Read On! Greed in Publishing

Patrons who use our ebook library are about to be frustrated with our service. I sincerely apologize. All 8,000 public library systems offering ebooks are trying to find a solution.

Ebooks are sold differently than their physical counterparts. When we buy a physical book, the library owns it. We can add it to our collection, loan it as many times as we want, trade it, give it away, or sell it. That book is 100% ours. 

When libraries buy digital books, we don’t own anything. We are simply buying a license to access the book in a digital format. That license is only good for one patron at a time. The publishers dictate how we can use it, how many times we can let our patrons check it out, how many copies we can purchase, and how long those copies will be available. Plus, libraries pay between $40 – $80 per license, depending on the publisher. 

All five of the big publishers limit access to library ebooks in some way. Most licenses expire in two years or after 26 – 52 checkouts, whichever comes first. Macmillan is enacting a new embargo on their ebooks: A library, no matter how many people they serve, can only purchase one copy of any newly published ebook for the first 8 weeks after publication. This will mean even longer holds lists for some popular titles. And our licenses may expire before everyone gets to check the book out. 

Publishers justify all of this by saying libraries eat into the publishers’ profits. Of course, an impartial study by the Panorama Project clearly demonstrates that wide availability of library ebooks increases sales and interest in authors. 

I’m not sure how the dust will settle on all of this, but please forgive the longer waits for ebooks. We’re trying to work with publishers, but it will take some time. It may even get worse before it gets better.

 

Read On: Back to School

Now that I’m well out of school I often think about my school years and regret that I didn’t take my classes or my education more seriously. I wouldn’t go back for a truck-load of money, but if I had it all to do over again, I’d pay more attention in my History classes, try to understand the math concepts for longer than what was needed for the test, and I’d probably choose to learn Spanish instead of French. 

The good news for me and anyone with similar feelings is that the public library has resources to help life-long learners brush up on the subjects we missed or have forgotten since our school days. (These resources can also help learners currently in school, of course.)

Online, you’ll find the EBSCO Host, Learning Express, and Mango resources are our most student-friendly. Even if the student hasn’t been in a classroom in decades. 

EBSCO Host is a resource full of full-text articles from a variety of magazines, newspapers, and journals on just about any subject you might want to research. It will even help with citations!

Learning Express is primarily a test-preparation resource, but it also has tutorials for most subjects from about 4th grade through high school. If you want to remember how to do Geometry, this is the resource for you. 

Mango is our language-learning resource. It features more than 70 courses on languages like Hebrew, Cherokee, Spanish, and English for non-native speakers. The lessons are quick, thorough, and easy to follow. Mango also has an app for language-learning on the go! 

Of course, we also have our collection of materials in the building and resources available from just about any library in the world through our Inter-Library Loan (ILL) service. If there’s something you want to learn or know more about, your library staff can hook you up. 

 

Read On! Summer Reading Wrap Up

We just wrapped up our most successful Summer Reading Program on record! I don’t have the numbers for every event we hosted, but when I compare the numbers I have to the same numbers from last year, we had a phenomenal Summer! 

Our Summer Reading Program has two parts: the reading part where kids & teens track the time they read and adults mark squares off our Bingo sheet and the class/event part where people can attend an event at the library. Comparing sign-ups for the reading part and attendance for the event part, we have seen a significant increase in participation this year. Thank you! 

We had 368 people register for and receive the various trackers for the reading part of Summer Reading. Exactly half of those registered are kids ages 5 – 11 who earned a free book for every five hours they read. Overall, our total registration increased by almost 12% over the registration from last year’s program. 

This year, we saw almost 20% more people attend our Summer Reading events than we had last year. In all, 1,212 people made it to the library for an adult, teen, or kid event! And that’s not counting the number of people who attend our Library Festival! (I don’t have those numbers yet.)

I’m so proud of how hard the Library staff worked to make this summer a success. I love watching their planning unfold and I love hearing the stories of the people who attend. This summer seemed to bring a lot of fun and excitement to everyone who joined us. Next year’s slogan for Summer Reading is “Imagine Your Story,” which will surely be as much fun as this year!

We take a break from programming in August, but join us in September for Storytime Classes every Wednesday at 10:30 AM; Teen Night the first Thursdays at 6:30 PM; and Adult Classes and Workshops the second Thursdays at 6:30 PM.