A while back I
wrote a post on Shrewsbury School’s Ancient Library, now here I am writing
about the Castle Gates Library which is housed in what used to be the old
Shrewsbury School. It’s a
drop-dead beautiful library, housed in one of the finest buildings associated
with public lending libraries right across the country. It’s one of the finest buildings in our
town as well. We Shrewsbury folk are lucky to have such a fine library - and
the extraordinary thing is that all are welcome, seven days a week, and it can
be used for free.
I first joined a
library back in the dawn of time when I was nine years old, queuing on my
little scooter outside the newly-built library in my home town, waiting for its
doors to open for the first time.
I loved the smell of books when I got inside, and I still find myself
savouring that smell when I go through the doors at the Castle Gates Library.
It makes me feel at home.
But then so it
should. I’ve been a member of Castle Gates Library since moving to Shropshire
back in 1974. I was a newcomer to the county then, wintering amongst the
library’s shelves while my house sale went through. In more recent years I was to find my own books on those
shelves, but back then it was Shropshire Folk-Lore that I stumbled upon,
collected by Charlotte Burne, Georgina Jackson’s Shropshire Word-Book and A.G.
Bradley’s Book of the Severn, all of which have been invaluable in my writing
life, as has that other treasure from amongst those shelves, Brian Waters’
Severn Stream.
As an author, I
have much to be grateful for in the Castle Gates Library. But the other day it
was as a reader that I met Caroline Buckley, Castle Gates’ Branch Manager,
full of questions about the day-to-day mystery of how the library works.
Caroline said
that it depended for its smooth running upon a mass of tiny things. Even before
opening to the public there were date-stamps to be updated, newspapers to put
out, daily deliveries of requested books and returns to receive and record. The hour before the library opened was
always a busy one. Shelves would be tidied on a rolling rota system, which
allowed for every section to be put in order before moving onto the next.
Then, once the
doors were opened, the day would be spent helping people find the books they
wanted and use the computers. For
the weekly Story Times, they’d have up to thirty toddlers and accompanying
parents, and on the monthly babies’ Rhyme Time the children’s library could
become a bit of a buggy park.
In addition,
staff from Castle Gates Library would go out to the smaller libraries around
town, like Bayston Hill’s library and the Lantern on Sundorne, and they’d help
with activities in these. They were always responding to the time of the year,
and to general interests that the public might have – books on sport activities
around the time of the Olympics, for examples, or Booker short list
displays. There would be spooky
stories on offer on Halloween week, and during the summer holidays there would
be reading challenges.
Amid all this
activity, one thing’s for sure – the Castle Gates Library might exude
peacefulness and relaxation, but behind the scenes librarians are very busy
people. In addition to their work in the library, they’re also organizing
author events, school visits, book quests, poetry reading and composing
competitions – you name it; if it’s to do with books and writing, they’ll be
there. In addition, the library provides a quiet place for children to do
homework. It becomes packed during
the exam season, Caroline said.
You never know who is going to turn up asking for what obscure piece of
information, and it’s your job to help track it down.
Caroline has
been at Castle Gates Library for fifteen years and seen many changes over those
years. Nowadays, she says, members
of staff come in at a younger age than in her day. The arrival of the internet, too, has brought about changes
in the library. Fifteen years ago
there was no online referencing.
No emailing. No computers.
Caroline can
remember the library back to when she was a child. In those days, when the
library included museum artifacts, it had stuffed birds in cases, children’s
books in the Hobbes Room and an art gallery upstairs. Then, in the 1980s a massive revamp took place. Then, in
more recent years, the decision was made to open the library seven days a week.
However, the biggest change of recent years, Caroline said, was the absorbing
back into the Castle Gates building of the Reference Library, because of local
government cutbacks.
‘Some library
services have faced far bigger cut-backs than that. It was a shame to lose the reference library building, but in
general terms we’ve been lucky so
far,’ said Caroline.
It’s the books
that count most, of course, buying new ones, repairing old ones – how does that
all work? Caroline said that suppliers would put together book lists according
to a library’s specific criteria.
Then librarians would go through the lists, which largely happened
online nowadays [‘You mean there’s no actually physically handling of books any
more?’ I naively asked] and decide whether to knock books off the list or
arrange for their delivery. ‘Most days we have new books coming in,’ Caroline
said. ‘You hear in the papers
about book funds being cut, but we still have some money left for buying
books.’
Looking after
stock is of vital importance. When
books become too tatty to keep on the shelves they’ll go into book sales. Some books disappear altogether from
the shelves, others - including the classics - will be ordered anew. ‘A
considerable amount of time is spend repairing,’ Caroline said. ‘The binding of a book will often be
the first thing to go. A careful repair, or a simple re-jacketing, can give a
book months more life.’
According to
Caroline, Shrewsbury’s Castle Gates Library has a bit of every sort of book.
Crime novels are massively popular, as are thrillers, Booker Prize winners and
books that have been made into films. You got to know the regulars, Caroline
said, and what they liked. And you followed the reviews and picked up trends.
What was the best thing about her job, I wanted to know. ‘The variety,’ Caroline replied. ‘Two days in the library are never the
same - and you’re never short of a good book to read!’
No comments:
Post a Comment