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I am going to talk a bit about Nance's comment on yesterday's post, which, to be scrupulously clear, I did not in the least interpret as an attack, and which I do not want to sound defensive responding to, although I probably will.
The comment: "That little grade one boy is THE reason that I do not use libraries for books. I do not like to give books back, period. So I buy books. I support libraries, I think they are wonderful, I recommend libraries, and when I was teaching I made great use of our school's library and library staff. As a child, I adored my town's librarian, who let me take out dozens of books at a time (against the rules), but I always hated taking them back.
Books are my one extravagance. That kid may grow up to be just like me."
I want SO MUCH not to be a stereotypical shush-ing, cranky librarian. Both of these can be difficult, because some classes are SO LOUD and really provoke the crankiness. I had one class at a school I'm not at anymore that literally spiked my blood pressure. There were four boys in it that would have probably been okay, a bit challenging maybe, on their own, but together they were a perfect storm of belligerence, boundary-testing and defiance. Mostly I could meet this with a degree of humour - once I told them to go line up because their class was leaving and one said "is this the end of our library time, or are we getting kicked out?" and I said "a little bit of both!" Once, before Christmas when everyone was burned out, I lost my temper, and that did not feel good. In January I set some clearer, firmer boundaries and changed up some procedures, and after that it was fine.
If a student is passionate about a particular book, I will happily waive the renewal limits and let them keep it all year, unless someone else requests it. Once I saw a grade three boy hiding some craft books and asked him why and he said "I can't take out books today and I'm afraid these are going to get tooken by another kid who's creative!" So I let him take the books. But if we don't impose any kind of limit (which I have tried), it... doesn't go well. There needs to be a bit of incentive for the child or their parents to at least make a cursory effort to find the book, or we would rapidly have no books left. One grade six student graduated last year with eight graphic novels (the most desired genre) not returned. That is a serious dent in our collection. If a book has been out for a long time I send a notice to the parent assuring them that no payment is needed, but asking them to confirm that the book is lost. I can then declare it lost, the student starts over fresh, and we decide whether the book will be replaced.
I don't believe the little boy yesterday (with whom I have a fairly good relationship) didn't want to return the books. He had just forgotten to put them in the return bin, and, well, it's January.
Now, about libraries. My town library was in a little house in our little town, and I could go alone but my dad had to come over sometimes when the librarian called him to approve the level of books I wanted to take and the number.In university I spent blissful hours in the library. The one sour note was during my master's degree, when the library claimed I hadn't returned some stupid Androgyny book that I took out for some stupid essay that it wasn't even helpful for, and I DEFINITELY returned it and they charged me EIGHTY DOLLARDS. So I understand the indignation of a wrongly-accused library patron. And it is a perfectly valid sentiment to not like returning books. . But generally, it is one of the most magnificent things for someone like me.
I read 191 books last year. Assuming each one cost twenty dollars - hard to get one for less these days, many are more - that adds up to three thousand, eight hundred and twenty dollars. I have one or more bookshelves in every room of the house except the bathrooms and the kitchen (well, there kind of is one, but it holds cookbooks and dishes). So I a positively delighted to give many books back. If I don't want to give one back, I will usually buy a copy, and I'm grateful that I have the library to preview it before I know. I pre-ordered Holly by Stephen King a couple of years ago when Matt was going to be away, for something to look forward to. After I read it, I had mild regret for having bought it in hardcover, because it was not one I would want to keep (unlike The Outsider, or If It Bleeds, which also feature Holly Gibney - although The Life of Chuck is my favourite entry in If It Bleeds. It's up there with Rita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemption for heart-deep beauty, bittersweetness and wonder). I also lend books pretty freely, and just consider it off-site storage, although not books that I am too afraid to lose.Being able to borrow thirty books at a time from the library (only this year, because Sarah) and then return them fits my lifestyle really well. I can completely see how it would not be the same for others. When the kids were small, I thought going to the library and getting them their own card and then letting them borrow their own books was the most delightful idea ever.
It was a nightmare. I was not an organized parent. I slept badly, what sleep I got was interrupted several times an hour by a sleep apnea that was not diagnosed until many years later, I was painfully anxious, and my husband traveled a lot. I was constantly stressed about losing their library books, finding their library books, where to keep their cards. In the end, I took out books for them on my own card and it was much better. Eve now has a library card that covers Hamilton (where she lives) and Ottawa (where I live) - she borrows ebooks nearly exclusively, but also the odd paper book. She also has some kind of lucky charm that means she keeps finding perfect copies of books she wants that are used.
Nance, I so value your opinion and perspective and I so hope this doesn't come off bitchy. I also thank you for sparking this post, because it is the fastest something has come out of my head onto the screen for weeks, possibly months. I love books. I love libraries. I love being a librarian - the other day a little girl pointed at a poster we have up of David from the David Shannon books (okay, this is super embarrassing but I just realized both the author and the character are named David HE IS WRITING ABOUT HIMSELF, the story just became so much more layered). I walked over to the picture book section and pulled it out and gave it to her and she looked at me like I was a magician. I love the kids (even when they're cartwheeling on my last nerve), and I really try to make library a positive experience for them. In the spirit of transparency, I should be clear that I also buy books. More books than I should. More books than I can probably read in a lifetime? I used to own no books I had not read. I once declared that I was going to achieve Zero Growth with books, as in, if one came in, one went out. Neither of these things are true as of this moment. This is paper books - sometimes I just want a pristine trade paperback that I can caress knowing no one else has. Sometimes I hear about a book and check on the Kindle store if it's available for less than five dollars, and if it is I buy it. If I had to house all my Kindle books in my, um, house, the whole "no bookshelves in the bathrooms and kitchen" thing would have to be revisited. Today I had to go out in a veritable blizzard, and since I was out anyway I went by the bookstore to buy Horse by Geraldine Brooks. I had no desire to read this book, although I like the author, but this year I read Memorial Days, her book about grieving her husband who was super fit and also a writer and died of a massive heart attack at age sixty. She had to finish this book while grieving, so I thought I would buy it and give her my two dollar royalty support.(Also, books are NOT my one extravagance, so more power to Nance on that as well. And the little boy could do much worse than growing up to be just like her.)




22 comments:
Oooh great topic!
First of all, you are an amazing librarian.
Second of all, I only buy books I know I will want to reread. I mean, sometimes I buy a book that I think I'm going to love and I don't, in fact I hate them, and those are usually the books I loan out* but generally, I only want books on my shelf that I love. I read 153 books last year and if I bought every book I read I would be on that Hoarders show, Rob would divorce me, and I'd be squeezed among the stacks. Also I wouldn't have a house because I'd be broke.
*I get Nance's feelings because I hate loaning out books. I am not an anxious person as you know but the second a book leaves my possession I want it back. I WANT IT BACK NOW. But once in a while I'll get a book as a gift or buy a book optimistically and I will hate it, and then I will give it away or put it in a LFL.
Great topic!!! I mostly liked Horse (4/5 stars, I think, I gave it, though I didn't love the ending so will be curious to see what you think).
I love libraries. I am a minimalist and I am also a cheapskate. I support my library but, like Nicole, I basically only buy books 1) written by someone I know or 2) that I know I will re-read. I'd say I average 2/year now? I actually love not owning many books!! And each trip to the library is such a delight for me (I just came from the library a bit ago and have a huge stack of books which is amazing because my January reading has been sub-par).
I love everything about this post.
I have never taken out a physical book from a library because 1) the only library I know in Puerto Rico isn't accessible to me by public transport and 2) I have resorted to Libby using my boyfriend's library card from Texas so I can borrow e-books (it feels so illegal). So I've never struggled with overdue books, and sadly, here it's easier to just buy them since there's more bookstores than libraries. Like the other commenters, I also only buy books I'm sure I'm gonna enjoy, and even then I end up donating them or selling them in PangoBooks. I hope to one day be able to support my local library more, I love the library! As an aspiring librarian, I also forget about these struggles with the books that are never returned. How much does it actually cost to replace them? I also hear/read a lot about the cost of ebooks licenses; they sound so insane to me!!
Regular reader, first time commenter. I enjoyed this post immensely, as a book lover and former part-time librarian. I used to have a huge (HUGE) collection of books. Back in my high school days I bought every single Star Trek: The Next Generation paperback as they came out, because I wanted to collect them, even the duds (and there were duds, just as there are episodes that are duds!). When we moved into a smaller home, though, I did pledge that I would keep my collection to one large bookshelf. Then COVID happened, and libraries were curtailed, so I started using my Amazon points to purchase certain books, and Kindle Unlimited for the books I could find through that channel.
What I guess I'm saying is that I love both buying books and borrowing books. I love curating my personal collection, because sometimes I change and then the books I want to keep around me must needs change. My library is an extension of me, and the public library is how I test out different genres and subjects to see if they spark an interest.
I read too many books (and live in too finite a space) to buy them all---but also, most of the books I read, I would never have bought. It's only the "it's free to try it!" that lets me bring home a nice pile of books. And I like returning them: it hits that same mental button as decluttering. And whenever I'm reluctant to return one, I buy a used copy, or I put it on my wish list if I want a new copy.
Our library just had to revisit our policy on little kids being able to check out books, because of the exact issue of how it really ends up being on the parents. We want to teach personal responsibility, plus societal responsibility for the society's shared collection of books---but we also get that it's not within a 6-year-old's ability to write us a check for a missing book. (This is for a public library rather than a school library, which I think makes a big difference.) So now we have given ourselves a little extra work, which is that we let the kid check out more books, but we contact the parents. Most of the employees are parents, and this makes us all feel kind of bad for the parents. Like oh god one more thing to have to deal with. But...as you say, we do need the books back, or we would not have books! And we would like to use our budget judiciously: every book we have to replace means another book we can't acquire.
You're right: this was a really thought-provoking topic!
I would also like to mention, for people who may be library patrons but not employees, the EXTREME THRILL of checking in a book that had been missing long enough to be declared lost. Sometimes a patron will bring back, say, thirty picture books, all of which we thought were gone forever---and now here they are, back into our loving arms!! I think patrons sometimes feel a sense of shame, or like they'll be in trouble, which can even keep them from returning the books---but as employees we feel joy, and gratitude, to see those returns.
We are hard core library users - both for me and the kids. I only buy chapter books for the kids typically. And I used to buy picture books but now we have too many and since we check out so many library books, we don't even read the ones we own anymore! I have one elementary school kid and I am trying to train him to put his school library books in a particular location so they don't get mixed in with the county library books. I do not limit the # of books the kids check out at our weekly library visit. They are limited by what will fit in our big bag, which can fit around 30 picture books. So we have massive amount of books checked out at any given time. I have never lost a book - yet! But I am very anal about where library books can go. When we come home with our haul, I put them in 3 baskets in front of our fireplace. When a book is read, it has to go back in the library bag (which has a bike print so I tell the kids to put it in the bike bag). This has worked so far, but it takes a very very strict system to make it work!
This is a wonderful post! School librarians are my heroes, and let me tell you that when I was teaching, my classes were always praised and welcomed by our library staff. I rode herd on those kids (actually, I didn't really have to; my discipline was already well-established in the classroom).
When I was a kid, one of my favourite people was Miss Mamie, our little storefront library's librarian. I honestly think she read A Tree Grows In Brooklyn because she made sure her library was a haven for the kids in our steeltown neighbourhood. She recommended the best books for me and let me take out enormous numbers of books. She also guided me into the upper level sections once I had exhausted the books in my age/grade level because I was reading well beyond them, as I'm sure all of you here were at a young age. Remember that this was Back In The Day of no technology, only date stamping, and paper library cards upon which your name and number were handwritten. (I am shockingly old, I know.)
I don't read in the volume that you do, Allison. I wish I could/did. You're right that it would be massively expensive. If I do get a book that disappoints me or that I DNF, oh well. I consider it like buying fruit: it's a risk that I take, like getting a mealy peach or a bunch of flavourless strawberries. At that point, I either donate it to a nearby Little Free Library or save it for my town library's twice-annual book sale. They've been the recipient of my bookshelf gleanings many times, and I'm happy to do it. And I'm happy to vote for their tax levy every single time as well. For some niche books, I donate them to my nephew's bookstore, a nonprofit enterprise. The more books we can get out into the world, the better, and however we do that is fine with me.
Thank you again, Allison, for what you do and how you do it. I can tell you are a joyful, compassionate reader and librarian.
When I was a kid, we lived a very short block from the library, and I could walk there whenever I wanted. It was amazing. I could get whatever books I wanted, and also listen to albums in their audio room. I loved listening to wolf songs (just what it sounds like…wolves howling…I can close my eyes now, 50 years later, and hear them). School libraries were magic, as was the bookmobile that came to our neighborhood in the summer and brought books.
Once I was a young adult with a job, I started buying books, and I wanted to keep all of them. ALL OF THEM. But a couple of times over the years, we have done major purges to declutter our house, which really, really hurt.
More recently, I’ve tried to realize that books I love that I listen to from the library, I am OK with not owning. So maybe, I can give away books that I have read and loved. It’s hard, I don’t always do it well, but I’m working on it.
BTW, I read and loved Horse, and when I read her memoir, I wondered about it and thought about reading it again, but I haven’t yet. Now it’s been long enough that I feel like I need to reread the memoir before I reread the novel. I love Brooks, though, I’ve read three or four of her books, all amazing.
TEAM LIBRARY here, but my kids would rather buy books because they take FOREVER to read them (screens have ruined my kids for sure). Did you ever read All of the Kind Family by Sidney Taylor? I was named after Sarah in the book because my mm loved the whole series, and I read all of the books a million times as a kid and have read them to my kids. Anyway! It is about a Jewish immigrant family in NYC with 5 little girls, and Sarah loses a library book in the first chapter of the first book. The librarian is wonderful and sweet and becomes a major plot point, and she lets the 5 girls pay a penny a week (each) for the book (that cost the overwhelming sum of ONE DOLLAR) and still keep borrowing-- it is darling. I recommend the whole series.
I mostly get book club books from the library (except the really long ones I need more than the borrowing period to read) and buy books I chose on my own. Our house is overflowing with books. There are boxes and boxes in the basement and I don't like having them down there, but the shelves are overloaded and it's hard to find books on them because books are piled in front of other books, and anything I've read in the past year or so is probably on a table in the living room or on my bedside table. It's a real problem.
Wow on this book, right? Teaching the kids real responsibility rather than just forgiving the debt. But also the grace to let them keep borrowing while they paid. I love this so much. Our library recently did away with fees, which I also love.
Thanks for the reminder that libraries are a privilege not available to everyone! I fully support you using your boyfriend's Texan library card for ebooks. It is wildly variable how much it costs to replace a book - sometimes we buy new, sometimes used, sometimes we get volume discounts, sometimes not. If we get a book for a great price and then it gets lost or destroyed, it is annoying to have to pay full price for a replacement!
Heyyyy, how exciting to hear from a regular reader that I don't know! I fully agree about both buying books and borrowing books, although I think I really do need to work on letting some books go. "Curating my personal collection" is a great way to put it.
Oh, I totally forgot to mention that - it's true, if a book comes back it is all celebrating, no shaming!
That is SUCH a smart system. From this vantage point it seems eminently sensible and obvious to do that kind of thing, and yet when the kids were little it seemed utterly beyond my abilities.
Oh Nance, how MUCH I love the teachers that don't let their classes go bonkers in the library. I don't resent the ones who can't manage, they are mostly exhausted, there are so many high-needs kids in classes these days, but the ones who always bring their class in and reiterate the library rules and then remind them whenever needed are such a blessing.
I love that fruit comparison. And it's true, I do often go into a bookstore to buy a book by an author I don't yet know, to support them, and sometimes you just don't know what you're going to get. And it's fun to supply little free libraries and used book sales, and your nephew's bookstore, how cool!
I have not, but will be checking the series out now! And yes, pouring one out for all of our attention spans.
Oh wow, Steph, that sounds like it would be anxiety-provoking. We have boxes in the basement too, which I also don't like, but I keep my shelves pretty need because, well, it would make me anxious not to
Oh, these books! I read them as if it were my job when I was little. I learned so much from these books. The name Charlotte became a favourite because of this series (and later, of course, reinforced by a Bronte sister).
I know you've moved on from this post, but I just want to say that without libraries, I would not be able to afford my own hobby. I mean, I could probably scout used book stores and buy cheapos off ebay or whatever, but I couldn't get THE BOOKS I want. Also, where would I put them? I'd have to resell them to the used book stores, I guess. ANYWAY. My point is that I adore the library and cannot imagine living somewhere that didn't have library access. I would not do well in that environment.
My SIL once told me that she didn't get books for kids at the library because the books were probably all filled with germs and gross and that made sense to me. So now library books get a 72 hour cooling off period in my house before I'll read them. That seems fair, right?
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