SEPTEMBER 13, 2009 10:18PM

Libraries Living, Libraries Dead

Rate: 18 Flag

 

If I remember my schoolboy history, Thomas Jefferson’s evacuation during the 1812 War was delayed as he tried to secure the fate of his books. Even as a ten year old, this didn’t seem strange to me. I placed a high value on my own library, which was pretty flush for a kid.

 

I’ve always had books around. I recall two of my earliest: a volume of Kipling’s Jungle Books and a pop-up book variant on Hickory Dickory Dock. I may have been barely four when I explored the spine on the pop-up and came across the bold words “Random House.” What could that be?

 

Today I still worry about my books. I even consider their fates post mortem—which is a kind of lunacy. I have several hundred, but my true concern is with a core, and most of them have been duded up with ex libris stickers. Those are the ones I hope to never be desperate enough to sell, never homeless enough to not shelter.

 

But this is not to be a taking of the pulse of my own library, not here and now. I present that I have my own, and after the fashion, I have taken an interest in the health of some other libraries. I use my hometown library—once top-rated in the nation—extensively. But that is for my pleasure. I also concern myself with libraries because I believe that a civilization will not long matter when its libraries fail.

 

A dramatic budget shortfall in Ohio has caused the funding for the library system in C-bus to be cut back to 1980 levels. Just in case you mistakenly thought Democrats were inexhaustibly perspicuous, it was the judgment of our Governor that this top-of-the-nation bibliophile daisy chain should be well-clipped. This motion was followed.

 

Well, I will grant that the money must be suffered from somewhere. Perhaps a reduction in the salary of state legislators…? In any case, The C-bus Met is biting the bullet, and the reduction in hours, staff, and availability became a reality last Tuesday.

 

Columbus has been in a bit of a spiral the past nine years. Normatively tepid in times boom and bust, Columbus has been trimming itself shoddy, and that was before the State got into the act. Rain does more civic work cleaning the minor debris of automobile touchés from the roadways and, well, the parks don’t have lights after dark. Not quite the mecca of business convention travel that they’d like to sell you.

 

Literacy is the lifeblood of Democracy (possibly why they are phasing it out), and the regular respiration of loaned works has meant that anyone who could prove an address could be exposed to Marx and Lincoln and Douglass and Learned Hand. As far as that goes, you could even groove to Adolf Hitler’s scintillating tabloid-style history, if that’s your thing. In other words—and words are what we aim for—this was the Garden of Eden you’ve heard tell of, complete with trees of knowledge and helpful serpents.

 

I despise writers who whine that they lose money on book sales because of libraries, when they ought to be down on their knees thanking whatever watchful eye is located out there somewhere West of Orion. Most writers will only have the library to keep their words in stock. There are very few Poes and Twains and even fewer Livys. Most writers will not find time—and capital—kind to their own currency.

 

I am not calling Columbus Metropolitan Library dead, by any means—but it has been substantially harmed. And I fear that in our continuous march towards historical irrelevance, this is one more mile marker—towards, not away from.

 

Just as Rush Limbaugh believes forests magically appear elsewhere on the globe to compensate for woodlands lost, another Ohio library has surged while one wanes—but it is not for general use. I recently attended the opening of the new Ohio State University Library, and what a chuckle that was.

 

Having been years since my schooldays there—and in confusion with my heavy utilization of the quality-over-quantity resources at Denison University—I can’t imagine why the OSU stocker needed a dramatic facelift. I assume space was the main motivator, but the speakers at the mall-like configuration’s door-swinger seemed mostly fixated on aesthetics.

 

Some of you may know that OSU is a powerhouse yet utilitarian state property, with a cancer hospital that is considered superior to most of the nation’s private affairs. OSU is big in every way, but bigness is not the same as esteemed. OSU would very much like to be nationally respected, which has led to some very ill-fitting parts, such as the misbegotten reign of Karen A. Holbrook as President. She did not bring prestige, but she did bring Eastern Establishment-style contempt with her—thus the unhappy marriage.

 

Alas, OSU is a football school, in a football culture. So it was that at the opening of the library, esteemed speakers were not scholars and were not scientists, but none other than Buckeye Coach Jim Tressel. Tressel had been given the steering arm on the library funding committee, no doubt to give the project credibility.

 

Joining Big Jim (actually rather slight of stature) on the mall dais was many-moons-ago double Heisman Trophy winner Archie Griffin. Nothing against Archie, but he is prone, as Marlon Brando once said of someone else, to show up for the opening of a phone booth at a gas station. Archie makes up for his frequency of appearance with affability, a resource sterling in former Buckeye star players.

 

Both gentlemen served as draws, but even so, the crowd was mostly polyester-bedecked elders. There was that same blind stop-and-stare quotient as is remarkable in the halls of a VA Hospital. The absence of Beautiful People at the library opening (and with football fever in the wings!) perhaps shadows the fate of the C-bus Met with even more charcoal. About libraries, no one now cares. Isn’t all that available on the Intertubes?

 

Some speaker or another, while I sought some cool air absent from this stifling glassine envelope of academia, made a crack about the erotic adventurings in the old library. It’s true. The OSU Library was long known as a quick interface for casual cruisers and end-of-exams blowjobbery. Even the polyester crowd managed a dirty chuckle.

 

Piquant to me, because books themselves have long seemed quasi-erotic, in the same way that musicians often fondle longingly the frets of their guitars. Books have long seemed to me suitable companions, ones that never stop talking yet never quite interrupt. I am pleasured to be lectured by minds wiser than mine, and if not wiser, at least minds with a good deal more sense of fun. Books provide the words of masterminds living and dead, and if it remains a one-way dialog, it is surely not a dialog without profit.

 

There may have always been libraries, at least from that moment when records were struck and fired in clay, and businesses needed to warehouse accounts. But there have not always been libraries for general use. There have not always been references for the many. The most locked-up libraries were in that era we call The Dark Ages.

 

I am suspicious of the Internet. Despite its pretentions to print, it is much more oral in kind and temporary in nature. It is damned more effective in changing the facts to suit New Necessities than imagining Winston Smith burning old clippings and filing amended histories. Wikipedia skins itself over with the ease of selecting the next track on your IPod. In a library, the counterfeit of an article would have been a noticeable attempt.

 

I fear for the libraries, that they might go not from burning, but from lack of funding, lack of interest, and the fading cares of the noonday football crowd, as yet another two-point conversion consumes our personal sovereignties.

 -30-

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Comments

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Pre-emptively rated, and going back up to read. First? :-)
oh christ. this is excellent. i rated it and will be back to re-read. but True Blood finale comes first, as much as i love you. i'll leave you to your cool kid minions.
Same thing going on out here in California, Scoub. Also? They're trying to shut down the state parks. Too EXPENSIVE.

Gah.
I worry similarly about libraries. In fact, in 1999, when everyone was stocking up in case of a major meltdown at the turn of the century, my plan was to loot the library. I figured everyone else would head to the stores to loot. I'd protect and care for the books, and the books would take care of me.
I still like standing in a musty Library isle.
I'd go to a filthy 3 X 5 dewey-decimal file.
Cards were dirty as a lewd internet date.
I never ever dated someone I no can see.
It's hard in person? Women see and gag.
If Ya can't see me? Why not type naked?
gads.
I do miss he old reliable public Library.
I admit. Internets makes Ya smell bad.
I never shout on webs. Ya a nice baby.
I never hear on internet ref:`testicle?
Ya can't say any cuss words:`tummy?
Ya can't touch the thigh and see lips?
Ya make me want to go to Paw Paw?
Paw Paw naked club has cook book?
Ya can cook poor boy Pa Pa Paw pie?
Verb: they've been doing much thinking about our parks. here in Columbus, WE VOTED TO RAISE TAXES rather than cut the police/ fire forces...

T'LEK--I can't compete with big budget tv...

Owl: that was a good plan.

Arthur: I still have fond memories of that card catalog. It was elegant, almost a pre-Industrial relic. Here I go...libraries are like cemeteries to me, its where I go to be close to the beloved dead...
A terrific tribute to books, libraries and reading.
I, for one, am not the kind of writer who whines about libraries and book sales. On the contrary, I agree with you completely on this point. (Besides, libraries do pay for the books.) When I was in DC for the Obama Inauguration, I stopped at the Library of Congress and was absolutely thrilled to see that they had all my books there. A waste of space in my humble opinion, but a thrill anyway.

Excellent piece. R
Same here. One of the first casualties of the "economic downturn" was the local library. Closed on weekends! Nighttime hours curtailed. The local newspaper didn't seem to notice and never raised an eyebrow. Bigger fish to fry I guess -- property taxes, zoning laws, local political feuds.

One of these days I'm going to be assaulted by a gang of drunks when I move because the truck will be loaded with boxes of Canadian Mist, Captain Morgan and Smirnoff on them. The drunks will be disappointed to find the only intoxicants inside are Bradbury, Twain, London, Rabelais, King, etc. But these are the intoxicants I value most.

If I ever write something that winds up published and circulates a little while, I don't think anything would be better when I am eighty than to find it on the shelf of the local library a couple of shelves below John Steinbeck.

Anyhow, as always, blah, blah, blah, looking forward to your next post.
To begin, this piece is timely with the notification of the Free Library of Philadelphia shutting down. I'll link below:

http://libwww.freelibrary.org/closing/http://libwww.freelibrary.org/closing/

A library closing down thousand of miles away from me, in another country no less depressed me more than I could have anticipated.

It's funny..I was prepared to go on a rant here, as I am normally prone to do when I'm infuriated by something, but I just feel listless at the moment. It's a body blow below the belt personally, and I've yet to catch my proverbial breath.

I'm just sad really. I'm sad because I know where this is leading. I have a friend who just bought a Kindle and was going on about how he's downloaded all these books to it and I feel like kicking his ass. I feel like an inquisitioner and he has been convicted of heresy.

There is an organic relationship with books, that many people just don't understand. To feel the pages, the binding..the smell.

I don't know what to say. You're just a bunch of cocksuckers really.

My problem is that I never think so much about what is currently happening as I think about what this will inevitably lead to. None of the answers that come to mind are positive in any way.
Very sad. But it's not like that everywhere I hope. I recently visited the tiny town where I grew up and the little library had a do over a couple years ago. Inside and out. I visited to use a computer a couple of time while I was up there and it was quite nice though noisier than I remember with people talking normally rather than in whispers. Still, their hours had been trimmed a bit. Although every nickel counts, I can't see where trimming library hours could amount to much more than hurting the librarian's income and the educational bottom line.
"Literacy is the lifeblood of Democracy." Abso-friggin-lutely! Great piece. It's a scary world where some have access but no relationship with books, let alone libraries. Rated.
JB--I share yr thrill vicariously.

TStone: speaking of intoxicants, Ohio divested itself of all its liquor store holdings a few years ago. Not sure why, but its a cinch the clerks are no longer making $18 an hour...

Manchu: Absolutely. I have nothing more I could say, only to add...
MRodgers, in this case, the BUYING power of the library was also cut back to 1980 levels. This means no new books, or precious few. I can't think of a bigger disaster for a library than not ebing able to buy books.

This means problems in rennovations, maintenance--need I go on? My concerns for the incomes of those librarians are substantial as well. Librarians are not exactly rolling in the dough...
this is wht I appreciate about the West. can relate to your concern... we moved a lot and inevitably books got left behind. it is very difficult to replace books lost in transition... for instance the copy of Sherlock Holmes I lost tht had original picture plates or the copy of The Alchemist with the green cover. It is out of circulation - you don't get that anymore and the others never do feel like 'my' book somehow, they feel like borrowed books :)

Manchuwok shdnt hve used cocksuckers in that way.
Rolling, "that" or "those" books are indeed an obsession. About a year ago, I bought the entire Golden Book Encyclopedia set, which I coveted since age five. I am unlikely to now use them frequently for reference, but I HAD to scratch that ancient itch.

In the matter of books, I am again thinking like a musician. I know exactly what I want. When I see it, I'll know it. I will know my definitive replacement for The Jungle Books when I find them...
Oh yes books are sexy. Were I to find a love that I could spread so pliantly upon my bed that would expose himself silently while telling all I would turn his pages until I fell asleep with him on my chest and then dream him as a dream.
Funny as a guitar player since I was four and a reader from about the same time it is the chest that I associate with the two. Each rests on your chest and reverberate into you.
Here's hoping to fall asleep with some scoubi scribblings someday.
Libraries in my neck of the woods are adapting and becoming centers of learning and of public meetings, with lots of emphasis on computerized materials. I think they will morph and remain culural centers where people can actually interact.
I fear for them, too. What we all lose is immeasurable.

A few years ago a big new library was built downtown here. The first time I walked in, I felt like I was in a Borders. I was sad.
We need less pomp and more circumstance in life. You identify the core problem magnificently.
libraries in the poorest neighborhoods and communities are closing first. it's not a good thing for democracy....
I seen you in China town, no?
I seen you in China town, no?