My efforts to nurture a community and support literacy and connection in my neighborhood will never cease; but a pivot is sometimes needed.
Photo of sign saying this library is now closed, visit little free library.org for list of other LFL’s in the neighborhood and city; if you’re not able to get online call or text me and I will send you a list. Also support your local public library and used bookstore.
I will be writing more about this a little later. “Longtime neighborhood little free library steward makes weirdest rant ever.” Stay tuned, I will probably add it to this post by the end of the day.
For now you can see the photo of my basic handwritten sign. Courtesy of a whiteboard and perfectly fresh whiteboard marker that I found awhile back in the curbside trash. Yay for landfill diversion, and for things being available right when they’re needed.
OK, I am back.
So imagine that somebody runs a little free library, and they get annoyed with people for always asking, “Do you need books?” Pretty weird, right? I mean weird that a librarian would get annoyed with people for offering books.
But, that annoyed librarian is me. And there’s a reason I feel this way.
Of course a little free library needs a steady stream of people bringing back books, and bringing other books that they’re no longer reading. This ideally occurs roughly in balance with people taking books.
But what a Little Free Library really depends on is flow.
What keeps the library alive is people who care about it and use it. I mean, who actually rely on it for books, and bring books that they’re finished reading as they finish reading them.
Instead, what typically happens is that a person hears about the library and immediately thinks of cleaning out their bookshelves, and brings a huge box of books and dumps it on the sidewalk or porch.
The first thing out of their mouth when they hear about the library is, “Do you need books?”
OK, so that sounds petty of me, right? If I am looking for book donations, do I have any business being picky, and being annoyed about having to sort through somebody’s big box of Fortran manuals and Atkins diet books?
Am I entitled for not wanting to store extra books and wait for space to empty out in the library?
Flow, my friends. What we’re talking about is a problem of flow.
And also a problem of mentality. People are not thinking of the library as a library; they’re thinking of it as a place to unload their extra stuff. That’s how the more well-off people think of it.
Meanwhile, there’s the population that actually depend on the library. They walk past everyday on their way to work at the hotels or restaurants. We say hi and pass the time of day.
There are also many of our unhoused neighbors who love the library. Maybe they can’t walk all the way over the bridge to the big public library. Maybe the public library won’t let them in because their backpacks are too big. Yes, this happens. These people actually need a library. And they actually take books, and at least occasionally bring back a book here and there. That kind of flow is what sustains this type of little community library.
There are a number of other little free libraries not far away, and I’m going to re-open mine eventually as well. In the long run, I can’t really not run the library. I can’t not share books. But geez Louise, those voluminous drive-by offloads of people’s closets are a drag. And then the other extreme, when it gets really empty and no one’s bringing back any books. Until the next giant drop-off.
Over the years, I have asked for help of more of a co-stewardship variety, but that hasn’t been forthcoming. Once in a while I’ll have someone told me I should do this with that improvement. Better doors. Glass front, whatever. My attitude is that those people can either pick up a hammer and a checkbook or keep it moving.
I guess the thing that bugs me most is what a sign of community fracture this is. There is a disconnect. It’s sad.
But I know a lot of people really appreciate the library in the spirit it’s intended.
So when I finish being fed up with the housekeeping aspect (constantly having to straighten up the books on the shelves because people can’t or won’t keep them straight), I’ll throw myself back into the fray of sifting through those SUV-trunk expulsions of dreary weight-loss tomes, phone books, VCR manuals, cans of green beans, Fodor’s travel guides from 1999 … and glean the books that are actually for reading.
But hey, even the books I think of as duds, are treasures for someone.
Just for gosh sake don’t ask me if my little community library “needs books.” What it needs is more interaction, more people who actually use it.
Interesting thought … I just had a flashback to a time I was helping to run a small garden at a church. It grew better when I was living nearby and was depending on the garden as a food source. When it became just a demonstration garden, the plants seemed to languish.
I imagine my library closure will probably last until about next week. If that long.
But those people who leave the shelves messy. Argh! Do I need to hide in the shrubbery with a super soaker squirt gun and give them a surprise when they leave the books in disarray? Or maybe I could chase after them like a book version of the Seinfeld “Soup Nazi,” yelling “NO BOOKS FOR YOU!”
What comes to me just now is, it feels like something a whole order of magnitude more novel and interesting needs to happen with the design of the library. There are a lot of really cute and wildly creative library designs; might be time for me to revisit the LittleFreeLibrary.org website.
UPDATE: Update, well that library closure lasted about a day and a half lol. I just can’t NOT support literacy and accessibility in the community. So, the library is back open.
That being said, i DID post a couple of short videos just now. Heart request to my more-affluent neighbors part one and part two. See links below in the further exploration section.
part 1 https://www.tiktok.com/t/ZThcNRqff/
Further exploration:
• Little Free Library website www.LittleFreeLibrary.org ; and Little Free Library page on Facebook
• And check out my TikTok videos I posted just now. #LittleFreeLibrary heart-request to my more-affluent neighbors — Part 1 (Video duration 3 minutes 2 seconds) ; and #LittleFreeLibrary heart-request to my more-affluent neighbors — Part 2 (Video duration 2 minutes 50 seconds).