Experimental web bulletin for users of college libraries in UK - specifically for University of Cambridge but independent of official College or University sites. Posts have been non existent recently; we hope to resume more regular posting towards the end of 2006.

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Currently reading...
The Worms Can Carry Me To Heaven by Alan Warner
This book, his fifth novel, is a step change from his previous novels into a more experimental style which seems autobiographical in its detail switching between different times of his(?) life in Spain and his 'Home City' - never named but could be Malaga?. Warner is best known for his first novel, Morvern Callar (1996), after it was made into a movie in 2003 by British director Lynne Ramsay (also made Ratcatcher) starring Samantha Morton. Warner was chosen as a Granta Best of Young British Novelists in 2003.

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Wednesday 19 May 2004

Literary

Aventis Prize for Science Books shortlists

Aventis Prize logoThis year’s General Prize shortlist for the Aventis Prizes for Science Books has been announced. (The Junior Prize shortlist was announced earlier on the April 19, and is listed for reference afterwards).

The Aventis General Prize shortlist of six books was chosen from a total of 106 entries (up almost 20% on the previous year), and a longlist of 15 titles. The prize will be awarded at the Royal Society in London on Monday June 14.

This year’s six General Prize shortlisted books are:
- In the Beginning Was the Worm by Andrew Brown (Simon & Schuster).
- A Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson (Doubleday/Transworld).
- Mutants by Armand Marie Leroi (HarperCollins).
- Nature via Nurture by Matt Ridley (Fourth Estate).
- Magic Universe by Nigel Calder (Oxford University Press).
- Backroom Boys by Francis Spufford (Faber & Faber).

Last year, the winner of the General Prize was:
- Right Hand, Left Hand by Chris McManus (Weidenfeld & Nicolson).

Previous winners during the prize’s 16-year history include, amongst the General Prize, Stephen Hawking for The Universe in a Nutshell, Brian Greene for The Elegant Universe, and Steve Jones for The Language of the Genes. Amongst the Junior Prize winners, Dorling Kindersley Guides have won the last four years running!

The selected books for this year’s Junior Prize shortlist were, as always, picked by children. The six books on the Aventis Junior Prize shortlist, which was announced on April 19, are:

- The Beginning: Voyages Through Time by Peter Ackroyd (Dorling Kindersley).
- Really Rotten Experiments by Nick Arnold & Tony De Saulles (Scholastic Children’s Books).
- Riotous Robots by Mike Goldsmith (Scholastic Children’s Books).
- Start Science: Forces and Motion by Sally Hewitt (Chrysalis Children’s Books).
- Survivor’s Science: In The Rainforest by Peter Riley (Hodder Wayland).
- Tell Me: Who Lives In Space? by Clare Oliver (Chrysalis Children’s Books).

Last year, the winner of the Junior Prize was:
- The DK Guide to the Oceans by Dr Frances Dipper (Dorling Kindersley).


Monday 10 May 2004

Library updates

Official Library User Guide launched

At last, our comprehensive Library User Guide is ready! As well as the Library itself, it also includes sections on NEWTON, the web based catalogue of all the University libraries and UL Electronic Resources, which include access to the full text of over 4,000 journals and over 200 databases on the web.
The User Guide will be a developing document: additional sections are planned for the autumn. The User Guide is downloadable from the Homerton College Library web page.

Oh yes! There is a library web page - well hidden within the College website. You could be forgiven for not being aware of its existence. But, I’m told, it has been there for some years. We have been dusting down the cobwebs around it and starting to furnish it with something useful. A coat of magnolia would be nice, but we seem to be stuck with a gloomy dark blue.

Anyway, we hope to start making more use of the library web page, and the Guide is a start. (One small step for a librarian, one giant leap etc…)

Currently, the Guide is in Word format. We hope to offer it in pdf format as well later in the year, but the hyperlinks will need to be modified first.

Happy reading! I guarantee that, from experience behind the enquiry desk, everyone who reads it will learn something new about using the library. (I certainly learned some new stuff!)


 

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