Forum - View topicHey, Answerman! - Where Are They Now?
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Gilles Poitras
Posts: 477 Location: Oakland California |
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Love the phrase. Would make a great workshop title. Seriously you should have reported her and asked to speak to a librarian. The counter staff are almost always paraprofessionals who handle the clerical side of library work. Gilles - a librarian. |
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DuelLadyS
Posts: 1705 Location: WA state |
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It all varies, actually. My mom used to do inventory control at a grocery store that was visited daily by the food bank to pick up all the 1-2 day old bakery goods that hadn't sold. the craft store I work at throws out merchandise that's gone out of the system, but I know other stores in the chain cart if off to schools and thrift stores. It all depends on local laws, charity afflifiation, and the likelyhood of someone trying to take advantage of the situation to de-fraud the donating company. (by getting stuff from the thrift store and trying to return it to the original company for full cost, for example.) As much as I'd like to see libraries be a home for rare titles to get maximum exposure, I can't help but remember then time I wanted to get a rare DVD and all 6 library copies were 'reported returned'... which I learned was library code for 'missing and presumed stolen'. I'd be too afraid that if a series I donated did make it into the collection, it'd just get grabbed by some truly evil ebay flipper and never come back. I think I'd have to try and find a good anime/manga club to donate to... I'd be more comfortable with such a group making titles available, while keeping a cap on books walking away. That's just me. |
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belvadeer
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I second the motion. I have both Dust books and they're great reads. Speaking of angel manga, does anyone know what happened with Nephylym? Volume 3 has been on hiatus for ages. If I had to add an obscure OAV that did everything right for me, well you know what I'm going to say: Dragon Century. As for manga, I'd have to put Dragon Wars the Tale of Lufiak Duell as well Beyond the Beyond (which we will never get to see finished anyway). Last edited by belvadeer on Sat Nov 26, 2011 7:13 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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Midwestern Tanuki
Posts: 13 |
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My first job years ago, was working as a page/book shelfer at a near by local library. While donations of brand new or like new books had better chance of ending up on the shelfs. Most used book/dvd/vhs/etc. donations we recieved would end up either used for a yearly used book sale to raise funds or in the personal collections of the workers. And what didn't sell would end up being sent either to Goodwill/ Thrift shops or passed on to the next nearby library for thier used book sales and what not.
Don't get this wrong, we always gave the people who would drop off/ donate books a slip to use for taxes. So if you are one thinking of donating say manga or anime, see if there is a nearby high school Anime club that may be trying to build a club manga/anime library. Which leads to my question of how likely would a publisher/distrubitor be to answering a donation request from a high school Anime club? Since the club that I am a faculty advisor for is in the process of starting it's own manga library for use by the members. |
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wandering-dreamer
Posts: 1733 |
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Funimation actually has a way for anime clubs to request screener DVDs (the website is down now but here's the link) and I think Nozomi has something similar, keep meaning to fill out that form for my club actually...
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Asterisk-CGY
Posts: 398 |
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Hotel was a very interesting read. I love that group, they like to do those really rare and disturbing one shots and series that no one else would do. Especially Inio Asano's work, Solanin and Oyasumi Punpun. Realistic and extremely bittersweet. Wasn't thinking of manga when answering.
Also Miyazaki had a bunch of 1 shots and shorts from his pre movie days. On Your Mark was one that comes to mind. Essentially a music video but by Miyazaki/Ghibli. Very old early work. Good times there. |
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enurtsol
Posts: 14869 |
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Not that old/early. It was 1995. |
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Sailor S
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Well, after reading what usually happens to most donations to libraries, I feel better about my decision to have myself embalmed in my molten DVDs and have my manga and figures entombed with me.
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Tamaria
Posts: 1512 Location: De Achterhoek |
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If you want to share manga with others so badly, why not start your own library like MangaKissa did?
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Midwestern Tanuki
Posts: 13 |
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Thanks, my club has been using Funi's Operation Anime program off and on for the past couple of years and that's gone well. Plus, I too have been meaning to look Nozomi over again. After looking over different sites, so far it looks like Viz is the only publisher that does anything close to manga donations for clubs. |
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la_contessa
Posts: 200 Location: Pennsylvania |
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My library system allegedly takes donations, but there are big, ominous signs everywhere about how people shouldn't just presume to donate anything without getting permission first. In fact, the outdoor book-drop says that any unapproved donations left there will be thrown away immediately (which seems like a weird thing to do for a library system protesting budget cuts, but whatever, it's only my tax money and stuff). I don't know if they solicit donations from publishers, though.
I have had VERY good luck making purchase requests, however. All I do is log into my online account, fill out a form, and wait for the books to arrive. I'd say 2/3 of my requests are granted, although one of the ones that was not granted was for Goong. They bought a collection of Miyazaki-sensei's essays, though. |
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Tank252ca
Posts: 26 |
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Ah, Iczer-One, that brings back memories. I still have a copy on VHS stashed away somewhere. One of my favorite one offs, though, has to be Jaja-Uma Quartet, released as Wild Cardz in the US. I added this to an order an a whim and it was a real treat. Funny, fast paced and plenty of crazy action for a 1997 OAV. I have the US Manga tape, but it was released on DVD as well. The killer is that it consists of two half hour episodes with a cliff hanger ending, and there was never a sequel. Even better was Idol Project which pokes a lot of fun at the idol and beauty pageant genre. Not that well known, but if you are familiar with older anime titles and their stereotypes this can be a lot of fun to watch. |
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LibraryJoy
Posts: 27 |
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I'll throw in my 2 cents on the library issue - because at my library I'm the professional librarian in charge of the manga collection (it's actually why I started reading manga myself, and now I'm an avid reader/collector)! Each local library is different in terms of budget, space, collection policy and donation policy. At our small library we have over 1000 vol. of manga, and I have no more space for more. I have to get rid of series that are not circulating in order to continue adding One Piece volumes or to purchase new series that everyone hasn't already read. This includes some of my favorite series and some that are out of print. In fact, earlier this month someone checked out and lost the first 8 vol. of Chibi Vampire - and I'm pretty sure I can't buy replacement volumes from my book vendor. Most of our manga is purchased, not donated, although I will accept some donations - but only of complete series or only of ones I can find good reviews of and decided I want to spend the money on purchasing from my budget. Most of our unwanted donations go into prizes for the Teen Summer Reading Program or the used book sale. As for the weeded books, I checked with our school library, and they don't have nearly the budget I do, so when I have no more room for the books, I give them to the High School. At least that way our community still has access to those titles.
If you want to donate manga to your library, first find out who is responsible for adding to that collection, and then talk directly and only to that person. Find out what they look for in donations they want to add. Not every librarian is an expert in manga, but they are experts in what will check out in their community. It's what we do. I actually took a whole class on Collection Development for my Master's Degree in Library Science. And visit your library often and check out the manga - if the librarians can prove people are reading it, they'll be willing to give more money and shelf space to that collection. |
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enurtsol
Posts: 14869 |
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The manga are in the separate YA room. |
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