RSS in your e-mail!

July 8, 2008

by Rachel Gogan

There’s light on the horizon for RSS e-mail delivery!

I ran our Newsletter feed through feed burner and now you can get the posts delivered to your computer via e-mail.

Click on this link and put in your e-mail address and then whenever new content is posted you should get it e-mailed to you!  You can also find this sign up link on the right side of the newsletter.  See where it says “Subscribe to University of New Hampshire Library Newsletter by Email”.  That’s the place!

Thanks for sticking with us!


No Love for the Outlook Feed Reader

July 2, 2008

by Rachel Gogan

It seems that Outlook has a new feature!  The ability to get RSS feeds delivered to your inbox.

Unfortunately that feature works about as well as matches under water.  Right now I’m investigating some alternate methods of getting e-mail delivery of newsletter articles.

Watch this space for new and exciting updates on getting the newsletter to you!


What’s a Wiki?

July 2, 2008

by Rachel Gogan

What exactly is a wiki? Well, the Wikipedia says that a wiki is:

a collection of web pages designed to enable anyone who accesses it to contribute or modify content, using a simplified markup language. Wikis are often used to create collaborative websites and to power community websites. The collaborative encyclopedia, Wikipedia, is one of the best-known wikis. Wikis are used in business to provide intranets and Knowledge Management systems. Ward Cunningham, developer of the first wiki software, WikiWikiWeb, originally described it as ‘the simplest online database that could possibly work’.

From the Wikipedia page on Wikis.

So what does that mean in plain English? It means that a wiki is a website that’s set up so that anyone can change it. You can add things (like text or links or pictures), edit things (update a link or picture), and take things away (remove a picture that isn’t the right one).

Here’s another explanation in a You Tube video: Wikis in Plain English

The Wikipedia is one of the most famous wikis. However, to learn about Wikis, the wikipedia is a little bit too huge to use as a good teaching example. So to make it a little easier here’s a wiki that I created last semester for my coursework.

My Wiki – http://rgogan.wetpaint.com/

There isn’t very much on my wiki page because my wiki is very small. The most useful thing about it is probably the How to Edit a Wiki Page.

Wikis are great tools for collaborative efforts, like planning a trip, or making changes in a department or office. Many people can add content to a wiki without needing to know any complicated computer languages. Wet paint wikis also allow you to invite certain contributors and bar others (good it you’re working with a small group, like a committee, but also want to share the information with others).  If you can type and you have an internet connection you can add to a wiki. It’s easier than ever with the myriad of wiki type pages online these days. The hardest part is choosing a subject to create your wiki about.

Check out this YouTube video to see a mini movie about WetPaint Wiki’s in particular: Wet Paint Wikis in Plain English

Got all that? Why not give it a shot. Try editing my wiki page. Or, try your hand at making one yourself. Go to Wetpaint.com and click on the big green ‘Go’ button. It’s easy! I promise.


Book Review: The Persian Boy

June 25, 2008

by Rachel Gogan

The Persian Boy by Mary Renault

An exquisitely written book, unnerving and haunting but sweet and tender at the same time.

I found this book even better than the first (Fire From Heaven). Bagoas is an excellent narrator and through his eyes Alexander is made out to be a god and a human in the same breath. I was inexorably drawn in by the tragic story, all the while dreading the inevitable end which was made even more agonizing by the feeling of reality created in the pages.

Another reviewer on Amazon (Kris Dotto) had this to say:

Excerpt:

Renault’s mastery is impeccable. With a few well-chosen words, she conjures the images of the great Persian palaces–the ruins at Persepolis, Susa, Ekbatana, and Babylon; she recreates the travels of the Macedonian army so well that any reader who picks up her companion book “The Nature of Alexander” will look at the pictures and exclaim, “I know this! This is–” and name the very scene. But it is her characters that truly live. Bagoas is keenly intelligent, charming, courtly, sarcastic, prey to jealousy and possessiveness when it comes to his lover; his growing maturity merely adds to the pain he experiences as the affair and Alexander’s conquests progress. And Alexander is much more accessible here than in “Fire From Heaven,” which is a wonderful book but presents Alexander as all light and no fire. Here we get to see Alexander as preening boy, heroic warrior, pragmatic king, and devoted lover. It is a marvelous love story whether or not it actually happened.

But the emotional payoffs of the affair are balanced by hideous tragedies, none more affecting than the death of Hephaistion. Bagoas’ quiet desperation to keep Alexander with the sane and living is agonizing with the knowledge that Alexander did not survive his lover by more than three months. Renault foreshadows without laying it on too thick, but it’s worth noting that the portents of Alexander’s death were recorded by historians, and the ancients paid close attention to that sort of thing. The final quarter of the book is grim, with only a few moments of light, and the most poignant moment is when Bagoas, having kept watch over Alexander even after his death, finally gives way to the Egyptian priests who come to embalm the Macedonian.

It isn’t all romance and grief. Bagoas is, after all, only sixteen when the affair starts; he’s prey to insecurity about his place in Alexander’s heart, and his two antagonists are Hephaistion, Alexander’s lifelong love, and Roxane, the legendary beauty who becomes Alexander’s wife. With Hephaistion, Bagoas indulges in the sort of reverie that anyone who’s ever had a romantic rival can identify with (stopping short of cutting him into little pieces and feeding him to the dogs). Roxane, on the other hand, earns Bagoas’ hatred for good reason, and she is presented as everything Hephaistion isn’t: clinging, vindictive, and devouring. Bagoas wryly notes that Alexander has, like most men, married a woman like his mother, and it’s asides like this from him that make the story such an indulgent treat to read.


Book Review: Rose Daughter

June 10, 2008

by Rachel Gogan

Book Review: Rose Daughter by Robin McKinley

This book is a fairy tale. A retelling of Beauty and the Beast by a very talented wordsmith. The entire book is written in the style of a fairy tale, just as though it were being handed down through some kind of oral tradition. The flavors are antique and almost childlike in their innocence.

I enjoyed reading this book although I did find the long and involved descriptions a little bit dense in some places, my mind started to wander as I read through them. It’s an easy read, but at the same time it takes focus to keep up with some of the events because of switching point of view and a few times where you’re not sure if the story is a dream or if events are really happening.

This sense of non-certainty is intentional in the story and helps to keep the fairy tale quality. There are also many legends and stories within the story and it’s very satisfying to piece them all together.

If you like a good fairy tale love story this is the book for you.