Library Stories
The Exploration Lab portion of the maps exhibition closed on schedule, and the room has now been converted back into our Deep Quiet Room. Remember – no talking in this room, and we ask that if you need to use a keyboard you even try to type quietly. :-) So if you need more quiet space, come here on the first floor, or go to the Quiet Floor on LG3. Edward Spodick Associate Director of Library Services lbspodic@ust.hk
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Library Stories
I love bi-lingual puns! Today at the Idea Corner, I saw this witty commentary on yesterday's weather. This is a play on the Cantonese name for HKUST: 香港科技大學 香[heung1]港[gong2]科[fo1]技[gei6]大[daai6]學[hok6] 科[fo1]技[gei6] = sounds like Foggy It made me chuckle. Today, it's still a bit foggy, but beautiful. Let's embrace the name :) Victoria Caplan Head (Research & Learning Support) lbcaplan@ust.hk
Learning Commons
Research Bridge
Welcome back to the new semester! In this post, we are happy to share the changes we have made to our library’s support for Open Access transformative publishing.
Academic Publishing
Library Stories
Lots of people assume that if you're a librarian, or work in a library you must love to read. It's a stereotype and in my case a true one. :) I like to read and recommend stories, books, poems, plays and all sorts of things to others.This post is the first in what I hope will be a series on good reads. Ursula K. Le Guin (1929-2018) was an American novelist, essayist, poet and short-story writer. She first became well-known for her Wizard of Earthsea fantasy series, aimed at the young, but enjoyed by people of all ages. Her main genre was science fiction, but she also wrote fantasy, poetry, essays, and fiction set in the "real world" . One of the things I like about her books is how they explore human relations and societies in what to the reader are very unusual situations. To get a start with her work, let me recommend two nice ones that are short and easy entries into her writing. The Lathe of Heaven ( PS3562.E42 L3 2003). This short novel, first published in 1971 is set in a future Portland Oregon, beset by the problems of global warming and over-population. The main character, George Orr, has a problem: his dreams change reality in the waking world. If I tell you more, I'll be guilty of "spoiling". But I can say that the situation is fascinating and the writing is simple, yet poetic.
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