Showing posts with label digital media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label digital media. Show all posts

Thursday, March 9, 2017

Download Your New Favorite: The Big Library Read and More!


Are you an eBook fan? Do you want to join a book group, but have a hard time with scheduling, or dislike large groups? Have you considered a eBook club?  OverDrive, one of our providers of digital media, sponsors a global eBook club called Big Library Read, with participation completely online. Goodreads also has eBook groups, or you could start your own - borrowing eBooks from hoopla, another of our providers, ensures that there will be no wait list.

If you haven't yet checked out our digital collection, maybe it's time to give it a whirl! Besides OverDrive, the library catalog also features eBooks, eAudiobooks, magazines, and more from OneClickdigital (eAudio only), authoritative information from ebrary, Bibliotheca's cloudLibrary, hoopla (eBooks, and also eAudio, movies, television, music, and comics), streaming music from Freegal, and Zinio for downloadable magazines. Each works a little differently, so be sure to check out our handy Digital Media About & Help Guide for more information, and the library does offer in-person assistance at Gizmo Garages at many branches. We know many people still prefer print books - but in a pinch, a digital download could save the day!

If you are looking to attend a book club or for other reading recommendations, look no further than our Books and Literature guide to access a list of book clubs by branch, printable booklists, bestseller lists, and more, and also considering checking out our email newsletter service!

Thursday, January 21, 2016

eAudiobooks

There are so many reasons to listen to audiobooks. We like to listen to them while we are struggling with household chores, or crafting. Some people enjoy listening to them in the car, particularly for long road trips. And they are not just available in CDs anymore, although we still have plenty of those - the library catalog also offers the Playaway format and downloadable audiobooks (eAudio). There are two eResources for eAudio avaible to ABC Library customers, Overdrive (which also provides eBooks) and OneClickdigital; you can search their databases for titles rather than the library catalog, if you prefer.

If you would like to stick to books on CD, don't miss the featured collections list of Adult Books on CD and Playaways and Children's Books on CD and Playaways - these will show you our latest acquisitions. However, if you'd like to give eAudio a try, the list below is compiled from recommended recent audiobook lists - because, for audiobooks, a good reader is so important! If you find you need help with downloading, you can find help on the library website or stop at one of our Gizmo Garage sessions!

Non-Fiction

Wildflower by Drew Barrymore

Between the World and Me by Ta-Nehisi Coates


A Fine Romance: A Memoir by Candice Bergen


The Witches: Salem, 1692 by Stacy Schiff


Fiction

A Strangeness in My Mind by Orhan Pamuk 

The Buried Giant by Kazuo Ishiguro 

A God in Ruins by Kate Atkinson 

Early Warning by Jane Smiley

Uprooted by Naomi Novik
  

And finally, if you want the personal touch, try Adult Storytime at our San Pedro branch or Storytime for Grownups at our Los Griegos branch! "Sit back, relax and listen to a San Pedro Library staff member read aloud from a selection of classic literature, short stories or other favorite works. Unlike a book club, there is no need for you to read the selection ahead of time, but feel free to join in a lively discussion after the reading. Adult Storytime happens at the San Pedro Library on the last Saturday of each month." Or, "Storytime for Grownups meets the first Wednesday of each month at Los Griegos Library. Hear great short stories or excerpts from longer works read by Book Mark."
 

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Poetry Month: ePoetry

Our eBook collection is growing all the time - you may have already checked out and downloaded a bestseller, or a cookbook, or a Young Adult novel (it's okay to read YA as an adult! We don't judge).  But did you know you can also download poetry to read on your eReader?  April is National Poetry Month, and we'd like to share with you a sampling of some of the ePoetry available to you - you don't even have to come into the library to check them out if you have internet access at home and a valid library card! All titles listed are eBooks in our catalog unless otherwise noted.


Litany for the City: Poems by Ryan Teitman

Need Machine by Andrew Faulkner

Holy Heathen Rhapsody by Pattiann Rogers

Faces of Love Hafez and the Poets of Shiraz by Dick Davis

Phantasmagoria and Other Poems by Lewis Carroll

That Said: New and Selected Poems by Jane Shore

Night of the Republic by Alan Shapiro

Waiting For the Moon: Poems of Bo Juyi translated by Arthur Waley

The Story of a People: An Anthology of Palestinian Poets Within the Green-Lines edited and translated by Jamal Assadi

Fast Break to Line Break: Poets on the Art of Basketball edited by Todd Davis

Voodoo Inverso by Mark Wagenaar

Our Andromeda by Brenda Shaughnessy

The Door by Margaret Atwood 

Hiphop H.A.I.K.U.: Volume 1 - Higher Awareness is Kept Underground by ShaIfa Mami Watu

The Essential Brendan Kennelly: Selected Poems by Brendan Kennelly

Poems 1960-2000 by Fleur Adcock

Out of the Blue: Poems 1975-2001 by Helen Dunmore

I Won't Let You Go: Selected Poems by Rabindranath Tagore

The Hands of Strangers: Poems from the Nursing Home by Janice N. Harrington

Songs and Stories of the Ghouls by Alice Notley

The Spoken Arts Treasury - Volume I: 100 Modern American Poets Reading Their Poems [eAudiobook]

The Spoken Arts Treasury - Volume II: 100 Modern American Poets Reading Their Poems [eAudiobook]

Yeats Reads His Own Work by W.B. Yeats  [eAudiobook]


 For more poetry eBooks, check the library catalog. Ditto poetry eAudiobooks!

                

Sunday, October 6, 2013

eNovellas & eStory Collections: Short Fiction When You're on the Go!

Maybe you just want something quick to read, while you're waiting at the doctor's office, or waiting at the airport for your flight.  Maybe you don't have a lot of time.  Maybe you want to borrow a Kindle from the library, but you are not sure you're going to like eReading, and don't want to commit to a whole book that you might not have the time or inclination to finish.  Whatever your reasons for avoiding reading an eBook, we would like to suggest the burgeoning field of eNovellas, and, our personal favorite, short story collections in eBook format.

The novella as a form has fallen out of favor, but is enjoying a resurgence right now.  They have been around in European literature since the Renaissance, and feature generally "fewer conflicts than a novel, yet more complicated ones than a short story...[they] are often intended to be read at a single sitting" [Wikipedia].  Famous novellas include: Herman Melville's Billy Budd, Sailor; Ernest Hemingway's The Old Man and the Sea; Truman Capote's Breakfast at Tiffany's; and Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol. We think you may even love the form already without knowing it!

Here at abcreads, we often feel that short stories as a genre have gotten short shrift lately as well, despite their rich and magnificent tradition, which date back to oral storytelling and fables. Early examples include The Canterbury Tales and The Decameron, both of which feature short stories in the "frame" of a larger story. Early short story masters include Washington Irving, Edgar Allan Poe, Kate Chopin, Guy de Maupassant, and Anton Chekhov. In the early 1900s, when magazine publishing was flourishing, so did the short story, with magazines like The Strand, The Atlantic Monthly, and The Saturday Evening Post regularly featuring stories. At this time short story writing was lucrative and authors often quickly penned a story for some cash in hand. Some authors published in this era are: F. Scott Fitzgerald; Ryūnosuke Akutagawa (the father of the Japanese short story); Dorothy Parker; and Franz Kafka. The genre continued to be very popular through the '50s and '60s, with its popularity falling off alongside the rise of film and the shrinking of the commercial market for them.

So, check out an eNovella or an eStory collection today!  Maybe you just want to kill some time...but you will be breathing life into a literary tradition, and becoming a link in the chain of literary history, all while still being on the cutting edge of technology!


Novellas

Shipwreck by Maureen Jennings

The Hangman by Louise Penny

Patricide by Joyce Carol Oates

A Leaf on the Wind of All Hallows by Diana Gabaldon

Darkness Under the Sun by Dean Koontz

Hollyleaf's Story by Erin Hunter

Chaotic by Kelley Armstrong

High Heat by Lee Child

Snatched by Karin Slaughter

Museum of Final Journeys by Anita Desai

The Variable Man by Philip K. Dick

Stupid Perfect World by Scott Westerfeld



Short Stories

Qissat: Short Stories by Palestinian Women

Mad For It: Short Stories on Football's Greatest Rivalries - Part 1, Manchester Utd. v. Liverpool: Seeing Red by Andy Mitten

There is No Long Distance Now: Very Short Stories by Naomi Shihab Nye

One World: A Global Anthology of Short Stories edited by Chris Brazier

Agnes Owens: The Complete Short Stories by Agnes Owens

Island Boyz: Short Stories by Graham Salisbury

Midnight Pleasures: Four Short Stories of Otherworldly Passion by Amanda Ashley ... [et al.].

The Jacques Futrelle Megapack: 47 Tales of the Thinking Machine and Others

Dreamsongs, Vol. 1 by George R. R. Martin

Bite by Laurell K. Hamilton ... [et al.].



Links

A list of popular eNovellas from Goodreads

A Brief History of the Short Story in America

In Praise of Short


Saturday, April 20, 2013

New & Novel in eBooks

Our collection of eBooks and eAudiobooks is always expanding!  Here are some recent acquisitions, available in our catalog only as eBooks, that may have flown beneath your radar:


Bible Stories in Cockney Rhyming Slang by Keith Park

Bright Particular Stars: A Gallery of Glorious British Eccentrics by David McKie

A Bull on the Beach by Anna Nicholas

Catalog Living at Its Most Absurd by Molly Erdman

Coal to Diamonds: A Memoir by Beth Ditto

Confessions of a Hostie: True Stories of an International Flight Attendant by Danielle Hugh

Corrupted Classics by the Corrupted Classics Team

Etsy-preneurship: Everything You Need to Know to Turn Your Handmade Hobby into a Thriving Business by Jason Malinak

More Than a Team: A Father, A Son and Barça by Vicenç Villatoro

Suffering Succotash: A Picky Eater's Quest to Understand Why We Hate the Foods We Hate by Stephanie Lucianovic


For more new eBooks, check the library catalog.  There's eAudio too!

Find out more about the library's digital media offerings in our handy-dandy subject guide!

New to digital media?  Need a little assistance with your new reader?  We have a Kindle guide if you are borrowing one from the library.  If you'd prefer more hands-on assistance, try attending a Gizmo Garage!  You can bring in your reader, or try one of ours!

Monday, December 17, 2012

eReader Holiday Gift Guide

giftIt's that time of year again, where you might find yourself scratching your head trying to come up with good gift ideas.  Judging by the number of questions I get asked, eReaders are going to be a big hit again this year.  Since there are a wide variety of devices available that are compatible with the library system, a little guidance might be handy for those looking for a gift (or a gift for oneself!)

eReaders can be broken down into two basic types: Tablet-style and E-Ink.  Each type has its own advantages and disadvantages, so continue reading to figure out what kind best matches what you had in mind.

Tablet-style eReaders are actually tablets that also function as eReaders.  Beyond reading eBooks on them, you can also listen to audiobooks and music, play videos and movies, connect to the internet, access apps,  and play a variety of games.  These have color backlit screens, like a computer or smart phone screen.  So while color is nice, even necessary for some functions, battery life can be short with long use, requiring frequent charging.  These screens may also be difficult to see in sunlight or cause eye fatigue.  One of the nicest things about tablet-style eReaders is that you can load library apps on them, so borrowing eBooks and eAudiobooks is easy and doesn't require any other devices.  While tablet-style eReaders are a little larger and heaver than E-Ink ones, if you find yourself ferrying a bag full of devices around, these tablets may allow you to leave more of them at home.

Tablet-style Recommendations: Many are quite nice, so I can't point to one particular one as a must-have.  However, I recommend ones running either iOS (Apple iPads) or Android (Kindle Fire, Nook HD, and any number of other tablets from electronic manufacturers).  Tablets come in multiple sizes, ranging from about 7" tall to 11" tall, so seeing a variety in person can be helpful.  Along with a variety of choices, there are a variety of prices, from less than $100 to upwards of $500.

E-Ink eReaders are meant for one purpose: to read eBooks.  These have black and white E-Ink screens, which look very similar to a printed page.  Battery life can last a very long time between charges, as very little power is needed for turning pages.  E-Ink is easy to read in bright sunlight and shouldn't tire eyes any more than reading print books.  However, borrowing eBooks from the library requires a few more steps and possibly the use of a computer, depending on your eReader.  E-Ink eReaders are generally, small, thin, and lightweight and don't take up much room in a handbag or briefcase, but they don't have all the extra features that Tablet-style ones do.  There are even ones that have a built in light so that you can read in the dark without a separate light source.

E-Ink Recommendations: Again, there are many nice ones, so I can't pick one as the best.  However, I can make some broad recommendations.  If you plan to buy most of the books you read, Amazon and Barnes & Noble have the largest and most established book stores for eBooks.  If you want to read in the dark without a light, try the Barnes & Noble Simple Touch with Glowlight, the Amazon Kindle Paperwhite, or the KoboGlo.  If you want the easiest access to library books, try the Sony Reader Wi-Fi (no computer required to check out).  Most E-Ink eReaders have 7" screens and most are under $200, with many less than $100. 

Consumer Reports has recently tested many brands of both Tablets and E-Ink eReaders (look for Tablet and eReader reviews).  You'll need your library card number and PIN to access reviews through the link.  If you'd like to learn how to use any of these devices with the library, look for a Gizmo Garage at a library branch near you.

Sunday, September 30, 2012

Discovering Digital Media for Kids

As the checkout statistics prove, eBooks and eAudiobooks are overwhelmingly popular.  However, many people don't realize that we have a large selection of children's and young adult eBooks and eAudiobooks.  To get to any of the resources detailed below, look for the eBooks and eAudiobooks links on the library homepage.

eAudiobooks from One Click Digital
One Click Digital makes it possible to search by target audience, limiting search results by Beginning Reader (17 titles), Children's (347 titles), or Yound Adult (501 titles).  These titles can be downloaded to a home computer and transferred to a device or you can use the new Android or iPhone/iPad/iPod Touch apps to checkout and download to a mobile device.  The best thing about One Click Digital is that most titles can be checked out by multiple people at the same time, meaning there is never a waitlist!
Titles of note in One Click Digital are American Girl books, the Ranger's Apprentice series, the Sisters Grimm series, Meg Cabot books, titles from Anthony Horowitz, and student guides for many of Shakespeare's plays.

ebrary
eBooks from Ebrary
Ebrary provides mostly non-fiction titles, with many academic sources and study guides available.  This resource is best suited for high school students and titles can be downloaded to a home computer or to an Android or iPhone/iPad/iPod Touch app.  Most of these resources can be checked out by multiple people at the same time.

overdrive
eBooks and eAudiobooks from Overdrive
Overdrive provides both eBooks and eAudiobooks for children and young adults, though finding them is a little tricky.  The best way to access children's titles is to do an advanced search.  In the advanced search mode, using the subject dropdown menu, results can be restricted to Juvenile Fiction (2075 titles), Juvenile Literature (100 titles), Young Adult Fiction (1761 titles), Young Adult Literature (32 titles), and Young Adult Non-fiction (83 titles).  Also in the advanced search is the option to restrict results to particular award winners, including Caldecott and Newbury Medal and Honor books, Michael L. Printz Award and Honors books for teens, and several other children's and YA awards.  Overdrive titles can be downloaded to a home computer and transferred to many devices or checked out and downloaded via an Android or iPhone/iPad/iPod Touch app.

Thursday, August 30, 2012

Free eBook Sources Roundup

ebooks
More and more people are reading eBooks these days, on smart phones, tablets, computers, and dedicated eReaders.  Though the library is a great source for eBooks, there are many more available on the internet for free!

In January, I posted a great list of sources for free eBooks that you can still access here.  Here are some other websites to keep on your radar for yet more free Ebooks.

Digitalbooktoday.com has a daily list of free Kindle books available on Amazon.com.  Many of these are publisher promotionals that may only be free for 24 - 48 hours.  You can sign up for a daily email to be notified of the latest additions.

Smashwords.com has over 70,000 eBooks, with approximately 12,000 free in a variety of formats.  These books are from indie authors and small publishers.

Plough.com is a Christian publishing house that has free eBooks in a variety of formats and a variety of languages including English, Chinese, Korean, Russian, and Spanish among others.

Obooko.com is another site with free eBooks from independent authors.  Most books are in PDF format, though EPUB and Kindle formats are being introduced.

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Kindles!

ABC Libraries now has Kindles available for checkout, for those curious about eReaders - whether you are thinking of buying one, but want to try it first, or you just want to get a feel for eBooks! The 32 Kindles started circulating on April 1st.  Place your hold now!

While you are waiting to receive your Kindle hold, you might want to peruse our Kindle LibGuide, with its handy sections on How Borrowing a Kindle Works, How to Use the Kindle, & Help (lists an array of common  problems & how to correct them).  You will want to make special note of the ABC Libraries Kindle Borrowing Agreement, which a staff member will walk you through at checkout.

Also, many libraries have classes that can help you use your Kindle!  You can find answers to FAQ, links to branches with classes, & printable handouts in our Downloading Digital Media LibGuide.

Happy eBorrowing!

Friday, October 23, 2009

Digital Videos That You Can Download

Did you know that the library's downloadable digital media section has 1,152 videos that you can watch on your computer or a WMV device? Now, these videos are not first-run movies or the latest hot television series, but there are some treasures if you are willing to take the time to look through the various titles available. I have gone through every page and was quite amazed at the variety of stuff available. I found a Japanese anime movie called "Ninja Scroll" a 1993 Citizen Award Winner from the Yubari International Fantastic Film Festival, a drama called "Hog Island", about a woman who walks away from a comfortable home and ends up becoming involved with two drifters, and a 1959 horror classic called "House on Haunted Hill" with one of Hollywood's greatest actors, Vincent Price. There are also documentaries such as "An Adventure of a Different Nature" about Gros Morne Mountain in Newfoundland, Canada, now a UNESCO World Heritage site, and the original "The Fast and the Furious" from 1955 with John Ireland and Dorothy Malone. Who would have thought there would be a female character in a 1950's movie who is driving a muscle car? You will also find comedies, classics, old cartoons, and foreign films. So, for those of you who like to try offbeat videos for free, head on over to the "Featured Video" section and check out some of the titles for download. Or if you have the time, look through every single video like I did and you just might fine a hidden gem.

I have tried the video download, choosing a PBS Nature program and in about fifteen minutes, I was watching a documentary on birds.
If you have the Overdrive Media Console software already installed, the video will download in about ten minutes or so with a high-speed internet connection. I am not sure how it works with most computers, but for mine it opened up in a small window and then I clicked the small Windows Media Player icon on the bottom and the video then displayed in a larger picture through Windows Media Player. If you are not sure if you are able to watch videos on your computer or device, be sure and go to the "
Help" section for answers and troubleshooting if you are having problems.

Happy Birthday, iPod!


CUPERTINO, California—October 23, 2001—Apple® today introduced iPod™, a breakthrough MP3 music player that packs up to 1,000 CD-quality songs into an ultra-portable, 6.5 ounce design that fits in your pocket.

--from apple.com


Remember the days before iPods? Remember when you had to drag CDs (or even cassette tapes) around with you if you wanted to listen to music? Now you can practically fit your entire music collection in this tiny player. But have you considered downloading audiobooks to your iPod?

From our website, you can download audiobooks, eBooks, even videos. Just recently, the iPod-compatible format was added to this feature! Now you can search our Digital Library for iPod compatible audiobooks. Downloading is easy with the help of our handy FAQs. Or stop by your local branch & check at the Information Desk--we have helpful handouts for you!