May 2012

  • May 31 2012

    More e-books now available

    UMKC Libraries expanded collection of electronic books now includes over 50,000 with 300-400 new titles added every week.

    ebooks

    Many e-books can be checked out for 24 hour blocks of time and can be downloaded for either 1 or 7 days as needed. There is no limit to the number of times you may check out or download a title. For most e-books, there is never a wait or limit to how many users can check out the same book at the same time.

    The collection includes titles from such publishers as Cambridge University Press, Oxford University Press, Elsevier Science and Technology, John Wiley & Sons, Routledge, Sage Publications, and Springer-Verlag. Subject coverage spans all the major disciplines.

    To take advantage of personalized features like your own bookshelf, bookmarks, and annotations, just log into the EBook Library (EBL) platform using your UMKC single sign-on.

  • May 31 2012

    Medieval and rare book exhibit, June 1-30

    Desire for the Medieval Past: Book Collecting in Midwestern Monastic Libraries

    Miller Nichols Library Dean's Gallery, 2nd floor

    June 1 - 30, 2012

    Medieval book display

    There is a wealth of materials in Midwestern monastic libraries that are virtually unknown to the outside world. These books include a variety of religious materials, including donations from other religious communities, gifts from benefactors, and purchases by the communities themselves.

    Focusing on three Benedictine libraries near Kansas City—Conception Abbey (Conception, MO), Mount St. Scholastica (Atchison, KS), and St Benedict's Abbey (Atchison, KS) whose collection is now housed at Benedictine College—this exhibition will feature manuscripts and early printed books from the fourteenth to the sixteenth century, some in original bindings, including:

    • thirteenth-century Latin textbook in which a later German nun has inscribed her name
    • hand-written book of astronomical charts from 1483
    • copy of the Nuremburg Chronicle, printed in 1493
    • choir book dated about 1650 given to a Spanish nun
    • German atlas showing Benedictine missions throughout the world, printed in 1753
    • hand-written German prayer book from 1803
    • unique book of saints’ lives, hand-decorated and written in 1887 by a French priest for his niece, when she joined a convent

    Together this eclectic gathering of materials demonstrate,  a "desire for the medieval past" of Benedictine scholarship, and this tradition of producing hand-written books continues as the more recently made books demonstrate.