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2026 ALA Annual Conference preview

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“ALA was founded in Philadelphia in 1876 amid the patriotic spectacle of our nation’s centennial celebrations. But it’s Chicago, the Association’s home for more than a century, that will welcome the library community for a milestone 150th anniversary celebration at the , to be held June 25–29 at the McCormick Place Convention Center. This year’s speakers, programs, and gatherings strike a balance between the retrospective and the speculative, as library workers and advocates stake out a brighter, stronger, and more inclusive and accessible future for libraries of all types.”...

American Libraries feature, Summer

Sam Helmick writes: “A unique electricity fills the air when the ALA returns to Chicago, the city that holds our history and anchors our future. As we gather this June, we aren’t just attending a professional meeting, we are stepping into a historical slipstream 150 years in the making. This is the moment we have been building toward: the sesquicentennial celebration of our collective impact. This milestone is about more than looking back; it is about the momentum we carry into the next era.”...

American Libraries column, Summer

Pride Month is celebrated annually in June. Our collection of statistics offers fascinating facts about the AIDS Memorial Quilt, the Digital Transgender Archive, the founding of Drag Story Hour, and San Diego Public Library’s 2025 Pride library card design contest, which was won by Annie Alwine with a design resembling a vintage date-due slip filled with the names of LGBTQ+ icons, including Marsha P. Johnson, Harvey Milk, and Edie Windsor....

American Libraries Trend, Summer

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“For this year’s report, we cover the new challenges academic libraries faced, including radical political and regulatory shifts in academic institutions, developments in artificial intelligence disrupting traditional research methods and tools, and Americans with Disabilities Act Title II whole-scale redesign of websites, digital repositories, and future collection and intake processes. The report also highlights a bright spot: the Data Rescue Project, a grassroots volunteer community launched in 2025 by data librarians to recover and house at-risk public data from shuttered government websites.”...

College & Research Libraries News, vol. 87, no. 6, June

ALA has partnered with NonProfit Vote as a partner for , which will take place on September 15. ALA and the League of Women Voters will that will highlight how the voter engagement landscape has changed in recent years, how local Leagues and libraries are evolving their collaborations in response, and how to contribute to increasing voter participation in 2026....

ALA Public Policy and Advocacy Office, May 29

Celeste Leeds-Laliberte writes: “In my first full-time librarian job, I was often scared I didn’t belong or that I wouldn’t live up to my coworker’s expectations. With over a year in my current position, I still sometimes feel like I have no idea what I’m doing, but I’m now able to piece together what I’m doing, what my job demands, and how best to accomplish it. As you settle into your jobs, I’d like to share some things that have been the most helpful on my journey as a librarian.”...

New Members Round Table Notes, May 31

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As part of ALA’s 2026 sesquicentennial, the Association is launching a comprehensive fundraising campaign, “.” The $60 million campaign goal represents the most ambitious philanthropic initiative in ALA’s history and reflects a long-term investment in libraries, library workers, literacy, intellectual freedom, and equitable access to information. Key action areas for the campaign include advancing the library profession, advocacy, equitable access to information, and intellectual freedom. The campaign extends through December 31, 2027....

ALA Communications & Media Relations Office, June 3

Phenix S. Halley writes: “Just days after Alex Haley’s Roots was swept into Tennessee’s growing book ban, his historic work has been restored to school library shelves in Knox County following . The district reversed course after lawmakers put Roots on a restricted list under Tennessee’s book review policies, which allow parents and community members to challenge school materials they believe are inappropriate for students. The banned book list already included over 115 titles.” The Knox County Board of Education is June 4 on two resolutions urging the Tennessee General Assembly to change treatment of challenged books....

The Root, May 27; Tennessee Lookout, May 26; WATE-TV (Knoxville), June 1

John Cox writes: “A clear identity matters for libraries. It explains what the library is, what it does and why, as well as who can benefit from what it provides. Crucially, it makes it as easy as possible for everyone to understand its offering and its value. Without that clarity, institutional leaders, decision-makers, and other stakeholders can overlook the library. Students and academics may turn elsewhere, the library suffers from lower visibility and less recognition, its contributions are underestimated, it loses its competitiveness in the fight for resources, and it struggles to advance its position within the institution.”...

Times Higher Education, May 25

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Molly Templeton writes: “There’s so much to reread. This is a lesson I keep having to relearn. I struggle with rereading. It’s because of all those new books. It is hard to turn my back on the to-be-read pile and commit time to something I’ve read before. But then I do it, and I wonder what’s wrong with me. Rereading isn’t wasting time. It’s finding what I didn’t see before, discovering the details and the threads that were hiding, and, sometimes, if I’m really lucky, finding something I didn’t even know about myself.”...

Reactor, May 28

Roxy Van Ruiten and Darcy Ramirez write: “A display inside San Antonio’s Central Library is turning the city’s love for the Spurs NBA team into a celebration of reading, and it’s now getting national attention. San Antonio Public Library’s ‘Read Like Wemby’ display, inspired by Spurs star Victor Wembanyama’s well-known love of books, was recently featured in The New York Times. Staff said visitors are stopping to snap photos with the display, which highlights books connected to Wembanyama and his reading habits.”...

KENS-TV (San Antonio), May 28

David Nield writes: “More than 30 years after Adobe came up with it, the PDF file remains essential for archiving, sharing, and publishing. It’s no surprise that commercial PDF software tools are in high demand. But you don’t necessarily have to pay to process these documents, especially for basic editing operations. A host of PDF tools are available on the web that will let you quickly and easily manipulate your documents for free (with more advanced features and usage limits available for a price).”...

Wired, June 2

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