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Credit: Nikki Natrix

What I've Learned from ALA 2010

  • Beware the Mad Rush of the Exhibit Hall openings. You have been warned
  • Publishers are not interested in you unless you are a Public Library Director/Collections Manager/Reviewer/Adorable Child
  • Wheeled carts are Not Allowed. You will see them Everywhere Anyway.
  • Avoid the Exhibit Halls after one or two runs. Especially Monday morning; nothing new is put out for free, and everyone is just waiting for the 'giveaway' around 4 pm
  • If at all possible, demagnetize your card (I discovered this one by accident). With luck, vendors will assume that their machine is broken, so you will a) still get free stuff and b) avoid junk mail
  • When approaching someone, try to figure out their area of interest and pitch your introduction to that
  • Chat with fellow librarians! They are generally surprisingly eager to share their tips and experience with you
  • Talk with your fellow newbie colleagues as well, even though none of you has a job. Relationships are valuable no matter what; you can't predict what will come down the road
  • Paula Poundstone is hilarious
  • Give away your business cards like they are on fire (it will generally take 10 conversations/contacts for every 'connection' made)

Day One Point Five ALA

So I have already failed in the goal of Not Permanently Crippling Oneself For the Sake Of ARCs (i.e. free books). But then I look at all these lovely books and decide that the sacrifice was well worth it. But today I shall try to improve, and my strategy will consist of Avoiding the Exhibit Halls, since my willpower obviously isn't up to the task.

We'll see how that goes.

I did strike up some conversations, and everyone seemed quite friendly despite the 'running of the bulls' atmosphere at exhibit opening time. I spoke to David Serchay, author of two guides to graphic novels for librarians (including a section on graphic novels in academia, which I had never considered) -- he generously shared his conference experiences, including the mind-boggling fact that the Book Expo is ten times the crazy, since basically all of the books are free.

What glorious madness...

On to the next day!

Cranky Trains and the Undead

So I am finally in D.C., after a train 'signaling issue' had us crawling along the tracks just outside of Philadelphia. Fortunately, I was well-supplied with snacks and Mira Grant's Feed, a novel about bloggers and zombies.

Yes, they go together perfectly. And I'm not finished yet, but right now I would highly recommend it.

Books like these are making me think about the new publishing/news paradigm; Grant has created a scenario where bloggers are basically ruling the newsfeeds, largely because of the advantages of a) speed b) first-hand experience and c) lack of a corporate agenda. When the zombie Rising begins, it's the bloggers who first break the news and keep spreading the world, despite the mainstream media's attempt to downplay the incidents (after all, it's just too crazy to be true, right?).

True, there are lots of nutcases out there, and lots of them have blogs. But there are ways to 'triangulate' authentic information, from the 'mass numbers' approach (if enough different sources are saying it, it's probably true) to the 'trusted' bloggers and platforms who have earned reputations of integrity and accuracy.

The model isn't perfect, but it works (for surviving a zombie attack, anyhow). And the Rising, the loss of trust in the mainstream media, and the surge of autonomous investigation and reporting that followed has drastically shifted the balance of influence -- now bloggers have serious clout, even to the point of being invited on the campaign trail on the next presidential race.

What I've found most interesting about this book is that it seems pretty plausible -- substitute 'zombies' for 'widespread disaster' and you can already see similar things happening today. People on the ground, in the moment, are spreading news the quickest ways they can, thanks to technology. And since we're social animals, we're all involved in this transmission of information (and yes, the 'viral' implications are completely apt, here).

I'm really interested to see if I can get in on some of this crowd/social tech action at the conference, from Twitter feeds to blog updates, and see how this changes or enhances my ALA experience.

If I can keep my head attached, anyway. I hear the opening of the Exhibit Hall is more dangerous than a crowd of zombies at a meat market.

ALA Madness

So I'm now in the midst of trying to plan for my first-ever annual librarian conference down in D.C., and the sheer number of programs is making my head spin. I am trying to follow the advice of more experienced, wiser librarians in my preparations, such as:
  • wear comfortable shoes (you will not want to be limping through the convention halls)
  • attend some discussion/committee groups - it's a great way to participate instead of just sitting in presentations
  • bring business cards and then use them
  • have several backups in case your program is canceled/too far away/demolished by giant library-hating locusts
And some separate advice I have tailored to myself:
  • talk to people: yes, it's scary, but try striking up some conversations (you never know where things will lead -- so long as you do not hyperventilate and vomit over someone's shoes. Then it's pretty much a foregone conclusion)
  • make notes during the conference and blog about what's happening
  • take breaks! otherwise you will become a Conference Zombie, wandering the halls and moaning quietly (and that isn't productive or fun)
Above all, try oh please try to resist the siren call of free galleys...

Oh, who am I kidding? Just try to avoid permanent spinal damage at least.

Let My Ebooks Go!

Just came across this excellent post on ebooks and DRM by the Librarian in Black - she makes a compelling case for librarians banding together and forcing a change in the current ebooks landscape (where everything is so locked down by DRM that users don't have a chance of borrowing the ebooks they want at libraries within a reasonable timeframe).

I really hope this gains some momentum - otherwise, we are going to lose our users on the digital front. Because no one wants to spend that much pain and effort to get an ebook or audiobook, even if it is 'free' - the temporal and emotional costs are going to send people to Amazon, B&N, iTunes, and pretty much anywhere else.

And that would be a terrible waste - why bother adding ebooks to our collection if we can't let our users really use them?

Can Use My Catalog...

This has officially made my morning.

Librarians Do Gaga.

That song is going to be in my head all day now...

Libraries in the Wild

My Memorial Day weekend included venturing off into the wilds of Massachusetts/Rhode Island with my mother, during which we discovered:

*Rhode Island is a ridiculously small state
*The Talking GPS Lady is not to be trusted
*Public libraries are awesome

This last realization was prompted by our discovery of the Cumberland Public Library, which is nested inside a beautiful monastery building. Cumberland PL saved us from an aimless evening with its free wifi and comfy chairs, giving me another idea for the value of public libraries: rest and planning stations for befuddled travelers.

I don't have any budget details, but the library seemed well-off, with automatic doors and plenty of workshops and classes advertised -- including dowsing, which I found intriguing. I took photos of a few of the 'library advocacy' posters that were sprinkled throughout the building, too.

Which got me thinking about library advocacy for public libraries, and how much of it is the 'luck of the draw' in terms of having a patron population that already places a high value on literacy and the library as a community space (and fair amounts of free time/disposable income). The Catch-22 is, of course, that the libraries most in need of advocacy - those in poorer communities, with patrons who have little enough time between jobs and child care - those libraries are the most difficult to generate support for, because there isn't the same pro-reading/education tradition and/or (more crucially) there just isn't enough time and money to go around. And forget support from the wealthier sectors -- no one is going to jump for 'paying' for libraries that they see as waystations for homeless people and immigrants.

As much as I love to come into a public library and see it really thriving, it always brings up a twinge of...indignation? sadness? Because all libraries should be like this, not just the ones in the 'nicer' communities. Everyone deserves access to this sort of public refuge.

*Addendum: Pictures from the trip to be added soon (hopefully). Meanwhile, this morning I took a jaunt down to Mike's Diner:

I highly recommend the chocolate chip pancakes, and my waitress was an absolute angel. Thank you, Mike's!