Tuesday, April 29, 2008

New Fiction and Non-Fiction in the Library

The library has received New books that are on display near the entrance of the library - comy by and have a look at them!

New Fiction










New Non-Fiction





















Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Database Updates




The JSTOR database interface has recently been updated. You can now create a "My JSTOR Account" and save citations, email citations, and export citations to bibliographic software. Once you create a "My JSTOR Account," you can keep your username and password and use it beyond St. George's. If you have any questions email a librarian for help.



Use the "Snapshot Tool " feature in ProQuest Historical Newspapers to print a section of a lengthy newspaper article. You can use the tool to highlight a section of the article, select it and then print it.

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Global Issues Week - Events In the Library


This week is Global Issues Week at St. George's and the library is hosting a series of events. On Tuesday evening, April 15th following the IncaSon performance, the library will host a Kids Read Event. St. George's students who are native speakers of Chinese, Spanish, French, and Latin will read a children's story to the kids and then a St. George's student who is learning the language will translate for the audience. We will be having pizza and drinks so stop by and listen. The event should last a half hour or so.


"Seen from Abroad: How America can win friends and influence people in the 21st Century." On Thursday, April 17 at 6:30PM, the Library will host a panel discussion. Five international officers from the Naval War College representing the countries of Pakistan, Sweden, Norway, Senegal and Spain will share reflections on America and offer their thoughts about how America can keep or regain a position of influence during the coming century. Questions from the audience will be welcomed and refreshments will be served.

















See you at the library!!

Friday, April 4, 2008

April is National Poetry Month
















Stop by the library and find yourself some POETRY to read. We have lots of choices!










Thursday, April 3, 2008

Library of Congress and Flickr


The Library of Congress has posted over 3000 photos up on Flickr in an effort to "..afford better access ot the vast trove of historical photographs and invite user feedback." Photos include images from the Depression era and World War II. None of the photographs have any known copyright restrictions. The staff at the Library of Congress are hoping people will add caption information to photos and add information to the documentary record.

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Pictures of Books Included in Card Catalog



New Feature! The Ocean State Libraries catalog now has pictures of the materials indexed. When you do a search the result list will show an image of the materials. Go to: http://catalog.oslri.net/

Monday, March 31, 2008

New Non-Fiction of the Week


New Non-Fiction of the Week:
Ezra Pound: The Young Genius, 1885-1920 by A. David Moody. New York: Oxford University Press, 2007.
In this first volume of a definitive new biography of the poet, Moody charts the huge strides Pound took during his first 35 years toward the realization of his ambitious goal. Readers follow the astonishingly confident-even brash-young Idaho native as he wins his place in a London rich in tradition yet pregnant with revolutionary new literary movements.And no writer has ever ransacked the past-from Dante to Li Po-with fiercer energy in his quest to forge a modern prosody that will make everything astonishingly new. Pound's restless imagination also draws inspiration from contemporaries such as Yeats and Ford and resonates with the ideas propounded by Imagists and Vorticists. Determined to cut his own way, Pound champions the early work of Eliot, Frost, and Joyce, but he never relents in his own pursuit of poetic fame. Moody indeed concludes this volume with Pound's publication of Hugh Selwyn Mauberly, a luminous poem assuring an astonishing world that a gifted artist has found his way onto the world stage.With The Pisan Cantos still ahead, readers will wait impatiently for Moody's second volume. Source: Booklist (December 2007)