A Librarian's Open Shelf eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 358 pages of information about A Librarian's Open Shelf.

A Librarian's Open Shelf eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 358 pages of information about A Librarian's Open Shelf.

A few of those questioned relate their experiences at some length.  Says one boy:  “A boy friend of mine said he belonged to this library and he found some very good books here.  He asked me if I wanted to join; I said yes.  He told me I would have to get a reference.  I got one, and joined this library.”  Another one reports:  “I saw a boy in the street and asked him where he was going.  He said he was going to the library.  I asked him what the library was and he told me; so I came up here and have been coming ever since.”

Critical judgment is shown by some of the young people.  One boy says:  “I heard all the other boys saying it was a good library and that the books were better kept than in a majority of libraries.”  A girl says that friends “told her what nice books were in this library.”  In one case a boy’s brother “told him he could get the best books here for his needs.”

The combination of man and book seems to be very attractive.  One child “saw a boy in school with a book, telling what a boy should know about electricity; I wanted to read that book and joined the library.”  Others “followed a crowd of little boys with books”; “saw children taking books out of the building and asked them about joining”; “saw a boy carrying books and asked if there was a library in the neighborhood.”  A woman “saw a child with a library book in the park and asked her for the address of the library.”  Sometimes the book alone does the work, as shown by the following laconic report:  “Found a book in the park; took it to the library; joined it.”  A cause of sorrow to many librarians who have decided ideas regarding literature for children will be the report of a boy who exclaimed:  “Horatio Alger did it!” On being asked to explain, he said that a friend had brought one of Alger’s books to his house and that he was thereby attracted to the library.

Among those who were brought in by relatives are children who were first carried by their mothers to the library as infants and so grew naturally into its use.  Sometimes the influence works upward instead of downward, for several adults report that their children brought them to the library or induced them to visit it.  One man reports that he “got married and his wife induced him to come.”

Some of the reasons given are curious.  A few are unconnected with the use of books.  One girl came to the library because “it was a very handy library”; another, because she “saw it was a nice place to come to on a rainy day.”  Still another frankly avows that “it was the fad among the boys and girls of our neighborhood; we used to meet at the library.”  A postman reported that he entered the library first in the line of his duty, but was attracted by it and began to take out books.  A clergyman had his attention called to the library by requests from choir-boys that he should sign their application blanks; afterwards thinking that he might find books there for his own reading, he became a regular user.  One user came

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A Librarian's Open Shelf from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.