Drip, drip, drip. Dropping below freezing now. Fortunately the warm up was only a couple of degrees above freezing, so we didn't get the catastrophic meltdown that flooded the boys' barn last year. The main consequence was that the snow around the "ice tracks" our wheelbarrow follows got spongy, making navigation of a full wheelbarrow difficult. It
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I've gotten hardened against such practices, knowing that culling has to begin somewhere, but inwardly this still bothers me when a classic old book is retired due to circulation numbers. I used to bring a lot of these weeds home, like my 1909 The Arabian Nights, illustrated by Parish, but I just can't save them all.
So tonight I've ordered a 1914 Penrod from our Scituate branch just to give it a looksee, and to give it a mark. I hope it was cataloged correctly and doesn't turn out to be one of the latter reprints.
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I agree, space is limited and sometimes things do have to be removed from the collections. It has to be done judiciously though, and not just by numbers. I need to remove a lot of outdated material on computers and networks, something I can competently do. On the other paw, I can't judge medical books properly. Sadly, everyone thinks they are competent to weed the children's books, but few really have the background and vision that is needed.
My predecessor tossed books just because they were "old" or "looked too worn," with utter disregard for context, content, or historic value.
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As for things being mis-catalouged, this is something I see happening all the time when it comes to video rentals. I don't know how many times I've found the movie "Wizards" in the Children's Section. "D-Uh, it's a cartoon, so it must be a kid's film!" More rarely, I've found "Fritz the Cat" in the kiddie-section, but the cover artwork on Fritz generally make it obvious that it's not a kiddie-film, but Wizards was a little more obscure unless you're paying attention.
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However, the treasures in the film lie in the Bach at the beginning, the Tschaikowsky Nutcracker selections, and the last two works, "Night on Bald Mountain" and "Ave Maria," at least in my opinion. Children generally do not appreciate those and may even be seriously frightened by some of them.
Disney's own discussions of the film make it clear that he was aiming at all audiences, but in particular hoped to reawaken an interest in classical music among teens and adults. At least in the era in which the film was released, it failed at that and was heavily criticized for the choice of "long hair" music. Fortunately it survived and is appreciated today.
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We do, however, try to be selective about what gets removed. How to's for Windows 3.1 are much more dispensible than early 20th century novels. I've been rebuilding some of the things my predecessor tossed, like Jane Austen and Mark Twain. We've also added back a lot of older award winning children's books that had gone away (probably through self-destruction in that case, rather than "weeding.") It is sadly true, however, that general public readership rarely looks at such things. They think instead that we should have fifteen copies of the latest James Patterson or Janet Evanovich, so they don't have to buy one and can get ours as soon as they want it.
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