All around the school, things have been winding down. Not in the library though... Here, spurred on by the extended loan period and increased allowances, students have been flocking to the issue desk with armfuls of books to take out over the summer. It's aces. Friday was a particularly crazy one, with over 260 issues going out over the course of the day. There are huge gaps on the shelves now, and it's not just the most popular reads that have been going out; there's been a lot of interest in the hidden gems too.
News of the new Cherub book by Robert Muchamore has been drawing a lot of attention, but I'm sorry folks, you'll have a bit of a wait for that yet! We'll be getting a few copies in, but probably not as many as folks who've been asking for it.
And of course it's been a huge week for Harry Potter fans, with the release of HP7b. There were some interesting discussions about spoilers on Twitter and other sites, resulting in a determination that you can't claim to have had a plot spoiled if the narrative came straight from a best selling book that's been out for several years and that if you haven't read it, then you're not a big enough fan to justify your irritation. Fair play.
The other exciting news of this week is that we've taken receipt of our first library Kindle! Now, I must confess that I'm not a fan of them. I don't like the lack of a touch screen, the buttons are clunky, it's made of plastic for heaven's sake. But I've been trialling it and I think it's starting to grow on me. The key thing is when you stop noticing the device and your attention goes back to what you're reading.
The trial book of choice is Holly Black's Red Glove, sequel to White Cat which I adored earlier in the year. The happy point has been reached where I'm no longer thinking of the Kindle, but of the book. The advantages of this thing are starting to present themselves. You can read one handed, lay the book (not book!) on your lap while you eat and turn the pages by hitting the button with a chopstick*, it's lighter than a book of double the thickness if you take it out of the case** and it's right - the strain on your eyes that I've come to expect when reading off a screen just isn't there. The electronic ink is quite fab. But the flash up of the next page in negative is horribly off-putting and I do keep coming back to the fact that it's plastic and for me, that just feels a bit wrong. I reserve the right to change my mind when I'm tired and it reads to me.
With a bit of luck we'll get the eBook management system up and running and over the next few months request either some additional funding or some donations so that we can get a couple more and start loaning them out. Exciting times!
Speaking of exciting times, thank you to all the students who have helped me out this week while I hobbled around the library and shouted at you all from the comfy chairs. After pulling a tendon in my knee (not recommended) I've been very grateful to you all for being so fab!
* Please do not hit library loans with chopsticks.
** Which weighs almost as much as the Kindle! Daft, but also detracts from the overwhelming plastic-ness of it.
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