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#LibraryofCongress
review
swynn
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Pickpick

(2017) I "read" this for #ReadYouKindle , but it doesn't really work well on Kindle: it's a coffee-table book for people who love library catalogs, and the content mostly consists in images of treasures from the Library of Congress, with corresponding catalog cards. The text is dry, and most interesting to readers who probably know the story already, but the text isn't the point here. In print I expect it's gorgeous, and I want a copy of my own

33 likes1 stack add
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Ladygodiva7
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Enjoying these two.

51 likes1 comment
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IndoorDame
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Pickpick

This was a fast, interesting read. I think my favorite part was getting to see handwritten card catalog cards for a bunch of books again. But I did actually learn a lot of new things along with all the nostalgia. My one complaint is that I found myself tempted to skim large stretches when the writing style was less dynamic, or info I already knew was being related.

KathyWheeler I learned how to type these cards in library school but the professor really did that just as a way of showing us how records were structured. In 1992, card catalogs were well on the way to being obsolete. 2y
73 likes2 stack adds1 comment
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IndoorDame
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My current impulse read is this fascinating nonfiction that in surprisingly simple language gives an overview of the history of cataloguing itself dating back to ancient Sumeria, and a history of the library of congress in particular, and includes a treasure trove of over 200 full color images from the library‘s collection. #Card #DivineDecember @Eggs @Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks

TheBookHippie ♥️ 2y
Eggs Perfect 📚🥰👏🏻 2y
52 likes1 stack add2 comments
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tpixie
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What a great day! Anticipating the Zoom event of The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe Book Club with Patti Callahan, Douglas Gresham, David C Downing, & more of the National Book Festival!
#ChroniclesOfNarnia
#TheLionTheWitchAndTheWardrobe
#TheVoyageOfTheDawnTreader
#CSLewis
#OnceUponAWardrobe
#NationalBookFestival
#NationalBookFestival2021
#NatBookFest
#NatBookFest2021 #LibraryOfCongress
 @HarperCollins

LeahBergen Oh, fun! 3y
Zoes_Human I think this might be my favorite of the whole series. 3y
tpixie @Zoes_Human it is a really good adventure read! 3y
tpixie @LeahBergen yes! I‘m enjoying revisiting Narnia! 3y
63 likes4 comments
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JenReadsAlot
The Library of Congress | Charles A. Goodrum
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Memories popped up on One Drive from my trip to Washington DC! I could live in Library of Congress!

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SayersLover
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“This single volume—its history so full of questions and gaps—stands alone on my shelf as a reminder of the social lives and secret lives of books. Not simply inanimate objects, books are highly mobile, taking up residence in our homes and memories.” —For me, this is the most beautiful and powerful passage in the whole book!

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SayersLover
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“I, personally, would feel somewhat like a goop walking into Brentano‘s, picking up one copy of everything in sight, and saying, ‘I want to buy these.‘ But this is what the Library of Congress wants you to do.” —Frederick Kilgour. Wow! I‘ve never seen the word ‘goop‘ used in this context before! 😂

review
audraelizabeth
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Pickpick

Loved the photos and learning about not just card catalogs but also the library of congress.
@Cinfhen #booked2021 @4thhouseontheleft #containsphotos @BarbaraTheBibliophage

Cinfhen Cool choice!!! 4y
BarbaraTheBibliophage Awesome! And this would work for the #libraryorlibrarianintitle prompt also! 4y
audraelizabeth @BarbaraTheBibliophage True and i have one picked for that 4y
17 likes4 comments
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Beatlefan129
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Mehso-so

I can‘t help but feel like Ruth Rappaport would not have approved of this book. For example, the author notes that Ruth did not speak or write much in her diary about her parents deaths in a concentration camp. Well, maybe that was a very painful subject for her and she chose to keep it private. The author goes on long personal tangents regarding her own life and experience writing the book, none of which were particularly interesting or useful.