10.20.2009

Visiting the Library

Libraries, ah libraries. When your afternoon stroll through the cemetery must be postponed due to a downpour, it is to the library you often turn, no?

(And today I refer to public libraries. Private libraries are doubly magnificent, with generally exquisite furniture and artistic reading lamps, ornate liquor cabinets and comfortable mahogany desks. Oh and the books! But I digress.)

The public library is a bastion of democracy and literacy, where vagrant and doctor both can enter and become enlightened. Recently, however, I discovered that my own public library, the C. City Library, is frequented more by the former than the latter, and this once-great institution has changed its presentation to suit its new constituency.

A recent renovation, planned by clearly unintelligent people, has turned the reference area into a computer area rife with porn connoisseurs (their screens changed abruptly when I could no longer keep my approach stealthy enough). Was the old wing so dilapidated that it had to be redesigned to something so pedestrian?

Perhaps, actually. As I was browsing the Historical Animal Tending section (a particular pastime of mine) I noticed that that entire section of the Dewey Decimal system was in shambles. Books in disarray! Shelves buckling! I even noticed that two editions of the same book (A Passion for Donkeys by Elisabeth Svendsen of the highly regarded Donkey Sanctuary in England) were not shelved in order of publication.

passion for donkeys


I righted the wrong, but I was not about to trawl through the entire building correcting other such mistakes. This is what librarians are supposed to be doing.

And about those librarians! I recall the days of sophisticated, bespeckled women in semi-transparent blouses and sensible shoes. At the C. City Library, however there were only heavily pierced teenagers and potato-shaped matrons.

A further disappointment occurred when I ventured into the Modern Collection area. There were more digital items than paper ones available for loan! DVDs, CDs, books on tape (or rather, on CD), computer games...! What a travesty! Truth be told I was actually a bit curious: would this be an opportunity to finally see The Garbage Pail Kids Movie, directed by the esteemed Rodney Amateau?

The Garbage Pail Kids Moviehttp://g-ecx.images-amazon.com/images/G/01/ciu/46/9f/5665c060ada0bc49edcae110.L.jpg


Alas, such material was not in stock. (I had to use the computer "card catalogue" to search. Gone are the glorious days of real card catalogues, as I'm sure, dear reader, you are already aware. We should mourn their passing over a good bottle of aged single-malt whiskey very soon, I say.)

I was considering investigating what digital material they did have available, but I didn't want to touch anything, for fear of contagion.

There is so much more I could say! How the graffiti, once comprised of amorous tributes and of notes on books of which call number (and what pages) had the best images of lumberjack footware, was now mainly juvenile depictions of male genitalia. How children, formerly confined to their own area of the building, instead scampered freely through the isles like fleas on a stray.

This post has gone on for long enough. I have decided to redirect my efforts and leisure time to restoring my own private library. When it is in a more presentable state, I would be delighted to have you visit, and I will have cigars and cognac to celebrate the occasion.

4 comments:

  1. Can I build a Shakespeare fort in your library?!

    ReplyDelete
  2. My good sir, only if it is large enough for us both to bring in two of the remaining leather armchairs so we can sit and watch the other patrons and complain together, cloaked in the invisibility of the Bard's good words.

    ReplyDelete
  3. We might need to incorporate some Hawthorne for structural integrity.

    ReplyDelete
  4. omg Gazza how fun would it be to run amok in a big state library or something?!?!

    ReplyDelete