mayhap: hennaed hands, writing (Default)
[personal profile] mayhap
I do, in fact, enjoy my job, probably more than I am meant to.

For one thing, I actually derive pleasure from both the physical and mental (such as they are) aspects of putting books on shelves. I like zipping around with my little cart, and scooping up armsful of books, sometimes quite large ones, and narrowing down the possibilities from G to Gra to Grafton to Grafton, Sue (N is for Noose).

Also, there is scarcely any conflict in my workplace. The people who come to the library want to get books, and also mostly to be left alone. I want the people who come to the library to check out books, and also mostly to be left alone. See? We get along just splendidly.

However, since it's more amusing to be snarky than to be pleased, and because there are certain things that I would like to tell the patrons at the library, if I actually talked to them at all, I present to you (even though of course all of you are too smart to be thinking any of these things):

Meghan Corrects the Misapprehensions of Her Patrons



Misapprehension the First:
The reference librarians and the clerks at the checkout desk are the physical manifestations of a pan-dimensional being and they will suck your soul out with their eyes. The computer terminals are much the same, except that they are even more dangerous, since the cathode ray tube is bigger. Therefore, whenever you have a question, you should ask one of the pages who is working in the stacks, because they aren't scary at all.
In fact:
Answering your questions is not in my job description. That's why I'm not sitting in front of a computer. I have, in fact, been instructed by the head librarian to direct all such queries to the staff at the reference desk. I may condescend to answer your question, but only if a.) it is really easy, like "Where are the audiobooks?" or "Where are the books about dogs?", and b.) I like you. Because I'm not really required to do this at all.

Misapprehension the Second:
a.) I don't have to clean up all those books/videocassettes/audiobooks/DVDs/whatever that I or my small child just knocked over, because that's somebody else's job and I'm too incompetent to do it properly; or

b.) I can just shove all those books/videocassettes/audiobooks/DVDs/whatever back on the shelf however I want, because, like, if the library actually cared about what order the books were on the shelves, they'd have employees to come around and clean up after me and check all the shelves systematically to make sure they're in order.

In fact:
Sadly. this is all true. This is why you should not knock over the books/videocassettes/audiobooks/DVDs/whatever in the first place. And you should certainly not permit your small child to do so. Because one of these days, a page is going to go postal on your ass.


Misapprehension the Third:
The chairs need to be randomly moved until they have been diffused throughout the available space in the library.
In fact:
The chairs need to pretty much stay at the tables.


Misapprehension the Fourth:
It is acceptable to take a form from the Summer Reading Program directly over to the picture books section, fill it with twenty titles of books off the shelf, and then instruct your child to turn it in for a free book.
In fact:
Look, this whole program is run on the honor system. We don't even make a pretense at determining whether the children have read the books on their lists; that's between you and your child and whatever morals you lay claim to. But could you at least check the damn books out? This is how we increase our circulation. Increased circulation is how we get our funding. Funding is how we pay my salary, buy all the shiny new books and CDs that I want to check out, and buy the free books we give out in the Summer Reading Program, besides. Except I don't even know what you want with the damn free book, because obviously you don't value actually reading in your family.


Misapprehension the Fifth:
I'll go check out one of the books that has been nominated for the Mark Twain award, because no one else has had the same idea!

In fact:
The books that have been nominated for the Mark Twain award stay on the shelves for, like, five minutes. Seriously. I put them there, and the next thing I know, they're gone. Don't just stand there staring at the empty shelf. Go sit down at the Soul-Sucking Computer Terminals of DOOM or go talk to the Evil Reference Librarian and put one or some or all of those books on hold, because that's the only way you're going to see them. Unless, of course, you stand there staring at the empty shelf for a really long time. In which case, you will be in my way.


If I think of any other misapprehensions my patrons are laboring under, I'll let you all know. :D

Date: 2004-06-12 06:16 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] aesc.livejournal.com
Hm. One that I've noticed (even in a research library, where people are supposed to be professional and respectful) is the belief that all shelves are pretty much the same, so if you're in, say, the BX section of the library and don't feel like taking the Early English Text Society volumes you got back to the PR section, it's perfectly OK to shove them in amongst the BX stacks, because somehow the person desperately looking for them will find them.

I love that. Not that I'm a librarian worker, but damn it, I'd like my books to be where I can find them. (What? Am I crazy for wanting that?)

Date: 2004-06-12 07:41 pm (UTC)
ext_12394: (lyre)
From: [identity profile] lysimache.livejournal.com
Oh, I loved working as a page at my public library (which I did the summer before, I think, my senior year in college?) so so so much. Besides my current job, it's *totally* the job I loved the most. It was wonderful. It wasn't stressful, and I was surrounded by books all day. So so nice. I like alphabetizing; it gives such a nice feeling of accomplishment looking at the beautiful shelves, all nice and neat. Plus, one can think nice library!sex thoughts while walking through the stacks. *g*

If only that job paid enough to be a career....

Date: 2004-06-13 10:11 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mgrinter.livejournal.com
It possibly could if people would actually check out the books they claim to have read or read while sitting in the library.
From: [identity profile] kivrin.livejournal.com
The summer before my senior year of college I was a page at the public library, and actually it seriously shook my ambition to become a reference librarian. First, because I was responsible for the new book room, which is right next to the main reference desk, I had ample opportunity to see that for every actual reference query, such as "I'm trying to find out if Leonardo da Vinci actually invented the helicopter," the librarians had to respond to fifteen not-so-reference queries such as "why did you get rid of the old computer terminals? I hate the web catalog!" "I caaaaaan't fiiiiiind a freeeee compuuuuuuuuuuter!!" and "where's the bathroom? I need to know NOW! NOW! GOD, why won't you TELL me? My son has [insert bizarre medical diagnosis] and can't wait!" Second, and not unrelated, is the fact that I found as I worked in the library that I began to resent the people who come to the library, because I had the most interaction with the obnoxious minority.

Misapprehension 5A:
The page doesn't need to actually touch or even get within three feet of her cart in order to get books from the cart onto the shelves where they could easily be found. Therefore, patrons should hover nearby like vultures as she pushes the cart into the new book room, and swarm over it like ants over spilled honey as soon as she steps away, and make irritated noises if, after five minutes, she attempts to get more books off the cart for reshelving. Also, the books on the cart aren't in any particular order any more than those on the shelves are, so if you take a book off the cart, put it back any old how. In fact, express your individuality by putting it back spine-down!

Misapprehension 1A:
The page is personally responsible for every aspect of your library experience. Thus, is it appropriate to ask her "Why doesn't the library have any good books? What do I pay taxes for?" or "Why don't you have Sitara the Slut by Danielle Steele? It's a BEST SELLER!!" or "I'm looking for the book they were talking about on NPR yesterday. I don't know if it was fiction or nonfiction, or if Nicholas was the author's first or last name... but they were talking about it on N. P. R.!!"
From: [identity profile] mgrinter.livejournal.com
It is much too bad that I no longer go to the Mid Continent Library or I could get in on some the purposefully nescient free drug distribution...

Date: 2004-06-12 09:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sternel.livejournal.com
::page/seasonal clerk/reserve desk staffer/circ clerk/junior cataloger/jill of all trades stands up and CHEERS::

Sing it, sister. Sing it loud, proud, and then beat them over the head with a fat ol' Stephen King. =)

Date: 2004-06-13 07:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] coercedbynutmeg.livejournal.com
Do you ever have any trouble with the INTERNET? Or people asking you to turn it on? Or do they even have that there anymore or anything?

Geez, I haven't been to the library since calculus ended.

Date: 2004-06-14 07:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] coercedbynutmeg.livejournal.com
d00d! I don't know how to speall "laff"
Do they change it every day?

Date: 2004-06-15 05:57 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] coercedbynutmeg.livejournal.com
Wow, that's like, a huge time involvement. Are they spelling a secret message? Like "Laugh, the president came to town last Monday"?

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