Libraries, libraries everywhere…and not a book to read
Click the link: Libraries, libraries everywhere, and not a book to read?
ACW blog - September 7th 2024
Library: from Latin librarium – a bookcase, chest for books
Local libraries were places where even the squeak of a shoe on the shiny floor was frowned upon and silence was fiercely enforced by stern ladies with oversized glasses and penetrating stares.
Nevertheless, I spent a fair bit of time in my local library (Whitstable, Kent) during school years rooting around various sections: science, maths, the paranormal, science fiction, and history all come to mind.
It was at University, though, that I successfully distracted myself from my Chemistry degree with fiction - others might have done so with copious amounts of alcohol and other synthetic means – but my forays into Mordor, East of Eden, the Russian Gulag, or Corfu with the Durrels, seemed to be just as intoxicating.
Michael Rosen, former Children’s Laureate, has been voicing his ‘horror’ at the latest round of library closures: ‘
Every time I hear of a library being closed I find it…horrifying… a decimation of our cultural entitlement…many children come from families where they either don’t think to buy books or can’t afford to buy books… we’re taking away free books. At the very moment we’re saying we want everybody to read – so it seems both absurd and horrifying.’
Two stats have made me think:
• 7% children aged 8-18 do not have a book at home. Of those receiving Free School Meals this
increases to 12% and 19% of children aged 5-8 have no book at home
• 97% of children in England have Internet access at home
Is there a case, therefore, for reducing the number of computers in public libraries and returning them to the book and reading sanctuaries of yesteryear?
Libraries have become internet portals and welcoming warm places; more community hubs than reading centres.
But I wonder if there might be a causal link between the declining numbers of library users and this dilution of their primary focus, rather than reduced funding? And as writers shouldn't we be at the sharp end of championing a library-revival?
You may be right in thinking I’ve been captured by some dinosaurian tractor-beam…but I’m searching for solid ground and asking for your thoughts!
In writing this short post, I have hit Google several times. We all use word processors and carry out vast amounts of research online, so I’m not knocking the rise of the Internet, but surely, as writers, we know in our bones, that we have a vital role to play with all present and future readers, stimulating their thirst for imaginative story-telling, and firing their love of literature
Libraries as repositories of cultural treasure?
Michael Rosen has a point.