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Cover image for book This Book Is Overdue!

This Book Is Overdue!

How Librarians and Cybrarians Can Save Us All
By:Marilyn Johnson
Publisher:Open Road Integrated Media, Inc.
Print ISBN:9780061431609
eText ISBN:9780061962103
Edition:0
Copyright:2010
Format:Reflowable

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"[A] marvelous book about the vital importance of librarians in the cyber age. . . . Move over, Google—make way for the . . . all-knowing lady behind the desk." —Christopher Buckley, New York Times– bestselling author of Losing Mum and Pup In a world of streaming media, digital archives, and Google Everything, some think librarians are as obsolete as print on a page. Marilyn Johnson, acclaimed author of The Dead Beat, now celebrates libraries and librarians, arguing that the work they do is more important than ever. Johnson follows a new breed of visionary professionals—cybrarians—who use the web to link people and information, and bridge the gulf between those who have the tools and resources they need and those left behind by economics, education, or the latest computer upgrade. With wit and grace, Johnson upends the stereotypes to show that contemporary librarians come in a variety of disguises, including: a tattooed, multi-ethnic, hard-partying children's librarian; a writers' groupie; a boxing archivist; a Catholic couple who teach missionaries to use computers; and many sexually ambiguous and voluptuous avatars. They're joined by a chorus of entertaining librarians and cybrarians who make unholy, and hilarious, noise behind the stacks, in the bar, and on the web. Libraries are the portal to our future and the cradle of our past, and librarians are wired to both. Johnson presents a refreshing view of the undervalued individuals who create order out of our messy world. "Johnson does for the library profession what Malcolm Gladwell did for the theory of memetics in The Tipping Point." —Nora Rawlinson, The Tipping Point "Topical, witty. . . . Johnson's wry report is a must-read for anyone who's used a library in the past quarter century." — Publishers Weekly (starred review)

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