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New Young Adult Science Fiction and Fantasy Sun 8:30 - 9:59AM Caucus
A general panel on the best new YA fantasy and science fiction books.

I'm taking suggestions, if you have them (released before mid-May, preferably); I keep up pretty well with new YA books, but I haven't been reading all that much lately. I'm very intrigued by The Demon's Lexicon but it doesn't come out until June.

Public Libraries: Where's the SF? Sun 10:00 - 11:29AM Conference 5
With the Current Economic Climate (tm), people are flocking to libraries for the free books, dvds, video games, internet access, and programming. With a shrinking budget and an increased demand, what can we as library workers and library patrons do to ensure science fiction gets a good place in the collection? Is it about encouraging the purchase of more materials, making it easier to find those materials once they're in the library, or maybe starting a book club? Should we be focussing on the children's room, the teen collection, or the adults? Are there particular books we feel are essential for a library to have?

I'm not sure whether I'm a good person to answer that question, given that the two libraries where I've worked have had tiny science fiction sections -- actually, Southgate didn't have a science fiction section at all. Must think some more about this one.
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(no subject)

13/4/09 19:36 (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] takumashii.livejournal.com
In general I think library ordering IS largely driven by patron demand, both from a philosophical point of view and from a pragmatic point of view (because it's easier to make a case for us getting more library money if we circulate a ton of books!), but I think one of the problems for science fiction is that it sort of falls into that gap between "we should buy it because it's really popular" and "we should buy it because it's a classic." So literary or niche or small-press science fiction, or minor classics of the 1970s and 1980s, tend to get ignored. And obviously I can't say that libraries should conform themselves to my tastes just because they're my tastes, but I think it's reasonable for science fiction fans as a group to think about whether we can do something to change that.

(BPL is one of the largest library systems in the country, right? Looking at some of those minor classics at random -- we have half a dozen copies of Neuromancer, 8 of Left Hand of Darkness, two of Snow Crash, two of Mythago World. This is to share between 60 library branches. I tend to think that's not really adequate.)

(no subject)

13/4/09 19:37 (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] takumashii.livejournal.com
And no copies at all of Little, Big; THAT is a problem.

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