Getting Started  
RSS
Threads [ Previous | Next ]
Why do you love libraries?
Showing 18 results.
Why do you love libraries?
6:03 PM EST 2/6/08
Valentine's Day is coming up (I know that produces both excitement and horror for many of you), but we want to know about the true love of your life - libraries.

Tell us why you love libraries.

My love story:

My husband and I moved to a new neighborhood in south Seattle about a year ago. One day, when we were out on the front lawn, our neighbor, who knew my husband plays guitar, brought over a photocopy of a CD cover he had checked out of the library. We hadn't had much interaction with him other than a brief conversation when we had first moved in. He gave the photocopy to my husband and said that he was really excited that the library now carried this CD after he had requested it from them about a month before. He then told us about how we can request the library carry certain items. We had a nice conversation with him about music and the new library and from then on, we have had a cordial, neighborly relationship.

So why does this mundane story move me so much? Because it was this little piece of information checked out from the library that inspired a real face-to-face conversation between two neighbors. In our technology-insulated and suburbanized lives, where we have lost many of our opportunities to form face-to-face relationships with our neighbors, this was a transcendent moment. It was an example of how a library can facilitate strong communities through not just a program or outreach activity, but also through providing recreational materials, like music CDs, or a simple conversation, or the million other little things we do to fill the work day.

Emily
Re: Why do you love libraries?
8:05 PM EST 2/6/08 as a reply to Emily Inlow-Hood.
I love libraries because I believe they are an important part of a larger vision I have for economic equity. When I think about the zillions of times I've heard people talk about the library being the first place they realized that there was a world beyond their own experiences (usually in childhood), I am reminded of exactly how critical libraries are to that end.

My friend in library school once said to me: the first time that I realized it was ok to be who I am was in a library.

The library wasn't where I was when I first realized this, but it was the first place I was exposed to ideas outside of the very narrow world-view my parents had provided for me. It was a hard-bound copy of "Thoughts of Thoreau" and I got it at the Kitsap County Library in Port Orchard, WA.

True confession: I still have that book.
Re: Why do you love libraries?
8:43 AM EST 2/7/08 as a reply to Emily Inlow-Hood.
I love libraries for the blast of energy I receive every time I visit one. Whether it's OCLC's corporate library, an ARL library like Oklahoma State University (where I spoke a while back), or my local branches of the Columbus Metro and the Worthington Libraries, there is a buzz in the library. People are learning, enjoying new ideas or sounds or sights, they are discovering something that is going to rock their world or just help them relax after a busy day.

There are few places in the world where so much is available and so few demands are made.
Re: Why do you love libraries?
2:46 PM EST 2/9/08 as a reply to Emily Inlow-Hood.
I've been thinking about how to answer this, and realize it may have been easier to answer why I don't love libraries. Libraries are my religion...they tie together all my loves: community, learning, books, art, music, technology, story time, synchronicity, capacity building, partnerships, knowledge as power, meditation, noise, belonging, quality of life, jobs, hub, social capital, families, kids, social work, health, leadership, mentoring, comedy, public, equal access, education, information, architecture (physical and digital), dialog, debate, old stuff, new stuff, culture, documentation and free speech, to name a few.

love and be loved by libraries and the lives they touch.
Re: Why do you love libraries?
5:25 PM EST 2/8/08 as a reply to Emily Inlow-Hood.
One word best describes libraries for me: transformative. This power to transform, at both a personal and community level, is why I love libraries. As a kid and interminable daydreamer, I felt confined in our working-class, logging town. I regularly rode my bike to my small, brick library, where the stacks felt cavernous and secret. I studied atlases, browsed card files, and began to explore the world in that library – transforming how I viewed the world and myself in it.

Many years later I would find myself on a dusty bus headed to another small, brick library. This one sits in the center of Phalaubeni, a rural village in the Limpopo Province of South Africa. We’d been driving in the dark on a dirt road for about two hours when our driver started slow down and laid on the horn. Waving hands and smiles greeted our small team of librarians. In the month that I worked in Phalaubeni’s community library, I saw a community transformed by their cooperative efforts to provide more opportunities for themselves, and in particular, their children, through their library. I saw personal transformations in teachers who found resources to bring their classes to life; in teens that formed connections with Nelson Mandela and Desmond Tutu as they devoured biographies; in grandmothers that found a new space and a wider audience to bring their oral histories; and of course, in myself - how I viewed the world and myself in it.
-Zola
Re: Why do you love libraries?
6:54 PM EST 2/8/08 as a reply to Emily Inlow-Hood.
I love libraries for many reasons… the books, the research tools, the enabling of life long learning … all the usual suspects. But the main thing I dig about libraries is the reflection of them I see through my kids' eyes.

I've devolved into being a pretty pragmatic library _consumer_. I usually have a pre-defined material need, find and reserve the target of that need online, swing by my local branch, grab the books, and I'm gone.

However my kids have changed all of this. They remind me it isn't just a building full of product. To them, the library is an experience, a wandering journey that can (but doesn't have to) lead to a really excellent destination. Going to the library is fun -- they rank it up there with the zoo, going to grandma's house, or watching a movie. We go at least weekly, usually via foot or bike. During the trip, they chatter about how they'll use their library time: look videos, read, try the computes, find Maisy or Lemony Snicket books, read, talk to the librarian, read, join the book club, pick up holds, read, and more. They are very thoughtful planners and make creative decisions to maximize their library time.

Their energy has inspired me to be a more thoughtful library user. Once they've had enough of my hovering I take some time _wander_ as they execute those carefully crafted plans. I browse new book displays, sometimes finding an unexpected must-read. I scan community happenings and news posted on bulletin boards and feel connected to my neighborhood. I talk to my librarian. I people watch and take in the comings and going of my community. I see and chat with neighbors -- you know, those neighbors you wave at in passing but don't often share a conversation. It may only be a brief library stop (though honestly, it's rare to get the kids out in under an hour) but it's worth every minute.

The library slows us to a human-friendly speed. We make time to talk. We connect. We love our library.
Re: Why do you love libraries?
9:30 PM EST 2/8/08 as a reply to Emily Inlow-Hood.
Library love --it's an emotion that has been part of my being for so long that it's on a level with my love of family, love of nature. I can't imagine life without libraries. Not just my current neighborhood library or the one I grew up with, but all libraries everywhere. I love to visit libraries everywhere I travel, whether they be [url http://farm1.static.flickr.com/156/429436299_ccd344efdd_o.jpg ]grand[/url] or [url http://farm1.static.flickr.com/202/512820419_e1dc0f4c60_o.jpg ]humble[/url].

I lived in a community in the interior of Alaska that had no library. The gathering spot was the general store, a soulless place, offering little activity. What a hole there was where a library could be, where people could connect with each other and with the outside world, where questions could be answered and dreams fostered and culture renewed. The focal point was missing.

I see library love in the eyes of the people newly arrived in this country to whom I teach computer skills. It's a look of love mixed with disbelief that there could be something so wonderful and free as the public library and its services.
Re: Why do you love libraries?
2:42 PM EST 2/9/08 as a reply to Emily Inlow-Hood.
Libraries are our most democratic institution. They matter to everyone. This was brought home to me years ago when I was being recruited for the position of Director of the Cleveland Public Library. I flew into Cleveland, hopped into a taxi at the airport, and asked the driver to take me to the main library downtown. No address. No directions. Just take me to the library. For the entire trip the taxi driver told me how wonderful the library was. Not only did he know where it was but he - and his family and friends - used it regularly. He was inspiring.
Re: Why do you love libraries?
1:29 PM EST 2/11/08 as a reply to Emily Inlow-Hood.
I love that I never have had to explain to anyone what a library is. I love that when I tell people that I work for an organization that serves librarians, their response is always along the lines of "Ooooohhh, coooool!" -Sharon
Re: Why do you love libraries?
3:10 PM EST 2/12/08 as a reply to Emily Inlow-Hood.
I have been using, enjoying, and loitering in libraries all my life, both public and school, and consequently I always feel like I am in a familiar, safe place even if I go to a library I've never been to before. These days, I mainly use the Fremont branch of the Seattle Public Library (about 1-2 times per week, sometimes more), but I love visiting all the amazing new libraries our city's "Libraries for All" levy (http://www.spl.org/lfa/index.html) has resulted in.

I have realized lately that I am the odd person who actually enjoys going to the DMV because of the variety of people I see there - I think that my appreciation of libraries, both as a patron and as a licensed librarian, reflects this part of my personality. As we tend to meet people with similar experience, education, etc. in our workplaces, private social events, and other places in which we spend the majority of our time, it's refreshing to me to see new faces, talk to new people, and hear new ideas.

So, not only does my library offer me intellectual and creative growth through its materials and programming, it offers me the opportunity to connect with my community in a way that I don't often do, and I love it for that.
Re: Why do you love libraries?
4:43 PM EST 2/13/08 as a reply to Emily Warren.
When Willie Sutton was asked why he robbed banks he said it was because "that's where the money is."

I kinda feel that way about books (and, after their being read, knowledge) being in libraries.
Re: Why do you love libraries?
2:36 PM EST 2/18/08 as a reply to Bob Watson.
Free Knowledge - Bring Your Own Container
Re: Why do you love libraries?
2:11 AM EST 2/22/08 as a reply to < maddog >.
tee-hee. did you make that up? i like it and want to steal it for a blog post.
Re: Why do you love libraries?
12:12 PM EST 2/22/08 as a reply to Chrystie Hill.
Or put it on a bumper sticker... or a library book bag. Or (this is my Seattle showing), a coffee cup! ;-)
Re: Knowledge is free...
4:35 PM EST 2/26/08 as a reply to Chrystie Hill.
I am fairly sure the words are a slight paraphrase of a Terry Pratchett quote...
Re: Knowledge is free...
5:01 PM EST 2/26/08 as a reply to < maddog >.
And from the "free" pictures at [url http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Main_Page]Wikipedia Commons[/url], a picture of the Discworld librarian (see attached).

Attachments: 450px-Discworld-librarian.jpg (60.9k)   
Re: Why do you love libraries?
4:49 PM EDT 4/7/08 as a reply to Emily Inlow-Hood.
I have been going to a Library since I was in Grade school. Our town library was a small town library & another girl & I would visit it every Saturday night. We had a lot of fun. I have worked in a Library when I was in High School during my study hall period. This has continued to be a place I liked to visit & check out books to read in my adult life. One day it amazed me while standing in a Library, "Can you imagine how many hours are spent in writing just one book" Look how many books are on the shelves. Amazing!!!!
Re: Why do you love libraries?
2:51 PM EDT 4/23/08 as a reply to Emily Inlow-Hood.
I love libraries because, even though I am not a wealthy man, at the library I realize how rich I am.
Showing 18 results.