Evanston, I Love You, But You Are Weird

September 11, 2019

Let me be clear that prior to taking my current position as the Collection Development Manager of Evanston Public Library, my primary experience was in purchasing children’s literature. Evanston has provided a learning curve these last four years, and I believe that at this point I have a pretty clear sense of what the city does and does not like to read. Because I moved here from Manhattan, it is difficult to compare the reading habits of the city to any other location. And yet I believe I can say, with utmost sincerity and solemnity, that Evanston, Illinois has some very odd reading habits.

Very odd.

First off, let us consider the most popular display I ever created. If you enter the library you will often find a number of thematic displays situated on the first and second floor. I believe that at this moment in time there is a display of science for laymen, of pirates, and of newspaper heroes. Thinking up these displays can prove a challenge, but there’s always something new to try. So what, you may ask, was the most popular display I ever made? There is no question in my mind. The topic:

Grammar.

I kid you not. Books about grammar. I literally could not keep that display filled. There were the usual suspects like Eats, Shoots & Leaves, and then there were more obscure books with names like Do I Make Myself Clear? Why Writing Well Matters and How Language Began: The Story of Humanity’s Greatest Invention. Such books as these are catnip to this town. I can only assume that the new book I just purchased, Have You Eaten Grandma?: Or, the Life-Saving Importance of Correct Punctuation, Grammar, and Good English by Gyles Brandreth is destined to become a hit as well.

But even more interesting than what Evanstonians borrow is what they steal. Like any public library, we have to deal with theft. An expensive prospect, much of my time is spent re-ordering those books that light fingers have slipped from our stacks. Most thefts are easy to predict. Name the popular book or movie/TV series and you’ll inevitably see copies marked as “Missing” in our records. But recently I stumbled upon a massive number of missing items on a single, specific topic. I was pulling books for a display on the first floor when I noticed that 1 . . . 2 . . . 27 books were missing. What was this enticing topic that was walking out our doors never to be seen again?

Food memoirs.

I kid you not. Someone has been stealing food memoirs from the library. 1,000 Foods to Eat Before You Die? Gone. The Deluxe Food Lover’s Companion? Gone. Letters to a Young Chef? Gone gone gone.

All this has led me to one final and inescapable conclusion. Evanston, you are a city of nerds. And I, your nerdy Materials Specialist, will do what I can to meet your wonderful, strange, odd little needs.


The Book Thief, Italian Style

December 3, 2013

theft-articleInlineFormer library director Marino Massimo De Caro is accused of theft and embezzlement of thousands of volumes of rare books, including “centuries-old editions of Aristotle, Descartes, Galileo and Machiavelli” from the Girolamini Library in Naples. The president of the Italian Antiquarian Bookseller’s Association noted that “this is the biggest books scandal to hit in the past 150 or 200 years.” At the center of this plot to remove these books, Mr. De Caro “a character who seems to have been conjured jointly by Jorge Luis Borges and the Italian crime novelist Andrea Camilleria”, said he took the books in order “to raise money to restore the library.” As an interesting aside, Mr. De Caro, who doesn’t have a college degree, apparently became director of the Girolamini Library through political connections. Read the entire fascinating NYT article here – this is the stuff movies are made of.

Laura


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