Merry Wanderer of the Night:
libraries

  • Scrolling Forward: Making Sense of Documents in the Digital Age

    Scrolling Forward: Making Sense of Documents in the Digital Age

    Awhile back I was at a party where I talked with a friend who is also interested in libraries and more specifically archives. When he found out I was interested he recommended that I read Scrolling Forward: Making Sense of Documents in the Digital Age

    by David Levy, which I promptly purchased the next week. This slim (202 pages to be exact) book is full of information about the place of the document in today's world. Even though the book was published in 2001, it is still right on target with the way we see documents in a digital world. And it takes a surprisingly personal approach towards them and made me see documents in a way I hadn't really considered or just maybe couldn't verbalize before; "For if documents are surrogates for us, they are extensions of ourselves, parts of ourselves. The best and the worst of ourselves can be found in them"(38).

    The book starts out with the receipt. Receipts are very ordinary, and a lot of times I tell the cashier I don't want a receipt anymore because I know it will just sit in my wallet for three months and then I will throw it away. But receipts, as Levy shows us, are actually full of information. They tell us where a person went, the day they went there, possibly what they purchased, how much the item cost on that day, how much tax was or if the item was taxed, and anymore a lot of receipts will tell you who it was that rang you up. Receipts are also, as I said, easily discardable and the reason for this is because paper can be mass produced now. This, however, has not always been the case and the fact that we can so easily print and toss receipts says a lot about the society we live in today. This is just one of many examples Levy makes in the book, although it is one of the ones I enjoyed the most. Another section I really enjoyed was the chapter entitled Libraries and the Anxiety of Order, which is all about the basic human need to organize and how libraries are a reflection of this anxiety. He also gets into the creation of the Dewey Decimal System which I think any book lover would enjoy.

    There is a lot of information to take in in this book and even though it is short, I read it over a long period of time. It is, honestly, a scholarly book. But I felt like the book maybe wasn't quite sure what it wanted to be. At times it catered to the average Joe, pointing out mundane things we see every day and then turning them and making us see them differently. But then at other times it make an intense discussion about how computers work which, frankly, used some vocabulary that could have been discarded as easily as that receipt at the beginning of the book. And he spent way too much time talking about the etymology of words. I'm sorry, but a pair of parentheses on every page describing the origin of a word is really not that helpful to me, maybe one or two of the really interesting ones I can live with but it was just all too much.

    So basically, I would say read this book if you are interested but skim the parts you think are boring. If you are only going to read one library book I would suggest reading Marylin Johnson's This Book is Overdue! How Librarians and Cybrarians Can Save Us All which is much more readable than this one. There is a lot to discover here, and that is why this book earned a B.

    I am an Amazon Affiliate. If you make a purchase using one of my links I will earn a small percentage which will then go back into this blog.

  • This Book is Overdue! How Librarians and Cybrarians Can Save Us All

    This Book is Overdue! How Librarians and Cybrarians Can Save Us All

    I was immediately intrigued by Marilyn Johnson's new book This Book Is Overdue!: How Librarians and Cybrarians Can Save Us All. After all, I want to go to library school and when I was in high school I used to make comic books where I was the superhero. So the idea shown on the cover, a librarian with a cape off to save the world, was attractive to me. Once I started reading I was surprised to find out that Johnson isn't a librarian herself, but rather a librarian stalker like me. Except that I plan on becoming a librarian and as far as I could tell she did not. I think the book was even better (at least for me) written from the perspective of a non-librarian because it made it more interesting for an outsider. In this book Johnson talks about the changing world of libraries, the problems with digital records and the plus sides to them, the stereotype of the librarian, and what librarians do outside their jobs. And I'll admit this right away, the book made me even more positive that library school is what I want to do in two years.

    The book is divided into 12 essays, really, about different aspects of libraries and librarians. One of my favorites was How to Change the World, which talked about librarians that work in other countries and with students from around the world, specifically underprivileged countries to help their nations advance in society through technology. As a blogger I really enjoyed The Blog People, which is all about librarian bloggers (several I'd never heard of even though I follow a lot of librarian blogs). She also touches on the danger of blogging for librarians, particularly young librarians. Even though many librarians know the Internet is the future of libraries and want to further that research, there is still resistance from other librarians. Follow That Tattooed Librarian was also an entertaining look at the stereotype of librarians as old, crotchety ladies when there are plenty of librarians that don't fit that stereotype one bit (Hello! Time Traveler's Wife anyone?).

    I read this book at the same time as Scrolling Forward: Making Sense of Documents in the Digital Age, and while Scrolling Forward as insightful and certainly made me feel like I knew more about digitization, Johnson was just so much better at making things exciting! Her descriptions alone deserve an A++; "This is the greatest and most fraught romance of modern society, the marriage between the IT staff and those who depend on them" (39). That is just great. This didn't feel like a how to guide on librarianship, it felt like a documentary in which the most exciting possibilities of the career were explored. I've seen a lot of reviews that complain about her extended discussion of the game Second Life. Apparently this game is pretty popular within some groups of librarians and Johnson was obviously a little obsessed with the game when she was writing this, but I just didn't care. Everything else was just so awesome, so perfect, that John could have ranted on about Second Life for another 25 pages and I would have listened to her. Because she completely captured my sentiments about libraries by the end of the book; "We'll always need printed books that don't mutate the way digital books do; we'll always need places to display books, auditoriums for book talks, circles for story time; we'll always need brick-and-mortor libraries. But another library, the ninetieth in the system, is growing explosively in cyberspace" (187).

    This book deserves an A.

    I am an Amazon Affiliate. If you make a purchase using one of my links I will earn a small percentage which will then go back into this blog.