We moved into a new, smaller library this year and the layout provoked a mini genrefication. I put Sports together (fiction and narrative nonfiction) and pulled Fantasy into its own section. The rationale being that fantasy and sports
readers often just want more.
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Sent from my iPhone
On Dec 18, 2019, at 9:33 AM, Gail Nelson <gwnelson100@gmail.com<mailto:gwnelson100@gmail.com>> wrote:
Good morning!
I saw the recent discussion about genrefying fiction. After spending years dug in defending alphabetical author (and fighting the knot in my stomach when I think about making decisions about which categories books belong in) I am considering dipping my toe
in the genrefying waters. I already do alternatives to make the books easier to find: displays, genre labels on the spine, etc.
I am still resistant because in my experience I can go into most public libraries and independently find the book I am looking for. In Barnes and Noble I often have to ask for help to find a book.
Does anyone have a great experience they would like to share after genrefying? Persuasive reasoning why this is a good idea? Contrary thoughts are also welcome! I know this is a tall order, but I would appreciate any input you are willing to share at a very
busy time.
Thanks so much!
Gail Nelson
School Librarian
Harwinton Consolidated School
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