Libraries that I have used, worked at or simply visited!

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Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Clymer Library in the Heart of the Poconos



This library certainly brings back a lot of memories for me. During the time I worked at Skytop Lodge, I used to frequent this library during the late 1990s to attend a monthly program entitled "Foreign Film Night."

It is a small rural library in northeastern Pennsylvania, but already more than a decade ago, they were offering internet access, had a very respectable AV collection and were even able to offer up adult programming on a shoestring budget.


Orderly, well lit and very functional, this may very well be my favorite small library so far. Hopefully I will be able to make a return visit in the near future... and get my library card renewed!

http://www.clymerlibrary.org/

Friday, January 14, 2011

The Mecca of Public Libraries

Don't ask me why I've taken so long to post this library. I am from New York after all! Well, when it comes to public libraries, I challenge you to find one more famous than this!
Technically, this is a research library although it is open to the public and is part of NYPL, the New York Public Library System, which consists of over 80 branches.
the most famous lion in New York

the grand reading room

the map division room






an old postcard featuring the library








For a history on the library, click on this link. I would rather present to you a blurb from this book by Marilyn Johnson. In her chapter entitled "Gotham City", she gives a very vivid view on the inner workings of the old library.

"This library is huge. It encompasses two city blocks, millions of items, miles of shelves, hundreds of librarians, a cavernous storage space beneath Bryant Park, the whole thing humming like a freeway. You locate what you want in the digital catalog, an ever-expanding index of knowledge. You write down your name and the particulars of the item, its call number and title, on an old-fashioned clip with a stubby pencil. You have just used the most sophisticated tool in the library and the least sophisticated; the twenty-first-century library embraces both. A reference librarian checks the call number against a map of the library, tucks the slip into one of the 1911-era brass tubes, and sends your request whizzing through pneumatic pipes to a station deep in the building's bowels. If you're lucky, the book is where it is supposed to be and arrives at the call desk on a conveyer belt; the slip you sent out like a prayer is answered."