Browsing Bookshelf -- Vinyl Records
Do you have a record player? Check out some of the vinyl records on the 1st floor Browsing Bookshelf.
The rest of the vinyl records collection can be found on the 3rd floor to the left of the stairs and elevators.

Do you have a record player? Check out some of the vinyl records on the 1st floor Browsing Bookshelf.
The rest of the vinyl records collection can be found on the 3rd floor to the left of the stairs and elevators.

The Browsing Bookshelf theme for April is Welcome to Nicolas Capril.
Why? Just because.
Items are inspired or recommended by the greatest thespian to ever live. Visit our Nicolas Capril Guide to learn more and to vote on your favorite Nicolas Cage film.

March is Women's History Month! Join us in celebrating women all month long by exploring some of our books on the Browsing Bookshelf that honor women and feminist studies.
View the Browsing Bookshelf on the 1st floor near the Reference Desk.

Ever finished a movie and thought the book was better?
Our March Browsing Bookshelf at Dupré Library is built around that very idea! This month’s theme, “The Book Is Better,” features books that were later adapted into movies and TV shows, so you can experience the original story before (or after) seeing it on screen.
Dupré Library now provides online access to Cabell’s Directories, a definitive source of publication information on more than 8,500 academic and scholarly journals across eleven disciplines, including business, education, psychology, computer science, nursing and health administration.
The Cajun & Creole Music Collection is located on the 3rd floor within the Ernest J. Gaines Center and visits are by appointment only this semester.
Contact Cajun & Creole Music Collection for more info.
The Cajun & Creole Music Collection, along with Cajun & Creole Music Collection librarian Sandy Himel, are featured in the Jan./Feb. 2023 issue of American Libraries – The Magazine of the American Library Association.
Photos from the Cajun & Creole Music Collection were used in the LPB documentary, “Why Louisiana Ain’t Mississippi… or Any Place Else.”
UL Lafayette and Special Collections are listed in the film credits. The two-part documentary aired on Dec. 11 and 12, 2022.
Photo credit: LPB
