Although not suited for even a “small” public or college library, LibraryThing sometimes serves as the system of choice for the very smallest institutions—schools, churches, non-profits and so forth. Some of these institutions want to preserve an “upward path” to a traditional, low-end Integrated Library System, based on MARC records. Although we don’t want to see anyone leave, and we think LibraryThing beats even high-end OPACs silly on most features, we see LibraryThing’s value as a first or transitional step to a “real” system for those who need to go that way.
To meet this need, we’ve just released a feature that will allow you to export your LibraryThing library as MARC (USMARC, UTF-8) records. You’ll find the Export as MARC option now on the Import/Export page, accessible via the “More” tab when you’re logged in.
For books in your library that you added from library sources (such as the Library of Congress or Overcat), we have the original MARC record. In this case, the MARC export feature will give you back the record you searched for and added.
For books in your library that you added from non-library sources, or added manually, you have a choice: fuzzy records, or non-fuzzy records. If you choose the fuzzy option, where we have a MARC record that matches your book closely (on the basis of ISBN or other control number), we will give you the library MARC record. If you choose the non-fuzzy option, or you choose the fuzzy option but we don’t have a match to give you, we will instead create a MARC record from scratch. Such records aren’t completely “up to snuff” as cataloging records, but they may serve some libraries’ purposes.
In both cases, your LibraryThing tag, review, ratings and collections data are added to the 9xx fields.
For more techy goodness about how LT’s MARC export function works, see the HelpThing page. Also, please see the disclaimer.
Come discuss in Talk.
Hi: I exported all my records as MARC on my MacBook Pro. The Mac asked me what program I would like to read these with. Do you have any suggestions?
Wow, that’s awesome!
Wow. And may I say, wow, again?
In a former life I worked at one of those very small institutions, and one of the main reasons I didn’t use LT there was that I wanted to preserve upward MARC mobility, just in case. This is a huge offering from you guys! Well done.
A utility for read MARC files with Mac OS (as well as Windows / LINUX) can be downloaded from this site. I don’t know why you would use it.
http://acumen.lib.ua.edu/project/?f=MARC%20Utility.txt
I did try it (also on a MacBook Pro) and it seems to work although it initially claims that the file I exported from LT is not a MARC file.
Very nice addition. I’ve gone through several “library systems” for various reasons, and having the ability to export to the standard system for library records is a great addition. Thanks!