WHAT DOES A LIBRARY OF SOCIAL SCIENCE BOOK EXHIBIT LOOK LIKE?
Please scroll down the page to view photos from our recent conferences.
Dear Colleague,

Library of Social Science is nearing the end of our 2015 book exhibits. We’ll be in Washington, DC this weekend—and will close out the year in San Antonio in mid-November. Our exhibits have created excitement among conference-goers, showcasing the breadth and depth of research in their given field.

People say a picture is worth a thousand words. I’m a writer, so I don’t know about this (or prefer to believe it isn’t true). But I have to admit that the experience of a Library of Social Science Book Exhibit is best captured in photographs. When one of our onsite managers returns from an exhibit with photos, I’m astonished. Did we create that?

To give you feeling for an LSS Book Exhibit, our Creative Director, Orion Anderson, has selected a potpourri of scenes from our 2015 conferences. I’m impressed—not only with the size of our exhibits and the scope of the titles—but with the beauty of our displays, which obviously enhance and enrich the conference experience for attendees.

PLEASE SCROLL DOWN THE PAGE & CHECK OUT THE BEAUTIFUL PHOTOGRAPHS. The only thing missing is the coffee.

With regards,
Richard Koenigsberg, PhD
Director, Library of Social Science

PS: The photos selected below are panoramic views—showing how we configure our exhibits. A future LSS Newsletter will feature attendees viewing titles on display.


Asian Studies Development Program National Conference

Annual Human Behavior and Evolution Society Conference

Annual Meeting of the Philosophy of Education Society

Annual Conference of the Community Development Society

Meeting of the Midwest Sociological Society

Annual Meeting of the Pacific Sociological Association

Annual Meeting of the Rural
Sociological Society

Annual Annual ASIANetwork
Spring Conference

Annual Meeting of the Annual Conference of the Society for Humanistic Psychology

Annual Winter Roundtable on Cultural Psychology and Education