Due to a system upgrade, Interlibrary Loan services will be unavailable on May 6, 2013. We apologize for any inconveniences. If you have further questions, please contact Tammy Hines.
Due to a system upgrade, Interlibrary Loan services will be unavailable on May 6, 2013. We apologize for any inconveniences. If you have further questions, please contact Tammy Hines.
Looking for page turning books to heat up your summer? We recommend checking out a Kindle from the library! We have updated, preloaded Kindles with new, popular and bestselling books from the following genres:
Come by the Circulation/Reserves desk and ask for a Kindle in the genre of your choice. Would you like to suggest an author or a title to be loaded on a Library Kindle? Suggestions will be honored on a first-come, first-served basis as funding permits. Make a request here.
Just in time for alumni weekend, past yearbooks are now available in the Digital Commons. First published as The Normal Light under the State Female Normal School, The Virginian became the the yearbook for Longwood College, later, Longwood University, in Farmville, Virginia. The Virginian was not published for the following years: 1919, 1984-1986, 1992, 1997-2003, 2008.
They have been available through the Internet Archive for some time, but now can be found in the Digital Commons. Can you find your friends? Your parents? Your teachers? http://digitalcommons.longwood.edu/yearbooks/
Join us for Fort Finals: Beach Week Sunday, April 21 – Wednesday, April 24 in the Library Atrium! We’ll have plenty of beach decor and activites to help you escape from exam stress and, of course, SNACKS starting at 8pm each evening! Want the inside scoop? Here are a few highlights we are planning:
Extended hours begin Monday, Aprill 22.
Thanks to the Janet D. Greenwood Library, Longwood Dining Services, the Office of Enrollment Management and Student Success, Cormier Honors College, Cook-Cole College of Arts & Sciences, the Writing Center, and Printing Services for sponsoring this event.
Who Knew?: Reflections on Vietnam by J. Holley Watts
In the Inscribed Collection; signed by the author
Link to catalog: http://readpac.longwood.edu//record=b1301128
Student assistant Chandler Pascale chose to highlight Rural Virginia. He writes:
Published in 2004, Who Knew? is a collection of photographs and memories from J. Holley Watts’ service in Vietnam during the Vietnam War. In 1966 as a senior in college, Watts decided to join the Red Cross and chose to serve in Vietnam. There she became close to the American troops fighting a bloody war, and many of her memories are very emotional. For instance, she noted that radio operators often listened to telephone calls made to the United States. When Watts asked why she couldn’t have a private conversation, the operator said “It’s just that you…you remind me of home.”
I chose this book because I don’t know much about the Vietnam War, but I wanted to read personal stories from the conflict. Its contents are very emotional and often surprising. Watts’ reflections reminded me that my grandfather said he would take cut out sports articles from the newspaper and send them to his friends stationed in Vietnam. Any student with an appreciation for history who would like to see a very unique perspective of a very tenuous episode in America’s past would find this book fascinating.
Special Collections Spotlight will periodically feature material that can be found the Longwood University Special Collections and Archives. If you have questions or would like to request an item to be featured, please contact Amanda Hartman at hartmanar@longwood.edu
Rural Virginia
In Virginiana Collection
Link to catalog: http://readpac.longwood.edu//record=b1060272
Student assistant Chandler Pascale chose to highlight Rural Virginia. He writes:
Compiled by Bill Westbrook and John Hurt Whitehead III, Rural Virginia was published in 1974, and is a collection of photographs of rural life across Virginia.
I found the book fascinating because it also contains the words of rural Virginians, such as one man who said “I can’t read or write much, but I learned more here at the mill than I ever learned at school. I learned how to count a dollar and keep it.” This book would certainly appeal to the environmentally conscious, as it offers a look at the former composition of Virginia’s countryside. Indeed, while flipping through Rural Virginia, I found myself wondering how much of the landscape shown has remained untouched or unaltered.
Special Collections Spotlight will periodically feature material that can be found the Longwood University Special Collections and Archives. If you have questions or would like to request an item to be featured, please contact Amanda Hartman at hartmanar@longwood.edu
The Last Lecture
In Virginia Authors Collection
Link to catalog: http://readpac.longwood.edu//record=b1369020
Student assistant Chandler Pascale chose to highlightThe Last Lecture. He writes:
The Last Lecture is an autobiography of Randy Pausch, a professor at Carnegie-Mellon University in Pittsburgh who was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 2006. The book is part of the Virginia Authors Collection because its author, Randy Pausch, lived in Virginia for the last year of his life. After his diagnosis, Pausch realized that he could have either a negative or optimistic outlook in relation to his life. He decided to savor life’s pleasant moments, cherishing the time spent with his wife Jai and their three young children.
Although Pausch died in July 2008, most readers will find his story as inspiring as I did. Many college students (myself included) can begin to feel overburdened by academic or social stresses. Pauch’s advice to live each day and cherish each experience to the fullest can renew students’ lowered motivation and imbue them with excitement for the future.
Special Collections Spotlight will periodically feature material that can be found the Longwood University Special Collections and Archives. If you have questions or would like to request an item to be featured, please contact Amanda Hartman at hartmanar@longwood.edu
Lee’s Last Stand: Sailor’s Creek Virginia, 1865, By Derek Smith
In the Virginiana collection
Link to the catalog: http://readpac.longwood.edu//record=b1260592
Student Derek Johnson chose to highlight Lee’s Last Stand: Sailor’s Creek Virginia, 1865. He writes:
This book peaked my interest because of the subject matter. The Battle of Sailor’s Creek has always interested me during the American Civil War because of the small amount of information that is normally provided in histories of the American Civil War about this battle. Another point that I noticed after choosing this book is that the author was the same first name as I do, right down to the spelling.
Special Collections Spotlight will periodically feature material that can be found the Longwood University Special Collections and Archives. If you have questions or would like to request an item to be featured, please contact Amanda Hartman at hartmanar@longwood.edu
To End A War by Richard Holbrooke
In the Inscribed Collection; signed by the author
Link to the catalog: http://readpac.longwood.edu//record=b1222702
Student assistant Kim Honor chose to highlight To End A War. She writes:
The book is about Bosnia and the administrations diplomacy towards that country. Books about diplomacy tend to be boring and dry, but this one makes you feel like you are there listening to the debates, phone calls, arguments and compromises that took place. Definitely a must read!
Special Collections Spotlight will periodically feature material that can be found the Longwood University Special Collections and Archives. If you have questions or would like to request an item to be featured, please contact Amanda Hartman at hartmanar@longwood.edu
This week is Special Collections week! We’ve been saving up some of our reviews to publish every day this week.
Today we have a two-fer; student assistant Chandler Pascale chose to review Instant Lives and The Virginia Exiles:
Instant Lives by Howard Moss, Illustrated by Edward Gorey
In the Gorey Collection
Link to the catalog: http://readpac.longwood.edu//record=b1135178
Instant Lives by Howard Moss is located in the Edward Gorey Collection because Gorey illustrated the book. The Special Collections Department also has several works signed by Gorey himself.
I wanted to see if the work is as strange as Gorey’s writing, since he only illustrated this. I found this fictional compilation of humorous biographies very funny, and not oddly strange. Moss invents a story in which Beethoven named a piece of music for his nagging son who lazily complains about his lack of recognition. The author also claims to have read an unpublished work of T.E. Lawrence titled Omar in the cafeteria of the British Museum.
Students should read this thin book if they simply want to relax and read something humorous. Those who love to laugh will like Moss’ work in Instant Lives.
The Virginia Exiles by Elizabeth Gray Vining
In the Virginia Authors Collection
Link to the catalog: http://readpac.longwood.edu//record=b1147248
This book is in the Virginia Authors’ section because its theme concerns Virginia. Written by Elizabeth Gray Vining (A Pennsylvania native) and published in 1955, this work of fiction details the life of Caleb Middleton, a Pennsylvania native and a member of the Society of Friends (The Quakers).
After his family is banished to Virginia during the Revolutionary War, Caleb falls in love with a girl in his new surroundings. I think it’s interesting because it combines history and romance, even if the history is sometimes less than realistic. Still, those who are interested in history and/or romance would probably find this book interesting.
Special Collections Spotlight will periodically feature material that can be found the Longwood University Special Collections and Archives. If you have questions or would like to request an item to be featured, please contact Amanda Hartman at hartmanar@longwood.edu