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Re: [ARSCLIST] Interesting WSJ Article on when libraries should discard their holdings.



I think in the age of the Internet and online reservation/hold systems, local libraries probably can get rid of a lot of overlap over time. I know our local branch here in Bedford Hills NY is massively growing its DVD and audiobooks holdings, somewhat growing its music CD's and slowly discarding more and more print books. The deep stacks just don't circulate and when there are several other rarely-circulated copies in the county library system, they need to clear out space. I understand the reasoning very clearly, but I hope the efforts are all coordinated so one or two copies of seldom-circulated works remain available. At least the "classics." As for sound recordings, there is a specific arts/music library in the system, which still circulates vinyl (although the records are usually not in good condition).

Agree that there's a difference between a research/archive library and a local public library. A PUBLIC library is funded by and answerable to the public. In other words, if the people want DVD's and audiobooks, it's the library's job to provide them. A librarian who looks askance at a fellow wanting to borrow "Terminator 2" DVD instead of the dusty copy of "For Whom The Bell Tolls" book should not be working at a public library.

For what it's worth, new and bestseller books seem to circulate hard and fast, but the reading crowd these days doesn't seem interested in the deep stacks. In my case, I am happy enough with this trend because my middle aged eyes don't like paperbacks so I've been slowly replacing my favorite books with usually first edition and excellent condition hard covers for a couple dollars each at various library sales. But, for the record, I don't pretend to be a bibliophile and actually prefer audiobooks for most new stuff. I can process aural info faster than I can read and I remember things told to me or heard via audiobook or radio more clearly than things read.

-- Tom Fine

----- Original Message ----- From: "Steve Ramm" <Stevramm@xxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wednesday, January 03, 2007 10:01 AM
Subject: [ARSCLIST] Interesting WSJ Article on when libraries should discard their holdings.



Since there are many Music Librarians on this list, I though this article in today's Wall St. Journal might be of interest. The subject is what books a library should retain if they haven't been checked out in two years. If you change the word "book" to "Sound recordings" it really hits home. Having seen some major libraries give away or dispose of their 78 rpm collection to build a new theater or - in the case of Temple Univ. in Philadelphia - a new Student Union, this raises some interesting questions. I'm not prompting a discussion here; just sharing. Also, this might be of interest to those on the MLA newsgroup (of which I'm not a mrember, so someone may want to forward). (BTW, I heard MLA was meeting here in Philly last week. Wish I knew!).

ALSO< please note that this article is Copyrighted by Dow Jones &  Co,  Enjoy
it.

Steve Ramm

       BOOKS
Should Libraries'  Target Audience Be
Cheapskates With Mass-Market Tastes?
By JOHN J.  MILLER
January 3,  2007; Page D9

"For Whom the Bell Tolls" may be one of Ernest  Hemingway's best-known books,
but it isn't exactly flying off the shelves  in northern Virginia these days.
Precisely nobody has checked out a copy  from the Fairfax County Public
Library system in the past two years,  according to a front-page story in
yesterday's Washington Post.
And now the bell may toll for Hemingway. A  software program developed by
SirsiDynix, an Alabama-based  library-technology company, informs librarians of
which books are  circulating and which ones aren't. If titles remain untouched
for two  years, they may be discarded -- permanently. "We're being very
ruthless,"  boasts library director Sam Clay.
As it happens, the ruthlessness may not  ultimately extend to Hemingway's
classic. "For Whom the Bell Tolls" could  win a special reprieve, and, in the
future, copies might remain available  at certain branches. Yet lots of other
volumes may not fare as well. Books  by Charlotte Brontë, William Faulkner,
Thomas Hardy, Marcel Proust and  Alexander Solzhenitsyn have recently been pulled.
Library officials explain, not unreasonably,  that their shelf space is
limited and that they want to satisfy the  demands of the public. Every unpopular
book that's removed from  circulation, after all, creates room for a new
page-turner by John  Grisham, David Baldacci, or James Patterson -- the authors of
the three  most checked-out books in Fairfax County last month.
But this raises a fundamental question: What  are libraries for? Are they
cultural storehouses that contain the best  that has been thought and said? Or
are they more like actual stores,  responding to whatever fickle taste or Mitch
Albom tearjerker is all the  rage at this very moment?<REPRINT
If the answer is the latter, then why must we  have government-run libraries
at all? There's a fine line between an  institution that aims to edify the
public and one that merely uses tax  dollars to subsidize the recreational habits
of bookworms.
Fairfax County may think that condemning a few  dusty old tomes allows it to
keep up with the times. But perhaps it's  inadvertently highlighting the fact
that libraries themselves are becoming  outmoded.
There was a time when virtually every library  was a cultural repository
holding priceless volumes. Imagine how much  richer our historical and literary
record would be if a single library  full of unique volumes -- the fabled Royal
Library of Alexandria, in Egypt  -- had survived to the present day.
As recently as a century ago, when Andrew  Carnegie was opening thousands of
libraries throughout the  English-speaking world, books were considerably more
expensive and harder  to obtain than they are right now. Carnegie always
credited his success in  business to the fact that he could borrow books from
private libraries  while he was growing up. His philanthropy meant to provide
similar  opportunities to later generations.
Today, however, large bookstore chains such as  Barnes & Noble and Borders
bombard readers with an enormous range of  inexpensive choices. An even greater
selection is available online: Before  it started selling mouthwash and power
tools, Amazon.com used to advertise  itself as "the world's biggest
bookstore." It still probably deserves the  label, even though there are now a wide
variety of competing retailers.  (Full disclosure: Years ago, I was a paid
reviewer for  Amazon.com.)
The reality is that readers have never enjoyed  a bigger market for books.
Shoppers can buy everything from  hot-off-the-press titles in mint condition to
out-of-print rarities from  secondhand dealers. They can even download
audiobooks to their MP3 players  and listen to them while jogging or driving to work.
Companies such as  Google and Microsoft are promising to make enormous
amounts of  out-of-copyright material available to anyone with a computer and a
browser.
The bottom line is that it has never been  easier or cheaper to read a book,
and the costs of reading probably will  do nothing but drop further.
If public libraries attempt to compete in this  environment, they will
increasingly be seen for what Fairfax County  apparently envisions them to be:
welfare programs for middle-class readers  who would rather borrow Nelson DeMille's
newest potboiler than spend a few  dollars for it at their local Wal-Mart.
Instead of embracing this doomed model,  libraries might seek to
differentiate themselves among the many options  readers now have, using a good dictionary
as the model. Such a dictionary  doesn't merely describe the words of a
language -- it provides proper  spelling, pronunciation and usage. New words come
in and old ones go out,  but a reliable lexicon becomes a foundation of
linguistic stability and  coherence. Likewise, libraries should seek to shore up the
culture against  the eroding force of trends.
The particulars of this task will fall upon  the shoulders of individual
librarians, who should welcome the opportunity  to discriminate between the good
and the bad, the timeless and the  ephemeral, as librarians traditionally have
done. They ought to regard  themselves as not just experts in the arcane ways
of the Dewey Decimal  System, but as teachers, advisers and guardians of an
intellectual  inheritance.
The alternative is for them to morph into  clerks who fill their shelves with
whatever their "customers" want, much  as stock boys at grocery stores do.
Both libraries and the public,  however, would be ill-served by such a Faustian
bargain.
That's a reference, by the way, to one of  literature's great antiheroes.
Good luck finding Christopher Marlowe's  play about him in a Fairfax County
library: "Doctor Faustus" has survived  for more than four centuries, but it
apparently hasn't been checked out in  the past 24 months.
Mr. Miller writes for National Review  and is the author of "A Gift of
Freedom: How the John M. Olin Foundation  Changed America" (Encounter Books).
URL for this article:
_http://online.wsj.com/article/SB116778551807865463.html_
(http://online.wsj.com/article/SB116778551807865463.html)


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