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LibraryThing: State of the Thing - September

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LibraryThing: Dear {NAME}, Welcome to the September State of the Thing. We've got good news about ou

LibraryThing: Dear {NAME}, Welcome to the September State of the Thing. We've got good news about our classification pages, a long-awaited development in TinyCat, an interview with Michael Tamblyn, CEO of Rakuten Kobo, and 2,970 free books. If you'd rather receive a plain-text version, [edit your email preferences](. You can also read it [online](. You can like LibraryThing on [Facebook]( and follow [@LibraryThing]( on Twitter for up-to-the-minute site news and updates. Better Book Classification LibraryThing has launched newly redesigned Classification pages. The [Library of Congress Classification](, [Melvil Decimal System]( and [Genres]( pages have all been updated and improved. Library of Congress Classification. The Library of Congress Classification (LCC) pages are entirely new, and should be interesting to members who don't find the Melvil (equivalent to the Dewey Decimal) system helpful. While Dewey is popular in public libraries, LCC is used by most academic libraries in the US and elsewhere. Needless to say, both systems have their partisans. LCC pages include both the numbers and the wordings (“schedules”), which you will rarely find elsewhere. See [this example](. As the full LCC schedules are insanely long—some 400,000 headings—and not easily available, we have used the simplified set of 8,600 headings found on the Library of Congress website and turned into machine-readable format by a number of clever librarians. Check it out: - [Your library's Library of Congress classification]( - [LCC ND2550-2733 Mural Painting]( Melvil Decimal System. The Melvil Decimal pages didn't change their content much, but they LOOK awesome. LibraryThing designer @conceptDawg came up with a system that turns every MDS/DDC number into a color. We think the result is gorgeous. Check it out: - [Your library's Melvil Decimal System classifications]( - [MDS 944 French History]( All three pages now include a link that will display the books with that classification from the member’s own catalog, and work pages now display LCC and MDS/DDC information, in addition to genres. The three classification systems are more closely linked with one another, as each classification page now displays related classifications from the other two categories. LCC codes in the member’s catalog are now clickable. These and other changes have made the Classification pages on LibraryThing more navigable, more informative and more fun! Come [join the discussion](, and take a deep dive into the world of classification! Interview: Michael Tamblyn This month LibraryThing is pleased to catch up with [Michael Tamblyn](, the CEO of [Rakuten Kobo](, a Canadian ebook, audiobook and ereader company doing business in 150 countries. Tamblyn serves on the board of [OverDrive](, an ebook distributor working with both the non-profit and retail sectors; is involved with [AGE-Well](, a Canadian organization dedicated to developing technology and services for healthy aging; and is the founder of [BookNet Canada](, a “non-profit organization that develops technology, standards, and education to serve the Canadian book industry.” See an excerpt below, and the full interview [here](. Q. What drew you to the book business and book technology? MICHAEL: I always loved bookstores. The small town where I grew up had a pretty standard books+cards+stationary store, but I thought it was fantastic and I began bugging the owner for a job at 11 or 12. He was a bookseller of the old school, wore three piece suits to work retail, and had absolutely no need of an urchin to work in his store. Fast forward 8 or 9 years, I’m working my way through a university degree in music, cooking at a restaurant that was attached to the iconic Canadian indy store, The Bookshelf. The store manager stuck his head in the door of the kitchen and said there was an opening in the bookstore and if anyone was interested, now was the time to speak up. I had just had a very timely conversation with one of my music instructors that went something like “If you get burned or cut working in a kitchen, you’re out of the program. You don’t get 2 months off to rehab an injury; you’re just out.” That got me into the store. Fast forward another couple of years, I have graduated with my music degree, so of course I’m still working in the bookstore. But I didn’t love stocking shelves, and we were just reading about this startup in Seattle that had just left the garage and was selling books online. I thought “We could definitely do this,” and the store owner agreed, so we gathered a little group together and started the first online bookstore in Canada, [bookshelf.ca](, next door to the store in the storage space of a gift basket company next door. It was 1995-ish. Since then, most of the jobs I’ve had have been where books, business and technology crash into each other. Visit the blog to [read the whole conversation](. The Talk of LibraryThing What conversations are going on in our groups? - A discussion of Neil Gaiman’s short story, [Feeders and Eaters](, is being undertaken by the readers of [The Weird Tradition](. - Members have been sharing their recent projects with one another, and discussing their [recent acquisitions]( in the long-running [Needlearts]( group. - A group read of Margaret Oliphant’s [Salem Chapel]( is underway in the [Virago Modern Classics]( group, as part of a larger project to read the author’s entire [Chronicles of Carlingford]( series. - The ongoing, year-long discussion of [Canadian Literature Enjoyed in 2021]( continues, over in the [Canadian Literature]( group. Speaking of Groups, if you're new to LibraryThing, there's a group for that: [Welcome to LibraryThing](21)! List of the Month Come join LibraryThing’s List of the Month project, as we create a new thematic book list each month. Like all of our [Lists](, the List of the Month draws upon the knowledge of the LibraryThing community, while also aiming to provoke discussion around each theme. See our [wiki page]( for a complete List of the Month list, and join us over in our [Talk group](, for further discussion of the project. September List of the Month. Our September List of the Month is dedicated to Native American / Indigenous Literature. Whether Native American, First Nations, Aboriginal, or Maori, if the literature explores the indigenous experience, and is written (or co-written) by an indigenous author, it belongs on our list. Head over to our list of [Native American / Indigenous Literature](25252F-Indigenous-Literature) to add your top five choices. Check out other recent Lists of the Month: - March. [Favorite Science Fiction by Women Authors]( - April. [Recommended Nature Writing]( - May. [Must-Read Maine Books]( - June. [Favorite Caribbean Books]( - July. [Best Beach Reads]( - August. [The Cookbooks of Home]( Free Books! Early Reviewers is our program where you can win free advance copies of books to read and review. This month we’re pleased to feature the first English-language editions of Anne Mette Hancock’s Kaldan og Schäfer Danish noir mystery series, and Latvian/Italian author Marina Jarre’s memoir. Explore the full list and [sign up to request books](. Our September batch of Early Reviewers has 2,970 copies of 98 books. The deadline to request a book is September 27th, 6pm Eastern time. Did you win a book recently? When you receive your book, make sure you head over to your [Books You've Won]( page to mark it received. After you've read your book, add your review to LibraryThing. First, add the book to your LibraryThing catalog. Then click the pencil-shaped "edit" icon next to the book, or click "edit book" from the work page. Type your review into the Review box, and click "submit" to save it. Reviewing your books gives you a greater chance of winning books in the future, while neglecting to review lowers your odds. For more information, vist the [Early Reviewers Help Page](. Book World News: Awards Awards and Prizes. The [National Book Award](Book+Award) Longlists [have been announced]( by the [National Book Foundation](. In the Fiction category, nominated titles include: [Cloud Cuckoo Land]( by [Anthony Doerr](, [Matrix]( by [Lauren Groff](, [Abundance]( by [Jakob Guanzon](, [Zorrie]( by [Laird Hunt](, [The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois]( by [Honorée Fanonne Jeffers](, [The Prophets]( by [Robert Jones, Jr.](, [Intimacies]( by [Katie Kitamura](, [The Souvenir Museum: Stories]( by [Elizabeth McCracken](, [Hell of a Book]( by [Jason Mott](, and [Bewilderment]( by [Richard Powers](. The Longlists for the other four categories recognized by the foundation—[Nonfiction](, [Poetry](, [Translated Literature](, and [Young People’s Literature](—are available as well. The National Book Foundation has also announced that it will be [presenting its Lifetime Achievement Award](to author and librarian [Nancy Pearl](, and that novelist and playwright [Karen Tei Yamashita]( will be [this year’s recipient of its medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters](. Following last month’s announcement of the [Booker Prize Longlist](Prize+Longlist) for 2021, the [Booker Prize Shortlist](Prize+Shortlist) of six titles [has been revealed](. These include: [A Passage North]( by [Anuk Arudpragasam](, [The Promise]( by [Damon Galgut](, [No One Is Talking About This]( by [Patricia Lockwood](, [The Fortune Men]( by [Nadifa Mohamed](, [Bewilderment]( by [Richard Powers](, and [Great Circle]( by [Maggie Shipstead](. The [Academy of American Poets]( has announced [the winners of their 2021 American Poets Prizes](. The [Wallace Stevens Award](, recognizing "outstanding and proven mastery in the art of poetry," has been given to [Toi Derracotte](, while [Camille T. Dungy]( has been awarded the [Academy of American Poets Fellowship](. [Honorée Fanonne Jeffers](, whose novel, [The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois](, has recently made the [National Book Award Longlist]( in the Fiction category, has received the [Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize](Marshall+Poetry+Prize), which recognizes "the most outstanding book of poetry published in the United States in the previous year," for her [The Age of Phillis](. For more details, and to read about other prizes given out, please see [this page](. The winners of this year’s [James Tait Black Memorial Prize](Tait+Black+Memorial+Prize), awarded annually by the University of Edinburgh, [have been announced](. [Shola Von Reinhold]( has won in the Fiction category for their debut novel, [Lote](, while Irish poet [Doireann Ní Ghríofa]( has won in the biography category for her prose debut, [A Ghost in the Throat](. [Susanna Clarke]( has [been awarded]( the 2021 [Women’s Prize for Fiction](Women%27s+Prize+for+Fiction) for [Piranesi](, the long-awaited follow-up to her best-selling fantasy novel, [Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norell](, first published seventeen years ago. The winners of the 2021 [Ned Kelly Awards](Kelly+Award), given out by the [Australian Crime Writers Association](, have [been announced](. The winner in the Best Crime Fiction category is [Garry Disher](, for [Consolation](. [Bret Christian]( has won in the Best True Crime category for his [Stalking Claremont: Inside the Hunt for a Serial Killer](. The Best Debut Crime Fiction category has gone to [Loraine Peck](, for [The Second Son](. Finally, the winner in the Best International Crime Fiction category is [Chris Whitaker](, for his [We Begin At the End](. The 2021 [Wainwright Prize](Wainwright+Prize) winners [have been announced]( with [James Rebanks]( winning in the Nature Writing category for his farming memoir, [English Pastoral: An Inheritance](, and [Merlin Sheldrake]( in the Global Conservation category for his [Entangled Life: How Fungi Make Our Worlds, Change Our Minds & Shape Our Futures](. This year’s [Wilbur Smith Adventure Writing Prize](20Smith%20Adventure%20Writing%20Prize) has [been awarded]( to [Rachel Joyce]( for her novel, [Miss Benson’s Beetle](. The Library of Congress [announced the winners of its 2021 Literacy Awards]( on International Literacy Day—September 8th— this year. Established in 2013, these awards “honor organizations doing exemplary, innovative and replicable work” in the field of literacy. [Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library](, which has distributed more than 165 million books to families worldwide, was among the honorees, winning the [David M. Rubenstein Prize](~:text=The%20David%20M.,to%20the%20advancement%20of%20literacy.). Other Book World News COVID-19 Updates. Changing Covid-19 conditions continue to make waves in the book world, affecting events, workplaces and production cycles. The Beijing Book Fair, originally scheduled to run from August 25th-29th, had to be [postponed at the last minute](, and was eventually rescheduled for mid September. Although the [Frankfurt Book Fair]( has confirmed that [it will remain a live event]( - albeit with a limit of 25,000 people allowed to attend daily - publishers PRH UK and Hachette have announced that [they will not be attending in person](. Canada, the guest of honor at the fair, [will have a mostly virtual presence]( as well. In the United States, Covid concerns have forced the [ALA]( (American Library Association) to [make their inaugural LibLearnX Conference a completely virtual event](, while the [ABA]( (American Booksellers Association) has announced that their upcoming [Winter Institute 2022]( will be open to North American attendees only. Publishing houses continue to update their Covid strategies, with Hachette UK and Bloomsbury [delaying the implementation of their previous office plans]( and PRH announcing that [it will not require any set number of office days from employees]( until at least the end of the year. Macmillan has [pushed back its official office opening until January]( although they do plan a “soft opening” in October. Trouble looms on the supply side in the meantime, with the publishing and bookselling world [bracing for a chaotic end of the year](, thanks to supply chain disruptions on all fronts. Changes and Discoveries. In Scotland, poet [Kathleen Jamie]( has been [named the new Makar]( or national poet, succeeding [Jackie Kay]( in the role. A previously unknown story from American author [Tennessee Williams]( has been discovered in Harvard University’s Archives, and [published for the first time]( in the pages of [The Strand Magazine](. Finally, [Salman Rushdie]( recently [joined the wave of authors and artists taking to Substack]( with [Chuck Palahniuk]( too [announcing a new serial publication on the platform](. Hot on LibraryThing - [Bloodless]( by [Douglas Preston]( - [The Madness of Crowds]( by [Louise Penny]( - [Rock Paper Scissors: A Novel]( by [Alice Feeney]( - [Beautiful World Where Are You]( by [Sally Rooney]( - [A Slow Fire Burning]( by [Paula Hawkins]( - [Mrs. March]( by [Virginia Feito]( - [Matrix]( by [Lauren Groff]( - [Harlem Shuffle]( by [Colson Whitehead]( - [The Night She Disappeared]( by [Lisa Jewell]( - [Velvet Was the Night]( by [Silvia Moreno-Garcia]( - [The Reading List: A Novel]( by [Sara Nisha Adams]( - [Billy Summers]( by [Stephen King]( - [We Were Never Here: A Novel]( by [Andrea Bartz]( - [Damnation Spring]( by [Ash Davidson]( - [My Heart Is a Chainsaw]( by [Stephen Graham Jones]( - [The Turnout]( by [Megan Abbott]( - [The Heart Principle]( by [Helen Hoang]( - [A Town Called Solace]( by [Mary Lawson]( - [Once There Were Wolves]( by [Charlotte McConaghy]( - [Not a Happy Family]( by [Shari Lapeña]( Hot in Libraries Here's what's hot so far in September across thousands of public libraries in the United States. This data was collected by Syndetics Unbound, a LibraryThing/ProQuest project to enrich the library catalog. The search data is fully anonymized the day it is collected. For more information about Syndetics Unbound, please visit [Syndetics.com](. Tim recently wrote a post for the [Syndetics Unbound Blog]( on [The Books of Summer](. TinyCat [TinyCat]( is the online catalog for small libraries, created by LibraryThing. It turns your existing LibraryThing account into a simple, professional, web-based catalog. New Feature: Admin Users. libraries usually require the help of a few volunteers or staff members to pitch in and manage circulation and patron data. Until now, there has been only one admin login for every TinyCat and LibraryThing account, meaning any volunteer accessing the account could accidentally add or delete books, change settings without notice, or create more serious issues. We’ve added a new level of security to give you peace of mind and make it even easier to manage your TinyCat: welcome, admin users! From the new [Admin Users Settings]( page, you can now add staff and volunteer logins for those assisting with circulation and patron management, without granting complete access to your LibraryThing account or Settings pages. Admin users will be able to log into your [TinyCat Admin]( portal, but will only have access to a limited number of pages. Staff will have access to your [Check in/out]( page, [Transactions]( pages, [Patrons]( pages, and [Reports]( pages. Volunteers will only have access to your Check in/out page and your Transactions pages. You can also add email addresses for your users, which we may use down the road for notification emails or password resets as we continue to improve the system. We hope you love this new feature! Please let us know what you think, or post any questions you might have on [Talk](. Live Demo. To learn more about TinyCat, join Kristi for a live demo Wednesdays at 1pm Eastern. Webinars are now on Zoom, so make sure to use our new [link to attend](. You can also check out our playlists of Tiny Tutorials on [LibraryThing's YouTube channel](, where Kristi walks you through various features of TinyCat in 30 seconds or less. If you'd like to schedule a webinar at another time or if you have other questions about TinyCat, you can reach Kristi at tinycat@librarything.com. That's all for the Thing this month! Happy reading, Abigail PS: Our lawyers would like you to know that the name "Dewey," "Dewey Decimal," "Dewey Decimal Classification" and "DDC" are registered trademarks of OCLC. This message was sent to {NAME}. Click to [edit your email preferences or unsubscribe from future emails](.

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