Don’t Panic, Bring a Towel
Lately my ears have been ringing with the words of the eternal Douglas Adams. In “The Hitch Hiker’s Guide to the Galaxy” Englishman Arthur Dent finds himself planetless (the Earth having been inconveniently demolished to make way for a hyperspatial express route) (don’t worry; the dolphins bring it back later). His one constant helpmeet is the eponymous guidebook, The Hitch Hiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, the principal advice of which is “Don’t panic. Bring a towel.”
This is my last column for the Enterprise. I am setting off on an adventure which I sincerely hope will not involve the destruction of the planet. Even a small, cross-continent move, though, inspires panic and the need for a nice, fluffy towel.
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There are so many books and library stories to choose among that it is very difficult to pick a topic for a last column. Fortunately the President – yes, the one in Washington – suggested a topic. Here follows a short state of the libraries address to the people of Barnstable.
How much did your village libraries offer to you last year? What did we do? Here’s a snapshot in numbers:
Hours open: 13,252
Items circulated: 604,485
Items in collection: approximately 300,000
Yearly attendance: 494,656
Children’s programs offered: 975
Children’s programs attendance: 17,961
Adult and Young Adult programs: 666
Adult and Young Adult programs attendance: 10,482
Reference questions: 43,223
Many thanks to Centerville’s Director Beth Butler for compiling these statistics.
The stories in words I’ve tried to tell through these columns. As Library Directors we must keep a sharp eye on statistics, but I think I speak for my colleagues when I say that each of those numbers brings a flood of faces and voices to mind. How many of those items circulated started with a question: “I loved this book, now what should I read next?” Every children’s program brings a memory of music and glittery crafts; every reference question a personal quest for understanding. Every transaction is attached to some person’s unique story. We are privileged to share these stories with you.
We remember the people who said a special “thank you” for a program on suicide prevention or substance abuse. We grin for the people who used our resources to find jobs, and came in waving acceptance letters. Some of those items circulated and reference questions were transmuted by patrons into brand new books, which we added to our library collections where they will be checked out and used to answer new questions that may turn into new books… How could you not love this?
Yet all around us, with library use rising in many places (Cotuit saw 32% more library visits in December, 2011 than December, 2010, for example), library funding and support are not keeping pace. The Massachusetts Board of Library Commissioners reports that “More people visit their local library each year than attend entire seasons of the Celtics, Patriots, Bruins, and Red Sox games combined. Entrepreneurs, students, job seekers, the homeless, the affluent, new Americans, children, young adults, adults and seniors, literate and illiterate, all find a path to success at the library.”
So why don’t we hear more about libraries? We’re hearing plenty about the Patriots.
Perhaps we need a reality show with avid readers being voted out of the library? Or commentators doing color commentary and play-by-play: “Joe Black has entered the library making a beeline for the new fiction, but here come Mehitabel Green on his right. Joe feints toward James Patterson…but no, Mehitabel got to the new Daniel Silva first. Score one for the Friends of the Library… but here comes another Cribbage Club member, picking off Michael Connelly straight from the shelving cart! What a play!”
Maybe not. Maybe we just need your help from time to time to spread the word. This year, why not send valentines to your legislators, local and state, declaring your undying love for your local libraries? I’ll be in New Mexico by then, but I’ll keep an eye on how well you’ve raised funding levels. Thanks!
So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish
The Barnstable Village Libraries column will continue next week. I will be reading from a distance, because I can’t wait to see what Lucy Loomis of Sturgis has to say. I only wish there were space for Lucy’s extraordinary photos.
It’s been fun to “talk” with all of you through this column and the many in-person conversations it has started. May the Village Libraries continue strong and happy, and best wishes to all who take extraordinary adventures within their walls and within the covers of their books, electronic or otherwise.
Should you have a lingering question about the column headings this week, find a helpful reference librarian, or pick up a very funny series of books from Douglas Adams.