checkouts (that's the 509 items checked out by Middletown patrons above, plus 1,437 items sent to OhioLINK users, and 611 sent to other MU libraries - that means that 80% of the uses of our materials came from libraries beyond GHL). That is a 19% decrease in total lending over 2019-2020. 

- GHL patrons checked out 661 reserve items from us (this includes faculty-placed course reserves, textbooks on reserve, study rooms, laptops, iPads, and other equipment). That is a 74% decrease from 2019-2020. Textbooks on reserve checkouts totaled 33 in 2020-21, a decrease of 93% from 2019-20.  The primary reason for both the reserves and the textbooks decreases was that courses on the Middletown campus were largely online for all of the 2020/21 academic year, and we were not checking out print reserves for much of year while we were practicing book quarantining (holding used materials for 3-5 days between uses to allow the COVID-19 virus to die off).  University Libraries did institute the LOLA: Limited Online Library Access service in Fall 2020 to allow textbooks and other printed materials to be scanned and used by individuals. GHL staff scanned several of our most commonly used textbooks for use in the service.

- In terms of building up our collection, Middletown faculty, staff, and students ordered 1512 items to add to our collection this year. That is a 12% decrease from 2019-2020.  

- We registered a total of 3,218 checkouts of items in our collection (reserves and circulating materials). The circulating items at GHL number 31,958, so each item in the collection circulated 0.10 times this year (all items in our library circulate). 


The Quest for Information

-

40 people visit our web site every day. That's a total of 14,510 visits for the year, by 3,947 unique individuals. That's a 8% increase in visits and a 1% increase in unique visitors from 2019-20.

- Gardner-Harvey Librarians also create and maintain subject guides to our databases and other
information sources called LibGuides.  In 2020-21, we were responsible for 124 LibGuides, either individually or in cooperation with our colleagues at the Rentschler Library in Hamilton or University Libraries in Oxford.  Those guides received a total of 26,791 visits during the year, for an average of 216 visits per guide.


Helping You Find What You Need

- In synchronous Zoom, Meet, and WebEx sessions, we gave library instruction presentations in 11 classes this year, reaching 218 students (a decrease of 72% from 2019-2020). 

- Our Embedded Librarian program reached students from 26 course sections in their Canvas course sites during the academic year (that is a 33% decrease from 2019-2020). We helped over 549 students with their information needs through the program.


A Place for Work, Study, and Remove from the World

-

GHL will be open 57 hours per week for Fall 2021, but we operated on reduced hours during Fall 2020, Spring 2021, and Summer 2021 (between 36 and 40 hours per week).

- We averaged 35 visitors per day, for a total of 8,676 visits this year. This reflects a 75% decrease from 2019-2020. Our best attended day was May 26, 2021, with 83 visitors. We had 37 days with 50 or more visitors (15% of our open days)

- In normal times, we regularly schedule the library learning lab (GRD 111) for single class sessions.
We also schedule Study Room 110 for class sessions.

- With reduced capacity for social distancing and the need to use two of our rooms for furniture storage and book quarantining, we had seven study rooms checked out 389 times this year by students, faculty, and staff members. That represents a 70% decrease from 2019-20.  

- We held several events on Zoom this year since we were unable to meet in person.  We had a total of 18 events:  11 MUM Book Discussion Group meetings, 6 National Parks geology video/lectures by Dr. Tammie Gerke, and our Human Library event.  Total attendance for Fall and Spring semesters was 128, for an average of 7 people per event.  

- We provided 2 TEC Lab workshops in Fall 2020 with video instructions and take home kits.  We also hosted sessions for the STEAM Studio program in Summer 2021.  


What don't we know about how the library is used?

- One key part missing from these figures is off-campus use of library resources: all off-campus use is tallied as MU-wide use, so we do not know how many Middletown patrons are using databases from home (we estimate a lot of you are).

- We don't have campus-specific stats for all database searches - we're missing uses of Nexis Uni, the EBSCO databases, and other databases that are tracked on a whole-university level.

- We hope you'll continue to let us know what you think about the library, what you need from us, and what materials we should order for the collection.


Thanks to everyone for making the library and its resources a vital part of your academic lives! We really appreciate the opportunity to meet your needs in the library and remotely during this very unusual year, and we look forward to a very different year in 2021/22).

The Gardner-Harvey Library Staff

Friday, July 30, 2021

New books (and more) added to the Gardner-Harvey Library in July!

 

We are adding many new items to the collection each month, and making sure that you can see them on display! Take a look at our New Books shelves or skim down our new materials list of items we added to the collection in July! We added 151 books, e-books, DVDs, and other items during that time, thanks to your selections and suggestions. The list can be sorted by call number, area of our collection, or by title. There is definitely something here for everyone!


Here are ten titles from the list, to give you an idea of what we've been buying: 

  • Better to have gone : love, death, and the quest for utopia in Auroville / Akash Kapur
  • The Appalachian Trail : a biography / Philip D'Anieri
  • Creating a culture of innovation : design an optimal environment to create and execute new ideas / Alexandra Deschamps-Sonsino
  • An ugly truth : inside Facebook's battle for domination / Sheera Frenkel and Cecilia Kang
  • Female monarchs and merchant queens in Africa / Nwando Achebe
  • The natural mother of the child : a memoir of nonbinary parenthood / Krys Malcolm Belc
  • The Holly : five bullets, one gun, and the struggle to save an American neighborhood / Julian Rubinstein
  • Razorblade tears / S. A. Cosby
  • Cultish : the language of fanaticism / Amanda Montell
  • Intimacies / Katie Kitamura
This tag will show you all of the prior lists of new materials, in reverse chronological order. We are eager to hear from you about individual items you would like us to buy, or types of items we should be on the look out for, or general subject areas we should build up in the collection.

If you have a suggestion of something to order, please use our "Tell GHL to Buy It" form, email Amy Carmichael (carmicae@miamioh.edu), or drop by the library with your request. And pass your general suggestions or comments about the collection to us in those same ways. 

Thanks again for keeping our collection vibrant and your information needs met!

Thursday, July 29, 2021

August's Middletown Book for Discussion: The Paris Library



The MUM Book Discussion group will next meet on Tuesday, August 31.  Our title is Janet Charles' The Paris Library.  Here is a brief summary of this tale of a library worker in Paris at the advent of World War II:


"Paris, 1939. Young and ambitious Odile Souchet has it all: Paul, her handsome police officer beau; Margaret, her best friend from England; her adored twin brother Remy; and a dream job at the American Library in Paris, working alongside the library's legendary director, Dorothy Reeder. But when World War II breaks out, Odile stands to lose everything she holds dear - including her beloved library. After the invasion, as the Nazis declare a war on words and darkness falls over the City of Light, Odile and her fellow librarians join the Resistance with the best weapons they have: books. "  

Here is where you can find the book:
  • There are several copies available through OhioLINK, and SearchOhio.  
  • Amazon has the paperback, Kindle, and audiobook available, and Bookshop.org has links to purchase the title from independent booksellers.
Our group is always finding interesting titles to share, and we look forward to the new things you'll bring to the table.  On July 27th, the members of the group discussed Outline, and also shared these titles to add to your reading/viewing lists:
  • The Paris Architect, Charles Belfoure
  • The Eagle Unbowed: Poland and the Poles in the Second World War, Halik Kochanski
  • The Music of Bees, Eileen Garvin
  • The Paris Library, Janet Charles
  • The Big Finish, Brooke Fossey
  • The Book of Longings, Sue Monk Kidd
  • Tuscan Child, Rhys Bowen
  • The Opposite of Fate, Alison McGhee
  • America for Beginners, Leah Franqui
  • Strange Birds, Celia Perez
  • A Mosaic of Wings, Kimberly Duffy
  • A Pale View of Hills, Kazuo Ishiguro
  • The Souvenir Museum, Elizabeth McCracken
  • Analogia, George Dyson
  • Caste, Isabel Wilkerson
  • Memorial, Bryan Washington
  • Behold the Dreamers, Imbolo Mbue
We will meet at 12 pm on the 31st both in Room 123 in the Library and in Zoom at 

You may also join by calling +1 253-215-8782‬
Passcode: 893374
Add this event to your Google Calendar!  (which includes the Zoom and calling information)

Please come along to our discussion to share what you've been reading/watching/listening to/experiencing!

If you're looking for something interesting to read, check out our page of past and future reads at http://www.mid.miamioh.edu/library/bookdiscussion.htm



"La caverne aux livres" by gadl is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0

Sunday, July 04, 2021

July's Middletown Book for Discussion: Outline

 


The MUM Book Discussion group will next meet on Tuesday, July 27.  Our title is Rachel Cusk's Outline.  Here is a brief summary of this tale of a writer on a short-term trip to Greece:

"Outline is a novel in ten conversations. Spare and lucid, it follows a novelist teaching a course in creative writing over an oppressively hot summer in Athens. She leads her students in storytelling exercises. She meets other visiting writers for dinner. She goes swimming in the Ionian Sea with her neighbor from the plane. The people she encounters speak volubly about themselves: their fantasies, anxieties, pet theories, regrets, and longings. And through these disclosures, a portrait of the narrator is drawn by contrast, a portrait of a woman learning to face a great loss."

Here is where you can find the book:
  • There are several copies available through Miami, OhioLINK, and SearchOhio.  
  • Amazon has the paperback, Kindle, and audiobook available, and Bookshop.org has links to purchase the title from independent booksellers.
Our group is always finding interesting titles to share, and we look forward to the new things you'll bring to the table.  On June 29th, the members of the group had a spirited discussion of The Widow's War, and also shared these titles to add to your reading/viewing lists:
  • John Grisham – Sooley
  • TaraShea Nesbit – Beheld
  • Kristin Hannah – The Four Winds
  • Ruth Hogan – The Keeper of Lost things
  • Robin Wall Kimmerer  – Braiding Sweetgrass
  • Hope Jahren – Lab Girl
  • Daphne du Maurier – Rebecca
  • R.A. Moss – King Robin
  • Camille DeAngelis – Bones and All
  • Susan Orlean - The Library Book
  • Maggie O’Farrell – I Am, I Am, I Am / Hamnet
  • Joan Didion - The Year of Magical Thinking
  • Patrick Radden Keefe - Say Nothing
  • Clare Pooley - The Authenticity Project
  • Madhuri Vija - The Far Field
  • Kristina McMorris - Sold on a Monday
  • Ernest Hemingway – A Movable Feast
  • Ayana Mathis - The Twelve Tribes of Hattie
  • Abbi Waxman - The Bookish Life of Nina Hill
  • Anne Tyler - Spool of Blue Thread
  • Matt Haig – The Midnight Library

We will meet at 12 pm on the 27th both in Room 124 in the Library and in Zoom at 

You may also join by calling +1 253-215-8782‬
Passcode: 893374
Add this event to your Google Calendar!  (which includes the Zoom and calling information)

Please come along to our discussion to share what you've been reading/watching/listening to/experiencing!

If you're looking for something interesting to read, check out our page of past and future reads at http://www.mid.miamioh.edu/library/bookdiscussion.htm

John

"Athens" by Chris Ruggles is licensed under CC BY-NC 2.0


Friday, July 02, 2021

New Books (and more) added to the Gardner-Harvey Library in June!


We are adding many new items to the collection each month, and making sure that you can see them on display! Take a look at our New Books shelves or skim down our new materials list of items we added to the collection in June! We added 62 books, e-books, DVDs, and other items during that time, thanks to your selections and suggestions. The list can be sorted by call number, area of our collection, or by title. There is definitely something here for everyone!

Here are ten titles from the list, to give you an idea of what we've been buying: 

  • Americanon : an unexpected U.S. history in thirteen bestselling books / Jess McHugh
  • The day the world stops shopping : how ending consumerism saves the environment and ourselves / J.B. MacKinnon
  • Gentelligence : the revolutionary approach to leading an intergenerational workforce / Megan Gerhardt, Josephine Nachemson-Ekwall, and Brandon Fogel
  • You're invited : the art and science of cultivating influence / Jon Levy
  • Policing Black bodies : how Black lives are surveilled and how to work for change / Angela J. Hattery and Earl Smith
  • Everyone knows your mother is a witch / Rivka Galchen
  • Shape : the hidden geometry of information, biology, strategy, democracy, and everything else / Jordan Ellenberg
  • Touring the climate crisis : saving the earth around the world / Osseily Hanna
  • The plague year : America in the time of COVID / Lawrence Wright
  • Finding the mother tree : discovering the wisdom of the forest / Suzanne Simard
This tag will show you all of the prior lists of new materials, in reverse chronological order. We are eager to hear from you about individual items you would like us to buy, or types of items we should be on the look out for, or general subject areas we should build up in the collection.

We had a very successful 2020-21 academic year, adding 1512 items to our collection.  Thank you for all of your suggestions and requests!  We've started our new fiscal year on July 1, and we're ready for new requests for the 2021-2022 academic year.

If you have a suggestion of something to order, please use our "Tell GHL to Buy It" form, email Amy Carmichael (carmicae@miamioh.edu), or drop by the library with your request. And pass your general suggestions or comments about the collection to us in those same ways. 

Thanks again for keeping our collection vibrant and your information needs met!