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- 2010-2014: From Community Library to Community-run library: a look at the impact of volunteers
- Pros: reasons for volunteer “community libraries”
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- Practicalities
- “The reality is very different”: A volunteer library manager speaks
- Are volunteer libraries statutory or non-statutory?
- Four views on volunteer libraries: Sue Charteris, AnneMarie Naylor, Marylyn Haines-Evans of the WI and Ian Anstice
- The Risk Exposures of Volunteer Libraries
- A crude strategy but here to stay: Biddy Casselden on volunteer public libraries in the United Kingdom
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- Indigenous Knowledge Centres: Queensland Public Libraries finding a niche
- 3D Printers & Maker Spaces
- A Library is not just for Christmas
- The CCC/Tsutaya library miracle in Japan: combined bookshop libraries
- Maker Spaces in Libraries – The state of the art December 2013
- A glimpse of Tokyo library life, by Sue Charteris
- Relative Poverty: A display designed especially for libraries
- Nick Poole on what can we learn from the past to inform the future of public libraries
- A home for the homeless: Rachael Rivera and the Auckland Library Streeties
- Dancing Darth Vaders And Talking To Astronauts: Liam Cookson talks MozFest 2017
- A little less conversation: Nick Poole from CILIP writes about the problems with public libraries and action needed
- The Amazing Grace of Public Libraries (or aromatherapy for local living)
- Angry about cuts to Newport Libraries
- Libraries Taskforce Kathy Settle sets the records straight
- Thema: Graham Bell describes Thema, the new subject classification for the global book industry
- Glossary of common library terms
- LS&S (formally known as LSSI).
- Political
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Books which feature public libraries
Adult Books – Fiction
- The Abortion: An Historical Romance 1966 – by Richard Brautigan via Jules.”The Abortion is a genre novel parody concerning the librarian of a very unusual California library which accepts books in any form and from anyone who wishes to drop one off at the library—children submit tales told in crayon about their toys; teenagers tell tales of angst and old people drop by with their memoirs—described as “the unwanted, the lyrical and haunted volumes of American writing” in the novel. Summoned by a silver bell at all hours, submissions are catalogued at the librarian’s discretion; not by the Dewey Decimal system, but by placement on whichever magically dust-free shelf would, in the author’s judgment, serve best as the book’s home.”
- Ajax Penumbra – Robin Sloan. “A Junior Acquisitions Officer for the Occult Literature Department of the library of a college known as “the Harvard of Northwestern Illinois,” young Ajax Penumbra is blessed with a quest …”
- Among others – Jo Walton. “features a lonely teenage girl for whom going to the library and joining a library science fiction reading group turns out to be a bit of a lifesaver”
- Angels and Demons – Dan Brown.
- Body in the Library – Agatha Christie.
- Book Lady – Malcolm Forsythe. “The ‘book lady’ is Janet West, one of a pair of librarians who take the mobile library van around several Essex villages. Janet not only provides books for house bound readers but she also reads to them and if they pay, she will perform extra, more intimate, services.” via Chris Garnsworthy
- Book of Speculation – Erika Swyler.
- Book Thief – Marcus Zusak. Features a large personal library.
- Borrower – Rebecca Makkai. “Rebecca Makkai’s The Borrower is full of books, libraries, cross-country hijinks, accidental parenting, love gone wrong and friendships gone right. Makkai will have you cheering for her librarian heroine, who has all the history and darkness of a Russian novel in her veins, mixed with the humor and spirit of Bridget Jones. A fun, moving, and delightful read.” via Claire Back.
- Camel bookmobile – Masha Hamilton.
- Camel Club – David Baldacci. Caleb Shaw works at the Library of Congress.
- Case of the Missing Books – Ian Sansom.
- Conan the Librarian – A parody of, well, Conan the Barbarian (via Janet Moore).
- Crosstalk – Connie Willis.
- Dead Virgin – KM Ashman. And other books in the series. “India Sommers is a librarian and a talented historian, so when a stranger asks her opinion on an ancient coin she is happy to oblige but when the same man is murdered less than an hour later, it soon becomes apparent that there is far more to the situation than meets the eye.“
- Discworld series – Terry Pratchett. Ook.
- Fahrenheit 451 – Ray Bradbury. Includes an unsanctioned library. “Bradbury’s lifelong passion with books began at an early age. As a frequent visitor to his local libraries in the 1920s and 1930s, he recalls being disappointed because they did not stock popular science fiction novels, like those of H. G. Wells, because, at the time, they were not deemed literary enough.”
- Gaudy Night – Dorothy L Sayers. Many library scenes. Features Miss Burrows, the college librarian.
- Goodbye Columbus – Philip Roth. Librarian protagonist and libraries seen as refuge from outside world.
- Grand Complication – Allen Kurzweil. “an intrepid librarian and his sinister boss on the trail of Marie Antoinette’s stolen watch. ” (with thanks to Janet Moore)
- Hide and Seek – Ian Rankin. Public libraries mentioned in several in series.
- His Dark Materials trilogy – Philip Pullman.
- Historian – Elizabeth Kostova. Vampires and librarians. ” one of the librarians is trying to prevent their research into Dracula, but she is unpersuaded. Later, the librarian attacks and bites Helen. Paul intervenes and overpowers him, but he wriggles free. The librarian is then run over by a car in front of the library and apparently killed….”
- In the house of the seven librarians – Ellen Klages. A child raised by feral librarians. Yes, really.
- Invention of Solitude and Invisible by Paul Auster (via Jules in comments)
- Invisible Library – Genevieve Cogman. “Irene is a librarian, which in Cogman’s universe makes her half-rare book collector, half-spy. Working for the inter-dimensional Library, she must go into numerous parallel universes, collecting rare books that are unique to that world, at whatever cost. Armed with the Language, a magical form of universal speech that can alter the reality around her, Irene performs her duties, not for the power, or the ability to change the courses of the worlds she enters, but because “the deepest, most fundamental part of her life involved a love of books.”” (From OUP).
- Jonathan Strange and Dr Norell – Susanna Clarke. “The chief character in Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell isn’t, in fact, either of the magicians: it’s the library that they both adore, the books they consult and write and, in a sense, become.”
- Library at Mount Char – Scott Hawkins.
- Library at the Edge of the World – Felicity Hayes-McCoy. “As she drives her mobile library van between farms and villages she tries not to think of the sophisticated London lifestyle she abandoned after finding her barrister husband in bed with another woman. Or that she’s living in the back bedroom of her mother’s retirement bungalow in the small town she walked away from in her teens….”
- Library diaries – Anne Miketa. Fiction. One review calls it “an accurate account of the behind-the-scenes worklife of librarians in many public libraries across the United States”
- Library of Babel – Jorge Luis Borges.
- Library Policeman – Stephen King. Short Story in Four Past Midnight. “When a man forgets to return some books he borrowed from the library while writing a speech, and later accidentally destroys them, the phantom librarian who lent him the books sends the library policemen to terrorize him”
- Library of unrequited love – Sophie Divry. “One morning a librarian finds a reader who has been locked in overnight. She begins to talk to him, a one-way conversation full of sharp insight and quiet outrage. As she rails against snobbish senior colleagues, an ungrateful and ignorant public, the strictures of the Dewey Decimal System and the sinister expansionist conspiracies of the books themselves, two things shine through: her unrequited passion for a researcher named Martin, and an ardent and absolute love for the arts. A delightful divertissement for the discerning bookworm…”
- Library Wars – A whole series of manga based on the importance of libraries. “In the near future, the federal government creates a committee to rid society of books it deems unsuitable. The libraries vow to protect their collections, and with the help of local governments, form a military group to defend themselves—the Library Forces”
- The Little Shop of Happy Ever After – Jenny Colgan. “Nina is a librarian who spends her days happily matchmaking books and people – she always knows what someone should read next. But when her beloved library closes and she’s suddenly out of a job, Nina has no idea what to do next. Then an advert catches her eye: she could be the owner of a tiny little bookshop bus, driving around the Scottish highlands.”
- Mobile library – Ian Sansom via Erika Neck. This is whole series of books based on a mobile library.
- Mobile library – David Whitehouse. “Books are a lifeline as two lonely children hijack a local authority vehicle for an action-packed tale of expanding horizons “
- Name of the Rose – Umberto Eco. Set in mediaeval monastery, with it’s library playing a central part.
- Name of the Wind – Patrick Rothfuss.
- Night Bookmobile – Audrey Niffenegger.
- Possession – AS Byatt. “”Literary critics make natural detectives”, says Maud Bailey, heroine of a mystery where the clues lurk in university libraries, old letters and dusty journals…”
- Public library and other stories – Ali Smith. “What do the books we’ve read over our lives – our own personal libraries – make of us? What does the unravelling of our tradition of public libraries, so hard-won but now in jeopardy, say about us?”
- Sandman – Neil Gaiman. Lucien’s Library.
- Shadow of the Wind – Carlos Ruis Zafon. “Hidden in the heart of the old city of Barcelona is the ‘cemetery of lost books’, a labyrinthine library of obscure and forgotten titles that have long gone out of print. To this library, a man brings his 10-year-old son Daniel one cold morning in 1945…”
- Something Wicked This Way Comes – Ray Bradbury. The local librarian is a key figure in the novel, suspecting that something evil is happening and working out what to do to fight it.
- Special Powers – Mary Hoffman. “Emily feels that everything about her is boring, her name, her looks, her life. The only interesting bit is the fantasy world she creates in her head, the desert kingdom of Krin, where she rules as Queen K’sendra. But Emily is transformed into Emma Leigh when the glamorous Power family come to town and with a change of name comes a whole new life. When the local library is threatened with closure, Emma Leigh and her new friends lead the campaign against the closure. It is very exciting but Emma Leigh begins to suspect that the Power family are not quite who they claim to be. An adventure story of life between two worlds that will carry the reader along with enthusiasm.” [with special props for the author commenting on this page to let me know – Ian]
- Strange Library – Haruki Murakami.
- That Uncertain Feeling – Kingsley Amis. “A satire on life and culture in a Welsh seaside town, the story concerns a married librarian who begins an affair with the bored wife of a local bigwig.”
- Thursday Next novels – Jasper Fforde. Cheshire Cat is the librarian in many of these. “The world of Jasper Fforde’s Thursday Next series revolves around books—Next goes from being a Literary Detective in her world, maintaining the peace between the warring Shakespearean scholars, to working for the Great Library in Jurisfiction, which polices unruly fictional characters, dangerous plot holes, and outbreaks of the Mispeling Vyrus. While she is not technically a librarian, it is the Cheshire Cat (or the Cat Formerly Known as Cheshire, or Unitary Authority of Warrington Cat) who acts as her guide in the 52 levels and 26 basements of the Great Library, helping her find the books she needs to jump through in order to maintain order between genres. Presumably, the ability to appear and disappear anywhere at will is both useful for navigating this gargantuan, ever-expanding building, and for reaching the highest shelves.” (From this OUP article).
- Time Traveller’s Wife – Audrey Niffenegger. “Main character, Henry is a librarian in Chicago. Some library scenes ” via Clare Steele.
- Titus Groan by Mervyn Peake. Lord Sepulchraves’s only escape is reading in the library, The burning of the library is a major plot point. via Jules.
- Tree grows in Brooklyn – Betty Smith. “Although the library is small and shabby, Francie thinks it looks beautiful. She loves to read, and wants to read all the books in the world, in alphabetical order. She is in the B’s right now. She treats herself on Saturdays to a book outside of the sequence, asking the librarian for a recommendation….”
- The True and Untold Story of the Outlaw Tam Barker: “I’m Tam Barker. I’m the Last Librarian.” – Andy Robb.
- Uncommon Reader – Alan Bennett. via Caro Wallis. “When the Queen in pursuit of her wandering corgis stumbles upon a mobile library she feels duty bound to borrow a book. Aided by Norman, a young man from the palace kitchen who frequents the library, Bennett describes the Queen’s transformation as she discovers the liberating pleasures of the written word. “
- Un Lun Dun – China Mieville. Includes “The Wordhoard Pit, the extensive library which connects all libraries, shares its name with a ship in The Scar, called The Wordhoard located in Armada’s Haunted Quarter”
- Uprooted – Naomi Novik.
- When she woke – Hilary Jordan. Features a library. via Leanne Wain
Adult Books – Non-fiction
- Between the stacks – Barry Bowes. Public librarian memoirs.
- Bad-ass librarians of Timbuktu – Joshua Hammer.
- Dewey the Library Cat – Vicky Myron. Just wonderful.
- I work at a public library – Gina Sheridan.
- In the Stacks – Michael Cart. “noted author and librarian Michael Cart has assembled a fascinating collection of twentieth century short fiction about libraries and librarians: from such classics as Borges’s “The Library of Babel” and Isaac Babel’s “The Public Library”
- Is that the library speaking? – Ken Hornsby. Memoirs of a public librarian.
- Library Book – Ann Cleeves et al. A celebration of libraries by many authors via Chris Garnsworthy.
- Quiet, Please: Dispatches from a Public Library by Scott Douglas.
- Reading Allowed – Chris Paling.
- Reference librarianship: notes from the trenches – Charles Anderson and Peter Sprenkle.
- This book is overdue – Marilyn Johnson.
- World’s Strongest Librarian – Josh Hanagarne. US librarian … and weightlifter.
Poems
Beautiful Librarians – Sean O’Brien.
Romances
Webcomics
Unshelved – Well, there are anthologies, so kind of, books.
Teen
- Alcatraz versus the evil librarians – Brandon Sanderson.
- Chosen one – Carol Lynch Williams. “bookmobile librarian befriends and heroically attempts to help a girl escape her repressive fundamentalist polygamist Mormon compound. It’s not the main storyline, but it is pivotal.”
- Great Library series – Rachel Caine. “Jess Brightwell lives in a world where knowledge is strictly controlled and owned by the Library; owning personal books is illegal. His family makes a fortune smuggling books to collectors, but Jess has a love of knowledge that is a disadvantage in his line of work. His scheming father makes a liability into an asset, sending Jess to apprentice at the Great Library of Alexandria itself; having a spy in their ranks, he thinks, can only be a help.”
- Same sun here – Silas House. Features Seward Park Library.
- Smart – Kim Slater. The main character goes to a public library to help him solve a murder, and also as a safe place because he’s autistic.
- Supergirl – Was a public librarian.
- Who stole the Wizard of Oz – Avi Derek James.
Television
- Buffy the Vampire Slayer – Sunnydale High School Library.
- Doctor Who – Silence in the Library and Forest of the Dead.
- Pagemaster – Mr Dewey’s Library.
Children’s Books
- Big surprise for little card – Charise Harper. There’s a very special place (full of books) that might just be perfect for a card his size… As long as he can whisper”
- Bats at the Library – Brian Lies.
- Book! Book! Book! Deborah Bruss, Scholastic Hippo, 2002. The animals want to read but can’t make the librarian understand them – funny.
- The Boy who was Raised by Librarians – Carla Morris. “With humor, hyperbole, and repetition, author Carla Morris stresses all the ways Melvin gains from his relationship with the librarians. The more Melvin learns at the library, the better he does in school. Marge, Betty, and Leola are always quick to celebrate each of his accomplishments, including his graduation from high school. Even after Melvin goes to college, he keeps in touch with his librarian friends. It’s not surprising that several years later, when another little boy comes to the library, it is the Livingston Public Library’s newest librarian, Melvin, who is there to help him.”
- But excuse me that is my book – Lauren Child via Alison Taylor
- Carlo and the really nice librarian – Jessica Spanyol via Leanne Wain
<blockquoteclass=”twitter-tweet” data-lang=”en”>
@publiclibnews I wrote The Cherry Pie Princess to celebrate libraries … truly!
— Vivian French (@fivekingdoms) May 7, 2017
- Cherry Pie Princess – Vivian French.
- Chu’s Day – Neil Gaiman. Includes visit to library.
- Coral reefs – Jason Chin. “During an ordinary visit to the library, a girl pulls a not-so-ordinary book from the shelves”
- Covers of my book are too far apart – Vivian French.
- Creeping bookends [& the Library of Doom series]– Michael Dahl. “A young boy is accidentally locked inside the library. When, suddenly, a pair of lizard bookends come alive. Will the librarian arrive before the boy becomes their next meal? ” via the wife.
- Curious George visits the library – HA Rey. “George is lucky to arrive at the library just in time for story hour. But it’s not easy for a little monkey to sit still too long. From selecting books to getting his very own library card, George’s day at the library makes reading fun.” via Stephen Hackett.
- Delilah Darling is in the library – Jeanne Willis
- Detective Dog – Julia Donaldson. A public library featues at the end.
- Fizzlebert Stump: The boy who ran away from the circus (and joined the library) – AF Harrold. “‘There are many boys in the world, all slightly different from one another, and most of them are referred to by names. These are often John or Jack or Desmond, but sometimes they are James or Philip or Simon. Once, and once only, there was a boy whose name was Fizzlebert.’ Fizzlebert Stump lives in a travelling circus. But although he gets to hang around with acrobats, play the fool with clowns, and put his head in a lion’s mouth every night, he’s the only kid there – and he’s bored. But then Fizz decides to join a library, and life suddenly gets a lot more exciting, when a simple library card application leads to him being kidnapped by a pair of crazed pensioners! Will he ever see the circus again?” (via @kpaice).
- Frozen in time – Ali Sparkes. “She finds a torch, picks the lock of the boot with a hairgrip and sprays antiseptic into the librarians’ eyes.” via L Watts.
-
The Great Piratical Rumbustification, the Librarian and The Robbers: Margaret Mahy, Puffin, 1978. Serena Laburnum – a beautiful librarian outwits a band of wicked robbers turning them into outstanding citizens.
- Ghost Library – David Melling.
- Harry Potter series – Includes library scenes.
- Help! I’m a Prisoner in the Library – Eth Clifford.
- Homer the library cat – Reeve Lindbergh. “Homer is a very quiet cat. He lives in a very quiet house with a very quiet lady. But one day, while the lady is away, Homer hears a very loud sound, and out the window he goes! Poor Homer just wants to find a spot where he can curl up and be quiet, but his hometown is a surprisingly loud place. Will Homer find a bit of calm in all the noise? And will he ever find his quiet lady? Reeve Lindbergh’s cheerful, rhyming text pairs with Anne Wilsdorf’s charming illustrations for a story-lover’s ode to everyone’s favorite quiet place.” via my wife
- The House of Wisdom, Florence Parry Heide. Dorling Kindersley Publishers, 2000. Picture book for older readers – story of the Early Islamic Empire’s dedication to collecting and preserving the world’s knowledge
- How to live forever – Colin Thompson. “Peter and his family live among the Quinces in the cookery section of a mystical library, and at night, when the library comes to life, Peter ventures out of his home to find a missing volume: How To Live Forever” via my wife.
- How the Library (Not the Prince) Saved Rapunzel – Wendy Meddour.
- Inkheart – Cornelius Funke. Heroine is a librarian.
- Legend of Spud Murphy – Eoin Colfer. “Will and Marty live in a family with their mum, dad and two other brothers. In their summer holidays their mother decides that they should take up an educative hobby, so she sends them to the library twice a week. Will and Marty are terrorized. Everyone knows the story of Spud Murphy, the evil librarian… “
- Librarian and the robbers – Margaret Mahy ““Pulverized by literature,’ thought Miss Laburnum. ‘The ideal way for a librarian to die.” via Jules.
- Library book for bear – Bonny Becker.
- Library Dragon – Carmen Agra Deedy. “When Sunrise Elementary School advertised for a thick-skinned librarian with a burning love of books, Miss Lotta Scales knew she was perfect for the job. Who could guard books better than a REAL dragon?” via my wife.
- Library Lily – Gillian Shields.
- Library Lion – Michelle Knudsen
- Library Mouse – Daniel Kirk. “Every child can be a writer—and Library Mouse shows them how! Beloved children’s books author and illustrator Daniel Kirk wonderfully brings to life the story of Sam, a library mouse.” via Stephen Hackett
- Library pages – Carlene Morton. “Mrs. Heath, librarian at Happyland Elementary School, receives a DVD and letter from her students while she is on maternity leave. The letter notes that they miss her, and that the substitute falls asleep and snores while reading in the rocker. Meanwhile the pages are “helping” to keep the library running smoothly.” via the wife
- Lirael – Garth Nix. “Through her solitary work in forgotten corners of the mystical library in the Clayr’s Glacier, Lirael begins to unlock the keys to embarking upon an apparently predestined adventure of utmost importance. “
- Little Bo Beep’s Library Book – Cresside Cowell
- Lola at the Library – Anna McQueen.
- Lottie Paris and the Best Place – Angela Johnson. “Lottie Paris has a favorite place. The library! She loves to go there and read about space. She knows there are rules at the library, but sometimes they are not so easy to follow…”
- Lulu loves the library – Anna McQuinn. “A moment-by-moment account of a very young child’s visit to the local library. The charming illustrations perfectly capture the little girl’s enthusiasm for books and stories, and paint a lovely picture of her book-loving Mum. This is a perfect story to prepare young children for a library visit. ” (with thanks to Gabrielle Spillman).
- Maisy goes to the library – Lucy Cousins
- Matilda – Roald Dahl. “In the film, Matilda goes to the library the morning after her father turns her down, but in the novel, she goes on the same day.” via shopgirl_london
- Escape from Mr. Lemoncello’s Library and Mr. Lemoncello’s Library Olympics – Chris Grabenstein.
- Mistress of the storm – ML Welsh. “Verity Gallant is a lonely little girl who doesn’t quite fit in. But when a mysterious stranger hands her an ancient book, everything changes. Suddenly it’s up to her to solve the riddle of an ancient pledge and protect her family from the evil Mistress of the Storm. What hope does she have against a witch so powerful she can control the wind and create storms at will? Luckily, Verity does not have to face her enemy alone. As events begin to spiral out of control, she finds two loyal and steadfast friends to stand by her side.” via L Watts.
- My librarian is a camel – Margriet Ruurs. “When we think of a library, we picture a building on a street or perhaps a room in a school. But some libraries aren’t kept behind four walls. Some move from place to place in the most remarkable ways: by bus, by boat, by elephant, by donkey, by train, even by wheelbarrow. These unusual mobile libraries are often the only way that books can be brought to people in remote areas …” via the wife.
- New Librearian – Alison Donald. The common problem faced by communities everywhere: what happens when the librarian is a bear?
- Night Tourist – Katherine Marsh. Several scenes in New York Public Library.
- Not so quiet library – Zachariah O’hora.
- Otto the Book Bear – Katie Cleminson.
- Peppa goes to the library – Peppa Pig goes … guess where.
- Ron’s big mission – Rose Blue, Dutton Books, 2009. Book about a black boy in South Carolina in 1959 wanting to borrow books when only white people are allowed to borrow.
- Series of Unfortunate Events – Lemony Snicket. “While Lemony Snicket’s Dewey Denouement doesn’t have magic of his own, he hordes arcane knowledge, such as the mysterious sugar bowl, in his library, which is hidden under the pond outside the Hotel Denouement. He has lived his life according to library science, honoring his namesake by organizing his hotel according the Dewey Decimal system, and building a library catalogue of evidence to hold against every villainous member of the mysterious VFD (including a record of the 27 cakes that the dreadful Count Olaf has stolen).” (From this OUP article).
- Spot goes to the Library.
- Stinkbomb, Ketchup-Face and the Badness of Badgers – John Dougherty (and series). Message from author “just to let you know that the library (and its custodian, Miss Butterworth the Ninja Librarian) plays a significant part in 3 of my (so far) 6 Stinkbomb & Ketchup-Face books for children. John”
- Wanted! Ralfy Rabbit, Book Burglar, Emily MacKenzie, Bloomsbury, 2015.Ralfy loves reading so much he steals other people’s books. When he is caught, Arthur introduces him to the Library, where you can read as many books as you want.
- When the library lights go out -Megan MacDonald. “hen the library lights go out, that means it’s time for three story-hour puppets to begin their adventures! At first only Rabbit and Lion come out to play and explore their library home. But where is their friend Hermit Crab? Where could she be in the library darkness? In this charming story, come along with Rabbit, Lion, and Hermit Crab as they play, draw, and explore their way through the library—and find out what really happens when the library lights go out!” (with thanks to Gabrielle Spillman).
- Wild about Books – Judy Sierra. “All the animals are very curious when a mobile library arrives but soon they can’t wait to learn about this new something called reading. They read thin books and fat books and Cat in the Hat books…”
- Winston the book wolf – Marni McGee (with thanks to Gabrielle Spillman).
- Wolves – Emily Gravett
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Top Posts & Pages
- Arguments against libraries, arguments for libraries
- By authority
- Ideas and innovations in public libraries
- Statistics
- List of Staffless Libraries in the United Kingdom and beyond
- Caerphilly's has the "ambitious vision" of closing 12 out of its 16 libraries
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about 12 years ago
There is a book by Allen Kurzweil titled The Grand Complication, which has a reference librarian as the main character, and is also set partly in a library ( in New York) It’s a thriller/crime story, but a good and educative read. Its listed on the british Library catalogue and on Amazon.
about 12 years ago
Some additions to Children’s Books:
Lulu loves the library – Anna McQuinn
When the library lights go out – Megan McDonald
Winston the book wolf – Marni McGee
about 12 years ago
Matilda- she gets her books from the library as her salvation
about 12 years ago
My teenage novel, Special Powers is about trying to save a public library from closure +extra-terrestrials.
about 12 years ago
Daniel Kirk – Library Mouse
Curious George Goes to the Library
about 12 years ago
Children’s books
Mistress of the Storm by M.L. Welsh – plot starts with incident in a library
Frozen in Time by Ali Sparked – seem to remember this features an evil librarian
about 12 years ago
Glad to see some great picture books listed there, I love Library Lion and Winston the Book Wolf. Another one is Judy Sierra, Wild About Books, about the zoo animals discovering the delights of library use.
Older children – Edward Eager, Magic By the Lake
Older children/YA, has also been published in a grown up edition – Jane Gardam, A Long Way from Verona
Jo Walton, Among Others, features a lonely teenage girl for whom going to the library and joining a library science fiction reading group turns out to be a bit of a lifesaver
Betty Smith, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn
about 12 years ago
I have one called “Is That The Library Speaking” by Ken Hornsby a great funny read the story of a man who thought working in a library would be a nice quiet calm career and then found out he was wrong!
about 10 years ago
Sara Paretsky writes in ‘Blacklist’ (a V.I. Warshawski detective story) –
‘To my surprise, the papers were housed in a room off the main library branch – I’d pictured the collection in its own building. The library itself was doing a bustling business, mostly with women bringing their young children in to look at books, but also the usual collection of homeless and elderly that a library gathers. It’s a respectable destination. It’s warm, you can be with other people. All reasons why the Web cannot take the place of your branch library. Also it has books. And an archivist who knew and loved his collection.’
What more needs saying!
about 10 years ago
A Brief History of Montmaray – Cooper, Michelle (YA) One of the characters is the family librarian and spends all her time there
The Queen of Attolia – Megan Whalen Turner (YA) The whole series involves a character spending a great deal of time in the library
Bitterblue – Kristin Cashore (YA) Includes a librarian named after Lord Peter Wimsey
The House of Many Ways – Diana Wynne Jones (MG) In this follow-up to Howl’s Moving Castle, Charmain wishes to work in a library
Bats at the Library – Brian Lies (Children’s Picture Book) Bats in the library at night, checking out books
about 9 years ago
The Invisible Library by Genevieve Cogman.
about 8 years ago
Kevin Ashman India Sommers librarian and historian series
about 8 years ago
Great, thank you, now added.
about 8 years ago
The abortion: an historical romance
By brautigan
The librarian and the robbers
By mahy
And of course multiple books by pratchett, at the very least for the invention of L-Space
about 8 years ago
Whoops, pratchett already and obviously listed . . .
about 8 years ago
Titus Groan by Peake – steerpike engineers the burning of sepulchrave’s library
about 8 years ago
Libraries make appearances in two books by Auster: the invention of solitude & invisible
about 7 years ago
Smart by Kim Slater isn’t an adult book … it’s teen. Fantastic story though …
And great list!
about 7 years ago
Changed now. And, yes, I must read it myself!
about 6 years ago
The Little Shop of Happy Ever After by Jenny Colgan pub. 2016
A public library librarian is made redundant due to local authority funding cuts/’rationalisation’ so decides to take some of the books being ‘rationalised’ with her and set up a mobile bookshop…
about 6 years ago
Hi, Ian. Not sure how I’ve missed this list up till now, but just to let you know that the library (and its custodian, Miss Butterworth the Ninja Librarian) plays a significant part in 3 of my (so far) 6 Stinkbomb & Ketchup-Face books for children. John