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Quiet, Please: A Memoir in Libraries
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Charleston Post and Courier
Reviewed June 21, 2008 by Summer Mauldin
The field of librarianship is perhaps one of the most
stereotyped job positions, mainly because at some point in
recent history the cliches were all true.
Scott Douglas, author of "Quiet, Please," represents the
burgeoning sect of hipster librarians who are shattering the
bun-wearing shushers of the past.
Douglas' memoir chronicles his five years in the Anaheim
(Calif.) Public Library system, starting as a library page (the
lowest niche on the intricately carved library totem pole) to
earning his Library Science degree (which is still low on the
pole). Through a host of oddball characters and situations,
Douglas shows how public libraries are thriving amid the current
technological boom. They are places rife with tragic-comic
tales, where no amount of academic degrees or distance on an
organization chart keeps one from the gritty business of public
service.
Though Douglas' book offers some humorous moments between
co-workers and patrons, it lacks a unified message. More
problematic is its copious footnotes and lengthy asides that
grow tiresome. The book might be a useful tool for those
considering a library career, but for others, it may prove too
tedious and unremarkable to pursue. It does show the library is
more than a storehouse for books; it is a stage where a cast of
characters roams. |
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