Book Acquisitions: Library Slice of Life

Book Acquisitions: Library Slice of Life

What we purchased and cataloged in 2023 (sorta)

The High Frontier: Human Colonies in Space by Gerard K. O’Neill, 1976, first edition, is a 2023 NBLA acquisition. On the heels of the golden age of space exploration, this book is a roadmap for what the United States might do in outer space after the Apollo program, including human habitation on the Moon.

The Niels Bohr Library & Archives has a thorough Collection Development Policy, but how we interpret it and enact it can change from year to year. We can’t control what books are published or available on the rare book market. However, we can control what we spend our book budget on, and it’s interesting to take a look back and see if we met our goals of collecting more diversely and broadly than in years past. 

Even more chaotically than purchases, most of our acquisitions are via donation, which are entirely unpredictable. Additionally, 2023 was a pretty unusual year for the Library, but so far every year in this decade has been unusual, so maybe unusual is the new normal. But in 2023 we were without a cataloger for ¾ of the year AND dealing with a huge office clean-up (the office clean-up to end all office clean-ups, as everyone in the building had to empty their offices) so we were inundated with the books that have been lying around people’s offices since the early internet era (sorry netscape navigator tutorials, we tossed you) as well as the newer books that people at the American Institute of Physics collected for their work more recently. 

As a result we thought it would be fun to view the past year of collection development through a series of graphs. 

First up is a look at our purchases from 2023, both new and rare books. This is not a comprehensive look at our purchases by any means, we assigned tags based on subjects or the more subjective “why” we purchased a book.

We’re quite happy to see that after astronomy the category “Underrepresented in STEM” was almost 18% of our purchasing. This category includes books by and about women like the 1890 Through Magic Glasses and Other Lectures by Arabella Buckley and Mary Somerville: Science, Illumination, and the Female Mind by Kathryn Neeley. It also includes intersectional works like Hidden Human Computers: The Black Women of NASA by Duchess Harris and Making Black Girls Count in Math Education: A Black Feminist Vision for Transformative Teaching by Nicole Joseph. Also featured are books by and about Indigenous people and scientists, like a biography of Mary Golda Ross, a Cherokee Aerospace Engineer. This is one of the targets of our recent collection development so we’re happy we’re dedicating so much of our purchasing towards these topics and authors.

Physics history (included in 3 categories: pre-19th, 19th, and 20th centuries) is an obvious target and goes up even further if you include Nuclear History and War which was such a large topic we broke it out. Less obvious, but no less important topics for collection are Science for Kids and Science and the Arts where we purchased books about science fiction, poetry, and visual art. We also had a lot of fun tracking down and purchasing a number of the Miss Pickerell Series on physics related topics (more to come on those later I’m sure). 

graph

Graph by Karina Cooper

Donations have a totally different breakdown in topics, mostly because they tend to be older books that have been sitting around in people’s homes and offices for decades. Mid-century modern is not just a stylish look for homes, we also see it a lot in our donated books. Except for this year! However, until we catalog our donations it’s hard to get a snapshot of what we’ve received. Here you can see our cataloger actually tackled a lot of the AIP office cleanouts and donations of more modern books from Physics Today, which skews the data to some interesting places. More kids and arts books! Lots of general History of Science and Nuclear History and a significant chunk of philosophy. But we’re not missing out on those textbooks and scientific monographs either. 

graph

Graph by Karina Cooper

Here you can see that our purchases tend to be either very contemporary or quite antique. The oldest donated book we cataloged in 2023 was from all the way back in 1894, but the oldest one we purchased was from 1729, about a century and a half older than the oldest donated book.

Graph of books 1729-2022

Graph by Karina Cooper

We thought it would be fun to see the whole span of books that were purchased in 2023. This list does not include books donated to us in 2023. While donated books are important and interesting in their own right, purchased books, unlike donations, reflect our intentional selection; usually we select books in order to meet a collection development goal and/or to respond to a recommendation (you can recommend us books at this Suggest a book purchase link!), though sometimes serendipity and following a trail of interest can lead to a book purchase.

What follows is a list of all of the purchased books, with their title, author, and year organized from oldest to newest, and then we have images and further details about a few of our favorite acquisitions this year. Click on "List of all books purchased in 2023" below to see the list.

List of all books purchased in 2023

Author

Title

Publication Date

Harris, John

ASTRONOMICAL DIALOGUES BETWEEN A GENTLEMAN AND A LADY: WHEREIN THE DOCTRINE OF THE SPHERE, USES OF THE GLOBES, AND THE ELEMENTS OF ASTRONOMY AND GEOGRAPHY ARE EXPLAIN'D; IN A PLEASANT, EASY, AND FAMILIAR WAY. WITH A DESCRIPTION OF THE FAMOUS INSTRUMENT CALLED THE ORRERY

1729

Mills, John

An Essay on the Weather; with Remarks on the Shepherd of Banbury's Rules for Judging of It's Changes; and Directions for Preserving Lives and Buildings from the Fatal Effects of Lightening

1773

Pontecoulant, Philippe Gustave Doulcet de

Memoire sur la Partie des Coefficiens des Grandes Inegalites de Jupiter et de Saturne, qui Dependent du Carre des Forces Perturbatrices. Extract.

1829

Lindelof, Lorentz Leonard

Inclinationis poli ad speculam astronomicam Helsingforsiensem investigatio, ex azimuthis stellarum verticem prope praetereuntium theodolito observatis ducta. . ..

1849

Chalmers, Thomas

Discourses on the Christian Revelation viewed in connexion with the Modern Astronomy with others of a kindred character.

1852

Herschel, John

Meteorology

1861

Mohn, Henrik

Om kometbanernes indbyrdes beliggenhed. Besvarelse af Universitetets Prisopgave for 1860 . . .

1861

Fitzroy, Robert

The weather book: a manual of practical meteorology

1863

Chickering, Francis

Cloud Crystals, a snowflake album

1864

Hobson, Benjamin

Hakubutsu shimpen. 3 vols.

1872

United States Naval Observatory

A subject-index to the publications of the United States Naval Observatory, 1845-1875.

1879

Thomson, William (Lord Kelvin)

Notes of Lectures on Molecular Dynamics and the Wave Theory of Light

1884

Buckley, Arabella

Through Magic Glasses and Other Lectures

1890

Flammarion, Camille

Astronomie Populaire; Description Generale du Ciel.

1890

Roberts, Isaac

A Selection of Photographs of Stars, Star-Clusters and Nebulae, together with information concerning the instruments and the methods employed in the pursuit of celestial photography.

1893

Howe, Herbert

A Study of the Sky

1896

Hildebrandsson, H.

Les bases de la météorologie dynamique historique

1898/1900

Dolmage, Cecil

Astronomy of To-day

1909

Chant, Clarence Augustus

Our Wonderful Universe

1928

Abbot, Charles Greeley

Absorption Lines of the Infra-Red Solar Specturm

1929

West, William

Acoustical Engineering

1932

Lee, Oliver Justin

Beyond Yonder

1939

MacGregor, Ellen

Miss Pickerell Goes to Mars

1951

Babina, Jose

La Evolucion del Pensamiento Cientifico en la Argentina

1954

Hlavaty, Vaclav

Geometry of Einstein's Unified Field Theory

1957

Pirie, N.W.

The Biology of Space Travel. Edited by N. W. Pirie

1961

MacGregor, Ellen and Dora Pantell

Miss Pickerell on the Moon

1965

Hagihara, Yusuke

Celestial Mechanics

1970

Proctor, Richard

Wages and Wants of Science Workers. 1876

1970

Wood, Elizabeth

Science from Your Airplane Window

1975

O'Neill, Gerard K.

THE HIGH FRONTIER: Human Colonies in Space

1977

Westman, R. S.

Hermeticism and the Scientific Revolution: Papers Read at a Clark Library Seminar March 9, 1974

1977

MacGregor, Ellen

Miss Pickerell and the Geiger Counter

1980

MacGregor, Ellen and Dora Pantell

Miss Pickerell Tackles the Energy Crisis

1980

Homet, Jean-Marie

Astronomie et Astronomes en Provence 1680-1730.

1982

Corliss, William R.

STARS, GALAXIES, COSMOS

1987

Oldroyd, David

The Arch of Knowledge: An Introductory Study of the History of the Philosophy and Methodology of Science

1989

Percy, John

Variable Star Research: An International Perspective

1992

Schaaf, Larry

Out of the Shadows: Herschel, Talbot, and the Invention of Photography

1992

Henrard, J.

Impact of Modern Dynamics in Astronomy. Proceedings of the IAU Colloquium 172 held in Namur, Belgium, July 1998

1998

Schaffer, Simon

Picturing Science, Producing Art

1998

Hoffman, Darleane

The Transuranium People: The Inside Story

2000

Neeley, Kathryn

Mary Somerville: Science, Illumination, and the Female Mind

2001

Neeley, Kathryn

Mary Somerville

Science, Illumination, and the Female Mind

2001

Somerville, Mary

Queen of Science: Personal Recollections of Mary Somerville

2001

Baym, Nina

American Women of Letters and the Nineteenth-Century Sciences: Styles of Affiliation

2002

Stephenson, F. Richard

Historical Supernovae and their Remnants

2002

Medina, John Fitzgerald

Faith, Physics, and Psychology: Rethinking Society and the Human Spirit

2006

Robinson, Janet

The Stargazer of Hardwicke: The Life and Work of Thomas William Webb

2006

Holmes, Keith

Black Inventors, Crafting Over 200 Years of Success

2008

Bloom, Joshua S.

What Are Gamma-Ray Bursts?

2011

Barnes, E.J.

Caroline's Catalog

2012

Kasting, James F.

How to Find a Habitable Planet

2012

Adler, Charles L.

Wizards, Aliens, and Starships: Physics and Math in Fantasy and Science Fiction

2014

Glazer, A. (ed.)

Crystal Clear: The Autobiographies of Sir Lawrence and Lady Bragg

2015

Robinson, Andrew

Einstein: A Hundred Years of Relativity

2015

Chambers, John

From Dust to Life: The Origin and Evolution of Our Solar System

2017

Losure, Mary

Isaac the Alchemist: Secrets of Isaac Newton, Reveal'd

2017

Melvin, Leland

Chasing Space: An Astronaut’s Story of Chasing Grit, Grace, and Second Chances

2017

Harris, Duchess

Hidden Human Computers: The Black Women of NASA

2017

Brentjes, Sonja

Teaching and Learning the Sciences in Islamicate Societies (800-1700)

2018

Feke, Jacqueline

Ptolemy's Philosophy: Mathematics as a Way of Life

2018

Roy, William

Hedy Lamarr: An Incredible Life

2018

Chapman, Kit

Superheavy: Making and Breaking the Periodic Table

2019

Gowin, Emmet

Nevada Test Site

2019

Gunderson, Laura

The Half-Life of Marie Curie

2019

Ivezic, Zeljko et al

Statistics, Data Mining, and Machine Learning in Astronomy: A Practical Python Guide for the Analysis of Survey Data, Updated Edition

2019

Kennefick, Daniel

No Shadow of a Doubt: The 1919 Eclipse That Confirmed Einstein's Theory of Relativity

2019

Lambert, Franklin

Vous avez dit sabbat de sorcières? La singulière histoire des premiers Conseils Solvay

2019

Maor, Eli

The Pythagorean Theorem

2019

McLeish, Tom

The Poetry and Music of Science: Comparing Creativity in Science and Art

2019

Quinn, Helen

The Mystery of the Missing Antimatter

2019

Richeson, David S.

Tales of Impossibility: The 2000-Year Quest to Solve the Mathematical Problems of Antiquity

2019

Schotte, Margaret

Sailing School: Navigating Science and Skill 1550-1800

2019

Werner, Michael

More Things in the Heavens: How Infrared Astronomy Is Expanding Our View of the Universe

2019

Cointreau, Maya

The Girl Who Could Rock the Moon - An Inspirational Tale about Mary G. Ross and the Magic of STEM

2019

Canales, Jimena

Bedeviled: A Shadow History of Demons in Science

2020

Fleming, James

First Woman: Joanne Simpson and the Tropical Atmosphere

2020

Gordin, Michael D.

Einstein in Bohemia

2020

Guftfreund, Hanoch

Einstein on Einstein: Autobiographical and Scientific Reflections

2020

Masco, Joseph

The Nuclear Borderlands: The Manhattan Project in Post–Cold War New Mexico

2020

McCray, W. Patrick

Making Art Work
How Cold War Engineers and Artists Forged a New Creative Culture

2020

Schweizer, Linda

Cosmic Odyssey: How Intrepid Astronomers at Palomar Observatory Changed Our View of the Universe

2020

Weller, Melissa

A Good Bake: The Art and Science of Making Perfect Pastries, Cakes, Cookies, Pies, and Breads a Home

2020

Wood, Gillen D'Arcy

Land of Wondrous Cold: The Race to Discover Antarctica and Unlock the Secrets of Its Ice

2020

Brink, Lars

Geoffrey Chew: Architect of the Bootstrap

2021

Cavendish, Margaret

Cavendish: Philosophical Letters, Abridged

2021

Cutright, Patricia, ed.

Native Women Changing Their Worlds

2021

Heilbron, J.

The Ghost of Galileo: In a forgotten painting from the English Civil War

2021

Kim, Eun-Ji Amy

Integrating Indigenous and Western Education in Science Curricula: Relationships at Play

2021

Ouzounian, Gascia

Stereophonica

Sound and Space in Science, Technology, and the Arts

2021

Sorell, Traci

Classified: The Secret Career of Mary Golda Ross, Cherokee Aerospace Engineer

2021

Wellock, Thomas R.

Safe Enough? A History of Nuclear Power and Accident Risk

2021

Benedict, Marie

Her Hidden Genius

2022

Halpern, Nicole Yunger

Quantum Steampunk

2022

Joseph, Nicole

Making Black Girls Count in Math Education

A Black Feminist Vision for Transformative Teaching

2022

KASSENOVA, TOGZHAN

Atomic Steppe: How Kazakhstan Gave Up the Bomb

2022

Mody, Cyrus

The Squares: US Physical and Engineering Scientists in the Long 1970s

2022

Oreskes, Naomi

Science on a Mission: How Military Funding Shaped What We Do and Don’t Know About the Ocean

2022

Thiele, June

Jerry C. Elliott High Eagle

2022

Trimble, Virginia, ed.

The Sky is for Everyone

2022

Hiebert, Miriam

The Uranium Club

2023

Moynihan, Matt and Alfred Bortz

Fusion's Promise

2023

Lockyer, Norman

Astronomy of To-day

n.d.

 

 

In no particular order, here are some of our favorite acquisitions from the year. Click on the book image to see it bigger:

The Electroform Unified Field Theory 2nd ed. by James A. Green, 1995

Who knew giraffes and particle physics go together!! This delightful giraffe print book binding of The Electroform Unified Field Theory 2nd ed. by James A. Green, 1995, celebrates the author’s memories of constellations in the autumn night sky. It is dedicated to the Physics Today Book Review, who donated this to NBLA this summer.

 

Astronomical Dialogues Between A Gentleman And A Lady: Wherein The Doctrine Of The Sphere, Uses The Globes, And The Elements Of Astronomy And Geography Are Explained in a Pleasant, Easy, and Familiar way. With a Description of the Famous Orrery. By John Harris. 1729.

This book is a fictional dialogue between a gentleman and a lady and is intended to provide an explanation of astronomy and geography to people unfamiliar with the subject.

Hakubutsu shimpen by Benjamin Hobson, 1872.

Benjamin Hobson was a British missionary doctor who spent two decades (1839-59) in China. Hakubutsu shimpen is divided into three parts. The first, on physics, has sections on topology, heat, water, light and electricity. The second part is dedicated to astronomy; the third, entitled "Outlines of Birds and Beasts," is devoted to natural history. All the parts are illustrated. This Japanese versions of Hobson's works appeared during a critical time in Japanese history, when the country ended its isolationist foreign policy and began opening its ports to Western trade. (from bookseller Jeremy Norman)

Notes of Lectures on Molecular Dynamics and the Wave Theory of Light by William Thomson (Lord Kelvin) 1884.

This is the first edition of a “major monument of Victorian Science.” Kelvin’s lectures at Johns Hopkins University were recorded in shorthand by A.S. Hathaway, a fellow of the university, and subsequently transcribed for a small edition printed by the then-novel papyrographic process. Invented around 1872, the papyrograph was the first stencil duplicating method. This is why this volume appears handwritten! (from bookseller Type Punch Matrix)

Cloud Crystals: A Snow Flake Album by Francis Chickering, 1864.

First widely circulated American work on the crystallography of the snowflake.

 

Miss Pickerell and the Geiger Counter by Ellen MacGregor, 1953

We added four new Miss Pickerell books to our collection this year: Miss Pickerell Goes to Mars (1951), Miss Pickerell and the Geiger Counter (1953), Miss Pickerell on the Moon (1965), and Miss Pickerell Tackles the Energy Crisis (1980). This children’s science fiction series was created by American children’s author and librarian Ellen MacGregor in 1951 with Miss Pickerell Goes to Mars. After her death in 1954, there series was continued by educator Dora Pantell in the spirit of previous books, featuring the scientific issues and themes of the day. The Miss Pickerell books featured accurate science for children, but please note that Miss Pickerell takes her cow to Mars in Miss Pickerell Goes to Mars.

Through Magic Glasses and Other Lectures by Arabella B. Buckley, 1890.

This volume is a sequel to Buckley’s Fairytale Land of Science. From the preface: “It travels over a wide field, pointing out a few of the marvelous facts which can be studied and enjoyed by the help of optical instruments… I hope some eager minds may be thus led to take up one of the branches of science opened out to us by magic glasses; while those who go no further will at least understand something of the hitherto unseen world which is now being studied by their help.” The “magic glasses” in question are detailed on the front cover: Telescope, Microscope, Spectroscope, Photo Camera, etc.

 

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