Learn About Downloadable Books at Our OverDrive Clinics

overdriveclinicHave you checked out our OverDrive collection recently?  We’ve been busy adding downloadable ebooks and audiobooks – including current bestsellers Go Set A Watchman by Harper Lee, The Widow by Fiona Barton, Smarter Faster Better by Charles Duhigg and perennial favorites by authors like J.R.R. Tolkien, Bill Bryson and John Irving, and classics by Jane Austen and Bram Stoker.

Simply click into OverDrive to view our Newest Additions or to browse the ebook and audiobook collections by genre or check out the Getting Started Guide.

If you haven’t already set-up your laptop, Kindle, iPad, NOOK, smartphone or other device, we’d love to help you get started. We are holding two drop-in clinics this week to answer questions about Overdrive:

OverDrive Downloadable Books Clinics

Tuesday, April 12
2:30PM – 3:30PM
and
Thursday, April 14
4:30PM – 5:30PM

No RSVP is required – just come to our classroom (lower level, room 11) and we’ll be there to lend you a helping hand! If you bring your device with you, we can help you with the initial set-up or troubleshoot any problems you’ve been having. We hope to see you there.

Database of the Month: Business Insights: Essentials

BIE
Business Insights: Essentials
provides in-depth information on U.S. and international businesses (both public and private) and industries. Included are company profiles, industry profiles, financial data, investment reports and articles from business periodicals. The strength of this database comes from its underlying sources. It is a great resource for getting a company’s history, market share and SWOT analysis. It is also a great resource for getting an overview of a particular industry as well.

Usage tip: Start by searching for a company name (such as Wal-mart) or ticker symbol (such as WMT)  in the keyword box and look through your results for the company profile. This will create a “dashboard” view of all of the available reports regarding your company including:

  • A Company History (sourced from International Directory of Company Histories)
  • Market share (sourced from Market Share Reporter)
  • SWOT Analysis (sourced from Global Markets Direct SWOT Reports published by GlobalData Ltd.)
  • And many others  (see below image).

BIECDS

The company profile also provides a Related Articles area that groups current article content into specific subject categories. These articles help to update the above reports with the most current data available. The Related Articles are grouped into these categories:

  • Financial Data
  • Legal Issues
  • Management
  • Operations & Technology
  • People; Products & Services
  • Sales & Marketing
  • Statistics
  • Strategy & Planning

Remember, when you click on one of these subject categories in the company profile, you will only link to articles relevant to this specific company.

The company profile also includes the industry names and the NAICS codes in which the company operates including the one indicated as the Primary Industry. Clicking on the linked title (see below image) will bring up an industry profile.

BIENaics

Of note: searching for the NAICS code (such as 452990) in the keyword search box on the database’s homepage will also bring up an industry profile.

An industry profiles lists “Top Companies” by Revenue and provides “Industry Essays” (sourced from the Gale Business Insights Online Collection, 2016 which consists of these encyclopedias: Encyclopedia of American Industries; Emerging Industries & Global Industries).

Business Insights: Essentials can be used to compare companies and/or industries using available metrics. This feature is available under the Comparison Charts drop down menu from the database’s homepage.

  • Metrics available for companies: Number of employees, Number of employees over Time, Revenue, Sales per employee, Sales Per Employee over Time
  • Metrics available for industries: Number of Companies; Number of Companies over Time; Employees; Number of Employees over time; Sales Per Employee; Sales Per Employee over Time; Revenue

Comparison charts & data can be exported into Excel.

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Database of the Month provides a very brief introduction to a database available from the Library’s website, highlighting key features of the database that you should know about. If you would like more information about this database (or any of the library’s databases), please contact us for research assistance. If you would like a demonstration of this database for a class, please schedule a research instruction class using this form.

Readers and Writers: A Display of Books (& Films!) about Books

On display at the Bentley Library from April 5th – May 16th is a collection of titles about reading and writing. If you have a love for literature, be sure to take a look! We’ve divided the display into a few categories so you can find a book or movie that suits your interests the most. See the attached PDF Category List for the full list of titles in each category – although some fit more than one!

  • Readers: In these titles, books play a starring role. Possession by A.S. Byatt tells the story of two scholars searching for a hidden history inside old books, and in Fangirl by Rainbow Rowell a college freshman tries to navigate life through her obsession with her favorite book series.
  • Writers: Fictional stories about the craft and life of writers. Try Rick Moody’s Hotels of North America for a story about a man working through his troubles by writing online reviews. Or pick up Misery by Stephen King – the book or film version! – to see what happens to a writer when he’s confronted by his disgruntled biggest fan.

There are plenty of books and movies on this display that will satisfy your bookworm curiosities. Whatever genre you prefer, we hope you’ll find something new to read or watch!

New Bestsellers, Books, DVDs & Audiobooks Added in March

More than 400 new books, DVDs, audiobooks and OverDrive digital books were added to the library’s collection in March. Visit the New Books & DVDs page to browse all of the new titles.  When you see something you want, use the “request it” link to place a hold on an item.

 

Access the new acquisitions lists.
Click to browse the new acquisitions lists.

If you prefer to do your reading and listening on a mobile device or computer, visit OverDrive, the library’s downloadable books collection. For help using OverDrive, access their Getting Started page or contact the Reference Desk for personal assistance.

Access OverDrive ebooks and audiobooks.
Click to browse OverDrive ebooks and audiobooks to download or stream online.

Art Gallery Exhibit: Welcome to the Crowd | Miranda Updike

Opening in the RSM Art Gallery on April 2nd, Welcome to the Crowd is an installation of paintings by artist Miranda Updike.  All are invited to attend an opening reception for the artist on Wednesday, April 6, from 4:00 – 6:00 p.m.

Miranda Updike
Welcome to the Crowd
April 2 – 29, 2016
Read Artist’s Statement

Opening Reception
Wednesday, April 6, 2016
4:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m.

Miranda Updike painting, "Black Cloud"
Black Cloud | 2015

Artist Statement

Miranda Updike picture
Miranda Updike

These paintings are from a series on the subject of crowds. In our times of technology, there is little online substitute for a public gathering of bodies and souls uniting in a common cause.  My paintings represent human bonding and interacting in a hi-tech era that tends to foster isolation: People joining together to share ideas, physical space and sentiments.

Many of my crowd paintings are viewed from the aerial perspective.  I use photographic references to abstract the idea of human movement.  I’m attracted to the decorative quality of clustered people or when they are haphazardly separated, like dropped gems, confetti or beads. There is loveliness to the accidental placement of people in the streets seen, say, from the fourteenth floor of a skyscraper – A littering of colored shapes and shadows, which move above asphalt and street lines, express a brand of contemporary splendor.

In tandem with the aerial crowd paintings, I have been working on a mixed media sub-series. These works resemble uncertain seascapes of elliptical shapes that jut forward in space, then recede, and end below a moody sky at the horizon line. I want the viewer to feel like they are part-of-the-pack, and to experience the weight, the mass, and the muscle of a crowd.

– Miranda Updike

To view more works by Miranda Updike please view her Facebook page and visit her website.

What We’re Reading and Watching

Inquiring minds want to know – what are library staff reading and watching?  

I asked my colleagues to share what they have been reading and watching recently.  Here are a few of their responses….

My Brilliant Friend by Elena Ferrante

Dominque, Reference Department

I have been reading My Brilliant Friend by Elena Ferrante. Very good! –Dom

Jaimie, Project Archivist

Here are two books that I really love – I checked both out from the Bentley Library but soon found that I wanted to buy my own copies so I could keep them on my bookshelves forever.

The first is Connie Willis’ To Say Nothing of the Dog – a light sci-fi/fantasy time travel mystery novel! This was published in 1998 but the wit, plot, and tone are as relevant as ever. If you like Doctor Who, Douglas Adams, or mysteries by the likes of Dorothy Sayers, give this a shot. One of the few books I’ve read in recent memory to make me laugh out loud. Wolf in White Van by John Darnielle (Note: this book is not available in the library’s collection, but it can be requested via Interlibrary Loan).

The second, which was released last year, is Wolf in White Van by John Darnielle (also known as the singer/songwriter for the Mountain Goats). orphan-blackWhile this is *not* sci-fi/fantasy, it’s perhaps an even trippier read. The story moves back and forth between a young man who has suffered a horrible injury, and the people playing a text-based game he created. Powerful, haunting writing is about all I can say without spoiling anything.

(As an added bonus, if you have even a vague interest in either of these reads you should absolutely watch BBC America’s Orphan Black – one of the best shows on television if you like action, science, futurism, feminism, mystery, or comedy. The new season starts soon but you still have time to binge-watch!)  –Jaimie

Lisa, Reference Department

Orphan Train by Christina Baker KlineLast month my book club read The Orphan Train by Christina Baker Kline, which intertwines the stories of two women from different eras, each persevering through extremely difficult circumstances. Although I found the outcome of the story a bit predictable, I enjoyed the author’s descriptive writing and it was fascinating to learn about the orphan trains of the 1900s.

I also recently completed The Night Sister by Jennifer McMahon and I am almost finished with Michael Koryta’s Last Words.  I would describe both as psychological mystery/suspense with shades of the supernatural. Neither book blew me away, but both are entertaining and held my interest until the end.

I am looking forward to reading the YA novel Challenger Deep by Neal Shusterman and Bonnie Jo Campbell’s collection of short stories, Mothers, Tell Your Daughters. –Lisa

Kim, Reference Department

Sherlock Holmes: A Baker Street Dozen audiobook

We are listening to the Sherlock Holmes: A Baker Street Dozen by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. My 11 year old and I are listening to it in the car. We are both getting a huge kick out of it. It is the original radio program and it is performed not just read so sometimes the performer fades out and it can be hard to understand what when he is mumbling, but it is a different experience than most of the audiobooks we’ve listened to lately. We are on the last disc so it will be coming back to the library’s collection soon. We will continue our adventure with The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes which we can borrow and listen to through the Overdrive app on my iPhone.

I also listened to Unstoppable by Bill Nye recently and enjoyed that for different reasons entirely, but would recommend it as another family-friendly and thought-provoking, although sometimes alarming, audiobook to listen to. –Kim

Do you have a book or DVD recommendation?  Share it with us in the comments!  If you would like to suggest that the library purchase a title for our collection, please submit a request via the Suggest a Purchase form.

Database of the Month: Mediamark University Internet Reporter

Mediamark University Internet Reporter is a profiling system used to define targets in order to gain insights and better understand markets and/or the media used to reach those markets.  First time Mediamark users must register and create an account before they can us the database.  Users should contact the Bentley University Library at 781.891.2300 or refdesk@bentley.edu to receive a registration code to be entered when creating a Mediamark account.  Mediamark is available to current Bentley University students, faculty and staff.

Registration Steps:

  1. Go to the Mediamark home page and click [Register].
  2. Enter the Registration Code, your name and your Bentley University email address.  If your professor has not provided you with a registration code, please visit or email the Reference Desk at refdesk@bentley.edu to obtain the code.  A Bentley email address is required for proper authentication.
  3. After registering, you will receive a password validation email from clientservices@gfkmri.com. You must click the activation link in the email within 3 days to activate your account and set up your password.
  4. After clicking the activation link, you will be able to create your own password to access Mediamark University Internet Reporter. The password must be between 8-16 characters in length and have at least one alphabetic character and one numeric digit.
  5. After all these steps have been completed, proceed to Mediamark Reporter to begin using the database.

Mediamark registration

After registering for an account users will be able to access data on media use, product use, behavioral and other marketing measures from Mediamark’s yearly national probability sample of consumers.  The University Internet Reporter  provides access to GfK MRI’s Survey of the American Consumer for academic use by students and faculty.  The Survey’s vast database of media usage, demographics, psychographics and consumer behavior makes it a powerful resource for penetrating insight into the actions and motivations of adult American consumers.

Once logged in users will select a Category for a list of over 25 product areas:

Mediamark categories
Click to view larger image

Users will then select a Question — a consumer activity.   Once the consumer activity has been selected users will be able to create a report based on Target criteria including report type, consumer activities (Details) and demographics (Target).

Mediamark target reports
Click to view larger image

The understand how the Mediamark University Reporter presents information in a report users should download the Mediamark University Internet Reporter Tutorial.

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Database of the Month provides a very brief introduction to a database available from the Library’s website, highlighting key features of the database that you should know about. If you would like more information about this database (or any of the library’s databases), please contact us for research assistance. If you would like a demonstration of this database for a class, please schedule a research instruction class using this form.