About Meredith Lewis

Meredith is a librarian at Durham Tech on both the Main and Orange County Campuses.

What We Read Wednesday: The Durham Tech Faculty & Staff Best Reads of 2016 Edition

In a repeating series highlighting current and recent reads around Durham Tech, here are the best books that Durham Tech faculty and staff read in 2016


For Durham Tech Library availability and more details about the 2016 Durham Tech faves, check out the pdf of the book list: Durham Tech 2016 Best Books

You can also check out (literally) the books from the downstairs library display of Durham Tech’s favorite books of 2016.


Is your department, club, campus, committee, or subgroup interested in participating in a What We’re Reading* blog post? The goal of the What We’re Reading* posts is to highlight books, professional literature, blogs, or any other things you might be currently reading or have recently finished. Contact OCC Librarian Meredith Lewis for more information.

*Could also be What We Read– recent reads also accepted (and encouraged).

What We’re Reading Wednesdays: The Library Staff Edition

In a (hopefully) repeating series highlighting current and recent reads around Durham Tech, here’s what the Durham Tech library staff is reading and has recently read–

The Awkward Yeti website homepage screenshot

Several librarians also enjoy regularly reading The Awkward Yeti, including their current comics on germs in preparation for the new semester.

As always, if you’re interested in a title, you can either search our catalog to see if we have the book or request it through interlibrary loan.  Need help doing either of these things or don’t yet have a library card? Ask in the library.


Is your department, club, campus, committee, or subgroup interested in participating in a What We’re Reading blog post? The goal of the What We’re Reading posts is to highlight books, professional literature, blogs, or any other things you might be currently reading or have recently finished. Contact OCC Librarian Meredith Lewis for more information.

Films on Demand New Titles: U.S. Elections, Chernobyl and Other Topics

Through NC LIVE the Durham Tech library offers Films on Demand, which is a collection of almost 30,000 award winning documentaries, interviews, instructional and vocational training videos, historical speeches and newsreels.

This collection of video resources is updated regularly. September brought 164 new titles, many of which cover U.S. elections. Other topics in the September additions include energy and the environment, terrorism, human rights, medicine, space exploration and numerous other topics. Continue Reading →

Durham Tech Faculty & Staff’s Best of Summer 2016 Reads

For those who enjoy reading, summer can be a great time to re-read old favorites, discover new authors, or just make a dent in a to-read list.

Click through the slideshow to see Durham Tech Faculty & Staff’s incredibly diverse favorite reads of summer 2016.

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You can check them out for yourself from the display downstairs in the Main Library or by requesting a book through ILL (login through eforms).

Click to see the whole list: Durham Tech Faculty & Staff Best Reads of Summer 2016

What Durham Tech Has Read: Homegoing (& more!)

This book was read by Meredith Lewis, the Orange County Campus (mostly) Librarian, and several Durham Tech faculty & staff over the summer.

Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi book cover

Two half-sisters, Effia and Esi, are born into different villages in eighteenth-century Ghana. Effia is married off to an Englishman and lives in comfort in the palatial rooms of Cape Coast Castle. Unbeknownst to Effia, her sister, Esi, is imprisoned beneath her in the castle’s dungeons, sold with thousands of others into the Gold Coast’s booming slave trade, and shipped off to America, where her children and grandchildren will be raised in slavery. One thread of Homegoing follows Effia’s descendants through centuries of warfare in Ghana, as the Fante and Asante nations wrestle with the slave trade and British colonization. The other thread follows Esi and her children into America. From the plantations of the South to the Civil War and the Great Migration, from the coal mines of Pratt City, Alabama, to the jazz clubs and dope houses of twentieth-century Harlem, right up through the present day, Homegoing makes history visceral, and captures, with singular and stunning immediacy, how the memory of captivity came to be inscribed in the soul of a nation. (Description from Goodreads)

Why did you choose to read this book? 

I’ve been reading reviews of it all summer and mentally putting it on my “to-read later” list, but when I polled Durham Tech faculty and staff about the best book they read this summer, this one kept coming up and so I picked it up. And it was amazing!

What did you like about it?

The story itself was powerful and, despite many of the settings being upsetting (as enslavement and its various repercussions should be!), it was hard to put the book down. I loved how, even though the point-of-view changed every chapter, it wasn’t hard to follow, either. You could also clearly see how the families’ histories were influencing their present–something I think most people know, but maybe don’t think about in their daily lives.

Who would you recommend the book to?

Anyone who finds the premise interesting! It really was great and incredibly thought-provoking.

What would you pair this book with?

A hefty dose of self-awareness– the past (and the societal forces that shape our families) heavily influences who we are in the present.

You can find this book and more in the downstairs display featuring the rest of Durham Tech Faculty & Staff’s Best of Summer 2016 reads!  Check it out for yourself!

Let’s GO! to the library

Whether you’ve stubbornly decided to deny that you know what a Pikachu is, have whole-heartedly embraced that you’re committed to powering up your Snorlax, or are anywhere in between, Pokémon GO is here… and accessible for smartphone gamers of all skill levels.

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There are lots of options of places to battle or gather supplies (and catch ’em all!) around Durham Tech.  Did you know the Main Campus Library is a gym or that there are two PokéStops accessible in the Orange County Campus Library?

Caught any interesting Pokémon in the library or around Durham Tech? Take a picture and email it to us at library AT durhamtech dot edu and we’ll add it to our slideshow!

Too Hot to Cook?

Summer has really and truly arrived, which means it may be too hot to use some of our awesome cookbooks,* but that doesn’t mean you can’t check out some of our awesome other food-related books and movies.

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*Check out section TX in all campus libraries for cookbooks of all cuisines and sizes.