Hill Country Book Festival for Children & Youth 2009

October 2, 2009

Unleash the Magic!

Attention Children, Teens, Parents, and Grandparents of Central Texas!

November 14, 2009 more than 40 children and YA authors will be

Hill Country Book Festival

Hill Country Book Festival

showcasing their work and interacting with their readers at the Hill Country Book Festival for Children and Youth 2009 to be held in the Georgetown, Texas Public Library from 9:00 am to 4:00 pm.

An excellent way to kick off the Christmas season!

Nine authors will be presenting for the children and teens throughout the day along with writing activities and practice in developing and illustrating their own books.

A panel discussion on “College Preparation Tips” will be held from 1:00-2:45, and a Scrabble Tournament will be on going throughout the day.

Writing CompetitionAt 3:00, the awards to the winners of the Hill Country Book Festival writing competition will be presented to the top three in each age category. The grand prize is a Dell Netbook Computer.

Activities throughout the day include a magician; face painting, and elementary oral readers. Check out the festival Web site for more details.

Come and enjoy the fun!

Magic_box


Successful First Annual Hill Country Book Festival

October 13, 2008

First Annual Hill Country Book Festival


- a Huge Success -


Saturday, October 11th the Georgetown, Texas Public Library was abuzz with activities. The children’s department had crafts, face painting, live music, along with stories and presentations from their favorite authors and illustrators.

 

The community rooms of the library provided an opportunity for readers to meet over forty authors representing a wide variety of genres. Whatever a person’s interest area, there seemed to be an author who worked in that field.

For those desiring in-depth learning, celebrity authors provided informative presentations in the library classroom.

I would like to say a big thank you to the Hill Country Book Festival Board of Directors, Connie Miller, Phyllis Moses, Margie Boyd, Margarite Holt and the scores of volunteers who worked on this project.

The festival was definitely exemplary and a great asset to the city of Georgetown and the encouragement of literacy throughout Williamson County.

Make plans now to attend the Second Annual Hill Country Book Festival in 2009. Check the festival website  http://www.hillcountrybookfestival.org or call 512-864-1412 for future details. 

 


Advantages of Social Cataloging

November 11, 2007

Advantages of Social Cataloging

Social bookmarking has added a great deal to how information users share their online resources, however LibraryThing has taken social bookmarking and networking to an entirely new level.

Bookshelf

LibraryThing at http://www.librarything.com/ is a social network of bibliophiles. It is a Web site to help people catalog their own books, as well as connects people with the same books, and comes up with suggestions for what to read next. Its primary feature is the automatic cataloging of books by importing data from booksellers and libraries through Z39.50 (Z39.50 is a client server protocol for searching and retrieving information from remote computer databases).

BooksUsers (informally known as thingamabrarians) can catalog personal collections, keep reading lists, and meet other users who have the same books. While it is possible to keep a library catalog private, most people choose to make their catalogs public, which makes it possible to find others with similar tastes. Thingamabrarians can browse the entire database by searching titles, authors, or tags generated by users as they enter books into their libraries.

Users of LibraryThing can import information from over 80 libraries including Library of Congressthe Library of Congress, and the Canadian National Catalogue. Once the correct book and edition has been located, a simple click adds it to their own catalog. They can also add books from another member’s catalog or by searching on LibraryThing itself. Assuming the book is found (and most will be), each time a user adds a book, LibraryThing automatically posts an image of its front cover, its date of publication, its ISBN (International Standard Book Number), a list of other editions. It may even suggest where a person can buy new copies online. If the user desires, they can add other information, including tags, a star rating, a Dewey decimal number, the date they acquired the book, the day they started reading, and the date they finished reading it. Users can add comments to the database and even post reviews. If the correct book or edition is not available in the available databases, users can add it manually or edit the record later.

Although LibraryThing provides cataloging data from the Library of Congress, it encourages its users to tag the books included in their collective collections. clouds.gif LibraryThing, like many other folksonomy applications, incorporates a tag cloud into the “Social Information” page created for each book. The tag cloud enlarges the tags visually when they constitute a high percentage of use.

When a book is tagged, you can view when other users or books use that tag. “Members with your books” shows the 50 most similar libraries from other members. When viewing another member’s profile or library, the system shows how many (and which) books you share with that other member. If desired, you can leave a (public or private) comment on their profile. You can also add the member as a friend, to your private watch list, or as an interesting library.

The LibraryThing Web site does not use advertising, but receives referral fees from online bookstores that supply book cover images. Individual users can sign up for free and register up to 200 books. dollarsBeyond that limit and/or for commercial or group use, a subscription fee is charged. You can browse for free can post up to 200 books free of charge. You can also access your virtual library from my cell phone while standing in a bookshop by pointing your cell phone’s browser to <http://www.librarything.com/m>. Beyond that, you have to pay either $10 for a yearly membership or $25 for a lifetime account.

Danbury Public Library, Danbury, Connecticut was the first library to add the LibraryThing widgets to its catalog. The LibraryThing data is integrated almost seamlessly into the record display. Tags and the tag browsers bring the cataloging efforts of LibraryThing’s thousands of users into the local OPAC (online public access catalog). Users merely click on a tag associated with a book and the tag browser opens and provides a list of all the other books in the library with that same tag. The tag browser also provides a tag search engine, which has created an entirely new way to navigate our catalog.

Follow the link to a biography of Benjamin Franklin in the Danbury LibraryBen Franklin <http://cat.danburylibrary.org/record=1263103>. Notice the LibraryThing tag cloud at the end of the record. It provides more links to related OPAC resources than the traditional Library of Congress or Sears Subject Headings.

Using LibraryThing.com, readers, authors, librarians, and researchers can now multiply their resources by sharing libraries and network with those with similar interests and information needs.