What do you want to watch? Listen to? Read? We want to know!
We will be purchasing new DVDs, CDs, & paperback books for our recreational collections, and we want to know what suggestions you have. We will do our best to purchase all recommendations if they are available and appropriate for the collections. Feel free to leave your suggestion(s) as a comment to this post or in person at the library front desk.
Many thanks to the Brandon campus Student Government Association for funding our recreational collections!!!
Welcome to HCC Brandon Library's Blog. Check in with us for news, events, and even research tips!
Tuesday, November 4, 2008
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
Hispanic Culture Coast to Coast

Pictured above: Carmel Mission, Carmel California
http://www.staugustinelinks.com/st-augustine-history.asp
http://www.nps.gov/archive/jeff/LewisClark2/Circa1804/WestwardExpansion/EarlyExplorers/CaliforniaMissions.htm
Friday, August 29, 2008
Free People, Read Freely

"To prohibit the reading of certain books is to declare the inhabitants to be either fools or slaves." -- Claude Adrien Helvetius
Many authors we now take for granted on our library shelves have often been denied to the reading public. A common practice in totalitarian societies, we don’t think book bans happen in America, but they do. The Grapes of Wrath, Uncle Tom’s Cabin, Catcher in the Rye, Call of the Wild, Beloved, Don Quixote, and Fahrenheit 451 (a book about banning books) have all been burned, banned or withheld from readers in America and abroad. September 27th through October 4th is Banned Books Week, but here in the BLRC we’re observing for the entire month of September with books that someone didn’t want you to read. Use your library and exercise your right to read, and think, freely. Free People Read Freely ~ Laurie
Tuesday, August 12, 2008
It's Easy bein' Green

Re-duce, Re-use, Re-cycle~ Laurie
Here is a list of our new "multiple use" books courtesy of SGA's Lease Book Program:
Careless in Red by Elizabeth George
The Forgery of Venus by Michael Gruber
Hell’s Bay by James W. Hall
Rouge by Danielle Steel
Just Too Good to Be True by E. Lynn Harris
Tribute by Nora Roberts
"Sequoias" courtesy Alain Thomas
Wednesday, June 4, 2008
Tis the Season .........For Hurricanes

Evolutionary Psychologist Gordon Gallup, Jr. has heard many stories from police and emergency workers who’ve observed people freezing under extreme stress. Gallup notes that animals do this in a state of fear and describes it as “playing dead” to evade predators. Humans, under stress, search the brain for a survival response and many cases freezing is the choice, and often the fatal choice. But humans can break out of such a state through focus and preparation, by something as simple as knowing which exit to take in an emergency. This gives the brain a starting point, and the person the ability to react.
At home and at work we are all responsible for our survival in an emergency. A realistic perception of the dangers, preparation and keeping our focus can mean the difference for us, and those around us.
Visit the link below for the full article in Time and the story of Rick Rescorla, whose preparation and courage saved the lives of more than two thousand people on 9/11.
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1810315-1,00.html
Monday, April 21, 2008
Let us know what you think!
Friday, March 7, 2008
Literary Databases Update
There have been some recent changes to our Literature databases. For one, the popular LRC or Literature Resource Center has changed names. It is now called Literature Resources from Gale.

Not to confuse things but there is also a new literary database called Literary Reference Center, So, in effect there is still an LRC, just a different database.

Both of these are quality article databases for literary research. They are available from our Online Databases list under "Literature". To access these you will need your HCC ID information. Do you have your HCC ID card?
Thursday, February 28, 2008
2007 Pulitzer Prize Winning Titles at the Library
The 2007 Pulitzer Prize Winners at the Library are:
Fiction: Cormac McCarthy's The Road.

(Click on book jacket for more information)
History: Gene Roberts and Hank Klibanoff's The Race Beat: The Press, the Civil Rights Struggle, and the Awakening of a Nation.

(Click on book jacket for more information)
Fiction: Cormac McCarthy's The Road.

(Click on book jacket for more information)
History: Gene Roberts and Hank Klibanoff's The Race Beat: The Press, the Civil Rights Struggle, and the Awakening of a Nation.

(Click on book jacket for more information)
Monday, February 4, 2008
Election 2008
The HCC Libraries Election 2008 Resources guide provides links to information on candidates, their positions, ballot measures, and helpful elections info for Hillsborough County voters. Follow the elections through the primaries to the Nov '08 general election...and don't forget to vote!
Tuesday, January 8, 2008
YOUR BRAIN ON BOOKS

“More than income, social class, or education, says NEA Chairman Dana Gioia, the more you read, the greater likelihood that you will do well in school, be successful in business, and become involved in your community. The bottom line, he says: ‘Reading allows us to achieve more of our personal potential than almost any other activity.’ Neuroscience further backs up those contentions, says Tufts University child development Prof. Maryanne Wolfe. "Reading not only creates its own circuitry within the brain; that circuitry gives us the capacity to go beyond the text to new thoughts of our own," says Wolfe "My worry is that our children's and our societal immersion into the ever more immediate, digital presentation format for text will short-circuit" part of that ability.”
Feed your brain: Read
New in the Library:




Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)