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Question for Juggler-ga
Published by: jack 2009-01-07

  • Juggler, I'm an avid user of Google Answers and have marveled at the way you are able to track down book titles from brief descriptions. I work as a librarian and am usually able to piece together the title of a book from even bad information. Whenever such a question arises on GA I always give it a go and can sometimes find the title but you invariably answer the question. I would just like to pick your brain as to the best tools and strategies for finding titles. Also do you have any special background that compliments your ability to find titles.


  • Thanks Juggler! I really appreciate the examples. I also have luck using the WorldCat Database which is essentially a database of most libraries in the U.S., but the searching capabilities are not great. I also enjoy your answers because they are very brief and to the point. Keep up the good work. Bowler-ga


  • Hi Bowler, First of all, thanks for the question, and my apologies for the delay in answering. As for experience, well, I've always been a big reader, so the book questions are particularly interesting to me. Also, I like the challenge involved. The main resources that I use, in addition to the basic Google search, are: The Library of Congress catalog: http://catalog.loc.gov Google Groups: http://groups.google.com Amazon.com http://www.amazon.com And used book sites, such as abebooks.com: http://www.abebooks.com If it?s a relatively new book (e.g., less than 7 or 8 years old), a basic Google search is usually my first step because there?s a good chance of hitting a review, the author's web site, etc. For older books, it becomes more of a challenge. The LOC catalog is good for children's fiction, but adult fiction seems to be poorly classified, so I usually turn to one of the used book sites or Google. A lot depends on the customer's description. It's fascinating to me what folks remember about books. If they remember a lot and key plot details, then the question is often pretty easy. For example, here: http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=268929 In that question, the customer remembered not only the key plot device (teen with invisibility), but also important details. Sometimes, customers remember specific details that are relatively minor, but unusual enough to distinguish the book. In one of the first book identification questions that I ever did, a customer was looking for a book that involved a man going back and forth between parallel worlds. There area a lot of books about parallel worlds, but the customer remembered that in one of the worlds, the Kennedy assassination hadn't taken place. That sort of detail can help identify the book. http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=18537 You've probably experienced the same thing in your library work, but the hardest questions are often those in which the customer remembers it wrong. Mentally, one of the most difficult things to do is to IGNORE major parts of the description that you?re given. For example, in this question, the customer was asking for a book about a Chinese child, a shoe and a duck. http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=307568 I probably spent a couple hours doing searches using the words Chinese or China, just because that seemed to be such an important detail. I figured that any description of the book was going to use it (e.g., "Wonderful Chinese tale," "Delightful story about a Chinese girl," etc.). But that detail was useless because it was wrong. Turned out that the book was about a Japanese child! It seems counterintuitive to ignore major details that the customer claims to be part of the book, but sometimes that?s what you must do to answer the question. I hope this helps.



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