One Book, One U 2024 | University of Miami Libraries (2024)

subjectId: 690715

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  • UM Resources
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One Book, One U 2024 | University of Miami Libraries (1)

<b><i>If I Survive You</i>, by Jonathan Escoffery</b>

If I Survive You by Jonathan Escoffery.

One Book, One U Common Reading Program

The One Book, One U program selects a book for each Spring semester to provide a shared educational experience in our university community. Find information on upcoming events as well as research resources, dicussion guides, and more!

<b>Pick up a copy of the book</b>!

Find a copy of the book in a library!

If you are a member of the South Florida community, check your local library to find a copy of the ebook available for check out.

Events

One Book, One U website. If you are planning an event related to If I survive you, please feel free to let us know about here: https://forms.gle/nk7zYSGQ6Sbwvbu38

<b>SAVE THE DATE: Spring 2024 Author Event</b>

Save the date!
Thursday, Feb. 15, 2024, 6pm

Databases

Search for research based on themes in If I survive you. Most resources focus on sociology, gender studies, and related fields.

  • ProQuest Research Library
    ProQuest Research Library provides in-depth coverage of the top 150 core academic subject, including 5,060 titles -over 3,600 in full text- from 1971 forward. It features a highly-respected, diversified mix of scholarly journals, trade publications, magazines, and newspapers.
  • Sociological Abstracts
    Sociological Abstracts indexes and abstracts research literature published worldwide in journals and other serial publications.Social Planning/Policy Development (SOPODA) is included as a subfile, providing additional literature on policy issues addressing violence, abuse, housing, the environment and other social issues.
  • Nexis Uni
    Nexis Uni™ features more than 15,000 news, business and legal sources from LexisNexis®—including U.S. Supreme Court decisions dating back to 1790—with an intuitive interface that offers quick discovery across all content types, personalization features such as Alerts and saved searches and a collaborative workspace with shared folders and annotated documents.
  • Refugee Health Information Network
  • Sociological Abstracts
    Sociological Abstracts indexes and abstracts research literature published worldwide in journals and other serial publications.Social Planning/Policy Development (SOPODA) is included as a subfile, providing additional literature on policy issues addressing violence, abuse, housing, the environment and other social issues.
  • CultureGrams
    CultureGrams is a reference for concise and reliable cultural information on the countries of the world. The database provides up-to-date country reportson 200+ cultures of the world, all 50 United States, and the Canadian provinces, that go beyond mere facts and figures to deliver a one-of-a-kind perspective on daily life and culture, including the background, customs, and lifestyles of the world's people.
  • America: History and Life
    America: History and Life abstracts and indexes journals and dissertations on the history of the United States and Canada.
  • Gender Watch
    GenderWatch indexes and provides the full-text of articles in 175 publications that focus on the impact of gender across a broad spectrum of subject areas. GenderWatch contains archival material, in some cases as far back as the 1970's with additional archival material continually added, making this the repository of historical perspective on the evolution of the women's movement and the changes in gender roles and understandings over the last fifteen to twenty years.

UM Libraries Specialists


  • The Data & Visualization Services department of the University of Miami Libraries promotes data literacy on all campuses through education, consultation, and curation. We provide equitable expert advice on the components of the research process (discover, planning, collection, preparation, analysis, publication, and long-term management).
  • UM Libraries' GIS Services
  • UM Special Collections

UM Instructional Designers

Academic Technologies website.

Reading Guides

If I suvive you is forthcoming.

<b>Instructor Reading Groups: Fall 2023</b>

If I Survive You in your teaching? Join us for a facilitated reading group to discuss how to teach If I Survive You, for UM faculty, staff, and graduate students. Organized by the and the Learning Innovation and Faculty Engagement departments, this initiative allows interested instructors to explore how to incorporate the text into their classrooms.

Please join us for our Instructor Group session: November 15th, Noon to 1pm
Sessions will be held over Zoom.

Register now using this link: https://miami.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJEudO2vqD8sG90vy1ZUdGd5oXZEnliB5VbO

Discussion questions

American Library Association Book Discussion Group online guide.

Questions to Discuss (Fiction)

  1. How did you experience the book? Were you immediately drawn into the story--or did it take you a while? Did the book intrigue, amuse, disturb, alienate, irritate, or frighten you?
  2. Do you find the characters convincing? Are they believable? Compelling? Are they fully developed as complex, emotional human beings--or are they one-dimensional?
  3. Which characters do you particularly admire or dislike? What are their primary characteristics?
  4. What motivates a given character’s actions? Do you think those actions are justified or ethical?
  5. Do any characters grow or change during the course of the novel? If so, in what way?
  6. Who in this book would you most like to meet? What would you ask—or say?
  7. If you could insert yourself as a character in the book, what role would you play? You might be a new character or take the place of an existing one.
  8. Is the plot well-developed? Is it believable? Do you feel manipulated along the way, or do plot events unfold naturally, organically?
  9. Is the story plot or character driven? In other words, do events unfold quickly? Or is more time spent developing characters' inner lives? Does it make a difference to your enjoyment?
  10. Consider the ending. Did you expect it or were you surprised? Was it manipulative? Was it forced? Was it neatly wrapped up--too neatly? Or was the story unresolved, ending on an ambiguous note?
  11. If you could rewrite the ending, would you? In other words, did you find the ending satisfying? Why or why not.
  12. Can you pick out a passage that strikes you as particularly profound or interesting--or perhaps something that sums up the central dilemma of the book?
  13. Does the book remind you of your own life? An event or situation? A person--a friend, family member, boss, co-worker?
  14. If you were to talk with the author, what would you want to know? (Many authors enjoy talking with book clubs. Contact the publisher to see if you can set up a phone chat.)
  15. Have you read the author’s other books? Can you discern a similarity—in theme, writing style, structure—between them? Or are they completely different?

Contact Information

This guide is maintained by the following individual(s):

Subject Specialist

  • Meg Merrill

    Student Success Librarian

    m.merrill8@miami.edu

Find your teaching partner here!

One Book, One U 2024 | University of Miami Libraries (2024)

FAQs

How to complete one book in one day? ›

How to read a book in one day
  1. 1 Begin with a book no longer than 350 pages. ...
  2. 2 Silence your phone and put it in another room. ...
  3. 3 Sit while reading. ...
  4. 4 Books should be read in as few sittings as possible, so read at least 50, preferably 75 pages in your first sitting. ...
  5. 5 Remain at home, unshowered, in your pajamas.
Feb 16, 2015

How many libraries does University of Miami have? ›

More about the Libraries

The University Libraries comprises six libraries across all three of the University's campuses in Coral Gables, on Virginia Key, and in the Health District near downtown Miami.

Is it possible to read 350 pages in a day? ›

The average reader will read 350 pages in 9.7 hours when reading at a speed of 300 words per minute (wpm). Typical documents that are 350 pages or more include full-length novels. A typical single-spaced page is 500 words long.

Is it possible to read 400 pages in a day? ›

While reading a 400-page book in one day is not always ideal, it is possible. There are actually several factors that will determine if you can accomplish this. Your reading speed is only one of them. Remember a few years ago when the Harry Potter books were extremely popular.

Can anyone use the University of Miami library? ›

Guest of the University

At the request of a senior administrator, a University guest may obtain a library permit. The permit allows guests to enter the Richter Library, borrow materials, and use the computers. A guest may not use interlibrary loan services or materials on reserve.

Which US university has the largest library? ›

It holds more than 167 million items, including "more than 39 million books and other printed materials, 3.6 million recordings, 14.8 million photographs, 5.5 million maps, 8.1 million pieces of sheet music and 72 million manuscripts." The largest research library in the United States is the Harvard Library in ...

What is the largest university library in the US? ›

Largest academic libraries
RankInstitutionLibrary Holdings (volumes) (2020)
1Harvard University19,608,349
2University of Michigan16,025,996
3Yale University15,421,200
4University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign15,385,227
16 more rows

Is it possible to learn one book in one day? ›

If you don't allow yourself to take breaks, your motivation will diminish, which means the probability of finishing that book in a day is low. You have to be able to mix things up. Set yourself a timer and read for 20 minutes, then take a break and do something that'll give you some energy for 5-10 minutes.

Is it possible to read a 300 page book in 1 day? ›

If you're a slow reader, you may read at closer to 125 to 200 words per minute. This means reading 300 pages will take you between 12.5 and 20 hours.

Is it possible to read a 500 page book in one day? ›

Answer: the average reader takes about 13.9 hours to read 500 pages. You might take more or less time than 13.9 hours to read 500 pages, depending on your reading speed and the difficulty of your text. The average person's reading speed is around 300 words per minute (WPM).

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