09/10/2015



11 notes

HOW DID I NOT KNOW ABOUT THESE ADORABLE EXTRA COMMERCIALS?

PART 2

16:27



2 notes

HOW DID I NOT KNOW ABOUT THESE ADORABLE EXTRA COMMERCIALS!? 

PART !

30/9/2015



2,092 notes

medievalpoc:

Books by Authors of Color and Those With “Diverse Content” Disproportionately Challenged or Banned

(American Library Association)

The OIF (American Library Association’s Office for Intellectual Freedom) has been tracking an increasing number of challenges to diverse titles. Authors of color and books with diverse content are disproportionately challenged and banned.
The OIF defines books with diverse content as those that include:
  • Non-white main and/or secondary characters
  • LGBT main and/or secondary characters
  • Disabled main and/or secondary characters
  • Issues about race or racism
  • LGBT issues
  • Issues about religion
  • Issues about disability and/or mental illness
  • Non-Western settings, in which the West is North America and Europe

Malinda Lo analyzed OIF’s list of the “Top 100 Banned/Challenged Books: 2000–2009” and the “Top Ten Challenged Books” lists for 2010, 2011, 2012, and 2013. Lo discovered that 52% of the books challenged or banned include diverse content. OIF analyzed the 2014 Top Ten Challenged Books and found that eight of the ten titles included diverse content.

Read More at ALA.org

This post was reblogged from Rich in Color.

29/9/2015



35,940 notes

Some Things Your Local Librarians Would Like You To Know

backofthebookshelf:

It is not a stupid question. Even if it is a stupid question, we have been thoroughly trained to answer your question without judgement or second-guessing. Besides, we’re mostly just glad you’re not asking us about the noise the printer is making again.

There are probably (at least) two desks in the library. One is where you check out books and is mostly staffed by people wearing nametags that say “Circulation Clerk.” These people can answer your questions about damaged or missing books, fines, and how many forms of identification we’ll need if you want to get a library card but your mailing address is in Taiwan. The other one is closer to the books and computers and is mostly staffed by people wearing nametags that say “Librarian.” These people can answer your questions about spider extermination, how to rent property to the United States Postal Service, and the number of tropical island nations in which you could theoretically establish the first United States Embassy. We would love to answer these questions for you. It would be a nice change from the printer.

We probably own a 3D printer by now. 3D printers, are cool, right? Please, please come use our 3D printer, it’s so lonely.

We spent a lot of money to hire this woodworker to come and teach a class at the library which you can attend for free. You will probably be the only person between the ages of ten and fifty in attendance, but your presence will fill the librarian with an unnameable joy. They will float back to their manager in a daze. “A young person came to my program,” they will say. You will have made their entire job worthwhile.

Every time you ask us for a book, movie, or music recommendation, a baby librarian gets their first cardigan.

Somewhere in the library, there is a form. If you fill out this form with your name and library card number and the details of the thing you are looking for, we will find you the thing. Sometimes the answer is “the thing is in Great Britain and they will not send it to us,” but more often the thing will just appear on hold for you, and one day you will pick up a copy of that out-of-print book you never thought you would read and maybe you will say, “Wow, the library is amazing,” and the librarian’s heart will glow. 

Please bring back book #2. The rest of its series misses it very much.

Five dollars is not a large library fine. Believe me, before I started working in libraries, I too wondered how someone could sleep at night, knowing they owed money to the library. When we laugh as you sheepishly apologize for your $2.50 in overdue fees, we are not mocking you, we are thinking of the ten people we sent to debt collection already today.

We really don’t care why you’re checking out Fifty Shades of Grey. Maybe you have a specifically-themed ironic bachelorette party to plan. Maybe you’re working on a thesis paper about mainstream media’s depiction of female sexuality. Maybe you just got curious. We will give you the benefit of the doubt. 

Whatever you’re smoking in the family restroom, please stop.

Somewhere on the library’s website, buried under “Links” or “Research” or “On-line Resources,” is a page that a librarian spent a month’s worth of work on. It contains many links to websites you thought everyone knew about, and one to a page that you could never have imagined existed that perfectly solves a problem you never expected to be resolved. 

Imagine the kind of person who would think to themselves, “Library school sounds like a thing I should do.” For the most part, you are imagining the kind of person who is now a librarian. We want very much to help you, but we’re not entirely sure how to do that unless you ask. You are not bothering us. Please, come and say hi.

This post was reblogged from In the Back of the Bookshelf.

29/5/2015



1,395 notes

mccallspatternbehavior:

image

Kelly

There’s literally only one rule to Hat Club

This blog makes me giggle 

This post was reblogged from .

14/3/2015



210 notes

Troll the respawn, Jeremy.

This post was reblogged from Maximilian Years, B.C..

23:47



914 notes

This post was reblogged from I Fit Every Where and No Where.

23:43



115,445 notes

asylum-art:

Sena RunaPaper Quilling by Sena RunaI love to come across a designer whose work is exploring new territory… that was the case when I noticed the fresh designs of quiller Sena Runa of Turkey. The colorful, yet cohesive palette she favors gives an appealing unity to her art pieces.

This post was reblogged from Cynical Minds.

23:37



80 notes

lookingbrasil:

Jonathan singing with Lea Michele on 6x11 “We Built This Glee Club”  of Glee.

Okay. Breaking my tumblr hiatus because this gave me ALL the feelings, and I needed a safe space to confess: 1) because I rarely talk about GLEE anymore since it’s been a struggle to watch lately and 2) because I am a grown-ass woman who still misses show choir. 

 This whole episode just beautifully summed up all my post-show choir life nostalgia while incorporating so many songs I love. Styx’s Come Sail Away basically WAS my childhood, We Built This City was one of my first show choir performances, and THIS right here… well let’s just say I am pretty sure my 9th grade diary had quotations from this song doodled in the corners. 

I’ve watched this scene three times. Can’t stop smiling. They just look so darn happy to see each other!

Haven’t felt the Glee chemistry this much since the Borderline/ Open Your Heart mash-up. Nicely done. 
 

This post was reblogged from Looking Brasil.

28/10/2014



My new librarian glasses are perfect… If only the prescription was. May be worth the headache

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