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Geisel Library Summer 2023 Book Group
Join us for three summer reads, in June, July, & August.

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Join us for three summer reads, in June, July, & August.
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Celebrate Pride Month with our virtual and physical displays of LGBTQ+ library materials.
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On March 27, Geisel Library is celebrating 60 years as a member of the Federal Depository Library Program (FDLP). Check out the display of selected government documents on the main level of the library, pick up some swag, and join us for refreshments. Learn more about our collection of government documents.
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This summer we added a new primary source database of historical newspapers from Africa. Part of the World Newspaper Archive by Readex, the database includes more than 40 nineteenth and early twentieth-century African newspapers from Ghana, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, South Africa, Uganda, and Zimbabwe.
Access is available to current members of the college community through the library's Database A-Z webpage.
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Students and faculty returned to campus to see significant change at Geisel Library. The Library is one of several buildings updated to accommodate the relocation of offices and classrooms from the Poisson building in preparation for its forthcoming demolition. In June 2022, President Joseph A. Favazza, Ph.D., announced plans to establish a School of Nursing and Health Professions to be housed in a new state-of-the-art nursing facility. This facility will replace Poisson building adjacent to Geisel Library.
Geisel is now home to the Computer Science department with faculty/staff offices, labs, and classrooms located on the main and lower levels. Three IT technicians also relocated their offices to the library, behind the Helpdesk on the main level.
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Angela is the Circulation Associate at Geisel Library. Having started in May, she is so happy to be on campus with students, staff and faculty for the new school year. Angela graduated from Franciscan University of Steubenville this summer with her BA in English, American and British Literature. When not at Geisel Library, she enjoys thrifting, hiking (more like trail - walking), coffee shops, and reading about the American poet, T.S. Eliot.
Carisa is a librarian and archivist who received her Master of Library Science and archival management graduate certificate from the University of North Texas after 17 years as a stay-at-home mom. A self described history nerd and book hoarder, Carisa also enjoys cooking, gardening, traveling, and spending time with her three teenagers in her free time. When not working at St. Anselm, Carisa can be found assisting researchers, processing archival collections, writing finding aids, and going down fun history rabbit holes at the Center for Lowell History, the archives and special collections library at UMass Lowell.
Kimberly worked as a journalist for more than 30 years for newspapers in New Hampshire and the Pacific Northwest. She’s the author of Carolina Israelite: How Harry Golden Made Us Care about Jews, the South, and Civil Rights (The University of North Carolina Press), and along with her work in the library, this semester she’ll be teaching “Saving Lives – Writing about People” for the Nackey S. Loeb School of Communications, which recently announced an affiliation with our New Hampshire Institute of Politics. In her free time, Kimberly often grabs a bus to Boston or explores NH's backroads with her husband. “I also sketch (badly) in the galleries of the Currier Museum and pretend to do yoga,” she says.
Kat Gatcomb (she/her) is happy to join the Geisel Library staff as a Periodicals Supervisor. She holds a BA in theater from the University of New Hampshire and a MS in Library Science from Simmons University. She has worked in public libraries since 2017 and was named the NH Children’s Librarian of the Year by the NH Library Association in 2021. When not working, she enjoys thrifting, watching live theatre, and spending time with her amazing five month old daughter.
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On September 17, 1787, the Founders of our country signed arguably "the most influential document in American history, the U.S. Constitution" (National Constitution Center). We invite you to join us in recognizing this important event by taking time to familiarize yourself with the U.S. Constitution. Small "pocket" copies are freely available at the Circulation Desk, September 14-19, 2023. We also offer an online companion guide with books and videos about the Constitution and its Founders, as well as quizzes to test your knowledge.
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In honor of Hispanic Heritage Month, we offer two displays of adult and children's and young adult items by Hispanic authors and featuring Hispanic characters. Prepared by David Quinn, the display located in front of the IT Helpdesk offers a selection of books for adults. On the lower level, Kat Gatcomb prepared a display of books for children and young adults.
Feel free to borrow from the displays any titles you’d like to read.
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Boston Public Library recently joined three other libraries in the United States, Seattle Public Library, Brooklyn Public Library, and LA County Library, to offer free eCards to teens and young adults who live in the U.S. The eCards offer cardholders' access to frequently banned and challenged ebooks and audiobooks.
Obtain your eCard at one of these libraries by completing their online registration form: