Texas Tech University

Hillary Veeder

Associate Librarian
Architecture Library

Email: hillary.veeder@ttu.edu

Phone: (806) 834-3703

Room Number: 811 Arch. Library

Hillary Veeder-- University Libraries

Bio

Hillary Veeder received her Master of Library Science from Indiana University, Bloomington as well as her B.A. in History of Art from IUB. She has been with the TTU Libraries since 2013. Her research interests include public services initiatives, collection development, and library instruction. She is a member of the Art Libraries Society of North America (ARLIS/NA) and the Association of Architecture School Librarians (AASL).

Selected Peer-Reviewed Publications

Veeder, Hillary B. “Demand-Driven Acquisition for an Academic Architecture Library Collection: A Case Study and Commentary.” Art Documentation 40.2 (Fall 2021): 316-323. DOI: 10.10086/716736

Reed, Bonnie, Hillary B. Veeder, Sara Schumacher, and Brian C.R. Zugay. “Placing Research on Their Map: Curriculum Mapping as a Collaboration Tool for an Architecture Branch Library.” Art Documentation 37.2 (Fall 2018): 176-191. DOI: 10.1086/700012

Veeder, Hillary B. “Title Histories of the Periodical Literature of Art & Design.” ARLIS/NA Research & Reports, December 2015

Veeder, Hillary B. “The Merge: The Artful Marriage of EBSCO Publishing and H.W. Wilson.” Art Documentation 34.1 (Spring 2015): 152-182. DOI: 10.1086/680571

Veeder, Hillary B. “A Comparison of EBSCO’s Art & Architecture Complete and H.W. Wilson’s Art Full-Text Databases.” Art Documentation 30.1 (Spring 2011): 54-68.

Book Reviews

“Émigré Cultures in Design and Architecture.” ARLIS/NA Reviews (September 2019) 

“Indoor America: The Interior Landscape of Postwar Suburbia.” ARLIS/NA Reviews (March 2019)          

“The Age of Glass: A Cultural History of Glass in Modern and Contemporary Architecture.” ARLIS/NA Reviews (June 2018) 

“Architecture and Surrealism: A Blistering Romance.” ARLIS/NA Reviews (May 2017)

“Research Methods for Architecture.” ARLIS/NA Reviews (May 2016) 

“New Architecture on Indigenous Lands.” ARLIS/NA Reviews (March 2014)