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Celebrate National Libraries Day (6 Feb) Tell us what your library mean to you

56 replies

RachelMumsnet · 01/02/2016 16:02

It's National Libraries Day on Saturday 6 February and the Mumsnet Books team wants to show our support as we think they're worth celebrating. Tell us what your local library means to you by Sunday 7 February and you'll be entered into a draw to win a bundle of great books for you and your dcs. Winner will be announced next Monday (8 Feb).

OP posts:
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NotJanine · 16/02/2016 12:00

Yes, would be nice to know who won and what the prize was?

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purplepandas · 11/02/2016 21:43

Any news on this?

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purplepandas · 08/02/2016 16:52

Congrats ImperialBlether on your agent!

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ImperialBlether · 07/02/2016 23:14

I've just written my third novel in a library - went there every day and stayed for hours. It's so nice to work when other people around you are reading or studying or researching. And the librarians were great. If I so much as looked up, they'd give me a "Get on with it" look.

It's the first book that's got me an agent, too, so yes, I absolutely love libraries!

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halcyondays · 07/02/2016 23:11

I've always loved going to the library, from a young age borrowing picture books. As a child I lived just very close to the library which was great as I could go by myself any time and I still remember vividly many of the books I borrowed then. I had quite a few books at home but would never have been able to read so much, and so many different kinds of books without the library.

We go to the library quite often now as a family and all of us borrow books, we like listening to childrens' audiobooks and can always find something new to read. It is great to able to read so many different books, all for free, so you try something different. Our local library has good opening hours and a good range of books, and is one of the most visited in the area.They put on a variety of activities such as storytime and rhythym and rhyme and and recently dd1 went to a Harry Potter night they had. It would be a real shame if libraries were to disappear.

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katyk81 · 07/02/2016 15:01

Over the past year or so we have rediscovered our local library (which is a good 30 minutes drive from us but sadly is the nearest) and for us it means a lovely afternoon trip after school and a chance to enjoy some time together at bedtime reading the books they choose. We go every fortnight and they often ask to go more often.

The kids have a snack en-route to get their energy back and then we go and have a good browse. They both like the machines for returning and checking out the books and always ask for more than the 5 books each I let them get. My oldest goes off and spends the time carefully choosing his own, I have a quite look and choose a couple of reads from a favorite author, my 3 year old comes back with a huge pile to pick from and the baby and I have a cuddle and a read while we wait for them.
The staff are knowledgeable and friendly and it always feels like a nice welcoming place to go. I plan to try and get across to some of the school holiday activities this year and the kids loved the reading challenge last Summer.

Of course then when we get home there is the excitement of choosing which books to start with and getting into new stories.

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EDisFunny · 07/02/2016 13:11

We love our local library! My sons love going and choosing their books.

Besides the obvious, fostering a love of books, i think visiting the library has help make them more confident. They walk up to staff to ask for books they want, take part in storytelling and singalongs, and just enjoy the community atmosphere.

Libraries still play a vital role in our lives.

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dementedma · 07/02/2016 12:53

I agree with all the above but at the risk of being held wholly responsible for the closure of these much loved libraries, I am probably one of the reasons they are shutting - along with modern technology. I lived in the library as a child ( am now in my 50s) and when the dcs came along, took them pretty much every weekend to our local one 5 miles away for bags of lovely books. Fast forward to now. My adult DDS haven't been in any library except the university ones for years. They either buy books, or download them or swap with friends/raid charity shops. I cant remember the last time I was in a library, or need to be. 14 year old Ds doesn't want to go to one - "What for?" -and only uses the school one for somewhere warm to sit while he waits for the bus! My elderly mother depends on the !library and visits often, my brother used to so that he could use the WiFi bit now he is connected, he doesn't bother. We are not illiterate book haters, far from it. All graduates, all keen readers in our spare time and, ironically, my sister was an archivist with the British Library in London for many years so we understand the importance, but the library doesn't fill any need for our demographic any more. I hope they stay open for everyone else's sakr though but personally, its not som ething which features in our life any more.

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lemonymelanie · 07/02/2016 12:25

If buying books online, I always try to by used, and always look for the "ex-library book " description - it's a kind of hobby.

I love the surprise of finding out which library the book has been in. I have books from libraries all over the British Isles and America.

I also join libraries when I'm in different places, so I have a collection of local authority library cards. It's something I make a point of doing when I go anywhere, again a kind of hobby.

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mrsronswanson · 07/02/2016 12:09

I have always loved libraries - it was such a treat as a child to find a new book. Even as a grown up I have such a feeling of happiness if I come out of the library with a book I know i'm going to enjoy. Realistically I can only read books from the library or charity shops, my budget at the moment doesn't stretch to buying new books.
Unfortunately it looks like my local council will be reducing the opening hours of all the libraries round here. I know it's better than closures but it makes me sad.

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SylvDP · 07/02/2016 10:51

I live in a village and use our mobile library service. Dd thinks it's great fun to go in the library bus!
My nearest library doesn't have the best choice of books for me, but I can order from their website and have the books I want to read delivered to my local library (from other libraries across the county).
I have a kindle and do use it, but nothing beats a real book and I always have library books on the go. Also, it's great to chat to our librarian, he gives good recommendations and it's great to have book chats with another reader.

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JoyceDivision · 07/02/2016 07:49

Our local library is fab,dcs love using it, while to me it is a chance to read as much as possible on a budget. The idea of having a stack ofbooks to read in bed is heaven!

However mybig library love at the moment is the dcs school library... itwas previously a bit unloved and underused... we are spending lots of time classifying all the nonfiction, sorting all the fiction, new storage for picture books, making fun displays and trying to put a scannig system in place so it can be used just like a public library. It is a joy to help out in it and knowing it is for such a good cause, to get the pupils more interested in using it and reading makes it all the more worthwhile.

(although I think some one had got a bit freaked out by reading Neil Gaiman's The Graveyard Book and hidden it downsome shelving!)

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kateandme · 07/02/2016 07:35

My library is my santaury,its been my saviour.
No longer those quiet hushing grey rooms u usually think of for librarys.ours is a community hub.teens come,all shapes,colour,personalities have come used and loved it.
I fear now because they r talkin of closing due to cuts.it will devastate our community

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minsmum · 06/02/2016 23:44

When I was little we had no money to waste, my mother's words, on books. Then my friends mum took me to the library and got me a library card, it was heaven. In my turn I took my younger brothers and then my children. Now I am lucky enough to have started a job in an office just above a library. I went in every day last week.

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leccybill · 06/02/2016 22:13

The library is a special place for me. As soon as I could cross the main road, I'd take myself off to the library and I actually read every book in the children's section.
Now I take my daughter and we share our love of books on a Friday after school before going to the ice cream parlour. Special times.

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PerspicaciaTick · 06/02/2016 21:48

Today, most people in my area celebrated National Libraries Day by not going to the library. Which was OK because none of the people working in the library knew it was a special day either (except me because I saw this thread yesterday).

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Pickofthepops · 06/02/2016 20:34

Libraries have played a massive role in my life and continue to do so now I'm a mum too. My earliest childhood memories are of choosing books - the very hungry caterpillar, ant and bee etc. Then when I got older, learning to love reading, help with homework and a place to relax and enjoy the peace and quiet. We were lucky enough to live near a wonderful newly opened library when my son now eight was born. And it was open Sunday's too. Amazing - and coincided with the self serve machines. We still had help
from kind staff - and enjoyed Rhymetime sessions and all those extra things that libraries do so well. I'm so thrilled and proud that my children love the library too - where we are now we also have a fantastic library, the staff are fantastic. Being a stay at home mum it's really great that we have somewhere to go and also read new books whereas with my son I still has a larger disposable budget to buy them. Reserving library books for me and the children still gives me that new book smell buzz though :-) long live libraries!

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heymammy · 06/02/2016 18:36

I live in a city so have quite a few 'local' libraries and I cherish every single one of them.
They run bounce n rhyme sessions and toddlers' tales, which are a godsend when you're at home with small folk. I have read so many different to my usual, books that I may not have bought in case they were shit.
They introduced me to Thomas Hardy and for that I will be forever grateful.
My dc (3, 9 & 12) all love going to the library, the kids section at one of my local's is brilliant.
Smile

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LiDLrichardsPistachioSack · 06/02/2016 17:23

I was just thinking about how much I love my tiny local library and then this thread popped up!

My little local library always gets a variety of little-known, edgy, fantastic books in along with the more popular stuff -I go every week with DD (2) and we both love to just dive in and see what we come out with. It gives me such pleasure.

Without libraries the world would be a much crapper place.

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SweetieDrops · 06/02/2016 17:06

I love our library because it saves me a fortune on buying rainbow fairies books Grin.

Seriously though, I've always made a weekly trip to the library with DD first for baby rhyme time then for story hour when she was older and now she is learning to read independently she is amazed at all these books she can choose from. I really hope she grows up with a love of reading.

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Raeray · 06/02/2016 16:52

From young child to an adult I have always been a regular visitor to libraries.
But in recent years I didn't go as often, life too busy etc.
However my New Years resolution was to read more and last week I took my gran to her local library and as soon as I walked in I remembered quite how much I love a library.

My Gran enjoyed it very much as did I - we will be regular visitors from now on.
That's quite fitting I feel as she would always take me as a child and now she's nearly 90 with dementia it's my turn to look after her and introduce her to the wonders the library holds.

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coughingbean · 06/02/2016 16:05

I am currently on sick leave from my job - at my local library!
We have worked so hard over the past year organising for this day.
We put on lots of free events and managed to get 4 famous(ish!) authors in to give free talks throughout the day.
I LOVE my job, the atmosphrere, the readers and the people I work with,
It means so much to me to be working in an environment where people care.
We care about our books, our building and giving everyone who walks through the doors the service they require. This is despite low pay, cuts in funding, constant restructure and threatened redundancies.

I am GUTTED I couldn't be at work today!

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CheeseAtFourpence · 06/02/2016 13:49

Our village library is a lifeline for many people, but sadly is one of many at risk of closure. So I'm part of a small team campaigning to keep it open.

The library is a hub of activities - be it toddler time, knit and natter, people researching on the computers, reading the paper or doing a jigsaw.

As a young mum it was a lifeline when I was on maternity and we are in weekly borrowing children's books.

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starlight36 · 06/02/2016 12:40

Our library is a welcoming sanctuary of calm for my children. At the baby stage we attended library staff rhyme time and a privately run music group and now regularly go in to get library books. Although we have lots of books at home courtesy of kind relatives both children see this as an opportunity to have lots of different books. The craft sessions run during the holidays were brilliant last summer and helped stretch our summer fun budget as they were all free.

Our library staff are brilliant - always friendly and constantly change the displays so there is often something new to look at.

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strawberrypenguin · 06/02/2016 10:59

Visit your library today, they'll have load of stuff going on. Ours has!

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