illustration of the dance macabre with skeletons

News and announcements

The Baldwin Library of Historical Children’s Literature at the University of Florida is one of the largest collections of children’s books in the world. Last month, they announced that they had received a donation of books from the family of Ed Young, a notable children’s book author and illustrator. Young, who passed away in 2023, illustrated some 100 books of fairy tales, poetry and memoirs, and won a Caldecott Medal and two Caldecott Honors. The donation to UF Libraries includes books from his personal collection. 

The University of Delaware Library recently announced the winners of its inaugural Open Data Impact Awards. These awards “celebrate UD students, faculty and staff whose openly shared datasets continue to make meaningful contributions to research, teaching and public engagement.” One of the winners pulled together attendee-level datasets for 33 years of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change Conference of the Parties. Another created a global dataset of monthly irrigated and rainfed cropped areas for 23 crop classes over 15 years. 

Discover the hidden art of fore-edge painting—images tucked into the gilded edges of  books, usually invisible until pages are fanned. The J. Willard Marriott Library’s “The Business of Books” exhibition showcases these secret masterpieces, including works by 20th century California artist Vera Dutter and historic English binders. The exhibit reveals how books can simultaneously be objects of beauty, mystery, and commerce. (My parents definitely had books with gilded edges. I wonder…)

I’ve always said that if I ever got a tattoo, it would be a memento mori (pictured above). Illinois State University Libraries highlights one of its notable holdings, a 1590s publication of the Booke of Christian Prayers, which includes various depictions of death, “the great leveler for all.” 

A simple announcement but a notable one. Brown University Library has created a new faculty publications collection. This circulating collection consists of print books authored by Brown faculty members as well as digital publications, which can be accessed via QR codes within the display. On the one hand, I’m surprised more academic libraries don’t have collections like these. On the other hand, I know the difficulty of having to keep a collection like this up to date (and heaven forbid you leave someone out). 

Notable mentions 

Finally, International Open Access Week was Oct. 20. A number of libraries celebrated the occasion by highlighting their services and collections, including Boston University Librareies, Touro University Libraries, Seattle University, Villanova’s Falvey Library, Seattle University, IU Bloomington Libraries, Fordham, University of Delaware, University of Louisville, UC Davis, and the University of Maryland BC.

On social

This spend the day with me video from University of South Carolina Libraries  has to be one of the best pieces of academic library content I’ve seen in a while. Not only is it totes adorbs, but someone really put some thought into the script. The modified voice is chef’s kiss.

Make a collage for each of your different campus libraries. Just like how University of Illinois did it here. Don’t have multiple libraries? Do one for different spaces, floors, or collections.

This format from the B.D. Owens Library at Northwest Missouri State University seems easily replicable at any college. Just throw in a few bulleted item specific to your institution. 

https://www.tiktok.com/@clubowenslibrary/video/7564425899806821663?_r=1&_t=ZT-90uy24NvH0Y

This remix was living in my head rent free for days after SNL and Sabrina Carpenter posted it. My team hopped on the meme and it outperformed our usual content. But I loved the twist the UVU Library put on it. 

@uvulibrary

We know social media can be humerus, but it’s time to bone up on your anatomy homework! You can borrow skeletons, models, and more at Fulton Library’s first-floor Circulation Desk for free. #BeezInTheTrap #Trending #Library #CollegeLife #StudyTok

♬ original sound – uvulibrary

Finally, I’m going to self promote a little bit. Every semester at the William H. Hannon Library, we unveil a new set of stickers. Before we had even made the stickers this year, I knew how I wanted to premiere them

magets wrapped in tyvek on top of manuscript page

News and announcements

✨🖥️ 🖼 The AUC Robert W. Woodruff Library secured a $500,000 grant from the MacArthur Foundation to boost its ongoing HBCU digitization initiative. This two-year funding will expand the library’s capacity to digitize, preserve, and share archives from Historically Black Colleges and Universities via the HBCU Digital Library Trust. Partnering with HBCUs, the AUC library hosts a growing portal that already features collections from over 30 institutions. 

🎶🎙️🌍 The Archives of Traditional Music (ATM) at Indiana University preserves more than 250,000 hours of recordings in formats from wax cylinders to vinyl and VHS. Many materials are now digitally accessible via streaming. ATM’s collections are shaped by donor gifts, shifting research emphases, and archival vision, and today they support work in language revitalization, ethnomusicology, and cultural memory. 

🔍💾🤝 The University of Chicago Libraries launched “SHARED” (Secure Hub for Access, Reliability, and Exchange of Data), a new data platform backed by NSF funding to support research collaboration and discovery. It offers scalable, secure storage and integrates with UChicago’s Knowledge@UChicago repository as well as national networks like the Open Science Grid. This project will support the full research data lifecycle and enable faculty to comply with federal data-sharing mandates. 

🧠📄⚖️ Berkeley Library created an FAQ to help ensure compliance when scraping or using AI with its electronic collections. Which is good because violating license terms could risk campus-wide access to critical resources and lead to legal liabilities.

📚🏛️🎉 Knight at Night at the University of Oregon is a late-evening event for first-year and transfer students with live music, games, DIY crafts, trivia, mini-gold, and social space in the library. What an amazing open house style event!

🗞️🧱✍️ Northwestern University Libraries’s conservation lab treated 22 tightly folded 18th-century parchment documents (1705–1730), from a collection that included deeds, wills, and seals from the 14th through 20th century. Damage included creases, tears, and wax flaking, and conservators worked to safely unfold and stabilize these fragile legal records. (pictured above)

📖🌐👩‍🏫 Gonzaga University welcomed Katia Passerini as its 27th president back in July and celebrated her scholarly contributions via a new research guide. The LibGuide showcases her publications, honors, and interdisciplinary impact across education, global development, and innovation. This is a pretty cool way to celebrate university leadership.

Notable mentions

Many libraries pulled together resources and recommended readings for Latine Heritage Month, including; USF’s Gleeson Library, University of Utah’s Marriott Library, Binghamton University Library, University of Virginia, University of Dayton, UC Irvine Libraries, Syracuse University, San Diego State University, Loyola Marymount University, Emory University, and American University

On social

This was a trend for a hot minute, and FSU Libraries jumped on it with a perfect iteration, showing how to fix a common frustration students have entering the library. (FSU also jumped on the Alexander sneaking out meme) 

My favorite part of this trend was getting to hear a song that I will never tire of.  OK State Library executed it seamlessly. 

A few libraries jumped on the “Unfortunately I do love…” meme, including Penn Libraries, Fondren Library, and EKU Libraries

Finally… why, Instagram? WHHHHYYYYY?