Today I (June 25)

Today I:

  • Processed board books (checked against invoice, stickered)
  • Straightened children’s room
  • Shelved readers (we were WIPED OUT)
  • Worked on book order.

Things I’ve been thinking about as I’ve been working on the book order:

  • I have a strong tendency to pick books with female protagonists and more stereotypically female activities.  I actually went through, book by book, and put hashmarks in my notebook for male and female protagonists to get them up to something resembling parity.
  • I tried to pick books with a historical fiction bent to them, since I’m also going to be creating a historical fiction book list this summer, and it seems like a good thing to buy books to support it, even if they’re uncatalogued.
  • I also tried to pick books from different genres than I usually read (mostly fantasy and SF) in order to get a better balance in.  I also tried to get books that would support our neighborhood population, which is pretty heavily Jewish.

Today I (June 23)

Today I:

  • Worked on the book order for uncataloged paperbacks
  • Staffed the reference desk (the librarians were VERY happy to see me, since one of the four was on vacation and another was out sick)
  • Folded “I loved Twilight! ….Now what?” brochures for the teen librarian
  • Organized the children’s brochures in the cupboard behind the information desk – they’d been kind of piled in there, so I put most of the low-interest ones in a box with labels for easy access and put the high-interest ones out on the bottom shelf neatly arranged by age level, with titles facing out.

Miscellania

Today I:

  • Made Summer Reading Club completion packets (set of 10 stickers, entry form for Breakfast of Champions, Wall of Fame slip, 10 More Books form)
  • Shadowed on the reference desk for most of the day as other people cycled in and out
  • Tidied children’s room (oy, the tidying that was needed.  We’ve been hugely busy.)
  • Politely asked a lady to leave the meeting room, which should have been locked.  She was very nice about it and just needed a plug for her laptop.  I sent her to the study area in the back of the library and all was wel.
  • Helped the teen librarian find paranormal romances for her display and got to dig through the newly arrived uncataloged paperbacks.

No particularly exciting reference questions, just an incident where a girl was looking for one of the innumerable Flower (or Sport, or Jewel, or Dance) Fairy books by Daisy Meadows and I searched the catalog but neglected to do it last name first and failed to turn anything up, which I *knew* was wrong.

Things I learned today:

  • LAST NAME FIRST when doing author searches.
  • Lock the meeting room, and be nice and probably people will not get cantankerous.

Orange…Chest? Excuse me?

Today I

  • Processed board books (checked invoices against shipped contents, added stickers)
  • Processed new children’s books (fairly small shipment)
  • Sorted a cart of children’s books for shelvers
  • Handled reference questions

I got some fairly interesting reference questions today, actually.

  • A kid came up asking for the “Jack and Annie” series, and I had to probe quite a bit to figure out that he wanted the Magic Treehouse series – I dove into the catalog too soon and wasted a bit of time faffing around before starting to ask more questions that finally got me to the right place.  I also neglected to write down the author’s name before tearing off into the stacks/back and that wasted some more time.
  • I got a request to figure out what order a particular series of books was in – I believe it was the Rick Riordan series but I don’t remember for sure. In any case, the catalog was pretty useless for this particular thing, so I ended up hitting Amazon instead, which is usually pretty good at telling you up front what order a series goes in.
  • And the tour de force: A woman came in saying that she’d been talking to a fellow bus rider who told her to pick up a book called “Orange Chest,” by a local author (Ballard) with red hair, and that it was a collection of recipes and vignettes.  She admitted that she might have heard the title wrong and that it could also be “Orange Zest.”  The YA librarian and I worked around these for a while – we checked the catalog, we checked Google (thoroughly unhelpful googling “orange zest recipes vignettes”, by the way), I started checking to see if Wikipedia had an article for local authors under Ballard or Seattle (nope) and started to see if I could find a list of Seattle-area food writers.  I couldn’t, and then I realized that I’ve been reading Molly Wizenberg’s Orangette for years and years, and she was a Seattle writer and by god she might even have red hair (her About page indicates that she does indeed).  And she wrote a book (A Homemade Life).  With recipes and vignettes.  And (most embarrrassing of all) I had even put myself on the hold list for it a few days ago after a friend said I reminded her of Molly and I should read it.  So I told all this to the patron (except the part about my friend) and she got really very excited, and then I told her there were 350 holds on it…but she could be 351!  She said she might also want to buy it for her daughter, so I wrote down the author and title and gave her the blog address for good measure.  Let’s hear it for external knowledge saving the day!

Things I learned today:

  • Always write down author’s names and titles before charging off to find a book.
  • When patrons are recounting things they heard on the bus, it’s okay to have a lax attitude to the accuracy of their hearing.  It’s also good to be a longtime food blog reader.

Excuses, excuses

I woke up at 5:30a this morning to hit F5 on my computer until registration finally opened for classes at 5:55.  Next quarter will be two cores, “Organization of Information and Resources” and “Information in Social Context,” and two electives.  One’s a three-credit class on government publications, being as I’m still considering applying for another masters in some kind of PoliSci-related field, and the other is a one-credit, one-day a week class on “Special Topics in Information Resources, Services, and Collections.”

This quarter’s special topic?  Graphic novels.

I wonder if I can use this to justify the purchase of the full Absolute Sandman.  I’m thinking…yes.

Getting away with it

I’m in the hot middle of writing my second essay for grad school.

The first was on the Harry Potter Lexicon.

This one is on the Encyclopedic Sourcebook of UFO Religions.

I have a sneaking suspicion that I’m going to spend a great deal of time over the next few years trying to find the most outrageous thing I can to write an essay on and then doing it.  Because hells with it, what’s the point if you can’t have fun?

(Yes, I’ll either flunk out by second quarter or be the most beloved student in a generation.  Great risks, great rewards, etc.)