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Booklist |
Library Journal
Reviewed March 11, 2008 by Norman Oder
Verdict: This self-described "humor memoir" provides a
mostly enjoyable glimpse into the sometimes maddening world of
public librarianship. Footnotes, asides ("short pointless
interludes"), and other McSweeney’s-esque touches can be
grating; acknowledgement that "many things…have been exaggerated
to make this book more entertaining" affirms a
not-always-reliable narrator. Smirkier than Don Borchert’s wry
library memoir Free for All, it nonetheless provides real
insight—assuming you can believe it. Click here for Douglas’s
blog.
Background: A college student who fell into a job as a
public library page, then went to library school at 23, Douglas,
now a 28-year-old Anaheim Public Library (CA) staffer and
McSweeney’s contributor, looks skeptically at the value of his
LIS education. Life in the library runs the gamut, including
bureaucratic slogging (staff committees, grant writing), minor
crisis (rats, masturbators, crazy patrons), and productive work.
Douglas holds forth on fellow librarians—they lack social skills
and don’t read—but more productively applies his skepticism to a
fast-food chain plumping summer reading or politicians who
neglect the library. Still, a broad variety of patrons—kids,
teens, seniors, immigrants, the homeless—make use of the library
and harvest his sincerity: "I was staying because I liked
helping people."—Norman Oder, Library Journal |