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PHYSICAL LIBRARY COLLECTIONS

The SRSU Library provides access to hundreds of thousands of resources, including many physical print materials held in the Bryan Wildenthal Memorial Library on the Alpine campus. The three floors of the library house cataloged books; print journals and news; DVDs and other media. Holdings of the Archives of the Big Bend are described on the Archives’ site.

MORE ABOUT SPECIFIC PHYSICAL COLLECTIONS

The Sul Ross State University Masters Thesis Collection includes masters theses written by Sul Ross State University graduate students as part of their degree requirements.

Over time, technology has evolved the way that libraries preserve and share scholarship.

Masters theses are held in print, digital, and microfiche formats at SRSU’s Bryan Wildenthal Memorial Library. In Fall 2022, print theses were moved from the third-floor general collection to the Conference Room on level 1 of the Bryan Wildenthal Memorial Library building in Alpine, WML 104. The Archives of the Big Bend additionally holds archival copies of nearly all published and printed theses.

Theses published after 1984 are also available in digital format and can be found by accessing the ProQuest Dissertations and Theses database. Note that SRSU Masters Theses will not display as results in QuickSearch.

Books from the Van Robinson Fine Press Book Collection are produced by the finest book designers and printers in the United States and Europe. The 317-book collection represents an entire century of exquisitely crafted books from renowned printers such as Kelmscott, Ashendene, Arion, Book Club of Texas, Doves, and others. They are printed on the finest paper, some handmade, illustrated with original drawings, etchings, or engravings. Many are produced in limited editions, giving audiences a rare chance to see these volumes in person.

The finest and most valuable book from the collection is Moby Dick; or, The Whale by Herman Melville printed by Arion Press located in San Francisco, California. Every element of the book is crafted to reflect the mood of this classic text, resulting in a volume that is as much a work of art as it is a novel. Considered one of the greatest American fine press books ever printed, it took a year and a half to print and was completed in 1979. Only 265 copies were printed of which 250 were for sale. The text is set by hand with initial letters printed in blue at the start of each of the 135 chapters in Leviathan Capitals, a special alphabet designed for the purpose by Charles Bigelow and Kris Holmes. Boxwood engravings created by Barry Moser depict a whaling industry on the cusp of the Industrial Revolution in meticulously researched detail. It is printed on handmade paper tinted blue-grey. A whale can be seen lurking in the very pages themselves as a watermark, visible only when light shines through the paper. The 600-page book is bound in full blue Levant Morocco (the finest goatskin) with silver lettering stamped into the spine.

The Van Robinson Fine Press Book Collection was donated to the Bryan Wildenthal Memorial Library by Mr. Van Robinson of Fort Davis, Texas.

The collection can be found in the library’s conference room 104 on the first floor and may be viewed by appointment.

To search the Fine Press Book Collection, Search “Van Robinson” and filter the Location to “Library – 1st Floor Conference Room (260).”

Find the Juvenile (Children’s Literature) Collection on the third floor of the library, adjacent to the regular circulating collection. The Juvenile Collection features education and recreational books appropriate for early readers through high school (Young Adult) including classics, picture books, folk literature, fairy tales, poetry, and nonfiction.

The collection is utilized predominantly to support the curriculum of the College of Education and Professional Studies’ Education Department, but it is open for browsing and circulation.

SRSU Librarians regularly collaborate with faculty and staff to make course readings freely accessible to students where possible. Textbooks available for check-out are shelved behind the Front Desk and are available as special circulating check-outs. In most cases, textbooks are available for four hours at a time and must be used in the library.

The Textbook Collection differs slightly from Course Reserves but the terms are used interchangeably.

Textbooks and Course Reserves are not available for Community Borrower check-out.

The Print Journal (Periodicals) Collection spans the first and second floors of the library. The first floor of the library houses recent editions of local and regional newspapers, as well as recent editions of popular magazines. The second floor of the library houses back-issues and bound periodicals, including print popular magazines and print academic journals.

Print journals and periodicals do not circulate, but to the extent that copyright allows, may be made available to current SRSU students, faculty, and staff at all campuses (including DE) via ScanIt.

last updated: October 4, 2024