"There are children, right now, waiting - wanting to read."

★

JVL

Kiana Khansmith
Today's Document
Claire Keane
Stranger Things
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
Keni

pixel skylines
noise dept.
we're not kids anymore.
Not today Justin
RMH
Misplaced Lens Cap
will byers stan first human second
YOU ARE THE REASON
wallacepolsom
Show & Tell

JBB: An Artblog!
seen from Australia

seen from Türkiye

seen from Malaysia

seen from Germany

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Hungary
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Germany

seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from Poland

seen from Italy

seen from Canada

seen from Mexico
seen from Malaysia
@plumlib-blog
"There are children, right now, waiting - wanting to read."
You can’t read all day
A comic strip by Marksville / deviantART / more library cartoons http://ebks.to/1dpIgBW
For anyone who loves YA, or who needs some help with teen or crossover reader's advisory. Great infographic. :)
Brought to you by Teach.com
Here it is—the coolest poster I have ever owned, or ever will own.
Obviously Scholastic was rockin’ it in the 90s.
The man who does not read has no advantage over the man who cannot read.
Mark Twain (via abookblog)
Book Paintings by Ekaterina Panikanova
The beautiful young woman pictured in this photo is Helen Keller who was born on this day in 1880. The story of her relationship with teacher, Anne Sullivan who helped her gain the ability to communicate was chronicled in the film and play, The Miracle Worker. You can find copies of the film, The Miracle Worker at multiple branches of the NYPL as well as books on Helen Keller’s amazing achievements.
According to our May 2013 survey, 85% of American adults use the internet at least occasionally.
“When writing a novel a writer should create living people; people not characters. A character is a caricature.”
-Ernest Hemingway
A Moveable Feast
The Complete Short Stories
A Farewell to Arms
“Thinking beyond the (summer) list”
Open For Business (From The Archives)
London readers continue to browse through a library, even though it was destroyed by German bombs during WWII.
What a powerful, wonderful image that perfectly illustrates the triumphant human spirit.
“The vast majority of parents with children younger than 18 feel libraries are very important for their kids, leading to higher-than-average use of a wide range of library services, a new national report from the Pew Research Center shows. According to ‘Parents, Children, Libraries, and Reading,’ 94 percent of parents feel libraries are important for their kids, with 79 percent describing libraries as ‘very important.’ This is especially true of parents of young children (those under 6), some 84 percent of whom describe libraries as ‘very important.’” —”Pew Study: Why Parents Love Libraries”
Fresh off the success of her first novel, Swamplandia!, a finalist for last year’s Pulitzer Prize for fiction (and an unwitting participant in the notorious Pulitzer selection process that resulted in no 2012 winner), Karen Russell is back with a quirky, and according to many critics brilliant, collection of short stories. The title piece in Vampires in the Lemon Grove concerns aging blood-suckers who are trying to temper their addiction to bodily fluids by sucking on citrus. But at this Feb. 25 appearance at Politics & Prose, Russell read instead from another story in the collection, “Proving Up.” She also answered a wide range of audience questions.
“Live at Politics & Prose” is a new show from Slate Radio that features some of today’s best writers reading from their new work and answering audience questions at Washington, D.C.’s famous bookstore.
Pick up Karen Russell’s Newest Novel, Vampires in the Lemon Grove by visiting your Library. It’s not in? Click here to see the record and request the copy when it comes in! Don’t forget to pick up Swamplandia! either.
Ad Students Aim to Bring the Library to Commuters with NFC Technology
By Elizabeth Michaelson
New York City’s underground transit system may be the final digital frontier: on the Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA)’s hundreds of miles of subterranean track, Internet access is not available. But a speculative ad campaign has suggested that a Wi-Fi-free digital information exchange on the subway is possible—and could boost library readership.
The one minute “Underground Library” commercial from students at the Miami Ad School promotes an as-yet nonexistent library program which would allow smartphone users to download book extracts from the New York Public Library (NYPL) during their commutes. The ad, which can be viewed online at video-sharing service Vimeo, shows subway passengers scanning an NYPL “smart poster” with their smartphones to access the first 10 pages of a current bestseller—no Wi-Fi access required. The information transfer process, known as Near Field Communications (NFC) technology, uses radio to communicate. “The data is stored in a poster in a tag containing RFID [radio-frequency identification] technology,” explains Miami Ad School student and “Underground Library” art director Keri Tan. “Subway passengers just have to hold their phones close enough to the tag for the data to transfer.” Upon exiting the subway, commuters’ devices would alert them to the location of nearby branch libraries.
The idea for the program began as a class assignment to boost NYPL membership, according to Tan. Featuring NYC’s most recognizable form of mass transportation in their campaign appealed to Tan and her colleagues, since “pretty much all New Yorkers spend so much of their time on the subway.” (NYC subways carry an estimated 1.6 billion passengers annually.) “Max [Pilwat, the ad’s other art director] mentioned that the subway ad space kind of looks like a shelf, and we ran with the idea.” She and Pilwat, with copywriter Ferdi Rodriguez, created the ad.
VIABLE TECHNOLOGY
While the MTA is not displaying any print campaigns featuring NFC technology at the moment, “It’s doable,” confirms Jodi Senese, Chief Marketing Officer at CBS Outdoor, the media company that handles advertising for the MTA. Additionally, “Advertisers are very interested in one-on-one consumer engagement opportunities, especially in venues where’s there’s significant ‘dwell time,’ like transit facilities and malls.” Senese estimates that $40,000 would buy a month-long “decent-sized general showing” in MTA subway cars, and “For $50,000 you could have a month of ads in 260 MTA subway stations,” many of which are underground. For a non-profit like the NYPL, CBS Outdoor might be able to negotiate a discount.
Although the students did not pilot-test their idea, or contact either the NYPL or the MTA, an “Underground Library” program holds promise, in part because an estimated half of all American cell phone users use smartphones, and many major telecommunications corporations—including Samsung, Nexus, Motorola, Nokia and Sony—sell NFC-enabled phones and tablets.
However, the idea would likely need some tweaking before it could be implemented: most libraries already have waiting lists for bestsellers, and would not want to create a further bottleneck by promoting those titles. A more likely target could be “readalikes,” suggesting undiscovered gems likely to appeal to those who loved a particular well-known title.
“One potential concern for implementation would be whether it is practical and affordable for the smart posters to hold a reasonably sized sample in epub format. Even the largest NFC tags currently on the market hold only 32 KB of information, and while some epub files are that small, most are considerably larger.
LOCAL LIBRARIES RESPOND
An “Underground Library” program might boost readership, but the ad’s claim that library use has been declining “since the creation of the Internet,” is incorrect: “Attendance, circulation and participation in our wide range of teen, computer, and literacy classes at The New York Public Library is up, not down in recent years,” says Ken Weine, NYPL’s Vice President for Communication & Marketing. Between 2008 and 2012, visits to the NYPL increased by 12 percent (in person) and 15 percent (online), and the number of circulated items jumped 44 percent, to 28 million annually. Nor would this be the NYPL’s first foray into digital lending: the library also has a robust collection of downloadable titles. Nonetheless, Weine says, the Library’s lab division has discussed initiatives similar to the “Underground Library.”
Another library system served by the MTA, the Queens Library, is likewise interested but noncommittal: “While right now top priority at the Queens Library is restoring service to six or more days a week, access to library services in train stations and other non-traditional venues is something the library would like to pursue down the road,” says Thomas W. Galante, Queens Library’s President and CEO.
In the meantime, New York City’s readers and researchers can take advantage of their libraries’ digital offerings by downloading ebooks, browsing images in digital galleries, and locating branch libraries via their smartphones. And in the future, says a spokesperson, the Queens Library hopes to develop “outdoor customer service plazas,” at certain branches, complete with seating, Wi-Fi access, and extended hours.
The very first ad for Winnie the Pooh.
For more of this morning’s round up, click here.
Arrow Magnetic Bookend