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08/31/2023
profile-icon Jocelyn Codner

August 2023

Textbooks are expensive, but it’s possible that you may be able to request some of those textbooks through the JKM Library or interlibrary loan for free! Whether it’s sitting on our shelves, waiting in our eBook collection, or calling your name from one of our partner libraries, your textbook might be available for free! What’s even better? You won’t be risking a computer virus that those shady websites (like Z-Library and LibGen) often have attached to their “textbook” offerings. Below are your options for finding free textbooks and course materials through the JKM Library in order of how we, your librarians, recommend you attempt them in. 

  • Option 1. Search the JKM Library Catalog to see if we have the book you need. If you find it, place a hold, and we’ll email you when it’s ready for you to pickup! Or come to the library and ask a librarian to help you find it on the shelves. 
  • Option 2. We have over 1 million eBooks! You can search them for the titles you need by using the eBooks tab on our homepage. Most eBooks will require you read them in the browser window, so if you would prefer to have a physical book, try… 
  • Option 3. Search EZBorrow to find books from other libraries. The books usually arrive in 2-5 business days, and you have 14 days to pick them up at the JKM Library. You can keep these books for the entire semester. EZBorrow works great for textbooks and fun reading! 
  • Option 4. E-ZBorrow doesn’t have the book? Try ILLiad. ILLiad takes longer (9 days on average), and the library that sends the book decides how long you can keep it and whether it can be renewed. Loan times can be as short as two weeks, although a month or two is more common.   
  • BONUS: Do you have your Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh library card yet? The CLP system us large and has many options available to its users. Students are eligible for library cards with their student ID. The closest CLP branches to Chatham University’s Shadyside and Eastside locations are Squirrel Hill (5801 Forbes Avenue Pittsburgh PA 15217) and East Liberty (130 S. Whitfield Street Pittsburgh PA 15206). Learn more about CLP locations here. For student up at Eden Hall, the Northern Tier Library (4015 Dickey Rd. Gibsonia PA 15044) is a wonderful public library close to campus that offers many services to Chatham students. 

We hope these options are helpful in your search for free or affordable textbooks during your time here at Chatham. If you ever have a question about how to use interlibrary loan services or locating books in our collection, please ask a librarian! You can ask in person at the library, or email the librarians at reference@chatham.edu. 

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02/05/2019
profile-icon Jocelyn Codner

February 6, 2019

Have you ever checked out a book and noticed it was marked with a sticker that says, “Wray”? Or what about that collection of books on the small bookshelf near the elevator on the third floor marked “Olkes Collection”? Have you ever wondered what Wray and Olkes mean? The JKM Library has, in addition to our main circulating collection, smaller collections of books that are focused on certain topics, aimed at certain age ranges, or were donated by certain people. We give these collections of books different names in order to honor the person who donated the items or to make it clear that there is something special about the items in the collection. For example, our Curriculum Collection is comprised of books for young readers and includes picture books, middle- grade fiction and nonfiction, young adult fiction and nonfiction, and graphic novels appropriate for those age ranges. In the case of the Wray and Olkes collections, these are items donated by Professor Wendell Wray and Dr. Cheryl Olkes respectively. Wendell Wray, a library and information science professor emeritus at the University of Pittsburgh, was an avid book collector. The first African-American man to graduate from the then Carnegie Institute of Technology’s library science program with a master’s degree in 1952, Wray was an influential voice in the library profession. After graduation, he went on to be one of the first African-American men to be hired by the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh. Raised in Beltzhoover, Wray’s resume includes military service during WWII and working at the New York Public Library, the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, and the inner city outreach program the North Manhattan Library Project. Wray returned to Pittsburgh in 1973 to take a position as a faculty member at the University of Pittsburgh in the library school. He was honored the same year with the Distinguished Alumni award from Carnegie Tech. He moved to California in 1988 upon his retirement, where he spent the rest of his life until his death in 2003. His personal book collection largely focused on African-American and Caribbean cultures and histories. Of this collection, over 4,000 were donated to Jennie King Mellon Library. Some items are first edition copies or signed by the author and are housed in Special Collections. The rest of the items donated by Wray are in the circulating collection and are indicated with a spine sticker and a special book plate on the inside front cover. You can read more about Professor Wray on the University of Pittsburgh’s Archives and Manuscripts tumblr post about his papers. The Olkes book collection was donated to the Jennie King Mellon Library by Chatham alumna Dr. Cheryl Olkes as a supplemental element to the formidable Cheryl Olkes African Art Collection. The collection was donated in 1998 and includes more than 600 works of African art meant for study and exhibition. Along with the artwork, over 120 books covering African art, history, sociology, anthropology, and culture were donated to the library. From “The Dynamics of Gender: African Art from Chatham University” at the August Wilson Center After graduating from Chatham in 1970, Dr. Olkes went on to earn a master’s degree in journalism from Ohio State University and a doctorate in communications from the University of Texas, Austin. She then spent time during the 1980s in Niger with the Songhay people, resulting in a book co-authored by her husband Paul Stoller titled In Sorcery’s Shadow: A Memoir of Apprenticeship Among the Songhay of Niger. She continued to make trips to Africa and collected works of art from across the continent. The result is that her collection is wide-ranging and eclectic. Certain pieces from the collection have also been displayed at the Smithsonian National Museum of African Art. Most recently, a group of Chatham students crafted an exhibit, “The Dynamics of Gender: African Art from Chatham University,” held in Pittsburgh’s August Wilson Center, that included pieces from Dr. Olkes as well as alumna Vivian Lowery Derryck, ’67, and a gift from Richard and Marilyn Finberg. While the Olkes book collection is kept together on the bookshelves near the elevator on the third floor (near our limited textbook collection), the Wray collection is sprinkled throughout our circulating collection and Special Collections, easily identifiable by the “Wray” spine sticker. The Jennie King Mellon Library is proud to hold both of these collections, and while the books are older and well-loved, we encourage you to take advantage of your access to them! 

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08/28/2018
profile-icon Jocelyn Codner

August 29, 2018

For the first time ever, the library is able to offer limited textbooks for checkout! We understand how expensive textbooks can be, which is why we have embraced an idea brought to us by members of the Chatham Student Government. We now accept student textbook donations for our circulating collection. What does this mean? Well, it means that you as a student can check out any of the textbooks we have in our limited collection for a full semester to use for classwork. You can browse the textbook collection on the third floor next to our Olkes collection. You can find them on the shelf to the right as you walk out of the elevator. If you find a book you think will be helpful, you can check it out at the Circulation Desk downstairs on the first floor.
Because these textbooks were donations from your peers, they might not be the most recent editions. This also means that our selection is still small since we rely on you for textbook donations. So what if you want to donate your old textbooks? First of all, thank you! You’re helping your fellow students decrease the cost of their education. In order to donate your textbooks to the library, bring them to either the Reference or Circulation Desk on the first floor.
Faculty are also encouraged to donate materials and make use of our Course Reserve service by putting materials (such as books, DVDs, or articles) on reserve in the
library for your students to access. You can learn more about Course Reserve here. We know that there will still be books for class that you won’t be able to find in our library, but don’t worry! You can still check E-ZBorrow or ILLiad to see if another library has what you need. If you have any questions about our textbook collection or how to find books for class, please contact a librarian! We’re available through email, phone, chat, text, and in person at the Reference Desk, and we’re always happy to help!

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04/15/2013
profile-icon Jocelyn Codner

April 2013

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