That’s
the danger of condensed news, it misses out so much. The actual article is here:
So
the vital conditional is missing – ‘or made relevant again.’ She agrees that ‘…
libraries have a social function. Making them free up to 18 gives every
citizen, rich or poor, an opportunity to borrow books and use WiFi internet
access, something which may not be available at home.’ That social function is
important.
Most
of us probably tend to take for granted the existence of our town libraries –
at least until they’re transformed into ‘information centres’ or threatened
with closure.
In
the old days – the 1920s and 1930s, many a self-made man (and woman) spent
hours in the library in order to improve their lot. They understood that education
– and knowledge – is power. Granted, much of that information is now available
a mouse-click away. Though the source perhaps needs double-checking; and that
was true of the printed word, too. Received wisdom was not always correct. But
the inescapable fact was that libraries liberated young minds, and still can do
so.
The
demand on the town or city’s purse grows every year; yet they never seem to
economise with smaller offices or make do with older furniture, I notice, but
they do seem to want to make cuts, whatever the political affiliation. And
repeatedly in their sights is the local library.
Be
vigilant, fight for your library.
Many
an author has written a dedication to his or her librarians. Here is but one,
from my own library, slightly shortened:
‘During
the 1930s and 1940s anyone writing science fiction did so almost exclusively
for magazines. Then in the early 1950s the magazine market began to die and
paperback books took over. But the paperback books were on the stand one week
and gone the next.By the time an author’s newest book came out his older books
had disappeared… a few of us could afford to be full-time writers of science
fiction, and that was possible only because libraries continued to be the only
real market for hardcover science fiction. The libraries bought these books on
a regular basis, shelved them, and made them continuously available to readers;
and in this way libraries kept both science fiction and those of us who wrote
it, alive. To librarians everywhere, this book is dedicated.’ – Gordon R
Dickson, Time Storm (1977)
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