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If you have never
visited the MSU Student Book Collection Competition reception,
held every Spring semester, you have missed a fascinating
look at the wide variety of book collectors who attend Michigan
State University. Open to MSU students (graduate
students and undergraduate students), the competition gives
students a chance to share their enthusiasm for something
we in the Libraries also treasure: the book. The competition
carries a monetary prize, sponsored by the MSU Friends of
the Libraries. Many of the entrants, not surprisingly,
state that they intend to use any winnings to buy more books.
For information on entering this year's competition, go to
the entry form. The
MSU Student Book Collection Competition reception, at which
you can see the collections of this year's winners and finalists
displayed, will be held in April 2005. You can see the
essays and annotated bibliographies for previous winners and
finalists by clicking on the links below.
Some of the collections
submitted to the competition are enormous, and some are quite
small. The topics cover the spectrum--history, literature,
art, science, religion, regions and cultures, genre literature,
leisure activities, children's books, and personal experiences.
Even collections that sound like they would be similar are
very different in focus and intent.
The diversity in
winning collections in the years the contest has been held
will give you an idea of the variety of interests expressed
by collectors. The 2000 winner, Barry Stiefel, has a
Judaica book collection, begun when he received a couple of
books on Judaism and Jewish history for his bar Mitzvah.
Those books remained gathering dust until he wrote a paper
on the Jews of Asia for a class. After writing the research
paper, his interest in Jewish history took off, and he collected
many more titles, many obtained on his travels to Europe and
the Middle East. Today, his collection includes book
on Jewish religion, art, literature, history, culture, folklore,
(auto)biographies, and cooking.
The 1999 contest
winner, Raymond Garcia, collects hard-boiled and noir detective
literature. Erudite about the literature, he puts his
finger on the appeal of this literature to many: "the affirmation
that in the omnipresent world of corruption, economic inequality,
crime, violence, mendacity, and seedy urban decay, the power
to go on and stick to one's principles remains possible."
His search for these books has led him to open and maintain
an online bookstore specializing in this genre. (See
http://www.abebooks.com/home/hbnbooks/.)
Tami Michele, the
winner of the 1998 contest, began her collection on drug-free
childbirth when she was expecting her own child. What
she learned inspired her to become a certified childbirth
educator for the Bradley Method, so that she could share with
other couples the joy of natural birth. Traveling to
conferences allowed her to meet many of the authors of the
books in her collection, and continued to inspire her interest
in birth. Her pursuit of the knowledge gained from her
initial collection has led to her current enrollment as a
medical student at MSU's College of Osteopathic Medicine,
where she plans to go into Obstetrics and Women's Health Care.
The MSU Student
Book Collection Competition offers students an opportunity
to share their enthusiasm for books and their personal interests
with others. All topics and genres are welcome.
Participants submit a short essay describing the focus and
contents of their collection, and an annotated bibliography
of its contents or a selection of 50 titles from larger collections.
Finalists display
their collections in the Main Library for final judging, followed
by a reception. The first place collection will
be awarded a $500 prize, and the second place collection will
be awarded $250. All other finalists will receive a
$100 award.
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