While working on Carnegie-Stout Public Library's project involving archiving digital scans of the Dubuque Telegraph Herald I came across this little tidbit:
As I read this article from October 7, 1949, I thought to myself "this still happens today". Despite nearly 67 years of progress, a librarian still provides reader's advisory and often gets to decipher vague and confusing book descriptions in an attempt to find a specific book.
A few years ago, one of my coworkers found a birthday card to his mother in a book on the shelf. I myself have found cancelled checks, airplane boarding passes, letters, greeting cards, utility bills and shopping lists. Just a few of the many random things used as a bookmark. Yep, working in a library still has an amusing side.
~Amy, Adult Services
Thursday, March 24, 2016
Tuesday, March 22, 2016
Monday, March 21, 2016
Staff Review: The Man Who Loved Only Numbers by Paul Hoffman
I come from a family of book lovers, but it isn't often that we all love the same book. The Man Who Loved Only Numbers happens to be one of the few. Paul Hoffman's biography of the prolific and eccentric mathematician Paul Erdős is a fascinating read, even for someone like me who finds math a less than engaging topic. Reading about Erdős and his colleagues in this book, I was able to understand how a person could devote their life to a pursuit of mathematical truth.
I also recommend checking out Feynman by Jim Ottaviani and Leland Myrick, a graphic novel biography of the equally eccentric physicist Richard Feynman.
~Sarah, Adult Services
Tags:
Biography,
csplreviews,
FY16,
History,
math,
Science,
Staff Reviews
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