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#1 | ||
Spirit of the Lonely Star
Join Date: Mar 2002
Posts: 5,133
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I have to smile. My gut feeling is that the key must lie elsewhere rather than an "attraction to detail". I would respectfully demur on this image of our poor profession. ![]() Just remember that most of the people you meet in a library are not (technically) "librarians". Librarians are not so good (or perhaps less hung up?) on drawing a sharp line between themselves and their support staff than is generally true in other professions. (Certainly, professors are very careful to make sure that you don't mix up a TA and a prof.) Most of the people behind the desks are not librarians. In fact in most larger systems, librarians spend more time managing staff issues and less time on arranging, classifying or searching for items. That was certainly true in every job I held except for my very first one. Remember, too, that those librarians who tend to be professionally active and serve on this type of body are less likely to be the person in charge of a small local branch and more likely to be someone further up the food chain. (It's easier for the latter to get travel money, permission to take off, etc.) Quote:
Oh, my goodness! I hope not. If so, they are lousy librarians. They will hopefully speak with you first to get some good idea of what you are looking for. I can tell you though what will likely happen to these recommendations, from a purely practical point of view. The local system will probably put them out in some kind of flyer with a little blurb on each telling you what it's about, along with the call number so you can quickly find it. Then when you go to the shelf, it will not be there because everyone else has picked up the flyer and searched out the same books! I would strongly recommend you follow Lalwende's good advice and dig the copies out of your own personal bookshelves. Littlemanpoet I think you're definitely on to something! Since our profession has such fuzzy edges, we need some way to distinguish ourselves. We can't assume the public recognizes our credentials in the same way they might clearly acknowledge a lawyer, doctor, teacher, or social worker! Librarians are very big on lists, and we tend to be a socially active bunch. We want people to think about big social questions, and we think it's our job to urge them to go forward in that direction. Therefore, you will often see books about war, gender issues, race, class realities on such lists. Lord of the Rings does look a bit out of place in this company. That doesn't surprise me. Often on such committee picks, snuck in among the various titles, you can identify books that are there for a totally different reason. Simply put, the people who made the list had read the book and dearly loved it. It made a personal impact on their life. I have served on TLA/ALA committees that drew up book recommendations and have seen this kind of thing happening (though none of my committees were ever this exalted). My gut feeling is that the Lord of the Rings is there because it was a personal favorite of a substantial chunk of the committee. It's not there to teach anybody anything (despite how we love to argue moral/philosophical/relgious underpinings on this board). Rather it's a good story that the recommenders were personally fond of. Then again, it may be there because they had the good sense to include a children's librarian on the committee, and children's librarians are notoriously fond of real stories. I really do mean this. In a world that devalues stories, children's librarians are a hidden gem.
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Multitasking women are never too busy to vote. Last edited by Child of the 7th Age; 03-04-2006 at 07:26 PM. |
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#2 | ||
Illustrious Ulair
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: In the home of lost causes, and forsaken beliefs, and unpopular names,and impossible loyalties
Posts: 4,240
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#3 | ||
Itinerant Songster
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: The Edge of Faerie
Posts: 7,066
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#4 | |
A Mere Boggart
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: under the bed
Posts: 4,737
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![]() ![]() I always wonder how people put together such lists. Do they go on choosing 'what is good for you to read', or do they simply pick what they like? Or in some cases, do they simply go for what will impress? I suspect the latter is often the case when broadsheet newspapers such as The Observer create lists like this. It surprises me how often Ulysses turns up on these lists as I suspect most people wouldn't exactly enjoy it - I found it was more about the language rather than the story, and I often think it's a case of 'look at me, I've read Ulysses! Or I want you to think I have!'. If I had to pick a top twenty of my favourite books it would be exactly that - my favourites. Those books that stayed in my mind and those that I can return to and enjoy reading again, and those which affected me and I was very sorry to finish.
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Gordon's alive!
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#5 | |
Shadowed Prince
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Thulcandra
Posts: 2,343
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I wasn't going to post here but you've drawn me in Lal!
I myself have a "reading list" spanning over a page of books and authors, fiction and non-fiction. This was the direct result of a long period (to me) of booklessness when I couldn't find anything new. I add books to it according to recommendations from friends, newspapers, magazines, the internet, authors or Downers. As for Ulysses - I'm a couple of hundred pages into it now after spotting in a Guardian list of books to read - I believe either you or davem posted a thread about it. The poet laureate, or whatever the obsolete man is called, had it on his list. The name caught my interest and later, as I went a-hunting in my library, I found it and took it out. Not enjoying Ulysses? I enjoy all fo what I've read so far, simply because it's so different from what I'm accustomed to. It is indeed related to the language - the way Joyce composes the thoughts of each character in half-phrases and unfinished ideas strikes me as revolutionary genius (presuming he was the first to do this). And the complex language also helps - it pleases me when the book goes into French or German, or when I can deduce meaning from latin phrases. When the language is above me, it is a learning experience. It pleases, whichever angle I look at it from. Now I've finished ranting! Hourra! What were we meant to be discussing? ![]() Quote:
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#6 |
Blithe Spirit
Join Date: Jan 2003
Posts: 2,779
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Ahem, it was I who posted that thread, tgwbs....
![]() I agree that it's interesting that Tolkien is included in a 'must-read', usually he only makes the 'most popular' polls.... One thing that strikes me about both this list and the one I mentioned is the absence of foreign classics. A "read before you die" list that doesn't include Tolstoy is fundamentally flawed IMO. No Zola, Balzac, or Flaubert either, TUT. Tolkien meanwhile would I suspect have been tutting about the absence of classical literature. I have read over half of the books on that list, and most of those near the top (...I too am very fond of To Kill a Mockingbird....) better get cracking I suppose on the rest, never know how much time one's got... ![]()
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Out went the candle, and we were left darkling |
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#7 |
Haunting Spirit
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Valinor
Posts: 97
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Child of the Seventh Age, you’re scaring me. I am also about to start training to be a librarian, and my boyfriend is entering law school. Spooky.
Actually, I’m in my last year of my undergrads right now, and I’m taking an English course on Fantasy. The professor is a little bit . . . interesting, and he has a few sort of frightening ideas about Tolkien (especially concerning his intentions regarding Shelob), but he did say a few things about fantasy in academia that, based on my observations, seemed dead-on. He noted that, when you ask academics to name the most important book of the twentieth century, they say James Joyce’s Ulysses . . . but when you ask the general public, they choose The Lord of the Rings. That’s starting to change, but change is slow. And with some of the things they tried to teach me this year, I can’t say I’m sorry. I’ve learned miles more about Tolkien from you fine folk than from that crazy prof (whom I was actually correcting in front of the class when he misspoke on Tolkien, so I fear he doesn’t like me all that much). I’m starting to think that maybe our dear Professor Tolkien should be left to the people who love him. But still, it is encouraging to see The Lord of the Rings on this list. I suppose you could see the story as “saying something”, but personally, I don’t see what’s so wrong with it if it isn’t. I think some of the most valuable, most enriching works I’ve ever read are those that don’t have any major political or social agendas, but just say something about our archetypal emotions and what it means to be human, to struggle with the issues of life and death, good and evil, and what all those things mean – questions we all ask. Just my thoughts, of course . . . but I believe those are the books we should read before we die, because I think those are the questions we all want to be able to answer by that time.
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Above all shadows rides the Sun and Stars forever dwell: I will not say the Day is done, nor bid the Stars farewell. -- Samwise Gamgee |
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#8 |
The Pearl, The Lily Maid
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To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee -- X
The Bible -- X The Lord of the Rings Trilogy by JRR Tolkien -- X 1984 by George Orwell -- X A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens -- X Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte -- X Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen -- X All Quite on the Western Front by E M Remarque His Dark Materials Trilogy by Phillip Pullman -- X Birdsong by Sebastian Faulks The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck The Lord of the Flies by William Golding -- X The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time by Mark Haddon Tess of the D'urbevilles by Thomas Hardy -- X Winnie the Pooh by AA Milne -- X Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Graham -- X Gone With the Wind by Margaret Mitchell -- X Great Expectations by Charles Dickens The Time Traveller's Wife by Audrey Niffenegger The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold The Prophet by Khalil Gibran David Copperfield by Charles Dickens -- X The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho The Master and Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov Life of Pi by Yann Martel Middlemarch by George Eliot -- X The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich by Alexander Solzenhitsyn X's mean I've read them...but I'm afraid there are many on this list that I simply cannot see as important enough to be on a must-read list, and as much as I love it, LotR falls within that category. Where are Crime and Punishment, Vanity Fair, Tom Sawyer, The Iliad, The Good Earth, Catch-22, and so many TRUE classics? And yet His Dark Materials is a must read? I know that book was very popular, but it was published what? 5-6 years ago? An interesting list...but I feel it is a sad comment on our society that some of these are on the list.
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