Top Opinion Posts of 2012

Saving the longest list for last: There were dozens of thoughtful 2012 opinion pieces illustrating the conversations that buzzed, so I’m going all-out and including the top 20 posts here (inclusive of posts appearing in the lists above). As an added bonus, I’ve added these all to Readlist, which experimentally allows you to export an ebook (.epub, Kindle, etc.) and read them in one sitting. Click “export” in the left-hand sidebar of the Readlist widget below, and choose the format that suits your needs.
Happy reading, and happy 2013!
- Ebook Strategy and Public Libraries: Slow Just Won’t Work Anymore
- Random House Says Libraries Own Their Ebooks | LJ Insider
- What Popular Culture is Telling Us About Libraries and Why We Should Listen | Backtalk
- All Hat, No Cattle: A Call for Libraries to Transform Before It’s Too Late
- Library as Platform
- Assisting Research Versus Research Assistance | Peer to Peer Review
- Attention Is the New Currency | From the Bell Tower
- Ebooks Choices and the Soul of Librarianship
- Here Come the Rules Police | From the Bell Tower
- Helicopter Librarian: Expect the Unexpected | Backtalk
- Libraries as Indoctrination Mills | Peer to Peer Review
- Authentic Librarianship and the Question of Service | Peer to Peer Review
- My Farewell Editorial
- Turning “Us” vs. “Them” Into Just “Us” | Not Dead Yet
- No More Gatekeepers | From the Bell Tower
- Digital Content Curation Is Career for Librarians | Backtalk
- Are You Being Watched? | From the Bell Tower
- The Class of Twentysomething: Degreed and Jobless | Backtalk
- Nontraditional Students Are the New Majority | From the Bell Tower
- Why Are Some Publishers So Wrong About Fair Use? | Peer to Peer Review

None of the five articles below were written in 2012. In fact, there’s nothing more recent than 2010 on this list. But in compiling the rest of these lists I ran across a number of articles that remain steadily popular, in some cases growing in popularity years after their original publication date. This is largely the Google Traffic Machine at work, especially in the case of the articles of interest to readers seeking out information about how to enter the profession. Though these articles go way back, I’m including them as a look at what abides long-term relative to seemingly short half-life of prevailing concerns.


