
By the wonderful Grace Farris.
P.S. Reading styles and reading positions.
Right now my mom stop talking to me and stay out of my room. Stay out of my room and mind her own business.
I miss wandering the aisles of the Library knowing my kids are safe on the other side of the shelf. There is something magically about browsing book titles while still being able to see my littles through the gaps doing the same thing !
Our library has curbside pick-up too. But I discovered their only pandemic practice aside from a disinfectant swipe is to let books “rest” for 5 days between checkouts. All the book jackets are plastic and covid is said to love plastic and live there happily for 3 weeks!
So I mist them inside and out and all the paper edges with 70 percent isopropyl alcohol and let the books sit standing up with the pages fanned out for 3 weeks. At any given time there are at least 6 books sitting for their 3 week “cure”, and a long list of titles on order at the library, so I am well stocked with excellent reads for the winter to come.
Currently reading, “The Boys in the Boat”; about how the University of Washington’s crew team won the Berlin Olympics during Hitlers reign, against all odds. It is excellent so far.
My childhood branch of my city library closed when I was about 20 when they built a larger brand new one a few blocks away. I was sad and nostalgic but then the best possible thing happened- a delicious bakery moved in to the old space. Now I can still hang out and read under that goofy red roof but I don’t get in trouble for sneaking snacks. Shout out to the Hollywood branch library in PDX!
I worked under that “goofy red roof” in 1979. It was a great experience and I loved it.
Our library in Corvallis, OR has been amazing through the pandemic. The deliver books to our front door!! My girls are in a library book club and get a free book with activities each month. There is a phone number we can call to listen to a recorded librarian reading a kids story 24 hours a day! There are daily Facebook live readings. We can check out a telescope, a guitar, thousands of CDs and of course eBooks. There are resources for teens working through anxiety and depression. It is truly inspiring to see the many ways they are keeping folks engaged in our community. It is such a special place and I can’t wait to get back in the building one of these days.
Wow! Very impressed with OR support for literacy and literate citizens!!!
As a grad student and recent graduate from university, I lived in the library. I relied on my local library as well as university libraries along with local small coffee shops to keep me focused while working on assignments and reading. I miss the environment they provided me with, finding the perfect spot off to the side near an outlet to just unwind and power through what needed to be done, it was something about the thought of people watching me made me work harder as if, if I stopped they would judge me or tell my professor. I loved simply the joy from walking through the isles of books and picking on one at random, and it being free to take a book out I never felt regret if the book was not up to par. With the pandemic, my alma mater does not allow people in the library, those without permission and my local library does not even allow for people to walk through simply just online pick up and drop off. I fully understand these changes and am thankful that they care about their guests however I can’t wait to be there when they re-open!
Our libraries here in Richmond, Virginia have done a remarkable job of transitioning to remote operations – they’ve boosted their online services and e-book offerings and built a curb-side check out process for physical materials. We have been mostly utilizing e-readers since the pandemic began (for convenience largely), but I miss leisurely browsing the aisles with my school age children for “the one!” and asking our librarians for recommendations. There’s a calming feeling that washes over me when we walk into the library and you just can’t recreate that feeling online :)
We are so grateful for our librarians and encourage any who feel the same to seek ways to donate to their local library as many are facing funding shortages during the pandemic.
I still use the library during COVID.
Flipster allows me, using my library code number, to view hundreds of magazines in their digital version for free! Download the app and work with your library reception desk to get in. Also, I use all the digital versions of books for my Kindle or audio on the Libby app which is also a library app. Saves money, times and is environmentally friendly! Then I log my books onto my Goodreads account to keep track of all my reading and follow other voracious readers for recommendations. It is really easy!
I’m in the U.K. here, and it was such a relief when the library reopened after lockdown 1 (though I had the excuse that I couldn’t get books from the library, so I had to buy a lot. Oh well).
Just ahead of lockdown 2, it was me and the over 80s there everyday, making sure we had enough books to get us through these four weeks. They are doing click and collect and offering computer access to people who don’t have a computer at home. At least there is still something this time around
I got my first library card at age three and for years our mom took us twice a week. Even when she was in the terrible black hole of vascular dementia my sister and I would take her to the library and she would check out a book or two. She could no longer read but she would pat the book and smile. All the librarians knew her well and it was the one place in her life left that was normal. Until covid my sister and I still went for, ‘coffee and library’ weekly.
It is number one on our post vaccine list! I am going to head right over to New Mystery open one and inhale. Then I am going to go hug a librarian. Ha
I miss reading a huge stack of magazines for a few hours. The libraries have so many to choose from, it’s amazing.
Love this!! When my local library re-opened to the public mid-summer I flew through the children’s section like a tornado, sweeping up piles of books for my daughter. I am not kidding, it was like Christmas morning when I returned home and she saw the haul.
One of my top favorite things is going to the library and getting a pile of books and coming home, having tea and picking up each book and anticipating how much I will love reading it. I have been having these moments since I was 11 and went to the bookmobile once a week, I would get the maximum number of books (as many about horses as possible) and go home to be with my books. I love that I love this about myself. Joy.
I thought I was the only one who had this little ritual!
Oh Cherie my son (7) is just like you and I love that about him! He’s got his own library card now, probably his most treasured belonging.
Libraries (and bookstores) give me the urge to poop after like 5 minutes inside. Anybody else?
Um, yes! I feel SEEN. That musky smell always gets to me.
All these years I thought I was the only one!
I’d give anything to sit in a carol and have quiet, uninterrupted time to get my homework done. Then treat myself to half hour looking at all the new non-fiction titles. (And it’s that time of year when I read Fellowship of the Ring, I need to borrow the beaten up copy that scores of other admirers have surely read lovingly.)
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