Today I went to a meeting of the Friends of my local
Library, one of the Carnegie buildings. We met in a small neat room in the
basement, next to the children’s library. Back in the first half of the last
century, the basement held a shooting range for local riflemen.
In the recent years of this century, through the National
Lottery, the library was revamped and opened up to more daylight. Now it houses
adaptable shelving and rows of well-used computers, although the reference
library was lost in the alterations.
The whole interior is painted in the airy
lilac with purple accents that are the standard local authority library
colours. It is a very pleasant library, yet I can’t help coming back from these
meetings - aware of yet another “re-structuring” behind the scenes - that this is an uncomfortable age for our
national libraries.
True, this week, a new library was announced, courtesy of
the Margaret Thatcher Trust, which may well be a subscribing or closed library. Somewhere else, no doubt, a free local authority
library is closing or transforming into a community library.
Although I welcome
volunteers and a more open mood in libraries, I know the inspiring expertise -
spread too thinly – will fade quickly. Rather like the respected collection of early Victorian children’s literature once held at my
local library and now, apparently, lost in the counties archives. Last reported in a
cardboard box, somewhere, but now untraceable. Gone with the fairies.
I do not feel the destruction of libraries can ever be a
good sign. The ravage of the great libraries of the past - Alexandria,
Lindisfarne, St David’s, Leuvain and more - was never the sign of greater
tolerance. These libraries were destroyed dramatically with blood, fire and
hatred, dramatically and awfully. They were true disasters.
But the current re-structuring and rationalisation of the
library service feels like the pettiest, meanest-minded aspect of Englishness.
It makes me feel ashamed, knowing that the poor, the old, the out-of work, the
students and the immigrants who use the libraries that are most affected.
It goes deeper. Behind the library lies the stock of books
available. I enquired, recently, about an expensive academic book on
children’s literature. My local library will help by arranging an out-of-county
loan for twenty pounds.
Will our library stock eventually only offer the light romances and
whodunits once the core of the Boots subscription libraries? Will biographies
of recent and current celebrities be the only lives available? More
importantly, will more study be impossible unless one joins a major
subscription library? Or signs up and pays for an academic course? Will history only be "now" and not "once" or "then"?
I have always loved being in libraries, in using libraries.
My first library was one of those ornate late Victorian library that declared
Here is Learning. That building, with its green copper dome, is long gone. The
replacement, which I am sure is well used and excellent, is now contained
within a big new shopping mall. Which, if times get even tougher, is a much
simpler space to disappear. Rather like the use of the word “librarian”, that
became “learning resources manager” in many local libraries and secondary
schools. How convenient.
Excuse this gloomy History Girl post. I love my local
library and the people there. But sitting in such a meeting, working out ways
to raise money for a notice-board for the railings outside, set my history
teeth jangling. Is what I feel the very faintest echo of how it was when only
the priests and the rich had access to books?
I also find it impossible
to post about tomorrow’s event.
Penny Dolan
Penny Dolan is the author of A Boy Called Mouse.
(Bloomsbury)
I SO agree with all you say in this blog. By the way, I've just hugely enjoyed reading Carnegie's own autobiography, available for free as a kindle book. What an amazing man living through fascinating times. I recommend it.
ReplyDeleteOh, thank you for that information, Pippa! I did look into Carnegie's background but found far too much to even attempt mentioning any details of it here. His autobiography sounds fascinating in many ways.
ReplyDeleteGreat post. Libraries and free higher education are key to making society work. And I believe society does exist! I wonder if any of the people salting away their millions at the moment will found a library or two? I don't know, but I know I wish more banks and corporations were still run by Quakers.
ReplyDeleteFree libraries are a measure of civilisation.
ReplyDeleteBe afraid. Be very afraid.
Couldn't agree more, Penny. It's tragic. I rely very heavily on my local library and always have done. Luckily it's still (at the moment) relatively untouched.
ReplyDeleteAnd honestly - waaaay too much is already being said about today's 'event'.
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