Library in the News: October Edition

With the November opening of the new exhibition “The Civil War in America” only a month away, media outlets picked up on the announcement of a new blog featuring historical voices from the war.

The Associated Press wrote an announcement that many outlets ran with, including The Washington Post, WTOP, military.com and various broadcast affiliates of CBS, ABC, NBC and Fox. Also spotlighting the blog with individual coverage was the Daily Kos blog and the Washington Times, which took an in-depth look at one of the voices, Elizabeth Keckley.

“She is finally being remembered at the Library of Congress Civil War exposition next month and restored to her historical place in the Lincoln saga,” wrote Martha M. Boltz.

Continuing to make the headlines in October was news about Poet Laureate Natasha Trethewey and the 12th annual National Book Festival.

Trethewey gave her inaugural reading to kick off the Library’s literary season on Sept. 13 and was featured speaker at the National Book Festival, who actually spoke for the first time at the festival in 2004.

Rosalind Bentley of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution spoke with Trethewey, detailing her personal journey as a poet.

“[James] Billington believes the time for this kind of poet is right now,” she wrote of Trethewey’s laureateship. “She is only 46 and in the prime of her artistic life. This will signal that the Library is looking forward.”

In an interview with Roll Call, Trethewey told reporter Rebecca Baird-Remba, “I’m always interested in investigating my relationship with the past. I write to make sense of this history we’ve been given, and I write so that we can be a nation that is reckoning with the past, instead of one that has amnesia about it.”

Among countless articles far and wide on the book festival — from The Clarion Ledger to Asian Fortune News — was this gem from philly.com by author Lisa Scottoline, who writes a regular column for the Philadelphia Inquirer titled “Chick Wit.”

“There can be no greater pleasure, as a parent, than watching your child come fully into her own, taking all of her God-given talents and putting them to their most perfect use,” she said of watching her daughter, author Francesca Serritella, giving her presentation. “That feeling? It’s Mom Heaven.”

Terminology in Office

(This is the third in a series of posts featuring presidential campaign items from the Library’s collections. Read the others here and here.) Every election year, as candidates go head to head during their campaigns, a new wave of vocabulary is born. Political idioms that have found their way into our lexicon include POTUS, left-wing, …

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Lost at Sea

Today, on what would have been Amelia Earhart’s 115th birthday, news reports are trending about a recent expedition to discover what truly  happened to the famed aviator on July 2, 1937, when she and Fred Noonan mysteriously disappeared over the Pacific Ocean. A $2.2 million expedition that hoped to find wreckage from the famed aviator’s …

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Library in the News: June Recap Edition

June marked a pretty busy time here at the Library of Congress with some big-ticket announcements. From naming a new Poet Laureate and pivotal books in America’s history to recent collection acquisitions, the institution was making regular headlines. In announcing Mississippi native and Pulitzer Prize-winning Natasha Trethewey as Poet Laureate, Librarian of Congress James H. …

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Literate Critters

When it comes to priceless art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York has quite a bit, including a trove of Raphaels. But the Library of Congress (on its National Book Festival site, now live at www.loc.gov/bookfest) has a new Rafael López National Book Festival poster for 2012 that’s priceless, too – because you …

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