from Bonita Dickman, Librarian & Head of E-Resources and Automation Systems
Officially designated in 1990, National Native American Heritage Month is observed each November to recognize the history and significant contributions of indigenous Americans.
For information specific to Wisconsin's twelve tribal nations (out of 574 tribal nations in the U.S.), take a look at our Indigenous People guide.
For reading inspiration, here's just a small selection of titles by indigenous authors that we have in our library's collection:
Ceremony by Leslie Marmon Silko
Print (PS 3569 .I44 C4 1986)
The Round House by Louise Erdrich
Ebook via Libby and Print (General Collection, PS 3555 .R42 R68 2012)
There, There by Tommy Orange
Ebook via Libby and Print (General Collection, PS 3615 .R32 T48 2018)
Warrior Girl, Unearthed by Angeline Boulley
Print (LZ 7 .B685 WAR 2023)
IRL by Tommy Pico
Print (PS 3616 .I288 I75 2016)
Jonny Appleseed by Joshua Whitehead
Print (PR 9199.4 .W4745 J64 2018)
Reckonings: Contemporary Short Fiction by Native American Women ed. by Hertha D. Sweet Wong, Lauren Stuart Muller, and Jana Sequoya Magdaleno
Ebook via EBSCO eBooks
About Libby
Libby allows you to borrow ebooks and audiobooks. You can find links to Libby in our A-Z Resource List and on the library homepage (in the Ebooks, Audiobooks, & Streaming tab).
For help and more info, see our FAQ: How do I download ebooks?
from Andrew Holbrook, Graduate Assistant
The library may be the go-to place for laptops and printing, but it's also home to something more personal.
We recently digitized a photo album from the Edgewood College Archives commemorating the dedication of St. Joseph Chapel on April 30, 1959. In addition to beautiful photographs, the volume contains six large, cream-colored pages filled with signatures of people who were present at the dedication. Some of the names are easy to make out -- such as the first one, Bishop William Patrick O'Connor, who presided over the service. Others may be harder to decipher. Either way, these traces of the human hand make a distant event feel closer and more intimate.
Handwriting isn't just hidden away in the archives either. When you open a book from the stacks, you never know what you might find. Maybe that Irish poetry book was signed (or inscribed, to use the formal term) by a former owner.
Or maybe it's autographed by the author. Nobel Prize-winning poet Derek Walcott signed his book The Bounty, for example, when he gave a reading at the opening of the Predolin Humanities Center in 2000.
Sometimes, it's more than just a name. Yevgeny Yevtushenko was a famous and controversial Russian poet known for his criticisms of the Soviet Union and his denunciation of anti-Semitism. Five of his poems were set to music by Dmitri Shostakovich in his Symphony no. 13, "Babi Yar." When he visited Madison in 2001, Yevtushenko inscribed several volumes of his poetry in our collection: With his name, with a message to the Oscar Rennebohm Library wishing "that your students will never abandon poetry," and even with a drawing, which he captioned "the symbol of my life: oh the sharp edge of the Kremlin tower."
Around the library you will also find many examples of artists' handiwork, from the fine embroidery of the Hmong paj ntaub near the P&P room, to the eagle at the base of the stairs, which was hand-carved by Ho-Chunk sculptor Harry Whitehorse from a burr oak that formerly stood on campus.
As you make your way upstairs, two wildlife prints are signed and numbered by the artist, Owen J. Gromme. He was a curator at the Milwaukee Public Museum known for his precise observations of nature and advocacy on environmental issues. Online access to Gromme's 22 volumes of Field Notes is available exclusively in our library's Digital Collections.
On the second floor, don't miss one more handwritten touch. Affirming messages on the white board provide motivation and encouragement on your way to the study rooms.
When you're done with your assignments and you're ready to print them out, don't worry -- we still have you covered on that too.