Columbia College Chicago
Library
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

March 13, 2014

Papermaking Workshop with The People’s Library

In collaboration with the Center for Book and Paper Arts, The People’s Library will lead a DIY paper making workshop on the 3rd Floor of the Library tomorrow between 10am to 1pm. Drop-in at any time to participate! 


The People's Library re-purposes discarded books otherwise headed for a landfill by making new paper from their pulp. The Columbia College community is invited to participate in making paper and binding the paper into blank books. After the workshop concludes, students can contribute their own content to the blank books until April 15th. 

So join us for the open workshop Friday, March 14th from 10am until 1pm or stop by the Library between March 18th and April 15th to contribute content to the blank books.

Additionally, visit The People’s Library at Chicago Zine Fest this Saturday, March 15th

March 6, 2014

Library Cats


A wise person once said, "the internet is made of cats." But the relationship between libraries and cats dates back centuries. Cats in ancient Egypt protected ancient papyrus from rodents and snakes. The State Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg Russia is still patrolled by cats descended from Empress Elizabeth's court (they even hold a Day of the Cat celebration for these felines!). In fact, a library in Russia employs Kuzma the Russian Library Cat, protects the books and sports a bow-tie collar. 

Kuzma the Library Cat, on the job.
While the Columbia College Library doesn't have a cat wandering the shelves, we do have many, many books about cats. 

Follow CCC Library's board Library Cat on Pinterest.

You can see some highlights on our Pinterest board some of my favorites include:
Why Cats Paint: A Theory of Feline Aesthetics


Dancing with Cats
Feng Shui for You and Your Cat

And finally, here's a silly interactive game to occupy your during your study breaks. Enjoy!

Cat Bounce - an interactive game for your enjoyment

August 27, 2013

Does the Library have my textbook?



This is a great question and it can be easily answered!

The tool you’ll need to fuel your search is the title of the book.

For extra insurance, it’s really good if you also have the name of the author of the book. (It’s amazing how many books have the same title!)



Start your search at the Library Home Page, and follow these steps:

  1. Key the title of the book into the search box. 
  2. Before hitting enter, click on the word “keyword” [to the right of the search box] and change it to “title”. 
  3. Also, click the link below the search box that says “Just books”.
  4. Now press enter and… voila!



Be sure to write down the location and the call number. 



If the textbook costs more than $40 in the bookstore then we will always have a copy available on course reserve. These items can only be used in the library. Present your Columbia ID along with the title and call number of the book at the 1st floor desk. 


Don’t know the name of the book?
You can find it on your course syllabus or your schedule in OASIS.



November 30, 2011

Give Your Books a New Home: Books for Africa




Do you have textbooks that can't be returned for a refund?  Are you cleaning out your dorm room or office and have great books needing a new home?  Well, we can help you with that!

The Library, in partnership with Better World Books, will be sponsoring a book drive through Friday, December 16, 2011. All books received will be sent to Better World Books who will then sort and sell as many books as possible with proceeds going to our chosen literacy partner, Books for Africa. 

For more information about these organizations, go to:   

March 14, 2011

Friday, April 1 - Edible Books & Tea

Edible Books & Tea
Friday, April 1, 2011 marks the 12th Annual Edible Books & Tea, sponsored by the Center for Book & Paper Arts and the Library.

IT CAN LOOK LIKE A BOOK,
IT CAN ACT LIKE A BOOK,
IT CAN BE A PUN ON A BOOK...
THE ONLY RULE: IT MUST BE EDIBLE!

RSVP FOR BOOKMAKERS
Deadline: Friday, March 25th 2011 at 5pm
book&paper@colum.edu or 312.369.6630
Register!

Friday April 1, 2011 6-8pm
6–7pm Viewing & Voting
7–8pm Devouring Books
Winners will be announced by 7:30pm

Columbia College Chicago Library
624 South Michigan Ave.
3rd Floor—North
Chicago, IL 60605

Columbia College Chicago, Center for Book & Paper Arts, Library

March 8, 2011

15th Annual Story Week - March 13-18


From Sunday, March 13 through Friday, March 18, the Columbia College Chicago Fiction Writing Department presents its 15th Annual Story Week Festival of Writers: Class Acts.

This year's theme will spark discussion among Story Week participants about how issues of class manifest themselves in creative works and the rapidly changing world of publishing. It also reflects the high quality of writing from this year's featured guests.


As it has for the last 15 years, Story Week 2011 will offer six days jam-packed with readings, conversations with authors, panels, performances, and book signings at venues throughout Chicago—all free and open to the public. It is co-sponsored in part by the Chicago Public Library and Metro.


Story Week will once again present a diverse group of headliners who will read from and discuss their works. They are: Scottish-born Irvine Welsh, who grabbed the world's attention with his daring working-class fiction novel Trainspotting; Chicago-born Jennifer Egan, whose most recent book, A Visit from the Goon Squad, was named one of the top 10 books of 2010 by the New York Times; and Karen Tei Yamashita, National Book Award finalist and author of I Hotel, about the Yellow Power movement in 1970s San Francisco. Also lighting up the Story Week stage is Columbia College Chicago professor Audrey Niffenegger, acclaimed author of The Time Traveler's Wife, Her Fearful Symmetry, and the serialized graphic novel The Night Bookmobile. Goodman Theatre playwrights Regina Taylor (The Trinity River Plays) and Tanya Saracho (El Nogalar) will explore the collaborative nature of storytelling and the stage.


The complete Schedule of Events and Authors is available at the Story Week website: http://www.colum.edu/SpecialEvents/Story_Week/

August 30, 2010

We've got your textbooks* @ the Library

Photo courtesy of anshu_si via Flickr Creative Commons
All required textbooks *over $40 are purchased and placed on reserve in the Columbia College Chicago Library.

Reserve books are available for short-term check-out at the first floor Circulation Desk. They may be used in the library only. We ask that you return reserve items to the desk as soon as you have completed your assignment. An OASIS ID is required for check-out.

You can search for reserve books here.

February 4, 2010

3rd Floor Complete!

new 3rd floor study space
Come take a look at the newly completed 3rd floor of the library.

  • Additional shelving - and Art books from 700-739
  • New study rooms and study tables
  • Computers workstations

new 3rd floor study space

Book shifting is still occurring on the 4th floor - Art books from 740-799. This will eliminate the overflow carts in the 770's, 780's, and 790's. Pardon our dust while this work is completed.

new 3rd floor study space

January 27, 2010

Remodeled 3rd Floor & Expansion of Art Book Collection

Coming next month a large section of the Art Book Collection - call numbers from 700-739 - will be moved to the 3rd Floor of the library. This move will free up space on the 4th Floor and will eliminate the overflow areas in the 770's, 780's and 790's. Please bear with us while this major shifting of materials takes place. We think the end result will be well worth the disruption!

Overflow Carts, 4th Floor
Overflow Carts, 4th Floor

In addition to the book shift, the 3rd Floor West has been completely remodeled and will include additional computer stations, furniture and seating and two new study rooms.



Starting on Monday, February 1st the call number ranges for each floor will be as follows:
2nd Floor: Reference Materials, Oversize Books, Magazines, Journals & Newspapers, and Career Corner Resources
3rd Floor: Circulating Collection 000-739
4th Floor: Circulating Collection 740-799
5th Floor: Circulating Collection 800-999

For more information on the collections and services located in the library see the Library Floor Directory.

April 27, 2009

Big Read-A-Thon Tomorrow 4/28 Library 3rd Floor 9am-5pm

Burned any good books lately?


Join us for the Big Read Read-A-Thon Tomorrow - Tuesday, April 28 from 9am - 5pm as we read Fahrenheit 451 from start to finish!



Not familiar with the classic story of censorship, book burning, and the continued need for intellectual freedom and critical thought?

Come listen to readers from all over the college and the community read aloud from Ray Bradbury's 1953 classic.







Tuesday, April 28th
9:00 am - 5:00 pm
Library 3rd Floor
624 S. Michigan Ave.

April 15, 2009

Book Sale


Columbia College Chicago Library Book Sale


Pre-Sale Wednesday, April 22nd - 6:00 - 8:00 p.m.
{Friends of the Library* only}
Thursday, April 23rd - 10:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.
Friday, April 24th - 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.
{grab bag $5 after 3:00 p.m.}

624 S. Michigan Ave.
3rd Floor



*are you a Friend of the Library?

April 9, 2009

Panel on Censorship: "Burning Bright: a dialogue on creative freedom in the age of new media"

Steve EdwardsKaren FioritoJason Salavon

Stacia YeapanisDawn Larsen
Panel Discussion on Censorship - part of the month-long celebration of the Big Read

Monday, April 13th, 2009
6:00 - 8:00 p.m.
Library - 3rd Floor
Columbia College Chicago
FREE!

Local and national artists and theorists from across a range of creative disciplines discuss how governmental, corporate and self-censorship impact creative expression.

Panelists include:

  • Steve Edwards, former host of WBEZ's 84.8 and current acting program director;
  • Stacia Yeapanis, new media artist;
  • Dr. Al Gini, professor of Business Ethics at Loyola University;
  • Jason Salavon, media artist;
  • Karen Fiorito, Los Angeles political artist (via conference call); and
  • Dawn Larsen, Intellectual Property attorney and faculty member of Columbia College Chicago.

April 6, 2009

Big Read-A-Thon - Readers Needed!

































Let your voice fuel the flames
at the
BIG READ-A-THON
for Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451

Tuesday, April 28
9am-5pm
3rd Floor of the Library

624 S. Michigan Ave.

To sign up:
CONTACT
Molly Beestrum
312-369-7966
mbeestrum@colum.edu
or
Shirley Bennett
312-369-7966
sbennett@colum.edu

Part of the Big Read program of events.


March 26, 2009

The Big Read & Fahreheit 451


Ray Bradbury's "Fahrenheit 451" is a selection of The Big Read. A program of the National Endowment for the Arts, The Big Read provides the opportunity for communities across the nation to join together in reading a single book.

The Columbia College Chicago Library Presents
A month-long series of events, on and off campus, inspired by this year's Big Read Book:
Fahreheit 451 by Ray Bradbury

See the Big Read website for more information.

March 13, 2009

Edible Books & The Big Read - April 1st


















It can look like a book, it can act like a book, it can be a pun on a book...
The only rule: it must be edible!

Artists with a culinary streak, chefs with artistic flair, and book lovers are invited to participate by whipping up an edible book for this event which takes place on Wednesday, April 1st at venues around the world. Prize categories: Most Likely To Be Burned, Most Likely To Be Devoured, Most Out Of This World, Most Likely To Be Made Into a Truffaut Film, Most Magical.




Fahrenheit 451, Ray Bradbury’s classic parable of literature under threat of destruction. Bradbury will be honored at this year’s Manifest celebration at Columbia College Chicago following the Library’s Big Read month-long programming in April and May focusing on Fahrenheit 451.

The Big Read at Columbia College Chicago features readings, panel discussions, book discussion group
gatherings, lectures by national authors, film screenings, demonstrations, and a number of other exciting and creative events held here at Columbia College Chicago, as well as throughout the Chicagoland area. Free copies of Fahrenheit 451 and supplementary materials such as Reader’s and Teachers Guides will be available at all Big Read events.

For more information, visit the library’s website. http://www.colum.edu/bigread

RSVP for Bookmakers--Deadline: Friday, March 27th 2009 at 5 pm
book&paper@colum.edu or 312-369-6630

Registration form can be found at: http://www.bookandpaper.org
Information for bookmakers: Gina Ordaz 312-369-6630
Information for event: Opal Anderson 312-369-7027

Entries must be dropped off and set up on April 1st between 5:30-6 pm at the Columbia Library.

Admission $10 per person (free for bookmakers), $5 Friends of the Library. Tickets at the door, cash & check only. Proceeds benefit the Center for Book & Paper Arts’ Equipment Fund.

December 13, 2008

"Everyone has had at least one magical polaroid experience."

I liked this idea so much I decided to adapt to for the Columbia College Chicago Library. Below are the first sentences from twelve new books in the library. Click on the sentence to discover more information - including the title and call number.

These women of television news toughed it out and fortunately were driven enough to insist on equity.




A few years ago I met a wheat farmer from North Dakota, and couldn't stop myself from asking him how he kept from going crazy with all that windblown solitude.


Everyone has had at least one magical Polaroid experience.




It is a common misconception that when the Armistice brought the Great War to a halt at the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month of 1918, the world was suddenly at peace.


Whether because of fervent patriotism, youthful enthusiasm, or simply a sense of adventure born in the humdrum of day-to-day living, there was no shortage of volunteers rushing to the flag after Abraham Lincoln's April 15 proclamation.


Do not mess about or play carelessly with any of the techniques, drills, or exercises you see in this book.




Ask any woman of a certain age if she read romance comics, and you'll probably get a smile and maybe a sigh.






I had truly believed that I would be six feet under before something like this took place.



If you want to understand how race works in American politics and society, you would do well to attend to ethnicity.




There is a wide-spread assumption that science and religion are at war with one another.



Throughout Saxon times until well into the Norman period the costume of men and women underwent little change.




In the 1920s, black culture exploded into the public consciousness.