Connecting Michigan Libraries: The Importance of MeL, MeLCat, and RIDES

Connecting Michigan Libraries: The Importance of MeL, MeLCat, and RIDES

The Library of Michigan in Lansing, Michigan (photo courtesy of LoM)

Why are books written, collected, read, and re-read? Since the world’s first library, the Library of Ashurbanipal (Iraq, 600’s BC), humans have been collecting their thoughts and impressions into books, thereby helping each other achieve breakthrough insights, peak experiences, and unleashed imaginations.

Fast forward some 2,600 years and hundreds of millions of books later. Libraries are still important, still relevant, and still changing lives.

I wanted to write this article as a reminder to the good people of Michigan how good we have it in terms of easy access to great libraries.

Michigan eLibrary MeL

Thanks to the combined efforts of the Library of Michigan and the Midwest Collaborative for Library Services (MCLS) and a vast array of other partners, we have resources like MeL, MeLCat, and RIDES.

Serving over 10 million Michigan residents statewide is no easy feat. The basis of this network is a statewide interlibrary loan service. The Library of Michigan’s eLibrary (MeL) has two components: the eResources and MeLCat (the catalog), supported by the Regional Interlibrary Delivery Service (RIDES).

What this means is that your local library card is also an all-access pass to borrowing books for free from hundreds of participating libraries.

In this article, we’re going to hear from Randy Riley (State Librarian), Tara Kanon (MeLCat Support Specialist & Statewide Delivery Coordinator), and Scott Garrison (MCLS Executive Director). Each of these individuals occupies a pivotal role at a critical juncture in this constantly moving mandala of books.

 

Randy Riley

I’m sitting inside Randy’s office on the 5th floor of the Library of Michigan in Lansing. This five-story, 250,000-square foot building houses several treasures, including the Rare Book Room and State Archives.

Randy has been a librarian since 1989. He is THE Librarian for the entire state, and he has kindly taken time out of his exceedingly busy schedule to chat with me.

Randy Riley, State Librarian at the Library of Michigan in Lansing, Michigan (photo courtesy of LoM)

Let’s hear from Randy:

“I grew up in mid-Michigan, graduated Ionia High School, then University of Michigan. Started my career in education as a history-government teacher at the Valley School (Grand Blanc). After a few years, I transitioned into the library field, working in Special Collections (the genealogy and family history center), and became State Librarian in 2014. Fortunately, I’ve worked with some phenomenal people over the years and have had many great experiences.”

“As the main library for the State of Michigan, our development policy is we primarily collect the printed history of Michigan and build collections that serve our great state. Mostly donations, occasional acquisitions. We are also a central resource for the many topics of state government. And we oversee aid payments to libraries, along with training and consulting for librarians.”

“The Library of Michigan has three core units: Special Collections, Library Development, and Technical & Access Services. Special Collections are the books and other materials. Library Development is how we help other Michigan Libraries, and Technical & Access Services is the cataloging and processing side of the business.”

“The Michigan e-Library (MeL) is the premier program of the Library Development office. MeL contains over 80 e-resources and is a big part of what we do. MeLCat is the union catalog where you can request items.”

The Library of Michigan in Lansing, Michigan (photo courtesy of LoM)

“Around one million items circulate annually among 420+ libraries statewide. When I started, the famed $100 reference book was a big deal. MeL has helped level the playing field in terms of easy on-demand access.”

“The inception of MeL can be traced to the early 1990’s. There was the Go-M link at the University of Michigan, then it came to the Library of Michigan in the mid-90’s and took shape as an actual database in 1998 when Access Michigan was created. This morphed into MeL and in 2005, MeLCat was added thanks to our wonderful partnership with MCLS.”

“For the majority of libraries in Michigan, MeL is their main database content. You can also access it online right now from anywhere. MeL completes about 20-30 million data retrievals annually, meaning that specific information was successfully located for 94% of these requests.”

“MeL presents the user with high-quality information from subject matter experts. For example, some of the most popular of the 80 databases are: Opposing Viewpoints (Gale Cengage database used heavily by schools), NoveList Plus (book discussion group; guides to almost 30,000 books of fiction), and the A to Z database (general business info).”

 

“We receive $1.75 million dollars per year from the state to run MeL, along with $4.5 million dollars from IMLS grants, thanks to the LSTA Act.”

“The Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) is an independent agency in federal government and they help us with funding. When calculated for ROI, for every dollar spent, the general public gets $26 in return, which is significant. We also use some federal funds for sub-grants to libraries, meaning that a few dozen libraries can each receive up to $25,000 per year.”

“Overall, MeL is a tremendous resource featuring a wealth of options for anyone to explore. Libraries from Monroe to Escanaba use it heavily. MeLCat allows you to borrow from libraries that are 500 miles away!”

Libraries are community centers, not just book warehouses. A healthy library has many facets, including being a place of refuge for everyone from kids to adults of any economic status.”

“In my 35 years as a librarian, I’ve witnessed constant unstoppable change, driven by technology. For example, generative AI is coming so fast, that librarians who embrace and understand it will have an advantage over those who balk at it and ignore it, hoping it’ll go away. There is a working group called State Libraries and AI Technologies (SLAAIT) figuring out how to best handle AI.”

“Books and getting them into people’s hands is still vitally important to society. Working in libraries, you see firsthand the transformational power of the written word. Libraries exist to provide opportunities to people and make their lives better and I’m thrilled every single day to be a part of this.”

 

Tara Kanon

Tara Kanon is the statewide delivery coordinator for RIDES. She has graciously allowed me a rare peek into the process. I’m walking through a cavernous warehouse with her and some staff from RIDES courier ProMed Delivery, Inc.

We are witnessing an amazing feat of logistics and boots-on-the-ground hard work from dedicated people ferrying shrink-wrapped pallets of books.

Tara Kanon and team at RIDES hub warehouse in Detroit (photo by Ryan M. Place)

Let’s hear from Tara:

“The Regional Interlibrary Delivery Service (RIDES) is a statewide courier service for Michigan libraries. Some 300-400 couriers physically drive the books around the state to and from the various libraries. ProMed Delivery, Inc. provides delivery service to the Lower Peninsula, and they coordinate with another courier to provide delivery service in the Upper Peninsula.”

“There are six main regional warehouses statewide, and a transfer site for materials moving between the Lower Peninsula and the Upper Peninsula. The central Detroit hub is our largest. When someone requests a book or other item, it goes from the library to the closest warehouse hub where it gets sorted, sub-sorted, then routed to the requesters library via courier.”

RIDES hub warehouse in Detroit (photo by Ryan M. Place)

“Each library has its own 3-digit RIDES code identifier. Any library can choose to participate in the RIDES program. However, there is a small cost for libraries to join. Libraries can also choose to be a no-pack library (no packaging) if they want. We work with libraries of all sizes. Certain algorithms are in place to ensure request balancing, so that lending and borrowing doesn’t fall on any one library.”

“Materials are manually sorted by hub into green RIDES totes. There are three different sizes: large, medium, and very small. The max weight is 40 pounds per tote. An estimated 15,000 MeLCat materials move through the RIDES system daily. Audio visual material is double bubble wrapped.”

“MCLS manages the RIDES label maker. There are over 740 library names on the RIDES label maker. MCLS contracts with ProMed Delivery, Inc. to provide delivery. Many drivers themselves are independent contractors.”

 

Scott Garrison

Scott is the Executive Director of the Midwest Collaborative for Library Services (MCLS). He is kindly chatting on the phone with me.

Let’s hear from Scott:

“The Midwest Collaborative for Library Services (known as MCLS) operates in Michigan and Indiana.”

“MCLS exists to help support libraries. We promote collaboration, engagement, innovation, learning, and more for libraries. We work with a variety of other organizations across the library landscape by offering collective e-licensing, consulting, training programs, and much more.”

“We’re very proud of our strong relationship with the Library of Michigan, with whom we contract to support MeL for millions of citizens across Michigan. . Our staff take the trust that the Library of Michigan and hundreds of libraries across the state have placed in us very, very seriously, and we take pride in serving libraries the best we possibly can. The MeLCat and other servers we maintain are at an IT co-location facility in Lansing, and are currently undergoing significant upgrades to bring them more up to date. MCLS serves and supports libraries of all sizes and types, from smaller academic to larger academic, school, public, special (i.e., hospitals and law firms), and the state libraries in Indiana and Michigan.”

“MCLS created and administers RIDES, which enables over 400 libraries to move over 1 million items back and forth to the Upper Peninsula and all around the state on a constant basis. Since we have two peninsulas, each with its own courier, Michigan is one of the most complex, multi-type resource sharing environments for libraries in the entire country.”

 

Final Thoughts

Michigan library card

I hope looking through this small window into an enormously vast network and what it takes to run it, has increased your appreciation for not only your local library but for libraries in general.

Many thanks to Randy, Scott, and Tara for taking the time to help us understand and appreciate the intricacies of the Michigan library system.

If you are a Michigan resident and don’t have a membership card to your local library, make it a priority to go there this week and get one. Use the Michigan Library Directory to locate the nearest public library to you. If you are a Michigan library, make sure you look into joining MeLCat.

Fun Bonus:

Cool items from the Library of Michigan’s Griffiths Rare Book Room (4th floor)

Library of Michigan’s Griffiths Rare Book Room (photo courtesy of Googchives)

According to Adam Oster, Community Engagement Librarian at the Library of Michigan, here are some cool items:

“The oldest item is from 1490. It’s called “Statham’s abridgement of the law” and it’s a collection of English law translated into French.

When it comes to other unique items in the Rare collection, we have a fairly complete set of the “The Michigan Suffragist” newsletter of the Michigan Equal Suffrage Association. A great feature within most issues of the newsletter is the County Reports section where the work be performed for the suffrage movement within individual Michigan counties is highlighted, including where individual people are listed.

Statham’s Abridgement of the Law circa 1490 book @ Library of Michigan’s Griffiths Rare Book Room (photo courtesy of Googchives)

Some other interesting items, according to Matt Pacer, Reference Librarian at the Library of Michigan:

The American woods : exhibited by actual specimens and with copious explanatory text / by Romeyn B. Hough. Published in 1892. Most of the pages are cross sections of the varying woods of North America. You can see the color and grain.

Mapping my world : buildings + bridges / Laura Davidson. Published 2002. A pop-up book. One can think of it as more of an art piece with pop-ups of Michigan bridges and buildings.

Addresses of Abraham Lincoln. (miniature book). Published 1929. It is about 2cm. So, about the size of  the knuckle to top of thumb. A representative sample of a book that would have been purchased as a memento/keepsake. One needs at least a magnifying glass to read it.

Hough’s Woods book circa 1892 @ Library of Michigan’s Griffiths Rare Book Room (photo courtesy of Googchives)

 

As for acquisitions/donations, there are several reasons we would add a book to our rare collection. For the above three books, we want to ensure that many future generations of Michigan residents and researchers have access to these items. If you have other questions, please ask.

Make a Gift

www.Michigan.gov/LibraryGift

Temperature-controlled closed-stacks room which houses the rare book collection at Library of Michigan (photo by Library of Michigan)

Donate rare Michigan yearbooks to the Library of Michigan

“The Michigan Suffragist” newsletter of the Michigan Equal Suffrage Association, which is housed in the Rare Book Room at the Library of Michigan (photo courtesy of Library of Michigan)

 

Exclusive Interview: Touring the World’s Largest Library Comic Book Collection of 350,000 items @ Michigan State University with head honcho RANDY SCOTT!

Exclusive Interview: Touring the World’s Largest Library Comic Book Collection of 350,000 items @ Michigan State University with head honcho RANDY SCOTT!

Aerial photo of MSU (photo courtesy of: Michigan State University)

Michigan State University is a sprawling and beautiful campus of leafy trees, ubiquitous green & white team colors, and intriguing experiences, such as visiting the World’s Largest Library Comic Book Collection.

Located in East Lansing, about 1hr 30mins west of Detroit, the school was founded in 1855 as a prototype land-grant university and renamed MSU in 1964.

MSU currently sits on 5,200-acres dotted with 566 buildings. Over 50,000 students attend here. There are 27 resident halls and over 900 registered student groups on campus. Yes, this place is massive. It’s one of the largest universities by population in the USA.

MSU’s Nuclear Physics graduate program ranks # 1 in the nation. Magic Johnson & Sam Raimi attended MSU simultaneously in the late 1970’s. Fun factoids abound.

I’m here visiting the MSU Library, the building which contains the main portion of the comic collection.

Red Cedar River (photo by: Ryan M. Place)

You park on the north side of Spartan Stadium in Lot # 62 W (99 Red Cedar Road, East Lansing). You ‘pay by plate’ by the hour. Then, use the footbridge to cross the beautiful Red Cedar River and enter the library doors straight ahead.

Once inside, the Special Collections Reading Room is on your left. This is where you’ll read the comics.

As the world’s largest library/academic comic book collection, the MSU Comic Collection is a true world resource.

Sure, Mile High Comics in Denver has a self-estimated eight million comic books in three warehouses and a single individual, Bob Bretall, in Mission Viejo, California has over 105,000 comics.

But the MSU Collection is catalogued, indexed, available to the general public free of charge and managed by comic book expert, Randall W. Scott.

Randall W. Scott, or “Randy” as he prefers to be called, is an MSU Special Collections Librarian, Comic Art Bibliographer, and head curator of the MSU Comic Art Collection. Working here almost 50-years, Randy has one of the greatest jobs on the planet: reading and archiving comic books.

Yes, a state university had the foresight to bankroll Randy’s unique expertise and thus, help fund a world-class collection of pop culture artifacts in the form of comics books. We’re so jelly. Randy, I want your job.

MSU’s Comic Book Curator and Head Honcho: Randy Scott

Randall W. Scott, aka: Randy, head of the MSU Comics Collection (photo by: Ryan M. Place)

I’ve always enjoyed comic books. I like the format of blending words and pictures. I also read a lot of books without pictures. Mainly, I like thinking about how the literary form of comic books works and is evolving. Comic books are different from every other kind of storytelling. And I like the theoretical questions associated with comics and collecting comics.”

“I grew up on a farm in Alpena County in a little town called Hubbard Lake. I like to practice reading in other languages like French, German, Spanish. My foreign language level is fair. But my level of reading comics is pretty good.”

“In the late Sixties, I migrated to Lansing and attended MSU while working at Curious Book Shop, a used & rare bookstore run by Ray Walsh. I was Ray’s first employee and the comics buyer there back when Curious had an upstairs that was all comics. Stan Lee did a signing there once! I met Ray while we were both students at MSU. He was famous for riding his bike around campus in a trench coat.”

The Paper (image courtesy of: Michigan State University)

“As a student here at MSU, I worked as a writer and editor on an underground paper aptly called ‘The Paper’ and toward the end of its lifespan, it became absorbed into SDS, Students for a Democratic Society. There was a national movement for underground papers at that time. Detroit had The Fifth Estate, Ann Arbor had The Sun and so on. In June 1969, we had a convention in Chicago where SDS split and The Weathermen became one of the splits, so I briefly became an original Weatherman before it became the Weather Underground.”

“I have a B.A. from MSU and an M.S. in Library Science from Columbia with a concentration in cataloging and indexing.”

I started working in the MSU Library back in 1971. I had various jobs, including being a preorder typist, whereby I would send out orders to jobbers to order books. I started cataloging the Comic Art Collection in 1974 when I developed a system for indexing and cataloging them and I’ve been here ever since.”

“In 1975, a high-school student stole our Amazing Spider-Man # 1 comic book. We knew who it was but couldn’t prove it. Today, in good condition, that comic is worth around $100,000.”

“After that happened, I decided to take on the job of looking after the Comic Collection, during my lunch hours, as a volunteer.”

 

MSU Comic Collection: At 350,000 items, it’s the World’s Largest Library Comic Book Collection

MSU Comic Collection (photo by: Ryan M. Place)

Randy and I head downstairs, one floor below the Reading Room.

The Comic Collection is housed in long rows of electronic Spacesaver mobile storage units. The lights are on 120-second timers, thus, if there’s no movement for 120 seconds, the lights go off.

We have the main core of the collection here. Then we have about 700 shelves of international comics at an offsite, remote storage warehouse.”

 

Russell Nye: Creator of the MSU Comic Collection

Russell B. Nye circa 1978 (photo courtesy of: Michigan State University)

The MSU Comic Collection started in 1969-70 when MSU professor Russell Nye donated 6,000 comic books, mostly 60’s-era Marvel superhero comics, to the university.”

“Around 100 of the comics were his, the rest were from some of his senior students who donated their collections to him for his new Pop Culture course.”

“Nye taught in the English department from 1941-79. He was an early proponent of Pop Culture Theory and I had him as a teacher. Nye was a gentleman, always wore a suit, taught 19th century American Literature and had an inquiring mind.”

“At the time, comics were deemed ‘inappropriate material’ by academia. However, Nye was respectable, he had also won a Pulitzer Prize in 1945, so they couldn’t deny this pop culture scholar’s donation of comics.”

Comic Buyer’s Guide issue # 1 (1971) image courtesy of: Michigan State University

“Comic books had already been around for over 100 years and it took them that long to get academic recognition. I did Independent Study with Nye and wrote a paper called ‘Comics in Libraries’ where I argued for their inclusion.”

“Prior to this, academic libraries had been reluctant to collect and study comics, which they foffed off as ‘subliterature’. It was revolutionary times. The spirit of the time was to open things up and do what hadn’t been done before.”

“Nye wasn’t thought of as a radical but being a proponent of putting comic books in libraries was definitely a radical idea at the time. It’s hard to fathom now because it’s more commonplace. Now over 50 libraries have permanent comic book collections.”

 

It’s a Midwest thing: Michigan and Ohio Lead the Charge

Bowling Green University’s Popular Culture dept. (image courtesy of Bowling Green University)

“Ohio’s Bowling Green University started a Pop Culture department around the same time. The Journal of Popular Culture started in 1967 at Bowling Green and was edited by Ray Browne. They now have the Browne Popular Culture Library, which is the world’s largest collection of pulps, dime novels and ephemera.”

“In 1977, Lucy Caswell started the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum at Ohio State University, which is now the world’s largest repository of original cartoon art.”

It was a Midwest thing. We started putting comic books in libraries, then NYPL followed suit after a few years and now it’s a global thing.”

“In 1978, the Russell B. Nye Popular Culture Collection was officially titled as a branch of the Special Collections. This collection includes the Comic Art Collection, 10,000 volumes of sci-fi (mostly monographs), probably 5,000 books, magazines & fanzines, and loads of Popular Fiction (ie: dime novels, pulps, detective, westerns, etc).”

MSU Library’s Carolyn Blunt (c. 1973)

 

A Taste of the Goodies

Young Allies # 1 (1941) photo by: Ryan M. Place

The hardest part of being a Comics Librarian is cataloguing. Cataloguing is a daily, ongoing process. On January 1st, 1981, we stopped using the filing index card system.”

“Every year we get deliveries of 12 to 20 boxes of comics sent via UPS. Gerber invented mylar comic sleeves. I order these babies 5,000 at a time. Cataloguing all this stuff takes time.”

“We have 7 copies of the original Obadiah Oldebuck here, the first comic ever created.”

Obadiah Oldebuck, the first comic book ever printed (photo by: Ryan M. Place)

“We have the personal microfilm collection of Detroit comics guru Jerry Bails and the #1 CAPA-Alpha (1964).”

“We have all sorts of comics: Young Allies # 1 (1941), Walt Disney Comics and Stories No. 1 (1940), Wonder Woman # 1 (1942), R. Crumb’s Zap # 1 (1967), etc.”

“We have about 600 Underground comics, 10,000 volumes of Manga, 1 million comic strips donated by Dick Webster, and large holdings of Eclipse, Marvel, DC, Fantagraphics.”

“We have the King Features proof sheet collection from NYC (1930’s-1990’s).”

Rodney Ford scrapbooks (photo by: Ryan M. Place)

“We have 530 scrapbooks of daily newspaper strips. They came all at once from Rodney Ford in Sacramento, California. Over 100 titles from the 1920’s-1970’s. He made the scrapbooks meticulously by hand.”

“We have 17,000 Golden Era comics (1938-52), the first 1,000 of which came from Jim Haynes, a Connecticut racetrack owner who grew up in Port Huron, Michigan.”

“We have the Lexikon der Comics, the only copy in North America. It’s a German language encyclopedia of comics.”

“The list goes on and on. MSU has a tradition of keeping the best two copies of each item. Our triplicates we give to the MSU Surplus Store to be sold, and proceeds of these sales come directly back to the library to continue supporting the collection.”

Lexikon der Comics: German language encyclopedia of comic books (photo by: Ryan M. Place)

MSU’s International Comics @ the Remote Storage Warehouse

MSU International Comics inside Remote Storage warehouse (photo by: Ryan M. Place)

After touring the main collection, Randy drives us to an offsite warehouse in Lansing, about 15 minutes away from the main library. The facilities coordinator, Josh Maki, lets us in.

The warehouse is divided into two massive rooms.

One room contains international comic books on 10 and 12-foot-high steel shelving. The other room is a high-density storage bay of 800,000 books and bound journals. Big blue-box air scrubbers clean the air.

This is but one warehouse in a complex of warehouses. The others are: Folio, Special Collections and RSA. The comics warehouse is RS-F and called ‘remote storage’. Spread across the complex, there are around 1.7 million items.

MSU Remote Storage warehouse (photo by: Ryan M. Place)

“Here we have about 700 shelves of international non-American comics from all over the world. For instance, we have 1,800 comics catalogued from India alone.”

“We have shoe boxes full of two million daily comic strips, plus big boxes of proof sheets, Sunday sections, etc.”

“The most we ever paid was $130,000 for 13,000 European comics in the 1990’s.”

“We get about one international visitor per month, mostly from Europe and Asia.”

“When visiting, please remember that international comics must be requested at least three full days in advance.”

Funding: Where does the money come from?

“I get a little slice of the annual MSU Library book budget. I also have a couple of endowments which provide funding. Our total annual budget is around $40,000.”

“In regard to acquisitions, I have a Collection Development statement that I follow when we want to acquire new material for the collection.”

In addition to the budget Randy receives from MSU, generous supporters also lend a hand by giving funds in support of this collection.

For more information on ways you can support the collection, contact:

MSU Libraries’ Development Office

517-432-0708

[email protected]

 

MSU Special Collections

MSU Special Collections Rare Book Collection (photo by: Ryan M. Place)

Established in 1962, the MSU Special Collections department contains 450,000+ printed works, several manuscript and archival collections, a huge stash of ephemera, and more.

MSU has a massive collection of Sixties Radicalism pamphlets and papers. You can find these in the American Radicalism Vertical File (ARVF).

The Special Collections Rare Book Collection is at the end of the comics collection, behind a vault door, inside a temperature-controlled room.

It contains the Charles Schmitter Fencing archives. And the oldest printed book at MSU: Scriptores Rei Rusticae (1472, Venice). They even have a Book of Hours here.

 

Randy’s Final Thoughts

Randy Scott at work in the MSU Library basement (photo by: Ryan M. Place)

Well, I’ll need to retire one day, I suppose.”

“My replacement will need to be enthusiastic about comic scholarship, knowledgeable in the field of comics books and care deeply about growing the collection and understanding how important it is.”

The MSU Comic Collection is always open to donations of comic books. If you or someone you know wants to donate their collection, they can email or call the MSU Libraries’ Development Office.”

“Personally, I think it would be cool if the library put a little more recognition into the comics, such as the graphic novels. We have a ton of graphic novels, including the first-ever, Will Eisner’s ‘A Contract with God’ from 1978.”

Randy Scott at work in the MSU Library basement (photo by: Ryan M. Place)

“There’s a future in academic comic study. It just depends on administrative attitudes. Currently, MSU offers two minor degrees in Comics.”

“Every February, we host a two-day long MSU Comics Forum here on campus.”

“Visiting scholars with an MSU netID can apply to stay overnight at the Owen Hall Grad Dorm here on campus.”

Plan a trip. Let us know you’re coming. We look forward to seeing you.”

MSU Comics Forum (courtesy of MSU)

 

Donate your comic collection to MSU by emailing Randy Scott and the library development office:

[email protected]

[email protected]

 

Search the MSU Comic Collection here

https://lib.msu.edu/findbooks/

 

Randy’s Comic Index

http://comics.lib.msu.edu/index.htm

 

Russell B. Nye Popular Culture Collection

https://lib.msu.edu/spc/collections/nye/

 

MSU Comics Forum

http://www.comicsforum.msu.edu/

 

Map of MSU Campus

https://maps.msu.edu/

 

Library of Congress has 150,000 comic books

https://www.loc.gov/rr/news/comics.html

MSU logo (image courtesy of: Michigan State University)

Ryan’s Final Thoughts

Having toured the collection multiple times, I feel it necessitates its own building.

Due to the size, importance and future growth potential of the collection, MSU should consider centralizing the entire collection under one roof exclusively.

You could also add a museum component to this, complete with display cases, regular events and periodic in-person signings.

 

Ryan’s Recommendations on Visiting the MSU Comic Collection

While visiting MSU, you might want to make time to check out the following:

 

1.) Brody Square (241 Brody West) campus food hall

Brody Hall (photo by: Ryan M. Place)

Brody Hall (photo by: Ryan M. Place)

Park in the Kellogg Conference Center parking garage (219 S. Harrison Rd.) for $1.50/hr. Walk directly across the street to Brody. Up on the 2nd floor is one of the most ingenious campus food hall concepts ever created.

Brody features 9 to 12 food stations. For $10.00 per person it’s all you can eat, all day long. And yes, this is open to the general public.

They have a wondrous array of food featuring things like:

Burritos, sushi, spicy crab soup, Cajun fish with mashed potatoes and gravy, Hudsonville ice cream (get the Cake Batter with chocolate syrup), 15 breakfast cereals, pepperoni pizza, vegetable spring roll, miso soup, mango slush drink, pasta with spinach and alfredo, breadsticks, and more.

Also impressive is their automated tray system. You walk over to a moving wall of empty metal racks and slide your tray in and it disappears into the back for the cleaners. Every university in the country should replicate this food hall model.

 

2.) MSU Dairy Store @ Anthony Hall (474 South Shaw Lane) 9am-8pm

MSU Dairy Store (photo by: Ryan M. Place)

MSU Dairy Store (photo by: Ryan M. Place)

MSU Dairy Store grilled cheese (photo by: Ryan M. Place)

Park out front at the meters. 8 minutes per quarter or use your credit card.

This is an ice cream parlor open to the general public and run by the MSU Department of Food Science. All the ice cream is made right here at MSU. You can even buy half-gallon tubs!

I recommend trying a double scoop of the Sesquicentennial Swirl and Dantonio’s Double Fudge.

Also try the Grilled cheese on sourdough with a cup of soup.

 

3.) Curious Book Shop (307 East Grand River Ave)

Curious Book Shop (photo by: Ryan M. Place)

Curious Book Shop (photo by: Ryan M. Place)

Park directly behind the store. $2.25 for 90 minutes maximum.

Opened in 1969, this is a used & rare bookstore with a large sci-fi section.

The store is owned by Randy’s friend Ray Walsh. Ray has done a tremendous number of good things for the book community over the past several decades.

Ray puts on the annual Michigan Antiquarian Book & Paper Show.  You can usually find Ray himself a half mile down the road, running his other bookstore, Archives Book Shop (519 W. Grand River).

 

Some Other Cool stuff in Lansing:

Potter Park Zoo (1301 South Pennsylvania Ave, Lansing)

Zoobie’s Old Town Tavern (1200 North Larch Street, Lansing)

Lansing Brewing Company (518 East Shiawassee St, Lansing)

Meat BBQ (1224 Turner Rd, Lansing)

Randy Scott (photo by: Ryan M. Place)

Adventures of Obadiah Oldbuck (photo by: Ryan M. Place)

MSU Special Collections gift of Jim Haynes (photo by: Ryan M. Place)

MSU Comic Collection cataloguing (photo by: Ryan M. Place)

MSU Library basement (photo by: Ryan M. Place)

Comics Librarianship Handbook by Randy Scott

Comics Librarianship Handbook by Randy Scott

Randy Scott at work in the MSU Library basement (photo by: Ryan M. Place)