1. The first half of 2024 has been full of astronomical events—the eclipse, the northern lights, and sublime images of space. Here on Earth, LJ reviewers have discovered 490+ stars of their own, with books that have earned the magazine’s highest accolade, a starred review. To celebrate these dazzling reads, we have gathered their constellation of reviews, with an accompanying downloadable spreadsheet, sortable by subject/genre and BISAC heading (bit.ly/4eED0RS).


  2. For three long-tenured, nationally recognized directors—Pat Losinski of Columbus Metropolitan Library (CML), OH; Vailey Oehlke of Multnomah County Library (MCL), OR; and Ramiro Salazar of San Antonio Public Library (SAPL), TX—this year marks their retirements from a combined 56 years in their most recent roles. From weathering the Great Recession to the launch of Kindle ebook borrowing via OverDrive, their time leading three major public library systems overlapped with advancements in the profession and change in American culture. The jobs they exit are different from the jobs they entered in the early ’00s.

  3. The estimate does not include expenses for replacing and repairing any damaged technology or furniture, and PSU President Ann Cudd said on Wednesday that she expected the full cost to surpass $1 million.

    Administrators don’t expect the library to reopen until the beginning of the 2024-2025 school year. 

  4. End of an era. ALA Midwinter, rebranded as LibLearnX, will be discontinued after 2025. Will the book award ceremonies be moved to the summer conference? The press release says:

    As ALA looks ahead, efforts are underway to determine how best to present some of the most beloved celebratory events traditionally held at the January conference: the I Love My Librarian Awards; the RUSA Book & Media Awards, which features the Andrew Carnegie Medals for Excellence in Fiction and Nonfiction; the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Sunrise Celebration; and the Youth Media Awards.  

  5. “I can’t emphasize enough how everyone’s COVID-19 experience is valuable,” AFC Director Nicole Saylor said. “It’s worth preserving. It doesn’t matter your zip code, your community, whether you contracted it. Everyone has a story.”

    Hard to believe it has been almost four years since the pandemic shutdown.

  6. image

    Attn. Book Lovers: Are you angry about #bookbans? Join us on Mon. July 17th at noon ET to learn what you can do about it! Register ASAP, and please help spread the word!

    @DC_Cimina

    @FerrellStephana

    @ninalorez

    @ctrichmond

    @veronikellymarshttps://womensmediagroup.org/event-5325775

  7. Never mess with an archivist.

  8. Willa Cather will be the first Pulitzer Prize winner and the 12th woman represented in the National Statuary Hall Collection in the United States Capitol in Washington, D.C.

    Cather once said in an interview, “I had searched for books telling about the beauty of the country I loved, its romance, and heroism and strength and courage of its people that had been plowed into the very furrows of its soil, and I did not find them. And so I wrote ‘O Pioneers!.’

  9. willywaldo:

    Michael Caine is becoming a debut novelist at age 90. “The actor…has long harboured the desire to write a thriller, and was inspired to do so by a news item, says his UK publisher, Hodder’s Rowena Webb, about ‘the discovery of uranium by workers on a dump in London’s East End’." 

    #michaelcaine #authordebuts
    #thrillers
    #firstnovels

    #itsnevertoolate

  10. willywaldo:


    A tribute to a century of filmmaking. Take a tour of the Warner Bros. prop archive.

    What a cool librarian job!

  11. willywaldo:

    After the judge dismissed Wallace, she turned to Heckel, who sat flanked by JCPS attorneys.

    “I just want to say I’m so sorry you have to deal with this,” Leibson told Heckel. “I admire your courage. … I wish you had been my librarian when I was a kid.”

    Heckel, a 22-year employee of JCPS, declined to be interviewed for this story. She did, however, offer a brief statement before the hearing.

    “Books are mirrors and windows,” she told LPM News. “And any reader deserves the right to choose to see themself in what they read.”

  12. Congratulations to Brooklyn Public Library’s Books Unbanned Team who defied rising book challenges by providing free ebook access to teens and young adults across the country.

  13. “I see it every day,” said Mr. Santillano, 57, a former City Council member. “I see these kids hanging out, doing their homework, doing what they are supposed to be doing. If you take that away from them, you are pushing them to basically hang out in places where they are not supposed to. So instead of helping the community, you are pushing them away, to do crime and things like that.”

    Why can’t both public services be important? The people who see the library only as a baby sitter really don’t understand its role and function in a community.