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My Favorite Libraries: "Your Informal School, College and University"

Posted: 08/18/11 05:25 PM ET

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Yesterday, my colleague Thabiti Brown called me in California from the beautiful courtyard inside the Boston Public Library (View image). Like me, Thabiti is happy to spend a precious summer vacation day at the library. The only public library to house also a presidential library (John Adam's library is on the top floor) under head librarian Amy Ryan, the BPL has undertaken a comprehensive community process to solicit input on which principles should guide the library's future. As a Compass Committee member, I am biased about the value of these guiding principles; but I think they would be useful guide posts for any library.

When I travel, I always try to visit the local library. Libraries are a reflection of a community's aspiration and commitment to universal education. Is this a community that values learning? Is this a good place to read? In an increasingly isolated human world, libraries are gathering places which confirm the shared social endeavor of learning together. Inter-generational and non-sectarian, public libraries are safe places to question and to think, and, as noted in the Compass Principles, also have fun!

This afternoon, I went to meet a friend in San Juan Capistrano so, of course, stopped by the main library . I learned it had been designed in 1983 by Michael Graves (of Target fame) who won the contest to design the library early in his career. I was delighted to see a gas fireplace in the library, and since I am excited our new wing for our school will include a gas fireplace, I asked the librarian about its origin. Terri Garza explained, "Libraries should be welcoming and cozy. Several of our branches have hearths, too."

On this California visit, I met with the board of the new charter school slated to open inside the new San Diego Public Library in the summer of 2013. This visionary group is embedding a high school, grades 9-12 for 500 students, inside their magnificent new library. As an advocate of locating and partnering high schools inside other community institutions, I am eager to watch this new school/main library develop symbiotically.

Other favorite libraries?

Once upon a time, I lived across the street from the Hot Springs, Arkansas library for which I was deeply grateful. The San Antonio Public Library wins my "best color" award with its stunning orange rust exterior, particularly brilliant against a clear blue Texas sky.

Massachusetts has more than its share of special libraries with magical spaces. My favorites include: Concord Free Library, Lenox Public Library, Vineyard Haven and Fairhaven. My branch library for the past 30 years, Uphams Corner in Boston, hopefully will be getting a new home soon; but in the meantime, if you'd like to see a children's room literally located inside a circa 1900 empty swimming pool, we've got one to show you.

If you go to Seattle or Denver, their main libraries are worth visiting. Denver's building is a short walk from the Denver Art Museum. Nice pairing -- art and library. Seattle's is very new and provocative. If you are making the rounds of college visits with your son or daughter in New England, don't miss the Orozco mural on the lower level at the Dartmouth College library. If you're driving north from Hanover, visit the charming Tenney Memorial Library in Newbury, Vermont combined with a stop for ice cream at the Newbury General Store.

Yesterday, I went back to my beloved "library of origin," where I spent many hours growing up. The building is now the La Jolla Athenaeum, a privately funded art and music library but open to the public, as the city has built a new branch. Also in La Jolla is another favorite library at University of California at San Diego. It looks like a glass spaceship has gracefully landed in a grove of Eucalyptus trees.

My most moving experience in a library was when I went to Lilongwe, Malawi. I was searching for the library when I saw a building with the sign: National Library Service of Malawi: Your Informal School, College and University. Inside, I tried in vain to find a seat, because every chair was taken. It was about 11 am on a weekday. I am accustomed to visiting libraries in the states, and I have never been to one where I had any difficulty finding a place to sit.

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I asked the person at the information desk if a local school or college was using this library as their main library. There were so many people there!

"No," he explained. "All the people are working class. They want to study to advance their learning. It is always crowded here."

"Free to all" is the motto of the Boston Public Library. It's possible to visit your library online from home or your local cafe. But it's summer, and a great time to explore the nooks and crannies of what the people of Malawi call, "your informal school, college or university."

Do you have a favorite library to recommend? Hope you'll share photos and stories!

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Yesterday, my colleague Thabiti Brown called me in California from the beautiful courtyard inside the Boston Public Library (...
Yesterday, my colleague Thabiti Brown called me in California from the beautiful courtyard inside the Boston Public Library (...
 
 
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Meizhu Lui
03:31 AM on 08/31/2011
Thank you Meg for reminding us of the wonderful libraries there are and their importance for people and for their contribution to making places great to visit/live in. I too love to visit local libraries when I travel; some of the best are in small towns USA. But your comment about the library in Malawi really caught my eye. It made me think about how people of all ages in other parts of the world - I've noted this in South Africa, China, and Zimbabwe - will go to extraordinary lengths to get the chance for education, including self-education, while we in the US struggle to re-instill in our nation's children the understanding that education is the greatest gift. Not being able to find a seat in the library!! Wow.

But even with a few empty seats, US libraries are still well utilized, and as with other aspects of education, they are experiencing budget cuts around the nation. When will our political leadership really take the lead in promoting and funding all aspects of educational experience in America?! Otherwise, you can be sure that other nations will soon surpass us in this global economy.
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Ginnette Powell
Gemini Trekki lover of coffee
11:24 AM on 08/21/2011
Awesome article! I too visit other libraries and want to visit libraries in other states and countries!
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mlaiuppa
Pres. Sarcasm Society. Like we need your approval.
06:59 PM on 08/19/2011
When I was in the U.K. I visited the Leeds public library and liked it very much.

2013 for the new San Diego Downtown library? I'm not holding my breath. I only wish the new school housed in that library would have a teacher librarian on staff to instruct students and staff on information science but with 500 students I doubt that is going to happen. Too bad. A public librarian is not a teacher librarian, lacking a credential, experience and training as a teacher.
09:15 AM on 08/19/2011
Thanks for this post, Meg. In these days of online books and iPads, it's great to remember the true value of a library. Boston's central library, with it's charming interior courtyard, is indeed a favorite. So is our local library here in Amherst, Massachusetts. It has a beautiful central space with lots of light that I have used for long hours of writing. Another favorite is the National Library in Dublin. This was a wonderful post.
08:02 PM on 08/18/2011
This is a wonderful piece on libraries!
I'd like to add the Countway Library of Medicine to Meg Campbell's list. A journey into the basement of the Countway takes one back to the early days of medicine. It's hard to give up the evocative experience of musty books, even though internet searches are so much more efficient.
05:49 PM on 08/18/2011
Check out the plans for the New San Diego Central Library that is mentioned in the blog.

https://www.supportmylibrary.org/centrallibrary/aboutproject
05:27 PM on 08/18/2011
How wonderful to be reminded of libraries I have loved. I just moved to Seattle and am very proud of our Koolhaas creation. My children love it and will happily ride on a city bus for 30 minutes just to get to what they dubbed "the diamond shaped library."

As a former New Yorker, I can't help but boast about the reading room in the 42nd Street branch of the Public Library. I always felt slightly elevated by its lofty ceilings, broad wooden tables, and storied past.

But perhaps the most important of all is, as the author writes, the "Library of Origin." For me it was a small, simply building in a small town in CT, but it was enough to spark a life-long desire to search out and enjoy libraries everywhere.