Library – Love or Loathe?
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That is sad. I'd never heard anything about it before.Maud Fitch wrote:Ah, I bet every librarian in the world wishes that were true!!A24 wrote:...I just love walking into a library though just knowing that I could have any of those books for free and read until my heart's content! I envy those girls that work there that actually get paid to read all day!
On a sad note, while the world mourns the tragic loss of life on 9/11, the twin towers of the World Trade Center were also home to twenty-one libraries which were destroyed including the Journal of Commerce.
Lost forever are letters written by Helen Keller and forty-thousand photographic negatives of John F. Kennedy taken by the president's personal cameraman, sculptures by Alexander Calder and Auguste Rodin plus the 1921 agreement which created the agency that built the World Trade Center and tens of thousands of records, irreplaceable archives, historical documents and art works.
Two weeks after the attacks, archivists and librarians gathered at New York University to discuss how to document what was lost, forming the World Trade Center Documentation Task Force.
If you are interesting in reading more from Cristian Salazar of Associated Press (e.g. the CIA had a clandestine office on the 25th floor).
I love libraries, and don't have money or space for more of my own really.
I took the 5 yo nephew to his favorite library and decided not to risk paying for a lost book, so as we left I let him buy one from the used book corner for 25 cents. The librarian thanked him for helping the library. He showed that book to all his friends and had us reread it constantly. I'll always remember the moment when I told him it was his and he didn't have to return it.
- Maud Fitch
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That's a lovely story, Gold Star. It would give anyone who has similar childhood memories that warm feeling of first ownership. I can remember the librarian reading aloud Little Golden Books then the first time I borrowed from our local library without my mother. So grown up!Gold Star wrote:I love libraries, and don't have money or space for more of my own really.
I took the 5 yo nephew to his favorite library and decided not to risk paying for a lost book, so as we left I let him buy one from the used book corner for 25 cents. The librarian thanked him for helping the library. He showed that book to all his friends and had us reread it constantly. I'll always remember the moment when I told him it was his and he didn't have to return it.
What do you borrow? Books, CDs, Magazines?
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Last year, when I turned 40, I purchased a Nook. I love it! However, after using it for a year, I found that I missed the look, feel, smell of a book. (I know that might sound corny, lol!)
So,the past two months, I have improvised and compromised. I now read my Nook, and buy used books at the library. It's the best of both worlds!
- Maud Fitch
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It sounds like the perfect situation to me.Julie1014 wrote:So,the past two months, I have improvised and compromised. I now read my Nook, and buy used books at the library. It's the best of both worlds!
I read about a NSW library (across the border from my State) where they hold F.O.O.D. Week. It stands for Food Of Orange District and there's an annual event entitled "Books On The Menu" which invites more than 70 guests. There are discussions about wine and fresh produce, food stories, recipes, cookbooks and anecdotes from local foodies. Apparently the crowd asks questions, enjoys local wines and delicious local produce created into meals by the Librarian Masterchefs. It sounds like great fun and, of course, new cookbooks recently acquired by the library are available for loan.
I wonder if other public libraries do this?
- Gannon
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Maud Maud Maud you never cease to amaze me with all the "Stuff" you know and come up with. It does sound like a great event and a wonderful idea. Hopefully ideas and events like this will be copied and may just save some of our dwindling libraries.Maud Fitch wrote:It sounds like the perfect situation to me.Julie1014 wrote:So,the past two months, I have improvised and compromised. I now read my Nook, and buy used books at the library. It's the best of both worlds!
I read about a NSW library (across the border from my State) where they hold F.O.O.D. Week. It stands for Food Of Orange District and there's an annual event entitled "Books On The Menu" which invites more than 70 guests. There are discussions about wine and fresh produce, food stories, recipes, cookbooks and anecdotes from local foodies. Apparently the crowd asks questions, enjoys local wines and delicious local produce created into meals by the Librarian Masterchefs. It sounds like great fun and, of course, new cookbooks recently acquired by the library are available for loan.
I wonder if other public libraries do this?
- Teesie
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My library is the same. $1 for hardcover and 50 cents for paperback. It is such a great deal.Teesie wrote:I usually just borrow books from the library instead of spending extra money. When I do buy books, it's usually at the semi-anuall library book sales. Hardback - $1 paperback - $0.50 They're used but they read just as good as a new one. I rarely ever buy books new.
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- Maud Fitch
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Your comments interested me because I don't ever remember my library selling second-hand books. My investigations unearthed the fact that Cystic Fibrosis Queensland (a charity which develops national CF education programs) has two book shops which sell all the ex-library books from 33 public libraries in my city. Prices are hardbacks or paperbacks, large or small $3.50 each or 7 books for $20.00 which is good compared to the price of a new book here.Julie1014 wrote:My library is the same. $1 for hardcover and 50 cents for paperback. It is such a great deal.Teesie wrote:I usually just borrow books from the library instead of spending extra money. When I do buy books, it's usually at the semi-anuall library book sales. Hardback - $1 paperback - $0.50 They're used but they read just as good as a new one. I rarely ever buy books new.
What a great description!Bergamot wrote:I love a library it's just like an aladdin's cave, you never know what you may discover.
- Bighuey
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- Maud Fitch
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It was run in a number of libraries throughout my city and everyone is hoping our local library repeats it this summer. Live action has to be better than kids staring at a screen all day!
-- Thu Nov 17, 2011 4:50 am --
Tip: If you are interested in architecture, type "the most beautiful libraries in the world" into Google and be amazed!Maud Fitch wrote:Summertime is coming and at my nearest public library last year the RSPCA team delivered a fantastic wildlife session for the children’s Summer Library Program. Wildlife Crusaders, a fun and interactive holiday workshop, demonstrated how we can live in harmony with animals. Through story-telling, the youngsters explored the needs of local wildlife and discovered how their actions impact on the environment and the animals who rely on us to survive. There was a Koala and some very cute and cuddly animals.
It was run in a number of libraries throughout my city and everyone is hoping our local library repeats it this summer. Live action has to be better than kids staring at a screen all day!
- love_aud
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I am thinking of opening a sanctuary for abused and battered books, please do not hesitate to send them to me, I will look after them.love_aud wrote:I love the smell of the library and going to the library always makes me feel right at home, but I love having my own copies of books, then I don't have to really be very careful with the books, because somehow I always seem to ruin them.



- RuqeeD
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Ahh some of them are just gorgeous! I love the more old-fashioned ones with the wooden benches and the mahogany bookshelves. I feel like I step back in time when I visit a library like that.Maud Fitch wrote: Tip: If you are interested in architecture, type "the most beautiful libraries in the world" into Google and be amazed!
- love_aud
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Ant wrote:I am thinking of opening a sanctuary for abused and battered books, please do not hesitate to send them to me, I will look after them.love_aud wrote:I love the smell of the library and going to the library always makes me feel right at home, but I love having my own copies of books, then I don't have to really be very careful with the books, because somehow I always seem to ruin them.![]()
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