 Hi, this is Mary Wisner from the Gallagher Law Library. I'd like to share with you a nifty tip that can help you keep track of books that you want to read later or refer to in your research. So suppose we're looking at a list of National Book Award finalists, and we see the heartbeat of Wounded Knee, Native America from 1890 to the present. I think I might like to look at that later. So what do I do? I go to the Law Library homepage, and our default is to search the UW Law Library. That includes books that are in the Law Library plus e-books that we have access to. I can also search UW Libraries, and let's do that. Type in Troyer Wounded Knee and search. This book is available in three formats, as an e-book, a print book that happens to be checked out right now, and an audio book that we can get online. I'm not sure I want to read it now, but I want to come back to it later. So after checking it, I click on this pushpin. And if I look up at the pushpin, I see those are the things that I have pinned this session. This green box tells me to log in for all services. I enter my net ID. Now here I see the heartbeat of Wounded Knee that I've just saved, and I also see other things that have labels. You don't own me how Mattel versus MG Entertainment exposed Barbee's Dark Side is labeled Read Maybe. This book about pandemics is labeled Epidemics. I want to put a label with these three formats of the heartbeat of Wounded Knee, and so I click it, I add label, read maybe, and that way whenever I want to look at my reading list or my read maybe list, it'll be there. That's all there is to it. Let's review. You hear about a book, you check the catalog, you pin the book to save it. If you haven't already logged into your library account, you log in, you tag the book to make it easy to find. That's all there is to it. This has been Mary Wisner of the Gallagher Law Library. Please visit our website for library services, research guides, and more.