Livros aleatórios da biblioteca de kelleykl
Timothy Goes to School por Rosemary Wells
Dog's Colorful Day: A Messy Story About Colors and Counting (Picture Puffins) por Emma Dodd
Monique and the Mango Rains: Two Years with a Midwife in Mali por Kris Holloway; Consulting Editor John Bidwell
Library Mouse por Daniel Kirk
301 Simple Things You Can Do to Sell Your Home Now and for More Money Than You Thought: How to Inexpensively Reorganize, Stage, and Prepare Your Home for Sale por Teri B. Clark
Batman : The Purr-fect Crime (Scholastic Reader Level 3) por Liz Mills
Click, Clack, Moo: Cows That Type por Doreen Cronin
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amigos: abbylibrarian, bvlibrary, BVReaders, centergrove, ewyatt, jwilk55, librarychs, lorabear, monarchlibrary, ReddAcademy, sarahthelibrarian, silencius, Siniperhonen, strandedon8jo
bibliotecas interessantes: BiblioFool, booktalker, BVstorytime, CBC, librarianlk, lil1_79, mermerlibrarian, MrsBond, teachbooks
Autores LibraryThing: Mark Hockley (MarkJH), Cat Urbigkit (catu2), Kimberly Pauley (kimpauley), Margie Palatini (margiepalatini), Gabrielle Zevin (memoirsofa), Michelle Knudsen (michelleknudsen), John Green (sparksflyup)
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Membro: kelleykl
ColecçõesA sua biblioteca (273), Em leitura (1), Lidos mas não possuídos (2), Todas as colecções (273)
Resenhas21 resenhas
EtiquetasAudio (27), Humor (22), Monarch 2009 (16), Caudill 2009 (12), Library (10), Early Reviewer (9), Cats (8), Science (8), Purchase (7), Folklore (7) — ver todas as etiquetas
Nuvensnuvem de etiquetas, nuvem de autores
GruposLibrarians who LibraryThing, Read YA Lit, School Media Specialists, Teacher Librarians & School Librarians, Your Pants
Livrarias favoritasPiece of Mind Books- Edwardsville
Sobre mimI am a certified school librarian. I read a lot of children's and young adult books. I am usually interested in whatever anyone recommends to me.
Sobre a minha bibliotecaThis library only contains books that I am reading or have read since joining LibraryThing. It helps me remember what books I liked and what books I loved!!
Página pessoalhttp://librarychs.wikispaces.com
Adesão
LibraryThing Primeiros Resenhistas/Ofertas de Membros
Nome realKrystina
LocalizaçãoGlen Carbon, IL
Autores favoritosNenhuma
Tipo de contapública, vitalícia
Novidades das LigaçõesNovidades das Ligações
URL
http://www.librarything.com/profile/kelleykl (perfil)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/kelleykl (biblioteca)
Conhecimento ComumSéries (53), Prémios (211), Personagens (478), Lugares (110)
Membro desdeFeb 27, 2008
Em leituraDragon Slippers por Jessica Day George










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publicado por cnb às 10:56 pm (EST) em Jan 10, 2009
Yeah, it was definitely worth the wait. I really, really enjoyed Paper Towns. I still rate An Abundance of Katherines as my favourite John Green, though.
I was terribly excited to hear the book debuted at number five on the New York Times Bestselling Author list. We, nerdfighters, sure can rally to make/achieve something pretty awesome.
DFTBA,
Anne D.
publicado por strandedon8jo às 10:08 am (EST) em Oct 27, 2008
publicado por BVstorytime às 12:15 pm (EST) em Aug 28, 2008
Decided to leave a comment here rather than Twitter for length. Wanted to comment on our transition from Dewey to genre-based cataloguing in the music collection. For small collections genre is the way to go because searching for items that way is generally intuitive. The drawback in music cataloguing is that record companies don't uniformly label their CDs. Some lead with title, some with artist, and some omit one or the other. So, consistent library labeling and searching are frustrated. At least with genres you can determine what categories to use and how many to have. Dewey kind of specifies, and like in other aspects, reflects 19th century (or at least mid 20th) tastes and practices.
In the classical genre one can catalog by composer regardless of type of composition, while in Dewey every type (symphony, string quartet, opera, etc.) has its own alphabet. that makes searching just by composer very frustrating, and you kind of have to know the overall type scheme. Since a small-medium library may only have a few CDs in any type, its classical collection may just appear to be out of order.
At our branch the collection has a lot of jazz, gospel, R&B and Rock; very little C&W and classical. The pop genre is confused because it includes big-band through Michael Jackson. Obviously it needs to be subdivided, but in Dewey pop is only one number, while classical is around 10.
I think it's important to be able to view the front of the CD jacket when browsing, rather than the spine. Obviously the front is easier to read than the spine, and more information about the CD is immediately available. The drawback is keeping the collection in order. Of course, have bins that allow for front access take up more floor space.
How is your collection organized and shelved?
publicado por saxhorn às 3:23 am (EST) em Aug 26, 2008
publicado por silencius às 12:59 am (EST) em Aug 26, 2008
I just finished Deliver Us From Normal by Kate Klise and recommend that too. I don't normally bother with mundane juvenile fiction (Cornelia being the exception etc etc) because I'm more of an SF/F fan, but I picked it up at the bookstore and couldn't put it back down. I only gave it 3-1/2 stars because it's just not my usual taste, but overall it's a good grown-up read too.
publicado por cabri às 9:40 pm (EST) em Aug 20, 2008
Happy reading!
publicado por strandedon8jo às 1:35 am (EST) em Aug 10, 2008
publicado por strandedon8jo às 12:02 pm (EST) em Aug 9, 2008
I spent those years living on a small island about 300 kilometers south of Tokyo with a population of just under 9000 people (hence my name... strandedon8jo. Eight is hachi in Japanese, so I was stranded on Hachijo). I enjoyed my time on Hachijo-jima very much, but there were no book stores to speak of. Hachijo-jima is such a beautiful and out of the way place. If you ever make it back to Japan, I definitely recommend a visit.
Since leaving my little tropical island I've been living in Hokkaido the northern most of Japan's main islands. Such a different climate. And while there a bookstore with English books a couple of hours away, I still tend to do most of my purchasing online. So, I while I wait for my good friends at Amazon to send me Katherines, I'll be working my way through TBR pile... a pile that is ever increasing!
publicado por strandedon8jo às 10:39 am (EST) em Jul 25, 2008
I see you have some Mem Fox in your library. Have you read Possum Magic? It's hugely popular amongst Australian kids and is without a doubt her most famous book.
If your interested in a recommendation for an Australian YA author, I suggest John Marsden. I particularly liked his 'Tomorrow when the War Began' series.
publicado por strandedon8jo às 1:31 pm (EST) em Jul 24, 2008
At least I can pretend to be a librarian with the help of librarything.com. It's such a great tool...that and it makes me feel so much better about my love of YA novels. It's reassuring to know I'm not the only adult reader of YA out there.
DFTBA.
publicado por strandedon8jo às 1:19 pm (EST) em Jul 24, 2008
How funny! :-) I was just looking at the book battle page and saw you added some questions. When I went into librarything, I saw your messages. I look forward to keep up on what you are reading.
Erin
publicado por ewyatt às 12:11 am (EST) em Jul 21, 2008
I sent you a friend request... I am a school librarian from Finland and it was nice to see how you had taken up a wiki to be used as a research gateway to students! If you don't mind, it would be nice to be in contact - I am trying to come up with some kind of solution in that area as well... It would be nice to know how that wiki works and is it used by the students.
Thanks already in advance and have a great weekend!
Anu
publicado por Siniperhonen às 7:04 am (EST) em Jul 18, 2008
Happy Reading
Lora
publicado por lorabear às 1:09 pm (EST) em Jul 17, 2008
publicado por jwilk55 às 10:19 pm (EST) em Jun 30, 2008
publicado por BVReaders às 10:57 pm (EST) em Jun 27, 2008
publicado por abbylibrarian às 8:55 pm (EST) em Jun 9, 2008