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Quiet, Please: A Memoir in Libraries
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Reviewed April 16, 2008 by Lara Killian
This is a niche memoir in a world currently
stuffed full of niche memoirs. Only this one is tucked into a
smaller niche on the far side of the niche packed full of
memoirs, because most of its readers will be librarians or
aspiring librarians and possibly the people who love them.
In fact, I’ve worked in a handful of libraries and always
thought I would like to continue doing so in the future. After
reading this book, I still think I may want to work in
libraries, but if your faith in your library-centric future is
faint, you might want to skip this memoir. Or else read it in
order to convince yourself that your true career path lies
elsewhere.
The funniest material is about the crazy patrons who flock to
branch libraries in Californian cities. They probably exist in
most places, but the mild Californian climate probably attracts
a higher than normal concentration. Clearly, Douglas’ memories
about patrons who range from mildly neurotic to completely
bonkers to your run-of-the-mill angry teenager are more
interesting than describing the mild-mannered pensioners or
soccer moms who must surely have also patronized the library at
some point.
Sometimes it is Douglas’ coworkers who make the least sense,
with their committees and regulations and policies. However, the
reader gets the idea that these sometimes bizarre rules are in
place because there are some very strange situations that need
to be addressed. Should there be a policy regarding how long
patrons are allowed to remain in the restroom? Or whether it is
acceptable to bring your own casserole into the library and ask
the reference desk worker to heat it up in the staff room so you
can continue playing computer games without going home to feed
your children? Is serving free popcorn to all and sundry a good
idea when some patrons would prefer their books sans grease
spots? Yet who doesn’t love free popcorn? As Douglas’ boss
remarks, “...more important than books is community! Libraries
are about community! And community loves popcorn!’
Douglas has a knack for observing people. That said, his
inconsistency in mentioning co-workers by name or maintaining a
coherent time-line for the book is distracting, at times. The
author resorts to many, many footnotes and sub-sections within
the chapters to distract the reader from the general
disorganization of the narrative, and the book can be thoroughly
enjoyed if the reader simply takes it as more of a collection of
anecdotes than a cohesive tale. One chapter, for example,
discusses In-N-Out hamburger vouchers given as prizes for
reading achievement. Douglas notes first that though he has not
eaten beef for several years he can still remember how good an
In-N-Out burger tasted; four pages later he remarks that the
last time he ate there he couldn’t remember what it tasted like.
Funny thing, memory. And Douglas does go right ahead and admit
that his memoir is embellished for the entertainment of the
reader. Better to come straight out and declare such a thing
than to pretend that it is possible for memoirs to be entirely
factual. Refreshing, really.
Though Douglas periodically proclaims himself to be a jerk, the
only time when he comes across as truly pathetic is when
describing his boredom in the early stages of his library
career, and his inability to stay away from that black hole of
time wasting solitary game, Freecell. In a chapter which
explains ‘How to Do Nothing and Get Paid’ he notes: “I start
each day telling myself I’m not going to play Freecell. It
should be easy to resist. I hate that game. It’s pointless and
you accomplish nothing. And yet by the end of each day I have
played more than a few hands.”
Along with playing Freecell, and also being an occasional jerk,
Douglas is relatable to the reader because that’s probably what
most of us would do when faced with a tedious, quiet Saturday
morning and the need to do something more than stare at our
hands (Douglas describes doing that as well, and from various
angles) in order to continue receiving a paycheck.
From death threats to a demolished library to the uselessness of
library school, Douglas explores his early declaration that
libraries are not a home for people who love books (including
librarians who are not inclined to read for pleasure), but
rather exist as a gateway to a better future for people who make
use of available resources. The appeal of the job, ultimately,
is to be able to help the people in the community. They are what
sustains the library, and given meaning to Douglas’ job.
Though Douglas starts out with what he later recognizes as a
naïve and hopeful attitude about helping people evaluate
resources and think critically about things like current events
and mass media, the narrative soon changes its focus to explore
how the library as an institution can hope to stay alive in
modern times. The author realizes that the well-being of the
community must be a primary concern for the librarian, whether
that means running reading incentive programs with fast-food
coupon prizes to get hungry kids a hot meal, or ignoring the
homeless person in the corner who comes in for a safe place to
sleep. “People made the library. That’s what made a library.
Without them, all the sacredness was gone. It was just a
building with books.”
Douglas advocates a changing role for the modern library, where
many patrons come in and ignore shelves full of books in order
to update their MySpace profile or do research on Wikipedia. He
envisions a library that is more like a massive chain bookstore,
offering food and drink and many electrical outlets in which to
plug in the average person’s assortment of devices—cell phone,
iPod, laptop. Indeed, without making some concessions to our
electronics-saturated lifestyle, the branch library may be a
dying breed. Young, computer-savvy librarians like Douglas are
exactly the antidote.
Douglas rambles about his library experience on a regular basis
on his blog, Speak Quietly. He also provides periodic
contributions to McSweeney’s, Dispatches from a Public
Librarian. If there weren’t enough stories for you about crazy
people doing strange things in libraries in this memoir, that’s
where you can find more. |
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