Wednesday, March 17, 2021

Professional shelver

 




I had scheduled an hour of Non Fiction shelving in the late afternoon. There were two carts people had put in order and I grabbed one to take it upstairs. This was a mere 15 minutes into my shelving hour which I'm pretty sure was the fastest anyone had managed to get to shelving at my library all day.

I was making good time on my shelving when I came upon five volumes of The Diaries of Virginia Woolf. This was excellent news. Five volumes of anything is a super easy shelve! These were, in order:

Volume One

Volume Two

Volume Three

Volume Five, and

Volume Four.

Do you see the problem? If you're not a professional shelver you probably didn't spot it. It's very subtle.

Still no?

Volume Four should come before Volume Five. This is because Four is a lower number than Five.

If you're not a professional shelver this probably doesn't mean much to you. But for me, a professional shelver, one who reveres and lives by the craft, well, it was too much, all too much.

So I headed downstairs and curled up in a leather armchair by a large window looking out on the heavy rain. I brought with me a huge glass of sherry, and I opened a thick book of Wodehouse short stories. I settled in for four recuperative hours and slowly pet the cat.

If you must speak to me yet today, speak softly.


























3 comments:

  1. I live at a place that has a community library and I am the assistant librarian. I always think of you when I shelve all the James Patterson, Lee Child, Michael Connelly, and Deborah Macomber books. I remember you lamenting that people didn't read something different once in a while, and now I am also having the same thoughts.

    But then I have only read the Jeeves and Bertie books. What else of Wodehouse should I read?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I'm very fond of his golf stories, maybe also known as "Oldest Member" stories. I'm pretty sure you don't have to care about golf to like them.

      Delete

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