About Meredith Lewis

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

Films on Demand Adds 113 New Titles

You may be familiar with Films on Demand, a streaming video platform with thousands of educational videos. In January of 2015 we announced this new service for the Durham Tech community. On March 7 Films on Demand added over 100 new films to Durham Tech’s collection. You can see a list of the new titles here: https://durhamtech.idm.oclc.org/login?url=http://fod.infobase.com/PortalPlaylists.aspx?wID=107014&m=2&y=2016&cType=1. Continue Reading →

#colorourcollections: Coloring Pages from Library & Museum Collections

black and white drawn image of stereotypical college sports and other activities from the 1913 UNC-Chapel Hill Yackey Yak Yearbook

One of UNC-Chapel Hill’s Libraries’ #colorourcollection pages, including a football scene at the top. (Go, Panthers!)

It’s almost the weekend (yay!), and you may want to unwind a little and give yourself a mental break between study sessions and family responsibilities (and maybe a little football?).  Why not throwback to your childhood and take a mental break by coloring?

Several special collections libraries and museums across the US and UK decided to create “Color Our Collections” week (Feb. 1-5) by posting images from their collections with the color removed, creating pages that anyone can access and color in their own way.

For all you A&P students, check out the Oregon Health & Science University’s Historical Collections & Archives Coloring Book, featuring a wide variety of historical medical illustrations. (Skeletons! Amputations! Guts!)

For the animal and nature lovers out there, check out the BioDiversity Heritage Library‘s collection of images (scroll down for their coloring book).

For a more complete list of participating libraries and museums, see Book Riot’s roundup or search #colorourcollections on Twitter or Facebook.

What We’re Reading: The Brothers K

The Brothers K - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Title: The Brothers K

Author: David James Duncan

Genre: literary fiction

Why did you choose to read this book?

I have a Goodreads account and this book kept showing up on my recommendations, even though I’d never heard of the author.

In a small mill town in Washington State, a former minor-league baseball pitcher and his Seventh-Day Adventist wife raise five children. The book follows the members of the family from the late 1950s through the early 1970s.

What did you like about it?

I liked the development of all the characters. The children grow to become adults as the story reveals more about the past of older characters too. My favorite character is arguably the main character and the narrator’s father, Hugh Chance. Following characters for decades also provides a window into an earlier time in history.

Did it remind you of any other book, or a movie?

It reminds me of Freedom, by Jonathan Franzen, which also follows multiple characters over a period of time.

Was there anything noteworthy about the book?

It was a New York Times Notable Book. It is written in beautiful but accessible prose. Introducing each chapter or section of the book is a quote from a work of literature or philosophy.

What feeling did the book leave you with?

At 645 pages, it’s a long book, so I was glad finally to have finished it! I thought it was a great book, but felt like the ending, in which we learn what happened to each of the characters years down the road, was tacked-on and unnecessary, which diminished the overall experience of reading it.

Who would you recommend the book to?

I’d recommend this to fans of literary fiction and baseball. I would also suggest that people who are experiencing some sort of significant familial change may find this book to be an opportunity to reflect on their own situations.

What would you pair this book with?

Spicy Indian food and cold, cheap beer.

Don’t Catch the Flu: Get Vaccinated!

Every year, millions of people in the United States contract influenza (“the flu”). Hundreds of thousands of people are hospitalized for the flu each year and thousands die from it. You can help prevent the spread of this virus–and protect yourself from it–by getting a flu vaccine every year. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) say that all people aged six months and older need to get the vaccine. Continue Reading →

Banned Books Week… and why it matters

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Every year, the American Library Association, libraries, bookstores, and other groups and places “celebrate” Banned Books Week the last week in September.  While people may object to books based on topic or personal taste, Banned Books Week at its core is about celebrating and promoting the right to read and discouraging blanket censorship of literature based on its subject-matter or presentation.

To check out some books that are frequently challenged and why, see the library displays in the Main and Orange County Campus Libraries.  If you want, check out a challenged book.  Judge for yourself.

Durham-Orange Light Rail Project Resources

D-O-LRT-Project-Map_2014-11-17-e1416255530265The main campus library of Durham Tech has a copy of the Durham-Orange Light Rail Project’s Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS)–book and DVD–at the circulation desk and it is available for use within the library.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is accepting comments during a 45-day period, which ends on October 13, 2015. GoTriangle will hold public information sessions regarding the DEIS: on Tuesday, September 15, 2015, from 4 – 7 p.m. at the Friday Center in Chapel Hill and on Saturday, September 19, 2015, from 2 – 5 p.m. at the Durham Station Transportation Center (515 W. Pettigrew St, Durham, NC 27701).

For detailed information about the project:

 

Verily and such…and Luke and Leia.

In the library, we like books and movies. Some of us also like cheesy internet promotions that combine Shakespeare and Star Wars.

For a minute or two of fun, check out the Star Wars Sonnet Generator.

Have at-eth it!

(Now that you know-eth of these tomes, do you need-eth a copy?  Ask or email the library about interlibrary loan, and we can get you a copy to check out.  Forsooth!)