
izzy's playlists!
Sweet Seals For You, Always
Cosimo Galluzzi

tannertan36
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
d e v o n

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Stranger Things

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ellievsbear

shark vs the universe

Origami Around
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ojovivo

blake kathryn
Show & Tell

oozey mess
we're not kids anymore.

No title available
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

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@saved-this-for-later
I checked this out of the library and have renewed it twice but I think I need my own copy. I am a big Martha fan and this book is the bible of all the Martha Stewart Living articles over the years. It’s literally got a how to for everything: How to throw a cocktail party (with a handy guide for how much alcohol you’ll need per person), How to Hang a Hammock or a Tire Swing, How to Put Together the Essential Toolbox, How to Mend Clothes, How to Embroider, How to Paint Floors, How to Plant a Container Garden, How to Meditate, you name it. Just flipping through it makes me want to do each thing.
Me to my student: You need to pare things down. Just, like, Marie Kondo this whole paragraph. Student, softly to herself: Does this clause spark joy??
EXCELLENT WRITING ADVICE
A research tip from a friendly neighborhood librarian!
I want to introduce you to the wonderful world of subject librarians and Libguides.
I’m sure it’s common knowledge that scholars and writers have academic specialties. The same is true for subject librarians! Most libraries use a tool called Libguides to amass and describe resources on a given topic, course, work, person, etc. (I use them for everything. All hail Libguides.) These resources can include: print and ebooks, databases, journals, full-text collections, films/video, leading scholars, data visualizations, recommended search terms, archival collections, digital collections, reliable web resources, oral histories, and professional organizations.
So, consider that somewhere out there in the world, there may be a librarian with a subject specialty on the topic you’re writing on, and this librarian may have made a libguide for it.
Are you writing about vampires?
Duquesne University has a guide on Dracula
University of Northern Iowa: Monsters and Religion
Fontbonne University has a particularly good one on Monsters, Ghosts, and Mysteries
Washington University in St. Louis: a course guide on Monsters and Strangeness
How about poverty?
Michigan State: Poverty and Inequality with great recommended terms and links to datasets
Notre Dame: a multimedia guide on Poverty Studies.
Do you need particular details about how medicine or hygiene was practiced in early 20th century America?
UNC Chapel Hill: Food and Nutrition through the 20th Century (with a whole section on race, gender, and class)
Brown University: Primary Sources for History of Health in the Americas
Duke University: Ad*Access, a digital collection of advertisements from the early 20th century, with a section on beauty and hygiene
You can learn about Japanese Imperial maps, the American West, controlled vocabularies, Crimes against art and art forgeries, anti-Catholicism, East European and Eurasian vernacular languages, geology, vaudeville, home improvement and repairs, big data, death and dying, and conspiracy theories.
Because you’re searching library collections, you won’t have access to all the content in the guides, and there will probably be some link rot (dead links), but you can still request resources through your own library with interlibrary loan, or even request that your library purchase the resources! Even without the possibility of full-text access, libguides can give you the words, works, people, sites, and collections to improve your research.
Search [your topic] + libguide and see what you get!
This is…amazing. I am angry that I didn’t know about this until now. Now I can ~academically~ indulge my fascination with the 1918 flu pandemic? When I have organic chem homework and a lab report due tomorrow? I both love this and hate this.
I have terrible news.
At a quick glance, Christopher Newport University, Goodwin College, and Harford Community College all have libguides on the 1918 flu pandemic.
LibGuides are magic.
(also let us know if you find dead links, we can fix them!)
An even better way to search for libguides?
https://community.libguides.com
Use the libguide community site and search by topic, institution, or even your friendly neighborhood librarian! (If you have a librarian or two who you trust to put you on the right path, you might be able to get that guidance even if you don’t have time to reach out directly!) If their site says “LibGuide” it’ll show up in THAT community somewhere!
Looking to see what books are being used in a particular class in a particular university? Course specific libguides usually have those!
Interested in browsing until you find something that catches your attention? Springshare (the vendor that manages LibGuides) curates lists of interesting, amusing, and innovative libguides! (Okay some of these are boring because they’re geared towards UX and data visualization for librarians, but still…)
Interested in seeing the stuff that YOUR local or institutional librarians are trying to promote? Looking for ways to make the most of the resources that are freely available to you just down the road? Libraries from Atlantic City to Saratoga Springs to South Australia are making guides for their various resources, which describe everything from how to search databases to how to read call numbers to how to access online resources like e-books and video subscriptions!
Even major institutions like the New York Public Library have guides, on everything from genealogy to the history of New York neighborhoods!
omg
My new shelves are done! I have so much more space now, in my room and for my books because of the new set-up.
april 22nd 2019 - my two weeks holidays in a nutshell: rediscovering my love for mangas, spending quality time with my brothers, my dad and my boyfriend, reading lots, cycling my new bike, sleeping in, going to the library. and so many other things.
Shelf-Confidence April BPC Day 22: In Full Bloom
“Whether it’s a pen or a sword you wish to wield, you have the power within to slay all those dragons who try to burn your castle down.” -Amanda Lovelace
In the valley of goblins😈
whisper sweet somethings… Photo by Amber Maitrejean
Real talk though has anyone else just thrown away a whole Tupperware container bc you left food in there for way too long and now you’re afraid to open it?
All of you are so valid
if u ever feel like u have really weird and specific and intense obsessions, i think you’d benefit from learning about this book i found in the library today
seems like it’s prob a normal book and weasels are a metaphor for something ? right ? like ? that’s what you’d think ? but no; no, look:
it’s literally about women and weasels. women and weasels throughout history. it’s a long, scholarly book about women interacting with cute furry rodent slinkies throughout history
i love you, maurizio bettini, whomever you may be. you keep doin you.
Why he light skinned?
Because Martin Luther was white and German.
did…
did someone confuse Luther with Jesus omg
I suspect they confused him with Martin Luther King
I mean, I get mixing them up based on names alone, but I’m concerned about the people who think Martin Luther King Jr. routinely wrote with a quill or dressed like a Renaissance man.
At that point it’s your own damn fault for making that kind of mistake
but why is martin luther the fastest sold playmobil figurine
Penguins attend classes on the first day of school at the University of Antarctica, 2007
i know this is fake history but i hope it’s real future