Start A Revolution: Stop Acting Like A Library
by Ben Bizzle with Maria Flora (2015)
Bizzle and Flora present students, academics, and librarians working in a
variety of contexts with a comprehensive guide to reinventing and radically
marketing library services based on the author’s experience in reinvigorating
the Craighead County Jonesboro Public Library in Arkansas. The authors have
organized the bulk of their text into eight chapters, including a prelude
telling the Jonesboro story, and an interlude telling the story of the Crooked
Valley Regional Library. The eight chapters cover a variety of related topics,
including digital library services, mobile library services, Facebook
advertising and marketing, and many others. (Summary by: protoview.com).
Welcome
Welcome to the Freeport Memorial Library blog. We hope to use this blog to offer in-depth information about library services that we do not have room to explore in our bi-monthly newsletter. We look forward to hearing from you.
New York Times Bestsellers
Feature Films at Freeport
Music CDs at Freeport
Wednesday, October 7, 2015
Friday, October 2, 2015
Readers' Advisory
The Girl in the Spider's Web: A Lisbeth Salander Novel
by David Lagercrantz (2015)
Lagercrantz's worthy, crowd-pleasing fourth installment in the late Stieg Larsson's Millennium saga opens in Sweden, where some intellectual property developed by artificial intelligence genius Frans Balder has been stolen by a video game company with ties to Russian mobsters. Crusading journalist Mikael Blomkvist, who's casting about for a new investigative project, is about to meet with Balder when an intruder kills the scientist and puts Balder's autistic eight-year-old son in danger. Meanwhile in the U.S., the National Security Agency is hacked, and its chief of security, Edwin Needham, vows revenge. Lisbeth Salander plays a central role in both plot lines, and the pleasure resides in watching Lagercrantz corral an enormous cast of characters into an intricate story revolving around the larger-than-life hacker and her desire to right wrongs, including corporate espionage, a government spying on its own citizens, and violence against the defenseless. (PW Annex Reviews).
by David Lagercrantz (2015)
Lagercrantz's worthy, crowd-pleasing fourth installment in the late Stieg Larsson's Millennium saga opens in Sweden, where some intellectual property developed by artificial intelligence genius Frans Balder has been stolen by a video game company with ties to Russian mobsters. Crusading journalist Mikael Blomkvist, who's casting about for a new investigative project, is about to meet with Balder when an intruder kills the scientist and puts Balder's autistic eight-year-old son in danger. Meanwhile in the U.S., the National Security Agency is hacked, and its chief of security, Edwin Needham, vows revenge. Lisbeth Salander plays a central role in both plot lines, and the pleasure resides in watching Lagercrantz corral an enormous cast of characters into an intricate story revolving around the larger-than-life hacker and her desire to right wrongs, including corporate espionage, a government spying on its own citizens, and violence against the defenseless. (PW Annex Reviews).
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