Did You Know? Configure Google to Display Our Library’s Full Text Holdings!

Blog_GoogleIt’s that easy! Configure Google Scholar to display our library’s full text holdings: Google Scholar Settings > Library Links > type/select University of Puget Sound > Save

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Music in the Library – Euphonium & Trumpet, Friday, March 25, 2013, 3:30 p.m.!

Blog_2-guysPlease join us as Stephen Abeshima and Gavin Tranter perform the “Euphonium & Trumpet” in our next Music in the library series this Friday, March 29, 2013, 3:30-3:50 p.m. in the library reading room!

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One of African Literature’s Giants, Chinua Achebe, Passed Away Friday, March 22, 2013.

ChinuaOn Friday, March 22, we learned the sad news that Chinua Achebe had passed away at age 82.  One of the giants of African literature—indeed, of world literature—Achebe’s 1958 novel, Things Fall Apart, explores the tragic consequences of cross-cultural misunderstanding through the life and actions of an Ibo man named Okonkwo.

To honor Achebe’s memory and to encourage further exploration of African literature, we offer this sampling of novels by African authors as suggested reading.  Each link will take you to the Puget Sound WorldCat record, where you can note the book’s location in Collins Library or request a copy from SUMMIT. 

Arrow of God, by Chinua Achebe.  During the 1920s in Eastern Nigeria, a son’s overzealous conversion to Christianity brings about a clash between his father, the Chief Priest, and the British District Officer.

Everything Good Will Come, by Sefi Atta.  Enitan Taiwo and Sheri Bakare are two Nigerian girls in 1971, one who is prepared to manipulate the traditional system and one who attempts to defy it.

So Long a Letter, by Mariama Ba.  Ramatoulaye Fall, a recently widowed Senegalese schoolteacher, writes a letter to a friend recounting her struggles to survive after her husband takes a second wife.

Nervous Conditions, by Tsitsi Dangarembga.  Tambu leaves her rural village in colonial Rhodesia to go to a missionary boarding school headed by her wealthier, British-educated uncle.

Links, by Nuruddin Farah.  Returning to Mogadishu, Somalia, from New York after a twenty-year exile, Jeebleh finds a troubled and devastated city ruled by clan warlords and patrolled by violent gangs of thugs.

Bones, by Chenjerai Hove.  Marita, a farmworker, goes to the city in search of her only son, but is killed by the government.  Her death sets in motion of a series of additional tragedies.

Ways of Dying, by Zakes Mda.  Toloki, a professional mourner in South Africa, is reunited with a woman from his village.

Beneath the Lion’s Gaze, by Maaza Mengiste.  After his physician father, Hailu, is jailed and his younger brother, Dawit, joins an underground resistance movement, Yonas prays to God for an end to the violence in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, and the rest of the country on the eve of revolution in 1974.

Efuru, by Flora Nwapa.  After two unsuccessful marriages and the death of her only child, Efuru becomes a woman to suspect in her small Nigerian village.

The Famished Road, by Ben Okri.  The narrator, Azaro, is an abiku, a spirit child, who in the Yoruba tradition of Nigeria exists between life and death.

Submitted by Peggy Burge, Humanities Librarian

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Rosalind Franklin and the discovery of the structure of DNA

RosalindThe award-winning, critically-acclaimed play Photograph 51, by playwright Anna Ziegler, recently finished its run at the Seattle Repertory Theatre. It tells the story of British-born scientist Rosalind Elise Franklin (1920-1958), who was a physical chemist and expert at X-ray diffraction. Through her imaging skills and techniques, technical innovations, and inductive approach, she made significant contributions to our understanding the physical structure of the DNA molecule.  Watson and Crick, who published their ground-breaking paper on the topic in 1953, received the lion’s share of credit and fame for solving the puzzle, while Franklin’s work was rarely cited.

Scholarly information on Rosalind Franklin and this fascinating story (and the play) can be found online or in Collins Library, a sampling of which is provided here.

Articles and papers

Biographical information

  • Find biographical information and lists of the key primary and secondary sources on a scientist in the Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography
  • Perform a subject (not keyword) search in the Collins Catalog or Puget Sound WorldCat on a scientist to find books and other materials about that person. (An author search will result in a list of works by a person).

Play reviews and theatre criticism

Documentary

DNA: Secret of Photograph 51 (2003)

By Elizabeth Stiles Knight, Interim Science Librarian

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Spotlight: People Making a Difference at Collins – Toria Messinger

My name is Toria Messinger and I am a Junior at the University of Puget Sound, majoring in Spanish Language, Culture, and Literature and minoring in Latin American Studies, Mathematics, and Latino Studies.  I’m the Treasurer of CHispA (Community for Hispanic Awareness), a member of Phi Eta Sigma Honor Society, and an Orientation 2013 Perspectives Coordinators.

I have worked at Collins Memorial Library for almost three years, first in the Learning Commons and later as an administrative assistant to Lori Ricigliano.  I feel blessed to have found a position at the library; it is such a supportive and exciting environment.  I always look forward to my shifts, and have gained valuable skills during my time here.  The support and encouragement from my supervisors and coworkers has contributed to an extremely rewarding experience.

The library is a fantastic resource for both academic and personal research.  I am in awe of the online resources available to students, such as EBSCO databases, Journal Locator, Summit and Puget Sound WorldCat.  Additionally, the expertise of Liaison Librarians has proved invaluable on several occasions, both through personal consultation and through the utilization of their course websites and subject guides.  Instead of struggling to locate sources, there is a wealth of texts and multi-media elements to use!

I have held several previous jobs in the field of customer service and feel that the library does an excellent job of stressing quality and attentiveness to patrons.  I had the opportunity to be a part of the customer service training video last fall which was a great experience.  All employees attend a yearly training, and I think this helps to clarify the high expectations of this institution as well as providing us with helpful tools and strategies for potential situations.  During my time in the Learning Commons, the best feeling was successfully helping patrons locate materials and navigate technological issues.

I am an avid reader, and when asked to name my favorite book I always wallow around for a definitive answer.  I would have to say that at this particular moment, The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafón, The House of the Scorpion by Nancy Farmer, and Taming the Star Runner by S.E. Hinton are three of my personal favorites!

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Revisiting Iraq Through The Eyes Of An Exiled Poet

poetRevisiting Iraq Through The Eyes Of An Exiled Poet

An interview with Poet Dunya Mikhail.

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From the Archives: Digital Versions of The Trail in Sound Ideas!

TrailIn addition to holding original copies of every issue of The Trail, previously known as Ye Recorde and The Maroon, digital versions are available via Sound Ideas!  Take a look at what professors, students, and your parents were up to!

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Books As Muses!

bookasMusesRead this New Yorker article about the many ways artists use books!

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10 Classic High School Required Books That You Should Reread!

ClassicsRead this huffingtonpost article on revisiting the classic books!

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Recommended Reading: Student Staff Picks

readingRecommended Books:

Beloved: Toni Morrison, Screwtape Letters: C. S. Lewis (a collection of fictional epistles from one devil to another regarding temptation. very philosophical) Cat’s Cradle: Kurt Vonnegut, Slaughterhouse 5: Kurt Vonnegut The Year of Living Biblically: A. J. Jacobs (agnostic tries to read and obey the bible as literally as possible for a year) Blink: Malcolm Gladwell (psychological book, but really interesting nonetheless)

-Library Student Staff

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