Tuesday, January 28, 2025
Let Publishers Help You Unshelve Your Books - Bookcation Edition
Monday, January 27, 2025
Using the Edgar Awards to Unshelve Your Collection
The nominee list for the Mystery Writers of America's Edgar Award has been announced. The awards will be presented on May 1, 2025, at the New York Marriott Marquis Times Square. Some of the nominees are by popular authors or are best sellers that you likely have many requests for (The God of the Woods by Liz Moore is an example). But dig down and you will find books that haven't circulated as much or have been overlooked by your patrons.
Those books that haven't gotten the attention at your library should be the focus of your display. Post the entire list and include verbiage that explains your holds list. Use the buzz that the Edgar awards can give to help give a boost to titles that need it. The God of the Woods doesn't need our promotional assistance.
Another option is to mine the lists of past nominees to find backlist titles that would benefit from the spotlight. While you might not have enough of the current nominees to keep a display filled for a few week, the database goes back to the 1940's so you will find titles in your collection that your readers have not discovered.
The MWA does have a full color listing of the nominees in their newsletter, The 3rd Degree. One page just has the covers of the novel nominees if you want something smaller.
Other awards given include the Grand Master award. This year Laura Lippman and John Sandford will be honored. Neither of these authors really needs our marketing assistance but you could dig into your stacks and find read-alikes for both of them while having signage that announces the awards. You can add a copy or so of Lippman and Sandford's books if you want to draw some more attention to the display.
I hope this helps spur some book display ideas!
Friday, January 24, 2025
Grabbing Ideas from Anywhere to Unshelve Your Collection - Reading as an Escape
I realize not everyone sees a potential book display idea everywhere. But you should be keeping notes if something does give you an idea for a potential display or list. Recently, I saw a post by Atlantic columnist Yair Rosenberg about a book called Breaking Bread With the Dead: A Reader's Guide to a More Tranquil Mind by Alan Jacobs. While I've not read the book, it did give me an idea for a display about reading and books as an escape to a more tranquil and calm place. Even the title of a book can help create a display that might have nothing to do with the content of that book.
Monday, January 13, 2025
Unshelve Your Collection - February Book Display Ideas
I know - the year has just begun but planning displays in advance will lead to better displays For example, one of the most popular displays I have put up in February for Black The other month-long events listed below definitely lead to displays with fiction, non-fiction, |
Month-Long Events Black History Month American Heart Month Great American Pie Month National Bird Feeding Month National Cancer Prevention Month National Cat Health Month National Embroidery Month National Wetlands Day Weekly Observances 2-8: Children's Authors and Illustrators Week 7-14: National Marriage Week 9-15: Random Acts of Kindness Week; Jell-O Week; Feb 27- Mar 2: National Pastry Week Days of Celebration 2: World Wetlands Day; Groundhog Day 4: World Cancer Day; National Mail Carrier Day 8: Safer Internet Day 11: National Day of Women and Girls in Science 12: Lincoln’s Birthday 14: Valentine’s Day 15: World Hippopotamus Day; International Childhood Cancer Day 17: President’s Day/Washington’s Birthday; Random Acts of Kindness Day |
Friday, January 3, 2025
Welcome to 2025 - The Year We Unshelve Our Collections
I am back at home after spending some time with friends for New Year's Eve. While we all re-evaluate what will be different in 2025, I want to encourage you to unshelve your collection more this year. I've chosen that well-used library phrase to describe taking books out of the stacks and moving them around your building to show off what treasures are in your stacks.
Even if you have a small building and no fancy fixtures to use for a book display, you have a surface somewhere in the building that has space for a few book easels. Even without a sign, you can display books near your catalog computers, service desks, near the printers, on a cart anywhere in your building... Walk your building as if you are a patron and you will find places.
Take pictures of titles on a theme and put them on your social media or blog. You can even create flyers with book lists and QR codes that link to your eBooks, library card registration information, and website. Partner with local businesses to put fliers in their buildings. Offer to create lists that complement special events or local celebrations. Spreading the word about the great titles in your collection needs to happen beyond the walls of your library. There are still people out there who don't know we offer digital books and audiobooks. Every new user is a new library supporter who can potentially advocate for the library when it's necessary.
Don't forget to archive the titles you displayed and put on lists either online or somewhere in your building so that they can be recalled for a curious patron. This idea from Gibson's Bookstore in Concord, NH is one of my favorites. That way anyone on staff can assist a patron who asks about a book that was on display a month ago.
If you would like staff training in passive readers advisory, including genre specific displays, book displays, displays that include passive programming, or passive readers advisory in general - please contact me at Lila [dot] Denning [at] gmail [dot] com.
Thursday, January 2, 2025
Book Display Idea - Using School Library Journal
I'm sure we all receive promotional emails not only from publishers and library vendors but from outlets like Library Journal and School Library Journal. Don't be so quick to delete them and move on. The staff at School Library has some really wonderful ideas that you can borrow for a book display or book list online.
A recent mailing from them included an article called Reverse Engineering: Taylor Swift Inspired RA Tools in Canva. This February 2024 post from Karen Jensen (Teen Librarian Toolbox) includes several images she made in Canva. The idea of making readalike lists or displays for each of Taylor Swift's eras is one you could use throughout a month.
Next up was 8 YA Thrillers That Blend Influencer Culture with Page-Turning Plots. While this article is about YA fiction, you could reproduce it with adult fiction as well. If you have non-fiction about influencer culture in your collection, you can add them. I would include some non-fiction about social media in general.
This October interview by Amanda MacGregor called A ‘Fear Factor’ Rating Adds Spice to the YA Horror Halloween Season, a guest post by Tony Jones has titles you could reference to do a "Chilling Fears" display with YA fiction for post-holiday winter months. Horror has no season and is read all year. With its increased popularity, adding a YA display to draw attention to the horror in your collection for teens is a great idea. Another area to get ideas is this September article called Short Stories, Big Scares: 7 Middle Grade & YA Horror Collections.
If you check their website under News and Features, you will see a variety of articles. The headlines alone can spark an idea and send you out to unshelve your collection to draw attention to the great books that need some help to find their reader! While their audience is librarians who focus on youth, the ideas can easily be transferred to adults.
I will leave you with another great idea that can be used with your juvenile, young adult, and adult collections - Out of This World: Eight Sci-Fi Graphic Novels | Stellar Panels. As popular as graphic novels are at the moment, I'm sure that you can find titles in all three collections which could use some time under the spotlight.
Subscription information for School Library Journal is here.
Monday, December 30, 2024
Books I can't wait to read in 2025
Rather than create a book of top 5 for 2024, I am going to list some of the books I am most looking forward to in 2025. I've read a few but most of these are listed based upon the description or the author alone. I will have to do an updated post as more titles are announced and titles published in October - December 2025 are available.
If you are interested in horror or dark literature, Emily Hughes' website should be your first stop when planning your future reads. She assembles an upcoming horror list that is essential. Her book, Horror for Weenies, is a great read that summarizes horror movies and provides books that have similar themes. I used Emily's site to compile my list so check out her site.
I am certain that there are other titles that will catch my attention!
January
Wake Up and Open Your Eyes by Clay McLeod Chapman (Quirk) My starred Library Journal review is here. This will be one of the most memorable books of the year.
Witchcraft for Wayward Girls by Grady Hendrix (Berkeley) Becky Spratford's starred review for Booklist is here.
At Dark I Become Loathsome by Eric LaRocca (Big Bald Head Blackstone) Becky Spratford's starred review for Library Journal is here.
February
Victorian Psycho by Virginia Feito - Anyone who already read this title told me it was amazing after I posted a picture of the advanced copy I had received.
The Poorly Made and Other Things by Sam Rebelein (William Morrow) -Rebelein's debut, Edenville, was very well received. It was a work of dark academia with a cultic vibe. This book adds to the story of Redfield County. Becky Spratford's rave review is here.
Haunted Ecologies: Stories by Corey Farrenkopf (JournalStone)- Corey's debut novel, Living in Cemeteries, was creative and unique take on the ghost story. Becky Spratford's review is here. Library Journal's review by Jeremiah Paddock is here.
March
The Unworthy by Agustina Bazterrica, trans. Sarah Moses (Scribner) - The new novel by the author of Tender is the Flesh is about a cloistered order of women. Sign me up...
Vanishing Daughters by Cynthia Pelayo (Thomas & Mercer) - Cina Pelayo's books blending modern day Chicago, it's fascinating history, and dark retellings of fairy tales have captured my heart while terrifying me since Children of Chicago. She weaves grief and loss within this book while also rethinking ghosts and haunting. My Library Journal review is here.
The Buffalo Hunter Hunter, Stephen Graham Jones (Saga) - One of the current masters of horror, this book weaves historical fiction into horror using mulitple narrators to move the story forward. Jones' rethinking of the vampire trope is incredible. My Library Journal review will be posted soon.
The Haunting of Room 904 by Erika T. Wurth (Flatiron) - A blend of horror and mystery by the author of the incredible White Horse. This has a great cast of characters with some wonderful friendships between women. I hope to see more of them in the future! My Library Journal review is upcoming.
April
Another Fine Mess by Lindy Ryan (Minotaur)- The sequel to Bless Your Heart which was a delightful novel. The Evans women keep the dead from rising in their small Texas town. The trouble from the first book is far from over... My Library Journal review is upcoming.
When the Wolf Comes Home by Nat Cassidy (Nightfire): I loved Nestlings by Cassidy and this promises to be another winner.
Bat Eater and Other Names for Cora Zeng by Kylie Lee Baker (Mira): Hungry ghosts and a serial killer during the pandemic in NYC. So much to like here.
May
Requiem, John Palisano (Flame Tree): Gothic horror in space. I have loved John's short stories and I'm looking forward to reading this novel.
We Live Here Now by Sarah Pinborough (Flatiron) - We seem to be in a time for gothic novels. A haunted house and a crumbling marriage.
Silk and Sinew: A Collection of Folk Horror from the Asian Diaspora by K.P. Kulski (Bad Hand) - I love folk horror and this anthology looks to be something special. Bad Hand has come out with some great books recently.
June
Maria the Wanted by V. Castro (Titan) - A thriller about a Mexican vampire who is finding her place in the world, facing conspiracies and a vampire boss.
Ecstasy by Ivy Pochoda (Putnam) - A retelling of a Greek tragedy about empowerment and desire.
The Nut House by Patrick Barb (Undertaker): A squirrel horror novella.
July
My Ex, the Antichrist by Craig DiLouie (Redhook) - A punk band and the antichrist. Occult/possession horror is another favorite of mine.
The Bewitching by Silvia Moreno-Garcia (Del Rey): Women in different eras fighting witchcraft by the author of Mexican Gothic. More occult horror!
Angel Down by Daniel Kraus (Atria) - The premise of this book is fascinating. Five soldiers encountering an angel during WWI. Kraus is a phenomenal writer with an amazing range.
August
Game in Yellow by Hailey Piper (Saga) - Hailey Piper is one of the most original voices in horror. She reimagined the vampire novel in All the Hearts We Eat. (My Library Journal review is here) I can't wait to read her take on a couple trying to spice up their sex life.
Feral & Hysterical: Mother Horror’s Ultimate Reading Guide to Dark and Disturbing Fiction by Women by Sadie Hartmann (Page Street) - Horror by women is something that I look out for. I loved Sadie's (Mother Horror) first book, the Bram Stoker Award winning 101 Horror Books to Read Before You're Murdered.
The Possession of Alba DÃaz by Isabel Cañas (Berkley): A demon possession in 18th century Mexico. From the author of Vampires of El Norte and The Hacienda.
Secret Lives of the Dead by Tim Lebbon (Titan) Dark folk horror about a deadly family curse...Lebbon is an award winning author who's The Silence is now a Netflix movie.
September
Play Nice by Rachel Harrison (Berkley) - Harrison's books are always delightful. She surprises readers by switching subgenres with each book. This time it's haunted houses. I love the way she writes about female friendships so I will be checking out this title.
Roots of My Fears: An Anthology of Ancestral Horror, ed. Gemma Amor (Titan): This has such an interesting premise and the line up of authors is incredible.
Fiend by Alma Katsu (Putnam): A wealthy family dynasty with an ancient cure. It's wonderful to see another Katsu horror novel on the horizon.
Unshelving the ALA Annual Conference in Philly.
I will be attending the American Library Association Annual Conference in Philadephia. My hope is to post some content related to what I p...
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September is almost here already and it's time to start thinking about book displays. Planning and scheduling them in advance is the b...
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Back to school starts in August with school supplies and the pending new school year appearing all over. Beyond the usual back to school, ...