Monday, March 16, 2009

000 Computer Science, Knowledge & Systems, Part 8


This week Books by the Numbers takes a break from the "Fast Forward" entries to return to the subject of study, the 000s. However, we are remaining in the guest author mode! This week's guest post is submitted by Emmetsburg Public Library's own--actually, we share her with Iowa Lakes Community College--Mary Faber.

Mary Faber is TRIO Director at Iowa Lakes Community College, where she oversees three federally funded programs for students in grades 6th - 12th, as well as first and second year transfer students at the community college. Mary obtained a baccalaureate degree in social work/management from the University of Northern Iowa, a master's degree in Education from the University of Iowa, and is currently in the final stages of completing her quantitative dissertation (with a qualitative insert) at Iowa State University. Her working title, 'Gender Differences in Community College Transfer Students to a Midwestern Land Grant University' is challenging her to relate her quantitative data in the most understandable of ways.

You will see that Mary's apple is not falling far from the tree in her choice of books to write about for the blog, for she has chosen a modern day classic of research and statistical methods. She is featuring the venerable and scholarly--yet accessible--The Visual Display of Quantitative Information, by Edward R. Tufte, 2nd ed (001.4 TU).

Take it away Mary...

In the pursuit of a PhD, I have found myself drawn to books and publications that are often asking me to think differently or grow intellectually. One such example is The Visual Display of Quantitative Information by Edward R. Tufte.

The book begins with a bulleted list defining quantitative data; with that the author also reveals his reverence for this subject. The first two chapters are spent discussing the history of quantitative data and how its interpretation has largely been by placing dots on a grid. It also highlights the shortcomings of such measurements, as each graph looks like the last graph, and each line drawn in succession measures a different set of data, yet looks eerily similar. The overall premise of the book emerges early, and gives examples of how statistical, quantitative data can become some of the strongest communication tools available to us, if we can broaden how the data is represented.

From there, the author gives us numerous examples of how transferring statistical data to a variety of visual concepts can illuminate the data, and allow a greater understanding in a visual way. The book continues to encourage us to illustrate quantitative data and make it more user friendly and understandable. Interestingly enough, the author is convincing in proposing this transition, and I found myself challenged to convert everyday statistics to such examples.

This book certainly has applications for someone who is involved in research. But the surprisingly interesting twist is that even the casual reader might find this concept appealing. Part of the charm of this book is the difficulty with which it is written; it is a not a Sunday afternoon read. However, I would recommend this book for anyone who has a sense of curiosity about the world. You might just find yourself looking at things in a different light. This book challenged my thinking, and that’s a good thing.

Monday, March 9, 2009

Fast Forward: 360 Social Problems & Social Services

This week Books by the Numbers stays in "Fast Forward" mode, peeking ahead to the 360s, but without the guest writer.

It is our twisted good fortune that bad things happen to gifted writers. How else could we be blessed with so many absorbing and heart-wrenching true stories that litter the literary landscape? Hurry Down Sunshine by Michael Greenberg (362.196 GR) certainly qualifies as such a story.

Greenberg's book recounts what happened to his family one fateful summer when his daughter, Sally, entered into a psychotic episode. The family's whole life is turned upside down by the excruciating process of watching helpless while a child loses their mind. Oh, yes, and it also should be mentioned that the episode occurred during a lapse of the family's medical insurance!

The account is candid, indeed, and makes for a cannot-put-it-down read. At times, you wonder if a journeyman novelist could generate a more nuanced and motley gallery of characters that populate the rather short book.

Monday, March 2, 2009

Fast Forward: 270 History of Christianity


This week begins a new regular feature in the format of the Books by the Numbers blog: "Fast Forward" entries. Since it does appear at this point that the blog is leaning towards taking the path of straight through the DDC in numerical order, I want to do something to keep everyone's interest. So, why not mix in entries about newer non-fiction books that are classified in areas other than Books by the Numbers' current focus? I should be able to kill two birds with one stone in that this will provide the blog with entries about high interest, new books and provide variety in the subject areas that they cover.

The other exciting change I am announcing this week signals the transition of my role on the blog from that of creator and sole author to that of editor. Yes, we will now be having guest bloggers here at Books by the Numbers! In the future, expect that unless I specifically state otherwise, I am writing the blog. All contributors to the blog will be fully credited.

With that, it is my pleasure to introduce a good friend of mine to you all: Jim Ramsey. Jim works at the Milford Memorial Library in Milford, Iowa. Jim enjoys reading non-fiction books, and he reads quite a few.

Jim holds a BA in Social Science from California State University in Fullerton, California, and a Master of Divinity from Garrett Theological Seminary in Evanston, Illinois. Jim was formerly a Methodist minister.

Quitting Church: Why the Faithful Are Fleeing and What to do About It by Julia Duin (277.3 DU)

I recommend this book to anyone who has concerns about the decline in church membership that has taken place over the past few decades. While I have some problems with the author’s perspective she still makes some good points.

Ms Duin is a part of the charismatic movement, which is seen most prominently in the Pentecostal churches. I have no problems with their faith, but they are a bit narrow and would not consider me a “life long Christian” as truly a Christian by their standards. So she is on a mission and while her message could speak to a wide range of churches, it gets caught in a narrow perspective.

If one can get by her bias, then there are some lessons to be learned. One is that most worship experiences do not challenge the congregation and more could be done to make services more engaging. People are busy and they want the worship experience to speak to them or they will stay home.

She also talks about how singles, especially single women, feel left out of the life of the church. This lack of understanding and inclusion results in large numbers of people feeling like they are pushed out of the church.

Her last main point is that Pastors like control, and when this happens it blocks many participants from feeling like they are deeply involved in the church. So a more open and inclusive church environment would be a plus.

Jim Ramsey

Monday, February 23, 2009

000 Computer Science, Knowledge & Systems, Part 7

I have been reading a book for my professional development that happens to be classed at 004.16. It is part of Neal-Schuman Publishers' How-To-Do-It Manuals series and is written by Colleen Cuddy titled Using PDAs in Libraries.

PDAs are personal digital assistants, which are small, handheld devices that are used for organizing one's information and a whole host of other applications. This book highlights the applications that can be useful in a library setting and tells how libraries have been adapting their programs for use with patron's PDAs.

Part of the reason for me selecting this book was that I have recently begun using a PDA. I really wish I had done so earlier. I have found I prefer the calendar and to-do-list functions on the PDA to any other method of keeping a calendar or dayplanner. The device is very portable, which makes the alarm function work very nicely. The contacts function acts as a good address book. I can view PDF, Word, and Excel files on the PDA. The interface is a touchscreen that I tap with a stylus. It even recognizes my handwriting! Finally, the feature that seals the deal with PDAs is that they "sync" with your PC, or in my case my two work PCs and my home PC.

There are also some very cool add-on items I can pair with the PDA to perform more specialized tasks. One such add-on is Socket Scanner. It is a laser barcode scanner that plugs into the memory card slot on the PDA. In a library environment, this device can be used to perform an inventory of the collection or to perform circulation beyond the circ desk. At the other library where I am director, we use this device for inventory.

At the Emmetsburg Public Library, another employee, Donna, also has her own PDA. She even has the same model, the Palm Tungsten E2. We can "beam" files to one another through the infrared ports on the PDAs--very cool!

The most exciting thing I learned from the book was that I could take advantage of the Bluetooth chip in the device to sync with my PCs and even share an Internet connection with them wirelessly. The USB adapters to enable PCs to this appears to be very inexpensive and I have sent away for some. I am excited to see what browsing the Internet via the PDA is like, particularly how browse-able our libraries' online catalogs on the web are now that I have read this book. If the Bluetooth fails, a wireless adapter card is available for the PDA, though not as cheaply (Donna already has one).

At any rate, patrons of the Emmetsburg Public Library should look to see more PDAs and PDA-inspired ideas in use at the library in the near future!

Monday, February 16, 2009

000 Computer Science, Knowledge & Systems, Part 6


This week, for the sixth entry in the 000s, Books by the Numbers returns to the world of computing. Specifically, the development of the personal computer is the subject of this week's book, What the Dormouse Said: How the 60s Counterculture Shaped the Personal Computer Industry by John Markoff (004.16 MA). As the title indicates its author has a special take on the development of the PC. In this book he contends that the psychedelic era and ethos ultimately gave rise to the development of the PC.

If you found this premise as interesting as I did, then you may want to give the book a try. It is certainly not as light reading as some of the other computer books I have read for the blog. Also, it focuses on times and events that I did not previously associate with the development of the PC. The MITS Altair, Steve Jobs, and Bill Gates receive hardly any mention in the book; just in the preface and some at the end.

The era that this book describes is also not what most people would associate with the psychedelic movement. It deals instead mostly with the very early experimentation with LSD and other psychedelic phenomena. Rather than being pure recreation, this was experimentation that was aimed at augmenting human abilities. This was seen by some as going hand-in-hand with development of artificial intelligence.

Eventually, the pursuit of creating thinking machines gave way to put the power of computers-- and of course we are talking very minuscule computing power by today's standards--into the hands of everyone. And, of course, it is a long and convoluted story how this all happened. Just as throning the "father of the computer" was not done in Electronic Brains, so neither is the "father of the PC" enshrined here. Its development was the work of many actors, and Markoff takes pains to give many of them credit.

As to whether he solidly ties in the development of the PC with the psychedelic era is another matter. Even after reading the book I am not convinced that its advent was inevitable regardless of the political and social climates holding sway over the time period. To be sure, it may not have happened exactly as it did otherwise, but that goes without saying. Still, it is interesting to see the interplay of the two movements, and I think one can still see some of the reverberations today--though faintly.

One thing I did not like about the book, which I know several Amazon commenters picked up on before me was the continuity in the flow of the narrative. At several points during the book, the author hops back and forth among the late 50s, all of the 60s, and the early 70s. I found it a little annoying and thought the book could have been paced a little more chronologically. Even so, one cannot deny that this book is an outstanding work of non-fiction for telling the story of the early roots of the PC, from such a unique perspective, and in such a well-researched and thorough manner.

Monday, February 9, 2009

000 Computer Science, Knowledge & Systems, Part 5



I have some news for all my readers, and it may good news or bad news depending upon how well they like the subject of the current features. The news is that Books by the Numbers will be staying in the 000s for another month. There are a couple reasons for this:

1. There are several books in this division that I would yet like to read and blog about, and after all it is my blog. Furthermore, I did lay it out in the introduction that some divisions may take awhile to get through. Initially, I had no idea that the 000s would be one of those, but I have found it to be an extremely interesting section and a diverse one at that!

2. Behind the scenes here at the library we have been taking advantage of the activities required to research and scrutinize the area being featured to develop that same area of the collection. Since conducting all this "housekeeping" collection development activity concurrently with the blog did not occur to me when I began the project, I have had to develop the procedures as I have gone along. I should have it down pat in another division or two.

Do not, however, think that I am only buying time for me to finalize these procedures. As you will see in the weeks to come, there are plenty of subject areas within the 000s that have not yet even been broached by this blog, and there will doubtless remain a few after we move on.
May I also take this opportunity to state what a pleasure it has been thus far writing this blog, for it has caused me to read even more. I already consumed a steady diet of books, but these were nearly exclusively through audiobooks I listened to during my commute.

Now, for me, there is nothing lost in listening to a book as a sound recording. If I heard it, then I know it as sure as if I read it. Still, there is something tactile and aesthetic lost in not reading a book in the printed form. Because of time constraints, I had gotten away from much book reading. Writing this blog has changed that. I have featured 7 titles thus far, of which only one was in audiobook form, and that was because it was an older title and that was the only format the library held it in.

Now, having dispensed with these housekeeping duties, on with the blog.

I am only going to feature one title this week, and I was hard pressed to finish it in time, though not due to the nature of the book. This is a slacker week, of sorts, for the blog as I chose a title that was on the subject of something I am personally very interested in right now: open source software and specifically, Linux. So, for a fun read I chose, appropriately, a biography of the creator of Linux, Linus Torvalds, titled Just For Fun: The Story of an Accidental Revolutionary by Linus Torvalds and David Diamond (005.1 TO).

Just for Fun is written much as it is titled, which is in fact a good descriptor of how Linus Torvalds approaches life. Greed and dogged pursuit of money are not his calling card, though he neither eschews it nor lacks for it (now). His drive to create the thing that has made him famous and revered, the Linux operating system, was to do it just for fun, to solve some problems he had using the Minix operating system.

After developing it the point that he felt he could share it with others, Torvalds made it available for free on the Internet. Gradually, the OS took off, gaining more and more users. Thus began the Linux phenomenon. Through it all, Torvalds was above greed, turning down several offers for money. He did eventually accept money to help him pay off his computer.

Eventually, Torvalds was married and moved to Silicon Valley where he took a job with a secretive technology firm that allowed time to work on Linux. Torvalds maintained his control over the kernel at the heart of the operating system and continued to raise his family.

Aside from the biographical component and the story of how Linux came about, Just For Fun is primarily a book about Torvalds take on celebrity, which he has certainly become. Torvalds comes across as a thoughtful person with very noble ideals, yet he does not come across as being idealistic nor iconoclastic. In short, he seems very worthy of his celebrity.

Also, it is interesting to see how well he handles the pressures from both ends of the spectrum. As already mentioned he has turned down some pretty big offers and probably could have done Linux as a money-making enterprise to begin with if he wanted. However, it should be said, some from the other camp have wanted to mold him into some sort of open source ascetic-monk. Torvalds has rejected both extremes.

Overall, I can not understate how fun reading this book was. The language in it was very conversational, the sentences very short, just a very light read, which is refreshing when the subject is computer operating system design. Though some computer terms and jargon make their way into the book, a general reader nowadays should know somewhat what is being talked about. After all, Linux is now a household word.


Monday, February 2, 2009

000 Computer Science, Knowledge & Systems, Part 4



In this, the fourth post of books classified in the 000 section, Books by the Numbers moves away from the book and the computer to subjects of controversial knowledge. More specifically, I am going to feature two books concerning the impending end of the world: A Guide to the End of the World: Everything You Never Wanted to Know by Bill McGuire (001.9 McG) and Apocalypse WOW! by James Finn Garner (AC 001.9 GA), of which the latter is on book on audio cassette in our library. This is the order I suggest one read the books in, for the first one might leave you so full of despair that you will need the humor of the sound recording to cheer you up.

Actually, both books are good, fact-based accounts of the subject, though McGuire's sets it all out in a much more scholarly fashion and matter-of-fact tone. For those of you not familiar with James Finn Garner, he is the man who brought you the popular Politically Correct Bedtime Stories and its sequels. So, as you may guess, his presentation is a pretty much to the far side of tongue-in-cheek in tone. Nonetheless, both books set the wheels in your mind turning--though perhaps not in a good way!

The first book, A Guide to the End of the World, as I have said, is written in a serious tone. It deals with events that could occur bringing about the end of our race. It could well be titled How Bad Has It Been and How Bad Can It Get, which might sum it up even better. Through it all, one gains a perspective for geological time frames, the relative probabilities of unlikely things, and the eventual probabilities of other things. The book sticks to disasters of a geological, meteorological, and astronomical nature but leaves gloomy religious portents to others.

So, I say "a serious tone," but maybe what I mean is a dry, British humor. That the book is British I can readily prove: it was published by Oxford University Press, measurements in the book are given in Celsius and kilometres, and many references and allusions to the British Isles abound within. As for the dry humor, I will leave it up to readers to determine the vein in which the section at the end of each of the chapters, "Facts to Fret Over," was meant.

All in all, I enjoyed reading this book, which is a little categorically than any of the others discussed on this blog thus far. All the others have told the story of an individual or groups of individuals. This book, on the other hand, has absolutely no biographical content. It tells the story of the planet primarily, which has had more face lifts, blow-ups, and eccentricities than any celebrity could cram into one biography.

The second read--or in the case of our library, listen--we have a book that is far less ambiguously dry humor. Written in 1997 by satirist James Finn Garner, the book focuses on the more sensationalistic aspects of eschatology. The book lampoons all the end times prophesies and prophets who gained attention in the years leading up to the turn of the millennium. Along the way you may learn a thing or two about Nostradamus, the story of Atlantis, and the Book of Revelations.

The book does spend a great deal of time spoofing many of viewpoints of Christian dispensationalism fictionalized in the runaway popular series published during the same time, the Left Behind series, of which the library owns the whole series (F LA).

One thing is for certain, this week's choices have certainly added some urgency for getting my blog post published!

Monday, January 26, 2009

000 Computer Science, Knowledge & Systems, Part 3



For my third installment in the ooos, I would like to feature two books by revisiting 002. After all, I may not be in such a friendly territory (books about the book/book collecting) for awhile depending where Books by the Numbers wanders next. Both books could be classed at 381 with other forms of commerce (they are both about book selling), but I think they will find their readers better among works about the book, and so they have been kept at 002.

The first, a shorter book, is the charming The Yellow-Lighted Bookshop : a Memoir, a History (002 BU) by Lewis Buzbee. It is truly a book lover's delight. Here, in 200 small pages, Buzbee offers a paean to the bookseller's trade. He details his career working in progressively larger bookstores in California in his young adulthood and his career as a sales rep for a publisher. All of this is intertwined with vignettes on the history of the book and book selling throughout. What emerges from the efficient prose is a concise, yet comprehensive treatise on how the profession of book seller has evolved over the century and on the rapidly changing nature of the business during the last quarter century.

It is also interesting to note a connection with the subject matter some of the other books featured in this division. The place Buzbee cuts his teeth in his first bookstores was Palo Alto, California, which was a very central location in the development of the PC. Indeed, one of the big successes of Printers Inc., Buzbee's most fondly remembered bookstores, was their extensive and timely collection of computer books when the boom hit.

The second book, Old Books, Rare Friends (002 RO), was written by two women, Leona Rostenberg and Madeleine Stern who enjoyed an extraordinary friendship of almost 70 years, and who had been in business for around 50 years together as dealers in antiquarian and rare books. What has set their careers apart from others in the trade, aside from their longevity and enduring--and it is noted platonic--friendship, has been their propensity for literary detective work, "sleuthing," as they are fond of referring to it.

The bit of sleuthing that made the duo famous was there discovery that Louisa May Alcott, well known author of Little Women (JF AL) and other classic children's books also wrote under the pseudonym A. M. Barnard a number of lurid "blood-and-thunder" tales. The library holds one volume of these collected stories, Behind a Mask: the Unknown Thrillers of Louisa May Alcott (F AL).

Between the two books, I think The Yellow-Lighted Bookshop has a more broad appeal, though both have appeal to book lovers. Old Books, Rare Friends might turn some people off because the writing style of the two ladies is more of a turn-of-the-20th century style. Still, for me, this makes for a meatier bone and all the more timeless, but you need to consider who is writing this blog. After all, Leona is quoted in
Old Books, Rare Friends as having said: "To librarians, booksellers, and collectors there is nothing limited in the subject of Books about Books."


Monday, January 19, 2009

000 Computer Science, Knowledge & Systems, Part 2





For my next entry I would like to feature two computer-related titles, The Road Ahead by Bill Gates (004.6 GA) and Electronic Brains : Stories From the Dawn of the Computer Age by Mike Hally (004 HA). For the first, even though it is from 1995 (older than most of the books I will be featuring), I feel somewhat compelled to feature a biography of such a well known person. He is such an eminent and iconic figure in the world for his success, wealth, and even his philanthropy this past decade. This is his only autobiography I know of.

Early in the book, Gates touches on the origins of the PC, which is a really fascinating story. I have heard it told elsewhere, but it was really interesting to hear his version of it. He points out the mistakes and missed opportunities that were made by other major players, and where fate could have turned out differently and made his company a mere footnote in the development of the PC.

But, history turning out as it did, Bill Gates' company, the venerable Microsoft, turned out to be a major force in the evolution of the PC. Gates took advantage of his opportunities at every turn. Equal parts computer whiz kid and astute businessman, Gates quit Harvard upon seeing an Altair 8800 computer on the cover of a Popular Electronics magazine. He and friend Paul Allen formed their software company, Micro-soft to write software for the Altair. The rest, as they say, is history.

There is more history gone over in the book given as an enjoyable narrative. The latter half of the book, though, tends to drag a little because Gates spends a lot of space speculating on the future of the computer and software. Now, given that it is Bill Gates doing the speculating, it is very authoritative, but it cannot help but come across as "in the future, you will get to work in a flying car" sort of talk. All that aside, and with a dozen years of hindsight, I have to say that Gates really had his finger on the pulse of his industry--or maybe it was his hands on the reins!

The book, Electronic Brains : Stories From the Dawn of the Computer Age deals with entirely different epoch in the history of the computer: its Stone Age. The book came out of a BBC radio series on the topic, and was able to go into much more depth on the topic. All in all, the book emulates the sort of quality you would expect from a BBC production.

The work highlights a number of pioneering efforts around the globe working to develop computers between the late '30s and late '50s. What I ended up liking about the book, was that it did not seek the crown the "father of the computer." Rather, the book laid out the accomplishments and the time frame they occurred in and left it largely up to the reader who should be considered the computer pioneer, or if this was even a relevant title.

There is at least a small amount of local pride knowing that probably the earliest candidate for the first electronic computer was built in the basement of a physics building at Iowa State College in 1939 in two men's spare time. It then sat untouched for nearly a decade and was later dismantled.

Interestingly, the word, computer, or spelled computor, seems to have most often referred to the women mathematicians who tended to the early machines as they calculated the ballistic trajectory tables of the guns used in and around World War II. The development of the machines received a boost from the war owing to the large amount of new weapons needing ballistic tables drawn up.

The technology that was spawned out of these early pioneer's efforts has become so pervasive in our everyday lives that it has been fascinating to take a look back at those times. Electronic Brains is an excellent non-fiction read for anybody because it is not bogged down in technical jargon and has wonderful resources at the back of the book for those wanting to do additional reading in the field. The length of the book is also very manageable. Highly recommended!

Monday, January 12, 2009

000 Computer Science, Knowledge & Systems Intro



For the first entry in my new blog, Books by the Numbers, I have decided to start at the start: the 000s. I am not considering myself locked into tackling the numbers in order, but I deem this as good a place as any to start out. The 000s is indeed a diverse division, having subjects ranging from the Loch Ness Monster to computer programming to book collecting. It is also contains some of the most quickly dating material in the collection.

For instance, we recently withdrew a book titled The Internet for Dummies, 7th ed. copyrighted 2000 (004.67 LE). Then, I found the 1st ed. from 1993 classed at 384.3 (in 1993, the librarians probably did not know what to do with it), and I withdrew it as well. The latter book, while being an introductory text to the Internet in 1993, would no doubt bewilder people who today use the Internet quite regularly. Things have changed so much in the past 15 years! This illustrates why it is such a challenge for librarians to keep their computer books up-to-date.

A listing of the newest selections from this area in the Emmetsburg Public Library prove that we are trying to meet this challenge. They are: Amp Your MySpace Page: Essential Tools for Giving Your Profile an Extreme Makeover (006.7 BU), How to do Everything With YouTube (006.7 FA), and How to do Everything With Podcasting (006.7 HO). In the Young Adult section we have The Rough Guide to MySpace & Other Online Communities (YA 004.69 BU). Each of these books deals with a different Internet-based computer application that is currently popular.

While the computer manuals are a very popular group of materials and very current in their area of study, other books classed in the 000s enjoy a more ephemeral popularity. These are works of controversial knowledge, and they include: Into the Bermuda Triangle : Pursuing the Truth Behind the World's Greatest Mystery (001.94 QU), Atlantis and the Lost Lands (001.94 ST), and The Secret Power of Pyramids (001.94 AK). We also have a set of reference books from the Marshall Cavendish Company called The Unexplained: Mysteries of Mind, Space and Time (001.9 UN).

Each month, I will be featuring several books I find to be engaging reads. Rather than how-to-manuals or books that merely lay out the facts, these are non-fiction books that tell a good story.

My first featured read is Aaron Lansky's Outwitting History: the Amazing Adventures of a Man Who Rescued a Million Yiddish Books (002.075 LA). No, this is not a story set in the Holocaust pitting a compassionate Gentile librarian shepherding Yiddish books across the border into safety under the noses of Nazi book-burners. Rather, Aaron Lansky was Jewish graduate student in 1980 when he dedicated himself towards preserving the Yiddish language in books.

So, why did Yiddish need saving in 1980, 35 years after the Holocaust? As it turns out, Yiddish, by that time, had become something of an orphan language. Hebrew was the language spoken in Israel. Jewish European immigrants to America were formerly a significant population of Yiddish speakers, but they had largely failed to pass on the language to their children. The Jews that remained in Europe became the victims of the Nazis, Stalin, and other anti-Semitic forces.

Lansky's efforts met with some apathy at first, but the book is chock full of stories of individuals who had kept their cherished Yiddish books for decades and then passed them on to Lansky's National Yiddish Book Center when they had to move on to a nursing home or before.

The book is wonderfully peppered with Yiddish phrases, which are always translated. If you know a bit of German, though, they are a special linguistic delight, for the languages share much in common.

The rather rollicking story of the group of Lansky and his zamlers (book collectors) makes an excellent can't-put-it-down read that can easily be digested in a few sittings. Anyone who has a love for books should fall in love with the man, Lansky, and his cause.

Monday, January 5, 2009

Welcome to Books by the Numbers!

Hello all! My name is Nathan Clark, the library director of the Emmetsburg Public Library. Welcome to my new blog about engaging non-fiction reads, Books by the Numbers. Each week I will feature a set of recommended reading by the numbers. Which numbers you ask? The numbers on the spines of our books--the Dewey Decimal numbers--of course!

Each month I will be focusing on the works in the Emmetsburg Public Library that have been assigned one of the 100 Dewey divisions. Many of these divisions are so broad that they will require several entries to feature them. Given that, and the fact that I may take a week off now and then, I think I will have fodder for blogging for a long time to come.

For each division, I will try to do each of the following:

1. Provide descriptions of each division discussed.

2. Provide examples of "classics" commonly assigned numbers within that division.

3. Feature 3-5 books, usually somewhat new, that I deem to be interesting and engaging reads.

4. Provide local call numbers of all books mentioned for people to find them in the Emmetsburg Public Library.

5. Provide comparable Library of Congress Classification for the books discussed to help in finding similar resources in other libraries (ILCC, with whom we share a space, classifies its books with this system).

I look forward to delving into the stacks of books, especially in places where I do not normally look. I know that I am bound to find some very pleasant surprises, and I hope that my readers will, too. Please stay tuned!