Archive for February, 2009

New titles in popular reading collection

February 20th, 2009
Check out the most recent titles in our Popular Reading collection in the Zumberge Library in the Café Bibliothèque area on the first floor! These are the latest titles received. Stay tuned for further additions – we add new titles every month!
Mounting fears by Stuart Woods
Moments of clarity by Christopher Kennedy Lawford
Water dogs by Lewis Robinson
Through it all by Christine King Farris
Breakneck by Erica Spindler
The Associate by John Grisham
True colors by Kristin Hannah
Church of lies by Flora Jessop
High voltage tattoo by Kat Von D
Dark of night by Suzanne Brockmann
A darker place by Jack Higgins
The plunder room by John Jeter
Honeymoon in Tehran by Azadeh Moaveni
What was I thinking? 58 bad boyfriend stories by Barbara Davilman
Galway Bay by Mary Pat Kelly
Lethal legacy by Linda Fairstein
The second opinion by Michael Palmer
While my sister sleeps by Barbara Delinsky
A wall of white by Jennifer Woodlief
Terminal freeze by Lincoln Child
Fool by Christopher Moore

Need a break from your studies?

February 10th, 2009

Relax with magazines from the Steelcase Library’s new leisure reading magazine collection. We now are, or soon will be, receiving the following:

  • Entertainment Weekly
  • Glamour
  • Men’s Health
  • National Geographic
  • New Yorker
  • Newsweek
  • People
  • Rolling Stone
  • Sports Illustrated
  • Time
  • U.S. News & World Report
  • US Weekly

You’ll find these on top of the book shelves just inside the reading room.

Be sure to check out the new books section, too. They’re in the display case right across from the entrance doors.

New Resource: The American Indian Experience

February 10th, 2009

The University Libraries are happy to announce the addition of a new reference database.

The American Indian Experience offers access to an online library, featuring more than 150 volumes of scholarship and reference content, hundreds of primary documents, and thousands of images. From Pre-contact to the present day, from the Inuit of the north to the Seminoles of Florida, AIE is meant for anyone wishing to learn more about America’s Native Peoples.”